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.

Phineas was himself surprised to find that his first feeling on reading this letter was one of dissatisfaction.  Here were his golden hopes about to be realised,—­hopes as to the realisation of which he had been quite despondent twelve months ago,—­and yet he was uncomfortable because he was to be postponed to Laurence Fitzgibbon.  Had the new Under-Secretary been a man whom he had not known, whom he had not learned to look down upon as inferior to himself, he would not have minded it,—­would have been full of joy at the promotion proposed for himself.  But Laurence Fitzgibbon was such a poor creature, that the idea of filling a place from which Laurence had risen was distasteful to him.  “It seems to be all a matter of favour and convenience,” he said to himself, “without any reference to the service.”  His triumph would have been so complete had Mr. Mildmay allowed him to go into the higher place at one leap.  Other men who had made themselves useful had done so.  In the first hour after receiving Lord Brentford’s letter, the idea of becoming a Lord of the Treasury was almost displeasing to him.  He had an idea that junior lordships of the Treasury were generally bestowed on young members whom it was convenient to secure, but who were not good at doing anything.  There was a moment in which he thought that he would refuse to be made a junior lord.

But during the night cooler reflections told him that he had been very wrong.  He had taken up politics with the express desire of getting his foot upon a rung of the ladder of promotion, and now, in his third session, he was about to be successful.  Even as a junior lord he would have a thousand a year; and how long might he have sat in chambers, and have wandered about Lincoln’s Inn, and have loitered in the courts striving to look as though he had business, before he would have earned a thousand a year!  Even as a junior lord he could make himself useful, and when once he should be known to be a good working man, promotion would come to him.  No ladder can be mounted without labour; but this ladder was now open above his head, and he already had his foot upon it.

At half-past eleven he was with Lord Brentford, who received him with the blandest smile and a pressure of the hand which was quite cordial.  “My dear Finn,” he said, “this gives me the most sincere pleasure,—­the greatest pleasure in the world.  Our connection together at Loughton of course makes it doubly agreeable to me.”

“I cannot be too grateful to you, Lord Brentford.”

“No, no; no, no.  It is all your own doing.  When Mr. Mildmay asked me whether I did not think you the most promising of the young members on our side in your House, I certainly did say that I quite concurred.  But I should be taking too much on myself, I should be acting dishonestly, if I were to allow you to imagine that it was my proposition.  Had he asked me to recommend, I should have named you; that I say frankly.  But he did not.  He did

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Phineas Finn from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.