No;—he was not in love with Lady Laura Standish. He had
not the remotest idea of asking her to be his wife. So he told
himself, both before he went over for his election, and after his
return. When he had found himself in a corner with poor little Mary
Flood Jones, he had kissed her as a matter of course; but he did
not think that he could, in any circumstances, be tempted to kiss
Lady Laura. He supposed that he was in love with his darling little
Mary,—after a fashion. Of course, it could never come to anything,
because of the circumstances of his life, which were so imperious
to him. He was not in love with Lady Laura, and yet he hoped that
his intimacy with her might come to much. He had more than once
asked himself how he would feel when somebody else came to be
really in love with Lady Laura,—for she was by no means a woman to
lack lovers,—when some one else should be in love with her, and be
received by her as a lover; but this question he had never been
able to answer. There were many questions about himself which he
usually answered by telling himself that it was his fate to walk
over volcanoes. "Of course, I shall be blown into atoms some fine
day," he would say; "but after all, that is better than being
slowly boiled down into pulp."
The House had met on a Friday, again on the Saturday morning,
and the debate on the Address had been adjourned till the Monday.
On the Sunday, Phineas determined that he would see Lady Laura. She
professed to be always at home on Sunday, and from three to four in
the afternoon her drawing-room would probably be half full of
people. There would, at any rate, be comers and goers, who would
prevent anything like real conversation between himself and her.
But for a few minutes before that he might probably find her alone,
and he was most anxious to see whether her reception of him, as a
member of Parliament, would be in any degree warmer than that of
his other friends. Hitherto he had found no such warmth since he
came to London, excepting that which had glowed in the bosom of
Mrs. Bunce.
Lady Laura Standish was the daughter of the Earl of Brentford,
and was the only remaining lady of the Earl's family. The Countess
had been long dead; and Lady Emily, the younger daughter, who had
been the great beauty of her day, was now the wife of a Russian
nobleman whom she had persisted in preferring to any of her English
suitors, and lived at St. Petersburg. There was an aunt, old Lady
Laura, who came up to town about the middle of May; but she was
always in the country except for some six weeks in the season.
There was a certain Lord Chiltern, the Earl's son and heir, who did
indeed live at the family town house in Portman Square; but Lord
Chiltern was a man of whom Lady Laura's set did not often speak,
and Phineas, frequently as he had been at the house, had never seen
Lord Chiltern there. He was a young nobleman of whom various
accounts were given by various people; but I fear that the account
most readily accepted in London attributed to him a great intimacy
with the affairs at Newmarket, and a partiality for convivial
pleasures. Respecting Lord Chiltern Phineas had never as yet
exchanged a word with Lady Laura. With her father he was
acquainted, as he had dined perhaps half a dozen times at the
house. The point in Lord Brentford's character which had more than
any other struck our hero, was the unlimited confidence which he
seemed to place in his daughter. Lady Laura seemed to have perfect
power of doing what she pleased. She was much more mistress of
herself than if she had been the wife instead of the daughter of
the Earl of Brentford,—and she seemed to be quite as much mistress
of the house.
Phineas had declared at Killaloe that Lady Laura was six feet
high, that she had red hair, that her figure was straggling, and
that her hands and feet were large. She was in fact about five feet
seven in height, and she carried her height well. There was
something of nobility in her gait, and she seemed thus to be taller
than her inches. Her hair was in truth red,—of a deep thorough
redness. Her brother's hair was the same; and so had been that of
her father, before it had become sandy with age. Her sister's had
been of a soft auburn hue, and hers had been said to be the
prettiest head of hair in Europe at the time of her marriage. But
in these days we have got to like red hair, and Lady Laura's was
not supposed to stand in the way of her being considered a beauty.
Her face was very fair, though it lacked that softness which we all
love in women. Her eyes, which were large and bright, and very
clear, never seemed to quail, never rose and sunk or showed
themselves to be afraid of their own power.
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