<p><SPAN name="7"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
<h3>Mr. and Mrs. Bunce<br/> </h3>
<p>It was three o'clock on the Thursday night before Mr. Daubeny's
speech was finished. I do not think that there was any truth in
the allegation made at the time, that he continued on his legs an
hour longer than the necessities of his speech required, in order
that five or six very ancient Whigs might be wearied out and
shrink to their beds. Let a Whig have been ever so ancient and
ever so weary, he would not have been allowed to depart from
Westminster Hall that night. Sir Everard Powell was there in his
bath-chair at twelve, with a doctor on one side of him and a
friend on the other, in some purlieu of the House, and did his
duty like a fine old Briton as he was. That speech of Mr.
Daubeny's will never be forgotten by any one who heard it. Its
studied bitterness had perhaps never been equalled, and yet not a
word was uttered for the saying of which he could be accused of
going beyond the limits of parliamentary antagonism. It is true
that personalities could not have been closer, that accusations of
political dishonesty and of almost worse than political cowardice
and falsehood could not have been clearer, that no words in the
language could have attributed meaner motives or more unscrupulous
conduct. But, nevertheless, Mr. Daubeny in all that he said was
parliamentary, and showed himself to be a gladiator thoroughly
well trained for the arena in which he had descended to the
combat. His arrows were poisoned, and his lance was barbed, and
his shot was heated red,—because such things are allowed. He did
not poison his enemies' wells or use Greek fire, because those
things are not allowed. He knew exactly the rules of the combat.
Mr. Mildmay sat and heard him without once raising his hat from
his brow, or speaking a word to his neighbour. Men on both sides
of the House said that Mr. Mildmay suffered terribly; but as Mr.
Mildmay uttered no word of complaint to any one, and was quite
ready to take Mr. Daubeny by the hand the next time they met in
company, I do not know that any one was able to form a true idea
of Mr. Mildmay's feelings. Mr. Mildmay was an impassive man who
rarely spoke of his own feelings, and no doubt sat with his hat
low down over his eyes in order that no man might judge of them on
that occasion by the impression on his features. "If he could have
left off half an hour earlier it would have been perfect as an
attack," said Barrington Erle in criticising Mr. Daubeny's speech,
"but he allowed himself to sink into comparative weakness, and the
glory of it was over before the end."—Then came the division. The
Liberals had 333 votes to 314 for the Conservatives, and therefore
counted a majority of 19. It was said that so large a number of
members had never before voted at any division.</p>
<p>"I own I'm disappointed," said Barrington Erle to Mr. Ratler.</p>
<p>"I thought there would be twenty," said Mr. Ratler. "I never went
beyond that. I knew they would have old Moody up, but I thought
Gunning would have been too hard for them."</p>
<p>"They say they've promised them both peerages."</p>
<p>"Yes;—if they remain in. But they know they're going out."</p>
<p>"They must go, with such a majority against them," said Barrington
Erle.</p>
<p>"Of course they must," said Mr. Ratler. "Lord de Terrier wants
nothing better, but it is rather hard upon poor Daubeny. I never
saw such an unfortunate old Tantalus."</p>
<p>"He gets a good drop of real water now and again, and I don't pity
him in the least. He's clever of course, and has made his own way,
but I've always a feeling that he has no business where he is. I
suppose we shall know all about it at Brooks's by one o'clock
to-morrow."</p>
<p>Phineas, though it had been past five before he went to bed,—for
there had been much triumphant talking to be done among liberal
members after the division,—was up at his breakfast at Mrs.
Bunce's lodgings by nine. There was a matter which he was called
upon to settle immediately in which Mrs. Bunce herself was much
interested, and respecting which he had promised to give an answer
on this very morning. A set of very dingy chambers up two pairs of
stairs at No. 9, Old Square, Lincoln's Inn, to which Mr. Low had
recommended him to transfer himself and all his belongings, were
waiting his occupation, should he resolve upon occupying them. If
he intended to commence operations as a barrister, it would be
necessary that he should have chambers and a clerk; and before he
had left Mr. Low's house on Sunday evening he had almost given
that gentleman authority to secure for him these rooms at No. 9.
