We had failed last summer,
and if he could get along he was welcome. But he could not get
along."
"I must say I think he was right to dissolve," said Lady
Laura.
"And we are right to force the consequences upon him as quickly
as we can. He practically lost nine seats by his dissolution. Look
at Loughshane."
"Yes; look at Loughshane," said Miss Fitzgibbon. "The country at
any rate has gained something there."
"It's an ill wind that blows nobody any good, Mr. Finn," said
the Earl.
"What on earth is to become of poor George?" said Mr.
Fitzgibbon. "I wonder whether any one knows where he is. George
wasn't a bad sort of fellow."
"Roby used to think that he was a very bad fellow," said Mr.
Bonteen. "Roby used to swear that it was hopeless trying to catch
him." It may be as well to explain that Mr. Roby was a Conservative
gentleman of great fame who had for years acted as Whip under Mr.
Daubeny, and who now filled the high office of Patronage Secretary
to the Treasury. "I believe in my heart," continued Mr. Bonteen,
"that Roby is rejoiced that poor George Morris should be out in the
cold."
"If seats were halveable, he should share mine, for the sake of
auld lang syne," said Laurence Fitzgibbon.
"But not to-morrow night," said Barrington Erle; "the division
to-morrow will be a thing not to be joked with. Upon my word I
think they're right about old Moody. All private considerations
should give way. And as for Gunning, I'd have him up or I'd know
the reason why."
"And shall we have no defaulters, Barrington?" asked Lady
Laura.
"I'm not going to boast, but I don't know of one for whom we
need blush. Sir Everard Powell is so bad with gout that he can't
even bear any one to look at him, but Ratler says that he'll bring
him up." Mr. Ratler was in those days the Whip on the liberal side
of the House.
"Unfortunate wretch!" said Miss Fitzgibbon.
"The worst of it is that he screams in his paroxysms," said Mr.
Bonteen.
"And you mean to say that you'll take him into the lobby," said
Lady Laura.
"Undoubtedly," said Barrington Erle. "Why not? He has no
business with a seat if he can't vote. But Sir Everard is a good
man, and he'll be there if laudanum and bath-chair make it
possible."
The same kind of conversation went on during the whole of
dinner, and became, if anything, more animated when the three
ladies had left the room. Mr. Kennedy made but one remark, and then
he observed that as far as he could see a majority of nineteen
would be as serviceable as a majority of twenty. This he said in a
very mild voice, and in a tone that was intended to be expressive
of doubt; but in spite of his humility Barrington Erle flew at him
almost savagely,—as though a liberal member of the House of Commons
was disgraced by so mean a spirit; and Phineas found himself
despising the man for his want of zeal.
"If we are to beat them, let us beat them well," said
Phineas.
"Let there be no doubt about it," said Barrington Erle.
"I should like to see every man with a seat polled," said
Bonteen.
"Poor Sir Everard!" said Lord Brentford. "It will kill him, no
doubt, but I suppose the seat is safe."
"Oh, yes; Llanwrwsth is quite safe," said Barrington, in his
eagerness omitting to catch Lord Brentford's grim joke.
Phineas went up into the drawing-room for a few minutes after
dinner, and was eagerly desirous of saying a few more words,—he
knew not what words,—to Lady Laura. Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Bonteen had
left the dining-room first, and Phineas again found Mr. Kennedy
standing close to Lady Laura's shoulder. Could it be possible that
there was anything in it? Mr. Kennedy was an unmarried man, with an
immense fortune, a magnificent place, a seat in Parliament, and was
not perhaps above forty years of age. There could be no reason why
he should not ask Lady Laura to be his wife,—except, indeed, that
he did not seem to have sufficient words at command to ask anybody
for anything.
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