“What Am I to Say, Sir?”
When Silverbridge left Mr. Boncassen’s
house he was resolved to go to his father without
an hour’s delay, and represent to the Duke exactly
how the case stood. He would be urgent, piteous,
submissive, and eloquent. In any other matter
he would promise to make whatever arrangements his
father might desire. He would make his father
understand that all his happiness depended on this
marriage. When once married he would settle down,
even at Gatherum Castle if the Duke should wish it.
He would not think of race-horses, he would desert
the Beargarden, he would learn blue-books by heart,
and only do as much shooting and hunting as would
become a young nobleman in his position. All
this he would say as eagerly and as pleasantly as
it might be said. But he would add to all this
an assurance of his unchangeable intention. It
was his purpose to marry Isabel Boncassen. If
he could do this with his father’s good will, so
best. But at any rate he would marry her!
The world at this time was altogether
busy with political rumours; and it was supposed that
Sir Timothy Beeswax would do something very clever.
It was supposed also that he would sever himself from
some of his present companions. On that point
everybody was agreed, and on that point
only everybody was right. Lord Drummond, who was
the titular Prime Minister, and Sir Timothy, had,
during a considerable part of the last Session, and
through the whole vacation, so belarded each other
with praise in all their public expressions that it
was quite manifest that they had quarrelled.
When any body of statesmen make public asseverations
by one or various voices, that there is no discord
among them, not a dissentient voice on any subject,
people are apt to suppose that they cannot hang together
much longer. It is the man who has no peace at
home that declares abroad that his wife is an angel.
He who lives on comfortable terms with the partner
of his troubles can afford to acknowledge the ordinary
rubs of life. Old Mr. Mildmay, who was Prime
Minister for so many years, and whom his party worshipped,
used to say that he had never found a gentleman who
had quite agreed with him all round; but Sir Timothy
has always been in exact accord with all his colleagues, till
he has left them, or they him. Never had there
been such concord as of late, and men,
clubs, and newspapers now protested that as a natural
consequence there would soon be a break-up.
But not on that account would it perhaps
be necessary that Sir Timothy should resign, or
not necessary that his resignation should be permanent.
The Conservative majority had dwindled, but
still there was a majority. It certainly was
the case that Lord Drummond could not get on without
Sir Timothy. But might it not be possible that
Sir Timothy should get on without Lord Drummond?
If so he must begin his action in this direction by
resigning. He would have to place his resignation,
no doubt with infinite regret, in the hands of Lord
Drummond. But if such a step were to be taken
now, just as Parliament was about to assemble, what
would become of the Queen’s speech, of the address,
and of the noble peers and noble and other commoners
who were to propose and second it in the two Houses
of Parliament? There were those who said that
such a trick played at the last moment would be very
shabby. But then again there were those who foresaw
that the shabbiness would be made to rest anywhere
rather than on the shoulders of Sir Timothy.
If it should turn out that he had striven manfully
to make things run smoothly; that the Premier’s
incompetence, or the Chancellor’s obstinacy,
or this or that Secretary’s peculiarity of temper
had done it all; might not Sir Timothy
then be able to emerge from the confused flood, and
swim along pleasantly with his head higher than ever
above the waters?
In these great matters parliamentary
management goes for so much! If a man be really
clever and handy at his trade, if he can work hard
and knows what he is about, if he can give and take
and be not thin-skinned or sore-bored, if he can ask
pardon for a peccadillo and seem to be sorry with
a good grace, if above all things he be able to surround
himself with the prestige of success, then so much
will be forgiven him! Great gifts of eloquence
are hardly wanted, or a deep-seated patriotism which
is capable of strong indignation. A party has
to be managed, and he who can manage it best, will
probably be its best leader. The subordinate
task of legislation and of executive government may
well fall into the inferior hands of less astute practitioners.
It was admitted on both sides that there was no man
like Sir Timothy for managing the House or coercing
a party, and there was therefore a general feeling
that it would be a pity that Sir Timothy should be
squeezed out. He knew all the little secrets
of the business; could arrange, let the
cause be what it might, to get a full House for himself
and his friends, and empty benches for his opponents, could
foresee a thousand little things to which even a Walpole
would have been blind, which a Pitt would not have
condescended to regard, but with which his familiarity
made him a very comfortable leader of the House of
Commons. There were various ideas prevalent as
to the politics of the coming Session; but the prevailing
idea was in favour of Sir Timothy.
