<p><SPAN name="c3-21" id="c3-21"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XXI.</h3>
<h4>THE REGISTRAR OF STATE RECORDS.<br/> </h4>
<p>Although Lord Persiflage had seemed to be very angry with the
recusant Duke, and had made that uncivil speech about the gutter,
still he was quite willing that George Roden should be asked down to
Castle Hautboy. "Of course we must do something for him," he said to
his wife; "but I hate scrupulous men. I don't blame him at all for
making such a girl as Fanny fall in love with him. If I were a Post
Office clerk I'd do the same if I could."</p>
<p>"Not you. You wouldn't have given yourself the trouble."</p>
<p>"But when I had done it I wouldn't have given her friends more
trouble than was necessary. I should have known that they would have
had to drag me up somewhere. I should have looked for that. But I
shouldn't have made myself difficult when chance gave a helping hand.
Why shouldn't he have taken his title?"</p>
<p>"Of course we all wish he would."</p>
<p>"Fanny is as bad as he is. She has caught some of Hampstead's
levelling ideas and encourages the young man. It was all Kingsbury's
fault from the first. He began the world wrong, and now he cannot get
himself right again. A radical aristocrat is a contradiction in
terms. It is very well that there should be Radicals. It would be a
stupid do-nothing world without them. But a man can't be oil and
vinegar at the same time." This was the expression made by Lord
Persiflage of his general ideas on politics in reference to George
Roden and his connection with the Trafford family; but not the less
was George Roden asked down to Castle Hautboy. Lady Frances was not
to be thrown over because she had made a fool of herself,—nor was
George Roden to be left out in the cold, belonging as he did now to
Lady Frances. Lord Persiflage never approved very much of
anybody,—but he never threw anybody over.</p>
<p>It was soon after the funeral of Marion Fay that Roden went down to
Cumberland. During the last two months of Marion's illness Hampstead
and Roden had been very often together. Not that they had lived
together, as Hampstead had declared himself unable to bear continued
society. His hours had been passed alone. But there had not been many
days in which the friends had not seen each other for a few minutes.
It had become a habit with Hampstead to ride over to Paradise Row
when Roden had returned from the office. At first Mrs. Roden also had
been there;—but latterly she had spent her time altogether at
Pegwell Bay. Nevertheless Lord Hampstead would come, and would say a
few words, and would then ride home again. When all was over at
Pegwell Bay, when the funeral was at hand, and during the few days of
absolutely prostrating grief which followed it, nothing was seen of
him;—but on the evening before his friend's journey down to Castle
Hautboy he again appeared in the Row. On this occasion he walked
over, and his friend returned with him a part of the way. "You must
do something with yourself," Roden said to him.</p>
<p>"I see no need of doing anything special. How many men do nothing
with themselves!"</p>
<p>"Men either work or play."</p>
<p>"I do not think I shall play much."</p>
<p>"Not for a time certainly. You used to play; but I can imagine that
the power of doing so will have deserted you."</p>
<p>"I shan't hunt, if you mean that."</p>
<p>"I do not mean that at all," said Roden;—"but that you should do
something. There must be some occupation, or life will be
insupportable."</p>
<p>"It is insupportable," said the young man looking away, so that his
countenance should not be seen.</p>
<p>"But it must be supported. Let the load be ever so heavy, it must be
carried. You would not destroy yourself?"</p>
<p>"No;"—said the other slowly; "no. I would not do that. If any one
would do it for me!"</p>
<p>"No one will do it for you. Not to have some plan of active life,
some defined labour by which the weariness of the time may be
conquered, would be a weakness and a cowardice next door to that of
suicide."</p>
<p>"Roden," said the lord, "your severity is brutal."</p>
<p>"The question is whether it be true. You shall call it what you
like,—or call me what you like; but can you contradict what I say?
