<p><SPAN name="16"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XVI</h3>
<h3>Phineas Finn Returns to Killaloe<br/> </h3>
<p>Phineas Finn's first session of Parliament was over,—his first
session with all its adventures. When he got back to Mrs. Bunce's
house,—for Mrs. Bunce received him for a night in spite of her
husband's advice to the contrary,—I am afraid he almost felt that
Mrs. Bunce and her rooms were beneath him. Of course he was very
unhappy,—as wretched as a man can be; there were moments in which
he thought that it would hardly become him to live unless he could
do something to prevent the marriage of Lady Laura and Mr.
Kennedy. But, nevertheless, he had his consolations. These were
reflections which had in them much of melancholy satisfaction. He
had not been despised by the woman to whom he had told his love.
She had not shown him that she thought him to be unworthy of her.
She had not regarded his love as an offence. Indeed, she had
almost told him that prudence alone had forbidden her to return
his passion. And he had kissed her, and had afterwards parted from
her as a dear friend. I do not know why there should have been a
flavour of exquisite joy in the midst of his agony as he thought
of this;—but it was so. He would never kiss her again. All future
delights of that kind would belong to Mr. Kennedy, and he had no
real idea of interfering with that gentleman in the fruition of
his privileges. But still there was the kiss,—an eternal fact.
And then, in all respects except that of his love, his visit to
Loughlinter had been pre-eminently successful. Mr. Monk had become
his friend, and had encouraged him to speak during the next
session,—setting before him various models, and prescribing for
him a course of reading. Lord Brentford had become intimate with
him. He was on pleasant terms with Mr. Palliser and Mr. Gresham.
And as for Mr. Kennedy,—he and Mr. Kennedy were almost bosom
friends. It seemed to him that he had quite surpassed the Ratlers,
Fitzgibbons, and Bonteens in that politico-social success which
goes so far towards downright political success, and which in
itself is so pleasant. He had surpassed these men in spite of
their offices and their acquired positions, and could not but
think that even Mr. Low, if he knew it all, would confess that he
had been right.</p>
<p>As to his bosom friendship with Mr. Kennedy, that of course
troubled him. Ought he not to be driving a poniard into Mr.
Kennedy's heart? The conventions of life forbade that; and
therefore the bosom friendship was to be excused. If not an enemy
to the death, then there could be no reason why he should not be a
bosom friend.</p>
<p>He went over to Ireland, staying but one night with Mrs. Bunce,
and came down upon them at Killaloe like a god out of the heavens.
Even his father was well-nigh overwhelmed by admiration, and his
mother and sisters thought themselves only fit to minister to his
pleasures. He had learned, if he had learned nothing else, to look
as though he were master of the circumstances around him, and was
entirely free from internal embarrassment. When his father spoke
to him about his legal studies, he did not exactly laugh at his
father's ignorance, but he recapitulated to his father so much of
Mr. Monk's wisdom at second hand,—showing plainly that it was his
business to study the arts of speech and the technicalities of the
House, and not to study law,—that his father had nothing further
to say. He had become a man of such dimensions that an ordinary
father could hardly dare to inquire into his proceedings; and as
for an ordinary mother,—such as Mrs. Finn certainly was,—she
could do no more than look after her son's linen with awe.</p>
<p>Mary Flood Jones,—the reader I hope will not quite have forgotten
Mary Flood Jones,—was in a great tremor when first she met the
hero of Loughshane after returning from the honours of his first
session. She had been somewhat disappointed because the newspapers
had not been full of the speeches he had made in Parliament. And
indeed the ladies of the Finn household had all been ill at ease
on this head. They could not imagine why Phineas had restrained
himself with so much philosophy. But Miss Flood Jones in
discussing the matter with the Miss Finns had never expressed the
slightest doubt of his capacity or his judgment. And when tidings
came,—the tidings came in a letter from Phineas to his
father,—that he did not intend to speak that session, because
speeches from a young member on his first session were thought to
be inexpedient, Miss Flood Jones and the Miss Finns were quite
willing to accept the wisdom of this decision, much as they might
regret the effect of it. Mary, when she met her hero, hardly dared
to look him in the face, but she remembered accurately all the
circumstances of her last interview with him. Could it be that he
wore that ringlet near his heart? Mary had received from Barbara
Finn certain hairs supposed to have come from the head of Phineas,
and these she always wore near her own. And moreover, since she
had seen Phineas she had refused an offer of marriage from Mr.
