Kennedy be of use to you as well as any one
else? You do not mean to conquer the world all by yourself."
"No;—but there is something mean to me in the expressed idea
that I should make use of any man,—and more especially of a man
whom I don't like."
"And why do you not like him, Mr. Finn?"
"Because he is one of my Dr. Fells."
"You don't like him simply because he does not talk much. That
may be a good reason why you should not make of him an intimate
companion,—because you like talkative people; but it should be no
ground for dislike."
Phineas paused for a moment before he answered her, thinking
whether or not it would be well to ask her some question which
might produce from her a truth which he would not like to hear.
Then he did ask it. "And do you like him?" he said.
She too paused, but only for a second. "Yes,—I think I may say
that I do like him."
"No more than that?"
"Certainly no more than that;—but that I think is a great
deal."
"I wonder what you would say if any one asked you whether you
liked me," said Phineas, looking away from her through the
window.
"Just the same;—but without the doubt, if the person who
questioned me had any right to ask the question. There are not
above one or two who could have such a right."
"And I was wrong, of course, to ask it about Mr. Kennedy," said
Phineas, looking out into the Square.
"I did not say so."
"But I see you think it."
"You see nothing of the kind. I was quite willing to be asked
the question by you, and quite willing to answer it. Mr. Kennedy is
a man of great wealth."
"What can that have to do with it?"
"Wait a moment, you impetuous Irish boy, and hear me out."
Phineas liked being called an impetuous Irish boy, and came close
to her, sitting where he could look up into her face; and there
came a smile upon his own, and he was very handsome. "I say that he
is a man of great wealth," continued Lady Laura; "and as wealth
gives influence, he is of great use,—politically,—to the party to
which he belongs."
"Oh, politically!"
"Am I to suppose you care nothing for politics? To such men, to
men who think as you think, who are to sit on the same benches with
yourself, and go into the same lobby and be seen at the same club,
it is your duty to be civil both for your own sake and for that of
the cause. It is for the hermits of society to indulge in personal
dislikings,—for men who have never been active and never mean to be
active. I had been telling Mr. Kennedy how much I thought of
you,—as a good Liberal."
"And I came in and spoilt it all."
"Yes, you did. You knocked down my little house, and I must
build it all up again."
"Don't trouble yourself, Lady Laura."
"I shall. It will be a great deal of trouble,—a great deal,
indeed; but I shall take it. I mean you to be very intimate with
Mr. Kennedy, and to shoot his grouse, and to stalk his deer, and to
help to keep him in progress as a liberal member of Parliament. I
am quite prepared to admit, as a friend, that he would go back
without some such help."
"Oh;—I understand."
"I do not believe that you do understand at all, but I must
endeavour to make you do so by degrees. If you are to be my
political pupil, you must at any rate be obedient. The next time
you meet Mr. Kennedy, ask him his opinion instead of telling him
your own. He has been in Parliament twelve years, and he was a good
deal older than you when he began." At this moment a side door was
opened, and the red-haired, red-bearded man whom Phineas had seen
before entered the room. He hesitated a moment, as though he were
going to retreat again, and then began to pull about the books and
toys which lay on one of the distant tables, as though he were in
quest of some article. And he would have retreated had not Lady
Laura called to him.
"Oswald," she said, "let me introduce you to Mr. Finn. Mr. Finn,
I do not think you have ever met my brother, Lord Chiltern." Then
the two young men bowed, and each of them muttered something. "Do
not be in a hurry, Oswald.
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