<p><SPAN name="c80" id="c80"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER LXXX</h3>
<h3>The Last Meeting at Matching<br/> </h3>
<p>The ex-Prime Minister did not carry out his purpose of leaving London
in the middle of the season and travelling either to Italy or Norway.
He was away from London at Whitsuntide longer perhaps than he might
have been if still in office, and during this period regarded himself
as a man from whose hands all work had been taken,—as one who had
been found unfit to carry any longer a burden serviceably; but before
June was over he and the Duchess were back in London, and gradually
he allowed himself to open his mouth on this or that subject in the
House of Lords,—not pitching into everybody all round, as his wife
had recommended, but expressing an opinion now and again, generally
in support of his friends, with the dignity which should belong to a
retired Prime Minister. The Duchess too recovered much of her good
temper,—as far at least as the outward show went. One or two who
knew her, especially Mrs. Finn, were aware that her hatred and her
ideas of revenge were not laid aside; but she went on from day to day
anathematizing her special enemies and abstained from reproaching her
husband for his pusillanimity. Then came the question as to the
autumn. "Let's have everybody down at Gatherum, just as we had
before," said the Duchess.</p>
<p>The proposition almost took away the Duke's breath. "Why do you want
a crowd, like that?"</p>
<p>"Just to show them that we are not beaten because we are turned out."</p>
<p>"But, inasmuch as we were turned out, we were beaten. And what has a
gathering of people at my private house to do with a political
man[oe]uvre? Do you especially want to go to Gatherum?"</p>
<p>"I hate the place. You know I do."</p>
<p>"Then why should you propose to go there?" He hardly yet knew his
wife well enough to understand that the suggestion had been a joke.
"If you don't wish to go <span class="nowrap">abroad—"</span></p>
<p>"I hate going abroad."</p>
<p>"Then we'll remain at Matching. You don't hate Matching."</p>
<p>"Ah dear! There are memories there too. But you like it."</p>
<p>"My books are there."</p>
<p>"Blue-books," said the Duchess.</p>
<p>"And there is plenty of room if you wish to have friends."</p>
<p>"I suppose we must have somebody. You can't live without your
Mentor."</p>
<p>"You can ask whom you please," he said almost fretfully.</p>
<p>"Lady Rosina, of course," suggested the Duchess. Then he turned to
the papers before him and wouldn't say another word. The matter ended
in a party much as usual being collected at Matching about the middle
of October,—Telemachus having spent the early part of the autumn
with Mentor at Long Royston. There might perhaps be a dozen guests in
the house, and among them of course were Phineas Finn and his wife.
And Mr. Grey was there, having come back from his eastern
mission,—whose unfortunate abandonment of his seat at Silverbridge
had caused so many troubles,—and Mrs. Grey, who in days now long
passed had been almost as necessary to Lady Glencora as was now her
later friend Mrs. Finn,—and the Cantrips, and for a short time the
St. Bungays. But Lady Rosina De Courcy on this occasion was not
present. There were few there whom my patient readers have not seen
at Matching before; but among those few was Arthur Fletcher.</p>
<p>"So it is to be," said the Duchess to the member for Silverbridge one
morning. She had by this time become intimate with "her member," as
she would sometimes call him in joke, and had concerned herself much
as to his matrimonial prospects.</p>
<p>"Yes, Duchess; it is to be,—unless some unforeseen circumstance
should arise."</p>
<p>"What circumstance?"</p>
<p>"Ladies and gentlemen sometimes do change their minds;—but in this
case I do not think it likely."</p>
<p>"And why ain't you being married now, Mr. Fletcher?"</p>
<p>"We have agreed to postpone it till next year;—so that we may be
quite sure of our own minds."</p>
<p>"I know you are laughing at me; but nevertheless I am very glad that
it is settled. Pray tell her from me that I shall call again as soon
as ever she is Mrs. Fletcher, though I don't think she repaid either
of the last two visits I made her."</p>
<p>"You must make excuses for her, Duchess."</p>
<p>"Of course. I know. After all she is a most fortunate woman. And as
for you,—I regard you as a hero among lovers."</p>
<p>"I'm getting used to it," she said one day to Mrs. Finn.</p>
<p>"Of course you'll get used to it. We get used to anything that chance
sends us in a marvellously short time."</p>
<p>"What I mean is that I can go to bed, and sleep, and get up and eat
my meals without missing the sound of the trumpets so much as I did
at first. I remember hearing of people who lived in a mill, and
couldn't sleep when the mill stopped. It was like that with me when
our mill stopped at first. I had got myself so used to the excitement
of it, that I could hardly live without it."</p>
<p>"You might have all the excitement still, if you pleased. You need
not be dead to politics because your husband is not Prime Minister."</p>
<p>"No; never again,—unless he should come back. If any one had told me
ten years ago that I should have taken an interest in this or that
man being in the Government, I should have laughed him to scorn. It
did not seem possible to me then that I should care what became of
such men as Sir Timothy Beeswax and Mr. Roby. But I did get to be
anxious about it when Plantagenet was shifted from one office to
another."</p>
<p>"Of course you did. Do you think I am not anxious about Phineas?"</p>
<p>"But when he became Prime Minister, I gave myself up to it
altogether. I shall never forget what I felt when he came to me and
told me that perhaps it might be so;—but told me also that he would
escape from it if it were possible. I was the Lady Macbeth of the
occasion all over;—whereas he was so scrupulous, so burdened with
conscience! As for me, I would have taken it by any means. Then it
was that the old Duke played the part of the three witches to a
nicety. Well, there hasn't been any absolute murder, and I haven't
quite gone mad."</p>
<p>"Nor need you be afraid, though all the woods of Gatherum should come
to Matching."</p>
<p>"God forbid! I will never see anything of Gatherum again. What annoys
me most is, and always was, that he wouldn't understand what I felt
