Duggin,
who at this time said very ill-natured things about young
Phineas.
At the end of the three years Phineas was called to the Bar, and
immediately received a letter from his father asking minutely as to
his professional intentions. His father recommended him to settle
in Dublin, and promised the one hundred and fifty pounds for three
more years, on condition that this advice was followed. He did not
absolutely say that the allowance would be stopped if the advice
were not followed, but that was plainly to be implied. That letter
came at the moment of a dissolution of Parliament. Lord de Terrier,
the Conservative Prime Minister, who had now been in office for the
almost unprecedentedly long period of fifteen months, had found
that he could not face continued majorities against him in the
House of Commons, and had dissolved the House. Rumour declared that
he would have much preferred to resign, and betake himself once
again to the easy glories of opposition; but his party had
naturally been obdurate with him, and he had resolved to appeal to
the country. When Phineas received his father's letter, it had just
been suggested to him at the Reform Club that he should stand for
the Irish borough of Loughshane.
This proposition had taken Phineas Finn so much by surprise that
when first made to him by Barrington Erle it took his breath away.
What! he stand for Parliament, twenty-four years old, with no
vestige of property belonging to him, without a penny in his purse,
as completely dependent on his father as he was when he first went
to school at eleven years of age! And for Loughshane, a little
borough in the county Galway, for which a brother of that fine old
Irish peer, the Earl of Tulla, had been sitting for the last twenty
years,—a fine, high-minded representative of the thorough-going
Orange Protestant feeling of Ireland! And the Earl of Tulla, to
whom almost all Loughshane belonged,—or at any rate the land about
Loughshane,—was one of his father's staunchest friends! Loughshane
is in county Galway, but the Earl of Tulla usually lived at his
seat in county Clare, not more than ten miles from Killaloe, and
always confided his gouty feet, and the weak nerves of the old
countess, and the stomachs of all his domestics, to the care of Dr.
Finn. How was it possible that Phineas should stand for Loughshane?
From whence was the money to come for such a contest? It was a
beautiful dream, a grand idea, lifting Phineas almost off the earth
by its glory. When the proposition was first made to him in the
smoking-room at the Reform Club by his friend Erle, he was aware
that he blushed like a girl, and that he was unable at the moment
to express himself plainly,—so great was his astonishment and so
great his gratification. But before ten minutes had passed by,
while Barrington Erle was still sitting over his shoulder on the
club sofa, and before the blushes had altogether vanished, he had
seen the improbability of the scheme, and had explained to his
friend that the thing could not be done. But to his increased
astonishment, his friend made nothing of the difficulties.
Loughshane, according to Barrington Erle, was so small a place,
that the expense would be very little. There were altogether no
more than 307 registered electors. The inhabitants were so far
removed from the world, and were so ignorant of the world's good
things, that they knew nothing about bribery. The Hon. George
Morris, who had sat for the last twenty years, was very unpopular.
He had not been near the borough since the last election, he had
hardly done more than show himself in Parliament, and had neither
given a shilling in the town nor got a place under Government for a
single son of Loughshane. "And he has quarrelled with his brother,"
said Barrington Erle. "The devil he has!" said Phineas. "I thought
they always swore by each other." "It's at each other they swear
now," said Barrington; "George has asked the Earl for more money,
and the Earl has cut up rusty." Then the negotiator went on to
explain that the expenses of the election would be defrayed out of
a certain fund collected for such purposes, that Loughshane had
been chosen as a cheap place, and that Phineas Finn had been chosen
as a safe and promising young man. As for qualification, if any
question were raised, that should be made all right. An Irish
candidate was wanted, and a Roman Catholic. So much the
Loughshaners would require on their own account when instigated to
dismiss from their service that thorough-going Protestant, the Hon.
George Morris. Then "the party,"—by which Barrington Erle probably
meant the great man in whose service he himself had become a
politician,—required that the candidate should be a safe man, one
who would support "the party,"—not a cantankerous, red-hot
semi-Fenian, running about to meetings at the Rotunda, and
such-like, with views of his own about tenant-right and the Irish
Church. "But I have views of my own," said Phineas, blushing again.
"Of course you have, my dear boy," said Barrington, clapping him on
the back. "I shouldn't come to you unless you had views. But your
views and ours are the same, and you're just the lad for Galway.
You mightn't have such an opening again in your life, and of course
you'll stand for Loughshane." Then the conversation was over, the
private secretary went away to arrange some other little matter of
the kind, and Phineas Finn was left alone to consider the
proposition that had been made to him.
To become a member of the British Parliament! In all those hot
contests at the two debating clubs to which he had belonged, this
had been the ambition which had moved him. For, after all, to what
purpose of their own had those empty debates ever tended? He and
three or four others who had called themselves Liberals had been
pitted against four or five who had called themselves
Conservatives, and night after night they had discussed some
ponderous subject without any idea that one would ever persuade
another, or that their talking would ever conduce to any action or
to any result. But each of these combatants had felt,—without
daring to announce a hope on the subject among themselves,—that the
present arena was only a trial-ground for some possible greater
amphitheatre, for some future debating club in which debates would
lead to action, and in which eloquence would have power, even
though persuasion might be out of the question.
Phineas certainly had never dared to speak, even to himself, of
such a hope. The labours of the Bar had to be encountered before
the dawn of such a hope could come to him. And he had gradually
learned to feel that his prospects at the Bar were not as yet very
promising. As regarded professional work he had been idle, and how
then could he have a hope?
And now this thing, which he regarded as being of all things in
the world the most honourable, had come to him all at once, and was
possibly within his reach! If he could believe Barrington Erle, he
had only to lift up his hand, and he might be in Parliament within
two months.
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