<p><SPAN name="14"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3>
<h3>Loughlinter<br/> </h3>
<p>Phineas Finn reached Loughlinter together with Mr. Ratler in a
post-chaise from the neighbouring town. Mr. Ratler, who had done
this kind of thing very often before, travelled without
impediments, but the new servant of our hero's was stuck outside
with the driver, and was in the way. "I never bring a man with
me," said Mr. Ratler to his young friend. "The servants of the
house like it much better, because they get fee'd; you are just as
well waited on, and it don't cost half as much." Phineas blushed
as he heard all this; but there was the impediment, not to be got
rid of for the nonce, and Phineas made the best of his attendant.
"It's one of those points," said he, "as to which a man never
quite makes up his mind. If you bring a fellow, you wish you
hadn't brought him; and if you don't, you wish you had." "I'm a
great deal more decided in my ways that that," said Mr. Ratler.</p>
<p>Loughlinter, as they approached it, seemed to Phineas to be a much
finer place than Saulsby. And so it was, except that Loughlinter
wanted that graceful beauty of age which Saulsby possessed.
Loughlinter was all of cut stone, but the stones had been cut only
yesterday. It stood on a gentle slope, with a greensward falling
from the front entrance down to a mountain lake. And on the other
side of the Lough there rose a mighty mountain to the skies, Ben
Linter. At the foot of it, and all round to the left, there ran
the woods of Linter, stretching for miles through crags and bogs
and mountain lands. No better ground for deer than the side of Ben
Linter was there in all those highlands. And the Linter, rushing
down into the Lough through rocks which, in some places, almost
met together above its waters, ran so near to the house that the
pleasant noise of its cataracts could be heard from the hall door.
Behind the house the expanse of drained park land seemed to be
interminable; and then, again, came the mountains. There were Ben
Linn and Ben Lody;—and the whole territory belonging to Mr.
Kennedy. He was laird of Linn and laird of Linter, as his people
used to say. And yet his father had walked into Glasgow as a
little boy,—no doubt with the normal half-crown in his breeches
pocket.</p>
<p>"Magnificent;—is it not?" said Phineas to the Treasury Secretary,
as they were being driven up to the door.</p>
<p>"Very grand;—but the young trees show the new man. A new man may
buy a forest; but he can't get park trees."</p>
<p>Phineas, at the moment, was thinking how far all these things
which he saw, the mountains stretching everywhere around him, the
castle, the lake, the river, the wealth of it all, and, more than
the wealth, the nobility of the beauty, might act as temptations
to Lady Laura Standish. If a woman were asked to have the half of
all this, would it be possible that she should prefer to take the
half of his nothing? He thought it might be possible for a girl
who would confess, or seem to confess, that love should be
everything. But it could hardly be possible for a woman who looked
at the world almost as a man looked at it,—as an oyster to be
opened with such weapon as she could find ready to her hand. Lady
Laura professed to have a care for all the affairs of the world.
She loved politics, and could talk of social science, and had
broad ideas about religion, and was devoted to certain educational
views. Such a woman would feel that wealth was necessary to her,
and would be willing, for the sake of wealth, to put up with a
husband without romance. Nay; might it not be that she would
prefer a husband without romance? Thus Phineas was arguing to
himself as he was driven up to the door of Loughlinter Castle,
while Mr. Ratler was eloquent on the beauty of old park trees.
"After all, a Scotch forest is a very scrubby sort of thing," said
Mr. Ratler.</p>
<p>There was nobody in the house,—at least, they found nobody; and
within half an hour Phineas was walking about the grounds by
himself. Mr. Ratler had declared himself to be delighted at having
an opportunity of writing letters,—and no doubt was writing them
by the dozen, all dated from Loughlinter, and all detailing the
facts that Mr. Gresham, and Mr. Monk, and Plantagenet Palliser,
and Lord Brentford were in the same house with him. Phineas had no
letters to write, and therefore rushed down across the broad lawn
to the river, of which he heard the noisy tumbling waters. There
was something in the air which immediately filled him with high
spirits; and, in his desire to investigate the glories of the
place, he forgot that he was going to dine with four Cabinet
Ministers in a row. He soon reached the stream, and began to make
his way up it through the ravine. There was waterfall over
waterfall, and there were little bridges here and there which
looked to be half natural and half artificial, and a path which
required that you should climb, but which was yet a path, and all
was so arranged that not a pleasant splashing rush of the waters
was lost to the visitor. He went on and on, up the stream, till
there was a sharp turn in the ravine, and then, looking upwards,
he saw above his head a man and a woman standing together on one
of the little half-made wooden bridges. His eyes were sharp, and
he saw at a glance that the woman was Lady Laura Standish. He had
not recognised the man, but he had very little doubt that it was
Mr. Kennedy. Of course it was Mr. Kennedy, because he would prefer
that it should be any other man under the sun. He would have
turned back at once if he had thought that he could have done so
without being observed; but he felt sure that, standing as they
were, they must have observed him. He did not like to join them.
