Phineas Finn, the Irish Member

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Phineas Finn, the Irish Member Page 15

by Anthony Trollope


  ‘What does he do when we leave London?’ Lord Brentford once said to his daughter.

  ‘He stays here, papa.’

  ‘But he hunts still?’

  ‘Yes, he hunts, – and he has a room somewhere at at inn, down in Northamptonshire. But he is mostly in London. They have trains on purpose.’24

  ‘What a life for my son!’ said the Earl. ‘What a life! Of course no decent person will let him into his house.’ Lady Laura did not know what to say to this, for in truth Lord Chiltern was not fond of staying at the houses of persons whom the Earl would have called decent.

  General Effingham, the father of Violet, and Lord Brentford had been the closest and dearest of friends. They had been young men in the same regiment, and through life each had confided in the other. When the General's only son, then a youth of seventeen, was killed in one of our grand New Zealand wars,25 the bereaved father and the Earl had been together for a month in their sorrow. At that time Lord Chiltern's career had still been open to hope, – and the one man had contrasted his lot with the other. General Effingham lived long enough to hear the Earl declare to him that his lot was the happier of the two. Now the General was dead, and Violet, the daughter of a second wife, was all that was left of the Effinghams. This second wife had been a Miss Plummer, a lady from the city with much money, whose sister had married Lord Baldock. Violet in this way had fallen to the care of the Baldock people, and not into the hands of her father's friends. But, as the reader will have surmised, she had ideas of her own of emancipating herself from Baldock thraldom.

  Twice before that last terrible affair at Newmarket, before the quarrel between the father and the son had been complete, Lord Brentford had said a word to his daughter, – merely a word, – of his son in connection with Miss Effingham.

  ‘If he thinks of it I shall be glad to see him on the subject. You may tell him so.’ That had been the first word. He had just then resolved that the affair in Paris should be regarded as condoned, – as among the things to be forgotten. ‘She is too good for him; but if he asks her let him tell her everything.’ That had been the second word, and had been spoken immediately subsequent to a payment of twelve thousand pounds made by the Earl towards the settlement of certain Doncaster accounts. Lady Laura in negotiating for the money had been very eloquent in describing some honest, – or shall we say chivalric, – sacrifice which had brought her brother into this special difficulty. Since that the Earl had declined to interest himself in his son's matrimonial affairs; and when Lady Laura had once again mentioned the matter, declaring her belief that it would be the means of saving her brother Oswald, the Earl had desired her to be silent. ‘Would you wish to destroy the poor child?’ he had said. Nevertheless Lady Laura felt sure that if she were to go to her father with a positive statement that Oswald and Violet were engaged, he would relent and would accept Violet as his daughter. As for the payment of Lord Chiltern's present debts; – she had a little scheme of her own about that.

  Miss Effingham, who had been already two days in Portman Square, had not as yet seen Lord Chiltern. She knew that he lived in the house, – that is, that he slept there, and probably eat his breakfast in some apartment of his own; – but she knew also that the habits of the house would not by any means make it necessary that they should meet. Laura and her brother probably saw each other daily, – but they never went into society together, and did not know the same sets of people. When she had announced to Lady Baldock her intention of spending the first fortnight of her London season with her friend Lady Laura, Lady Baldock had as a matter of course – ‘jumped upon her,’ as Miss Effingham would herself call it.

  ‘You are going to the house of the worst reprobate in all England,’ said Lady Baldock.

  ‘What; – dear old Lord Brentford, whom papa loved so well!’

  ‘I mean Lord Chiltern, who, only last year, – murdered a man!’

  ‘That is not true, aunt.’

  ‘There is worse than that, – much worse. He is always – tipsy, and always gambling, and always – But it is quite unfit that I should speak a word more to you about such a man as Lord Chiltern. His name ought never to be mentioned.’

  ‘Then why did you mention it, aunt?’

  Lady Baldock's process of jumping upon her niece, – in which I think the aunt had generally the worst of the exercise, – went on for some time, but Violet of course carried her point.