Do you not feel that it is your duty as a man to apply what intellect
you have, and what strength, to some purpose?"</p>
<p>Then, by degrees, Lord Hampstead did explain the purpose he had
before him. He intended to have a yacht built, and start alone, and
cruise about the face of the world. He would take books with him, and
study the peoples and the countries which he visited.</p>
<p>"Alone?" asked Roden.</p>
<p>"Yes, alone;—as far as a man may be alone with a crew and a captain
around him. I shall make acquaintances as I go, and shall be able to
bear them as such. They will know nothing of my secret wound. Had I
you with me,—you and my sister let us suppose,—or Vivian, or any
one from here who had known me, I could not even struggle to raise my
head."</p>
<p>"It would wear off."</p>
<p>"I will go alone; and if occasion offers I will make fresh
acquaintances. I will begin another life which shall have no
connection with the old one,—except that which will be continued by
the thread of my own memory. No one shall be near me who may even
think of her name when my own ways and manners are called in
question." He went on to explain that he would set himself to work at
once. The ship must be built, and the crew collected, and the stores
prepared. He thought that in this way he might find employment for
himself till the spring. In the spring, if all was ready, he would
start. Till that time came he would live at Hendon Hall,—still
alone. He so far relented, however, as to say that if his sister was
married before he began his wanderings he would be present at her
marriage.</p>
<p>Early in the course of the evening he had explained to Roden that his
father and he had conjointly arranged to give Lady Frances £40,000 on
her wedding. "Can that be necessary?" asked Roden.</p>
<p>"You must live; and as you have gone into a nest with the drones, you
must live in some sort as the drones do."</p>
<p>"I hope I shall never be a drone."</p>
<p>"You cannot touch pitch and not be defiled. You'll be expected to
wear gloves and drink fine wine,—or, at any rate, to give it to your
friends. Your wife will have to ride in a coach. If she don't people
will point at her, and think she's a pauper, because she has a handle
to her name. They talk of the upper ten thousand. It is as hard to
get out from among them as it is to get in among them. Though you
have been wonderfully stout about the Italian title, you'll find that
it will stick to you." Then it was explained that the money, which
was to be given, would in no wise interfere with the "darlings."
Whatever was to be added to the fortune which would naturally have
belonged to Lady Frances, would come not from her father but from her
brother.</p>
<p>When Roden arrived at Castle Hautboy Lord Persiflage was there,
though he remained but for a day. He was due to be with the Queen for
a month,—a duty which was evidently much to his taste, though he
affected to frown over it as a hardship. "I am sorry, Roden," he
said, "that I should be obliged to leave you and everybody else;—but
a Government hack, you know, has to be a Government hack." This was
rather strong from a Secretary of State to a Clerk in the Post
Office; but Roden had to let it pass lest he should give an opening
to some remark on his own repudiated rank. "I shall be back before
you are gone, I hope, and then perhaps we may arrange something." The
only thing that Roden wished to arrange was a day for his own
wedding, as to which, as far as he knew, Lord Persiflage could have
nothing to say.</p>
<p>"I don't think you ought to be sorry," Lady Frances said to her lover
as they were wandering about on the mountains. He had endeavoured to
explain to her that this large income which was now promised to him
rather impeded than assisted the scheme of life which he had
suggested to himself.</p>
<p>"Not sorry,—but disappointed, if you know the difference."</p>
<p>"Not exactly."</p>
<p>"I had wanted to feel that I should earn my wife's bread."</p>
<p>"So you shall. If a man works honestly for his living, I don't think
he need inquire too curiously what proportion of it may come from his
own labour or from some other source. If I had had nothing we should
have done very well without the coach,—as poor Hampstead calls it.
But if the coach is there I don't see why we shouldn't ride in it."</p>
<p>"I should like to earn the coach too," said Roden.</p>
<p>"This, sir, will be a lesson serviceable in teaching you that you are
not to be allowed to have your own way in everything."</p>
<p>An additional leave of absence for a month had been accorded to
Roden. He had already been absent during a considerable time in the
spring of the year, and in the ordinary course of events would not
have been entitled to this prolonged indulgence. But there were
reasons deemed to be sufficient. He was going to meet a Cabinet
Minister. He was engaged to marry the daughter of a Marquis. And it
was known that he was not simply George Roden, but in truth the Duca
di Crinola. He had suffered some qualms of conscience as to the
favour to be thus shown him, but had quieted them by the idea that
when a man is in love something special ought to be done for him. He
remained, therefore, till the Foreign Secretary returned from his
royal service, and had by that time fixed the period of his marriage.