He would not intrude himself. So he remained still, and began to
throw stones into the river. But he had not thrown above a stone
or two when he was called from above. He looked up, and then he
perceived that the man who called him was his host. Of course it
was Mr. Kennedy. Thereupon he ceased to throw stones, and went up
the path, and joined them upon the bridge. Mr. Kennedy stepped
forward, and bade him welcome to Loughlinter. His manner was less
cold, and he seemed to have more words at command than was usual
with him. "You have not been long," he said, "in finding out the
most beautiful spot about the place."</p>
<p>"Is it not lovely?" said Laura. "We have not been here an hour
yet, and Mr. Kennedy insisted on bringing me here."</p>
<p>"It is wonderfully beautiful," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"It is this very spot where we now stand that made me build the
house where it is," said Mr. Kennedy, "and I was only eighteen
when I stood here and made up my mind. That is just twenty-five
years ago." "So he is forty-three," said Phineas to himself,
thinking how glorious it was to be only twenty-five. "And within
twelve months," continued Mr. Kennedy, "the foundations were being
dug and the stone-cutters were at work."</p>
<p>"What a good-natured man your father must have been," said Lady
Laura.</p>
<p>"He had nothing else to do with his money but to pour it over my
head, as it were. I don't think he had any other enjoyment of it
himself. Will you go a little higher, Lady Laura? We shall get a
fine view over to Ben Linn just now." Lady Laura declared that she
would go as much higher as he chose to take her, and Phineas was
rather in doubt as to what it would become him to do. He would
stay where he was, or go down, or make himself to vanish after any
most acceptable fashion; but if he were to do so abruptly it would
seem as though he were attributing something special to the
companionship of the other two. Mr. Kennedy saw his doubt, and
asked him to join them. "You may as well come on, Mr. Finn. We
don't dine till eight, and it is not much past six yet. The men of
business are all writing letters, and the ladies who have been
travelling are in bed, I believe."</p>
<p>"Not all of them, Mr. Kennedy," said Lady Laura. Then they went on
with their walk very pleasantly, and the lord of all that they
surveyed took them from one point of vantage to another, till they
both swore that of all spots upon the earth Loughlinter was surely
the most lovely. "I do delight in it, I own," said the lord. "When
I come up here alone, and feel that in the midst of this little
bit of a crowded island I have all this to myself,—all this with
which no other man's wealth can interfere,—I grow proud of my
own, till I become thoroughly ashamed of myself. After all, I
believe it is better to dwell in cities than in the
country,—better, at any rate, for a rich man." Mr. Kennedy had
now spoken more words than Phineas had heard to fall from his lips
during the whole time that they had been acquainted with each
other.</p>
<p>"I believe so too," said Laura, "if one were obliged to choose
between the two. For myself, I think that a little of both is good
for man and woman."</p>
<p>"There is no doubt about that," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"No doubt as far as enjoyment goes," said Mr. Kennedy.</p>
<p>He took them up out of the ravine on to the side of the mountain,
and then down by another path through the woods to the back of the
house. As they went he relapsed into his usual silence, and the
conversation was kept up between the other two. At a point not
very far from the castle,—just so far that one could see by the
break of the ground where the castle stood, Kennedy left them.
"Mr. Finn will take you back in safety, I am sure," said he, "and,
as I am here, I'll go up to the farm for a moment. If I don't show
myself now and again when I am here, they think I'm indifferent
about the 'bestials'."</p>
<p>"Now, Mr. Kennedy," said Lady Laura, "you are going to pretend to
understand all about sheep and oxen." Mr. Kennedy, owning that it
was so, went away to his farm, and Phineas with Lady Laura
returned towards the house. "I think, upon the whole," said Lady
Laura, "that that is as good a man as I know."</p>
<p>"I should think he is an idle one," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"I doubt that. He is, perhaps, neither zealous nor active. But he
is thoughtful and high-principled, and has a method and a purpose
in the use which he makes of his money. And you see that he has
poetry in his nature too, if you get him upon the right string.