Elias Bodkin,—had refused it almost ignominiously,—and when
doing so had told herself that she would never be false to Phineas
Finn.</p>
<p>"We think it so good of you to come to see us again," she said.</p>
<p>"Good to come home to my own people?"</p>
<p>"Of course you might be staying with plenty of grandees if you
liked it."</p>
<p>"No, indeed, Mary. It did happen by accident that I had to go to
the house of a man whom perhaps you would call a grandee, and to
meet grandees there. But it was only for a few days, and I am very
glad to be taken in again here, I can assure you."</p>
<p>"You know how very glad we all are to have you."</p>
<p>"Are you glad to see me, Mary?"</p>
<p>"Very glad. Why should I not be glad, and Barbara the dearest
friend I have in the world? Of course she talks about you,—and
that makes me think of you."</p>
<p>"If you knew, Mary, how often I think about you." Then Mary, who
was very happy at hearing such words, and who was walking in to
dinner with him at the moment, could not refrain herself from
pressing his arm with her little fingers. She knew that Phineas in
his position could not marry at once; but she would wait for
him,—oh, for ever, if he would only ask her. He of course was a
wicked traitor to tell her that he was wont to think of her. But
Jove smiles at lovers' perjuries;—and it is well that he should
do so, as such perjuries can hardly be avoided altogether in the
difficult circumstances of a successful gentleman's life. Phineas
was a traitor, of course, but he was almost forced to be a
traitor, by the simple fact that Lady Laura Standish was in
London, and Mary Flood Jones in Killaloe.</p>
<p>He remained for nearly five months at Killaloe, and I doubt
whether his time was altogether well spent. Some of the books
recommended to him by Mr. Monk he probably did read, and was often
to be found encompassed by blue books. I fear that there was a
grain of pretence about his blue books and parliamentary papers,
and that in these days he was, in a gentle way, something of an
impostor. "You must not be angry with me for not going to you," he
said once to Mary's mother when he had declined an invitation to
drink tea; "but the fact is that my time is not my own." "Pray
don't make any apologies. We are quite aware that we have very
little to offer," said Mrs. Flood Jones, who was not altogether
happy about Mary, and who perhaps knew more about members of
Parliament and blue books than Phineas Finn had supposed. "Mary,
you are a fool to think of that man," the mother said to her
daughter the next morning. "I don't think of him, mamma; not
particularly." "He is no better than anybody else that I can see,
and he is beginning to give himself airs," said Mrs. Flood Jones.
