tive Con
returned the Duke himself while he was a commoner, but they had returned him as being part and parcel of the Omnium appendages. That was all over now. As a constituency they were not endowed with advanced views, and thought that a Conservative would suit them best. That being so, and as they had been told that the Duke's son was a Conservative, they fancied that by electing him they would be pleasing everybody. But, in truth, by so doing they would by no means please the Duke. He had told them on previous occasions that they might elect whom they pleased, and felt no anger because they had elected a Conservative. They might send up to Parliament the most antediluvian old Tory they could find in England if they wished,
into some further corner of the world, he would stamp it out. But she, when this foolish passion of hers should have been thus stamped out, could never be the pure, the bright, the unsullied, unsoiled thing, of the possession of which he had thought so much. He had never spoken of his hopes about her even to his wife, but in the s
him with her early spring of love, as she had loved that poor ne'er-do-well? How infinite had been his regrets. How often had he told himself that, with all that Fortune had given him, still Fortune had been unjust to him because he had been robbed of that. Not to save his life could he have whispered a word of this to any one, but he had felt it. He had felt it for years. Dear as she had be
Had he not known from the first that the woman was an adventuress? And had he not declared to himself over and over again that between such a one and himself ther
adhering to the old family party, while his mind was entirely preoccupied with his daughter? It had suddenly become almost indifferent to him whether Silverbridge should be a Conservative or a Liberal. But as he dressed he told himself that, as a man, he ought to be able to do a pl
ages, and had been held to be serviceable rather than disgraceful, if conducted in a noble fashion. He did not credit Tifto with much nobility. He knew but little about the Major. He
sir. The Major would ask a cou
s a gre
ery useful man. He thoroug
doesn't l
it. That is, he has a gre
e, if he can afford the expense,-as you
g to sp
is mind to the matter discussed,-his mind being on other things. But when their breakfast was eaten, then it was necessary that he
course I have t
do as I wou
tical opinion is a kind of
itical opinion. You are still young, and I do not
eas. We've got to protect our position as well
ism or for revolution. But, putting all that aside for the present, do you think that a man's political opinions shoul
st," said the youn
y self-prote
lves, and we must look after ourselves. We are so few and
uld tend. The son listened to it with attention, and when it was over, expressed his opinion that there was a great deal in what his father had said. "I trust, if you will consider it," said the
elf a Liberal," said
y n
am a Cons
for the county on t
l them that I should always
efuse to do
me to grow a couple of inches taller I couldn't do it,
so much deference for his elders as to be in
s; of
ondition of the country is the one subject to
d, of course, I know how m
might go for so
at all only for that little. Still, you see
ight,-you, who have never given
it is because I know that, that I am a Conservative. The Radicals are always say
again to burst out in wrath and threaten the lad,-to threaten him as to money, as to his amusements, as to the general tenure of his life. The pity was so great that the lad should be so stubborn and so foolish! He would never ask his son to be a slave to the Liberal party, as he had been. But that a Palliser should not be a Liberal,-and his son, as the first recreant Palliser,-was wormwood to him! As he stood there he more than once clenched his
for Silverbridge?
you obje
e now still more difficult f
at I should not m
d. They will return a Co
care about," sai
but what would you have me do? I will give up Pa
o not wi
't have me
N
an I do
to learn from some ma
e so many
t ill-behaved young man who was with
n Frank
an Mr. T
of course he and I have been much tog
, he
in a voice that almost betrayed fear, for he kne
are the disgrace which had fallen upon himself and his family. As he did tell the story, both his face and his voice we
was something
encoura
I have told him that I was
id you not
was hardly my b
the honour o
many things have ha
t th
uttered a deep sigh and turned again round to the f
ld thin
soon as the husband's grief for the loss of his wife had been in some degree appeased, but he could not spea
wri
hink
n has kno
. Fi
e has known it
how it can h
t be an end of this. I will speak to your sister. In the meantime, the less, I think, you see of Mr. Tregear the better. Of course
nly," said