How fond he is of the scenery of this place!"</p>
<p>"Any man would be fond of that. I'm ashamed to say that it almost
makes me envy him. I certainly never have wished to be Mr. Robert
Kennedy in London, but I should like to be the Laird of
Loughlinter."</p>
<p>"'Laird of Linn and Laird of Linter,—Here in summer, gone in
winter.' There is some ballad about the old lairds; but that
belongs to a time when Mr. Kennedy had not been heard of, when
some branch of the Mackenzies lived down at that wretched old
tower which you see as you first come upon the lake. When old Mr.
Kennedy bought it there were hardly a hundred acres on the
property under cultivation."</p>
<p>"And it belonged to the Mackenzies."</p>
<p>"Yes;—to the Mackenzie of Linn, as he was called. It was Mr.
Kennedy, the old man, who was first called Loughlinter. That is
Linn Castle, and they lived there for hundreds of years. But these
Highlanders, with all that is said of their family pride, have
forgotten the Mackenzies already, and are quite proud of their
rich landlord."</p>
<p>"That is unpoetical," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Yes;—but then poetry is so usually false. I doubt whether
Scotland would not have been as prosaic a country as any under the
sun but for Walter Scott;—and I have no doubt that Henry V owes
the romance of his character altogether to Shakspeare."</p>
<p>"I sometimes think you despise poetry," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"When it is false I do. The difficulty is to know when it is false
and when it is true. Tom Moore was always false."</p>
<p>"Not so false as Byron," said Phineas with energy.</p>
<p>"Much more so, my friend. But we will not discuss that now. Have
you seen Mr. Monk since you have been here?"</p>
<p>"I have seen no one. I came with Mr. Ratler."</p>
<p>"Why with Mr. Ratler? You cannot find Mr. Ratler a companion much
to your taste."</p>
<p>"Chance brought us together. But Mr. Ratler is a man of sense,
Lady Laura, and is not to be despised."</p>
<p>"It always seems to me," said Lady Laura, "that nothing is to be
gained in politics by sitting at the feet of the little
Gamaliels."</p>
<p>"But the great Gamaliels will not have a novice on their
footstools."</p>
<p>"Then sit at no man's feet. Is it not astonishing that the price
generally put upon any article by the world is that which the
owner puts on it?—and that this is specially true of a man's own
self? If you herd with Ratler, men will take it for granted that
you are a Ratlerite, and no more. If you consort with Greshams and
Pallisers, you will equally be supposed to know your own place."</p>
<p>"I never knew a Mentor," said Phineas, "so apt as you are to fill
his Telemachus with pride."</p>
<p>"It is because I do not think your fault lies that way. If it did,
or if I thought so, my Telemachus, you may be sure that I should
resign my position as Mentor. Here are Mr. Kennedy and Lady
Glencora and Mrs. Gresham on the steps." Then they went up through
the Ionic columns on to the broad stone terrace before the door,
and there they found a crowd of men and women. For the legislators
and statesmen had written their letters, and the ladies had taken
their necessary rest.</p>
<p>Phineas, as he was dressing, considered deeply all that Lady Laura
had said to him,—not so much with reference to the advice which
she had given him, though that also was of importance, as to the
fact that it had been given by her. She had first called herself
his Mentor; but he had accepted the name and had addressed her as
her Telemachus. And yet he believed himself to be older than
she,—if, indeed, there was any difference in their ages. And was
it possible that a female Mentor should love her
Telemachus,—should love him as Phineas desired to be loved by
Lady Laura? He would not say that it was impossible. Perhaps there
had been mistakes between them;—a mistake in his manner of
addressing her, and another in hers of addressing him. Perhaps the
old bachelor of forty-three was not thinking of a wife. Had this
old bachelor of forty-three been really in love with Lady Laura,
would he have allowed her to walk home alone with Phineas, leaving
her with some flimsy pretext of having to look at his sheep?