about it;—how proud I was that he should be Prime Minister, how
anxious that he should be great and noble in his office;—how I
worked for him, and not at all for any pleasure of my own."</p>
<p>"I think he did feel it."</p>
<p>"No;—not as I did. At last he liked the power,—or rather feared the
disgrace of losing it. But he had no idea of the personal grandeur of
the place. He never understood that to be Prime Minister in England
is as much as to be an Emperor in France, and much more than being
President in America. Oh, how I did labour for him,—and how he did
scold me for it with those quiet little stinging words of his! I was
vulgar!"</p>
<p>"Is that a quiet word?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—as he used it;—and indiscreet, and ignorant, and stupid. I
bore it all, though sometimes I was dying with vexation. Now it's all
over, and here we are as humdrum as any one else. And the Beeswaxes,
and the Robys, and the Droughts, and the Pountneys, and the Lopezes,
have all passed over the scene! Do you remember that Pountney affair,
and how he turned the poor man out of the house?"</p>
<p>"It served him right."</p>
<p>"It would have served them all right to be turned out,—only they
were there for a purpose. I did like it in a way, and it makes me sad
to think that the feeling can never come again. Even if they should
have him back again, it would be a very lame affair to me then. I can
never again rouse myself to the effort of preparing food and lodging
for half the Parliament and their wives. I shall never again think
that I can help to rule England by coaxing unpleasant men. It is done
and gone, and can never come back again."</p>
<p>Not long after this the Duke took Mr. Monk, who had come down to
Matching for a few days, out to the very spot on which he had sat
when he indulged himself in lecturing Phineas Finn on Conservatism
and Liberalism generally, and then asked the Chancellor of the
Exchequer what he thought of the present state of public affairs. He
himself had supported Mr. Gresham's government, and did not belong to
it because he could not at present reconcile himself to filling any
office. Mr. Monk did not scruple to say that in his opinion the
present legitimate division of parties was preferable to the
Coalition which had existed for three years. "In such an
arrangement," said Mr. Monk, "there must always be a certain amount
of distrust, and such a feeling is fatal to any great work."</p>
<p>"I think I distrusted no one till separation came,—and when it did
come it was not caused by me."</p>
<p>"I am not blaming any one now," said the other; "but men who have
been brought up with opinions altogether different, even with
different instincts as to politics, who from their mother's milk have
been nourished on codes of thought altogether opposed to each other,
cannot work together with confidence even though they may desire the
same thing. The very ideas which are sweet as honey to the one are
bitter as gall to the other."</p>
<p>"You think, then, that we made a great mistake?"</p>
<p>"I will not say that," said Mr. Monk. "There was a difficulty at the
time, and that difficulty was overcome. The Government was carried
on, and was on the whole respected. History will give you credit for
patriotism, patience, and courage. No man could have done it better
than you did;—probably no other man of the day so well."</p>
<p>"But it was not a great part to play?" The Duke in his nervousness,
as he said this, could not avoid the use of that questioning tone
which requires an answer.</p>
<p>"Great enough to satisfy the heart of a man who has fortified himself
against the evil side of ambition. After all, what is it that the
Prime Minister of such a country as this should chiefly regard? Is it
not the prosperity of the country? It is not often that we want great
measures, or new arrangements that shall be vital to the country.
Politicians now look for grievances, not because the grievances are
heavy, but trusting that the honour of abolishing them may be great.
It is the old story of the needy knife-grinder who, if left to
himself, would have no grievance of which to complain."</p>
<p>"But there are grievances," said the Duke. "Look at monetary
denominations. Look at our weights and measures."</p>
<p>"Well; yes. I will not say that everything has as yet been reduced to
divine order. But when we took office three years ago we certainly
did not intend to settle those difficulties."</p>
<p>"No, indeed," said the Duke, sadly.</p>
<p>"But we did do all that we meant to do. For my own part, there is
only one thing in it that I regret, and one only which you should
regret also till you have resolved to remedy it."</p>
<p>"What thing is that?"</p>
<p>"Your own retirement from official life. If the country is to lose
your services for the long course of years during which you will
probably sit in Parliament, then I shall think that the country has
lost more than it has gained by the Coalition."</p>
<p>The Duke sat for a while silent, looking at the view, and, before
answering Mr. Monk,—while arranging his answer,—once or twice in a
half-absent way, called his companion's attention to the scene before
him. But during this time he was going through an act of painful
repentance. He was condemning himself for a word or two that had been
ill-spoken by himself, and which, since the moment of its utterance,
he had never ceased to remember with shame. He told himself now,
after his own secret fashion, that he must do penance for these words
by the humiliation of a direct contradiction of them. He must declare
that Cæsar would at some future time be prepared to serve under
Pompey. Then he made his answer. "Mr. Monk," he said, "I should be
false if I were to deny that it pleases me to hear you say so. I have
thought much of all that for the last two or three months. You may
probably have seen that I am not a man endowed with that fortitude
which enables many to bear vexations with an easy spirit. I am given
to fretting, and I am inclined to think that a popular minister in a
free country should be so constituted as to be free from that
infirmity. I shall certainly never desire to be at the head of a
Government again. For a few years I would prefer to remain out of
office. But I will endeavour to look forward to a time when I may
again perhaps be of some humble use."</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />