<p><SPAN name="c28" id="c28"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII</h3>
<h3>The First Thunderbolt<br/> </h3>
<p>It was not till after Mr. Slide had left him that Phineas wrote the
following letter to Lady Laura:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright">House of Commons, 1st March, 18––</p>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps">My dear Friend</span>,</p>
<p>I have a long story to tell, which I fear I shall find difficult in
the telling; but it is so necessary that you should know the facts
that I must go through with it as best I may. It will give you very
great pain; but the result as regards your own position will not I
think be injurious to you.</p>
<p>Yesterday, Sunday, a man came to me who edits a newspaper, and whom I
once knew. You will remember when I used to tell you in Portman
Square of the amenities and angers of Mr. Slide,—the man who wanted
to sit for Loughton. He is the editor. He brought me a long letter
from Mr. Kennedy himself, intended for publication, and which was
already printed, giving an elaborate and, I may say, a most cruelly
untrue account of your quarrel. I read the letter, but of course
cannot remember the words. Nor if I could remember them should I
repeat them. They contained all the old charges with which you are
familiar, and which your unfortunate husband now desired to publish
in consummation of his threats. Why Mr. Slide should have brought me
the paper before publishing it I can hardly understand. But he did
so;—and told me that Mr. Kennedy was in town. We have managed among
us to obtain a legal warrant for preventing the publication of the
letter, and I think I may say that it will not see the light.</p>
<p>When Mr. Slide left me I called on Mr. Kennedy, whom I found in a
miserable little hotel, in Judd Street, kept by Scotch people named
Macpherson. They had come from the neighbourhood of Loughlinter, and
knew Mr. Kennedy well. This was yesterday afternoon, Sunday, and I
found some difficulty in making my way into his presence. My object
was to induce him to withdraw the letter;—for at that time I doubted
whether the law could interfere quickly enough to prevent the
publication.</p>
<p>I found your husband in a very sad condition. What he said or what I
said I forget; but he was as usual intensely anxious that you should
return to him. I need not hesitate now to say that he is certainly
mad. After a while, when I expressed my assured opinion that you
would not go back to Loughlinter, he suddenly turned round, grasped a
revolver, and fired at my head. How I got out of the room I don't
quite remember. Had he repeated the shot, which he might have done
over and over again, he must have hit me. As it was I escaped, and
blundered down the stairs to Mrs. Macpherson's room.</p>
<p>They whom I have consulted in the matter, namely, Barrington Erle and
my particular friend, Mr. Low,—to whom I went for legal assistance
in stopping the publication,—seem to think that I should have at
once sent for the police, and given Mr. Kennedy in charge. But I did
not do so, and hitherto the police have, I believe, no knowledge of
what occurred. A paragraph appeared in one of the morning papers
to-day, giving almost an accurate account of the matter, but
mentioning neither the place nor any of the names. No doubt it will
be repeated in all the papers, and the names will soon be known. But
the result will be simply a general conviction as to the insanity of
poor Mr. Kennedy,—as to which they who know him have had for a long
time but little doubt.</p>
<p>The Macphersons seem to have been very anxious to screen their guest.
At any other hotel no doubt the landlord would have sent for the
police;—but in this case the attempt was kept quite secret. They did
send for George Kennedy, a cousin of your husband's, whom I think you
know, and whom I saw this morning. He assures me that Robert Kennedy
is quite aware of the wickedness of the attempt he made, and that he
is plunged in deep remorse. He is to be taken down to Loughlinter
to-morrow, and is,—so says his cousin,—as tractable as a child.