  ‘If she marries him there will be an end of everything,’ said Lady Baldock to her daughter Augusta.

  ‘She has more sense than that, mamma,’ said Augusta.

  ‘I don't think she has any sense at all,’ said Lady Baldock; – ‘not in the least. I do wish my poor sister had lived; – I do indeed.’

  Lord Chiltern was now in the room with Violet, – immediately upon that conversation between Violet and his sister as to the expediency of Violet becoming his wife. Indeed his entrance had interrupted the conversation before it was over. ‘I am so glad to see you, Miss Effingham,’ he said. ‘I came in thinking that I might find you.’

  ‘Here I am, as large as life,’ she said, getting up from her corner on the sofa and giving him her hand. ‘Laura and I have been discussing the affairs of the nation for the last two days, and have nearly brought our discussion to an end.’ She could not help looking, first at his eye and then at his hand, not as wanting evidence to the truth of the statement which his sister had made, but because the idea of a drunkard's eye and a drunkard's hand had been brought before her mind. Lord Chiltern's hand was like the hand of any other man, but there was something in his eye that almost frightened her. It looked as though he would not hesitate to wring his wife's neck round, if ever he should be brought to threaten to do so. And then his eye, like the rest of him, was red. No; – she did not think that she could ever bring herself to marry him. Why take a venture that was double-dangerous, when there were so many ventures open to her, apparently with very little of danger attached to them? ‘If it should ever be that I loved him, I would do it all the same,’ she said to herself.

  ‘If I did not come and see you here, I suppose that I should never see you,’ said he, seating himself. ‘I do not often go to parties, and when I do you are not likely to be there.’

  ‘We might make our little arrangements for meeting,’ said she, laughing. ‘My aunt, Lady Baldock, is going to have an evening next week.’

  ‘The servants would be ordered to put me out of the house.’

  ‘Oh no. You can tell her that I invited you.’

  ‘I don't think that Oswald and Lady Baldock are great friends,’ said Lady Laura.

  ‘Or he might come and take you and me to the Zoo on Sunday. That's the proper sort of thing for a brother and a friend to do.’

  ‘I hate that place in the Regent's Park,’ said Lord Chiltern.

  ‘When were you there last?’ demanded Miss Effingham.

  ‘When I came home once from Eton. But I won't go again till I can come home from Eton again.’ Then he altered his tone as he continued to speak. ‘People would look at me as if I were the wildest beast in the whole collection.’

  ‘Then,’ said Violet, ‘if you won't go to Lady Baldock's or to the Zoo, we must confine ourselves to Laura's drawing-room; – unless, indeed, you like to take me to the top of the Monument.’26

  ‘I'll take you to the top of the Monument with pleasure.’

  ‘What do you say, Laura?’

  ‘I say that you are a foolish girl,’ said Lady Laura, ‘and that I will have nothing to do with such a scheme.’

  ‘Then there is nothing for it but that you should come here; and as you live in the house, and as I am sure to be here every morning, and as you have no possible occupation for your time, and as we have nothing particular to do with ours, – I daresay I shan't see you again before I go to my aunt's in Berkeley Square.’

  ‘Very likely not,’ he said.

  ‘And why not, Oswald?’ asked his sister.

  He passed his hand over his face
before he answered her. ‘Because she and I run in different grooves now, and are not such meet playfellows as we used to be once. Do you remember my taking you away right through Saulsby Wood once on the old pony, and not bringing you back till tea-time, and Miss Blink going and telling my father?’

  ‘Do I remember it? I think it was the happiest day in my life. His pockets were crammed full of gingerbread and Everton toffy, and we had three bottles of lemonade slung on to the pony's saddlebows. I thought it was a pity that we should ever come back.’

  ‘It was a pity,’ said Lord Chiltern.

  ‘But, nevertheless, substantially necessary,’ said Lady Laura.

  ‘Failing our power of reproducing the toffy, I suppose it was,’ said Violet.

