<p><SPAN name="75"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER LXXV</h3>
<h3>P. P. C.<br/> </h3>
<p>On the Thursday morning before Phineas went to Mr. Monk, a
gentleman called upon him at his lodgings. Phineas requested the
servant to bring up the gentleman's name, but tempted perhaps by a
shilling the girl brought up the gentleman instead. It was Mr.
Quintus Slide from the office of the "Banner of the People."</p>
<p>"Mr. Finn," said Quintus, with his hand extended, "I have come to
offer you the calumet of peace." Phineas certainly desired no such
calumet. But to refuse a man's hand is to declare active war after
a fashion which men do not like to adopt except on deliberation.
He had never cared a straw for the abuse which Mr. Slide had
poured upon him, and now he gave his hand to the man of letters.
But he did not sit down, nor did he offer a seat to Mr. Slide. "I
know that as a man of sense who knows the world, you will accept
the calumet of peace," continued Mr. Slide.</p>
<p>"I don't know why I should be asked particularly to accept war or
peace," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Well, Mr. Finn,—I don't often quote the Bible; but those who are
not for us must be against us. You will agree to that. Now that
you've freed yourself from the iniquities of that sink of
abomination in Downing Street, I look upon you as a man again."</p>
<p>"Upon my word you are very kind."</p>
<p>"As a man and also a brother. I suppose you know that I've got the
<i>Banner</i> into my own 'ands now." Phineas was obliged to explain
that he had not hitherto been made acquainted with this great
literary and political secret. "Oh dear, yes, altogether so. We've
got rid of old Rusty as I used to call him. He wouldn't go the
pace, and so we stripped him. He's doing the <i>West of England Art
Journal</i> now, and he 'angs out down at Bristol."</p>
<p>"I hope he'll succeed, Mr. Slide."</p>
<p>"He'll earn his wages. He's a man who will always earn his wages,
but nothing more. Well, now, Mr. Finn, I will just offer you one
word of apology for our little severities."</p>
<p>"Pray do nothing of the kind."</p>
<p>"Indeed I shall. Dooty is dooty. There was some things printed
which were a little rough, but if one isn't a little rough there
ain't no flavour. Of course I wrote 'em. You know my 'and, I dare
say."</p>
<p>"I only remember that there was some throwing of mud."</p>
<p>"Just so. But mud don't break any bones; does it? When you turned
against us I had to be down on you, and I was down upon
you;—that's just about all of it. Now you're coming among us
again, and so I come to you with a calumet of peace."</p>
<p>"But I am not coming among you."</p>
<p>"Yes you are, Finn, and bringing Monk with you." It was now
becoming very disagreeable, and Phineas was beginning to perceive
that it would soon be his turn to say something rough. "Now I'll
tell you what my proposition is. If you'll do us two leaders a
week through the session, you shall have a cheque for £16 on the
last day of every month. If that's not honester money than what
you got in Downing Street, my name is not Quintus Slide."</p>
<p>"Mr. Slide," said Phineas,—and then he paused.</p>
<p>"If we are to come to business, drop the Mister. It makes things
go so much easier."</p>
<p>"We are not to come to business, and I do not want things to go
easy. I believe you said some things of me in your newspaper that
were very scurrilous."</p>
<p>"What of that? If you mind that sort of thing—"</p>
<p>"I did not regard it in the least. You are quite welcome to
continue it. I don't doubt but you will continue it. But you are
not welcome to come here afterwards."</p>
<p>"Do you mean to turn me out?"</p>
<p>"Just that. You printed a heap of lies—"</p>
<p>"Lies, Mr. Finn! Did you say lies, sir?"</p>
<p>"I said lies;—lies;—lies!" And Phineas walked over at him as
though he were going to pitch him instantly out of the window.
