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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIII. EXHIBITS THE SPRINGING OF A MINE IN A NEWSPAPER ARTICLE </h2>
<p>The powers of harmony would seem to be tried to their shrewdest pitch when
Politics and Love are planted together in a human breast. This apparently
opposite couple can nevertheless chant a very sweet accord, as was shown
by Dacier on his homeward walk from Diana's house. Let Love lead, the God
will make music of any chamber-comrade. He was able to think of affairs of
State while feeling the satisfied thirst of the lover whose pride,
irritated by confidential wild eulogies of the beautiful woman, had
recently clamoured for proofs of his commandership. The impression she
stamped on him at Copsley remained, but it could not occupy the foreground
for ever. He did not object to play second to her sprightly wits in
converse, if he had some warm testimony to his mastery over her blood. For
the world had given her to him, enthusiastic friends had congratulated
him: she had exalted him for true knightliness; and he considered the
proofs well earned, though he did not value them low. They were little by
comparison. They lighted, instead of staining, her unparalleled high
character.</p>
<p>She loved him. Full surely did she love him, or such a woman would never
have consented to brave the world; once in their project of flight, and
next, even more endearingly when contemplated, in the sacrifice of her
good name; not omitting that fervent memory of her pained submission, but
a palpitating submission, to his caress. She was in his arms again at the
thought of it. He had melted her, and won the confession of her senses by
a surprise, and he owned that never had woman been so vigilantly
self-guarded or so watchful to keep her lover amused and aloof. Such a
woman deserved long service. But then the long service deserved its time
of harvest. Her surging look of reproach in submission pointed to the
golden time, and as he was a man of honour, pledged to her for life, he
had no remorse, and no scruple in determining to exact her dated promise,
on this occasion deliberately. She was the woman to be his wife; she was
his mind's mate: they had hung apart in deference to mere scruples too
long. During the fierce battle of the Session she would be his help, his
fountain of counsel; and she would be the rosy gauze-veiled more than cold
helper and adviser, the being which would spur her womanly intelligence to
acknowledge, on this occasion deliberately, the wisdom of the step. They
had been so close to it! She might call it madness then: now it was
wisdom. Each had complete experience of the other, and each vowed the step
must be taken. As to the secret communicated, he exulted in the pardonable
cunning of the impulse turning him back to her house after the guests had
gone, and the dexterous play of his bait on the line, tempting her to
guess and quit her queenly guard. Though it had not been distinctly
schemed, the review of it in that light added to the enjoyment. It had
been dimly and richly conjectured as a hoped result. Small favours from
her were really worth, thrice worth, the utmost from other women. They
tasted the sweeter for the winning of them artfully—an honourable
thing in love. Nature, rewarding the lover's ingenuity and enterprise,
inspires him with old Greek notions of right and wrong: and love is indeed
a fluid mercurial realm, continually shifting the principles of rectitude
and larceny. As long as he means nobly, what is there to condemn him? Not
she in her heart. She was the presiding divinity.</p>
<p>And she, his Tony, that splendid Diana, was the woman the world abused!
Whom will it not abuse?</p>
<p>The slough she would have to plunge in before he could make her his own
with the world's consent, was already up to her throat. She must, and
without further hesitation, be steeped, that he might drag her out, washed
of the imputed defilement, and radiant, as she was in character.
Reflection now said this; not impulse. Her words rang through him. At
every meeting she said things to confound his estimate of the wits of
women, or be remembered for some spirited ring they had: A high wind will
make a dead leaf fly like a bird. He murmured it and flew with her. She
quickened a vein of imagination that gave him entrance to a strangely
brilliant sphere, above his own, where, she sustaining, he too could soar;
and he did, scarce conscious of walking home, undressing, falling asleep.</p>
<p>The act of waking was an instantaneous recovery of his emotional rapture
of the overnight; nor was it a bar to graver considerations. His Chief had
gone down to a house in the country; his personal business was to see and
sound the followers of their party—after another sight of his Tony.
She would be sure to counsel sagaciously; she always did. She had a
marvellous intuition of the natures of the men he worked with, solely from
his chance descriptions of them; it was as though he started the bird and
she transfixed it. And she should not have matter to rule her smooth
brows: that he swore to. She should sway him as she pleased, be respected
after her prescribed manner. The promise must be exacted; nothing besides,
promise.—You see, Tony, you cannot be less than Tony to me now, he
addressed the gentle phantom of her. Let me have your word, and I am your
servant till the Session ends.—Tony blushes her swarthy crimson:
Diana, fluttering, rebukes her; but Diana is the appeasable Goddess; Tony
is the woman, and she loves him. The glorious Goddess need not cut them
adrift; they can show her a book of honest pages.</p>
<p>Dacier could truthfully say he had worshipped, done knightly service to
the beloved woman, homage to the aureole encircling her. Those friends of
his, covertly congratulating him on her preference, doubtless thought him
more privileged than he was; but they did not know Diana; and they were
welcome, if they would only believe, to the knowledge that he was at the
feet of this most sovereign woman. He despised the particular Satyr-world
which, whatever the nature or station of the woman, crowns the desecrator,
and bestows the title of Fool on the worshipper. He could have answered
veraciously that she had kept him from folly.</p>
<p>Nevertheless the term to service must come. In the assurance of the
approaching term he stood braced against a blowing world; happy as men are
when their muscles are strung for a prize they pluck with the energy and
aim of their whole force.</p>
<p>Letters and morning papers were laid for him to peruse in his
dressing-room. He read his letters before the bath. Not much public news
was expected at the present season. While dressing, he turned over the
sheets of Whitmonby's journal. Dull comments on stale things. Foreign
news. Home news, with the leaders on them, identically dull. Behold the
effect of Journalism: a witty man, sparkling overnight, gets into his
pulpit and proses; because he must say something, and he really knows
nothing.</p>
<p>Journalists have an excessive overestimate of their influence. They
cannot, as Diana said, comparing them with men on the Parliamentary
platform, cannot feel they are aboard the big vessel; they can only strive
to raise a breeze, or find one to swell; and they cannot measure the
stoutness or the greatness of the good ship England. Dacier's personal
ambition was inferior to his desire to extend and strengthen his England.