  ‘You were not Miss Effingham then,’ said Lord Chiltern.

  ‘No, – not as yet. These disagreeable realities of life grow upon one; do they not? You took off my shoes and dried them for me at a woodman's cottage. I am obliged to put up with my maid's doing those things now. And Miss Blink the mild is changed for Lady Baldock the martinet. And if I rode about with you in a wood all day I should be sent to Coventry instead of to bed. And so you see everything is changed as well as my name.’

  ‘Everything is not changed,’ said Lord Chiltern, getting up from his seat. ‘I am not changed, – at least not in this, that as I then loved you better than any being in the world, – better even than Laura there, – so do I love you now infinitely the best of all. Do not look so surprised at me. You knew it before as well as you do now; – and Laura knows it. There is no secret to be kept in the matter among us three.’

  ‘But, Lord Chiltern, –’ said Miss Effingham, rising also to her feet, and then pausing, not knowing how to answer him. There had been a suddenness in his mode of addressing her which had, so to say, almost taken away her breath; and then to be told by a man of his love before his sister was in itself, to her, a matter so surprising, that none of those words came at her command which will come, as though by instinct, to young ladies on such occasions.

  ‘You have known it always,’ said he, as though he were angry with her.

  ‘Lord Chiltern,’ she replied, ‘you must excuse me if I say that you are, at the least, very abrupt. I did not think when I was going back so joyfully to our old childish days that you would turn the tables on me in this way.’

  ‘He has said nothing that ought to make you angry,’ said Lady Laura.

  ‘Only because he has driven me to say that which will make me appear to be uncivil to himself. Lord Chiltern, I do not love you with that love of which you are speaking now. As an old friend I have always regarded you, and I hope that I may always do so.’ Then she got up and left the room.

  ‘Why were you so sudden with her, – so abrupt, – so loud?’ said his sister, coming up to him and taking him by the arm almost in anger.

  ‘It would make no difference,’ said he. ‘She does not care for me.’

  ‘It makes all the difference in the world,’ said Lady Laura. ‘Such a woman as Violet cannot be had after that fashion. You must begin again.’

  ‘I have begun and ended,’ he said.

  ‘That is nonsense. Of course you will persist. It was madness to speak in that way to-day. You may be sure of this, however, that there is no one she likes better than you. You must remember that you have done much to make any girl afraid of you.’

  ‘I do remember it.’

  ‘Do something now to make her fear you no longer. Speak to her softly. Tell her of the sort of life which you would live with her. Tell her that all is changed. As she comes to love you, she will believe you when she would believe no one else on that matter.’

  ‘Am I to tell her a lie?’ said Lord Chiltern, looking his sister full in the face. Then he turned upon his heel and left her.

  CHAPTER 12

  Autumnal Prospects

  THE session went on very calmly after the opening battle which ousted Lord De Terrier and sent Mr Mildmay back to the Treasury, so calmly that Phineas Finn was unconsciously disappointed, as lacking that excitement of contest to which he had been introduced in the first days of his parliamentary career. From time to time certain waspish attacks were made by Mr Daubeny, now on this Secretary of State and now on that; but they were felt by both parties to mean nothing; and as no great measure was brought forward, nothing which would serve by the magnitude of its interests to divide the liberal side of the House into fractions, Mr Mildmay's Cabinet was allowed to hold its own in comparative peace and quiet. It was now July, – the middle of July, – and the member for Loughshane had not yet addressed the House. How often he had meditated doing so; how he had composed his speeches walking round the Park on his way down to the House; how he got his subjects up, – only to find on hearing them discussed that he really knew little or nothing about them; how he had his arguments and almost his very words taken out of his mouth by some other member; and lastly, how he had actually been deterred from getting upon his legs by a certain tremor of blood round his heart when the moment for rising had come, – of all this he never said a word to any man. Since that last journey to County Mayo, Laurence Fitzgibbon had been his most intimate friend, but he said nothing of all this even to Laurence Fitzgibbon. To his other friend, Lady Laura Standish, he did explain something of his feelings, not absolutely describing to her the extent of hindrance to which his modesty had subjected him, but letting her know that he had his qualms as well as his aspirations. But as Lady Laura always recommended patience, and more than once expressed her opinion that a young member would be better to sit in silence at least for one session, he was not driven to the mortification of feeling that he was incurring her contempt by his bashfulness. As regarded the men among whom he lived, I think he was almost annoyed at finding that no one seemed to expect that he should speak. Barrington Erle, when he had first talked of sending Phineas down to Loughshane, had predicted for him all manner of parliamentary successes, and had expressed the warmest admiration of the manner in which Phineas had discussed this or that subject at the Union. ‘We have not above one or two men in the House who can do that kind of thing,’ Barrington Erle had once said. But now no allusions whatever were made to his powers of speech, and Phineas in his modest moments began to be more amazed than ever that he should find himself seated in that chamber.

