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<h2> CHAPTER XXI. 'THE YOUNG MINISTER OF STATE' </h2>
<p>Descriptions in the newspapers of the rural funeral of Lord Dannisburgh
had the effect of rousing flights of tattlers with a twittering of the
disused name of Warwick; our social Gods renewed their combat, and the
verdict of the jury was again overhauled, to be attacked and maintained,
the carpers replying to the champions that they held to their view of it:
as heads of bull-dogs are expected to do when they have got a grip of one.
It is a point of muscular honour with them never to relax their hold. They
will tell you why:—they formed that opinion from the first. And but
for the swearing of a particular witness, upon whom the plaintiff had been
taught to rely, the verdict would have been different—to prove their
soundness of judgement. They could speak from private positive information
of certain damnatory circumstances, derived from authentic sources. Visits
of a gentleman to the house of a married lady in the absence of the
husband? Oh!—The British Lucretia was very properly not legally at
home to the masculine world of that day. She plied her distaff in pure
seclusion, meditating on her absent lord; or else a fair proportion of the
masculine world, which had not yet, has not yet, 'doubled Cape Turk,'
approved her condemnation to the sack.</p>
<p>There was talk in the feminine world, at Lady Wathin's assemblies. The
elevation of her husband had extended and deepened her influence on the
levels where it reigned before, but without, strange as we may think it
now, assisting to her own elevation, much aspired for, to the smooth and
lively upper pavement of Society, above its tumbled strata. She was near
that distinguished surface, not on it. Her circle was practically the same
as it was previous to the coveted nominal rank enabling her to trample on
those beneath it. And women like that Mrs. Warwick, a woman of no birth,
no money, not even honest character, enjoyed the entry undisputed,
circulated among the highest:—because people took her rattle for
wit!—and because also our nobility, Lady Wathin feared, had no due
regard for morality. Our aristocracy, brilliant and ancient though it was,
merited rebuke. She grew severe upon aristocratic scandals, whereof were
plenty among the frolicsome host just overhead, as vexatious as the
drawing-room party to the lodger in the floor below, who has not received
an invitation to partake of the festivities and is required to digest the
noise. But if ambition is oversensitive, moral indignation is ever
consolatory, for it plants us on the Judgement Seat. There indeed we may,
sitting with the very Highest, forget our personal disappointments in
dispensing reprobation for misconduct, however eminent the offenders.</p>
<p>She was Lady Wathin, and once on an afternoon's call to see poor Lady
Dunstane at her town-house, she had been introduced to Lady Pennon, a
patroness of Mrs. Warwick, and had met a snub—an icy check-bow of
the aristocratic head from the top of the spinal column, and not a word,
not a look; the half-turn of a head devoid of mouth and eyes! She
practised that forbidding checkbow herself to perfection, so the endurance
of it was horrible. A noli me tangere, her husband termed it, in his
ridiculous equanimity; and he might term it what he pleased—it was
insulting. The solace she had was in hearing that hideous Radical
Revolutionary things were openly spoken at Mrs. Warwick's evenings with
her friends:—impudently named 'the elect of London.' Pleasing to
reflect upon Mrs. Warwick as undermining her supporters, to bring them
some day down with a crash! Her 'elect of London' were a queer gathering,
by report of them! And Mr. Whitmonby too, no doubt a celebrity, was the
right-hand man at these dinner-parties of Mrs. Warwick. Where will not men
go to be flattered by a pretty woman! He had declined repeated, successive
invitations to Lady Wathin's table. But there of course he would not have
had 'the freedom': that is, she rejoiced in thinking defensively and
offensively, a moral wall enclosed her topics. The Hon. Percy Dacier had
been brought to her Thursday afternoon by. Mr. Quintin Manx, and he had
one day dined with her; and he knew Mrs. Warwick—a little, he said.
