Finn.
‘Don’t be sarcastic, Marie. We have nothing further to do with the bestowal of honours. Why didn’t he make everybody a peer or a baronet while he was about it? Lord Finn! I don’t see why he shouldn’t have been Lord Finn. I’m sure he deserved it for the way in which he attacked Sir Timothy Beeswax.’
‘I don’t think he’d like it.’
‘They all say so, but I suppose they do like it, or they wouldn’t make it. And I’d have made Locock a knight;–Sir James Locock. He’s have made a more knightly knight that Sir Timothy. When a man has power he ought to use it. It makes people respect him. Mr Daubney made a duke, and people think more of that than anything he did. Is Mr Finn going to join the new Ministry?’
‘If you can tell me, Duchess, who is to be the next minister, I can give a guess.’
‘Mr Monk.’
‘Then he certainly will.’
‘Or Mr Daubney.’
‘Then he certainly won’t.’
‘Or Mr Gresham.’
‘That I could not answer.’
‘Or the Duke of Omnium.’
‘That would depend on his Grace. If the Duke came back, Mr Finn’s services would be at his disposal, whether in or out of office.’
‘Very prettily said, my dear. I never look round this room without thinking of the first time I came here. Do you remember, when I found the old man sitting there?’ The old man alluded to was the late Duke.
‘I am not likely to forget it, Duchess.’
‘How I hated you when I saw you! What a fright I thought you were! I pictured you to myself as a sort of ogre, willing to eat up everybody for the gratification of your own vanity.’
‘I was very vain, but there was a little pride with it.’
‘And now it has come to pass that I can’t very well live without you. How he did love you!’
‘His Grace was very good to me.’
‘It would have done no great harm, after all, if he had made you Duchess of Omnium.’
‘Very great harm to me, Lady Glen. As it is I got a friend that I love dearly, and a husband that I love dearly too. In the other case I should have made neither. Perhaps I may say that, in that other case my life would not have been brightened by the affection of the present Duchess.’
‘One can’t tell how it would have gone, but I well remember the state I was in then.’ The door opened and Phineas Finn entered the room. ‘What, Mr Finn, are you at home? I thought everybody was crowding down at the clubs, to know who is to be what. We are settled. We are quiet. We have nothing to do to disturb ourselves. But you ought to be in all the flutter of renewed expectation.’
‘I am waiting my destiny in calm seclusion. I hope the Duke is well?’
‘As well as can be expected. He doesn’t walk about his room with a poniard in his hand,–ready for himself or Sir Orlando; nor is he sitting crowned like Bacchus, drinking the health of the new Ministry with Lord Drummond and Sir Timothy. He is probably sipping a cup of coffee over a blue-book in dignified retirement. You should go and see him.’
‘I should be unwilling to trouble him when he is so much occupied.’
‘That is just what has done him all the harm in the world. Everybody presumes that he has so much to think of that nobody goes near him. Then he is left to boody over everything by himself till he becomes a sort of political hermit, or ministerial Lama, whom human eyes are not to look upon. It doesn’t matter now; does it?’ Visitor after visitor came in, and the Duchess chatted to them all, leaving the impression on everybody that heard her that she at least was not sorry to be relieved from the troubles attending her husband’s late position.
She sat there over an hour, and as she was taking her leave, she had a few words to whisper to Mrs Finn. ‘When this is all over,’ she said. ‘I mean to call on that Mrs Lopez.’
‘I thought you did go there.’
‘That was soon after the poor man had killed himself,–when she was going away. Of course I only left a card. But I shall see her now if I can. We want to get her out of her melancholy if possible. I have a sort of feeling, you know, that among us we made the train run over him.’
‘I don’t think that.’
‘He got so horribly abused for what he did at Silverbridge; and I really don’t see why he wasn’t to have his money. It was I that made him spend it.’
‘He was, I fancy, a thoroughly bad man.’
‘But a wife doesn’t always want to be made a widow even if her husband be bad. I think I owe her something, and I would pay my debt if I knew how. I shall go and see her, and if she will marry this other man we’ll take her by the hand. Good-bye, dear. You’d better come to me early to-morrow, as I suppose we shall know something by eleven o’clock.’
In the course of that evening the Duke of St Bungay came to Carlton Terrace, and was closeted for some time with the late Prime Minister. He had been engaged during that and the last two previous days in lending his aid to various political manoeuvres and ministerial attempts, from which our Duke had kept himself altogether aloof. He did not go to Windsor, but as each successive competitor journeyed thither and returned, someone sent for the old Duke or went to seek his council. He was the Nestor of the occasion, and strove heartily to compose all quarrels, and so to arrange matters that a wholesome, moderately Liberal Ministry might be again installed for the good of the country and the comfort of all true Whigs. In such moments he almost ascended to the grand heights of patriotism, being always indifferent as to himself. Now he came to his late chief with a new project. Mr Gresham would attempt to form a Ministry if the Duke of Omnium would join him.
‘It is impossible!’ said the younger politician, folding his hands together and throwing himself back in the chair.
‘Listen to me before you answer me with such certainty. There are three or four gentlemen who, after the work of the last three years, bearing in mind the manner in which our defeat has just been accomplished, feel themselves disinclined to join Mr Gresham unless you will do so also. I may specially name Mr Monk and Mr Finn. I might perhaps add myself, were it not that I had hoped that in any event I might at length regard myself as exempt from further service. The old horse should be left to graze out his last days, ne peccet ad extremum ridendus. But you can’t consider yourself absolved on that score.’
‘There are other reasons.’
‘But the Queen’s service should count before everything. Gresham and Cantrip with their own friends can hardly make a Ministry as things are now unless Mr Monk will join them. I do not think that any other Chancellor of the Exchequer is at present possible.’
‘I will beseech Mr Monk not to let any feeling as to me stand in his way. Why should it?’
‘It is not only what you may think and he may think,–but what others will think and say. The Coalition will have done all that ought to have been expected from it if our party in it can now join Mr Gresham.’
‘By all means. But I could give them no strength. They may be sure at any rate of what little I can do for them out of office.’
‘Mr Gresham made his acceptance of office,–well, I will not say strictly conditional on your joining him. That would hardly be correct. But he has expressed himself quite willing to make the attempt with your aid, and doubtful whether he can succeed without it. He suggests that you should join him as President of the Council.’
‘And you?’
‘If I were wanted at all I should take Privy Seal.’
‘Certainly not, my friend. If there were any question of my return we could reverse the offices. But I think I may say that my mind is fixed. If you wish it I will see Mr Monk and do all that I can to get him to go with you. But, for myself,–I feel that it would be useless.’
At last, at the Duke’s pressing request, he agreed to take twenty-four hours before he gave his final answer to the proposition.
CHAPTER 77
THE DUCHESS IN MANCHESTER SQUARE.
The Duke said not a word to his wife as to this new proposition, and when she asked him what tidings their old friend had brought as to the state of affairs, he almost told a fib in his anxiety to escape from her persecution. ‘He is in some doubt what he means to do himself,’ said the Duke. The Duchess asked many questions, but got no satisfactory reply to any of them. Nor did Mrs Finn learn anything from her husband, whom, however, she did not interrogate very closely. She would be contented to know when the proper time might come for ladies to be informed. The Duke, however, was determined to take his twenty-four hours all alone,–or at any rate not to be driven to his decision by feminine interference.
