The Duke's Children eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 842 pages of information about The Duke's Children.

The Duke's Children eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 842 pages of information about The Duke's Children.

‘He’ll make a capital member,’ said Silverbridge, clapping his friend on the back.

‘I hope he’ll never forget,’ said Mr Williams, ’that he owes his seat to the protestant and Church-of-England principles which have sunk so deeply into the minds of the thoughtful portion of the inhabitants of this borough.’

‘Whom should they elect but Tregear?’ said the mother, feeling that her rector took too much of the praise himself.

‘I think you have done more for us than anyone else,’ whispered Miss Tregear to the young Lord.  ‘What you said was so reassuring!’ The father before he went to bed expressed to his son, with some trepidation, a hope that all this would lead to no great permanent increase of expenditure.

That evening before he went to bed Lord Silverbridge wrote to his father an account of what had taken place at Polpenno.

’Polwenning, 15 December

My dear father,

’Among us all we have managed to return Tregear.  I am afraid you will not be quite pleased because it will be a vote lost to your party.  But I really think that he is just the fellow to be in Parliament.  If he were on your side I’m sure he’s just the kind of man you’d like to bring into office.  He is always thinking about those sort of things.  He says that, if there were no Conservatives, such Liberals as you and Mr Monk would be destroyed by the Jacobins.  There is something in that.  Whether a man is Conservative or not himself, I suppose there ought to be Conservatives.’

The Duke as he read this made a memorandum in his own mind that he would explain to his son that every carriage should have a drag to its wheels, but that an ambitious soul would choose to be the coachman rather than the drag.

‘It was beastly work!’ The Duke made another memorandum to instruct his son that no gentleman above the age of schoolboy should allow himself to use such a word in such a sense.  ’We had to go about in the rain up to our knees in mud for eight or nine days, always saying the same thing.  And of course all that we said was bosh.’  Another memorandum—­or rather two, one as to the slang, and another as to the expediency of teaching something to the poor voters on such occasions.  ’Our only comfort was that the Carbottle people were as quite badly off as us.’  Another memorandum as to the grammar.  The absence of Christian charity did not at the moment affect the Duke.  ’I made ever so many speeches, till at last it seemed quite easy.’  Here there was a very grave memorandum.  Speeches easy to young speakers are generally very difficult to old listeners.  ‘But of course it was all bosh.’  This required no separate memorandum.

’I have promised to go up to town with Tregear for a day or two.  After that I will stick to my purpose of going to Matching again.  I will be there about the twenty-second, and then will stay over Christmas.  After that I am going to the Brake country for some hunting.  It is such a shame to have a lot of horses and never to ride them!  ’Your most affectionate Son, ‘Silverbridge.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Duke's Children from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.