CHAPTER XVIII
The New Minister’s Patronage
At that time, just as Lady Lufton was about
to leave Framley for London, Mark Robarts received a pressing
letter, inviting him also to go up to the metropolis for a day or
two—not for pleasure, but on business. The letter was from his
indefatigable friend Sowerby.
“My dear Robarts,” the letter ran—”I have
just heard that poor little Burslem, the Barsetshire prebendary, is
dead. We must all die some day, you know—as you have told your
parishioners from the Framley pulpit more than once, no doubt. The
stall must be filled up, and why should not you have it as well as
another? It is six hundred a year and a house. Little Burslem had
nine, but the good old times are gone. Whether the house is letable
or not under the present ecclesiastical régime, I do not know. It
used to be so, for I remember Mrs. Wiggins, the tallow-chandler’s
widow, living in old Stanhope’s house.
“Harold Smith has just joined the Government
as Lord Petty Bag, and could, I think, at the present moment, get
this for asking. He cannot well refuse me, and, if you will say the
word, I will speak to him. You had better come up yourself; but say
the word ‘Yes,’ or ‘No,’ by the wires.
“If you say ‘Yes,’ as of course you will, do
not fail to come up. You will find me at the ‘Travellers,’ or at
the House. The stall will just suit you—will give you no trouble,
improve your position, and give some little assistance towards bed
and board, and rack and manger.
“Yours ever faithfully,
“N. SOWERBY.
“Singularly enough, I hear that your brother
is private secretary to the new Lord Petty Bag. I am told that his
chief duty will consist in desiring the servants to call my
sister’s carriage. I have only seen Harold once since he accepted
office; but my Lady Petty Bag says that he has certainly grown an
inch since that occurrence.”
This was certainly very good-natured on the
part of Mr. Sowerby, and showed that he had a feeling within his
bosom that he owed something to his friend the parson for the
injury he had done him. And such was in truth the case. A more
reckless being than the member for West Barsetshire could not
exist. He was reckless for himself, and reckless for all others
with whom he might be concerned. He could ruin his friends with as
little remorse as he had ruined himself. All was fair game that
came in the way of his net. But, nevertheless, he was good-natured,
and willing to move heaven and earth to do a friend a good turn, if
it came in his way to do so.
He did really love Mark Robarts as much as it
was given him to love any among his acquaintance. He knew that he
had already done him an almost irreparable injury, and might very
probably injure him still deeper before he had done with him. That
he would undoubtedly do so, if it came in his way, was very
certain. But then, if it also came in his way to repay his friend
by any side blow, he would also undoubtedly do that. Such an
occasion had now come, and he had desired his sister to give the
new Lord Petty Bag no rest till he should have promised to use all
his influence in getting the vacant prebend for Mark Robarts.
This letter of Sowerby’s Mark immediately
showed to his wife. How lucky, thought he to himself, that not a
word was said in it about those accursed money transactions! Had he
understood Sowerby better he would have known that that gentleman
never said anything about money transactions until it became
absolutely necessary. “I know you don’t like Mr. Sowerby,” he said;
“but you must own that this is very good-natured.”
“It is the character I hear of him that I
don’t like,” said Mrs. Robarts.
“But what shall I do now, Fanny? As he says,
why should not I have the stall as well as another?”
“I suppose it would not interfere with your
parish?” she asked.
“Not in the least, at the distance at which
we are. I did think of giving up old Jones; but if I take this, of
course I must keep a curate.”
His wife could not find it in her heart to
dissuade him from accepting promotion when it came in his way—what
vicar’s wife would have so persuaded her husband? But yet she did
not altogether like it. She feared that Greek from Chaldicotes,
even when he came with the present of a prebendal stall in his
hands. And then what would Lady Lufton say?
“And do you think that you must go up to
London, Mark?”
“Oh, certainly; that is, if I intend to
accept Harold Smith’s kind offices in the matter.”
“I suppose it will be better to accept them,”
said Fanny, feeling perhaps that it would be useless in her to hope
that they should not be accepted.
“Prebendal stalls, Fanny, don’t generally go
begging long among parish clergymen. How could I reconcile it to
the duty I owe to my children to refuse such an increase to my
income?” And so it was settled that he should at once drive to
Silverbridge and send off a message by telegraph, and that he
should himself proceed to London on the following day. “But you
must see Lady Lufton first, of course,” said Fanny, as soon as all
this was settled.
