Tales and Novels Volume VIII Part 7
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"What is to come?--Cunningham, perhaps," thought Mrs. Falconer; "or perhaps something about John. When will he speak?--I can't--I must--I am happy to see your lords.h.i.+p looking so well."
"Is Mrs. Falconer acquainted with Lady Trant?"
"Lady Trant--yes, my lord."
"Mercy! Is it possible?--No, for her own sake she would not betray me,"
thought Mrs. Falconer.
"Intimately?" said Lord Oldborough.
"Intimately--that is, as one's intimate with every body of a certain sort--one visits--but no farther--I can't say I have the honour--"
Mrs. Falconer was so distracted by seeing Lord Oldborough searching in his pocket-book for a letter, that in spite of all her presence of mind, she knew not what she said; and all her presence of countenance failed, when Lord Oldborough placed before her eyes the cover directed to Captain Nuttall.
Can you guess how this came into Lady Trant's possession, madam?"
"I protest, my lord," her voice trembling, in spite of her utmost efforts to command it, "I don't know--nor can I conceive--"
"Nor can you conceive by whom it was written, madam?"
"It appears--it bears a resemblance--some likeness--as far as I recollect--but it is so long since I have seen your lords.h.i.+p's own hand--and hands are so like--sometimes--and I am so bad a judge--every hand, all fas.h.i.+onable hands, are so like."
"And every seal like every seal?" said Lord Oldborough, placing the counterfeit seal before Mrs. Falconer. "I recommend it to you, madam, to waste no farther time in evasion; but to deliver to me the counterpart of this seal, the impression of my private seal, which you had from Lady Frances Arlington."
"A mere bread-seal! Her ladys.h.i.+p surely has not said--I really have lost it--if I ever had it--I declare your lords.h.i.+p terrifies me so, by this strange mode--"
"I recommend it to you once more, madam, and for the last time I earnestly recommend it to you, to deliver up to me that seal, for I have sworn to my belief that it is in your possession; a warrant will in consequence be issued, to seize and search your papers. The purport of my present visit, of which I should gladly have been spared the pain, is to save you, madam, from the public disgrace of having a warrant executed. Do not faint, madam, if you can avoid it, nor go into hysterics; for if you do, I must retire, and the warrant must be executed. Your best course is to open that desk, to give me up the seal, to make to me at this instant a full confession of all you know of this transaction. If you do thus, for your husband's sake, madam, I will, as far as I can consistently with what is due to myself, spare you the shame of an arrest."
Mrs. Falconer, with trembling hands, unlocked the desk, and delivered the seal.
"And a letter which I see in the same hand-writing, madam, if you please."
She gave it; and then, unable to support herself longer, sunk upon a sofa: but she neither fainted nor screamed--she was aware of the consequences. Lord Oldborough opened the window to give her air. She was relieved by a burst of tears, and was silent--and nothing was heard but her sobs, which she endeavoured to suppress in vain. She was more relieved on looking up by one glance at Lord Oldborough's countenance, where she saw compa.s.sion working strongly.
But before she could take any advantage of it, the expression was changed, the feeling was controlled: he was conscious of its weakness--he recollected what public justice, and justice to his own character, required--he recollected all the treachery, the criminality, of which she had been guilty.
"Madam, you are not now in a condition, I see, to explain yourself farther--I will relieve you from my presence: my reproaches you will never hear; but I shall expect from you, before one hour, such an avowal in writing of this whole transaction, as may, with the written confession of Lady Trant, afford the proofs which are due to my sovereign, and to the public, of my integrity."
Mrs. Falconer bowed her head, covered her face, clasped her hands in agony: as Lord Oldborough retired, she sprang up, followed to throw herself at his feet, yet without knowing what she could say.
"The commissioner is innocent!--If you forsake him, he is undone--all, all of us, utterly ruined! Oh! Georgiana! Georgiana! where are you?
speak for me!"
Georgiana was in an inner apartment, trying on a new robe _a la Georgienne_.
"Whatever you may wish farther to say to me, madam," said Lord Oldborough, disengaging himself from her, and pa.s.sing decidedly on, before Georgiana appeared, "you will put in writing, and let me have within this hour--or never."
Within that hour, Commissioner Falconer brought, for Lord Oldborough, the paper his wife had drawn up, but which he was obliged to deliver to Mr. Temple; for Lord Oldborough had so ordered, and his lords.h.i.+p persevered in refusing to see him more. Mrs. Falconer's paper was worded with all the art and address of which she was mistress, and all the pathos she could command--Lord Oldborough looked only for facts--these he marked with his pencil, and observed where they corroborated and where they differed from Lady Trant's confession, which Mr. Temple had been charged to obtain during his lords.h.i.+p's visit to Mrs. Falconer.
The greater part of the night Lord Oldborough and Mr. Alfred Percy were employed arranging these doc.u.ments, so as to put the proofs in the clearest and shortest form, to be laid before his majesty the succeeding day.