"Whether you remain in Parliament or no, you must make a
beginning," Mr. Low had said; "and how are you even to pretend to
begin if you don't have chambers?" Mr. Low hoped that he might be
able to wean Phineas away from his Parliament bauble;—that he
might induce the young barrister to give up his madness, if not
this session or the next, at any rate before a third year had
commenced. Mr. Low was a persistent man, liking very much when he
did like, and loving very strongly when he did love. He would have
many a tug for Phineas Finn before he would allow that false
Westminster Satan to carry off the prey as altogether his own. If
he could only get Phineas into the dingy chambers he might do
much!</p>
<p>But Phineas had now become so imbued with the atmosphere of
politics, had been so breathed upon by Lady Laura and Barrington
Erle, that he could no longer endure the thought of any other life
than that of a life spent among the lobbies. A desire to help to
beat the Conservatives had fastened on his very soul, and almost
made Mr. Low odious in his eyes. He was afraid of Mr. Low, and for
the nonce would not go to him any more;—but he must see the
porter at Lincoln's Inn, he must write a line to Mr. Low, and he
must tell Mrs. Bunce that for the present he would still keep on
her rooms. His letter to Mr. Low was as follows:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright"><i>Great Marlborough Street, May, 186––.</i></p>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps">My dear Low</span>,</p>
<p>I have made up my mind against taking the chambers, and am now off
to the Inn to say that I shall not want them. Of course, I know
what you will think of me, and it is very grievous to me to have
to bear the hard judgment of a man whose opinion I value so
highly; but, in the teeth of your terribly strong arguments, I
think that there is something to be said on my side of the
question. This seat in Parliament has come in my way by chance,
and I think it would be pusillanimous in me to reject it, feeling,
as I do, that a seat in Parliament confers very great honour. I
am, too, very fond of politics, and regard legislation as the
finest profession going. Had I any one dependent on me, I probably
might not be justified in following the bent of my inclination.
But I am all alone in the world, and therefore have a right to
make the attempt. If, after a trial of one or two sessions, I
should fail in that which I am attempting, it will not even then
be too late to go back to the better way. I can assure you that at
any rate it is not my intention to be idle.</p>
<p>I know very well how you will fret and fume over what I say, and
how utterly I shall fail in bringing you round to my way of
thinking; but as I must write to tell you of my decision, I cannot
refrain from defending myself to the best of my ability.</p>
<p class="ind10">Yours always faithfully,</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Phineas
Finn</span>.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Low received this letter at his chambers, and when he had read
it, he simply pressed his lips closely together, placed the sheet
of paper back in its envelope, and put it into a drawer at his
left hand. Having done this, he went on with what work he had
before him, as though his friend's decision were a matter of no
consequence to him. As far as he was concerned the thing was done,
and there should be an end of it. So he told himself; but
nevertheless his mind was full of it all day; and, though he wrote
not a word of answer to Phineas, he made a reply within his own
mind to every one of the arguments used in the letter. "Great
honour! How can there be honour in what comes, as he says, by
chance? He hasn't sense enough to understand that the honour comes
from the mode of winning it, and from the mode of wearing it; and
that the very fact of his being member for Loughshane at this
instant simply proves that Loughshane should have had no privilege
to return a member! No one dependent on him! Are not his father
and his mother and his sisters dependent on him as long as he must
eat their bread till he can earn bread of his own? He will never
earn bread of his own. He will always be eating bread that others
have earned." In this way, before the day was over, Mr. Low became
very angry, and swore to himself that he would have nothing more
to say to Phineas Finn. But yet he found himself creating plans
for encountering and conquering the parliamentary fiend who was at
present so cruelly potent with his pupil. It was not till the
third evening that he told his wife that Finn had made up his mind
not to take chambers. "Then I would have nothing more to say to
him," said Mrs. Low, savagely. "For the present I can have nothing
more to say to him." "But neither now nor ever," said Mrs. Low,
with great emphasis; "he has been false to you." "No," said Mr.