Mary made no answer; but she went up into her room and swore
before a figure of the Virgin that she would be true to Phineas
for ever and ever, in spite of her mother, in spite of all the
world,—in spite, should it be necessary, even of himself.</p>
<p>About Christmas time there came a discussion between Phineas and
his father about money. "I hope you find you get on pretty well,"
said the doctor, who thought that he had been liberal.</p>
<p>"It's a tight fit," said Phineas,—who was less afraid of his
father than he had been when he last discussed these things.</p>
<p>"I had hoped it would have been ample," said the doctor.</p>
<p>"Don't think for a moment, sir, that I am complaining," said
Phineas. "I know it is much more than I have a right to expect."</p>
<p>The doctor began to make an inquiry within his own breast as to
whether his son had a right to expect anything;—whether the time
had not come in which his son should be earning his own bread. "I
suppose," he said, after a pause, "there is no chance of your
doing anything at the bar now?"</p>
<p>"Not immediately. It is almost impossible to combine the two
studies together." Mr. Low himself was aware of that. "But you are
not to suppose that I have given the profession up."</p>
<p>"I hope not,—after all the money it has cost us."</p>
<p>"By no means, sir. And all that I am doing now will, I trust, be
of assistance to me when I shall come back to work at the law. Of
course it is on the cards that I may go into office,—and if so,
public business will become my profession."</p>
<p>"And be turned out with the Ministry!"</p>
<p>"Yes; that is true, sir. I must run my chance. If the worst comes
to the worst, I hope I might be able to secure some permanent
place. I should think that I can hardly fail to do so. But I trust
I may never be driven to want it. I thought, however, that we had
settled all this before." Then Phineas assumed a look of injured
innocence, as though his father was driving him too hard.</p>
<p>"And in the mean time your money has been enough?" said the
doctor, after a pause.</p>
<p>"I had intended to ask you to advance me a hundred pounds," said
Phineas. "There were expenses to which I was driven on first
entering Parliament."</p>
<p>"A hundred pounds."</p>
<p>"If it be inconvenient, sir, I can do without it." He had not as
yet paid for his gun, or for that velvet coat in which he had been
shooting, or, most probably, for the knickerbockers. He knew he
wanted the hundred pounds badly; but he felt ashamed of himself in
asking for it. If he were once in office,—though the office were
but a sorry junior lordship,—he would repay his father instantly.</p>
<p>"You shall have it, of course," said the doctor; "but do not let
the necessity for asking for more hundreds come oftener than you
can help." Phineas said that he would not, and then there was no
further discourse about money. It need hardly be said that he told
his father nothing of that bill which he had endorsed for Laurence
Fitzgibbon.</p>
<p>At last came the time which called him again to London and the
glories of London life,—to lobbies, and the clubs, and the gossip
of men in office, and the chance of promotion for himself; to the
glare of the gas-lamps, the mock anger of rival debaters, and the
prospect of the Speaker's wig. During the idleness of the recess
he had resolved at any rate upon this,—that a month of the
session should not have passed by before he had been seen upon his
legs in the House,—had been seen and heard. And many a time as he
had wandered alone, with his gun, across the bogs which lie on the
other side of the Shannon from Killaloe, he had practised the sort
of address which he would make to the House. He would be
short,—always short; and he would eschew all action and
gesticulation; Mr. Monk had been very urgent in his instructions
to him on that head; but he would be especially careful that no
words should escape him which had not in them some purpose. He
might be wrong in his purpose, but purpose there should be. He had
been twitted more than once at Killaloe with his silence;—for it
had been conceived by his fellow-townsmen that he had been sent to
Parliament on the special ground of his eloquence. They should
twit him no more on his next return. He would speak and would
carry the House with him if a human effort might prevail.</p>
<p>So he packed up his things, and started again for London in the
beginning of February. "Good-bye, Mary," he said with his sweetest
smile. But on this occasion there was no kiss, and no culling of
locks. "I know he cannot help it," said Mary to herself. "It is
his position. But whether it be for good or evil, I will be true
to him."</p>
<p>"I am afraid you are unhappy," Babara Finn said to her on the next
morning.</p>
<p>"No; I am not unhappy,—not at all. I have a deal to make me happy
and proud. I don't mean to be a bit unhappy." Then she turned away
and cried heartily, and Barbara Finn cried with her for company.</p>
<p><SPAN name="17"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3>
<h3>Phineas Finn Returns to London<br/> </h3>
<p>Phineas had received two letters during his recess at Killaloe
from two women who admired him much, which, as they were both
short, shall be submitted to the reader. The first was as
follows:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright"><i>Saulsby, October 20, 186––.</i></p>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps">My dear