It appeared that Mrs. Falconer had been first tempted to these practices by the distress for money into which extravagant entertainments, or, as she stated, the expenses incident to her situation--expenses which far exceeded her income--had led her. It was supposed, from her having kept open house at times for the minister, that she and the commissioner had great influence; she had been applied to--presents had been offered, and she had long withstood. But at length, Lady Trant acting in concert with her, they had been supplied with information by a clerk in one of the offices, a relation of Lady Trant, who was a vain, incautious youth, and, it seems, did not know the use made of his indiscretion: he told what promotions he heard spoken of--what commissions were making out.
The ladies prophesied, and their prophecies being accomplished, they gained credit. For some time they kept themselves behind the scenes--and many, applying to A.B., and dealing with they did not know whom, paid for promotions which would have come unpaid for; others paid, and were never promoted, and wrote letters of reproach--Captain Nuttall was among these, and he it was, who, finding himself duped, first stirred in the business; and by means of an active member of opposition, to whom he made known his secret grievance, brought the whole to light.
The proofs arranged (and Lord Oldborough never slept till they were perfected), he reposed tranquilly. The next day, asking an audience of his majesty, he simply laid the papers on his majesty's table, observing that he had been so fortunate as to succeed in tracing the forgery, and that he trusted these papers contained all the necessary proofs.
His lords.h.i.+p bowed and retired instantly, leaving his majesty to examine the papers alone.
The resolution to resign his ministerial station had long been forming in Lord Oldborough's mind. It was not a resolution taken suddenly in pride or pique, but after reflection, and upon strong reasons. It was a measure which he had long been revolving in his secret thoughts. During the enthusiasm of political life, the proverbial warnings against the vanity of ambition, and the danger of dependence on the favour of princes, had pa.s.sed on his ear but as a schoolboy's lesson: a phrase "to point a moral, or adorn a tale." He was not a reading man, and the maxims of books he disregarded or disbelieved; but in the observations he made for himself he trusted: the lessons he drew from life were never lost upon him, and he acted in consequence of that which he believed, with a decision, vigour, and invariability, seldom found even among philosophers. Of late years he had, in real life, seen striking instances of the treachery of courtiers, and had felt some symptoms of insecurity in the smile of princes. Fortune had been favourable to him--she was fickle--he determined to quit her before she should change.
Ambition, it is true, had tempted him--he had risen to her highest pinnacle: he would not be hurled from high--he would descend voluntarily, and with dignity. Lord Oldborough's habits of thought were as different as possible from those of a metaphysician: he had reflected less upon the course of his own mind than upon almost any other subject; but he knew human nature practically; disquisitions on habit, pa.s.sion, or the sovereign good, were unread by him, nor, in the course of his life, had he ever formed a system, moral or prudential; but the same penetration, the same _longanimity_, which enabled him to govern the affairs of a great nation, gave him, when his attention turned towards himself, a foresight for his own happiness. In the meridian of life, he had cherished ambition, as the only pa.s.sion that could supply him with motive strong enough to call great powers into great action. But of late years he had felt something, not only of the waywardness of fortune, but of the approaches of age--not in his mind, but in his health, which had suffered by his exertions. The attacks of hereditary gout had become more violent and more frequent. If he lived, these would, probably, at seasons, often incapacitate him from his arduous ministerial duties: much, that he did well, must be ill done by deputy. He had ever reprobated the practice of leaving the business of the nation to be done by clerks and underlings in office. Yet to this the minister, however able, however honest, must come at last, if he persist in engrossing business and power beyond what an individual can wield. Love for his country, a sense of his own honour, integrity, and consistency, here combined to determine this great minister to retire while it was yet time--to secure, at once, the dignity and happiness of the evening of life. The day had been devoted to good and high purposes--that was enough--he could now, self-satisfied and full of honour, bid adieu to ambition. This resolution, once formed, was fixed. In vain even his sovereign endeavoured to dissuade him from carrying it into execution.
When the king had examined the papers which Lord Oldborough had laid before him, his majesty sent for his lords.h.i.+p again, and the moment the minister entered the cabinet, his majesty expressed his perfect satisfaction in seeing that his lords.h.i.+p had, with so little trouble, and with his usual ability, got to the bottom of this affair.
What was to be done next? The Duke of Greenwich was to be summoned. His grace was in astonishment when he saw the papers which contained Lord Oldborough's complete vindication, and the crimination of Mrs. Falconer.
Through the whole, as he read on, his grace had but one idea, viz.
"Commissioner Falconer has deceived me with false intelligence of the intended resignation." Not one word was said by Lord Oldborough to give his grace hope of that event--till the member of opposition by whom the forged letters had been produced--till all those who knew or had heard any thing of the transaction were clearly and fully apprised of the truth. After this was established, and that all saw Lord Oldborough clear and bright in honour, and, at least apparently, as firm in power as he had ever been, to the astonishment of his sovereign his lords.h.i.+p begged permission to resign.
