<p><SPAN name="76"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER LXXVI</h3>
<h3>Conclusion<br/> </h3>
<p>We are told that it is a bitter moment with the Lord Mayor when he
leaves the Mansion House and becomes once more Alderman Jones, of
No. 75, Bucklersbury. Lord Chancellors going out of office have a
great fall though they take pensions with them for their
consolation. And the President of the United States when he leaves
the glory of the White House and once more becomes a simple
citizen must feel the change severely. But our hero, Phineas Finn,
as he turned his back upon the scene of his many successes, and
prepared himself for permanent residence in his own country, was,
I think, in a worse plight than any of the reduced divinities to
whom I have alluded. They at any rate had known that their fall
would come. He, like Icarus, had flown up towards the sun, hoping
that his wings of wax would bear him steadily aloft among the
gods. Seeing that his wings were wings of wax, we must acknowledge
that they were very good. But the celestial lights had been too
strong for them, and now, having lived for five years with lords
and countesses, with Ministers and orators, with beautiful women
and men of fashion, he must start again in a little lodging in
Dublin, and hope that the attorneys of that litigious city might
be good to him. On his journey home he made but one resolution. He
would make the change, or attempt to make it, with manly strength.
During his last month in London he had allowed himself to be sad,
depressed, and melancholy. There should be an end of all that now.
Nobody at home should see that he was depressed. And Mary, his own
Mary, should at any rate have no cause to think that her love and
his own engagement had ever been the cause to him of depression.
Did he not value her love more than anything in the world? A
thousand times he told himself that he did.</p>
<p>She was there in the old house at Killaloe to greet him. Her
engagement was an affair known to all the county, and she had no
idea that it would become her to be coy in her love. She was in
his arms before he had spoken to his father and mother, and had
made her little speech to him,—very inaudibly indeed,—while he
was covering her sweet face with kisses. "Oh, Phineas, I am so
proud of you; and I think you are so right, and I am so glad you
have done it." Again he covered her face with kisses. Could he
ever have had such satisfaction as this had he allowed Madame
Goesler's hand to remain in his?</p>
<p>On the first night of his arrival he sat for an hour downstairs
with his father talking over his plans. He felt,—he could not but
feel,—that he was not the hero now that he had been when he was
last at Killaloe,—when he had come thither with a Cabinet
Minister under his wing. And yet his father did his best to
prevent the growth of any such feeling. The old doctor was not
quite as well off as he had been when Phineas first started with
his high hopes for London. Since that day he had abandoned his
profession and was now living on the fruits of his life's labour.
For the last two years he had been absolved from the necessity of
providing an income for his son, and had probably allowed himself
to feel that no such demand upon him would again be made. Now,
however, it was necessary that he should do so. Could his son
manage to live on two hundred a-year? There would then be four
hundred a-year left for the wants of the family at home. Phineas
swore that he could fight his battle on a hundred and fifty, and
they ended the argument by splitting the difference. He had been
paying exactly the same sum of money for the rooms he had just
left in London; but then, while he held those rooms, his income
had been two thousand a-year. Tenant-right was a very fine thing,
but could it be worth such a fall as this?</p>
<p>"And about dear Mary?" said the father.</p>
<p>"I hope it may not be very long," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"I have not spoken to her about it, but your mother says that Mrs.
Flood Jones is very averse to a long engagement."</p>
<p>"What can I do? She would not wish me to marry her daughter with
no other income than an allowance made by you."</p>
<p>"Your mother says that she has some idea that you and she might
live together;—that if they let Floodborough you might take a
small house in Dublin. Remember, Phineas, I am not proposing it
myself."</p>
<p>Then Phineas bethought himself that he was not even yet so low in
the world that he need submit himself to terms dictated to him by
Mrs. Flood Jones. "I am glad that you do not propose it, sir."</p>
<p>"Why so, Phineas?"</p>
<p>"Because I should have been obliged to oppose the plan even if it
had come from you. Mothers-in-law are never a comfort in a house."</p>
<p>"I never tried it myself," said the doctor.</p>
<p>"And I never will try it. I am quite sure that Mary does not
expect any such thing, and that she is willing to wait. If I can
shorten the term of waiting by hard work, I will do so." The
decision to which Phineas had come on this matter was probably
made known to Mrs. Flood Jones after some mild fashion by old Mrs.
Finn. Nothing more was said to Phineas about a joint household;
but he was quite able to perceive from the manner of the lady
towards him that his proposed mother-in-law wished him to
understand that he was treating her daughter very badly. What did
it signify? None of them knew the story of Madame Goesler, and of
course none of them would know it. None of them would ever hear
how well he had behaved to his little Mary.</p>
<p>But Mary did know it all before he left her to go up to Dublin.
The two lovers allowed themselves,—or were allowed by their
elders, one week of exquisite bliss together; and during this
week, Phineas told her, I think, everything. He told her
everything as far as he could do so without seeming to boast of
his own successes. How is a man not to tell such tales when he has
on his arm, close to him, a girl who tells him her little
everything of life, and only asks for his confidence in return?
And then his secrets are so precious to her and so sacred, that he
feels as sure of her fidelity as though she were a very goddess of
faith and trust. And the temptation to tell is so great. For all
that he has to tell she loves him the better and still the better.