Mr. Finn</span>,</p>
<p>I write a line to tell you that our marriage is to be hurried on
as quickly as possible. Mr. Kennedy does not like to be absent
from Parliament; nor will he be content to postpone the ceremony
till the session be over. The day fixed is the 3rd of December,
and we then go at once to Rome, and intend to be back in London by
the opening of Parliament.</p>
<p class="ind10">Yours most sincerely,</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Laura Standish</span>.</p>
<p>Our London address will be No. 52, Grosvenor Place.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>To this he wrote an answer as short, expressing his ardent wishes
that those winter hymeneals might produce nothing but happiness,
and saying that he would not be in town many days before he
knocked at the door of No. 52, Grosvenor Place.</p>
<p>And the second letter was as follows:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright"><i>Great Marlborough Street, December,
186––.</i></p>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps">Dear and Honoured
Sir</span>,</p>
<p>Bunce is getting ever so anxious about the rooms, and says as how
he has a young Equity draftsman and wife and baby as would take
the whole house, and all because Miss Pouncefoot said a word about
her port wine, which any lady of her age might say in her
tantrums, and mean nothing after all. Me and Miss Pouncefoot's
knowed each other for seven years, and what's a word or two as
isn't meant after that? But, honoured sir, it's not about that as
I write to trouble you, but to ask if I may say for certain that
you'll take the rooms again in February. It's easy to let them for
the month after Christmas, because of the pantomimes. Only say at
once, because Bunce is nagging me day after day. I don't want
nobody's wife and baby to have to do for, and 'd sooner have a
Parliament gent like yourself than any one else.</p>
<p class="ind10">Yours umbly and respectful,</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Jane
Bunce</span>.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>To this he replied that he would certainly come back to the rooms
in Great Marlborough Street, should he be lucky enough to find
them vacant, and he expressed his willingness to take them on and
from the 1st of February. And on the 3rd of February he found
himself in the old quarters, Mrs. Bunce having contrived, with
much conjugal adroitness, both to keep Miss Pouncefoot and to
stave off the Equity draftsman's wife and baby. Bunce, however,
received Phineas very coldly, and told his wife the same evening
that as far as he could see their lodger would never turn up to be
a trump in the matter of the ballot. "If he means well, why did he
go and stay with them lords down in Scotland? I knows all about
it. I knows a man when I sees him. Mr. Low, who's looking out to
be a Tory judge some of these days, is a deal better;—because he
knows what he's after."</p>
<p>Immediately on his return to town, Phineas found himself summoned
to a political meeting at Mr. Mildmay's house in St. James's
Square. "We're going to begin in earnest this time," Barrington
Erle said to him at the club.</p>
<p>"I am glad of that," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"I suppose you heard all about it down at Loughlinter?"</p>
<p>Now, in truth, Phineas had heard very little of any settled plan
down at Loughlinter. He had played a game of chess with Mr.
Gresham, and had shot a stag with Mr. Palliser, and had discussed
sheep with Lord Brentford, but had hardly heard a word about
politics from any one of those influential gentlemen. From Mr.
Monk he had heard much of a coming Reform Bill; but his
communications with Mr. Monk had rather been private
discussions,—in which he had learned Mr. Monk's own views on
certain points,—than revelations on the intention of the party to
which Mr. Monk belonged. "I heard of nothing settled," said
Phineas; "but I suppose we are to have a Reform Bill."</p>
<p>"That is a matter of course."</p>
<p>"And I suppose we are not to touch the question of ballot."</p>
<p>"That's the difficulty," said Barrington Erle. "But of course we
shan't touch it as long as Mr. Mildmay is in the Cabinet. He will
never consent to the ballot as First Minister of the Crown."</p>
<p>"Nor would Gresham, or Palliser," said Phineas, who did not choose
to bring forward his greatest gun at first.</p>
<p>"I don't know about Gresham. It is impossible to say what Gresham
might bring himself to do. Gresham is a man who may go any lengths
before he has done. Planty Pall,"—for such was the name by which
Mr. Plantagenet Palliser was ordinarily known among his
friends,—"would of course go with Mr. Mildmay and the Duke."</p>
<p>"And Monk is opposed to the ballot," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Ah, that's the question. No doubt he has assented to the
proposition of a measure without the ballot; but if there should
come a row, and men like Turnbull demand it, and the London mob
kick up a shindy, I don't know how far Monk would be steady."</p>
<p>"Whatever he says, he'll stick to."</p>
<p>"He is your leader, then?" asked Barrington.</p>
<p>"I don't know that I have a leader. Mr. Mildmay leads our side;
and if anybody leads me, he does. But I have great faith in Mr.