What George Kennedy means to do, I cannot say; but for myself, as I
did not send for the police at the moment, as I am told I ought to
have done, I shall now do nothing. I don't know that a man is subject
to punishment because he does not make complaint. I suppose I have a
right to regard it all as an accident if I please.</p>
<p>But for you this must be very important. That Mr. Kennedy is insane
there cannot now, I think, be a doubt; and therefore the question of
your returning to him,—as far as there has been any question,—is
absolutely settled. None of your friends would be justified in
allowing you to return. He is undoubtedly mad, and has done an act
which is not murderous only on that conclusion. This settles the
question so perfectly that you could, no doubt, reside in England now
without danger. Mr. Kennedy himself would feel that he could take no
steps to enforce your return after what he did yesterday. Indeed, if
you could bring yourself to face the publicity, you could, I imagine,
obtain a legal separation which would give you again the control of
your own fortune. I feel myself bound to mention this; but I give you
no advice. You will no doubt explain all the circumstances to your
father.</p>
<p>I think I have now told you everything that I need tell you. The
thing only happened yesterday, and I have been all the morning busy,
getting the injunction, and seeing Mr. George Kennedy. Just before I
began this letter that horrible editor was with me again, threatening
me with all the penalties which an editor can inflict. To tell the
truth, I do feel confused among them all, and still fancy that I hear
the click of the pistol. That newspaper paragraph says that the ball
went through my whiskers, which was certainly not the case;—but a
foot or two off is quite near enough for a pistol ball.</p>
<p>The Duke of Omnium is dying, and I have heard to-day that Madame
Goesler, our old friend, has been sent for to Matching. She and I
renewed our acquaintance the other day at Harrington.</p>
<p>God bless you.</p>
<p class="ind10">Your most sincere friend,</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Phineas Finn</span>.</p>
<p>Do not let my news oppress you. The firing of the pistol is a thing
done and over without evil results. The state of Mr. Kennedy's mind
is what we have long suspected; and, melancholy though it be, should
contain for you at any rate this consolation,—that the accusations
made against you would not have been made had his mind been
unclouded.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Twice while Finn was writing this letter was he rung into the House
for a division, and once it was suggested to him to say a few words
of angry opposition to the Government on some not important subject
under discussion. Since the beginning of the Session hardly a night
had passed without some verbal sparring, and very frequently the
limits of parliamentary decorum had been almost surpassed. Never
within the memory of living politicians had political rancour been so
sharp, and the feeling of injury so keen, both on the one side and on
the other. The taunts thrown at the Conservatives, in reference to
the Church, had been almost unendurable,—and the more so because the
strong expressions of feeling from their own party throughout the
country were against them. Their own convictions also were against
them. And there had for a while been almost a determination through
the party to deny their leader and disclaim the bill. But a feeling
of duty to the party had prevailed, and this had not been done. It
had not been done; but the not doing of it was a sore burden on the
half-broken shoulders of many a man who sat gloomily on the benches
behind Mr. Daubeny. Men goaded as they were, by their opponents, by
their natural friends, and by their own consciences, could not bear
it in silence, and very bitter things were said in return. Mr.
Gresham was accused of a degrading lust for power. No other feeling
could prompt him to oppose with a factious acrimony never before
exhibited in that House,—so said some wretched Conservative with
broken back and broken heart,—a measure which he himself would only
be too willing to carry were he allowed the privilege of passing over
to the other side of the House for the purpose. In these encounters,
Phineas Finn had already exhibited his prowess, and, in spite of his
declarations at Tankerville, had become prominent as an opponent to
Mr. Daubeny's bill. He had, of course, himself been taunted, and held
up in the House to the execration of his own constituents; but he had
enjoyed his fight, and had remembered how his friend Mr. Monk had
once told him that the pleasure lay all on the side of opposition.
But on this evening he declined to speak. "I suppose you have hardly
recovered from Kennedy's pistol," said Mr. Ratler, who had, of
course, heard the whole story. "That, and the whole affair together
have upset me," said Phineas. "Fitzgibbon will do it for you; he's in
the House." And so it happened that on that occasion the Honourable
Laurence Fitzgibbon made a very effective speech against the
Government.</p>
<p>On the next morning from the columns of the <i>People's Banner</i> was
hurled the first of those thunderbolts with which it was the purpose
of Mr. Slide absolutely to destroy the political and social life of
Phineas Finn. He would not miss his aim as Mr. Kennedy had done. He
would strike such blows that no constituency should ever venture to
return Mr. Finn again to Parliament; and he thought that he could
also so strike his blows that no mighty nobleman, no distinguished
commoner, no lady of rank should again care to entertain the
miscreant and feed him with the dainties of fashion. The first
thunderbolt was as follows:—<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p>We abstained yesterday from alluding to a circumstance which occurred
at a small hotel in Judd Street on Sunday afternoon, and which, as we
observe, was mentioned by one of our contemporaries. The names,
however, were not given, although the persons implicated were
indicated. We can see no reason why the names should be concealed.
Indeed, as both the gentlemen concerned have been guilty of very
great criminality, we think that we are bound to tell the whole
story,—and this the more especially as certain circumstances have in
a very peculiar manner placed us in possession of the facts.</p>
<p>It is no secret that for the last two years Lady Laura Kennedy has
been separated from her husband, the Honourable Robert Kennedy, who,
in the last administration, under Mr. Mildmay, held the office of
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster; and we believe as little a
secret that Mr. Kennedy has been very persistent in endeavouring to
recall his wife to her home. With equal persistence she has refused
to obey, and we have in our hands the clearest possible evidence that
Mr. Kennedy has attributed her obstinate refusal to influence
exercised over her by Mr. Phineas Finn, who three years since was her
father's nominee for the then existing borough of Loughton, and who
lately succeeded in ousting poor Mr. Browborough from his seat for
Tankerville by his impetuous promises to support that very measure of
Church Reform which he is now opposing with that venom which makes
him valuable to his party. Whether Mr. Phineas Finn will ever sit in
another Parliament we cannot, of course, say, but we think we can at
least assure him that he will never again sit for Tankerville.</p>
<p>On last Sunday afternoon Mr. Finn, knowing well the feeling with
which he is regarded by Mr. Kennedy, outraged all decency by calling
upon that gentleman, whose address he obtained from our office. What
took place between them no one knows, and, probably, no one ever will
know. But the interview was ended by Mr. Kennedy firing a pistol at
Mr. Finn's head. That he should have done so without the grossest
provocation no one will believe. That Mr. Finn had gone to the
husband to interfere with him respecting his wife is an undoubted
fact,—a fact which, if necessary, we are in a position to prove.