The Duke was at Longroyston, the seat
of his old political ally the Duke of St. Bungay,
and had been absent from Sunday the 6th till the morning
of Friday the 11th, on which day Parliament was to
meet. On that morning at about noon a letter
came to the son saying that his father had returned
and would be glad to see him. Silverbridge was
going to the House on that day and was not without
his own political anxieties. If Lord Drummond
remained in, he thought that he must, for the present,
stand by the party which he had adopted. If, however,
Sir Timothy should become Prime Minister there would
be a loophole for escape. There were some three
or four besides himself who detested Sir Timothy,
and in such case he might perhaps have company in
his desertion. All this was on his mind; but through
all this he was aware that there was a matter of much
deeper moment which required his energies. When
his father’s message was brought to him he told
himself at once that now was the time for his eloquence.
“Well, Silverbridge,”
said the Duke, “how are matters going on with
you?” There seemed to be something in his father’s
manner more than ordinarily jocund and good-humoured.
“With me, sir?”
“I don’t mean to ask any
party secrets. If you and Sir Timothy understand
each other, of course you will be discreet.”
“I can’t be discreet,
sir, because I don’t know anything about him.”
“When I heard,” said the
Duke smiling, “of your being in close conference
with Sir Timothy ”
“I, sir?”
“Yes, you. Mr. Boncassen
told me that you and he were so deeply taken up with
each other at his house, that nobody could get a word
with either of you.”
“Have you seen Mr. Boncassen?”
asked the son, whose attention was immediately diverted
from his father’s political badinage.
“Yes; I have seen
him. I happened to meet him where I was dining
last Sunday, and he walked home with me. He was
so intent upon what he was saying that I fear he allowed
me to take him out of his way.”
“What was he talking about?”
said Silverbridge. All his preparations, all
his eloquence, all his method, now seemed to have departed
from him.
“He was talking about you,” said the Duke.
“He had told me that he wanted to see you.
What did he say, sir?”
“I suppose you can guess what
he said. He wished to know what I thought of
the offer you have made to his daughter.”
The great subject had come up so easily, so readily,
that he was almost aghast when he found himself in
the middle of it. And yet he must speak of the
matter, and that at once.
“I hope you raised no objection, sir,”
he said.
“The objection came mainly from
him; and I am bound to say that every word that fell
from him was spoken with wisdom.”
“But still he asked you to consent.”
“By no means. He told me
his opinion, and then he asked me a question.”
“I am sure he did not say that we ought not
to be married.”
“He did say that he thought you ought not to
be married, if ”
“If what, sir?”
“If there were probability that
his daughter would not be well received as your wife.
Then he asked me what would be my reception of her.”
Silverbridge looked up into his father’s face
with beseeching imploring eyes as though everything
now depended on the next few words that he might utter.
“I shall think it an unwise marriage,”
continued the Duke. Silverbridge when he heard
this at once knew that he had gained his cause.
His father had spoken of the marriage as a thing that
was to happen. A joyous light dawned in his eyes,
and the look of pain went from his brow, all which
the Duke was not slow to perceive. “I shall
think it an unwise marriage,” he continued,
repeating his words; “but I was bound to tell
him that were Miss Boncassen to become your wife she
would also become my daughter.”
“Oh, sir.”
“I told him why the marriage
would be distasteful to me. Whether I may be
wrong or right I think it to be for the good of our
country, for the good of our order, for the good of
our individual families, that we should support each
other by marriage. It is not as though we were
a narrow class, already too closely bound together
by family alliances. The room for choice might
be wide enough for you without going across the Atlantic
to look for her who is to be the mother of your children.
To this Mr. Boncassen replied that he was to look
solely to his daughter’s happiness. He meant
me to understand that he cared nothing for my feelings.
Why should he? That which to me is deep wisdom
is to him an empty prejudice. He asked me then
how others would receive her.”
“I am sure that everybody would like her,”
said Silverbridge.
“I like her. I like her very much.”
“I am so glad.”
“But still all this is a sorrow
to me. When however he put that question to me
about the world around her, as to those
among whom her lot would be cast, I could not say
that I thought she would be rejected.”
“Oh no!” The idea of rejecting Isabel!
“She has a brightness and a
grace all her own,” continued the Duke, “which
will ensure her acceptance in all societies.”
“Yes, yes; it is just that, sir.”
“You will be a nine days’
wonder, the foolish young nobleman who
chose to marry an American.”
“I think it will be just the other way up, sir, among
the men.”
“But her place will I think
be secure to her. That is what I told Mr. Boncassen.”
“It is all right with him then, now?”
“If you call it all right.
You will understand of course that you are acting
in opposition to my advice, and my wishes.”
“What am I to say, sir?”
exclaimed Silverbridge, almost in despair. “When
I love the girl better than my life, and when you tell
me that she can be mine if I choose to take her; when
I have asked her to be my wife, and have got her to
say that she likes me; when her father has given way,
and all the rest of it, would it be possible that I
should say now that I will give her up?”
“My opinion is to go for nothing, in
anything!” The Duke as he said this knew that
he was expressing aloud a feeling which should have
been restrained within his own bosom. It was natural
that there should have been such plaints. The
same suffering must be encountered in regard to Tregear
and his daughter. In every way he had been thwarted.
