书城公版The Prime Minister
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第138章

SIR ORLANDO RETIRES.

'He is a horrid man.He came here and quarrelled with the other man in my house, or rather down at Richmond, and made a fool of himself, and then quarrelled with his wife and took her away.

What fools, what asses, what horrors men are! How impossible it is to be civil and gracious without getting into a mess.I am tempted to say that I will never know anybody any more.' Such was the complaint made by the Duchess to Mrs Finn a few days after the Richmond party, and from this it was evident that the latter affair had not passed without notice.

'Did he make a noise about it?' asked Mrs Finn.

'There was not a row, but there was enough of a quarrel to be visible and audible.He walked about and talked loud to the poor woman.Of course it was my own fault.But the man was clever and I liked him, and people told me that he was of the right sort.'

'The Duke heard of it?'

'No;--and I hope he won't.It would be such a triumph for him, after all the fuss at Silverbridge.But he never heard of anything.If two men fought a duel in his own dining-room he would be the last man in London to know about it.'

'Then say nothing about it, and don't ask the men anymore.'

'You may be sure I won't ask the man with the wife any more.The other man is in Parliament and can't be thrown over so easily--and it wasn't his fault.But I'm getting so sick of it all! I'm told that Sir Orlando has complained to Plantagenet that he isn't asked to the dinners.'

'Impossible!'

'Don't you mention it, but he has.Warburton has told me so.'

Warburton was one of the Duke's private secretaries.

'What did the Duke say?'

'I don't' quite know.Warburton is one of my familiars, but Ididn't like to ask him for more than he chose to tell me.

Warburton suggested that I should invite Sir Orlando at once; but there I was obdurate.Of course, if Plantagenet tells me I'll ask the man to come every day of the week;--but it is one of those things that I shall need to be told directly.My idea is, you know, that they had better get rid of Sir Orlando,--and that if Sir Orlando chooses to kick over the traces, he may be turned loose without any danger.One has little birds that give one all manner of information, and one little bird has told me that Sir Orlando and Mr Roby don't speak.Mr Roby is not very much himself, but he is a good straw to show which way the wind blows.

Plantagenet certainly sent no message about Sir Orlando, and I'm afraid the gentleman must look for his dinners elsewhere.'

The Duke had in truth expressed himself very plainly to Mr Warburton; but with so much indiscreet fretfulness that the discreet private secretary had not told it even to the Duchess.

'This kind of thing argues a want of cordiality that may be fatal to us,' Sir Orlando had said somewhat grandiloquently to the Duke, and the Duke had made--almost no reply.'I suppose I may ask my own guests into my own house,' he had said afterwards to Mr Warburton, 'though in public life I am everybody's slave.Mr Warburton, anxious of course to maintain the unity of the party, had told the Duchess so much as would, he thought, induce her to give way, but he had not repeated the Duke's own observations, which were, Mr Warburton thought, hostile to the interests of the party.The Duchess only smiled and made a little grimace, with which the private secretary was already well acquainted.And Sir Orlando received no invitation.

In those days Sir Orlando was unhappy and irritable, doubtful of further success as regarded the Coalition, but quite resolved to put the house down about the ears of the inhabitants rather than to leave it with gentle resignation.To him it seemed to be impossible that the Coalition should exist without him.He too had moments of high-vaulting ambition, in which he had almost felt himself to be the great man required by the country, the one ruler who could gather together in his grasp the reins of government and drive the State coach single-handed safe through its difficulties for the next half-dozen years.There are men who cannot conceive of themselves that anything should be difficult for them, and again others who cannot bring themselves so to trust themselves as to think that they can ever achieve anything great.Samples of each sort from time to time rise high in political life, carried thither apparently by Epicurean concourse of atoms; and it often happens that the more confident samples are by no means the most capable.The concourse of atoms had carried Sir Orlando so high that he could not but think himself intended for something higher.But the Duke, who had really been wafted to the very top, had always doubted himself, believing himself capable of doing some one thing by dint of industry, but with no further confidence in his own powers.Sir Orlando had perceived something of his leader's weakness, and had thought that he might profit by it.He was not only a distinguished member of the Cabinet, but even the recognised Leader of the House of Commons.He looked out the facts and found that for five-and-twenty years out of the last thirty the Leader of the House of Commons had been the Head of Government.

He felt that he would be mean not to stretch out his hand and take the prize destined for him.The Duke was a poor timid man who had very little to say for himself.Then came the little episode about the dinners.It had become very evident to the world that the Duchess of Omnium had cut Sir Orlando Drought,--that the Prime Minister's wife, who was great in hospitality, would not admit the First Lord of the Admiralty into her house.