  To the forms and technicalities of parliamentary business he did give close attention, and was unremitting in his attendance. On one or two occasions he ventured to ask a question of the Speaker, and as the words of experience fell into his ears, he would tell himself that he was going through his education, – that he was learning to be a working member, and perhaps to be a statesman. But his regrets with reference to Mr Low and the dingy chambers in Old Square were very frequent; and had it been possible for him to undo all that he had done, he would often have abandoned to some one else the honour of representing the electors of Loughshane.

  But he was supported in all his difficulties by the kindness of his friend, Lady Laura Standish. He was often in the House in Portman Square, and was always received with cordiality, – and, as he thought, almost with affection. She would sit and talk to him, sometimes saying a word about her brother and sometimes about her father, as though there were more between them than the casual intimacy of London acquaintance. And in Portman Square he had been introduced to Miss Effingham, and had found Miss Effingham to be – very nice. Miss Effingham had quite taken to him, and he had danced with her at two or three parties, talking always, as he did so, about Lady Laura Standish.

  ‘I declare, Laura, I think your friend Mr Finn is in love with you,’ Violet said to Lady Laura one night.

  ‘I don't think that. He is fond of me, and so am I of him. He is so honest, and so naïve without being awkward! And then he is undoubtedly clever.’

  ‘And so uncommonly handsome,’ said Violet.

  ‘I don't know that that makes much difference,’ said Lady Laura.

  ‘I think it does if a man looks li
ke a gentleman as well.’

  ‘Mr Finn certainly looks like a gentleman,’ said Lady Laura.

  ‘And no doubt is one,’ said Violet. ‘I wonder whether he has got any money.’

  ‘Not a penny, I should say.’

  ‘How does such a man manage to live? There are so many men like that, and they are always mysteries to me. I suppose he'll have to marry an heiress.’

  ‘Whoever gets him will not have a bad husband,’ said Lady Laura Standish.

  Phineas during the summer had very often met Mr Kennedy. They sat on the same side of the House, they belonged to the same club, they dined together more than once in Portman Square, and on one occasion Phineas had accepted an invitation to dinner sent to him by Mr Kennedy himself. ‘A slower affair I never saw in my life,’ he said afterwards to Laurence Fitzgibbon. ‘Though there were two or three men there who talk everywhere else, they could not talk at his table.’ ‘He gave you good wine, I should say,’ said Fitzgibbon, ‘and let me tell you that that covers a multitude of sins.’ In spite, however, of all these opportunities for intimacy, now, nearly at the end of the session, Phineas had hardly spoken a dozen words to Mr Kennedy, and really knew nothing whatsoever of the man, as one friend, – or even as one acquaintance knows another. Lady Laura had desired him to be on good terms with Mr Kennedy, and for that reason he had dined with him. Nevertheless he disliked Mr Kennedy, and felt quite sure that Mr Kennedy disliked him. He was therefore rather surprised when he received the following note: —

  Albany, Z 3, July 17, 186—

 

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