The First Wedding
As Easter Sunday fell on the 17th
April, and as the arrangement of the new Cabinet,
with its inferior offices, was not completed till
the 6th of that month, there was only just time for
the new elections before the holidays. Mr. Monk
sat on his bench so comfortably that he hardly seemed
ever to have been off it. And Phineas Finn resumed
the peculiar ministerial tone of voice just as though
he had never allowed himself to use the free and indignant
strains of opposition. As to a majority, nothing
as yet was known about that. Some few besides
Silverbridge might probably transfer themselves to
the Government. None of the ministers lost their
seats at the new elections. The opposite party
seemed for a while to have been paralysed by the defection
of Sir Timothy, and men who liked a quiet life were
able to comfort themselves with the reflection that
nothing could be done this Session.
For our lovers this was convenient.
Neither of them would have allowed their parliamentary
energies to have interfered at such a crisis with
his domestic affairs; but still it was well to have
time at command. The day for the marriage of
Isabel and Silverbridge had been now fixed. That
was to take place on the Wednesday after Easter, and
was to be celebrated by special royal favour in the
chapel at Whitehall. All the Pallisers would
be there, and all the relations of all the Pallisers,
all the ambassadors, and of course all the Americans
in London. It would be a “wretched grind,”
as Silverbridge said, but it had to be done.
In the meantime the whole party, including the new
President of the Council, were down at Matching.
Even Isabel, though it must be presumed that she had
much to do in looking after her bridal garments, was
able to be there for a day or two. But Tregear
was the person to whom this visit was of the greatest
importance.
He had been allowed to see Lady Mary
in London, but hardly to do more than see her.
With her he had been alone for about five minutes,
and then cruel circumstances, circumstances,
however, which were not permanently cruel, had
separated them. All their great difficulties
had been settled, and no doubt they were happy.
Tregear, though he had been as it were received into
grace by that glass of wine, still had not entered
into the intimacies of the house. This he felt
himself. He had been told that he had better restrain
himself from writing to Mary, and he had restrained
himself. He had therefore no immediate opportunity
of creeping into that perfect intimacy with the house
and household which is generally accorded to a promised
son-in-law.
On this occasion he travelled down
alone, and as he approached the house he, who was
not by nature timid, felt himself to be somewhat cowed.
That the Duke should not be cold to him was almost
impossible. Of course he was there in opposition
to the Duke’s wishes. Even Silverbridge
had never quite liked the match. Of course he
was to have all that he desired. Of course he
was the most fortunate of men. Of course no man
had ever stronger reason to be contented with the
girl he loved. But still his heart was a little
low as he was driven up to the door.
The first person whom he saw was the
Duke himself, who, as the fly from the station arrived,
was returning from his walk. “You are welcome
to Matching,” he said, taking off his hat with
something of ceremony. This was said before the
servants, but Tregear was then led into the study
and the door was closed. “I never do anything
by halves, Mr. Tregear,” he said. “Since
it is to be so you shall be the same to me as though
you had come under other auspices. Of yourself
personally I hear all that is good. Consider yourself
at home here, and in all things use me as your friend.”
Tregear endeavoured to make some reply, but could
not find words that were fitting. “I think
that the young people are out,” continued the
Duke. “Mr. Warburton will help you to find
them if you like to go upon the search.”
The words had been very gracious, but still there
was something in the manner of the man which made
Tregear find it almost impossible to regard him as
he might have regarded another father-in-law.
He had often heard the Duke spoken of as a man who
could become awful if he pleased, almost without an
effort. He had been told of the man’s mingled
simplicity, courtesy, and self-assertion against which
no impudence or raillery could prevail. And now
he seemed to understand it.
He was not driven to go under the
private secretary’s escort in quest of the young
people. Mary had understood her business much
better than that. “If you please, sir, Lady
Mary is in the little drawing-room,” said a
well-arrayed young girl to him as soon as the Duke’s
door was closed. This was Lady Mary’s own
maid who had been on the look-out for the fly.
Lady Mary had known all details, as to the arrival
of the trains and the length of the journey from the
station, and had not been walking with the other young
people when the Duke had intercepted her lover.
Even that delay she had thought was hard. The
discreet maid opened the door of the little drawing-room, and
discreetly closed it instantly. “At last!”
she said, throwing herself into his arms.
“Yes, at last.”
On this occasion time did not envy
them. The long afternoons of spring had come,
and as Tregear had reached the house between four
and five they were able to go out together before the
sun set. “No,” she said when he came
to inquire as to her life during the last twelve months;
“you had not much to be afraid of as to my forgetting.”
“But when everything was against me?”
“One thing was not against you. You ought
to have been sure of that.”
“And so I was. And yet
I felt that I ought not to have been sure. Sometimes,
in my solitude, I used to think that I myself had been
wrong. I began to doubt whether under any circumstances
I could have been justified in asking your father’s
daughter to be my wife.”
“Because of his rank?”
“Not so much his rank as his money.”
“Ought that to be considered?”
“A poor man who marries a rich woman will always
be suspected.”
“Because people are so mean
and poor-spirited; and because they think that money
is more than anything else. It should be nothing
at all in such matters. I don’t know how
it can be anything. They have been saying that
to me all along, as though one were to stop
to think whether one was rich or poor.”
Tregear, when this was said, could not but remember
that at a time not very much prior to that at which
Mary had not stopped to think, neither for a while
had he and Mabel. “I suppose it was worse
for me than for you,” she added.
