<p><SPAN name="29"></SPAN> </p>
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<h3>CHAPTER XXIX</h3>
<h3>A Cabinet Meeting<br/> </h3>
<p>And now will the Muses assist me while I sing an altogether new
song? On the Tuesday the Cabinet met at the First Lord's official
residence in Downing Street, and I will attempt to describe what,
according to the bewildered brain of a poor fictionist, was said
or might have been said, what was done or might have been done, on
so august an occasion.</p>
<p>The poor fictionist very frequently finds himself to have been
wrong in his description of things in general, and is told so,
roughly by the critics, and tenderly by the friends of his bosom.
He is moved to tell of things of which he omits to learn the
nature before he tells of them—as should be done by a strictly
honest fictionist. He catches salmon in October; or shoots his
partridges in March. His dahlias bloom in June, and his birds sing
in the autumn. He opens the opera-houses before Easter, and makes
Parliament sit on a Wednesday evening. And then those terrible
meshes of the Law! How is a fictionist, in these excited days, to
create the needed biting interest without legal difficulties; and
how again is he to steer his little bark clear of so many
rocks,—when the rocks and the shoals have been purposely arranged
to make the taking of a pilot on board a necessity? As to those
law meshes, a benevolent pilot will, indeed, now and again give a
poor fictionist a helping hand,—not used, however, generally,
with much discretion. But from whom is any assistance to come in
the august matter of a Cabinet assembly? There can be no such
assistance. No man can tell aught but they who will tell nothing.
But then, again, there is this safety, that let the story be ever
so mistold,—let the fiction be ever so far removed from the
truth, no critic short of a Cabinet Minister himself can convict
the narrator of error.</p>
<p>It was a large dingy room, covered with a Turkey carpet, and
containing a dark polished mahogany dinner-table, on very heavy
carved legs, which an old messenger was preparing at two o'clock
in the day for the use of her Majesty's Ministers. The table would
have been large enough for fourteen guests, and along the side
further from the fire, there were placed some six heavy chairs,
good comfortable chairs, stuffed at the back as well as the
seat,—but on the side nearer to the fire the chairs were placed
irregularly; and there were four armchairs,—two on one side and
two on the other. There were four windows to the room, which
looked on to St. James's Park, and the curtains of the windows
were dark and heavy,—as became the gravity of the purposes to
which that chamber was appropriated. In old days it had been the
dining-room of one Prime Minister after another. To Pitt it had
been the abode of his own familiar prandial Penates, and Lord
Liverpool had been dull there among his dull friends for long year
after year. The Ministers of the present day find it more
convenient to live in private homes, and, indeed, not unfrequently
carry their Cabinets with them. But, under Mr. Mildmay's rule, the
meetings were generally held in the old room at the official
residence. Thrice did the aged messenger move each armchair, now a
little this way and now a little that, and then look at them as
though something of the tendency of the coming meeting might
depend on the comfort of its leading members. If Mr. Mildmay
should find himself to be quite comfortable, so that he could hear
what was said without a struggle to his ear, and see his
colleagues' faces clearly, and feel the fire without burning his
shins, it might be possible that he would not insist upon
resigning. If this were so, how important was the work now
confided to the hands of that aged messenger! When his anxious
eyes had glanced round the room some half a dozen times, when he
had touched each curtain, laid his hand upon every chair, and
dusted certain papers which lay upon a side-table,—and which had
been lying there for two years, and at which no one ever looked or
would look,—he gently crept away and ensconced himself in an easy
chair not far from the door of the chamber. For it might be
necessary to stop the attempt of a rash intruder on those secret
counsels.</p>
<p>Very shortly there was heard the ring of various voices in the
passages,—the voices of men speaking pleasantly, the voices of
men with whom it seemed, from their tone, that things were doing
well in the world. And then a cluster of four or five gentlemen
entered the room. At first sight they seemed to be as ordinary
gentlemen as you shall meet anywhere about Pall Mall on an
afternoon. There was nothing about their outward appearance of the
august wiggery of statecraft, nothing of the ponderous dignity of
ministerial position. That little man in the square-cut coat,—we
may almost call it a shooting-coat,—swinging an umbrella and
wearing no gloves, is no less a person than the Lord
Chancellor,—Lord Weazeling,—who made a hundred thousand pounds
as Attorney-General, and is supposed to be the best lawyer of his
age. He is fifty, but he looks to be hardly over forty, and one
might take him to be, from his appearance,—perhaps a clerk in the
War Office, well-to-do, and popular among his brother-clerks.