Phineas resolved that he must at any rate play out his
game,—whether he were to lose it or to win it; and in playing it
he must, if possible, drop something of that Mentor and Telemachus
style of conversation. As to the advice given him of herding with
Greshams and Pallisers, instead of with Ratlers and
Fitzgibbons,—he must use that as circumstances might direct. To
him, himself, as he thought of it all, it was sufficiently
astonishing that even the Ratlers and Fitzgibbons should admit him
among them as one of themselves. "When I think of my father and of
the old house at Killaloe, and remember that hitherto I have done
nothing myself, I cannot understand how it is that I should be at
Loughlinter." There was only one way of understanding it. If Lady
Laura really loved him, the riddle might be read.</p>
<p>The rooms at Loughlinter were splendid, much larger and very much
more richly furnished than those at Saulsby. But there was a
certain stiffness in the movement of things, and perhaps in the
manner of some of those present, which was not felt at Saulsby.
Phineas at once missed the grace and prettiness and cheery
audacity of Violet Effingham, and felt at the same time that
Violet Effingham would be out of her element at Loughlinter. At
Loughlinter they were met for business. It was at least a
semi-political, or perhaps rather a semi-official gathering, and
he became aware that he ought not to look simply for amusement.
When he entered the drawing-room before dinner, Mr. Monk and Mr.
Palliser, and Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Gresham, with sundry others,
were standing in a wide group before the fireplace, and among them
were Lady Glencora Palliser and Lady Laura and Mrs. Bonteen. As he
approached them it seemed as though a sort of opening was made for
himself; but he could see, though others did not, that the
movement came from Lady Laura.</p>
<p>"I believe, Mr. Monk," said Lady Glencora, "that you and I are the
only two in the whole party who really know what we would be at."</p>
<p>"If I must be divided from so many of my friends," said Mr. Monk,
"I am happy to go astray in the company of Lady Glencora
Palliser."</p>
<p>"And might I ask," said Mr. Gresham, with a peculiar smile for
which he was famous, "what it is that you and Mr. Monk are really
at?"</p>
<p>"Making men and women all equal," said Lady Glencora. "That I take
to be the gist of our political theory."</p>
<p>"Lady Glencora, I must cry off," said Mr. Monk.</p>
<p>"Yes;—no doubt. If I were in the Cabinet myself I should not
admit so much. There are reticences,—of course. And there is an
official discretion."</p>
<p>"But you don't mean to say, Lady Glencora, that you would really
advocate equality?" said Mrs. Bonteen.</p>
<p>"I do mean to say so, Mrs. Bonteen. And I mean to go further, and
to tell you that you are no Liberal at heart unless you do so
likewise; unless that is the basis of your political aspirations."</p>
<p>"Pray let me speak for myself, Lady Glencora."</p>
<p>"By no means,—not when you are criticising me and my politics. Do
you not wish to make the lower orders comfortable?"</p>
<p>"Certainly," said Mrs. Bonteen.</p>
<p>"And educated, and happy and good?"</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly."</p>
<p>"To make them as comfortable and as good as yourself?"</p>
<p>"Better if possible."</p>
<p>"And I'm sure you wish to make yourself as good and as comfortable
as anybody else,—as those above you, if anybody is above you? You
will admit that?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—if I understand you."</p>
<p>"Then you have admitted everything, and are an advocate for
general equality,—just as Mr. Monk is, and as I am. There is no
getting out of it;—is there, Mr. Kennedy?" Then dinner was
announced, and Mr. Kennedy walked off with the French Republican
on his arm. As she went, she whispered into Mr. Kennedy's ear,
"You will understand me. I am not saying that people are equal;
but that the tendency of all law-making and of all governing
should be to reduce the inequalities." In answer to which Mr.
Kennedy said not a word. Lady Glencora's politics were too fast
and furious for his nature.</p>
<p>A week passed by at Loughlinter, at the end of which Phineas found
himself on terms of friendly intercourse with all the political
magnates assembled in the house, but especially with Mr. Monk. He
had determined that he would not follow Lady Laura's advice as to
his selection of companions, if in doing so he should be driven
even to a seeming of intrusion. He made no attempt to sit at the
feet of anybody, and would stand aloof when bigger men than
himself were talking, and was content to be less,—as indeed he
was less,—than Mr. Bonteen or Mr. Ratler. But at the end of a
week he found that, without any effort on his part,—almost in
opposition to efforts on his part,—he had fallen into an easy
pleasant way with these men which was very delightful to him. He
had killed a stag in company with Mr. Palliser, and had stopped
beneath a crag to discuss with him a question as to the duty on
Irish malt. He had played chess with Mr. Gresham, and had been
told that gentleman's opinion on the trial of Mr. Jefferson Davis.