Whatever might have been the effect of misrepresentation, to lower Lord Oldborough's favour, at the moment when he spoke of retiring, his king recollected all his past services--all that must, in future, be hazarded and lost in parting with such a minister--so eminent in abilities, of such tried integrity, of such fidelity, such attachment to his person, such a zealous supporter of royalty, such a favourite with his people, so successful as well as so able a minister! Never was he so much valued as at this moment. All his sovereign's early attachment returned in full strength and warmth.
"No, my lord, you must not--you will not leave me."
These simple words, spoken with the warmth of the heart, touched Lord Oldborough more than can be told. It was difficult to resist them, especially when he saw tears in the eyes of the monarch whom he loved.
But his resolution was taken. He thanked his majesty, not with the common-place thanks of courtiers, but with his whole heart and soul he thanked his majesty for this gracious condescension--this testimony of approbation--these proofs of sensibility to his attachment, which paid--overpaid him, in a moment, for the labours of a life. The recollection of them would be the glory, the solace of his age--could never leave his memory while life lasted--would, he thought, be present to him, if he should retain his senses, in his dying moment. But he was, in the midst of this strong feeling, firm to the resolution his reason had taken. He humbly represented, that he had waited for a favourable time when the affairs of the country were in a prosperous train, when there were few difficulties to embarra.s.s those whom his majesty might name to succeed to his place at the head of administration: there were many who were ambitious of that station--zeal, talents, and the activity of youth were at his majesty's command. For himself, he found it necessary for his health and happiness to retire from public business; and to resign the arduous trust with which he had been honoured.
"My lord, if I must accept of your resignation, I must--but I do it with regret. Is there any thing your lords.h.i.+p wishes--any thing you will name for yourself or your friends, that I can do, to show my sense of your services and merit?"
"For myself, your majesty's bounty has left me nothing to wish."
"For your friends, then, my lord?--Let me have the satisfaction of obliging you through them."
Nothing could be more gracious or more gratifying than the whole of this parting audience. It was Lord Oldborough's last audience.
The news of his resignation, quickly whispered at court, was not that day publicly known or announced. The next morning his lords.h.i.+p's door was crowded beyond example in the memory of ministers. Mr. Temple, by his lords.h.i.+p's order, announced as soon as possible the minister's having resigned. All were in astonishment--many in sorrow: some few--a very few of the most insignificant of the crowd, persons incapable of generous sympathy, who thought they could follow their own paltry interests unnoticed--left the room, without paying their farewell respects to this great minister--minister now no more.
The moment he appeared, there was sudden silence. All eyes were fixed upon him, every one pressing to get into the circle.
"Gentlemen, thank you for these marks of attention--of regard. Mr.
Temple has told you--you know, my friends, that I am a man without power."
"We know," answered a distinguished gentleman, "that you are Lord Oldborough. With or without power, the same in the eyes of your friends, and of the British nation."
Lord Oldborough bowed low, and looked gratified. His lords.h.i.+p then went round the circle with an air more cheerful, more free from reserve, than usual; with something in his manner more of sensibility, but nothing less of dignity. All who merited distinction he distinguished by some few appropriate words, which each remembered afterwards, and repeated to their families and friends. He spoke or listened to each individual with the attention of one who is courting, not quitting, popularity. Free from that restraint and responsibility which his public and ministerial duties had imposed upon him, he now entered into the private concerns of all, and gave his parting a.s.sistance or counsel. He noted all grievances--registered all promises that ought to be recommended to the care of his successor in office. The wishes of many, to whom he had forborne to give any encouragement, he now unexpectedly fulfilled and surpa.s.sed. When all were satisfied, and had nothing more to ask or to hope from him, they yet delayed, and parted from Lord Oldborough with difficulty and regret.
A proof that justice commands more than any other quality the respect and grat.i.tude of mankind. Take time and numbers into the calculation, and all discover, in their turn, the advantage of this virtue. This minister, a few regretted instances excepted, had shown no favour, but strict justice, in his patronage.
All Lord Oldborough's requests for his friends were granted--all his recommendations attended to: it was grateful to him to feel that his influence lasted after his power had ceased. Though the sun had apparently set, its parting rays continued to brighten and cheer the prospect.
Under a new minister, Mr. Temple declined accepting of the emba.s.sy which had been offered to him. Remuneration suitable to his services, and to the high terms in which Lord Oldborough had spoken of his merit, was promised; and without waiting to see in what form, or manner, this promise would be accomplished, the secretary asked and obtained permission to accompany his revered master to his retirement. Alfred Percy, zealous and ardent in Lord Oldborough's service, the more this great man's character had risen upon his admiration, had already hastened to the country to prepare every thing at Clermont-park for his reception. By his orders, that establishment had been retrenched; by Alfred Percy's activity it was restored. Services, which the richest n.o.bleman in the land could not have purchased, or the highest have commanded, Alfred was proud to pay as a voluntary tribute to a n.o.ble character.
Tales and Novels Volume VIII Part 7
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Tales and Novels Volume VIII Part 7 summary
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