Immediately with him is Sir Harry Coldfoot, also a lawyer by
profession, though he has never practised. He has been in the
House for nearly thirty years, and is now at the Home Office. He
is a stout, healthy, grey-haired gentleman, who certainly does not
wear the cares of office on his face. Perhaps, however, no
minister gets more bullied than he by the press, and men say that
he will be very willing to give up to some political enemy the
control of the police, and the onerous duty of judging in all
criminal appeals. Behind these come our friend Mr. Monk, young
Lord Cantrip from the colonies next door, than whom no smarter
young peer now does honour to our hereditary legislature, and Sir
Marmaduke Morecombe, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Why
Sir Marmaduke has always been placed in Mr. Mildmay's Cabinets
nobody ever knew. As Chancellor of the Duchy he has nothing to
do,—and were there anything, he would not do it. He rarely speaks
in the House, and then does not speak well. He is a handsome man,
or would be but for an assumption of grandeur in the carriage of
his eyes, giving to his face a character of pomposity which he
himself well deserves. He was in the Guards when young, and has
been in Parliament since he ceased to be young. It must be
supposed that Mr. Mildmay has found something in him, for he has
been included in three successive liberal Cabinets. He has
probably the virtue of being true to Mr. Mildmay, and of being
duly submissive to one whom he recognises as his superior.</p>
<p>Within two minutes afterwards the Duke followed, with Plantagenet
Palliser. The Duke, as all the world knows, was the Duke of St.
Bungay, the very front and head of the aristocratic old Whigs of
the country,—a man who has been thrice spoken of as Prime
Minister, and who really might have filled the office had he not
known himself to be unfit for it. The Duke has been consulted as
to the making of Cabinets for the last five-and-thirty years, and
is even now not an old man in appearance;—a fussy, popular,
clever, conscientious man, whose digestion has been too good to
make politics a burden to him, but who has thought seriously about
his country, and is one who will be sure to leave memoirs behind
him. He was born in the semi-purple of ministerial influences, and
men say of him that he is honester than his uncle, who was
Canning's friend, but not so great a man as his grandfather, with
whom Fox once quarrelled, and whom Burke loved. Plantagenet
Palliser, himself the heir to a dukedom, was the young Chancellor
of the Exchequer, of whom some statesmen thought much as the
rising star of the age. If industry, rectitude of purpose, and a
certain clearness of intellect may prevail, Planty Pall, as he is
familiarly called, may become a great Minister.</p>
<p>Then came Viscount Thrift by himself;—the First Lord of the
Admiralty, with the whole weight of a new iron-clad fleet upon his
shoulders. He has undertaken the Herculean task of cleansing the
dockyards,—and with it the lesser work of keeping afloat a navy
that may be esteemed by his countrymen to be the best in the
world. And he thinks that he will do both, if only Mr. Mildmay
will not resign;—an industrious, honest, self-denying nobleman,
who works without ceasing from morn to night, and who hopes to
rise in time to high things,—to the translating of Homer,
perhaps, and the wearing of the Garter.</p>
<p>Close behind him there was a ruck of Ministers, with the
much-honoured grey-haired old Premier in the midst of them. There
was Mr. Gresham, the Foreign Minister, said to be the greatest
orator in Europe, on whose shoulders it was thought that the
mantle of Mr. Mildmay would fall,—to be worn, however, quite
otherwise than Mr. Mildmay had worn it. For Mr. Gresham is a man
with no feelings for the past, void of historical association,
hardly with memories,—living altogether for the future which he
is anxious to fashion anew out of the vigour of his own brain.
Whereas, with Mr. Mildmay, even his love of reform is an inherited
passion for an old-world Liberalism. And there was with them Mr.