"You may go and write as many more as you like. It is your trade,
and you must do it or starve. But do not come to me again." Then
he opened the door and stood with it in his hand.</p>
<p>"Very well, sir. I shall know how to punish this."</p>
<p>"Exactly. But if you please you'll go and do your punishment at
the office of the <i>Banner</i>,—unless you like to try it here. You
want to kick me and spit at me, but you will prefer to do it in
print."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said Quintus Slide. "I shall prefer to do it in
print,—though I must own that the temptation to adopt the manual
violence of a ruffian is great, very great, very great indeed."
But he resisted the temptation and walked down the stairs,
concocting his article as he went.</p>
<p>Mr. Quintus Slide did not so much impede the business of his day
but what Phineas was with Mr. Monk by two, and in his place in the
House when prayers were read at four. As he sat in his place,
conscious of the work that was before him, listening to the
presentation of petitions, and to the formal reading of certain
notices of motions, which with the asking of sundry questions
occupied over half an hour, he looked back and remembered
accurately his own feelings on a certain night on which he had
intended to get up and address the House. The ordeal before him
had then been so terrible, that it had almost obliterated for the
moment his senses of hearing and of sight. He had hardly been able
to perceive what had been going on around him, and had vainly
endeavoured to occupy himself in recalling to his memory the words
which he wished to pronounce. When the time for pronouncing them
had come, he had found himself unable to stand upon his legs. He
smiled as he recalled all this in his memory, waiting impatiently
for the moment in which he might rise. His audience was assured to
him now, and he did not fear it. His opportunity for utterance was
his own, and even the Speaker could not deprive him of it. During
these minutes he thought not at all of the words that he was to
say. He had prepared his matter but had prepared no words. He knew
that words would come readily enough to him, and that he had
learned the task of turning his thoughts quickly into language
while standing with a crowd of listeners around him,—as a
practised writer does when seated in his chair. There was no
violent beating at his heart now, no dimness of the eyes, no
feeling that the ground was turning round under his feet. If only
those weary vain questions would get themselves all asked, so that
he might rise and begin the work of the night. Then there came the
last thought as the House was hushed for his rising. What was the
good of it all, when he would never have an opportunity of
speaking there again?</p>
<p>But not on that account would he be slack in his endeavour now. He
would be listened to once at least, not as a subaltern of the
Government but as the owner of a voice prominent in opposition to
the Government. He had been taught by Mr. Monk that that was the
one place in the House in which a man with a power of speaking
could really enjoy pleasure without alloy. He would make the
trial,—once, if never again. Things had so gone with him that the
rostrum was his own, and a House crammed to overflowing was there
to listen to him. He had given up his place in order that he might
be able to speak his mind, and had become aware that many intended
to listen to him while he spoke. He had observed that the rows of
strangers were thick in the galleries, that peers were standing in
the passages, and that over the reporter's head, the ribbons of
many ladies were to be seen through the bars of their cage.
Yes;—for this once he would have an audience.</p>
<p>He spoke for about an hour, and while he was speaking he knew
nothing about himself, whether he was doing it well or ill.
Something of himself he did say soon after he had commenced,—not
quite beginning with it, as though his mind had been laden with
the matter. He had, he said, found himself compelled to renounce
his happy allegiance to the First Lord of the Treasury, and to
quit the pleasant company in which, humble as had been his place,
he had been allowed to sit and act, by his unfortunate conviction
in this great subject. He had been told, he said, that it was a
misfortune in itself for one so young as he to have convictions.