Monk."</p>
<p>"There's one who would go for the ballot to-morrow, if it were
brought forward stoutly," said Barrington Erle to Mr. Ratler a few
minutes afterwards, pointing to Phineas as he spoke.</p>
<p>"I don't think much of that young man," said Ratler.</p>
<p>Mr. Bonteen and Mr. Ratler had put their heads together during
that last evening at Loughlinter, and had agreed that they did not
think much of Phineas Finn. Why did Mr. Kennedy go down off the
mountain to get him a pony? And why did Mr. Gresham play chess
with him? Mr. Ratler and Mr. Bonteen may have been right in making
up their minds to think but little of Phineas Finn, but Barrington
Erle had been quite wrong when he had said that Phineas would "go
for the ballot" to-morrow. Phineas had made up his mind very
strongly that he would always oppose the ballot. That he would
hold the same opinion throughout his life, no one should pretend
to say; but in his present mood, and under the tuition which he
had received from Mr. Monk, he was prepared to demonstrate, out of
the House and in it, that the ballot was, as a political measure,
unmanly, ineffective, and enervating. Enervating had been a great
word with Mr. Monk, and Phineas had clung to it with admiration.</p>
<p>The meeting took place at Mr. Mildmay's on the third day of the
session. Phineas had of course heard of such meetings before, but
had never attended one. Indeed, there had been no such gathering
when Mr. Mildmay's party came into power early in the last
session. Mr. Mildmay and his men had then made their effort in
turning out their opponents, and had been well pleased to rest
awhile upon their oars. Now, however, they must go again to work,
and therefore the liberal party was collected at Mr. Mildmay's
house, in order that the liberal party might be told what it was
that Mr. Mildmay and his Cabinet intended to do.</p>
<p>Phineas Finn was quite in the dark as to what would be the nature
of the performance on this occasion, and entertained some idea
that every gentleman present would be called upon to express
individually his assent or dissent in regard to the measure
proposed. He walked to St. James's Square with Laurence
Fitzgibbon; but even with Fitzgibbon was ashamed to show his
ignorance by asking questions. "After all," said Fitzgibbon, "this
kind of thing means nothing. I know as well as possible, and so do
you, what Mr. Mildmay will say,—and then Gresham will say a few
words; and then Turnbull will make a murmur, and then we shall all
assent,—to anything or to nothing;—and then it will be over."
Still Phineas did not understand whether the assent required would
or would not be an individual personal assent. When the affair was
over he found that he was disappointed, and that he might almost
as well have stayed away from the meeting,—except that he had
attended at Mr. Mildmay's bidding, and had given a silent adhesion
to Mr. Mildmay's plan of reform for that session. Laurence
Fitzgibbon had been very nearly correct in his description of what
would occur. Mr. Mildmay made a long speech. Mr. Turnbull, the
great Radical of the day,—the man who was supposed to represent
what many called the Manchester school of politics,—asked half a
dozen questions. In answer to these Mr. Gresham made a short
speech. Then Mr. Mildmay made another speech, and then all was
over. The gist of the whole thing was, that there should be a
Reform Bill,—very generous in its enlargement of the
franchise,—but no ballot. Mr. Turnbull expressed his doubt
whether this would be satisfactory to the country; but even Mr.
Turnbull was soft in his tone and complaisant in his manner. As
there was no reporter present,—that plan of turning private
meetings at gentlemen's houses into public assemblies not having
been as yet adopted,—there could be no need for energy or
violence. They went to Mr. Mildmay's house to hear Mr. Mildmay's
plan,—and they heard it.</p>
<p>Two days after this Phineas was to dine with Mr. Monk. Mr. Monk
had asked him in the lobby of the House. "I don't give dinner
parties," he said, "but I should like you to come and meet Mr.