The opportunity was not lost to convey to him, entirely in the interest of
sweet Constance Asper, that the moral world entertained a settled view of
the very clever woman Mrs. Warwick certainly was. He had asked Diana, on
their morning walk to the station, whether she had an enemy: so prone are
men, educated by the Drama and Fiction in the belief that the garden of
civilized life must be at the mercy of the old wild devourers, to fancy
'villain whispers' an indication of direct animosity. Lady Wathin had no
sentiment of the kind.</p>
<p>But she had become acquainted with the other side of the famous
Dannisburgh case—the unfortunate plaintiff; and compassion as well
as morality moved her to put on a speaking air when Mr. Warwick's name was
mentioned. She pictured him to the ladies of her circle as 'one of our
true gentlemen in his deportment and his feelings.' He was, she would
venture to say, her ideal of an English gentleman. 'But now,' she added
commiseratingly, 'ruined; ruined in his health and in his prospects.' A
lady inquired if it was the verdict that had thus affected him. Lady
Wathin's answer was reported over moral, or substratum, London: 'He is the
victim of a fatal passion for his wife; and would take her back to-morrow
were she to solicit his forgiveness.' Morality had something to say
against this active marital charity, attributable, it was to be feared, to
weakness of character on the part of the husband. Still Mrs. Warwick
undoubtedly was one of those women (of Satanic construction) who have the
art of enslaving the men unhappy enough to cross their path. The nature of
the art was hinted, with the delicacy of dainty feet which have to tread
in mire to get to safety. Men, alas! are snared in this way. Instances too
numerous for the good repute of the swinish sex, were cited, and the
question of how Morality was defensible from their grossness passed
without a tactical reply. There is no defence: Those women come like the
Cholera Morbus—and owing to similar causes. They will prevail until
the ideas of men regarding women are purified. Nevertheless the husband
who could forgive, even propose to forgive, was deemed by consent
generous, however weak. Though she might not have been wholly guilty, she
had bitterly offended. And he despatched an emissary to her?—The
theme, one may, in their language, 'fear,' was relished as a sugared acid.
It was renewed in the late Autumn of the year, when ANTONIA published her
new book, entitled THE YOUNG MINISTER of STATE. The signature of the
authoress was now known; and from this resurgence of her name in public,
suddenly a radiation of tongues from the circle of Lady Wathin declared
that the repentant Mrs. Warwick had gone back to her husband's bosom and
forgiveness! The rumour spread in spite of sturdy denials at odd corners,
counting the red-hot proposal of Mr. Sullivan Smith to eat his head and
boots for breakfast if it was proved correct. It filled a yawn of the
Clubs for the afternoon. Soon this wanton rumour was met and stifled by
another of more morbific density, heavily charged as that which led the
sad Eliza to her pyre.</p>
<p>ANTONIA's hero was easily identified. THE YOUNG MINISTER of STATE could be
he only who was now at all her parties, always meeting her; had been spied
walking with her daily in the park near her house, on his march down to
Westminster during the session; and who positively went to concerts and
sat under fiddlers to be near her. It accounted moreover for his treatment
of Constance Asper. What effrontery of the authoress, to placard herself
with him in a book! The likeness of the hero to Percy Dacier once
established became striking to glaringness—a proof of her ability,
and more of her audacity; still more of her intention to flatter him up to
his perdition. By the things written of him, one would imagine the
conversations going on behind the scenes. She had the wiles of a
Cleopatra, not without some of the Nilene's experiences. A youthful Antony
Dacier would be little likely to escape her toils. And so promising a
young man! The sigh, the tear for weeping over his destruction, almost
fell, such vivid realizing of the prophesy appeared in its pathetic
pronouncement.</p>
<p>This low rumour, or malaria, began blowing in the winter, and did not
travel fast; for strangely, there was hardly a breath of it in the
atmosphere of Dacier, none in Diana's. It rose from groups not so rapidly
and largely mixing, and less quick to kindle; whose crazy sincereness
battened on the smallest morsel of fact and collected the fictitious by
slow absorption. But as guardians of morality, often doing good duty in
their office, they are persistent. When Parliament assembled, Mr. Quintin
Manx, a punctual member of the House, if nothing else, arrived in town. He
was invited to dine with Lady Wathin. After dinner she spoke to him of the
absent Constance, and heard of her being well, and expressed a great
rejoicing at that. Whereupon the burly old shipowner frowned and puffed.
