Sybil, Or, The Two Nations by Earl of Beaconsfield Benjamin Disraeli (10 best novels of all time txt) ๐
Read free book ยซSybil, Or, The Two Nations by Earl of Beaconsfield Benjamin Disraeli (10 best novels of all time txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
Read book online ยซSybil, Or, The Two Nations by Earl of Beaconsfield Benjamin Disraeli (10 best novels of all time txt) ๐ยป. Author - Earl of Beaconsfield Benjamin Disraeli
Sir Vavasour had evidently been delivering himself of a long narrative, to which Mr Hatton had listened with that imperturbable patience which characterised him, and which was unquestionably one of the elements of his success. He never gave up anything, and he never interrupted anybody. And now in a silvery voice he replied to his visitor:
โWhat you tell me, Sir Vavasour, is what I foresaw, but which, as my influence could not affect it, I dismissed from my thoughts. You came to me for a specific object. I accomplished it. I undertook to ascertain the rights and revive the claims of the baronets of England. That was what you required me: I fulfilled your wish. Those rights are ascertained; those claims are revived. A great majority of the Order have given in their adhesion to the organized movement. The nation is acquainted with your demands, accustomed to them, and the monarch once favourably received them. I can do no more; I do not pretend to make baronets, still less can I confer on those already made the right to wear stars and coronets, the dark green dress of Equites aurati, or white hats with white plumes of feathers. These distinctions, even if their previous usage were established, must flow from the gracious permission of the Crown, and no one could expect in an age hostile to personal distinctions, that any ministry would recommend the sovereign to a step which with vulgar minds would be odious, and by malignant ones might be rendered ridiculous.โ
โRidiculous!โ said Sir Vavasour.
โAll the world,โ said Mr Hatton, โdo not take upon these questions the same enlightened view as ourselves, Sir Vavasour. I never could for a moment believe that the Sovereign would consent to invest such a numerous body of men with such privileges.โ
โBut you never expressed this opinion,โ said Sir Vavasour.
โYou never asked for my opinion,โ said Mr Hatton; โand if I had given it, you and your friends would not have been influenced by it. The point was one on which you might with reason hold yourselves as competent judges as I am. All you asked of me was to make out your case, and I made it out. I will venture to say a better case never left these chambers; I do not believe there is a person in the kingdom who could answer it except myself. They have refused the Order their honours, Sir Vavasour, but it is some consolation that they have never answered their case.โ
โI think it only aggravates the oppression,โ said Sir Vavasour, shaking his head; โbut cannot you advise any new step, Mr Hatton? After so many years of suspense, after so much anxiety and such a vast expenditure, it really is too bad that I and Lady Firebrace should be announced at court in the same style as our fishmonger, if he happens to be a sheriff.โ
โI can make a Peer,โ said Mr Hatton, leaning back in his chair and playing with his seals, โbut I do not pretend to make Baronets. I can place a coronet with four balls on a manโs brow; but a coronet with two balls is an exercise of the prerogative with which I do not presume to interfere.โ
โI mention it in the utmost confidence,โ said Sir Vavasour in a whisper; โbut Lady Firebrace has a sort of promise that in the event of a change of government, we shall be in the first batch of peers.โ
Mr Hatton shook his head with a slight smile of contemptuous incredulity.
โSir Robert,โ he said, โwill make no peers; take my word for that. The whigs and I have so deluged the House of Lords, that you may rely upon it as a secret of state, that if the tories come in, there will be no peers made. I know the Queen is sensitively alive to the cheapening of all honours of late years. If the whigs go out to-morrow, mark me, they will disappoint all their friends. Their underlings have promised so many, that treachery is inevitable, and if they deceive some they may as well deceive all. Perhaps they may distribute a coronet or two among themselves: and I shall this year make three: and those are the only additions to the peerage which will occur for many years. You may rely on that. For the tories will make none, and I have some thoughts of retiring from business.โ
It is difficult to express the astonishment, the perplexity, the agitation, that pervaded the countenance of Sir Vavasour while his companion thus coolly delivered himself. High hopes extinguished and excited at the same moment; cherished promises vanishing, mysterious expectations rising up; revelations of astounding state secrets; chief ministers voluntarily renouncing their highest means of influence, and an obscure private individual distributing those distinctions which sovereigns were obliged to hoard, and to obtain which the first men in the country were ready to injure their estates and to sacrifice their honour! At length Sir Vavasour said, โYou amaze me Mr Hatton. I could mention to you twenty members of Boodleโs, at least, who believe they will be made peers the moment the tories come in.โ
โNot a man of them,โ said Hatton peremptorily. โTell me one of their names, and I will tell you whether they will be made peers.โ
โWell then there is Mr Tubbe Sweete, a county member, and his son in parliament tooโI know he has a promise.โ
โI repeat to you, Sir Vavasour, the tories will not make a single peer; the candidates must come to me; and I ask you what can I do for a Tubbe Sweete, the son of a Jamaica cooper? Are there any old families among your twenty members of Brookesโ?โ
โWhy I can hardly say,โ said Sir Vavasour; โthere is Sir Charles Featherly, an old baronet.โ
โThe founder a lord mayor in James the Firstโs reign. That is not the sort of old family that I mean,โ said Mr Hatton.
โWell there is Colonel Cockawhoop,โ said Sir Vavasour. โThe Cockawhoops are a very good family I have always heard.โ
โContractors of Queen Anne: partners with Marlborough and Solomon Medina; a very good family indeed: but I do not make peers out of good families, Sir Vavasour; old families are the blocks out of which I cut my Mercurys.โ
โBut what do you call an old family?โ said Sir Vavasour.
โYours,โ said Mr Hatton, and he threw a full glance on the countenance on which the light rested.
โWe were in the first batch of baronets,โ said Sir Vavasour.
โForget the baronets for a while,โ said Hatton. โTell me, what was your family before James the First?โ
โThey always lived on their lands,โ said Sir Vavasour. โI have a room full of papers that would perhaps tell us something about them. Would you like to see them?โ
โBy all means: bring them all here. Not that I want them to inform me of your rights: I am fully acquainted with them. You would like to be a peer, sir. Well, you are really Lord Vavasour, but there is a difficulty in
Comments (0)