It was to take place in the cold comfortless month of March. It would
be a great thing, he had said, to have Hampstead present at it, and
it was Hampstead's intention to start on his long travels early in
April. "I don't see why people shouldn't be married in cold weather
as well as in hot," said Vivian. "Brides need not go about always in
muslin."</p>
<p>When Lord Persiflage returned to Castle Hautboy, he had his plan
ready arranged for relieving his future half-nephew-in-law,—if there
be such a relationship,—from the ignominy of the Post Office. "I
have Her Majesty's permission," he said to Roden, "to offer you the
position of Registrar of State Records to the Foreign Office."</p>
<p>"Registrar of State Records to the Foreign Office!"</p>
<p>"Fifteen hundred a year," said his lordship, going off at once to
this one point of true vital importance. "I am bound to say that I
think I could have done better for you had you consented to bear the
title, which is as completely your own, as is that mine by which I am
called."</p>
<p>"Don't let us go back to that, my lord."</p>
<p>"Oh no;—certainly not. Only this; if you could be brought to think
better of it,—if Fanny could be induced to make you think better of
it,—the office now offered to you would, I think, be more
comfortable to you."</p>
<p>"How so?"</p>
<p>"I can hardly explain, but it would. There is no reason on earth why
it should not be held by an Italian. We had an Italian for many years
librarian at the Museum. And as an Italian you would of course be
entitled to call yourself by your hereditary title."</p>
<p>"I shall never be other than an Englishman."</p>
<p>"Very well. One man may lead a horse to water, but a thousand cannot
make him drink. I only tell you what would be the case. The title
would no doubt give a prestige to the new office. It is exactly that
kind of work which would fall readily into the hands of a foreigner
of high rank. One cannot explain these things, but it is so. The
£1500 a year would more probably become £2000 if you submitted to be
called by your own proper name." Everybody knew that Lord Persiflage
understood the Civil Service of his country perfectly. He was a man
who never worked very hard himself, or expected those under him to do
so; but he liked common sense, and hated scruples, and he considered
it to be a man's duty to take care of himself,—of himself first of
all, and then, perhaps, afterwards, of the Service.</p>
<p>Neither did Roden nor did Lady Frances give way a bit the more for
this. They were persistent in clinging to their old comparatively
humble English name. Lady Frances would be Lady Frances to the end,
but she would be no more than Lady Frances Roden. And George Roden
would be George Roden, whether a clerk in the Post Office or
Registrar of State Records to the Foreign Office. So much the next
new bride declared with great energy to the last new bride who had
just returned from her short wedding tour, having been hurried home
so that her husband might be able to lay the first stone of the new
bridge to be built over the Menai Straits. Lady Llwddythlw, with all
the composed manners of a steady matron, was at Castle Hautboy, and
used all her powers of persuasion. "Never mind, my dear, what he
says," Lady Llwddythlw urged. "What you should think of is what will
be good for him. He would be somebody,—almost as good as an Under
Secretary of State,—with a title. He would get to be considered
among the big official swells. There is so much in a name! Of course,
you've got your rank. But you ought to insist on it for his sake."</p>
<p>Lady Frances did not give way in the least, nor did any one venture
to call the Duca by his title, formally or openly. But, as Lord
Hampstead had said, "it stuck to him." The women when they were alone
with him would call him Duca, joking with him; and it was out of the
question that he should be angry with them for their jokes. He became
aware that behind his back he was always spoken of as The Duke, and
that this was not done with any idea of laughing at him. The people
around him believed that he was a Duke and ought to be called a Duke.
Of course it was in joke that Lady Llwddythlw always called Lady
Frances Duchessina when they were together, because Lady Frances had
certainly not as yet acquired her right to the name; but it all
tended to the same point. He became aware that the very servants
around him understood it. They did not call him "your grace" or "my
Lord," or make spoken allusion to his rank; but they looked it. All
that obsequiousness due to an hereditary nobleman, which is dear to
the domestic heart, was paid to him. He found himself called upon by
Lady Persiflage to go into the dining-room out of his proper place.
There was a fair excuse for this while the party was small, and
confined to few beyond the family, as it was expected that the two
declared lovers should sit together. But when this had been done with
a larger party he expostulated with his hostess. "My dear Mr. Roden,"
she said,—"I suppose I must call you so."</p>
<p>"It's my name at any rate."</p>
<p>"There are certain points on which, as far as I can see, a man may be
allowed to have his way,—and certain points on which he may not."</p>
<p>"As to his own name—"</p>
<p>"Yes; on the matter of your name. I do not see my way how to get the
better of you just at present, though on account of my near
connection with Fanny I am very anxious to do so. But as to the fact
of your rank, there it is. Whenever I see you,—and I hope I shall
see you very often,—I shall always suppose that I see an Italian
nobleman of the first class, and shall treat you so." He shrugged his
shoulders, feeling that he had nothing else to do. "If I were to find
myself in the society of some man calling himself by a title to which
I knew that he had no right,—I should probably call him by no name;
but I should be very careful not to treat him as a nobleman, knowing
that he had no right to be so treated. What can I do in your case but
just reverse the position?"</p>
<p>He never went back to the Post Office,—of course. What should a
Registrar of State Records to the Foreign Office do in so humble an
establishment? He never went back for the purposes of work. He called
to bid farewell to Sir Boreas, Mr. Jerningham, Crocker, and others
with whom he had served. "I did not think we should see much more of
you," said Sir Boreas, laughing.</p>
<p>"I intended to live and die with you," said Roden.</p>
<p>"We don't have dukes; or at any rate we don't keep them. Like to like
is a motto which I always find true. When I heard that you were
living with a young lord, and were going to marry the daughter of a
marquis, and had a title of your own which you could use as soon as
you pleased, I knew that I should lose you." Then he added in a
little whisper, "You couldn't get Crocker made a duke, could you,—or
a Registrar of Records?"</p>
<p>Mr. Jerningham was full of smiles and bows, pervaded thoroughly by a
feeling that he was bidding farewell to an august nobleman, though,
for negative reasons, he was not to be allowed to gratify his tongue
by naming the august name. Crocker was a little shy;—but he plucked
up his courage at last. "I shall always know what I know, you know,"
he said, as he shook hands with the friend to whom he had been so
much attached. Bobbin and Geraghty made no allusions to the title,
but they, too, as they were severally greeted, were evidently under
the influence of the nobility of their late brother clerk.</p>
<p>The marriage was duly solemnized when March came in the parish church
of Trafford. There was nothing grand,—no even distant imitation of
Lady Amaldina's glorious cavalcade. Hampstead did come down, and
endeavoured for the occasion to fit himself for the joy of the day.
