that Phineas Finn
had been chosen as a safe and promising young man. As for
qualification, if any question were raised, that should be made all right.
An Irish candidate was wanted, and a Roman Catholic. So much the
Loughshaners would require on their own account when instigated to
dismiss from their service that thorough-going Protestant, the Hon.
George Morris. Then "the party,"--by which Barrington Erle probably
meant the great man in whose service he himself had become a
politician,--required that the candidate should be a safe man, one who
would support "the party,"--not a cantankerous, red-hot semi-Fenian,
running about to meetings at the Rotunda, and such-like, with views of
his own about tenant-right and the Irish Church. "But I have views of
my own," said Phineas, blushing again. "Of course you have, my dear
boy," said Barrington, clapping him on the back. "I shouldn't come to
you unless you had views. But your views and ours are the same, and
you're just the lad for Galway. You mightn't have such an opening
again in your life, and of course you'll stand for Loughshane." Then the
conversation was over, the private secretary went away to arrange some
other little matter of the kind, and Phineas Finn was left alone to
consider the proposition that had been made to him.
To become a member of the British Parliament! In all those hot
contests at the two debating clubs to which he had belonged, this had
been the ambition which had moved him. For, after all, to what purpose
of their own had those empty debates ever tended? He and three or four
others who had called themselves Liberals had been pitted against four
or five who had called themselves Conservatives, and night after night
they had discussed some ponderous subject without any idea that one
would ever persuade another, or that their talking would ever conduce
to any action or to any result. But each of these combatants had
felt,--without daring to announce a hope on the subject among
themselves,--that the present arena was only a trial-ground for some
possible greater amphitheatre, for some future debating club in which
debates would lead to action, and in which eloquence would have
power, even though persuasion might be out of the question.
Phineas certainly had never dared to speak, even to himself, of such a
hope. The labours of the Bar had to be encountered before the dawn of
such a hope could come to him. And he had gradually learned to feel
that his prospects at the Bar were not as yet very promising. As
regarded professional work he had been idle, and how then could he
have a hope?
And now this thing, which he regarded as being of all things in the
world the most honourable, had come to him all at once, and was
possibly within his reach! If he could believe Barrington Erle, he had
only to lift up his hand, and he might be in Parliament within two
months. And who was to be believed on such a subject if not
Barrington Erle? This was Erle's special business, and such a man
would not have come to him on such a subject had he not been in
earnest, and had he not himself believed in success. There was an
opening ready, an opening to this great glory,--if only it might be
possible for him to fill it!
What would his father say? His father would of course oppose the plan.
And if he opposed his father, his father would of course stop his
income. And such an income as it was! Could it be that a man should
sit in Parliament and live upon a hundred and fifty pounds a year?
Since that payment of his debts he had become again embarrassed,--to
a slight amount. He owed a tailor a trifle, and a bootmaker a trifle,--and
something to the man who sold gloves and shirts; and yet he had done
his best to keep out of debt with more than Irish pertinacity, living very
closely, breakfasting upon tea and a roll, and dining frequently for a
shilling at a luncheon-house up a court near Lincoln's Inn. Where
should he dine if the Loughshaners elected him to Parliament? And
then he painted to himself a not untrue picture of the probable miseries
of a man who begins life too high up on the ladder,--who succeeds in
mounting before he has learned how to hold on when he is aloft. For
our Phineas Finn was a young man not without sense,--not entirely a
windbag. If he did this thing the probability was that he might become
utterly a castaway, and go entirely to the dogs before he was thirty. He
had heard of penniless men who had got into Parliament, and
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