In the meantime the Duchess went to Manchester Square intent on performing certain good offices on behalf of the poor widow. It may be doubted whether she had clearly made up her mind what it was that she could do, though she was clear that some debt was due by her to Mrs Lopez. And she knew too in what direction assistance might be serviceable, if only in this case it could be given. She had heard that the present member for Silverbridge had been the lady’s lover before Mr Lopez had come upon the scene, and with those feminine wiles of which she was a perfect mistress she had extracted from him a confession that his mind was unaltered. She liked Arthur Fletcher,–as indeed she had for a time liked Ferdinand Lopez,–and felt that her conscience would be easier if she could assist in this good work. She built castles in the air as to the presence of the bride and bridegroom at Matching, thinking how she might thus repair the evil she had done. But her heart misgave her a little as she drew near to the house, and remembered how very slight was her acquaintance and how extremely delicate the mission on which she had come. But she was not the woman to turn back when she had once put her foot to any work; and she was driven up to the door in Manchester Square without any expressed hesitation on her own part. ‘Yes;– his mistress was at home,’ said the butler, still shrinking at the sound of the name which he heard. The Duchess was then shown upstairs, and was left alone for some minutes in the drawing- room. It was a large handsome apartment hung round with valuable pictures, and having signs of considerable wealth. Since she had first invited Lopez to stand for Silverbridge she had heard much about him, and had wondered how he had gained possession of such a girl as Emily Wharton. And now, as she looked about her, her wonder was increased. She knew enough of such people as the Whartons and the Fletchers to be aware that as a class they are more impregnable, more closely guarded by their feelings and prejudices against strangers than any other. None keep their daughters to themselves with greater care, or are less willing to see their rules of life changed or abolished. And yet this man, half foreigner, half Jew,–and as it now appeared, whole pauper, had stepped in and carried off a prize of which such a one as Arthur Fletcher was contending! The Duchess had never seen Emily but once,–so as to observe her well,–and had then thought her to be a very handsome woman. It had been at the garden party at Richmond, and Lopez had then insisted that his wife should be well dressed. It would perhaps have been impossible in the whole of that assembly to find a more beautiful woman than Mrs Lopez then was,–or one who carried herself with a finer air. Now when she entered the room in her deep mourning it would have been difficult to recognize her. Her face was much thinner, her eyes apparently larger, and her colour faded. And there had come a settled seriousness on her face which seemed to rob her of her youth. Arthur Fletcher had declared that as he saw her now she was more beautiful than ever. But Arthur Fletcher, in looking at her, saw more then her mere features. To his eyes there was a tenderness added by her sorrow which had its own attraction for him. And he was so well versed in every line of her countenance, that he could see there the old loveliness behind the sorrow; the loveliness which would come forth again, as bright as ever, if the sorrow could be removed. But the Duchess, though she remembered the woman’s beauty as she might that of any other lady, now saw nothing but a thing of woe wrapped in customary widow’s weeds. ‘I hope,’ she said, ‘I am not intruding in coming to you; but I have been anxious to renew our acquaintance for reasons which I am sure you will understand.’
Emily at the moment hardly knew how to address her august visitor. Though her father had lived all his life in what is called good society, he had not consorted much with dukes and duchesses. She herself had indeed on one occasion been for an hour or two the guest of this grand lady, but on that occasion she had hardly been called upon to talk to her. Now she doubted how to name the Duchess, and with some show of hesitation decided at last upon not naming her at all. ‘It is very good of you to come,’ she said in a faltering voice.
‘I told you that I would when I wrote, you know. That is many months ago, but I have not forgotten it. You have been in the country since that, I think?’
‘Yes. In Hertfordshire. Hertfordshire is our county.’
‘I know all about it,’ said the Duchess, smiling. She generally did contrive to learn ‘all about’ people whom she chose to take by the hand. ‘We have a Hertfordshire gentleman sitting for,–I must not say our borough of Silverbridge.’ She was anxious to make some allusion to Arthur Fletcher, but it was difficult to travel on that Silverbridge ground, as Lopez had been her chosen candidate when she still wished to claim the borough as an appanage of the Palliser family. Emily, however, kept her countenance and did not show by any sign that her thoughts were running in that direction. ‘And though we don’t presume to regard Mr Fletcher,’ continued the Duchess, ‘as in any way connected with our local interests, he has always supported the Duke, and I hope has become a friend of ours. I think he is a neighbour of yours in that county.’
‘Oh yes. My cousin is married to his brother.’
‘I knew there was something of that kind. He told me that there was some close alliance.’ The Duchess as she looked at the woman to whom she wanted to be kind did not as yet dare to express a wish that there might be at some no very distant time a closer alliance. She had come there intending to do so; and had still some hope that she might do it before the interview was over. But at any rate she would not do it yet. ‘Have I not heard,’ she said, ‘something of another marriage?’
‘My brother is going to marry his cousin, Sir Alured Wharton’s daughter.’
‘Ah;–I though it had been one of the Fletchers. It was our member who told me, and spoke as if they were all his very dear friends.’
‘They are our very dear friends,–very.’ Poor Emily still didn’t know whether to call her Duchess, my Lady, or Grace,–and yet she felt the need of calling her by some special name.
‘Exactly. I supposed it was so. They tell me Mr Fletcher will become quite a favourite of the House. At this present moment nobody knows on which side anybody is going to sit to-morrow. It may be that Mr Fletcher will become the dire enemy of all the Duke’s friends.’
‘I hope not.’
‘Of course I’m speaking of political enemies. Political enemies are often the best friends in the world; and I can assure you from my own experience that political friends are often the bitterest enemies. I never hated any people so much as some of our supporters.’ The Duchess made a grimace, and Emily could not refrain from smiling. ‘Yes, indeed. There’s an old saying that misfortune makes strange bedfellows, but political friendship makes stranger alliances than misfortune. Perhaps you have never heard of Sir Timothy Beeswax.’
‘Never.’
‘Well;–don’t. But, as I was saying, there is no knowing who may support whom now. If I were asked who would be Prime Minister to-morrow, I should take half-dozen names and shake them in a bag.’
‘Is it not settled then?’
‘Settled! No, indeed. Nothing is settled.’ At that moment indeed everything was settled, though the Duchess did not know it. ‘And so we none of us can tell how Mr Fletcher may stand with us when things are arranged. I suppose he calls himself a Conservative?’
‘Oh, yes!’
‘All the Whartons are, I suppose, Conservatives,–and all the Fletchers.’
‘Very nearly. Papa calls himself a Tory.’
‘A very much better name to my thinking. We are all Whigs, of course. A Palliser who is not a Whig would be held to have disgraced himself for ever. Are not politics odd? A few years ago I only barely knew what the word meant, and that not correctly. I have been so eager about it, that there hardly seems to be anything else worth living for. I suppose it’s wrong, but a state of pugnacity seems to me the greatest bliss which we can reach here on earth.’
‘I shouldn’t like to be always fighting.’
‘That’s because you haven’t known Sir Timothy Beeswax and two or three other gentlemen whom I could name. The day will come, I dare say, when you will care for politics.’
Emily was about to answer, hardly knowing what to say, when the door was opened and Mrs Roby came into the room. The lady was not announced and Emily had heard no knock at the door. She was forced to go through some ceremony of introduction. ‘This is my aunt, Mrs Roby,’ she said, ‘Aunt Harriet, the Duchess of Omnium.’ Mrs Roby was beside herself,–not all with joy. That feeling would come afterwards when she would boast to her friends of her new acquaintance. At present there was the embarrassment of not quite knowing how to behave herself. The Duchess bowed from her seat, and smiled sweetly,–as she had learned to smile since her husband had become Prime Minister. Mrs Roby curtsied, and then remembered that in these days only housemaids ought to curtsey.
‘Anything to our Mr Roby?’ said the Duchess, continuing her smile,–‘ours as was till yesterday at least.’ This she said in an absurd wail of mock sorrow.
‘My brother-in-law, your Grace,’ said Mrs Roby delighted.
‘Oh indeed. And what does Mr Roby think about it, I wonder? But I dare say you have found, Mrs Roby, that when a crisis comes,– a real crisis,–the ladies are told nothing. I have.’
‘I don’t think, your Grace, that Mr Roby ever divulges political secrets.’
‘Doesn’t he indeed! What a dull man your brother-in-law must be to live with,–that is as politician! Good-bye, Mrs Lopez. You must come and see me and let me come to you again. I hope, you know,–I hope the time may come when things may once more be bright with you.’ These last words she murmured almost in a whisper, as she held the hand of the woman she wished to befriend. Then she bowed to Mrs Roby, and left the room.
‘What was it she said to you?’ asked Mrs Roby.
‘Nothing in particular, Aunt Harriet.’
‘She seems to be very friendly. What made her come?’
‘She wrote to me some time ago to say she would call.’
‘But why?’
‘I cannot tell you. I don’t know. Don’t ask me aunt, about things that are passed. You cannot do it without wounding me.’
‘I don’t want to wound you, Emily, but I really think it is nonsense. She is a very nice woman;–though I don’t think she ought to have said that Mr Roby is dull. Did Mr Wharton know that she was coming?’
‘He knew that she said she would come,’ replied Emily very sternly, so that Mrs Roby found herself compelled to pass on to some other subject. Mrs Roby had heard the wish expressed that something ‘once more might be bright’, and when she got home told her husband that she was sure that Emily Lopez was going to marry Arthur Fletcher. ‘And why the d–shouldn’t she?’ said Dick. ‘And that poor man destroying himself not more than twelve months ago! I couldn’t do it,’ said Mrs Roby. ‘I don’t mean to give you the chance,’ said Dick.
The Duchess when she went away suffered under a sense of failure. She had intended to bring about some sort of crisis of female tenderness in which she might have rushed into future hopes and joyous anticipations, and with the freedom which will come from ebullitions of feeling, have told the widow that the peculiar circumstances of her position would not only justify her in marrying this other man but absolutely called upon her to do it. Unfortunately she had failed in her attempt to bring the interview to a condition in which this would have been possible, and while she was still making the attempt that odious aunt had come in. ‘I have been on my mission,’ she said to Mrs Finn afterwards.
‘Have you done any good?’
‘I don’t think I’ve done any harm. Women, you know, are so very different. There are some who would delight to have an opportunity of opening their hearts to a Duchess, and who might almost be talked into anything in an ecstasy.’
‘Hardly women of the best sort, Lady Glen.’
‘Not of the best sort. But then one doesn’t come across the very best, very often. But that kind of thing does have an effect, and as I only wanted to do good, I wish she had been one of the sort for the occasion.’
‘Was she–offended?’
‘Oh dear, no. You don’t suppose I attacked her with a husband at the first. Indeed, I didn’t attack her at all. She didn’t give me an opportunity. Such a Niobe you never saw.’
‘Was she weeping?’
‘Not actual tears, but her gown, and her cap, and her strings were weeping. Her voice wept, and her hair, and her nose, and her mouth. Don’t you know that look of subdued mourning? And yet they say that that man is dying for love. How beautiful it is to see that there is such a thing as constancy left in the world.’
When she got home she found that her husband had just returned from the old Duke’s house, where he had met Mr Monk, Mr Gresham, and Lord Cantrip. ‘It’s all settled at last,’ he said cheerfully.
CHAPTER 78
THE NEW MINISTRY.
When the ex-Prime Minister was left by himself after the departure of his old friend his first feeling had been one of regret that he had been weak enough to doubt at all. He had long since made up his mind that after all that had passed he could not return to office as a subordinate. That feeling as to the impropriety of Caesar descending to serve under others which he had been foolish enough to express, had been strong with him from the very commencement of his Ministry. When first asked to take the place which he had filled the reason strong against it had been the conviction that it would probably exclude him from political work during the latter half of his life. The man who has written Q.C. after his name, must abandon his practice behind the bar. As he then was, although he had already driven by the unhappy circumstance of his peerage from the House of Commons which he loved so well, there was still open to him many fields of political work. But if he should once consent to stand on the top rung of the ladder, he could not, he thought, take a lower place without degradation. Till he should have been placed quite at the top no shifting his place from this higher to that lower office would injure him in his own estimation. The exigencies of the service and not defeat would produce such changes as that. But he could not go down from being Prime Minister and serve under some other chief without acknowledging himself to have been unfit for the place he had filled. Of all that he had quite assured himself. And yet he allowed the old Duke to talk him into a doubt!
As he sat considering the question he acknowledged that there might have been room for doubt, though in the present emergency there certainly was none. He could imagine circumstances in which the experience of an individual in some special branch of his country’s service might be of paramount importance to the country as to make it incumbent on a man to sacrifice all personal feeling. But it was not so with him. There was nothing now which he could do, which another might not do as well. That blessed task of introducing decimals into all commercial relations of British life, which had once kept him aloft in the air, floating as upon eagle’s wings, had been denied him. If ever done it must be done from the House of Commons, and the people of the country had become deaf to the charms of the great reform. Othello’s occupation was, in truth, altogether gone, and there was no reason by which he could justify to himself the step down in the world which the old Duke had proposed to him.
Early on the following morning he left Carlton Terrace on foot and walked to Mr Monk’s house, which was close to St James’s Street. Here at eleven o’clock he found his late Chancellor of the Exchequer in that state of tedious agitation in which a man is kept who does not yet know whether he is or is not to be one of the actors in the play just about to be performed. The Duke had never before been in Mr Monk’s very humble abode, and now caused some surprise. Mr Monk knew that he might probably be sent for, but had not expected any of the ex-Prime Ministers of the day would come to him. People had said that not improbably he himself might be the man,–but he himself had indulged in no such dream. Office had had no great charms for him;–and if there was one man of the late Government who could lay it down without personal regret, it was Mr Monk. ‘I wish you to come with me to the Duke’s house in St James’s Square,’ said the late Prime Minister. ‘I think we shall find him at home.’
‘Certainly I will come at this moment.’ There was not a word spoken till the two men were in the street together. ‘Of course I am a little anxious,’ said Mr Monk. ‘Have you anything to tell me before we get there?’
‘You of course must return to office, Mr Monk.’
‘With your Grace–I certainly will do so.’
‘And without, if there be the need. They who are wanted should be forthcoming. But perhaps you will let me postpone what I have to say till we see the Duke. What a charming morning;–is it not? How sweet it would be down in the country.’ March had gone out like a lamb, and even in London in the early April days were sweet–to be followed, no doubt, by the usual nipping inclemency of May. ‘I never can get over the feeling,’ said the Duke, ‘that Parliament should sit for the winter months, instead of in summer. If we met on the first of October, how glorious it would be to get away for the early spring!’
‘Nothing less strong than grouse could break up Parliament,’ said Mr Monk; ‘and then what would the pheasants and foxes say?’
‘It is giving almost too much for our amusements. I used to think that I should like to move for a return to the number of hunting and shooting gentlemen in both Houses. I believe it would be a small minority.’
‘But their sons shoot, and their daughters hunt, and all their hangers-on would be against it.’
‘Custom is against us, Mr Monk; that is it. Here we are. I hope my friend will not be out, looking up young Lords of the Treasury.’ The Duke of St Bungay was not in search of cadets for the Government, but he was at this very moment closeted with Mr Gresham, and Mr Gresham’s especial friend Lord Cantrip. He had been at this work so long and so constantly that his very servants had their ministerial-crisis manners and felt and enjoyed the importance of the occasion. The two newcomers were soon allowed to enter the august conclave, and the five great senators greeted each other cordially. ‘I hope we have not come inopportunely,’ said the Duke of Omnium. Mr Gresham assured him almost with hilarity that nothing could be less inopportune;– and then the Duke was sure that Mr Gresham was to be the new Prime Minister, whoever might join him or whoever might refuse to do so. ‘I told my friend here,’ continued our Duke, laying his hand upon the old man’s arm, ‘that I would give him his answer to a proposition he made with me within twenty-four hours. But I find that I can do so without that delay.’
‘I trust your Grace’s answer may be favourable to us,’ said Mr Gresham,–who indeed did not doubt much that it would be so, seeing that Mr Monk had accompanied him.
‘I do not think it would be unfavourable, though I cannot do as my friend has proposed.’
‘Any practicable arrangement–‘ began Mr Gresham, with a frown, however, on his brow.
‘The most practicable arrangement, I am sure, will be for you to form your Government, without hampering yourself with a beaten predecessor.’
‘Not beaten,’ said Lord Cantrip.
‘Certainly not,’ said the other Duke.
‘It is because of your success that I ask your services,’ said Mr Gresham.
‘I have none to give,–none that I cannot better bestow out of office than in. I must ask you, gentlemen, to believe that I am quite fixed. Coming here with my friend Mr Monk, I did not state my purpose to him; but I begged him to accompany me, fearing lest in my absence he should feel it incumbent on himself to sail in the same boat as his late colleague.’
‘I should prefer to do so,’ said Mr Monk.
‘Of course it is not for me to say what may be Mr Gresham’s ideas, but as my friend here suggested to me that, were I to return to office, Mr Monk would do so also, I cannot be wrong in surmising that his services are desired.’ Mr Gresham bowed assent. ‘I shall therefore take the liberty of telling Mr Monk that I think he is bound to give his aid in the present emergency. Were I as happily placed as he is in being the possessor of a seat in the House of Commons, I too should hope that I might do something.’
The four gentlemen, with eager pressure, begged the Duke to reconsider his decision. He could take this office and do nothing in it,–there being, as we know, offices the holders are not called upon for work,–or he could take that place which required him to labour like a galley slave. Would he be Privy Seal? Would he undertake the India Board? But the Duke of Omnium was at last resolute. Of this administration he would not at any rate be a member. Whether Caesar might or might not at some future time condescend to command a legion he could not do so when the purple had been but that moment stripped from his shoulders. He soon afterwards left the house with a repeated request to Mr Monk that he should not follow his late chief’s example.
‘I regret it greatly,’ said Mr Gresham when he was gone.
‘There is no man,’ said Lord Cantrip, ‘whom all who know him more thoroughly respect.’
‘He has been worried,’ said the old Duke, ‘and must take time to recover himself. He has but one fault,–he is a little too conscientious, a little too scrupulous.’ Mr Monk, of course, did join them, making one or two stipulations as he did so. He required that his friend Phineas Finn should be included in the Government. Mr Gresham yielded, though poor Phineas was not among the most favoured friends of that statesman. And so the Government was formed, and the crisis was again over, and the lists which the newspapers had been publishing for the last three days were republished in an amended and nearly correct condition. The triumph of the “People’s Banner”, as to the omission of the Duke, was of course complete. The editor had no hesitation in declaring that he, by his own sagacity and persistency, had made certain the exclusion of that very unfit and very pressing candidate for office.
The list was filled up after the usual fashion. For a while the dilettanti politicians of the clubs, and the strong-minded women who take an interest in such things, and the writers in newspapers, had almost doubted whether in the emergency which had been supposed to be so peculiar, any Government could be formed. There had been,–so they had said,–peculiarities so peculiar that it might be that the much-dreaded deadlock had come at last. A Coalition had been possible, and, though antagonistic to British feelings generally, had carried on the Government. But what might succeed the Coalition, nobody had known. The Radicals and Liberals together would be too strong for Mr Daubney and Sir Orlando. Mr Gresham had no longer a party of his own at his back, and a second Coalition would be generally spurned. In this way there had been much political excitement, and a fair amount of consequent enjoyment. But after a few days the old men had rattled into their old places,–or, generally, old men into new places. And it was understood that Mr Gresham would again be supported by a majority.
As we grow old it is a matter of interest to watch how the natural gaps are filled in the two ranks of parliamentary workmen by whom the Government is carried on, either in the one interest or the other. Of course there must be gaps. Some men become too old,–though that is rarely the case. A Peel may perish, or even a Palmerston must die. Some men, though, long supported by interest, family connection, or the loyalty of colleagues, are weighed down at last by their own incapacity and sink into peerages. Now and again a man cannot bear the bondage of office, and flies into rebellion and independence which would have been more respectable had it not been the result of discontent. Then the gaps must be filled. Whether on this side or on that, the candidates are first looked for among the sons of Earls and Dukes,–and not unnaturally, as the sons of Earls and Dukes may be educated for such work almost from their infancy. A few rise by the slow process of acknowledged fitness,–men who probably at first have not thought of offices, but are chosen because they are wanted, and those whose careers are grudged them, not by their opponents or rivals, but by the Browns and Joneses of the world who cannot bear to see a Smith or a Walker become something so different to themselves. These men have a great weight to carry, and cannot always shake off the burden of their origin and live among begotten statesman as though they too had been born to the manner. But perhaps the most wonderful ministerial phenomenon,–though now almost too common to be called a phenomenon,–is he who rises high in power and place by having made himself thoroughly detested and also–alas for parliamentary cowardice!–thoroughly feared. Given sufficient audacity, a thick skin, and power to bear for a few years the evil looks and cold shoulders of his comrades, and that is the man most sure to make his way to some high seat. But the skin must be thicker than that of any animal known, and the audacity must be complete. To the man who will once shrink at the idea of being looked at askance for treachery, or hated for his ill condition, the career is impossible. But let him be obdurate, and the bid will come. ‘Not because I want him, do I ask for him,’ says some groaning chief of party,–to himself, and also sufficiently aloud for others’ ears,–‘but because he stings me and goads me, and will drive me to madness as a foe.’ Then the pachydermous one enters into the other’s heaven, probably with the resolution already formed of ousting that unhappy angel. And so it was in the present instance. When Mr Gresham’s completed list was published to the world, the world was astonished to find that Sir Timothy Beeswax was to be Mr Gresham’s Attorney-General. Sir Gregory Grogram became Lord Chancellor, and the Liberal chief was content to borrow his senior law adviser from the Conservative side of the late Coalition. It could not be that Mr Gresham was very fond of Sir Timothy;–but Sir Timothy in the late debates had shown himself to be a man of whom a minister might well be afraid.
Immediately on leaving the old Duke’s house, the late Premier went home to his wife, and finding that she was out, waited for her return. Now that he had put his own decision beyond his power he was anxious to let her know how it was to be with them. ‘I think it is settled at last,’ he said.
‘Are you coming back?’
‘Certainly not that. I believe I may say that Mr Gresham is Prime Minister.’
‘Then he oughtn’t to be,’ said the Duchess crossly.
‘I am sorry that I must differ from you, my dear, because I think he is the fittest man in England for the place.’
‘And you?’
‘I am a private gentleman who will now be able to devote more of his time to his wife and children than has hitherto been possible with him.’
‘How very nice! Do you mean to say that you like it?’
‘I am sure that I ought to like it. At the present moment I am thinking more of what you would like.’
‘If you ask me, Plantagenet, you know I shall tell the truth.’
‘Then tell the truth.’
‘After drinking brandy so long I hardly think that 12s claret will agree with my stomach. You ask for the truth, and there it is,–very plainly.’
‘Plain enough!’
‘You asked, you know.’
‘And I am glad to have been told, even though that which you tell me is not pleasant hearing. When a man has been drinking too much brandy, it may be well that he should be put on a course of 12s claret.’
‘He won’t like it; and then,–it’s kill or cure.’
‘I don’t think you’ve gone so far, Cora, that we need fear that the remedy will be fatal.’
‘I am thinking of you rather than myself. I can make myself generally disagreeable, and get excitement in that way. But what will you do? It’s all very well to talk of me and the children, but you can’t bring in a bill for reforming us. You can’t make us go by decimals. You can’t increase our consumption by lowering our taxation. I wish you had gone back to some Board.’ This she said looking up into his face with an anxiety which was half real and half burlesque.
‘I had made up my mind to go back on to no Board,–for the present. I was thinking that we could spend some months in Italy, Cora.’
‘What; for the summer,–so as to be in Rome in July! After that we could utilize winter by visiting Norway.’
‘We might take Norway first.’
‘And be eaten up by mosquitoes! I’ve got to be too old to like travelling.’
‘What do you like, dear?’