Lord Brentford had—at last—called him Finn, and had proved to
him that nothing was known in Ireland about sheep. But with Mr.
Monk he had had long discussions on abstract questions in
politics,—and before the week was over was almost disposed to
call himself a disciple, or, at least, a follower of Mr. Monk. Why
not of Mr. Monk as well as of any one else? Mr. Monk was in the
Cabinet, and of all the members of the Cabinet was the most
advanced Liberal. "Lady Glencora was not so far wrong the other
night," Mr. Monk said to him. "Equality is an ugly word and
shouldn't be used. It misleads, and frightens, and is a bugbear.
And she, in using it, had not perhaps a clearly defined meaning
for it in her own mind. But the wish of every honest man should be
to assist in lifting up those below him, till they be something
nearer his own level than he finds them." To this Phineas
assented,—and by degrees he found himself assenting to a great
many things that Mr. Monk said to him.</p>
<p>Mr. Monk was a thin, tall, gaunt man, who had devoted his whole
life to politics, hitherto without any personal reward beyond that
which came to him from the reputation of his name, and from the
honour of a seat in Parliament. He was one of four or five
brothers,—and all besides him were in trade. They had prospered
in trade, whereas he had prospered solely in politics; and men
said that he was dependent altogether on what his relatives
supplied for his support. He had now been in Parliament for more
than twenty years, and had been known not only as a Radical but as
a Democrat. Ten years since, when he had risen to fame, but not to
repute, among the men who then governed England, nobody dreamed
that Joshua Monk would ever be a paid servant of the Crown. He had
inveighed against one minister after another as though they all
deserved impeachment. He had advocated political doctrines which
at that time seemed to be altogether at variance with any
possibility of governing according to English rules of government.
He had been regarded as a pestilent thorn in the sides of all
ministers. But now he was a member of the Cabinet, and those whom
he had terrified in the old days began to find that he was not so
much unlike other men. There are but few horses which you cannot
put into harness, and those of the highest spirit will generally
do your work the best.</p>
<p>Phineas, who had his eyes about him, thought that he could
perceive that Mr. Palliser did not shoot a deer with Mr. Ratler,
and that Mr. Gresham played no chess with Mr. Bonteen. Bonteen,
indeed, was a noisy pushing man whom nobody seemed to like, and
Phineas wondered why he should be at Loughlinter, and why he
should be in office. His friend Laurence Fitzgibbon had indeed
once endeavoured to explain this. "A man who can vote hard, as I
call it; and who will speak a few words now and then as they're
wanted, without any ambition that way, may always have his price.
And if he has a pretty wife into the bargain, he ought to have a
pleasant time of it." Mr. Ratler no doubt was a very useful man,
who thoroughly knew his business; but yet, as it seemed to
Phineas, no very great distinction was shown to Mr. Ratler at
Loughlinter. "If I got as high as that," he said to himself, "I
should think myself a miracle of luck. And yet nobody seems to
think anything of Ratler. It is all nothing unless one can go to
the very top."</p>
<p>"I believe I did right to accept office," Mr. Monk said to him one
day, as they sat together on a rock close by one of the little
bridges over the Linter. "Indeed, unless a man does so when the
bonds of the office tendered to him are made compatible with his
own views, he declines to proceed on the open path towards the
prosecution of those views. A man who is combating one ministry
after another, and striving to imbue those ministers with his
convictions, can hardly decline to become a minister himself when
he finds that those convictions of his own are henceforth,—or at
least for some time to come,—to be the ministerial convictions of
the day. Do you follow me?"</p>
<p>"Very clearly," said Phineas. "You would have denied your own
children had you refused."</p>
<p>"Unless indeed a man were to feel that he was in some way unfitted
for office work. I very nearly provided for myself an escape on
that plea;—but when I came to sift it, I thought that it would be
false. But let me tell you that the delight of political life is
altogether in opposition. Why, it is freedom against slavery, fire
against clay, movement against stagnation! The very inaccuracy
which is permitted to opposition is in itself a charm worth more
than all the patronage and all the prestige of ministerial power.
You'll try them both, and then say if you do not agree with me.
Give me the full swing of the benches below the gangway, where I
needed to care for no one, and could always enjoy myself on my
legs as long as I felt that I was true to those who sent me there!
That is all over now. They have got me into harness, and my
shoulders are sore. The oats, however, are of the best, and the
hay is unexceptionable."</p>
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