Constance, he said, had plunged into these new spangle, candle and high
singing services; was all for symbols, harps, effigies, what not. Lady
Wathin's countenance froze in hearing of it. She led Mr. Quintin to a
wall-sofa, and said: 'Surely the dear child must have had a
disappointment, for her to have taken to those foolish displays of
religion! It is generally a sign.'</p>
<p>'Well, ma'am-my lady—I let girls go their ways in such things. I
don't interfere. But it's that fellow, or nobody, with her. She has fixed
her girl's mind on him, and if she can't columbine as a bride, she will as
a nun. Young people must be at some harlequinade.'</p>
<p>'But it is very shocking. And he?'</p>
<p>'He plays last and loose, warm and cold. I'm ready to settle twenty times
a nobleman's dowry on my niece and she's a fine girl, a handsome girl,
educated up to the brim, fit to queen it in any drawing-room. He holds her
by some arts that don't hold him, it seems. He's all for politics.'</p>
<p>'Constance can scarcely be his dupe so far, I should think.'</p>
<p>'How do you mean?'</p>
<p>'Everything points to one secret of his conduct.'</p>
<p>'A woman?'</p>
<p>Lady Wathin's head shook for her sex's pained affirmative.</p>
<p>Mr. Quintin in the same fashion signified the downright negative. 'The
fellow's as cold as a fish.'</p>
<p>'Flattery will do anything. There is, I fear, one.'</p>
<p>'Widow? wife? maid?'</p>
<p>'Married, I regret to say.'</p>
<p>'Well, if he'd get over with it,' said Quintin, in whose notions the
seductiveness of a married woman could be only temporary, for all the
reasons pertaining to her state. At the same time his view of Percy Dacier
was changed in thinking it possible that a woman could divert him from his
political and social interests. He looked incredulous.</p>
<p>'You have heard of a Mrs. Warwick?' said Lady Wathin.</p>
<p>'Warwick! I have. I've never seen her. At my broker's in the City
yesterday I saw the name on a Memorandum of purchase of Shares in a
concern promising ten per cent., and not likely to carry the per annum
into the plural. He told me she was a grand kind of woman, past advising.'</p>
<p>'For what amount'</p>
<p>'Some thousands, I think it was.'</p>
<p>'She has no money': Lady Wathin corrected her emphasis: 'or ought to have
none.'</p>
<p>'She can't have got it from him.'</p>
<p>'Did you notice her Christian name?'</p>
<p>'I don't recollect it, if I did. I thought the woman a donkey.'</p>
<p>'Would you consider me a busybody were I to try to mitigate this woman's
evil influence? I love dear Constance, and should be happy to serve her.'</p>
<p>'I want my girl married,' said old Quintin. 'He's one of my Parliamentary
chiefs, with first-rate prospects; good family, good sober fellow—at
least I thought so; by nature, I mean; barring your incantations. He suits
me, she liking him.'</p>
<p>'She admires him, I am sure.'</p>
<p>'She's dead on end for the fellow!'</p>
<p>Lady Wathin felt herself empowered by Quintin Manx to undertake the
release of sweet Constance Asper's knight from the toils of his
enchantress. For this purpose she had first an interview with Mr. Warwick,
and next she hurried to Lady Dunstane at Copsley. There, after jumbling
Mr. Warwick's connubial dispositions and Mrs. Warwick's last book, and Mr.
Percy Dacier's engagement to the great heiress in a gossipy hotch-potch,
she contrived to gather a few items of fact, as that THE YOUNG MINISTER
was probably modelled upon Mr. Percy Dacier. Lady Dunstane made no
concealment of it as soon as she grew sensible of the angling. But she
refused her help to any reconciliation between Mr. and Mrs. Warwick. She
declined to listen to Lady Wathin's entreaties. She declined to give her
reasons.—These bookworm women, whose pride it is to fancy that they
can think for themselves, have a great deal of the heathen in them, as
morality discovers when it wears the enlistment ribands and applies yo
them to win recruits for a service under the direct blessing of
Providence.</p>
<p>Lady Wathin left some darts behind her, in the form of moral exclamations;
and really intended morally. For though she did not like Mrs. Warwick, she
had no wish to wound, other than by stopping her further studies of the
Young Minister, and conducting him to the young lady loving him, besides
restoring a bereft husband to his own. How sadly pale and worn poor Mr.
Warwick appeared? The portrayal of his withered visage to Lady Dunstane
had quite failed to gain a show of sympathy. And so it is ever with your
book-worm women pretending to be philosophical! You sound them vainly for
a manifestation of the commonest human sensibilities, They turn over the
leaves of a Latin book on their laps while you are supplicating them to
assist in a work of charity!</p>
<p>Lady Wathin's interjectory notes haunted Emma's ear. Yet she had seen
nothing in Tony to let her suppose that there was trouble of her heart
below the surface; and her Tony when she came to Copsley shone in the mood
of the day of Lord Dannisburgh's drive down from London with her. She was
running on a fresh work; talked of composition as a trifle.</p>
<p>'I suppose the YOUNG MINISTER is Mr. Percy Dacier?' said Emma.</p>
<p>'Between ourselves he is,' Diana replied, smiling at a secret guessed.