But his Irish birth and Irish connection had brought this
misfortune of his country so closely home to him that he had found
the task of extricating himself from it to be impossible. Of what
further he said, speaking on that terribly unintelligible subject,
a tenant-right proposed for Irish farmers, no English reader will
desire to know much. Irish subjects in the House of Commons are
interesting or are dull, are debated before a crowded audience
composed of all who are leaders in the great world of London, or
before empty benches, in accordance with the importance of the
moment and the character of the debate. For us now it is enough to
know that to our hero was accorded that attention which orators
love,—which will almost make an orator if it can be assured. A
full House with a promise of big type on the next morning would
wake to eloquence the propounder of a Canadian grievance, or the
mover of an Indian budget.</p>
<p>Phineas did not stir out of the House till the division was over,
having agreed with Mr. Monk that they two would remain through it
all and hear everything that was to be said. Mr. Gresham had
already spoken, and to Mr. Palliser was confided the task of
winding up the argument for the Government. Mr. Robson spoke also,
greatly enlivening the tedium of the evening, and to Mr. Monk was
permitted the privilege of a final reply. At two o'clock the
division came, and the Ministry were beaten by a majority of
twenty-three. "And now," said Mr. Monk, as he again walked home
with Phineas, "the pity is that we are not a bit nearer
tenant-right than we were before."</p>
<p>"But we are nearer to it."</p>
<p>"In one sense, yes. Such a debate and such a majority will make
men think. But no;—think is too high a word; as a rule men don't
think. But it will make them believe that there is something in
it. Many who before regarded legislation on the subject as
chimerical, will now fancy that it is only dangerous, or perhaps
not more than difficult. And so in time it will come to be looked
on as among the things possible, then among the things
probable;—and so at last it will be ranged in the list of those
few measures which the country requires as being absolutely
needed. That is the way in which public opinion is made."</p>
<p>"It is no loss of time," said Phineas, "to have taken the first
great step in making it."</p>
<p>"The first great step was taken long ago," said Mr. Monk,—"taken
by men who were looked upon as revolutionary demagogues, almost as
traitors, because they took it. But it is a great thing to take
any step that leads us onwards."</p>
<p>Two days after this Mr. Gresham declared his intention of
dissolving the House because of the adverse division which had
been produced by Mr. Monk's motion, but expressed a wish to be
allowed to carry an Irish Reform Bill through Parliament before he
did so. He explained how expedient this would be, but declared at
the same time that if any strong opposition were made, he would
abandon the project. His intention simply was to pass with regard
to Ireland a measure which must be passed soon, and which ought to
be passed before a new election took place. The bill was ready,
and should be read for the first time on the next night, if the
House were willing. The House was willing, though there were very
many recalcitrant Irish members. The Irish members made loud
opposition, and then twitted Mr. Gresham with his promise that he
would not go on with his bill, if opposition were made. But,
nevertheless, he did go on, and the measure was hurried through
the two Houses in a week. Our hero who still sat for Loughshane,
but who was never to sit for Loughshane again, gave what
assistance he could to the Government, and voted for the measure
which deprived Loughshane for ever of its parliamentary honours.</p>
<p>"And very dirty conduct I think it was," said Lord Tulla, when he
discussed the subject with his agent. "After being put in for the
borough twice, almost free of expense, it was very dirty." It
never occurred to Lord Tulla that a member of Parliament might
feel himself obliged to vote on such a subject in accordance with
his judgment.</p>
<p>This Irish Reform Bill was scrambled through the two Houses, and
then the session was over. The session was over, and they who knew
anything of the private concerns of Mr. Phineas Finn were aware
that he was about to return to Ireland, and did not intend to
reappear on the scene which had known him so well for the last
five years. "I cannot tell you how sad it makes me," said Mr.
Monk.</p>
<p>"And it makes me sad too," said Phineas. "I try to shake off the
melancholy, and tell myself from day to day that it is unmanly.
