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<h2> II. </h2>
<p>Philip was going into his chambers in Douglas that morning when he came
upon a messenger from Government House in stately intercourse with his
servant. His Excellency begged him to step up to Onchan immediately, and
to remain for lunch.</p>
<p>The Governor's carriage was at the door, and Philip got into it. He was
not excited; he remembered his agitation at the Governor's former message
and smiled. On leaving his own rooms he had not forgotten to order supper
for eight o'clock precisely.</p>
<p>He found the Governor polite and expansive as usual. He was sitting in a
room hung round with ponderous portraits of former Governors, most of them
in frills and ruffles, and one vast picture of King George.</p>
<p>"You will have heard," he said, "that our northern Deemster is dead."</p>
<p>"Is he so?" said Philip. "I saw him at one o'clock yesterday."</p>
<p>"He died at two?" said the Governor.</p>
<p>"Poor man, poor man!" said Philip.</p>
<p>That was all. Not a tremble of the eyelid, not a quiver of the lip.</p>
<p>"You are aware that the office is a Crown appointment?" said the Governor.
"Applications are made, you know, to the Home Office, but it is probable
that my advice may be asked by the Secretary in his selection. I may,
perhaps, be of use to a candidate."</p>
<p>Philip gave no sign, and the Governor shifted his leg and continued with a
smile, "Certainly that appears to be the impression of your brother
advocates, Mr. Christian; they are about me already, like wasps at a
glue-pot. I will not question but you'll soon be one of them."</p>
<p>Philip made a gesture of protestation, and the Governor waved his hand and
smiled again. "Oh, I shan't blame you; young men are ambitious. It is
natural that they should wish to advance themselves in life. In your case,
too, if I may say so, there is the further spur of a desire to recover the
position your family once held, and lately lost through the mistake or
misfortune of your father."</p>
<p>Philip bowed gravely, but said nothing.</p>
<p>"That, no doubt," said the Governor, "would be a fact in your favour. The
great fact against you would be that you are still so young. Let me see,
is it eight-and twenty?"</p>
<p>"Twenty-six," said Philip.</p>
<p>"No more? Only six-and-twenty? And then, successful as your career has
been thus far—perhaps I should say distinguished or even brilliant—you
are still unsettled in life."</p>
<p>Philip asked if his Excellency meant that he was still unmarried.</p>
<p>"And if I do," the Governor replied, with pretended severity, "and if I
do, don't smile too broadly, young man. You ought to know by this time
that the personal equation counts for something in this old-fashioned
island of yours. Now, the late Deemster was an example which it would be
perilous to repeat. If it were repeated, I know who would hear of the
blunder every day of his life, and it wouldn't be the Home Secretary
either. Deemster Mylrea was called upon to punish the crimes of drink, and
he was himself a drunkard; to try the offences of sensuality, and he was
himself a sensualist."</p>
<p>Philip could not help it—he gave a little crack of laughter.</p>
<p>"To be sure," said the Governor hastily, "you are in no danger of his
excesses; but you will not be a safe candidate to recommend until you have
placed yourself to all appearances out of the reach of them. 'Beware of
these Christians,' said the great Derby to his son; and pardon me if I
revive the warning to a Christian himself."</p>
<p>The colour came strong into Philip's face. Even at that moment he felt
angry at so coarse a version of his father's fault.</p>
<p>"You mean," said he, "that we are apt to marry unwisely."</p>
<p>"I do that," said the Governor.</p>
<p>"There's no telling," said Philip, with a faint crack of his fingers; and
the Governor frowned a little—the pock-marks seemed to spread.</p>
<p>"Of course, all this is outside my duty, Mr. Christian—I needn't
tell you that; but I feel an interest in you, and I've done you some
services already, though naturally a young man will think he has done
everything for himself. Ah!" he said, rising from his seat at the sound of
a gong, "luncheon is ready. Let us join the ladies." Then, with one hand
on Philip's shoulder familiarly, "only a word more, Mr. Christian. Send in
your application immediately, and—take the advice of an old fiddler—marry
as soon afterwards as may be. But with your prospects it would be a sin
not to walk carefully. If she's English, so much the better; but if she's
Manx—take care."</p>
<p>Philip lunched with the Governor's wife, who told him she remembered his
grandfather; also with his unmarried daughter, who said she had heard him
speak for the fishermen at Peel. An official "At home," the last of the
summer, was to be held in the garden that afternoon, and Philip was
invited to remain. He did so, and thereby witnessed the assaults of the
wasps at the glue-pot. They buzzed about the Governor, they buzzed about
his wife, they buzzed about his dog and about a tame deer, which took
grapes from the hands of the guests.</p>
<p>An elderly gentleman, sitting alone in a carriage, drove up to the lawn.
It was Peter Christian Ballawhaine, looking feebler, whiter, and more
splay-footed than before. Philip stepped up to his uncle and offered his
arm to alight by. But the Ballawhaine brushed it aside and pushed through
to the Governor, to whom he talked incessantly for some minutes of his son
Ross, saying he had sent for him and would like to present him to his
Excellency.</p>
<p>If Philip lacked enjoyment of the scene, if his face lacked heart and
happiness, it was not the fault of his host. "Will you not take Lady
So-and-so to have tea?" the Governor would say; and presently Philip found
himself in a circle of official wifedom, whose husbands had been made
Knights by the Queen, and themselves made Ladies by—God knows whom.
The talk was of the late Deemster.</p>
<p>"Such a life! It's a mercy he lasted so long!"</p>
<p>"A pity, you mean, my dear, not to be hard on him either."</p>
<p>"Poor thing! He ought to have married. Such a man wants a wife to look
after him. Don't you think so, Mr. Christian?"</p>
<p>"Why," said a white-haired dame, "have you never heard of his great
romance?"</p>
<p>"Ah! tell us of that. Who was the lady?"</p>
<p>"The lady——" there was a pause; the white-haired dame coughed,
smiled, closed her little ferret eyes, dropped her voice, and said with
mock gravity, "The lady was the blacksmith's daughter, dearest." And then
there was a merry trill of laughter.</p>
<p>Philip felt sick, bowed to his hosts, and left. As he was going off, his
uncle intercepted him, holding out both hands.</p>
<p>"How's this, Philip? You never come to Ballawhaine now. I see! Oh, I see!
Too busy with the women to remember an old man. They're all talking of
you. Putting the comather on them, eh? I know, I know; don't tell me."</p>
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