‘Nothing;–except being the Prime Minister’s wife; and upon my word there were times when I didn’t like that very much. I don’t know anything that I am fit for. I wonder whether Mr Gresham would have me as a housekeeper? Only we should have to lend him Gatherum, or there would be no room for the display of my abilities. Is Mr Monk in?’
‘He keeps his office.’
‘And Mr Finn?’
‘I believe so; but in what place I don’t know.’
‘And who else?’
‘Our old friend the Duke and Lord Cantrip, and Mr Wilson,–and Sir Gregory will be Lord Chancellor.’
‘Just the old stupid Liberal team. Put their names in a bag and shake them, and you can always get a ministry. Well, Plantagenet;– I’ll go anywhere you like to take me. I’ll have something for the malaria at Rome, and something for the mosquitoes in Norway, and will make the best of it. But I don’t see why you should run away in the middle of the Session. I would stay and pitch into them, all round, like a true ex-minister and independent member of Parliament.’ Then as he was leaving her she fired a last shot. ‘I hope you made Sir Orlando and Sir Timothy peers before you gave up.’
It was not until two days after this that she read in one of the daily papers that Sir Timothy Beeswax was to be Attorney-General, and then her patience almost deserted her. To tell the truth, her husband had not dared to mention the appointment when he first saw her after hearing it. Her explosion fell on the head of Phineas Finn, whom she found at home with his wife, deploring the necessity which had fallen upon him of filling the faineant office of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. ‘Mr Finn,’ she said, ‘I congratulate you on your colleagues.’
‘Your Grace is very good. I was at any rate introduced to many of them under the Duke’s auspices.’
‘And ought, I think, to have seen enough of them to be ashamed of them. Such a regiment to march through Coventry with!’
‘I do not doubt that we shall be good enough men for any enemies we may meet.’
‘It cannot be that you should conquer all the world with such a hero among you as Sir Timothy Beeswax. The idea of Sir Timothy coming back again! What do you feel about it?’
‘Very indifferent, Duchess. He won’t interfere much with me, as I have an Attorney-General of my own. You see I’m especially safe.’
‘I do believe men would do anything,’ said the Duchess, turning to Mrs Finn. ‘Of course I mean in the way of politics! But I did not think it possible that the Duke of St Bungay should again be in the same Government with Sir Timothy Beeswax.’
CHAPTER 79
THE WHARTON WEDDING.
It was at last settled that the Wharton marriage should take place during the second week in June. There were various reasons for the postponement. In the first place Mary Wharton, after a few preliminary inquiries, found herself forced to declare that Messrs Muddocks and Cramble could not send her forth equipped as she ought to be equipped for such a husband in so short a time. ‘Perhaps they do it quicker in London,’ she said to Everett with a soft regret, remembering the metropolitan glories of her sister’s wedding. And then Arthur Fletcher could be present during the Whitsuntide holidays, and the presence of Arthur Fletcher was essential. And it was not only his presence at the altar that was needed;–Parliament was not so exacting but that he might have given that;–but it was considered by the united families to be highly desirable that he should on this occasion remain some days in the country. Emily had promised to attend the wedding, and would of course be at Wharton for at least a week. As soon as Everett had succeeded in wresting a promise from his sister, the tidings were conveyed to the Fletchers. It was a great step gained. When in London she was her own mistress; but surrounded as she would be down in Hertfordshire by Fletchers and Whartons, she must be stubborn indeed if she should still refuse to be taken back into the flock, and be made once more happy by marrying the man whom she confessed that she loved with her whole heart. The letter to Arthur Fletcher containing the news was from his brother John, and was written in a very businesslike fashion. ‘We have put off Mary’s marriage for a few days, so that you and she should be down here together. If you mean to go on with it, now is your time.’ Arthur, in answer to this, merely said he would spend the Whitsuntide holidays at Longbarns.
It is probable that Emily herself had some idea in her own mind of what was being done to entrap her. Her brother’s words to her had been so strong, and the occasion of the marriage was itself so sacred to her, that she had not been able to refuse his request. But from the moment that she had made the promise, she felt that she had greatly added to her own difficulties. That she could yield to Arthur never occurred to her. She was certain of her own persistency. Whatever might be the wishes of others, the fitness of things required that Arthur Fletcher’s wife should not have been the widow of Ferdinand Lopez,–and required also that the woman who had married Ferdinand Lopez should bear the results of her own folly. Though since his death she had never spoken a syllable against him,–if those passionate words be excepted which Arthur himself had drawn from her,–still she had not refrained from acknowledging the truth to herself. He had been a man disgraced,–and she as his wife, having become his wife in opposition to the wishes of all her friends, was disgraced also. Let them do what they will with her, she would not soil Arthur Fletcher’s name with his infamy. Such was still her steadfast resolution; but she knew that it would be, not endangered, but increased in difficulty by this visit to Hertfordshire.
And there were other troubles. ‘Papa,’ she said, ‘I must get a dress for Everett’s marriage.’
‘Why not?’
‘I can’t bear, after all that I have cost you, putting you to such useless expense.’
‘It is not useless, and such expenses as that I can surely afford without groaning. Do it handsomely and you will please me best.’
Then she went forth and chose her dress,–a grey silk, light enough not to throw quite a gloom on the brightness of the day, and yet dark enough to declare that she was not as other women are. The very act of purchasing this, almost blushing at her own request as she sat at the counter in her widow’s weeds, was a pain to her. But she had no one whom she could employ. On such an occasion she could not ask her aunt Harriet to act for her, as her aunt was distrusted and disliked. And then there was the fitting on of the dress,–very grievous to her, as it was the first time since the heavy black mourning came home that she had clothed herself in other garments.
The day before that fixed for the marriage she and her father went down to Hertfordshire together, the conversation on the way being all in respect to Everett. Where was he to live? What was he to do? What income would he require till he should inherit the good things which destiny had in store for him? The old man seemed to feel that Providence, having been so very good to his son in killing that other heir, had put rather a heavy burden on himself. ‘He’ll want a house of his own, of course,’ he said, in a somewhat lachrymose tone.
‘I suppose he’ll spend a good deal of his time at Wharton.’
‘He won’t be content to live in another man’s house altogether, my dear, and Sir Alured can allow him nothing. It means, of course, that I must give him a thousand a year. It seems very natural to him, I dare say, but he might have asked the question before he took a wife to himself.’
‘You won’t be angry with him, papa!’
‘It’s no good being angry. No;–I’m not angry. Only it seems that everybody is uncommonly well pleased without thinking who has to pay for the piper.’
On that evening, at Wharton, Emily still wore her mourning dress. No one, indeed, dared to speak to her on the subject, and Mary was even afraid lest she might appear in black on the following day. We all know in what condition is a house on the eve of a marriage,–how the bride feels that all the world is going to be changed, and that therefore everything is for the moment disjointed; and how the rest of the household, including the servants, are led to share the feeling. Everett was of course away. He was over at Longbarns with the Fletchers, and was to be brought to Wharton Church on the following morning. Old Mrs Fletcher was at Wharton Hall,–and the bishop, whose services had been happily secured. He was formally introduced to Mrs Lopez, the use of the name for the occasion being absolutely necessary, and with all the smiling urbanity, which as a bishop he was bound to possess, he was hardly able not to be funereal as he looked at her and remembered her story. Before the evening was over Mrs Fletcher did venture to give a hint. ‘We are so glad you have come, my dear.’
‘I could not stay away when Everett said he wished it.’
‘It would have been very wrong; yes, my dear,–wrong. It is your duty, and the duty of us all, to subordinate our feelings to those of others. Even sorrow may be selfish.’ Poor Emily listened, but could make no reply. ‘It is sometimes harder for us to be mindful of others in our grief than in our joy. You should remember, dear, that there are some who will never be light-hearted till they see you smile.’
‘Do not say that, Mrs Fletcher.’
‘It is quite true;–and right that you should think of it. It will be particularly necessary that you should think of it to- morrow. You will have to wear a light dress, and–‘
‘I have come provided,’ said the widow.
