Dr Thorne - Anthony Trollope [111]
Lord de Courcy was now at home; but his presence did not add much hilarity to the claret-cup. The young men, however, were very keen about the election, and Mr Nearthewinde, who was one of the party, was full of the most sanguine hopes.
‘I have done one good at any rate,’ said Frank; ‘I have secured the chorister’s vote.’
‘What! Bagley?’ said Nearthewinde. ‘The fellow kept out of my way, and I couldn’t see him.’
‘I haven’t exactly seen him,’ said Frank; ‘but I’ve got his vote all the same.’
‘What! by a letter?’ said Mr Moffat.
‘No, not by a letter,’ said Frank, speaking rather low as he looked at the bishop and the earl; ‘I got a promise from his wife: I think he’s a little in the henpecked line.’
‘Ha – ha – ha!’ laughed the good bishop, who, in spite of Frank’s modulation of his voice, had overheard what had passed. ‘Is that the way you manage electioneering matters in our cathedral city? Ha – ha – ha!’ The idea of one of his choristers being in the henpecked line was very amusing to the bishop.
‘Oh, I got a distinct promise,’ said Frank, in his pride; and then added incautiously, ‘but I had to order bonnets for the whole family.’
‘Hush-h-h-h-h!’ said Mr Nearthewinde, absolutely flabbergasted by such imprudence on the part of one of his client’s friends. ‘I am quite sure that your order had no effect, and was intended to have no effect on Mr Bagley’s vote.’
‘Is that wrong?’ said Frank; ‘upon my word I thought that it was quite legitimate.’
‘One should never admit anything in electioneering matters, should one?’ said George, turning to Mr Nearthewinde.
‘Very little, Mr de Courcy; very little indeed – the less the better. It’s hard to say in these days what is wrong and what is not. Now, there’s Reddypalm, the publican, the man who has the Brown Bear. Well, I was there of course: he’s a voter, and if any man in Barchester ought to feel himself bound to vote for a friend of the duke’s, he ought. Now, I was so thirsty when I was in that man’s house that I was dying for a glass of beer; but for the life of me I didn’t dare order one.’
‘Why not?’ said Frank, whose mind was only just beginning to be enlightened by the great doctrine of purity of election as practised in English provincial towns.
‘Oh, Closerstil had some fellow looking at me; why, I can’t walk down that town without having my very steps counted. I like sharp fighting myself, but I never go so sharp as that.’
‘Nevertheless, I got Bagley’s vote,’ said Frank, persisting in praise of his own electioneering prowess; ‘and you may be sure of this, Mr Nearthewinde, none of Closerstil’s men were looking at me when I got it.’
‘Who’ll pay for the bonnets, Frank?’ said George, whispering to him.
‘Oh, I’ll pay for them if Moffat won’t. I think I shall keep an account there; they seem to have good gloves and those sort of things.’
‘Very good, I have no doubt,’ said George.
‘I suppose your lordship will be in town soon after the meeting of Parliament?’ said the bishop, questioning the earl.
‘Oh! yes; I suppose I must be there. I am never allowed to remain very long in quiet. It is a great nuisance; but it is too late to think of that now.’
‘Men in high places, my lord, never were, and never will be, allowed to consider themselves. They burn their torches not in their own behalf,’ said the bishop, thinking, perhaps, as much of himself as he did of his noble friend. ‘Rest and quiet are the comforts of those who have been content to remain in obscurity.’
‘Perhaps so,’ said the earl, finishing his glass of claret with an air of virtuous resignation. ‘Perhaps so.’ His own martyrdom, however, had not been severe, for the rest and quiet of home had never been peculiarly satisfactory to his tastes. Soon after this they all went to the ladies.
It was some little time before Frank could find an opportunity of recommencing his allotted task with Miss Dunstable. She got into conversation with the bishop and some other people, and, except that he took her teacup and nearly managed