'You know my model and can judge of the likeness.'</p>
<p>'You write admiringly of him, Tony.'</p>
<p>'And I do admire him. So would you, Emmy, if you knew him as well as I do
now. He pairs with Mr. Redworth; he also is the friend of women. But he
lifts us to rather a higher level of intellectual friendship. When the ice
has melted—and it is thick at first—he pours forth all his
ideas without reserve; and they are deep and noble. Ever since Lord
Dannisburgh's death and our sitting together, we have been warm friends—intimate,
I would say, if it could be said of one so self-contained. In that
respect, no young man was ever comparable with him. And I am encouraged to
flatter myself that he unbends to me more than to others.'</p>
<p>'He is engaged, or partly, I hear; why does he not marry?'</p>
<p>'I wish he would!' Diana said, with a most brilliant candour of aspect.</p>
<p>Emma read in it, that it would complete her happiness, possibly by
fortifying her sense of security; and that seemed right. Her own
meditations, illumined by the beautiful face in her presence, referred to
the security of Mr. Dacier.</p>
<p>'So, then, life is going smoothly,' said Emma.</p>
<p>'Yes, at a good pace and smoothly: not a torrent—Thames-like,
“without o'erflowing full.” It is not Lugano and the Salvatore. Perhaps it
is better: as action is better than musing.'</p>
<p>'No troubles whatever?'</p>
<p>'None. Well, except an “adorer” at times. I have to take him as my
portion. An impassioned Caledonian has a little bothered me. I met him at
Lady Pennon's, and have been meeting him, as soon as I put foot out of my
house, ever since. If I could impress and impound him to marry Mary
Paynham, I should be glad. By the way, I have consented to let her try at
a portrait of me. No, I have no troubles. I have friends, the choicest of
the nation; I have health, a field for labour, fairish success with it; a
mind alive, such as it is. I feel like that midsummer morning of our last
drive out together, the sun high, clearish, clouded enough to be cool. And
still I envy Emmy on her sofa, mastering Latin, biting at Greek. What a
wise recommendation that was of Mr. Redworth's! He works well in the
House. He spoke excellently the other night.'</p>
<p>'He runs over to Ireland this Easter.'</p>
<p>'He sees for himself, and speaks with authority. He sees and feels.
Englishmen mean well, but they require an extremity of misery to waken
their feelings.'</p>
<p>'It is coming, he says; and absit omen!'</p>
<p>'Mr. Dacier says he is the one Englishman who may always be sure of an
Irish hearing; and he does not cajole them, you know. But the English
defect is really not want of feeling so much as want of foresight. They
will not look ahead. A famine ceasing, a rebellion crushed, they jog on as
before, with their Dobbin trot and blinker confidence in “Saxon energy.”
They should study the Irish: I think it was Mr. Redworth who compared the
governing of the Irish to the management of a horse: the rider should not
grow restive when the steed begins to kick: calmer; firm, calm,
persuasive.'</p>
<p>'Does Mr. Dacier agree?'</p>
<p>'Not always. He has the inveterate national belief that Celtic blood is
childish, and the consequently illogical disregard of its hold of
impressions. The Irish—for I have them in my heart, though I have
not been among them for long at a time—must love you to serve you,
and will hate you if you have done them injury and they have not wiped it
out—they with a treble revenge, or you with cordial benefits. I have
told him so again and again: ventured to suggest measures.'</p>
<p>'He listens to you, Tony?'</p>
<p>'He says I have brains. It ends in a compliment.'</p>
<p>'You have inspired Mr. Redworth.'</p>
<p>'If I have, I have lived for some good.'</p>
<p>Altogether her Tony's conversation proved to Emma that her perusal of the
model of THE YOUNG MINISTER OF STATE was an artist's, free, open, and not
discoloured by the personal tincture. Her heart plainly was free and
undisturbed. She had the same girl's love of her walks where wildflowers
grew; if possible, a keener pleasure. She hummed of her happiness in being
at Copsley, singing her Planxty Kelly and The Puritani by turns. She stood
on land: she was not on the seas. Emma thought so with good reason.</p>
<p>She stood on land, it was true, but she stood on a cliff of the land, the
seas below and about her; and she was enabled to hoodwink her friend
because the assured sensation of her firm footing deceived her own soul,
even while it took short flights to the troubled waters. Of her firm
footing she was exultingly proud. She stood high, close to danger, without
giddiness. If at intervals her soul flew out like lightning from the rift
(a mere shot of involuntary fancy, it seemed to her), the suspicion of
instability made her draw on her treasury of impressions of the mornings
at Lugano—her loftiest, purest, dearest; and these reinforced her.
She did not ask herself why she should have to seek them for aid. In other
respects her mind was alert and held no sly covers, as the fiction of a
perfect ignorant innocence combined with common intelligence would have us
to suppose that the minds of women can do. She was honest as long as she
was not directly questioned, pierced to the innermost and sanctum of the
bosom. She could honestly summon bright light to her eyes in wishing the
man were married. She did not ask herself why she called it up. The
remorseless progressive interrogations of a Jesuit Father in pursuit of
the bosom's verity might have transfixed it and shown her to herself even
then a tossing vessel as to the spirit, far away from that firm land she
trod so bravely.</p>
<p>Descending from the woody heights upon London, Diana would have said that
her only anxiety concerned young Mr. Arthur Rhodes, whose position she
considered precarious, and who had recently taken a drubbing for venturing
to show a peep of his head, like an early crocus, in the literary market.