‘Try then to make you heart as light as your frock. You will be doing it for Everett’s sake, and for your father’s, and for Mary’s sake–and Arthur’s. You will be doing it for the sake of all of us on a day that should be joyous.’ She could not make any promise in reply to this homily, but in her heart of hearts she acknowledged that it was true, and declared to herself that she would make the effort required of her.
On the following morning the house was of course in confusion. There was to be a breakfast after the service, and after the breakfast the bride was to be taken away in a carriage and four as far as Hereford on her route to Paris;–but before the great breakfast there was of course a subsidiary breakfast,–or how could a bishop, bride, or bridesmaids have sustained the ceremony? At this meal Emily did not appear, having begged for a cup of tea in her own room. The carriages to take the party to the church, which was but the other side of the park, were ordered at eleven, and at a quarter before eleven she appeared for the first time in her grey silk dress, and without a widow’s cap. Everything was very plain, but the alteration was so great that it was impossible not to look at her. Even her father had not seen the change before. Not a word was said, though old Mrs Fletcher’s thanks were implied by the graciousness of her smile. As there were four bridesmaids and four other ladies besides the bride herself, in a few minutes she became obscured by the brightness of the others,–and then they were all packed in their carriages and taken to the church. The eyes which she most dreaded did not meet hers till they were all standing round the altar. It was only then that she saw Arthur Fletcher, who was there as her brother’s best man, and it was then that he took her hand and held it for half a minute as though he never meant to part with it, hidden behind the widespread glories of the bridesmaids’ finery.
The marriage was sweet and solemn as a kind-hearted bishop could make it, and all the ladies looked particularly well. The veil from London–with the orange wreath, also metropolitan–was perfect, and as for the dress, I doubt whether any woman would have it known it to be provincial. Everett looked the rising baronet, every inch of him, and the old barrister smiled and seemed, at least, to be well pleased. Then came the breakfast, and the speech-making, in which Arthur Fletcher shone triumphantly. It was a very nice wedding, and Mary Wharton–as she then and still was–felt herself for a moment to be a heroine. But, through it all, there was present to the hearts of most of them a feeling that much more was to be effected, if possible, than this simple and cosy marriage, and that the fate of Mary Wharton was hardly so important to them as that of Emily Lopez.
When the carriage and four was gone there came upon the household the difficulty usual on such occasions of getting through the rest of the day. The bridesmaids retired and repacked their splendours so that they might come out fresh for other second- rate needs, and with the bridesmaids went the widow. Arthur Fletcher remained at Wharton with all the other Fletchers for the night, and was prepared to renew his suit on that very day, if an opportunity were given him, but Emily did not again show herself till a few minutes before dinner, and then she came down with all the appurtenances of mourning which she usually wore. The grey silk had been put on for the marriage ceremony, and for that only. ‘You should have kept your dress at any rate for the day,’ said Mrs Fletcher. She replied that she had changed it for Everett, and that as Everett was gone there was no further need for to wear clothes unfitted for her position. Arthur would have cared very little for the clothes could he have had his way with the woman who wore them;–could he have had his way even so far as to have found himself alone with her for half-an-hour. But no such chance was his. She retreated from the party early, and did not show herself on the following morning till after he had started for Longbarns.
All the Fletchers went back,–not, however, with any intention on the part of Arthur to abandon his immediate attempt. The distance between the houses was not so great but that he could drive himself over at any time. ‘I shall go now,’ he said to Mr Wharton, ‘because I have promised John to fish with him to- morrow, but I shall come over on Monday or Tuesday, and stay till I go back to town. I hope she will at any rate let me speak to her.’ The father said he would do his best, but that that obstinate resumption of her weeds on her brother’s very wedding day had nearly broken his heart.
When the Fletchers were back at Longbarns, the two ladies were very severe on her. ‘It was downright obstinacy,’ said the squire’s wife, ‘and it almost makes me think that it would serve her right to leave her as she is.’
‘It’s pride,’ said the old lady. ‘She won’t give way. I said ever so much to her, but it’s no use. I feel it the more because we have gone so much out of the way to be good to her after she made such a fool of herself. If it goes on much longer, I shall never forgive her again.’
‘You’ll have to forgive her, mother,’ said her eldest son, ‘let her sins be what they may,–or else you will have to quarrel with Arthur.’
‘I do think it’s very hard,’ said the old lady, taking herself out of the room. And it was hard. The offence in the first instance had been very great and the forgiveness very difficult. But Mrs Fletcher had lived long enough to know that when sons are thoroughly respectable a widowed mother has to do their bidding.
Emily, through the whole wedding day, and the next day, and day after day, remembered Mrs Fletcher’s words. ‘There are some who will never be light-hearted again till they see you smile.’ And the old woman had named her dearest friends, and had ended by naming Arthur Fletcher. She had then acknowledged to herself that it was her duty to smile in order that others might smile also. But how is one to smile with a heavy heart? Should one smile and lie? And how long and to what good purpose can such forced contentment last? She had marred her whole life. In former days she had been proud of all her virgin glories,–proud of her intellect, proud of her beauty, proud of that obeisance which beauty, birth, and intellect combined, exact from all comers. She had been ambitious as to her future life;–had intended to be careful not to surrender herself to some empty fool;–had thought herself well qualified to pick her own steps. And this had come of it! They told her that she might still make everything right, annul the past and begin the world again as fresh as ever;–if she would only smile and study to forget! Do it for the sake of others, they said, and then it will be done for yourself also. But she could not conquer the past. The fire and water of repentance, adequate as they may be for eternity, cannot burn out or wash away the remorse of this life. They scorch and choke,–and unless it be so there is no repentance. So she told herself,–and yet it was her duty to be light- hearted that others around her might not be made miserable by her sorrow! If she could in truth be light-hearted, then would she know herself to be unfeeling and worthless.
On the third day after the marriage Arthur Fletcher came back to Wharton with the declared intention of remaining there till the end of the holiday. She could make no objection to such an arrangement, nor could she hasten her own return to London. That had been fixed before her departure, and was to made together with her father. She felt that she was being attacked with unfair weapons, and that undue advantage was taken of the sacrifice which she had made for her brother’s sake. And yet,– yet how good to her they all were! How wonderful it was that after the thing she had done, after the disgrace she had brought on herself and them, after the destruction of all that pride which had once been hers, they should still wish to have her among them! As for him,–of whom she was always thinking,–of what nature must be his love, when he was willing to take to himself as his wife such a thing as she had made of herself! But, thinking of this, she would only tell herself that, as he would not protect himself, she was bound to be his protector. Yes;–she would protect him, though she could dream of a world of joy that might be hers if she could do as he would ask her.
He caught her at last, and forced her to come out with him into the grounds. He could tell his tale better as he walked by her side than sitting restlessly on a chair and moving awkwardly about the room, as on such an occasion he would be sure to do. Within four walls she would have some advantage over him. She could sit still and be dignified in her stillness. But in the open air, when they would both be on their legs, she might not be so powerful with him, and he perhaps might be stronger with her. She could not refuse him when he asked her to walk with him. And why should she refuse him? Of course he must be allowed to utter his prayer,–and then she must be allowed to make her answer. ‘I think the marriage went off very well,’ he said.
‘Very well. Everett ought to be a happy man.’
‘No doubt he will be,–when he settles down to something. Everything will come right for him. With some people things seem to go smooth, don’t they? They have not hitherto gone smoothly with you and me, Emily.’
‘You are prosperous. You have everything before you that a man can wish, if only you will allow yourself to think so. Your profession is successful, and you are in Parliament, and everyone likes you.’
‘It is all nothing.’
‘That is the general discontent of the world.’
‘It is all nothing–unless I have you too. Remember that I had said so long before I was successful, when I did not dream of Parliament; before we had heard the name of the man who came between us and my happiness. I think I am entitled to be believed when I say so. I think I know my own mind. There are many men who would have been changed by the episode of such a marriage.’