But it gets the better of me just at present."</p>
<p>"I feel quite certain that you will come back among us again,"
said Mr. Monk.</p>
<p>"Everybody tells me so; and yet I feel quite certain that I shall
never come back,—never come back with a seat in Parliament. As my
old tutor, Low, has told me scores of times, I began at the wrong
end. Here I am, thirty years of age, and I have not a shilling in
the world, and I do not know how to earn one."</p>
<p>"Only for me you would still be receiving ever so much a year, and
all would be pleasant," said Mr. Monk.</p>
<p>"But how long would it have lasted? The first moment that Daubeny
got the upper hand I should have fallen lower than I have fallen
now. If not this year, it would have been the next. My only
comfort is in this,—that I have done the thing myself, and have
not been turned out." To the very last, however, Mr. Monk
continued to express his opinion that Phineas would come back,
declaring that he had known no instance of a young man who had
made himself useful in Parliament, and then had been allowed to
leave it in early life.</p>
<p>Among those of whom he was bound to take a special leave, the
members of the family of Lord Brentford were, of course, the
foremost. He had already heard of the reconciliation of Miss
Effingham and Lord Chiltern, and was anxious to offer his
congratulation to both of them. And it was essential to him that
he should see Lady Laura. To her he wrote a line, saying how much
he hoped that he should be able to bid her adieu, and a time was
fixed for his coming at which she knew that she would meet him
alone. But, as chance ruled it, he came upon the two lovers
together, and then remembered that he had hardly ever before been
in the same room with both of them at the same time.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Finn, what a beautiful speech you made. I read every word
of it," said Violet.</p>
<p>"And I didn't even look at it, old fellow," said Chiltern, getting
up and putting his arm on the other's shoulder in a way that was
common with him when he was quite intimate with the friend near
him.</p>
<p>"Laura went down and heard it," said Violet. "I could not do that,
because I was tied to my aunt. You can't conceive how dutiful I am
during this last month."</p>
<p>"And is it to be in a month, Chiltern?" said Phineas.</p>
<p>"She says so. She arranges everything,—in concert with my father.
When I threw up the sponge, I simply asked for a long day. 'A long
day, my lord,' I said. But my father and Violet between them
refused me any mercy."</p>
<p>"You do not believe him," said Violet.</p>
<p>"Not a word. If I did he would want to see me on the coast of
Flanders again, I don't doubt. I have come to congratulate you
both."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Mr. Finn," said Violet, taking his hand with hearty
kindness. "I should not have been quite happy without one nice
word from you."</p>
<p>"I shall try and make the best of it," said Chiltern. "But, I say,
you'll come over and ride Bonebreaker again. He's down there at
the Bull, and I've taken a little box close by. I can't stand the
governor's county for hunting."</p>
<p>"And will your wife go down to Willingford?"</p>
<p>"Of course she will, and ride to hounds a great deal closer than I
can ever do. Mind you come, and if there's anything in the stable
fit to carry you, you shall have it."</p>
<p>Then Phineas had to explain that he had come to bid them farewell,
and that it was not at all probable that he should ever be able to
see Willingford again in the hunting season. "I don't suppose that
I shall make either of you quite understand it, but I have got to
begin again. The chances are that I shall never see another
foxhound all my life."</p>
<p>"Not in Ireland!" exclaimed Lord Chiltern.</p>
<p>"Not unless I should have to examine one as a witness. I have
nothing before me but downright hard work; and a great deal of
that must be done before I can hope to earn a shilling."</p>
<p>"But you are so clever," said Violet. "Of course it will come
quickly."</p>
<p>"I do not mean to be impatient about it, nor yet unhappy," said
Phineas. "Only hunting won't be much in my line."</p>
<p>"And will you leave London altogether?" Violet asked.</p>
<p>"Altogether. I shall stick to one club,—Brooks's; but I shall
take my name off all the others."</p>
<p>"What a deuce of a nuisance!" said Lord Chiltern.</p>
<p>"I have no doubt you will be very happy," said Violet; "and you'll
be a Lord Chancellor in no time. But you won't go quite yet."</p>
<p>"Next Sunday."</p>
<p>"You will return. You must be here for our wedding;—indeed you
must. I will not be married unless you do."</p>
<p>Even this, however, was impossible. He must go on Sunday, and must
return no more. Then he made his little farewell speech, which he
could not deliver without some awkward stuttering. He would think
of her on the day of her marriage, and pray that she might be
happy. And he would send her a little trifle before he went, which
he hoped she would wear in remembrance of their old friendship.</p>
<p>"She shall wear it, whatever it is, or I'll know the reason why,"
said Chiltern.</p>
<p>"Hold your tongue, you rough bear!" said Violet. "Of course I'll
wear it. And of course I'll think of the giver. I shall have many
presents, but few that I will think of so much." Then Phineas left
the room, with his throat so full that he could not speak another
word.</p>
<p>"He is still broken-hearted about you," said the favoured lover as
soon as his rival had left the room.</p>
<p>"It is not that," said Violet. "He is broken-hearted about
everything. The whole world is vanishing away from him. I wish he
could have made up his mind to marry that German woman with all
the money." It must be understood, however, that Phineas had never
spoken a word to any one as to the offer which the German woman
had made to him.</p>
<p>It was on the morning of the Sunday on which he was to leave
London that he saw Lady Laura. He had asked that it might be so,
in order that he might then have nothing more upon his mind. He
found her quite alone, and he could see by her eyes that she had
been weeping. As he looked at her, remembering that it was not yet
six years since he had first been allowed to enter that room, he
could not but perceive how very much she was altered in
appearance. Then she had been three-and-twenty, and had not looked
to be a day older. Now she might have been taken to be nearly
forty, so much had her troubles preyed upon her spirit, and eaten
into the vitality of her youth. "So you have come to say
good-bye," she said, smiling as she rose to meet him.</p>
<p>"Yes, Lady Laura;—to say good-bye. Not for ever, I hope, but
probably for long."</p>
<p>"No, not for ever. At any rate, we will not think so." Then she
paused; but he was silent, sitting with his hat dangling in his
two hands, and his eyes fixed upon the floor. "Do you know, Mr.
Finn," she continued, "that sometimes I am very angry with myself
about you."</p>
<p>"Then it must be because you have been too kind to me."</p>
<p>"It is because I fear that I have done much to injure you. From
the first day that I knew you,—do you remember, when we were
talking here, in this very room, about the beginning of the Reform
Bill;—from that day I wished that you should come among us and be
one of us."</p>
<p>"I have been with you, to my infinite satisfaction,—while it
lasted."</p>
<p>"But it has not lasted, and now I fear that it has done you harm."</p>
<p>"Who can say whether it has been for good or evil? But of this I
am sure you will be certain,—that I am very grateful to you for
all the goodness you have shown me." Then again he was silent.</p>
<p>She did not know what it was that she wanted, but she did desire
some expression from his lips that should be warmer than an
expression of gratitude. An expression of love,—of existing
love,—she would have felt to be an insult, and would have treated
it as such. Indeed, she knew that from him no such insult could
come. But she was in that morbid, melancholy state of mind which
requires the excitement of more than ordinary sympathy, even
though that sympathy be all painful; and I think that she would
have been pleased had he referred to the passion for herself which
he had once expressed. If he would have spoken of his love, and of
her mistake, and have made some half-suggestion as to what might
have been their lives had things gone differently,—though she
would have rebuked him even for that,—still it would have
comforted her. But at this moment, though he remembered much that
had passed between them, he was not even thinking of the Braes of
Linter. All that had taken place four years ago;—and there had
been so many other things since which had moved him even more than
that! "You have heard what I have arranged for myself?" she said
at last.</p>
<p>"Your father has told me that you are going to Dresden."</p>
<p>"Yes;—he will accompany me,—coming home of course for
Parliament. It is a sad break-up, is it not? But the lawyer says
that if I remain here I may be subject to very disagreeable
attempts from Mr. Kennedy to force me to go back again. It is odd,
is it not, that he should not understand how impossible it is?"</p>
<p>"He means to do his duty."</p>
<p>"I believe so. But he becomes more stern every day to those who
are with him. And then, why should I remain here? What is there to
tempt me? As a woman separated from her husband I cannot take an
interest in those things which used to charm me. I feel that I am
crushed and quelled by my position, even though there is no
disgrace in it."</p>
<p>"No disgrace, certainly," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"But I am nobody,—or worse than nobody."</p>
<p>"And I also am going to be a nobody," said Phineas, laughing.</p>
<p>"Ah; you are a man and will get over it, and you have many years
before you will begin to be growing old. I am growing old already.