In every direction he was driven to yield. And
yet now he had to undergo rebuke from his own son,
because one of those inward plaints would force itself
from his lips! Of course this girl was to be
taken in among the Pallisers and treated with an idolatrous
love, as perfect as though “all the
blood of all the Howards” were running in her
veins. What further inch of ground was there for
a fight? And if the fight were over, why should
he rob his boy of one sparkle from off the joy of
his triumph? Silverbridge was now standing before
him abashed by that plaint, inwardly sustained no
doubt by the conviction of his great success, but subdued
by his father’s wailing. “However, perhaps
we had better let that pass,” said the Duke,
with a long sigh. Then Silverbridge took his father’s
hand, and looked up in his face. “I most
sincerely hope that she may make you a good and loving
wife,” said the Duke, “and that she may
do her duty by you in that not easy sphere of life
to which she will be called.”
“I am quite sure she will,”
said Silverbridge, whose ideas as to Isabel’s
duties were confined at present to a feeling that she
would now have to give him kisses without stint.
“What I have seen of her personally
recommends her to me,” said the Duke. “Some
girls are fools ”
“That’s quite true, sir.”
“Who think that the world is
to be nothing but dancing, and going to parties.”
“Many have been doing it for
so many years,” said Silverbridge, “that
they can’t understand that there should be an
end of it.”
“A wife ought to feel the great
responsibility of her position. I hope she will.”
“And the sooner she begins the
better,” said Silverbridge stoutly.
“And now,” said the Duke,
looking at his watch, “we might as well have
lunch and go down to the House. I will walk with
you if you please. It will be about time for
each of us.” Then the son was forced to
go down and witness the somewhat faded ceremony of
seeing Parliament opened by three Lords sitting in
commission before the throne. Whereas but for
such stress as his father had laid upon him, he would
have disregarded his parliamentary duties and have
rushed at once up to Brook Street. As it was
he was so handed over from one political pundit to
another, was so buttonholed by Sir Timothy, so chaffed
as to the address by Phineas Finn, and at last so occupied
with the whole matter that he was compelled to sit
in his place till he had heard Nidderdale make his
speech. This the young Scotch Lord did so well,
and received so much praise for the doing of it, and
looked so well in his uniform, that Silverbridge almost
regretted the opportunity he had lost. At seven
the sitting was over, the speeches, though full of
interest, having been shorter than usual. They
had been full of interest, but nobody understood in
the least what was going to happen. “I
don’t know anything about the Prime Minister,”
said Mr. Lupton as he left the House with our hero
and another not very staunch supporter of the Government,
“but I’ll back Sir Timothy to be the Leader
of the House on the last day of the Session, against
all comers. I don’t think it much matters
who is Prime Minister nowadays.”
At half-past seven Silverbridge was
at the door in Brook Street. Yes; Miss Boncassen
was at home. The servant thought that she was
upstairs dressing. Then Silverbridge made his
way without further invitation into the drawing-room.
There he remained alone for ten minutes. At last
the door opened, and Mrs. Boncassen entered. “Dear
Lord Silverbridge, who ever dreamed of seeing you?
I thought all you Parliament gentlemen were going
through your ceremonies. Isabel had a ticket
and went down, and saw your father.”
“Where is Isabel?”
“She’s gone.”
“Gone! Where on earth has
she gone to?” asked Silverbridge, as though
fearing lest she had been carried off to the other
side of the Atlantic. Then Mrs. Boncassen explained.
Within the last three minutes Mrs. Montacute Jones
had called and carried Isabel off to the play.
Mrs. Jones was up in town for a week, and this had
been a very old engagement. “I hope you
did not want her very particularly,” said Mrs.
Boncassen.
“But I did, most
particularly,” said Lord Silverbridge. The
door was opened and Mr. Boncassen entered the room.
“I beg your pardon for coming at such a time,”
said the lover, “but I did so want to see Isabel.”
“I rather think she wants to
see you,” said the father.
“I shall go to the theatre after her.”
“That might be awkward, particularly
as I doubt whether anybody knows what theatre they
are gone to. Can I receive a message for her,
my lord?” This was certainly not what Lord Silverbridge
had intended. “You know, perhaps, that
I have seen the Duke.”
“Oh yes; and I have seen him.
Everything is settled.”
“That is the only message she
will want to hear when she comes home. She is
a happy girl and I am proud to think that I should
live to call such a grand young Briton as you my son-in-law.”
Then the American took the young man’s two hands
and shook them cordially, while Mrs. Boncassen bursting
into tears insisted on kissing him.
“Indeed she is a happy girl,”
said she; “but I hope Isabel won’t be
carried away too high and mighty.”