Mark would have avoided this if he could have
decently done so, but he felt that it would be impolitic, as well
as indecent. And why should he be afraid to tell Lady Lufton that
he hoped to receive this piece of promotion from the present
Government? There was nothing disgraceful in a clergyman becoming a
prebendary of Barchester. Lady Lufton herself had always been very
civil to the prebendaries, and especially to little Dr. Burslem,
the meagre little man who had just now paid the debt of nature. She
had always been very fond of the chapter, and her original dislike
to Bishop Proudie had been chiefly founded on his interference with
the cathedral clergy—on his interference, or on that of his wife or
chaplain. Considering these things Mark Robarts tried to make
himself believe that Lady Lufton would be delighted at his good
fortune. But yet he did not believe it. She at any rate would
revolt from the gift of the Greek of Chaldicotes.
“Oh, indeed,” she said, when the vicar had
with some difficulty explained to her all the circumstances of the
case. “Well, I congratulate you, Mr. Robarts, on your powerful new
patron.”
“You will probably feel with me, Lady Lufton,
that the benefice is one which I can hold without any detriment to
me in my position here at Framley,” said he, prudently resolving to
let the slur upon his friends pass by unheeded.
“Well, I hope so. Of course, you are a very
young man, Mr. Robarts, and these things have generally been given
to clergymen more advanced in life.”
“But you do not mean to say that you think I
ought to refuse it?”
“What my advice to you might be if you really
came to me for advice, I am hardly prepared to say at so very short
a notice. You seem to have made up your mind, and therefore I need
not consider it. As it is, I wish you joy, and hope that it may
turn out to your advantage in every way.”
“You understand, Lady Lufton, that I have by
no means got it as yet.”
“Oh, I thought it had been offered to you: I
thought you spoke of this new minister as having all that in his
own hand.”
“Oh, dear, no. What may be the amount of his
influence in that respect, I do not at all know. But my
correspondent assures me—”
“Mr. Sowerby, you mean. Why don’t you call
him by his name?”
“Mr. Sowerby assures me that Mr. Smith will
ask for it; and thinks it most probable that his request will be
successful.”
“Oh, of course. Mr. Sowerby and Mr. Harold
Smith together would no doubt be successful in anything. They are
the sort of men who are successful nowadays. Well, Mr. Robarts, I
wish you joy.” And she gave him her hand in token of her
sincerity.
Mark took her hand, resolving to say nothing
further on that occasion. That Lady Lufton was not now cordial with
him, as she used to be, he was well aware; and sooner or later he
was determined to have the matter out with her. He would ask her
why she now so constantly met him with a taunt, and so seldom
greeted him with that kind old affectionate smile which he knew and
appreciated so well. That she was honest and true, he was quite
sure. If he asked her the question plainly, she would answer him
openly. And if he could induce her to say that she would return to
her old ways, return to them she would in a hearty manner. But he
could not do this just at present. It was but a day or two since
Mr. Crawley had been with him; and was it not probable that Mr.
Crawley had been sent thither by Lady Lufton? His own hands were
not clean enough for a remonstrance at the present moment. He would
cleanse them, and then he would remonstrate.
“Would you like to live part of the year in
Barchester?” he said to his wife and sister that evening.
“I think that two houses are only a trouble,”
said his wife. “And we have been very happy here.”
“I have always liked a cathedral town,” said
Lucy; “and I am particularly fond of the close.”
“And Barchester Close is the closest of all
closes,” said Mark. “There is not a single house within the
gateways that does not belong to the chapter.”
“But if we are to keep up two houses, the
additional income will soon be wasted,” said Fanny,
prudently.
“The thing would be, to let the house
furnished every summer,” said Lucy.
“But I must take my residence as the terms
come,” said the vicar; “and I certainly should not like to be away
from Framley all the winter; I should never see anything of
Lufton.” And perhaps he thought of his hunting, and then thought
again of that cleansing of his hands.
“I should not a bit mind being away during
the winter,” said Lucy, thinking of what the last winter had done
for her.
“But where on earth should we find money to
furnish one of those large, old-fashioned houses? Pray, Mark, do
not do anything rash.” And the wife laid her hand affectionately on
her husband’s arm. In this manner the question of the prebend was
discussed between them on the evening before he started for
London.