Yes, I am. I feel it, and know it, and see it. A woman has a fine
game to play; but then she is so easily bowled out, and the term
allowed to her is so short."</p>
<p>"A man's allowance of time may be short too," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"But he can try his hand again." Then there was another pause. "I
had thought, Mr. Finn, that you would have married," she said in
her very lowest voice.</p>
<p>"You knew all my hopes and fears about that."</p>
<p>"I mean that you would have married Madame Goesler."</p>
<p>"What made you think that, Lady Laura?"</p>
<p>"Because I saw that she liked you, and because such a marriage
would have been so suitable. She has all that you want. You know
what they say of her now?"</p>
<p>"What do they say?"</p>
<p>"That the Duke of Omnium offered to make her his wife, and that
she refused him for your sake."</p>
<p>"There is nothing that people won't say;—nothing on earth," said
Phineas. Then he got up and took his leave of her. He also wanted
to part from her with some special expression of affection, but he
did not know how to choose his words. He had wished that some
allusion should be made, not to the Braes of Linter, but to the
close confidence which had so long existed between them; but he
found that the language to do this properly was wanting to him.
Had the opportunity arisen he would have told her now the whole
story of Mary Flood Jones; but the opportunity did not come, and
he left her, never having mentioned the name of his Mary or having
hinted at his engagement to any one of his friends in London. "It
is better so," he said to himself. "My life in Ireland is to be a
new life, and why should I mix two things together that will be so
different?"</p>
<p>He was to dine at his lodgings, and then leave them for good at
eight o'clock. He had packed up everything before he went to
Portman Square, and he returned home only just in time to sit down
to his solitary mutton chop. But as he sat down he saw a small
note addressed to himself lying on the table among the crowd of
books, letters, and papers, of which he had still to make
disposal. It was a very small note in an envelope of a peculiar
tint of pink, and he knew the handwriting well. The blood mounted
all over his face as he took it up, and he hesitated for a moment
before he opened it. It could not be that the offer should be
repeated to him. Slowly, hardly venturing at first to look at the
enclosure, he opened it, and the words which it contained were as
follows:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p>I learn that you are going to-day, and I write a word which you
will receive just as you are departing. It is to say merely
this,—that when I left you the other day I was angry, not with
you, but with myself. Let me wish you all good wishes and that
prosperity which I know you will deserve, and which I think you
will win.</p>
<p class="ind10">Yours very truly,</p>
<p class="ind15">M. M. G.</p>
<p class="noindent"><i>Sunday morning</i>.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Should he put off his journey and go to her this very evening and
claim her as his friend? The question was asked and answered in a
moment. Of course he would not go to her. Were he to do so there
would be only one possible word for him to say, and that word
should certainly never be spoken. But he wrote to her a reply,
shorter even than her own short note.<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p>Thanks, dear friend. I do not doubt but that you and I understand
each other thoroughly, and that each trusts the other for good
wishes and honest intentions.</p>
<p class="ind10">Always yours,</p>
<p class="ind15">P. F.</p>
<p class="noindent">I write these as I am starting.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>When he had written this, he kept it till the last moment in his
hand, thinking that he would not send it. But as he slipped into
the cab, he gave the note to his late landlady to post.</p>
<p>At the station Bunce came to him to say a word of farewell, and
Mrs. Bunce was on his arm.</p>
<p>"Well done, Mr. Finn, well done," said Bunce. "I always knew there
was a good drop in you."</p>
<p>"You always told me I should ruin myself in Parliament, and so I
have," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Not at all. It takes a deal to ruin a man if he's got the right
sperrit. I've better hopes of you now than ever I had in the old
days when you used to be looking out for Government place;—and
Mr. Monk has tried that too. I thought he would find the iron too
heavy for him." "God bless you, Mr. Finn," said Mrs. Bunce with
her handkerchief up to her eyes. "There's not one of 'em I ever
had as lodgers I've cared about half as much as I did for you."
Then they shook hands with him through the window, and the train
was off.</p>
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