Low, who was a man thoroughly and thoughtfully just at all points;
"he has not been false to me. He has always meant what he has
said, when he was saying it. But he is weak and blind, and flies
like a moth to the candle; one pities the poor moth, and would
save him a stump of his wing if it be possible."</p>
<p>Phineas, when he had written his letter to Mr. Low, started off
for Lincoln's Inn, making his way through the well-known dreary
streets of Soho, and through St. Giles's, to Long Acre. He knew
every corner well, for he had walked the same road almost daily
for the last three years. He had conceived a liking for the route,
which he might easily have changed without much addition to the
distance, by passing through Oxford Street and Holborn; but there
was an air of business on which he prided himself in going by the
most direct passage, and he declared to himself very often that
things dreary and dingy to the eye might be good in themselves.
Lincoln's Inn itself is dingy, and the Law Courts therein are
perhaps the meanest in which Equity ever disclosed herself. Mr.
Low's three rooms in the Old Square, each of them brown with the
binding of law books and with the dust collected on law papers,
and with furniture that had been brown always, and had become
browner with years, were perhaps as unattractive to the eye of a
young pupil as any rooms which were ever entered. And the study of
the Chancery law itself is not an alluring pursuit till the mind
has come to have some insight into the beauty of its ultimate
object. Phineas, during his three years' course of reasoning on
these things, had taught himself to believe that things ugly on
the outside might be very beautiful within; and had therefore come
to prefer crossing Poland Street and Soho Square, and so
continuing his travels by the Seven Dials and Long Acre. His
morning walk was of a piece with his morning studies, and he took
pleasure in the gloom of both. But now the taste of his palate had
been already changed by the glare of the lamps in and about
palatial Westminster, and he found that St. Giles's was
disagreeable. The ways about Pall Mall and across the Park to
Parliament Street, or to the Treasury, were much pleasanter, and
the new offices in Downing Street, already half built, absorbed
all that interest which he had hitherto been able to take in the
suggested but uncommenced erection of new Law Courts in the
neighbourhood of Lincoln's Inn. As he made his way to the porter's
lodge under the great gateway of Lincoln's Inn, he told himself
that he was glad that he had escaped, at any rate for a while,
from a life so dull and dreary. If he could only sit in chambers
at the Treasury instead of chambers in that old court, how much
pleasanter it would be! After all, as regarded that question of
income, it might well be that the Treasury chambers should be the
more remunerative, and the more quickly remunerative, of the two.
And, as he thought, Lady Laura might be compatible with the
Treasury chambers and Parliament, but could not possibly be made
compatible with Old Square, Lincoln's Inn.</p>
<p>But nevertheless there came upon him a feeling of sorrow when the
old man at the lodge seemed to be rather glad than otherwise that
he did not want the chambers. "Then Mr. Green can have them," said
the porter; "that'll be good news for Mr. Green. I don't know what
the gen'lemen 'll do for chambers if things goes on as they're
going." Mr. Green was welcome to the chambers as far as Phineas
was concerned; but Phineas felt nevertheless a certain amount of
regret that he should have been compelled to abandon a thing which
was regarded both by the porter and by Mr. Green as being so
desirable. He had however written his letter to Mr. Low, and made
his promise to Barrington Erle, and was bound to Lady Laura
Standish; and he walked out through the old gateway into Chancery
Lane, resolving that he would not even visit Lincoln's Inn again
for a year. There were certain books,—law books,—which he would
read at such intervals of leisure as politics might give him; but
within the precincts of the Inns of Court he would not again put
his foot for twelve months, let learned pundits of the law,—such
for instance as Mr. and Mrs. Low,—say what they might.</p>
<p>He had told Mrs. Bunce, before he left his home after breakfast,
that he should for the present remain under her roof. She had been
much gratified, not simply because lodgings in Great Marlborough
Street are less readily let than chambers in Lincoln's Inn, but
also because it was a great honour to her to have a member of
Parliament in her house. Members of Parliament are not so common
about Oxford Street as they are in the neighbourhood of Pall Mall
and St. James's Square. But Mr. Bunce, when he came home to his
dinner, did not join as heartily as he should have done in his
wife's rejoicing. Mr. Bunce was in the employment of certain
copying law-stationers in Carey Street, and had a strong belief in
the law as a profession;—but he had none whatever in the House of
Commons. "And he's given up going into chambers?" said Mr. Bunce
to his wife.</p>
<p>"Given it up altogether for the present," said Mrs. Bunce.</p>
<p>"And he don't mean to have no clerk?" said Mr. Bunce.</p>
<p>"Not unless it is for his Parliament work."</p>
<p>"There ain't no clerks wanted for that, and what's worse, there
ain't no fees to pay 'em. I'll tell you what it is, Jane;—if you