His ship was ready for him, and he intended to start now in a week or
two. As it happened that the House was not sitting, Lord Llwddythlw,
at the instigation of his wife, was present. "One good turn deserves
another," Lady Llwddythlw had said to him. And the darlings were
there in all their glory, loud, beautiful, and unruly. Lady Kingsbury
was of course present; but was too much in abeyance to be able to
arouse even a sign of displeasure. Since that reference to the
"stumbling blocks" had reached her husband, and since those fears
with which Mr. Greenwood had filled her, she had been awed into
quiescence.</p>
<p>The bridegroom was of course married under the simple name of George
Roden,—and we must part with him under that name; but it is the
belief of the present chronicler that the aristocratic element will
prevail, and that the time will come soon in which the Registrar of
State Records to the Foreign Office will be known in the purlieus of
Downing Street as the Duca di Crinola.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="narrow" />
<p> </p>
<h4>Transcriber's note:</h4>
<div class="small">
<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
<p>Volume I, Chapter I, paragraph 9.
Trollope refers here and elsewhere
to Lord Hampstead as Lady Kingsbury's son-in-law, although he is
actually her stepson. This is not a example of carelessness by the
author but an archaic use of "son-in-law" which persisted into the
mid-nineteenth century.</p>
<p>Volume I, Chapter XIX, paragraph 1.
The astute reader might
wonder how a two-day visit can last from Wednesday to the
following Tuesday, as stated in the sentence: Lady Amaldina
and he were both to arrive there on Wednesday, December 3rd,
and remain till the Tuesday morning.</p>
<p>Specific changes in wording of the
text are listed below.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume I, Chapter XII, paragraph 42.
"On" was changed to "Oh" in the sentence: "OH, no doubt!</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume I, Chapter III, paragraph 62.
The word "began" was
changed to "begun" in the sentence: In the horror of the
first revelation he had yielded, but had since BEGUN to
feel that too much was being done in withdrawing him from
Parliament.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter III, paragraph 82.
A comma was changed to a
semi-colon in the sentence: This was on a Tuesday; on the Wednesday
he did not speak to her on the subject.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter VI, paragraph 17.
The word "live" was changed to
"life" in the sentence: I have had to ask myself, and I have told
myself that I do not dare to love above my station in LIFE.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter VI, paragraph 31.
The word "to" was added
to the sentence: It may be that you should drive me away
from you, and TO beg you never to trouble me any further.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter XII, paragraph 6.
The word "conviction" was
changed to the plural form in the sentence: The CONVICTIONS of the
world since the days of Cain have all gone in that direction.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter XIII, paragraph 47.
"Roden" was changed to
"Trafford" in the sentence: I have seen Lady Frances TRAFFORD.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter XV, paragraph 61.
"10" was changed to "11" in the
sentence: Marion Fay and her father live at No. 17, Paradise Row,
Holloway, and Mrs. Roden and George Roden live at No. 11. The reader
will recall that Mrs. Demijohn and her niece Clara resided at No. 10.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume II, Chapter XX, paragraph 19.
"17" was changed to "15" in the
sentence: I hope you'll let me introduce you to Mrs. Duffer of No.
15. The reader will recall that Mrs. Duffer lives at No. 15, while
No. 17 is the home of Marion Fay and her father.</p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume III, Chapter III, paragraph 25.
The Baron's name appears eight
times in the text; this, the first, occurrence was spelled "d'Osse,"
and the other seven spelled "d'Ossi" or "D'Ossi." "d'Osse" was
changed to "d'Ossi" in the sentence beginning: When Lord Persiflage
spoke of the matter to Baron d'OSSI, the Italian Minister in
<span class="nowrap">London, …</span></p>
<p class="noindentind">Volume III, Chapter VI, paragraph 1.
The word "fame" was changed to
"name" in the sentence: As to his mother's NAME, he said, no one had
doubted, and no one would doubt it for a moment.</p>
</div>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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