“I hope not.”
“But it was, Frank; and therefore
I ought to have it made up to me now. It was
very bad to be alone here, particularly when I felt
that papa always looked at me as though I were a sinner.
He did not mean it, but he could not help looking
at me like that. And there was nobody to whom
I could say a word.”
“It was pretty much the same with me.”
“Yes; but you were not offending
a father who could not keep himself from looking reproaches
at you. I was like a boy at school who had been
put into Coventry. And then they sent me to Lady
Cantrip!”
“Was that very bad?”
“I do believe that if I were
a young woman with a well-ordered mind, I should feel
myself very much indebted to Lady Cantrip. She
had a terrible task of it. But I could not teach
myself to like her. I believe she knew all through
that I should get my way at last.”
“That ought to have made you friends.”
“But yet she tried everything
she could. And when I told her about that meeting
up at Lord Grex’s, she was so shocked! Do
you remember that?”
“Do I remember it!”
“Were not you shocked?”
This question was not to be answered by any word.
“I was,” she continued. “It
was an awful thing to do; but I was determined to
show them all that I was in earnest. Do you remember
how Miss Cassewary looked?”
“Miss Cassewary knew all about it.”
“I daresay she did. And
so I suppose did Mabel Grex. I had thought that
perhaps I might make Mabel a confidante, but ”
Then she looked up into his face.
“But what?”
“You like Mabel, do you not? I do.”
“I like her very, very much.”
“Perhaps you have liked her too well for that,
eh, Frank?”
“Too well for what?”
“That she should have heard
all that I had to say about you with sympathy.
If so, I am so sorry.”
“You need not fear that I have
ever for a moment been untrue either to her or you.”
“I am sure you have not to me.
Poor Mabel! Then they took me to Custins.
That was worst of all. I cannot quite tell you
what happened there.” Of course he asked
her, but, as she had said, she could not
quite tell him about Lord Popplecourt.
The next morning the Duke asked his
guest in a playful tone what was his Christian name.
It could hardly be that he should not have known,
but yet he asked the question. “Francis
Oliphant,” said Tregear. “Those are
two Christian names I suppose, but what do they call
you at home?”
“Frank,” whispered Mary, who was with
them.
“Then I will call you Frank,
if you will allow me. The use of Christian names
is, I think, pleasant and hardly common enough among
us. I almost forget my own boy’s name because
the practice has grown up of calling him by a title.”
“I am going to call him Abraham,” said
Isabel.
“Abraham is a good name, only
I do not think he got it from his godfathers and godmothers.”
“Who can call a man Plantagenet?
I should as soon think of calling my father-in-law
Coeur de Lion.”
“So he is,” said Mary.
Whereupon the Duke kissed the two girls and went his
way, showing that by this time he had adopted
the one and the proposed husband of the other into
his heart.
The day before the Duke started for
London to be present at the grand marriage he sent
for Frank. “I suppose,” said he, “that
you would wish that some time should be fixed for
your own marriage.” To this the accepted
suitor of course assented. “But before we
can do that something must be settled about money.”
Tregear when he heard this became hot all over, and
felt that he could not restrain his blushes.
Such must be the feeling of a man when he finds himself
compelled to own to a girl’s father that he
intends to live upon her money and not upon his own.
“I do not like to be troublesome,” continued
the Duke, “or to ask questions which might seem
to be impertinent.”
“Oh no! Of course I feel
my position. I can only say that it was not because
your daughter might probably have money that I first
sought her love.”
“It shall be so received.
And now But perhaps it will be best that
you should arrange all this with my man of business.
Mr. Moreton shall be instructed. Mr. Moreton
lives near my place in Barsetshire, but is now in
London. If you will call on him he shall tell
you what I would suggest. I hope you will find
that your affairs will be comfortable. And now
as to the time.”
Isabel’s wedding was declared
by the newspapers to have been one of the most brilliant
remembered in the metropolis. There were six
bridesmaids, of whom of course Mary was one, and
of whom poor Lady Mabel Grex was equally of course
not another. Poor Lady Mabel was at this time
with Miss Cassewary at Grex, paying what she believed
would be a last visit to the old family home.
Among the others were two American girls, brought
into that august society for the sake of courtesy
rather than of personal love. And there were two
other Palliser girls and a Scotch McCloskie cousin.
The breakfast was of course given by Mr. Boncassen
at his house in Brook Street, where the bridal presents
were displayed. And not only were they displayed;
but a list of them, with an approximating statement
as to their value, appeared in one or two of the next
day’s newspapers; as to which terrible
sin against good taste neither was Mr. or Mrs. Boncassen
guilty. But in these days, in which such splendid
things were done on so very splendid a scale, a young
lady cannot herself lay out her friends’ gifts
so as to be properly seen by her friends. Some
well-skilled, well-paid hand is needed even for that,
and hence comes this public information on affairs
which should surely be private. In our grandmothers’
time the happy bride’s happy mother herself
compounded the cake; or at any rate the
trusted housekeeper. But we all know that terrible
tower of silver which now stands niddle-noddling with
its appendages of flags and spears on the modern wedding
breakfast-table. It will come to pass with some
of us soon that we must deny ourselves the pleasure
of having young friends, because their marriage presents
are so costly.
Poor Mrs. Boncassen had not perhaps
a happy time with her august guests on that morning;
but when she retired to give Isabel her last kiss
in privacy she did feel proud to think that her daughter
would some day be an English Duchess.