Success had at last crowned the earnest
effort with which Harold Smith had carried on the political battle
of his life for the last ten years. The late Lord Petty Bag had
resigned in disgust, having been unable to digest the Prime
Minister’s ideas on Indian Reform, and Mr. Harold Smith, after
sundry hitches in the business, was installed in his place. It was
said that Harold Smith was not exactly the man whom the Premier
would himself have chosen for that high office; but the Premier’s
hands were a good deal tied by circumstances. The last great
appointment he had made had been terribly unpopular—so much so as
to subject him, popular as he undoubtedly was himself, to a screech
from the whole nation. The Jupiter,
with withering scorn, had asked whether vice of every kind was to
be considered, in these days of Queen Victoria, as a passport to
the Cabinet. Adverse members of both Houses had arrayed themselves
in a pure panoply of morality, and thundered forth their sarcasms
with the indignant virtue and keen discontent of political
Juvenals; and even his own friends had held up their hands in
dismay. Under those circumstances he had thought himself obliged in
the present instance to select a man who would not be especially
objectionable to any party. Now Harold Smith lived with his wife,
and his circumstances were not more than ordinarily embarrassed. He
kept no race-horses; and, as Lord Brock now heard for the first
time, gave lectures in provincial towns on popular subjects. He had
a seat which was tolerably secure, and could talk to the House by
the yard if required to do so. Moreover, Lord Brock had a great
idea that the whole machinery of his own ministry would break to
pieces very speedily. His own reputation was not bad, but it was
insufficient for himself and that lately selected friend of his.
Under all these circumstances combined, he chose Harold Smith to
fill the vacant office of Lord Petty Bag.
And very proud the Lord Petty Bag was. For
the last three or four months, he and Mr. Supplehouse had been
agreeing to consign the ministry to speedy perdition. “This sort of
dictatorship will never do,” Harold Smith had himself said,
justifying that future vote of his as to want of confidence in the
Queen’s Government. And Mr. Supplehouse in this matter had fully
agreed with him. He was a Juno whose form that wicked old Paris had
utterly despised, and he, too, had quite made up his mind as to the
lobby in which he would be found when that day of vengeance should
arrive. But now things were much altered in Harold Smith’s views.
The Premier had shown his wisdom in seeking for new strength where
strength ought to be sought, and introducing new blood into the
body of his ministry. The people would now feel fresh confidence,
and probably the House also. As to Mr. Supplehouse—he would use all
his influence on Supplehouse. But, after all, Mr. Supplehouse was
not everything.
On the morning after our vicar’s arrival in
London he attended at the Petty Bag Office. It was situated in the
close neighbourhood of Downing Street and the higher governmental
gods; and though the building itself was not much, seeing that it
was shored up on one side, that it bulged out in the front, was
foul with smoke, dingy with dirt, and was devoid of any single
architectural grace or modern scientific improvement, nevertheless
its position gave it a status in the world which made the clerks in
the Lord Petty Bag’s office quite respectable in their walk in
life. Mark had seen his friend Sowerby on the previous evening, and
had then made an appointment with him for the following morning at
the new minister’s office. And now he was there a little before his
time, in order that he might have a few moments’ chat with his
brother.
When Mark found himself in the private
secretary’s room he was quite astonished to see the change in his
brother’s appearance which the change in his official rank had
produced. Jack Robarts had been a well-built, straight-legged,
lissom young fellow, pleasant to the eye because of his natural
advantages, but rather given to a harum-scarum style of gait, and
occasionally careless, not to say slovenly, in his dress. But now
he was the very pink of perfection. His jaunty frock-coat fitted
him to perfection; not a hair of his head was out of place; his
waistcoat and trousers were glossy and new, and his umbrella, which
stood in the umbrella-stand in the corner, was tight, and neat, and
small, and natty.
“Well, John, you’ve become quite a great
man,” said his brother.
“I don’t know much about that,” said John;
“but I find that I have an enormous deal of fagging to go
through.”
“Do you mean work? I thought you had about
the easiest berth in the whole Civil Service.”
“Ah! that’s just the mistake that people
make. Because we don’t cover whole reams of foolscap paper at the
rate of fifteen lines to a page, and five words to a line, people
think that we private secretaries have got nothing to do. Look
here,” and he tossed over scornfully a dozen or so of little notes.