Legge Wilson, the brother of a peer, Secretary at War, a great
scholar and a polished gentleman, very proud of his position as a
Cabinet Minister, but conscious that he has hardly earned it by
political work. And Lord Plinlimmon is with them, the Comptroller
of India,—of all working lords the most jaunty, the most
pleasant, and the most popular, very good at taking chairs at
dinners, and making becoming speeches at the shortest notice, a
man apparently very free and open in his ways of life,—but
cautious enough in truth as to every step, knowing well how hard
it is to climb and how easy to fall. Mr. Mildmay entered the room
leaning on Lord Plinlimmon's arm, and when he made his way up
among the armchairs upon the rug before the fire, the others
clustered around him with cheering looks and kindly questions.
Then came the Privy Seal, our old friend Lord Brentford,
last,—and I would say least, but that the words of no councillor
could go for less in such an assemblage than will those of Sir
Marmaduke Morecombe, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.</p>
<p>Mr. Mildmay was soon seated in one of the armchairs, while Lord
Plinlimmon leaned against the table close at his elbow. Mr.
Gresham stood upright at the corner of the chimney-piece furthest
from Mr. Mildmay, and Mr. Palliser at that nearest to him. The
Duke took the armchair close at Mr. Mildmay's left hand. Lord
Plinlimmon was, as I have said, leaning against the table, but the
Lord Chancellor, who was next to him, sat upon it. Viscount Thrift
and Mr. Monk occupied chairs on the further side of the table,
near to Mr. Mildmay's end, and Mr. Legge Wilson placed himself at
the head of the table, thus joining them as it were into a body.
The Home Secretary stood before the Lord Chancellor screening him
from the fire, and the Chancellor of the Duchy, after waiting for
a few minutes as though in doubt, took one of the vacant
armchairs. The young lord from the Colonies stood a little behind
the shoulders of his great friend from the Foreign Office; and the
Privy Seal, after moving about for a while uneasily, took a chair
behind the Chancellor of the Duchy. One armchair was thus left
vacant, but there was no other comer.</p>
<p>"It is not so bad as I thought it would be," said the Duke,
speaking aloud, but nevertheless addressing himself specially to
his chief.</p>
<p>"It was bad enough," said Mr. Mildmay, laughing.</p>
<p>"Bad enough indeed," said Sir Marmaduke Morecombe, without any
laughter.</p>
<p>"And such a good bill lost," said Lord Plinlimmon. "The worst of
these failures is, that the same identical bill can never be
brought in again."</p>
<p>"So that if the lost bill was best, the bill that will not be lost
can only be second best," said the Lord Chancellor.</p>
<p>"I certainly did think that after the debate before Easter we
should not have come to shipwreck about the ballot," said Mr.
Mildmay.</p>
<p>"It was brewing for us all along," said Mr. Gresham, who then with
a gesture of his hand and a pressure of his lips withheld words
which he was nearly uttering, and which would not, probably, have
been complimentary to Mr. Turnbull. As it was, he turned half
round and said something to Lord Cantrip which was not audible to
any one else in the room. It was worthy of note, however, that Mr.
Turnbull's name was not once mentioned aloud at that meeting.</p>
<p>"I am afraid it was brewing all along," said Sir Marmaduke
Morecombe gravely.</p>
<p>"Well, gentlemen, we must take it as we get it," said Mr. Mildmay,
still smiling. "And now we must consider what we shall do at
once." Then he paused as though expecting that counsel would come
to him first from one colleague and then from another. But no such
counsel came, and probably Mr. Mildmay did not in the least expect
that it would come.</p>
<p>"We cannot stay where we are, of course," said the Duke. The Duke
was privileged to say as much as that. But though every man in the
room knew that it must be so, no one but the Duke would have said
it, before Mr. Mildmay had spoken plainly himself.</p>
<p>"No," said Mr. Mildmay; "I suppose that we can hardly stay where
we are. Probably none of us wish it, gentlemen." Then he looked
round upon his colleagues, and there came a sort of an assent,
though there were no spoken words. The sound from Sir Marmaduke
Morecombe was louder than that from the others;—but yet from him
it was no more than an attesting grunt. "We have two things to
consider," continued Mr. Mildmay,—and though he spoke in a very
low voice, every word was heard by all present,—"two things
chiefly, that is; the work of the country and the Queen's comfort.