A man desires to win a virgin heart, and is happy to know,—or at
least to believe,—that he has won it. With a woman every former
rival is an added victim to the wheels of the triumphant chariot
in which she is sitting. "All these has he known and loved,
culling sweets from each of them. But now he has come to me, and I
am the sweetest of them all." And so Mary was taught to believe of
Laura and of Violet and of Madame Goesler,—that though they had
had charms to please, her lover had never been so charmed as he
was now while she was hanging to his breast. And I think that she
was right in her belief. During those lovely summer evening walks
along the shores of Lough Derg, Phineas was as happy as he had
ever been at any moment of his life.</p>
<p>"I shall never be impatient,—never," she said to him on the last
evening. "All I want is that you should write to me."</p>
<p>"I shall want more than that, Mary."</p>
<p>"Then you must come down and see me. When you do come they will be
happy, happy days for me. But of course we cannot be married for
the next twenty years."</p>
<p>"Say forty, Mary."</p>
<p>"I will say anything that you like;—you will know what I mean
just as well. And, Phineas, I must tell you one thing,—though it
makes me sad to think of it, and will make me sad to speak of it."</p>
<p>"I will not have you sad on our last night, Mary."</p>
<p>"I must say it. I am beginning to understand how much you have
given up for me."</p>
<p>"I have given up nothing for you."</p>
<p>"If I had not been at Killaloe when Mr. Monk was here, and if we
had not,—had not,—oh dear, if I had not loved you so very much,
you might have remained in London, and that lady would have been
your wife."</p>
<p>"Never!" said Phineas stoutly.</p>
<p>"Would she not? She must not be your wife now, Phineas. I am not
going to pretend that I will give you up."</p>
<p>"That is unkind, Mary."</p>
<p>"Oh, well; you may say what you please. If that is unkind, I am
unkind. It would kill me to lose you."</p>
<p>Had he done right? How could there be a doubt about it? How could
there be a question about it? Which of them had loved him, or was
capable of loving him as Mary loved him? What girl was ever so
sweet, so gracious, so angelic, as his own Mary? He swore to her
that he was prouder of winning her than of anything he had ever
done in all his life, and that of all the treasures that had ever
come in his way she was the most precious. She went to bed that
night the happiest girl in all Connaught, although when she parted
from him she understood that she was not to see him again till
Christmas-Eve.</p>
<p>But she did see him again before the summer was over, and the
manner of their meeting was in this wise. Immediately after the
passing of that scrambled Irish Reform Bill, Parliament, as the
reader knows, was dissolved. This was in the early days of June,
and before the end of July the new members were again assembled at
Westminster. This session, late in summer, was very terrible; but
it was not very long, and then it was essentially necessary. There
was something of the year's business which must yet be done, and
the country would require to know who were to be the Ministers of
the Government. It is not needed that the reader should be
troubled any further with the strategy of one political leader or
of another, or that more should be said of Mr. Monk and his
tenant-right. The House of Commons had offended Mr. Gresham by
voting in a majority against him, and Mr. Gresham had punished the
House of Commons by subjecting it to the expense and nuisance of a
new election. All this is constitutional, and rational enough to
Englishmen, though it may be unintelligible to strangers. The
upshot on the present occasion was that the Ministers remained in
their places and that Mr. Monk's bill, though it had received the
substantial honour of a second reading, passed away for the
present into the limbo of abortive legislation.</p>
<p>All this would not concern us at all, nor our poor hero much, were
it not that the great men with whom he had been for two years so
pleasant a colleague, remembered him with something of
affectionate regret. Whether it began with Mr. Gresham or with
Lord Cantrip, I will not say;—or whether Mr. Monk, though now a
political enemy, may have said a word that brought about the good
deed. Be that as it may, just before the summer session was
brought to a close Phineas received the following letter from Lord
Cantrip:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright"><i>Downing Street, August 4,
186––.</i></p>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps">My dear
Mr. Finn</span>,—</p>
<p>Mr. Gresham has been talking to me, and we both think that
possibly a permanent Government appointment may be acceptable to
you. We have no doubt, that should this be the case, your services
would be very valuable to the country. There is a vacancy for a
poor-law inspector at present in Ireland, whose residence I
believe should be in Cork. The salary is a thousand a-year. Should
the appointment suit you, Mr. Gresham will be most happy to
nominate you to the office. Let me have a line at your early
convenience.</p>
<p class="ind10">Believe me,</p>
<p class="ind12">Most sincerely yours,</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Cantrip</span>.<br/>
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>He received the letter one morning in Dublin, and within three
hours he was on his route to Killaloe. Of course he would accept
the appointment, but he would not even do that without telling
Mary of his new prospect. Of course he would accept the
appointment. Though he had been as yet barely two months in
Dublin, though he had hardly been long enough settled to his work
to have hoped to be able to see in which way there might be a
vista open leading to success, still he had fancied that he had
seen that success was impossible. He did not know how to
begin,—and men were afraid of him, thinking that he was unsteady,
arrogant, and prone to failure. He had not seen his way to the
possibility of a guinea.</p>
<p>"A thousand a-year!" said Mary Flood Jones, opening her eyes wide
with wonder at the golden future before them.</p>
<p>"It is nothing very great for a perpetuity," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Oh, Phineas; surely a thousand a-year will be very nice."</p>
<p>"It will be certain," said Phineas, "and then we can be married
to-morrow."</p>
<p>"But I have been making up my mind to wait ever so long," said
Mary.</p>
<p>"Then your mind must be unmade," said Phineas.</p>
<p>What was the nature of the reply to Lord Cantrip the reader may
imagine, and thus we will leave our hero an Inspector of Poor
Houses in the County of Cork.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />