BOOK V. THE DEAD HAND.
51. CHAPTER LI.
 (continued)
Plying among his recollections in this way, Mr. Brooke might have
 got along, easily to himself, and would have come back from the
 remotest seas without trouble; but a diabolical procedure had been set
 up by the enemy.  At one and the same moment there had risen above
 the shoulders of the crowd, nearly opposite Mr. Brooke, and within
 ten yards of him, the effigy of himself:  buff-colored waistcoat,
 eye-glass, and neutral physiognomy, painted on rag; and there
 had arisen, apparently in the air, like the note of the cuckoo,
 a parrot-like, Punch-voiced echo of his words.  Everybody looked
 up at the open windows in the houses at the opposite angles
 of the converging streets; but they were either blank, or filled
 by laughing listeners.  The most innocent echo has an impish mockery
 in it when it follows a gravely persistent speaker, and this echo
 was not at all innocent; if it did not follow with the precision
 of a natural echo, it had a wicked choice of the words it overtook. 
 By the time it said, "The Baltic, now," the laugh which had been
 running through the audience became a general shout, and but for
 the sobering effects of party and that great public cause which
 the entanglement of things had identified with "Brooke of Tipton,"
 the laugh might have caught his committee.  Mr. Bulstrode asked,
 reprehensively, what the new police was doing; but a voice could not
 well be collared, and an attack on the effigy of the candidate would
 have been too equivocal, since Hawley probably meant it to be pelted. 
Mr. Brooke himself was not in a position to be quickly conscious
 of anything except a general slipping away of ideas within himself: 
 he had even a little singing in the ears, and he was the only person
 who had not yet taken distinct account of the echo or discerned the
 image of himself.  Few things hold the perceptions more thoroughly
 captive than anxiety about what we have got to say.  Mr. Brooke heard
 the laughter; but he had expected some Tory efforts at disturbance,
 and he was at this moment additionally excited by the tickling,
 stinging sense that his lost exordium was coming back to fetch him
 from the Baltic. 
"That reminds me," he went on, thrusting a hand into his side-pocket,
 with an easy air, "if I wanted a precedent, you know--but we never want
 a precedent for the right thing--but there is Chatham, now; I can't
 say I should have supported Chatham, or Pitt, the younger Pitt--
 he was not a man of ideas, and we want ideas, you know." 
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