Turnbull." Phineas accepted the invitation as a matter of course.
There were many who said that Mr. Turnbull was the greatest man in
the nation, and that the nation could be saved only by a direct
obedience to Mr. Turnbull's instructions. Others said that Mr.
Turnbull was a demagogue and at heart a rebel; that he was
un-English, false and very dangerous. Phineas was rather inclined
to believe the latter statement; and as danger and dangerous men
are always more attractive than safety and safe men, he was glad
to have an opportunity of meeting Mr. Turnbull at dinner.</p>
<p>In the meantime he went to call on Lady Laura, whom he had not
seen since the last evening which he spent in her company at
Loughlinter,—whom, when he was last speaking to her, he had
kissed close beneath the falls of the Linter. He found her at
home, and with her was her husband. "Here is a Darby and Joan
meeting, is it not?" she said, getting up to welcome him. He had
seen Mr. Kennedy before, and had been standing close to him during
the meeting at Mr. Mildmay's.</p>
<p>"I am very glad to find you both together."</p>
<p>"But Robert is going away this instant," said Lady Laura. "Has he
told you of our adventures at Rome?"</p>
<p>"Not a word."</p>
<p>"Then I must tell you;—but not now. The dear old Pope was so
civil to us. I came to think it quite a pity that he should be in
trouble."</p>
<p>"I must be off," said the husband, getting up. "But I shall meet
you at dinner, I believe."</p>
<p>"Do you dine at Mr. Monk's?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and am asked expressly to hear Turnbull make a convert of
you. There are only to be us four. Au revoir." Then Mr. Kennedy
went, and Phineas found himself alone with Lady Laura. He hardly
knew how to address her, and remained silent. He had not prepared
himself for the interview as he ought to have done, and felt
himself to be awkward. She evidently expected him to speak, and
for a few seconds sat waiting for what he might say.</p>
<p>At last she found that it was incumbent on her to begin. "Were you
surprised at our suddenness when you got my note?"</p>
<p>"A little. You had spoken of waiting."</p>
<p>"I had never imagined that he would have been impetuous. And he
seems to think that even the business of getting himself married
would not justify him staying away from Parliament. He is a rigid
martinet in all matters of duty."</p>
<p>"I did not wonder that he should be in a hurry, but that you
should submit."</p>
<p>"I told you that I should do just what the wise people told me. I
asked papa, and he said that it would be better. So the lawyers
were driven out of their minds, and the milliners out of their
bodies, and the thing was done."</p>
<p>"Who was there at the marriage?"</p>
<p>"Oswald was not there. That I know is what you mean to ask. Papa
said that he might come if he pleased. Oswald stipulated that he
should be received as a son. Then my father spoke the hardest word
that ever fell from his mouth."</p>
<p>"What did he say?"</p>
<p>"I will not repeat it,—not altogether. But he said that Oswald
was not entitled to a son's treatment. He was very sore about my
money, because Robert was so generous as to his settlement. So the
breach between them is as wide as ever."</p>
<p>"And where is Chiltern now?" said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Down in Northamptonshire, staying at some inn from whence he
hunts. He tells me that he is quite alone,—that he never dines
out, never has any one to dine with him, that he hunts five or six
days a week,—and reads at night."</p>
<p>"That is not a bad sort of life."</p>
<p>"Not if the reading is any good. But I cannot bear that he should
be so solitary. And if he breaks down in it, then his companions
will not be fit for him. Do you ever hunt?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes,—at home in county Clare. All Irishmen hunt."</p>
<p>"I wish you would go down to him and see him. He would be
delighted to have you."</p>
<p>Phineas thought over the proposition before he answered it, and
then made the reply that he had made once before. "I would do so,
Lady Laura,—but that I have no money for hunting in England."</p>
<p>"Alas, alas!" said she, smiling. "How that hits one on every
side!"</p>
<p>"I might manage it,—for a couple of days,—in March."</p>
<p>"Do not do what you think you ought not to do," said Lady Laura.</p>
<p>"No; certainly. But I should like it, and if I can I will."</p>
<p>"He could mount you, I have no doubt. He has no other expense now,
and keeps a stable full of horses. I think he has seven or eight.