‘You ought to be changed by it,–and by its result.’
‘It had no such effect. Here I am, after it all, telling you as I used to tell you before. I have to look to you for my happiness.’
‘You should be ashamed to confess it, Arthur.’
‘Never;–not to you, nor to all the world. I know what it has been. I know you are not now as you were then. You have been his wife, and are now his widow.’
‘That should be enough.’
‘But, such as you are, my happiness is in your hands. If it were not so, do you think that all my family as well as yours would join in wishing that you may become my wife? There is nothing to conceal. When you married this man, you know what my mother thought of it, and what John thought of it, and his wife. They had wanted you to be my wife; and they want it now–because they are anxious for my happiness. And your father wishes it, and your brother wishes it,–because they trust me, and I think that I should be a good husband to you.’
‘Good!’ she exclaimed, hardly knowing what she meant by repeating the word.
‘After that you have no right to set yourself to judge what may be best for my happiness. They who know how to judge are all united. Whatever you may have been, they believe that it will be good for me that you should now be my wife. After that you must talk about me no longer, unless you will talk of my wishes.’
‘Do you think that I am not anxious for your happiness?’
‘I do not know;–but I shall find out in time. That is what I have to say about myself. And as to you, is it not much the same? I know you love me. Whatever the feeling was that overcame you as to that other man,–it has gone. I cannot now stop to be tender and soft in my words. The thing to be said is too serious to me. And every friend you have wants you to marry the man you love, and to put an end to the desolation which you have brought on yourself. There is not one among us, Fletchers and Whartons, whose comfort does not more or less depend on your sacrificing the luxury of your own woe.’
‘Luxury!’
‘Yes; luxury. No man ever had a right to say more positively to a woman that it is her duty to marry him, than I have to you. And I do say it. I say it on behalf of all of us, that it is your duty. I won’t talk of my own love now, because you know it. But I say that it is your duty to give up drowning us all in tears, burying us in desolation. You are one of us, and should do as all of us wish you. If, indeed, you could not love me it would be different. There! I have said what I have got to say. You are crying, and I will not take your answer now. I will come again to-morrow, and then you shall answer me. But, remember when you do so that the happiness of many people depends on what you say.’ Then he left her very suddenly and hurried back to the house by himself.
He had been very rough with her,–but not once attempted to touch her hand or even her arm, had spoken no soft word to her, speaking of his own love as a thing too certain to need further words; and he had declared himself to be so assured of her love that there was no favour for him now to ask, nothing for which he was bound to pray as a lover. All that was past. He had simply declared it to be her duty to marry him, and he had told her so with much sternness. He had walked fast, compelling her to accompany him, had frowned at her, and had more than once stamped his foot upon the ground. During the whole interview she had been so near to weeping that she could hardly speak. Once or twice she had almost thought him to be cruel;–but he had forced her to acknowledge to herself that all that he had said was true and unanswerable. Had he pressed her for an answer at that moment she would have known in what words to couch a refusal. And yet as she made her way alone back to the house she assured herself that she would have refused.
He had given her four-and-twenty hours, and at the end of that time she would be bound to give him an answer,–and answer which must then be final. And as she said this to herself she found that she was admitting a doubt. She hardly knew how not to doubt, knowing as she did, that all whom she loved were on one side, while on the other was nothing but the stubbornness of her own convictions. But still the conviction was left to her. Over and over again she declared to herself that it was not fit, meaning thereby to assure herself that a higher duty even than that which she owed to her friends, demanded from her that she should be true to her convictions. She met him that day at dinner, but he hardly spoke to her. They sat together in the same room during the evening, but she hardly once heard his voice. It seemed to her that he avoided even looking at her. When they separated for the night, he parted from her almost as though they had been strangers. Surely he was angry with her because she was stubborn,–thought evil of her because she would not do as others wished her! She lay awake during the long night thinking of it all. If it might be so! Oh;–if it might be so! If it might be done without utter ruin to her own self-respect as a woman!
In the morning she was down early,–not having anything to say, with no clear purpose as yet before her;–but still with a feeling that perhaps that morning might alter all things for her. He was the latest of the party, not coming in for prayers as he did all the others, but taking his seat when the others had half finished their breakfast. As he sat down he gave a general half- uttered greeting to them all, but spoke no special word to any of them. It chanced that his seat was next to hers, but to her he did not address himself at all. Then the meal was over, and the chairs were withdrawn, and the party grouped itself about with vague, uncertain movements, as men and women do before they leave the breakfast table for the work of the day. She meditated her escape, but felt that she could not leave the room before Lady Wharton or Mrs Fletcher;–who had remained at Wharton to keep her mother company for a while. At last they went;–but then, just as she was escaping, he put his hand upon her and reminded her of her appointment. ‘I shall be in the hall in a quarter of an hour,’ he said. ‘Will you meet me there?’ Then she bowed her head to him and passed on.
She was there at the time named, and found him standing by the hall door, waiting for her. His hat was already on his head and his back was almost turned to her. He opened the door, and, allowing her to pass out first, led the way to the shrubbery. He did not speak to her till he had closed behind her the little iron gate which separated the walk from the garden, and then he turned upon her with one word. ‘Well?’ he said. She was silent for a moment, and then he repeated his eager question: ‘Well;– well?’
‘I should disgrace you,’ she said, not firmly, as before, but whispering the words.
He waited for no other assent. The form of the words told him that he had won the day. In a moment his arms were round her, and her veil was off, and his lips were pressed to hers;–and when she could see his countenance the whole form of his face was altered to her. It was bright as it used to be bright in the old days, and he was smiling on her as he used to smile. ‘My own,’ he said;–‘my wife–my own!’ And she had no longer the power to deny him. ‘Not yet, Arthur; not yet,’ was all that she could say.
CHAPTER 80
THE LAST MEETING AT MATCHING.
The ex-Prime Minister did not carry out his purpose of leaving London in the middle of the season and travelling either to Italy or Norway. He was away from London at Whitsuntide longer perhaps than he might have been if still in office, and during this period regarded himself as a man from whose hands all work had been taken–as one who had been found unfit to carry any longer a burden serviceably; but before June was over he and the Duchess were back in London, and gradually he allowed himself to open his mouth on this or that subject in the House of Lords,–not pitching into everybody all round, as his wife had recommended,– but expressing an opinion now and again, generally in support of his friends, with the dignity which should belong to a retired Prime Minister. The Duchess too recovered much of her good temper,–as far at least as the outward show went. One or two who knew her, especially Mrs Finn, were aware that her hatred and her ideas of revenge were not laid aside; but she went on from day to day anathematizing her special enemies, and abstained from reproaching her husband for his pusillanimity. Then came the question as to the autumn. ‘Let’s have everybody down at Gatherum, just as we had before,’ said the Duchess.
The proposition almost took away the Duke’s breath. ‘Why do you want a crowd, like that?’
‘Just to show them that we are not beaten because we are turned out.’
‘But inasmuch as we were turned out, we were beaten. And what has a gathering of people at my house to do with a political manoeuvre? Do you especially want to go to Gatherum?’
‘I hate the place. You know I do.’
‘Then why should you propose to go there?’ He hardly yet knew his wife well enough to understand that the suggestion had been a joke. ‘If you don’t wish to go abroad–‘
‘I hate going abroad.’
‘Then we’ll remain at Matching. You don’t hate Matching.’
‘Ah dear! There are memories there too. But you like it.’
‘My books are there.’
‘Blue-books,’ said the Duchess.
‘And there is plenty of room if you wish to have friends.’
‘I suppose we must have somebody. You can’t live without your mentor.’
‘You can ask whom you please,’ he said almost fretfully.