don't look sharp there won't be nothing to pay you before long."</p>
<p>"And he in Parliament, Jacob!"</p>
<p>"There ain't no salary for being in Parliament. There are scores
of them Parliament gents ain't got so much as'll pay their dinners
for 'em. And then if anybody does trust 'em, there's no getting at
'em to make 'em pay as there is at other folk."</p>
<p>"I don't know that our Mr. Phineas will ever be like that, Jacob."</p>
<p>"That's gammon, Jane. That's the way as women gets themselves took
in always. Our Mr. Phineas! Why should our Mr. Phineas be better
than anybody else?"</p>
<p>"He's always acted handsome, Jacob."</p>
<p>"There was one time he could not pay his lodgings for wellnigh
nine months, till his governor come down with the money. I don't
know whether that was handsome. It knocked me about terrible, I
know."</p>
<p>"He always meant honest, Jacob."</p>
<p>"I don't know that I care much for a man's meaning when he runs
short of money. How is he going to see his way, with his seat in
Parliament, and this giving up of his profession? He owes us near
a quarter now."</p>
<p>"He paid me two months this morning, Jacob; so he don't owe a
farthing."</p>
<p>"Very well;—so much the better for us. I shall just have a few
words with Mr. Low, and see what he says to it. For myself I don't
think half so much of Parliament folk as some do. They're for
promising everything before they's elected; but not one in twenty
of 'em is as good as his word when he gets there."</p>
<p>Mr. Bunce was a copying journeyman, who spent ten hours a day in
Carey Street with a pen between his fingers; and after that he
would often spend two or three hours of the night with a pen
between his fingers in Marlborough Street. He was a thoroughly
hard-working man, doing pretty well in the world, for he had a
good house over his head, and always could find raiment and bread
for his wife and eight children; but, nevertheless, he was an
unhappy man because he suffered from political grievances, or, I
should more correctly say, that his grievances were semi-political
and semi-social. He had no vote, not being himself the tenant of
the house in Great Marlborough Street. The tenant was a tailor who
occupied the shop, whereas Bunce occupied the whole of the
remainder of the premises. He was a lodger, and lodgers were not
as yet trusted with the franchise. And he had ideas, which he
himself admitted to be very raw, as to the injustice of the manner
in which he was paid for his work. So much a folio, without
reference to the way in which his work was done, without regard to
the success of his work, with no questions asked of himself, was,
as he thought, no proper way of remunerating a man for his
labours. He had long since joined a Trade Union, and for two years
past had paid a subscription of a shilling a week towards its
funds. He longed to be doing some battle against his superiors,
and to be putting himself in opposition to his employers;—not
that he objected personally to Messrs. Foolscap, Margin, and
Vellum, who always made much of him as a useful man;—but because
some such antagonism would be manly, and the fighting of some
battle would be the right thing to do. "If Labour don't mean to go
to the wall himself," Bunce would say to his wife, "Labour must
look alive, and put somebody else there."</p>
<p>Mrs. Bunce was a comfortable motherly woman, who loved her husband
but hated politics. As he had an aversion to his superiors in the
world because they were superiors, so had she a liking for them
for the same reason. She despised people poorer than herself, and
thought it a fair subject for boasting that her children always
had meat for dinner. If it was ever so small a morsel, she took
care that they had it, in order that the boast might be
maintained. The world had once or twice been almost too much for
her,—when, for instance, her husband had been ill; and again, to
tell the truth, for the last three months of that long period in
which Phineas had omitted to pay his bills; but she had kept a
fine brave heart during those troubles, and could honestly swear
that the children always had a bit of meat, though she herself had
been occasionally without it for days together. At such times she
would be more than ordinarily meek to Mr. Margin, and especially
courteous to the old lady who lodged in her first-floor
drawing-room,—for Phineas lived up two pairs of stairs,—and she
would excuse such servility by declaring that there was no knowing
how soon she might want assistance. But her husband, in such
emergencies, would become furious and quarrelsome, and would
declare that Labour was going to the wall, and that something very
strong must be done at once. That shilling which Bunce paid weekly
to the Union she regarded as being absolutely thrown away,—as
much so as though he cast it weekly into the Thames. And she had
told him so, over and over again, making heart-piercing allusions
to the eight children and to the bit of meat. He would always
endeavour to explain to her that there was no other way under the
sun for keeping Labour from being sent to the wall;—but he would
do so hopelessly and altogether ineffectually, and she had come to
regard him as a lunatic to the extent of that one weekly shilling.</p>
<p>She had a woman's instinctive partiality for comeliness in a man,
and was very fond of Phineas Finn because he was handsome. And now
she was very proud of him because he was a member of Parliament.
