Phineas Finn eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 986 pages of information about Phineas Finn.

Phineas Finn eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 986 pages of information about Phineas Finn.

For some minutes after that Phineas did not speak another word, and the conversation generally was not so brisk and bright as it was expected to be at Madame Goesler’s.  Madame Max Goesler herself thoroughly understood our hero’s position, and felt for him.  She would have encouraged no questionings about Violet Effingham had she thought that they would have led to such a result, and now she exerted herself to turn the minds of her guests to other subjects.  At last she succeeded; and after a while, too, Phineas himself was able to talk.  He drank two or three glasses of wine, and dashed away into politics, taking the earliest opportunity in his power of contradicting Lord Fawn very plainly on one or two matters.  Laurence Fitzgibbon was of course of opinion that the ministry could not stay in long.  Since he had left the Government the ministers had made wonderful mistakes, and he spoke of them quite as an enemy might speak.  “And yet, Fitz,” said Mr. Bonteen, “you used to be so staunch a supporter.”

“I have seen the error of my way, I can assure you,” said Laurence.

“I always observe,” said Madame Max Goesler, “that when any of you gentlemen resign,—­which you usually do on some very trivial matter,—­the resigning gentleman becomes of all foes the bitterest.  Somebody goes on very well with his friends, agreeing most cordially about everything, till he finds that his public virtue cannot swallow some little detail, and then he resigns.  Or some one, perhaps, on the other side has attacked him, and in the melee he is hurt, and so he resigns.  But when he has resigned, and made his parting speech full of love and gratitude, I know well after that where to look for the bitterest hostility to his late friends.  Yes, I am beginning to understand the way in which politics are done in England.”

All this was rather severe upon Laurence Fitzgibbon; but he was a man of the world, and bore it better than Phineas had borne his defeat.

The dinner, taken altogether, was not a success, and so Madame Goesler understood.  Lord Fawn, after he had been contradicted by Phineas, hardly opened his mouth.  Phineas himself talked rather too much and rather too loudly; and Mrs. Bonteen, who was well enough inclined to flatter Lord Fawn, contradicted him.  “I made a mistake,” said Madame Goesler afterwards, “in having four members of Parliament who all of them were or had been in office.  I never will have two men in office together again.”  This she said to Mrs. Bonteen.  “My dear Madame Max,” said Mrs. Bonteen, “your resolution ought to be that you will never again have two claimants for the same young lady.”

In the drawing-room up-stairs Madame Goesler managed to be alone for three minutes with Phineas Finn.  “And it is as you say, my friend?” she asked.  Her voice was plaintive and soft, and there was a look of real sympathy in her eyes.  Phineas almost felt that if they two had been quite alone he could have told her everything, and have wept at her feet.

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Phineas Finn from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.