‘Lady Rosina, of course,’ suggested the Duchess. Then he turned to the papers before him, and wouldn’t say another word. The matter ended in a party much as usual being collected at Matching about the middle of October,–Telemachus having spent the early part of the autumn with Mentor at Long Royston. There might perhaps be a dozen guests in the house and among them were Phineas Finn and his wife. And Mr Grey was there, having come back from his eastern mission,–whose unfortunate abandonment of his seat at Silverbridge had cause so many troubles,–and Mrs Grey, who in days now long passed had been almost as necessary to Lady Glencora, as was now her later friend Mrs Finn,–and the Cantrips, and for a short time the St Bungays. But Lady Rosina De Courcy on this occasion was not present. There were few there whom my patient readers have not seen at Matching before; but among those few was Arthur Fletcher.
‘So it is to be,’ said the Duchess to the member for Silverbridge one morning. She had by this time become intimate with ‘her member’, as she would sometimes call him in a joke, and had concerned herself much as to his matrimonial prospects.
‘Yes, Duchess, it is to be,–unless some unforeseen circumstance should arise.’
‘What circumstance?’
‘Ladies and gentlemen do sometimes change their minds;–but in this case I do not think it likely.’
‘And why ain’t you being married now, Mr Fletcher?’
‘We have agreed to postpone it till next year;–so that we may be quite sure of our own minds.’
‘I know you are laughing at me; but nevertheless I am very glad that it is settled. Pray tell her from me that I shall again call soon as ever she is Mrs Fletcher, though I don’t think she repaid either of the last two visits I made her.’
‘You must make excuses for her, Duchess.’
‘Of course. I know. After all she is a most fortunate woman. And as for you,–I regard you as a hero among lovers.’
‘I’m getting used to it,’ she said one day to Mrs Finn.
‘Of course you’ll get used to it. We get used to anything that chance sends us in a marvellously short time.’
‘What I mean is that I can go to bed and sleep, and get up and eat my meals without missing the sound of trumpets so much as I did at first. I remember hearing of people who lived in a mill, and couldn’t sleep when the mill stopped. It was like that with me when our mill stopped at first. I had got myself so used to the excitement of it, that I could hardly live without it.’
‘You might have all the excitement still, if you pleased. You need not be dead to politics because your husband is not Prime Minister.’
‘No; never again,–unless he should come back. If anyone had told me ten years ago that I should have taken an interest in this or that man being in Government, I should have laughed him to scorn. It did not seem possible to me then that I should care what became of men like Sir Timothy Beeswax and Mr Roby. But I did get to be anxious about it when Plantagenet was shifted from one office to another.’
‘Of course you did. Do you think I am not anxious about Phineas?’
‘But when he became Prime Minister, I gave myself up to it altogether. I shall never forget what I felt when he came to me and told me that perhaps it might be so;–but told me also that he would escape from it if it were possible. I was the Lady Macbeth of the occasion all over;–whereas he was so scrupulous, so burdened with conscience! As for me, I would have taken it by any means. Then it was the old Duke played the part of the three witches to a nicety. Well, there hasn’t been any absolute murder, and I haven’t quite gone mad.’
‘Nor need you be afraid though all the woods of Gatherum should come to Matching.’
‘God forbid! I will never see anything of Gatherum again. What annoys me most is, and always was, that he wouldn’t understand what I felt about it;–how proud I was that he should be Prime Minister, how anxious that he should be great and noble in his office;–how I worked for him, and not at all for any pleasure of my own.’
‘I think he did feel it.’
‘No;–not as I did. At last he liked the power,–or rather feared the disgrace of losing it. But he had no idea of the personal grandeur of the place. He never understood that to be Prime Minister in England is as much as to be an Emperor in France, and much more than being President of America. Oh, how I did labour for him,–and how did he scold me for it in those quiet little stinging words of his! I was vulgar!’
‘Is that a quiet word?’
‘Yes;–as he used it;–and indiscreet, and ignorant, and stupid. I bore it all, though sometimes I was dying with vexation. Now it’s all over, and here we are as humdrum as anyone else. And the Beeswaxes, and the Robys, and the Droughts, and the Pountneys, and the Lopezes, have all passed over the scene. Do you remember that Pountney affair, and how he turned the poor man out of the house?’
‘It served him right.’
‘It would have served them all right to be turned out;–only they were there for a purpose. I did like it in a way, and it makes me sad to think that the feeling can never come back again. Even if they should have him back again, it would be a very lame affair to me then. I can never again rouse myself to the effort of preparing food and lodging for half the Parliament and their wives. I shall never again think that I can help to rule England by coaxing unpleasant men. It is done and gone, and can never come back again.’
Not long after this the Duke took Mr Monk, who had come down to Matching for a few days, out to the very spot on which he had sat when he indulged himself in lecturing Phineas Finn on Conservatism and Liberalism generally, and then asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer what he thought of the present state of public affairs. He himself had supported Mr Gresham’s government, and did not belong to it because he could not at present reconcile himself to filling any office. Mr Monk did not scruple to say that in his opinion the present legitimate division of parties was preferable to the Coalition which had existed for three years. ‘In such an arrangement,’ said Mr Monk, ‘there must always be a certain amount of distrust, and such a feeling is fatal to any great work.’
‘I think I distrusted no one till separation came,–and when it did come it was not caused by me.’
‘I am not blaming anyone now,’ said the other; ‘but men who have been brought up with opinions altogether different, even with different instincts as to politics, who from their mother’s milk have been nourished on codes of thought altogether opposed to each other, cannot work together with confidence even though they may desire the same thing. The very ideas which are sweet as honey to the one are bitter as gall to the other.’
‘You think, then, that we made a great mistake?’
‘I will not say that,’ said Mr Monk. ‘There was a difficulty at the time, and that difficulty was overcome. The Government was carried on, and was on the whole respected. History will give you credit for patriotism, patience, and courage. No man could have done it better than you did;–probably no other man of the day so well.’
‘But it was not a great part to play?’ The Duke in his nervousness, as he said this, could not avoid the use of that questioning tone which requires an answer.
‘Great enough to satisfy the heart of a man who has fortified himself against the evil of ambition. After all, what is it that the Prime Minister of such a country as this should chiefly regard? Is it not the prosperity of the country? Is it not often that we want great measures, or new arrangements that shall be vital to the country. Politicians now look for grievances, not because grievances are heavy, but trusting that the honour of abolishing them may be great. It is the old story of the needy knife-grinder who, if left to himself, would have no grievance of which to complain.’
‘But there are grievances,’ said the Duke. ‘Look at monetary denominations. Look at our weights and measures.’
‘Well; yes. I will not say that everything has as yet been reduced to divine order. But when we took office three years ago we certainly did not intend to settle those difficulties.’
‘No, indeed,’ said the Duke, sadly.
‘But we did do all that we were meant to do. For my own part, there is only one thing that I regret, and one only which you should regret also till you have resolved to remedy it.’
‘What thing is that?’
‘Your retirement from official life. If the country is to lose your services for the long course of years during which you will probably sit in Parliament, then I shall think that the country has lost more than it gained by the Coalition.’
The Duke sat for a while silent, looking at the view, and, before answering Mr Monk,–while arranging his answer,–once or twice in a half-absent way, called his companion’s attention to the scene before him. But during this time he was going through an act of painful repentance. He was condemning himself for a word or two that had been ill-spoken by himself, and which, since the moment of its utterance, he had never ceased to remember with shame. He told himself now, after his own secret fashion, that he must do penance for these words by the humiliation of a direct contradiction of them. He must declare that Caesar would at some future time be prepared to serve under Pompey. Then he made his answer. ‘Mr Monk,’ he said, ‘I should be false if I were to deny that it pleases me to hear you say so. I have thought much of all that for the last two or three months. You may probably have seen that I am not a man endowed with that fortitude which enables many to bear vexations with an easy spirit. I am given to fretting, and I am inclined to think that a popular minister in a free country should be so constituted as to be free from that infirmity. I shall certainly never desire to be at the head of Government again. For a few years I would prefer to remain out of office. But I will endeavour to look forward to a time when I may again perhaps be of some humble use.’