登陆注册
37373200000236

第236章

THE END OF THE SESSION.

The Duke of St Bungay had been very much disappointed.He had contradicted with a repetition of noes the assertion of the Duchess that he had been the Warwick who had placed the Prime Minister's crown on the head of the Duke of Omnium, but no doubt he felt in his heart that he had done so much towards it that his advice respecting the vacant Garter, when given so much weight, should have been followed.He was an old man, and had known the secrets of Cabinet Councils when his younger friend was a little boy.He had given advice to Lord John, and had been one of the first to congratulate Sir Robert Peel when that statesman became a free-trader.He had sat in conclave with THE Duke, and had listened to the bold Liberalism of old Earl Grey, both in the Lower and the Upper House.He had been always great in council, never giving his advice unasked, nor throwing his pearls before swine, and cautious at all times to avoid excesses on this side or that.He had never allowed himself a hobby horse of his own to ride, had never been ambitious, had never sought to be the ostensible leader of men.But he did now think that when, with all his experience, he spoke very much in earnest, some attention should be paid to what he said.When he had described a certain line of conduct as Quixotic he had been very much in earnest.He did not usually indulge in strong language, and Quixotic, when applied to the conduct of the Prime Minister, was, to his ideas, very strong.The thing described as Quixotic had now been done, and the Duke of St Bungay was a disappointed man.

For an hour or two he thought that he must gently secede from all private counsels with the Prime Minister.To resign, or to put impediments in the way of his own chief, did not belong to his character.That line of strategy had come into fashion since he had learnt his political rudiments, and was very odious to him.

But in all party compacts there must be inner parties, peculiar bonds, and confidence stricter, stronger and also sweeter than those which bind together the twenty or thirty gentlemen who form a Government.From those closer ties which had hitherto bound him to the Duke of Omnium he thought, for a while, that he must divorce himself.Surely on such a subject as the nomination of a Knight of the Garter his advice might have been taken,--if only because it had come from him! And so he kept himself apart for a day or two, and even in the House of Lords ceased to whisper kindly, cheerful words into the ears of his next neighbour.

But various remembrances crowded in upon him by degrees, compelling him to moderate and at last to abandon his purpose.

Among these the first was the memory of the kiss he had given to the Duchess.The woman had told him that she loved him, that he was one of the very few whom she did love,--and the word had gone straight into his old heart.She had bade him not to desert her; and he had not only given her his promise, but he had converted that promise into a sacred pledge by a kiss.He had known well why she had exacted the promise.The turmoil in her husband's mind, the agony which he sometimes endured when people spoke ill of him, the aversion which he had at first genuinely felt to an office for which he hardly thought himself fit, and now the gradual love of power created by the exercise of power, had all been seen by her, and had created that solicitude which had induced her to ask for the promise.The old Duke had known them both well, but had hardly as yet given the Duchess credit for so true devotion to her husband.It now seemed to him that, though she had failed to love the man, she had given her entire heart to the Prime Minister.He sympathized with her altogether, and, at any rate, could not go back from his promise.

And then he remembered, too, that if this man did anything amiss in the high office which he had been made to fill, who had induced him to fill it was responsible.What right had he, the Duke of St Bungay, to be angry because his friend was not all-wise at all points? Let the Droughts and the Drummonds and the Beeswaxes quarrel among themselves or with their colleagues.He belonged to a different school, in the teachings of which there was less perhaps of excitement and more of long-suffering;--but surely, also, more of nobility.He was, at any rate, too old to change, and he would therefore be true to his friend through evil and through good.Having thought all this out he again whispered some cheery word to the Prime Minister, as they sat listening to the denunciations of Lord Fawn, a Liberal lord, much used to business, but who had not been received into the Coalition.The first whisper and the second whisper the Prime Minister received very coldly.He had fully appreciated the discontinuance of whispers, and was aware of the cause.He had made a selection on his own unassisted judgment in opposition to his old friend's advice, and this was the result.Let it be so! All his friends were turning away from him and he would have to stand alone.If so, he would stand alone till the pendulum of the House of Commons had told him that it was time for him to retire.But gradually the determined good-humour of the old man prevailed.

'He has a wonderful gift of saying nothing with second-rate dignity,' whispered the repentant friend, speaking of Lord Fawn.

'A very honest man,' said the Prime Minister in return.

'A sort of bastard honesty,--by precept out of stupidity.There is no real conviction in it, begotten by thought.' This little bit of criticism, harsh as it was, had the effect, and the Prime Minister became less miserable than he had been.

But Lord Drummond forgave nothing.He still held his office, but more than once he was seen in private conference with both Sir Orlando and Mr Boffin.He did not attempt to conceal his anger.