Her ANTONIA'S last book had been reviewed obediently to smart taps from
the then commanding baton of Mr. Tonans, and Mr. Whitmonby's choice
picking of specimens down three columns of his paper. A Literary Review
(Charles Rainer's property) had suggested that perhaps 'the talented
authoress might be writing too rapidly'; and another, actuated by the
public taste of the period for our 'vigorous homely Saxon' in one and two
syllable words, had complained of a 'tendency to polysyllabic
phraseology.' The remainder, a full majority, had sounded eulogy with all
their band-instruments, drum, trumpet, fife, trombone. Her foregoing work
had raised her to Fame, which is the Court of a Queen when the lady has
beauty and social influence, and critics are her dedicated courtiers,
gaping for the royal mouth to be opened, and reserving the kicks of their
independent manhood for infamous outsiders, whom they hoist in the style
and particular service of pitchforks. They had fallen upon a little volume
of verse, 'like a body of barn-door hens on a stranger chick,' Diana
complained; and she chid herself angrily for letting it escape her
forethought to propitiate them on the author's behalf. Young Rhodes was
left with scarce a feather; and what remained to him appeared a
preposterous ornament for the decoration of a shivering and welted poet.
He laughed, or tried the mouth of laughter. ANTONIA's literary conscience
was vexed at the different treatment she had met and so imperatively
needed that the reverse of it would have threatened the smooth sailing of
her costly household. A merry-go-round of creditors required a
corresponding whirligig of receipts.</p>
<p>She felt mercenary, debased by comparison with the well-scourged
verse-mason, Orpheus of the untenanted city, who had done his publishing
ingenuously for glory: a good instance of the comic-pathetic. She wrote to
Emma, begging her to take him in at Copsley for a few days: 'I told you I
had no troubles. I am really troubled about this poor boy. He has very
little money and has embarked on literature. I cannot induce any of my
friends to lend him a hand. Mr. Redworth gruffly insists on his going back
to his law-clerk's office and stool, and Mr. Dacier says that no place is
vacant. The reality of Lord Dannisburgh's death is brought before me by my
helplessness. He would have made him an assistant private Secretary,
pending a Government appointment, rather than let me plead in vain.'</p>
<p>Mr. Rhodes with his travelling bag was packed off to Copsley, to enjoy a
change of scene after his run of the gauntlet. He was very heartily
welcomed by Lady Dunstane, both for her Tony's sake and his own modest
worship of that luminary, which could permit of being transparent; but
chiefly she welcomed him as the living proof of Tony's disengagement from
anxiety, since he was her one spot of trouble, and could easily be
comforted by reading with her, and wandering through the Spring woods
along the heights. He had a happy time, midway in air between his
accomplished hostess and his protecting Goddess. His bruises were soon
healed. Each day was radiant to him, whether it rained or shone; and by
his looks and what he said of himself Lady Dunstane understood that he was
in the highest temper of the human creature tuned to thrilling accord with
nature. It was her generous Tony's work. She blessed it, and liked the
youth the better.</p>
<p>During the stay of Mr. Arthur Rhodes at Copsley, Sir Lukin came on a visit
to his wife. He mentioned reports in the scandal-papers: one, that Mr. P.
D. would shortly lead to the altar the lovely heiress Miss A., Percy
Dacier and Constance Asper:—another, that a reconciliation was to be
expected between the beautiful authoress Mrs. W. and her husband. 'Perhaps
it's the best thing she can do,' Sir Lukin added.</p>
<p>Lady Dunstane pronounced a woman's unforgiving: 'Never.' The revolt of her
own sensations assured her of Tony's unconquerable repugnance. In
conversation subsequently with Arthur Rhodes, she heard that he knew the
son of Mr. Warwick's attorney, a Mr. Fern; and he had gathered from him
some information of Mr. Warwick's condition of health. It had been
alarming; young Fern said it was confirmed heart-disease. His father
frequently saw Mr. Warwick, and said he was fretting himself to death.</p>
<p>It seemed just a possibility that Tony's natural compassionateness had
wrought on her to immolate herself and nurse to his end the man who had
wrecked her life. Lady Dunstane waited for the news. At last she wrote,
touching the report incidentally. There was no reply. The silence ensuing
after such a question responded forcibly.</p>
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