A gosling from such a flock does become something of
a real swan by getting into Parliament. The doctor had his
misgivings,—had great misgivings, fearful forebodings; but there
was the young man elected, and he could not help it. He could not
refuse his right hand to his son or withdraw his paternal
assistance because that son had been specially honoured among the
young men of his country. So he pulled out of his hoard what
sufficed to pay off outstanding debts,—they were not heavy,—and
undertook to allow Phineas two hundred and fifty pounds a year as
long as the session should last.
There was a widow lady living at Killaloe who was named Mrs.
Flood Jones, and she had a daughter. She had a son also, born to
inherit the property of the late Floscabel Flood Jones of
Floodborough, as soon as that property should have disembarrassed
itself; but with him, now serving with his regiment in India, we
shall have no concern. Mrs. Flood Jones was living modestly at
Killaloe on her widow's jointure,—Floodborough having, to tell the
truth, pretty nearly fallen into absolute ruin,—and with her one
daughter, Mary. Now on the evening before the return of Phineas
Finn, Esq., M.P., to London, Mrs. and Miss Flood Jones drank tea at
the doctor's house.
"It won't make a bit of change in him," Barbara Finn said to her
friend Mary, up in some bedroom privacy before the tea-drinking
ceremonies had altogether commenced.
"Oh, it must," said Mary.
"I tell you it won't, my dear; he is so good and so true."
"I know he is good, Barbara; and as for truth, there is no
question about it, because he has never said a word to me that he
might not say to any girl."
"That's nonsense, Mary."
"He never has, then, as sure as the blessed Virgin watches over
us;—only you don't believe she does."
"Never mind about the Virgin now, Mary."
"But he never has. Your brother is nothing to me, Barbara."
"Then I hope he will be before the evening is over. He was
walking with you all yesterday and the day before."
"Why shouldn't he,—and we that have known each other all our
lives? But, Barbara, pray, pray never say a word of this to any
one!"
"Is it I? Wouldn't I cut out my tongue first?"
"I don't know why I let you talk to me in this way. There has
never been anything between me and Phineas,—your brother I
mean."
"I know whom you mean very well."
"And I feel quite sure that there never will be. Why should
there? He'll go out among great people and be a great man; and I've
already found out that there's a certain Lady Laura Standish whom
he admires very much."
"Lady Laura Fiddlestick!"
"A man in Parliament, you know, may look up to anybody," said
Miss Mary Flood Jones.
"I want Phin to look up to you, my dear."
"That wouldn't be looking up. Placed as he is now, that would be
looking down; and he is so proud that he'll never do that. But come
down, dear, else they'll wonder where we are."
Mary Flood Jones was a little girl about twenty years of age,
with the softest hair in the world, of a colour varying between
brown and auburn,—for sometimes you would swear it was the one and
sometimes the other; and she was as pretty as ever she could be.
She was one of those girls, so common in Ireland, whom men, with
tastes that way given, feel inclined to take up and devour on the
spur of the moment; and when she liked her lion, she had a look
about her which seemed to ask to be devoured. There are girls so
cold-looking,—pretty girls, too, ladylike, discreet, and armed with
all accomplishments,—whom to attack seems to require the same sort
of courage, and the same sort of preparation, as a journey in quest
of the north-west passage. One thinks of a pedestal near the
Athenaeum as the most appropriate and most honourable reward of
such courage. But, again, there are other girls to abstain from
attacking whom is, to a man of any warmth of temperament, quite
impossible. They are like water when one is athirst, like plovers'
eggs in March, like cigars when one is out in the autumn. No one
ever dreams of denying himself when such temptation comes in the
way. It often happens, however, that in spite of appearances, the
water will not come from the well, nor the egg from its shell, nor
will the cigar allow itself to be lit. A girl of such appearance,
so charming, was Mary Flood Jones of Killaloe, and our hero Phineas
was not allowed to thirst in vain for a drop from the cool
spring.
When the girls went down into the drawing-room Mary was careful
to go to a part of the room quite remote from Phineas, so as to
seat herself between Mrs. Finn and Dr. Finn's young partner, Mr.
Elias Bodkin, from Ballinasloe. But Mrs. Finn and the Miss Finns
and all Killaloe knew that Mary had no love for Mr. Bodkin, and
when Mr. Bodkin handed her the hot cake she hardly so much as
smiled at him. But in two minutes Phineas was behind her chair, and
then she smiled; and in five minutes more she had got herself so
twisted round that she was sitting in a corner with Phineas and his
sister Barbara; and in two more minutes Barbara had returned to Mr.
Elias Bodkin, so that Phineas and Mary were uninterrupted. They
manage these things very quickly and very cleverly in Killaloe.
"I shall be off to-morrow morning by the early train," said
Phineas.
"So soon;—and when will you have to begin,—in Parliament, I
mean?"
"I shall have to take my seat on Friday.
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