I propose to see her Majesty this afternoon at five,—that is, in
something less than two hours' time, and I hope to be able to tell
the House by seven what has taken place between her Majesty and
me. My friend, his Grace, will do as much in the House of Lords.
If you agree with me, gentlemen, I will explain to the Queen that
it is not for the welfare of the country that we should retain our
places, and I will place your resignations and my own in her
Majesty's hands."</p>
<p>"You will advise her Majesty to send for Lord de Terrier," said
Mr. Gresham.</p>
<p>"Certainly;—there will be no other course open to me."</p>
<p>"Or to her," said Mr. Gresham. To this remark from the rising
Minister of the day, no word of reply was made; but of those
present in the room three or four of the most experienced servants
of the Crown felt that Mr. Gresham had been imprudent. The Duke,
who had. ever been afraid of Mr. Gresham, told Mr. Palliser
afterwards that such an observation should not have been made; and
Sir Harry Coldfoot pondered upon it uneasily, and Sir Marmaduke
Morecombe asked Mr. Mildmay what he thought about it. "Times
change so much, and with the times the feelings of men," said Mr.
Mildmay. But I doubt whether Sir Marmaduke quite understood him.</p>
<p>There was silence in the room for a moment or two after Mr.
Gresham had spoken, and then Mr. Mildmay again addressed his
friends. "Of course it may be possible that my Lord de Terrier may
foresee difficulties, or may find difficulties which will oblige
him, either at once, or after an attempt has been made, to decline
the task which her Majesty will probably commit to him. All of us,
no doubt, know that the arrangement of a government is not the
most easy task in the world; and that it is not made the more easy
by an absence of a majority in the House of Commons."</p>
<p>"He would dissolve, I presume," said the Duke.</p>
<p>"I should say so," continued Mr. Mildmay. "But it may not
improbably come to pass that her Majesty will feel herself obliged
to send again for some one or two of us, that we may tender to her
Majesty the advice which we owe to her;—for me, for instance, or
for my friend the Duke. In such a matter she would be much guided
probably by what Lord de Terrier might have suggested to her.
Should this be so, and should I be consulted, my present feeling
is that we should resume our offices so that the necessary
business of the session should be completed, and that we should
then dissolve Parliament, and thus ascertain the opinion of the
country. In such case, however, we should of course meet again."</p>
<p>"I quite think that the course proposed by Mr. Mildmay will be the
best," said the Duke, who had no doubt already discussed the
matter with his friend the Prime Minister in private. No one else
said a word either of argument or disagreement, and the Cabinet
Council was broken up. The old messenger, who had been asleep in
his chair, stood up and bowed as the Ministers walked by him, and
then went in and rearranged the chairs.</p>
<p>"He has as much idea of giving up as you or I have," said Lord
Cantrip to his friend Mr. Gresham, as they walked arm-in-arm
together from the Treasury Chambers across St. James's Park
towards the clubs.</p>
<p>"I am not sure that he is not right," said Mr. Gresham.</p>
<p>"Do you mean for himself or for the country?" asked Lord Cantrip.</p>
<p>"For his future fame. They who have abdicated and have clung to
their abdication have always lost by it. Cincinnatus was brought
back again, and Charles V. is felt to have been foolish. The
peaches of retired ministers of which we hear so often have
generally been cultivated in a constrained seclusion;—or at least
the world so believes." They were talking probably of Mr. Mildmay,
as to whom some of his colleagues had thought it probable, knowing
that he would now resign, that he would have to-day declared his
intention of laying aside for ever the cares of office.</p>
<p>Mr. Monk walked home alone, and as he went there was something of
a feeling of disappointment at heart, which made him ask himself
whether Mr. Turnbull might not have been right in rebuking him for
joining the Government. But this, I think, was in no way due to
Mr. Mildmay's resignation, but rather to a conviction on Mr.
Monk's part that that he had contributed but little to his
country's welfare by sitting in Mr. Mildmay's Cabinet.</p>
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