She had heard,—from her husband, who had told her the fact with
much disgust,—that the sons of Dukes and Earls go into
Parliament, and she liked to think that the fine young man to whom
she talked more or less every day should sit with the sons of
Dukes and Earls. When Phineas had really brought distress upon her
by owing her some thirty or forty pounds, she could never bring
herself to be angry with him,—because he was handsome and because
he dined out with Lords. And she had triumphed greatly over her
husband, who had desired to be severe upon his aristocratic
debtor, when the money had all been paid in a lump.</p>
<p>"I don't know that he's any great catch," Bunce had said, when the
prospect of their lodger's departure had been debated between
them.</p>
<p>"Jacob," said his wife, "I don't think you feel it when you've got
people respectable about you."</p>
<p>"The only respectable man I know," said Jacob, "is the man as
earns his bread; and Mr. Finn, as I take it, is a long way from
that yet."</p>
<p>Phineas returned to his lodgings before he went down to his club,
and again told Mrs. Bunce that he had altogether made up his mind
about the chambers. "If you'll keep me I shall stay here for the
first session I daresay."</p>
<p>"Of course we shall be only too proud, Mr. Finn; and though it
mayn't perhaps be quite the place for a member of Parliament—"</p>
<p>"But I think it is quite the place."</p>
<p>"It's very good of you to say so, Mr. Finn, and we'll do our very
best to make you comfortable. Respectable we are, I may say; and
though Bunce is a bit rough sometimes—"</p>
<p>"Never to me, Mrs. Bunce."</p>
<p>"But he is rough,—and silly, too, with his radical nonsense,
paying a shilling a week to a nasty Union just for nothing. Still
he means well, and there ain't a man who works harder for his wife
and children;—that I will say of him. And if he do talk
politics—"</p>
<p>"But I like a man to talk politics, Mrs. Bunce."</p>
<p>"For a gentleman in Parliament of course it's proper; but I never
could see what good it could do to a law-stationer; and when he
talks of Labour going to the wall, I always ask him whether he
didn't get his wages regular last Saturday. But, Lord love you,
Mr. Finn, when a man as is a journeyman has took up politics and
joined a Trade Union, he ain't no better than a milestone for his
wife to take and talk to him."</p>
<p>After that Phineas went down to the Reform Club, and made one of
those who were buzzing there in little crowds and uttering their
prophecies as to future events. Lord de Terrier was to go out.
That was certain. Whether Mr. Mildmay was to come in was
uncertain. That he would go to Windsor to-morrow morning was not
to be doubted; but it was thought very probable that he might
plead his age, and decline to undertake the responsibility of
forming a Ministry.</p>
<p>"And what then?" said Phineas to his friend Fitzgibbon.</p>
<p>"Why, then there will be a choice out of three. There is the Duke,
who is the most incompetent man in England; there is Monk, who is
the most unfit; and there is Gresham, who is the most unpopular. I
can't conceive it possible to find a worse Prime Minister than
either of the three;—but the country affords no other."</p>
<p>"And which would Mildmay name?"</p>
<p>"All of them,—one after the other, so as to make the
embarrassment the greater." That was Mr. Fitzgibbon's description
of the crisis; but then it was understood that Mr. Fitzgibbon was
given to romancing.</p>
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