And now tell me, Mr. Finn; when are you going to charm the House?
Or is it your first intention to strike terror?"</p>
<p>He blushed,—he knew that he blushed as he answered. "Oh, I
suppose I shall make some sort of attempt before long. I can't
bear the idea of being a bore."</p>
<p>"I think you ought to speak, Mr. Finn."</p>
<p>"I do not know about that, but I certainly mean to try. There will
be lots of opportunities about the new Reform Bill. Of course you
know that Mr. Mildmay is going to bring it in at once. You hear
all that from Mr. Kennedy."</p>
<p>"And papa has told me. I still see papa almost every day. You must
call upon him. Mind you do." Phineas said that he certainly would.
"Papa is very lonely now, and I sometimes feel that I have been
almost cruel in deserting him. And I think that he has a horror of
the house,—especially later in the year,—always fancying that he
will meet Oswald. I am so unhappy about it all, Mr. Finn."</p>
<p>"Why doesn't your brother marry?" said Phineas, knowing nothing as
yet of Lord Chiltern and Violet Effingham. "If he were to marry
well, that would bring your father round."</p>
<p>"Yes,—it would."</p>
<p>"And why should he not?"</p>
<p>Lady Laura paused before she answered; and then she told the whole
story. "He is violently in love, and the girl he loves has refused
him twice."</p>
<p>"Is it with Miss Effingham?" asked Phineas, guessing the truth at
once, and remembering what Miss Effingham had said to him when
riding in the wood.</p>
<p>"Yes;—with Violet Effingham; my father's pet, his favourite, whom
he loves next to myself,—almost as well as myself; whom he would
really welcome as a daughter. He would gladly make her mistress of
his house, and of Saulsby. Everything would then go smoothly."</p>
<p>"But she does not like Lord Chiltern?"</p>
<p>"I believe she loves him in her heart; but she is afraid of him.
As she says herself, a girl is bound to be so careful of herself.
With all her seeming frolic, Violet Effingham is very wise."</p>
<p>Phineas, though not conscious of anything akin to jealousy, was
annoyed at the revelation made to him. Since he had heard that
Lord Chiltern was in love with Miss Effingham, he did not like
Lord Chiltern quite as well as he had done before. He himself had
simply admired Miss Effingham, and had taken pleasure in her
society; but, though this had been all, he did not like to hear of
another man wanting to marry her, and he was almost angry with
Lady Laura for saying that she believed Miss Effingham loved her
brother. If Miss Effingham had twice refused Lord Chiltern, that
ought to have been sufficient. It was not that Phineas was in love
with Miss Effingham himself. As he was still violently in love
with Lady Laura, any other love was of course impossible; but,
nevertheless, there was something offensive to him in the story as
it had been told. "If it be wisdom on her part," said he,
answering Lady Laura's last words, "you cannot find fault with her
for her decision."</p>
<p>"I find no fault;—but I think my brother would make her happy."</p>
<p>Lady Laura, when she was left alone, at once reverted to the tone
in which Phineas Finn had answered her remarks about Miss
Effingham. Phineas was very ill able to conceal his thoughts, and
wore his heart almost upon his sleeve. "Can it be possible that he
cares for her himself?" That was the nature of Lady Laura's first
question to herself upon the matter. And in asking herself that
question, she thought nothing of the disparity in rank or fortune
between Phineas Finn and Violet Effingham. Nor did it occur to her
as at all improbable that Violet might accept the love of him who
had so lately been her own lover. But the idea grated against her
wishes on two sides. She was most anxious that Violet should
ultimately become her brother's wife,—and she could not be
pleased that Phineas should be able to love any woman.</p>
<p>I must beg my readers not to be carried away by those last words
into any erroneous conclusion. They must not suppose that Lady
Laura Kennedy, the lately married bride, indulged a guilty passion
for the young man who had loved her. Though she had probably
thought often of Phineas Finn since her marriage, her thoughts had
never been of a nature to disturb her rest. It had never occurred
