You had better buy up the Birmingham Union and the other bodies, said Lord Monmouth; I believe it might all be done for two or three hundred thousand pounds; and the newspapers too. Pitt would have settled this business long ago.
Well, at any rate, we are in, said Rigby, and we must do something.
I should like to see Greys list of new peers, said Lord Eskdale. They say there are several members of our club in it.
And the claims to the honour are so opposite, said Lucian Gay; one, on account of his large estate; another, because he has none; one, because he has a well-grown family to perpetuate the title; another, because he has no heir, and no power of ever obtaining one.
I wonder how he will form his cabinet, said Lord Monmouth; the old story wont do.
I hear that Baring is to be one of the new cards; they say it will please the city, said Lord Eskdale. I suppose they will pick out of hedge and ditch everything that has ever had the semblance of liberalism.
Affairs in my time were never so complicated, said Mr. Ormsby.
Nay, it appears to me to lie in a nutshell, said Lucian Gay; one party wishes to keep their old boroughs, and the other to get their new peers.
CHAPTER VII
The future historian of the country will be perplexed to ascertain what was the distinct object which the Duke of Wellington proposed to himself in the political manoeuvres of May, 1832. It was known that the passing of the Reform Bill was a condition absolute with the King; it was unquestionable, that the first general election under the new law must ignominiously expel the Anti-Reform Ministry from power; who would then resume their seats on the Opposition benches in both Houses with the loss not only of their boroughs, but of that reputation for political consistency, which might have been some compensation for the parliamentary influence of which they had been deprived. It is difficult to recognise in this premature effort of the Anti-Reform leader to thrust himself again into the conduct of public affairs, any indications of the prescient judgment which might have been expected from such a quarter. It savoured rather of restlessness than of energy; and, while it proved in its progress not only an ignorance on his part of the public mind, but of the feelings of his own party, it terminated under circumstances which were humiliating to the Crown, and painfully significant of the future position of the House of Lords in the new constitutional scheme.
I should like to see Greys list of new peers, said Lord Eskdale. They say there are several members of our club in it.
And the claims to the honour are so opposite, said Lucian Gay; one, on account of his large estate; another, because he has none; one, because he has a well-grown family to perpetuate the title; another, because he has no heir, and no power of ever obtaining one.
I wonder how he will form his cabinet, said Lord Monmouth; the old story wont do.
I hear that Baring is to be one of the new cards; they say it will please the city, said Lord Eskdale. I suppose they will pick out of hedge and ditch everything that has ever had the semblance of liberalism.
Affairs in my time were never so complicated, said Mr. Ormsby.
Nay, it appears to me to lie in a nutshell, said Lucian Gay; one party wishes to keep their old boroughs, and the other to get their new peers.
CHAPTER VII
The future historian of the country will be perplexed to ascertain what was the distinct object which the Duke of Wellington proposed to himself in the political manoeuvres of May, 1832. It was known that the passing of the Reform Bill was a condition absolute with the King; it was unquestionable, that the first general election under the new law must ignominiously expel the Anti-Reform Ministry from power; who would then resume their seats on the Opposition benches in both Houses with the loss not only of their boroughs, but of that reputation for political consistency, which might have been some compensation for the parliamentary influence of which they had been deprived. It is difficult to recognise in this premature effort of the Anti-Reform leader to thrust himself again into the conduct of public affairs, any indications of the prescient judgment which might have been expected from such a quarter. It savoured rather of restlessness than of energy; and, while it proved in its progress not only an ignorance on his part of the public mind, but of the feelings of his own party, it terminated under circumstances which were humiliating to the Crown, and painfully significant of the future position of the House of Lords in the new constitutional scheme.
The Duke of Wellington has ever been the votary of circumstances. He cares little for causes. He watches events rather than seeks to produce them. It is a characteristic of the military mind. Rapid combinations, the result of quick, vigilant, and comprehensive glance, are generally triumphant in the field: but in civil affairs, where results are not immediate; in diplomacy and in the management of deliberative assemblies, where there is much intervening time and many counteracting causes, this velocity of decision, this fitful and precipitate action, are often productive of considerable embarrassment, and sometimes of terrible discomfiture. It is remarkable that men celebrated for military prudence are often found to be headstrong statesmen. In civil life a great general is frequently and strangely the creature of impulse; influenced in his political movements by the last snatch of information; and often the creature of the last aide-de-camp who has his ear.