Parliament was the field, Government the office. How many conversations
had passed between him and Diana on that patriotic dream! She had often
filled his drooping sails; he owned it proudly:—and while the world,
both the hoofed and the rectilinear portions, were biting at her
character! Had he fretted her self-respect? He blamed himself, but a
devoted service must have its term.</p>
<p>The paper of Mr. Tonans was reserved for perusal at breakfast. He reserved
it because Tonans was an opponent, tricksy and surprising now and then,
amusing too; unlikely to afford him serious reflections. The recent
endeavours of his journal to whip the Government-team to a
right-about-face were annoying, preposterous. Dacier had admitted to Diana
that Tonans merited the thanks of the country during 'the discreditable
Railway mania, when his articles had a fine exhortative and prophetic
twang, and had done marked good. Otherwise, as regarded the Ministry, the
veering gusts of Tonans were objectionable: he 'raised the breeze'
wantonly as well as disagreeably. Any one can whip up the populace if he
has the instruments; and Tonans frequently intruded on the Ministry's
prerogative to govern. The journalist was bidding against the statesman.
But such is the condition of a rapidly Radicalizing country! We must take
it as it is.</p>
<p>With a complacent, What now, Dacier fixed his indifferent eyes on the
first column of the leaders. He read, and his eyes grew horny. He jerked
back at each sentence, electrified, staring. The article was shorter than
usual. Total Repeal was named; the precise date when the Minister intended
calling Parliament together to propose it. The 'Total Repeal' might be
guess-work—an Editor's bold stroke; but the details, the date, were
significant of positive information. The Minister's definite and immediate
instructions were exactly stated.</p>
<p>Where could the fellow have got hold of that? Dacier asked the blank
ceiling.</p>
<p>He frowned at vacant corners of the room in an effort to conjure some
speculation indicative of the source.</p>
<p>Had his Chief confided the secret to another and a traitor? Had they been
overheard in his library when the project determined on was put in plain
speech?</p>
<p>The answer was no, impossible, to each question.</p>
<p>He glanced at Diana. She? But it was past midnight when he left her. And
she would never have betrayed him, never, never. To imagine it a moment
was an injury to her.</p>
<p>Where else could he look? It had been specially mentioned in the
communication as a secret by his Chief, who trusted him and no others. Up
to the consultation with the Cabinet, it was a thing to be guarded like
life itself. Not to a soul except Diana would Dacier have breathed
syllable of any secret—and one of this weight!</p>
<p>He ran down the article again. There were the facts; undeniable facts; and
they detonated with audible roaring and rounding echoes of them over
England. How did they come there? As well inquire how man came on the face
of the earth.</p>
<p>He had to wipe his forehead perpetually. Think as he would in exaltation
of Diana to shelter himself, he was the accused. He might not be the
guilty, but he had opened his mouth; and though it was to her only, and
she, as Dunstane had sworn, true as steel, he could not escape
condemnation. He had virtually betrayed his master. Diana would never
betray her lover, but the thing was in the air as soon as uttered: and off
to the printing-press! Dacier's grotesque fancy under annoyance pictured a
stream of small printer's devils in flight from his babbling lips.</p>
<p>He consumed bits of breakfast, with a sour confession that a
newspaper-article had hit him at last, and stunningly.</p>
<p>Hat and coat were called for. The state of aimlessness in hot perplexity
demands a show of action. Whither to go first was as obscure as what to
do. Diana said of the Englishman's hat and coat, that she supposed they
were to make him a walking presentment of the house he had shut up behind
him. A shot of the eye at the glass confirmed the likeness, but with a
ruefully wry-faced repudiation of it internally:—Not so shut up! the
reverse of that-a common babbler.</p>
<p>However, there was no doubt of Diana. First he would call on her. The
pleasantest dose in perturbations of the kind is instinctively taken
first. She would console, perhaps direct him to guess how the secret had
leaked. But so suddenly, immediately! It was inexplicable.</p>
<p>Sudden and immediate consequences were experienced. On the steps of his
house his way was blocked by the arrival of Mr. Quintin Manx, who jumped
out of a cab, bellowing interjections and interrogations in a breath. Was
there anything in that article? He had read it at breakfast, and it had
choked him. Dacier was due at a house and could not wait: he said, rather
sharply, he was not responsible for newspaper articles. Quintin Manx, a
senior gentleman and junior landowner, vowed that no Minister intending to
sell the country should treat him as a sheep. The shepherd might go; he
would not carry his flock with him. But was there a twinkle of probability
in the story?... that article! Dacier was unable to inform him; he was
very hurried, had to keep an appointment.</p>
<p>'If I let you go, will you come and lunch with me at two?' said Quintin.</p>
<p>To get rid of him, Dacier nodded and agreed.</p>
<p>'Two o'clock, mind!' was bawled at his heels as he walked off with his
long stride, unceremoniously leaving the pursy gentleman of sixty to
settle with his cabman far to the rear.</p>
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