“I tell you what, Mark; it is no easy matter to manage the
patronage of a Cabinet minister. Now I am bound to write to
everyone of these fellows a letter that will please him; and yet I
shall refuse to every one of them the request which he asks.”
“That must be difficult.”
“Difficult is no word for it. But, after all,
it consists chiefly in the knack of the thing. One must have the
wit ‘from such a sharp and waspish word as No to pluck the sting.’
I do it every day, and I really think that the people like
it.”
“Perhaps your refusals are better than other
people’s acquiescences.”
“I don’t mean that at all. We private
secretaries have all to do the same thing. Now, would you believe
it? I have used up three lifts of notepaper already in telling
people that there is no vacancy for a lobby messenger in the Petty
Bag Office. Seven peeresses have asked for it for their favourite
footmen. But there—there’s the Lord Petty Bag!”
A bell rang and the private secretary,
jumping up from his notepaper, tripped away quickly to the great
man’s room.
“He’ll see you at once,” said he, returning.
“Buggins, show the Reverend Mr. Robarts to the Lord Petty
Bag.”
Buggins was the messenger for whose not
vacant place all the peeresses were striving with so much
animation. And then Mark, following Buggins for two steps, was
ushered into the next room.
If a man be altered by becoming a private
secretary, he is much more altered by being made a Cabinet
minister. Robarts, as he entered the room, could hardly believe
that this was the same Harold Smith whom Mrs. Proudie bothered so
cruelly in the lecture-room at Barchester. Then he was cross, and
touchy, and uneasy, and insignificant. Now, as he stood smiling on
the hearth-rug of his official fireplace, it was quite pleasant to
see the kind, patronizing smile which lighted up his features. He
delighted to stand there, with his hands in his trousers’ pocket,
the great man of the place, conscious of his lordship, and feeling
himself every inch a minister. Sowerby had come with him, and was
standing a little in the background, from which position he winked
occasionally at the parson over the minister’s shoulder.
“Ah, Robarts, delighted to see you. How odd,
by-the-by, that your brother should be my private secretary!”
Mark said that it was a singular
coincidence.
“A very smart young fellow, and, if he minds
himself, he’ll do well.”
“I’m quite sure he’ll do well,” said
Mark.
“Ah! well, yes; I think he will. And now,
what can I do for you, Robarts?”
Hereupon Mr. Sowerby struck in, making it
apparent by his explanation that Mr. Robarts himself by no means
intended to ask for anything; but that, as his friends had thought
that this stall at Barchester might be put into his hands with more
fitness than in those of any other clergyman of the day, he was
willing to accept the piece of preferment from a man whom he
respected so much as he did the new Lord Petty Bag.
The minister did not quite like this, as it
restricted him from much of his condescension, and robbed him of
the incense of a petition which he had expected Mark Roberts would
make to him. But, nevertheless, he was very gracious.
“He could not take upon himself to declare,”
he said, “what might be Lord Brock’s pleasure with reference to the
preferment at Barchester which was vacant. He had certainly already
spoken to his lordship on the subject, and had perhaps some reason
to believe that his own wishes would be consulted. No distinct
promise had been made, but he might perhaps go so far as to say
that he expected such result. If so, it would give him the greatest
pleasure in the world to congratulate Mr. Robarts on the possession
of the stall—a stall which he was sure Mr. Robarts would fill with
dignity, piety, and brotherly love.” And then, when he had
finished, Mr. Sowerby gave a final wink, and said that he regarded
the matter as settled.
“No, not settled, Nathaniel,” said the
cautious minister.
“It’s the same thing,” rejoined Sowerby. “We
all know what all that flummery means. Men in office, Mark, never
do make a distinct promise—not even to themselves of the leg of
mutton which is roasting before their kitchen fires. It is so
necessary in these days to be safe; is it not, Harold?
“Most expedient,” said Harold Smith, shaking
his head wisely. “Well, Robarts, who is it now?” This he said to
his private secretary, who came to notice the arrival of some
bigwig. “Well, yes. I will say good morning, with your leave, for I
am a little hurried. And remember, Mr. Robarts, I will do what I
can for you; but you must distinctly understand that there is no
promise.”
“Oh, no promise at all,” said Sowerby—”of
course not.” And then, as he sauntered up Whitehall towards Charing
Cross, with Robarts on his arm, he again pressed upon him the sale
of that invaluable hunter, who was eating his head off his
shoulders in the stable at Chaldicotes.