同类推荐
  • Of the Conduct of the Understanding

    Of the Conduct of the Understanding

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Gaudissart II

    Gaudissart II

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 续明纪事本末

    续明纪事本末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金渊集

    金渊集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 沙弥尼离戒文

    沙弥尼离戒文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 秘闻供应商

    秘闻供应商

    历史的风沙掩埋了无穷的往事,留下了无数难以窥见的隐秘。诸神陨落的秘密,古老文明的遗迹,传奇英雄的传承……降临异世界的少年睁开双眼,穿透时光的迷雾看到一段段尘封的秘辛。整个世界的真相,尽归于眼前!
  • 地府恋爱指南

    地府恋爱指南

    “葱无心可活,人无心必死。”大概就是这个原因,我成了地府里的一只无心之鬼。不入轮回,就没法投胎转世。鬼帝看我可怜,让我当了个鬼使,每天送送信什么的。只是鬼帝家的某位殿下,你的桃花已经很旺了,可不可以不要缠着我,那些爱慕你的女鬼真的很难应对啊!
  • 奕橙不变

    奕橙不变

    于她而言,他是最耀眼的星星,是人间曙光;于他而言,她是最美丽的风景,是人间炽热。他热爱他的梦想,她热爱他的一切。他愿意为了自己的梦想努力拼搏,而她也在努力,努力走进他的世界。十年前,他如耀眼的星星,毫无征兆的闯入了她的世界,十年后,她真正地走入了他的人生。偶一瞬间回眸才发现,原来他一直都在。
  • 我是迷宫主

    我是迷宫主

    part1:莫名其妙成为游戏世界的迷宫主人,还能创造各种各样的生物守卫自己的领地,还要和玩家对抗,连本土NPC都是敌人!?part2:新天赋是融合?大宝剑A+大宝剑B=一划就破的小刺刀(黑人问号)史莱姆+史莱姆+史莱姆=史莱姆王!深渊触手+哥布林+淤泥怪=污秽哥布林?蜥蜴人+鬼火=幽魂蜥蜴......嗯?怎么还有这么多合成公式?不玩了不玩了。(一脸被玩坏的表情)
  • 终极一班之叶少天

    终极一班之叶少天

    蓝星,一座公寓里一位少年在一次意外的操作而导致的穿越
  • 网游之逆袭创世

    网游之逆袭创世

    主角徐豪凭借逆天的运气——买辣条中头盔!从此开启逆袭屌丝之路,看徐豪坑新手村村长,坑至高无上的主机,击败各种看着不爽之人!
  • 精灵大师从大胃王开始

    精灵大师从大胃王开始

    我(你):老爸,给我买只小火龙…老爸:儿砸,这是你想要小火龙的蛋…一个月后,我(你)看着不断进食的‘蓝胖子’欲哭无泪…这是一个传奇精灵大师的故事,从给某大胃王‘赚奶粉钱’开始…(PS:第三人称视角)(Q群已建:585124491)
  • 嗜血暴力系统

    嗜血暴力系统

    一位不起眼的小屌丝,在打CF的时候突然穿越到游戏里去了,居然出现了系统,从此开起了逆天之路,但他没想到,自己居然是国际档案为“sss”级的人物……
  • 殡葬暖妻

    殡葬暖妻

    他是蓉城赫赫有名的医生,而她则是蓉城不起眼的小殡葬师。一场无关爱情的婚姻,他娶她只为利用她保护好自己的爱情,而她嫁他只是不想让自己成为大龄剩女。他娶了她,却一声声的叫她“妹妹”;而她嫁了他,却一次次的喊他“哥哥”。直到后来,他将她压在身下,“哥哥是医生,妹妹是殡葬师,将来生个孩子就是法医。”
  • 最后城堡

    最后城堡

    那一天,赤红的流星划过天际……殊不知,确是死亡来临的脚步……外星文明踏足地球,高傲的人类第一次犹如襁褓里瑟瑟发抖的婴儿……“这一天,终究还是要来。”中将扣上头盔,目光炯炯,瞭望天空四射的流星,那是敌人飞船,亦或是敌人冲锋的号角。睁开浑浊发绿的双眼,挥动手中夺命的双镰。“加鲁鲁”和“阿萨斯”高傲的抬起头颅,炙热的能量在炮口聚集。一桩数十年前的惨案,拉开了与外星文明争斗的序幕。…………寂静的等候室中,王钰坐在人类最后的救赎机器“加百利号”旁边,放眼望去是无数面色狰狞的外星怪物。他和林子轻轻碰拳道,“和九年前不同,虽然不太可靠,但是现在的人类有王牌了。”