to her even to think that she regarded him with any feeling that
was an offence to her husband. She would have hated herself had
any such idea presented itself to her mind. She prided herself on
being a pure high-principled woman, who had kept so strong a guard
upon herself as to be nearly free from the dangers of those rocks
upon which other women made shipwreck of their happiness. She took
pride in this, and would then blame herself for her own pride. But
though she so blamed herself, it never occurred to her to think
that to her there might be danger of such shipwreck. She had put
away from herself the idea of love when she had first perceived
that Phineas had regarded her with more than friendship, and had
accepted Mr. Kennedy's offer with an assured conviction that by
doing so she was acting best for her own happiness and for that of
all those concerned. She had felt the romance of the position to
be sweet when Phineas had stood with her at the top of the falls
of the Linter, and had told her of the hopes which he had dared to
indulge. And when at the bottom of the falls he had presumed to
take her in his arms, she had forgiven him without difficulty to
herself, telling herself that that would be the alpha and the
omega of the romance of her life. She had not felt herself bound
to tell Mr. Kennedy of what had occurred,—but she had felt that
he could hardly have been angry even had he been told. And she had
often thought of her lover since, and of his love,—telling
herself that she too had once had a lover, never regarding her
husband in that light; but her thoughts had not frightened her as
guilty thoughts will do. There had come a romance which had been
pleasant, and it was gone. It had been soon banished,—but it had
left to her a sweet flavour, of which she loved to taste the
sweetness though she knew that it was gone. And the man should be
her friend, but especially her husband's friend. It should be her
care to see that his life was successful,—and especially her
husband's care. It was a great delight to her to know that her
husband liked the man. And the man would marry, and the man's wife
should be her friend. All this had been very pure and very
pleasant. Now an idea had flitted across her brain that the man
was in love with some one else,—and she did not like it!</p>
<p>But she did not therefore become afraid of herself, or in the
least realise at once the danger of her own position. Her
immediate glance at the matter did not go beyond the falseness of
men. If it were so, as she suspected,—if Phineas had in truth
transferred his affections to Violet Effingham, of how little
value was the love of such a man! It did not occur to her at this
moment that she also had transferred hers to Robert Kennedy, or
that, if not, she had done worse. But she did remember that in the
autumn this young Phœbus among men had turned his back upon her
out upon the mountain that he might hide from her the agony of his
heart when he learned that she was to be the wife of another man;
and that now, before the winter was over, he could not hide from
her the fact that his heart was elsewhere! And then she
speculated, and counted up facts, and satisfied herself that
Phineas could not even have seen Violet Effingham since they two
had stood together upon the mountain. How false are men!—how
false and how weak of heart!</p>
<p>"Chiltern and Violet Effingham!" said Phineas to himself, as he
walked away from Grosvenor Place. "Is it fair that she should be
sacrificed because she is rich, and because she is so winning and
so fascinating that Lord Brentford would receive even his son for
the sake of receiving also such a daughter-in-law?" Phineas also
liked Lord Chiltern; had seen or fancied that he had seen fine
things in him; had looked forward to his regeneration, hoping,
perhaps, that he might have some hand in the good work. But he did
not recognise the propriety of sacrificing Violet Effingham even
for work so good as this. If Miss Effingham had refused Lord
Chiltern twice, surely that ought to be sufficient. It did not
occur to him that the love of such a girl as Violet would be a
great treasure—to himself. As regarded himself, he was still in
love,—hopelessly in love, with Lady Laura Kennedy!</p>
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