That such interference must have been most heartrending every one
will admit. This intruder, who had thrust himself upon the
unfortunate husband on the Sabbath afternoon, was the very man whom
the husband accuses of having robbed him of the company and comfort
of his wife. But we cannot, on that account, absolve Mr. Kennedy of
the criminality of his act. It should be for a jury to decide what
view should be taken of that act, and to say how far the outrageous
provocation offered should be allowed to palliate the offence. But
hitherto the matter has not reached the police. Mr. Finn was not
struck, and managed to escape from the room. It was his manifest duty
as one of the community, and more especially so as a member of
Parliament, to have reported all the circumstances at once to the
police. This was not done by him, nor by the persons who keep the
hotel. That Mr. Finn should have reasons of his own for keeping the
whole affair secret, and for screening the attempt at murder, is
clear enough. What inducements have been used with the people of the
house we cannot, of course, say. But we understand that Mr. Kennedy
has been allowed to leave London without molestation.</p>
<p>Such is the true story of what occurred on Sunday afternoon in Judd
Street, and, knowing what we do, we think ourselves justified in
calling upon Major Mackintosh to take the case into his own hands.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Now Major Mackintosh was at this time the head of the London
constabulary.<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p>It is quite out of the question that such a transaction should take
place in the heart of London at three o'clock on a Sunday afternoon,
and be allowed to pass without notice. We intend to keep as little of
what we know from the public as possible, and do not hesitate to
acknowledge that we are debarred by an injunction of the
Vice-Chancellor from publishing a certain document which would throw
the clearest light upon the whole circumstance. As soon as possible
after the shot was fired Mr. Finn went to work, and, as we think, by
misrepresentations, obtained the injunction early on yesterday
morning. We feel sure that it would not have been granted had the
transaction in Judd Street been at the time known to the
Vice-Chancellor in all its enormity. Our hands are, of course, tied.
The document in question is still with us, but it is sacred. When
called upon to show it by any proper authority we shall be ready;
but, knowing what we do know, we should not be justified in allowing
the matter to sleep. In the meantime we call upon those whose duty it
is to preserve the public peace to take the steps necessary for
bringing the delinquents to justice.</p>
<p>The effect upon Mr. Finn, we should say, must be his immediate
withdrawal from public life. For the last year or two he has held
some subordinate but permanent place in Ireland, which he has given
up on the rumour that the party to which he has attached himself is
likely to return to office. That he is a seeker after office is
notorious. That any possible Government should now employ him, even
as a tide-waiter, is quite out of the question; and it is equally out
of the question that he should be again returned to Parliament, were
he to resign his seat on accepting office. As it is, we believe,
notorious that this gentlemen cannot maintain the position which he
holds without being paid for his services, it is reasonable to
suppose that his friends will recommend him to retire, and seek his
living in some obscure, and, let us hope, honest
profession.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Slide, when his thunderbolt was prepared, read it over with
delight, but still with some fear as to probable results. It was
expedient that he should avoid a prosecution for libel, and essential
that he should not offend the majesty of the Vice-Chancellor's
injunction. Was he sure that he was safe in each direction? As to the
libel, he could not tell himself that he was certainly safe. He was
saying very hard things both of Lady Laura and of Phineas Finn, and
sailing very near the wind. But neither of those persons would
probably be willing to prosecute; and, should he be prosecuted, he
would then, at any rate, be able to give in Mr. Kennedy's letter as
evidence in his own defence. He really did believe that what he was
doing was all done in the cause of morality. It was the business of
such a paper as that which he conducted to run some risk in defending
morals, and exposing distinguished culprits on behalf of the public.
And then, without some such risk, how could Phineas Finn be
adequately punished for the atrocious treachery of which he had been
guilty? As to the Chancellor's order, Mr. Slide thought that he had
managed that matter very completely. No doubt he had acted in direct
opposition to the spirit of the injunction, but legal orders are read
by the letter, and not by the spirit. It was open to him to publish
anything he pleased respecting Mr. Kennedy and his wife, subject, of
course, to the general laws of the land in regard to libel. The
Vice-Chancellor's special order to him referred simply to a
particular document, and from that document he had not quoted a word,
though he had contrived to repeat all the bitter things which it
contained, with much added venom of his own. He felt secure of being
safe from any active anger on the part of the Vice-Chancellor.</p>
<p>The article was printed and published. The reader will perceive that
it was full of lies. It began with a lie in that statement that "we
abstained yesterday from alluding to circumstances" which had been
unknown to the writer when his yesterday's paper was published. The
indignant reference to poor Finn's want of delicacy in forcing
himself upon Mr. Kennedy on the Sabbath afternoon, was, of course, a
tissue of lies. The visit had been made almost at the instigation of
the editor himself. The paper from beginning to end was full of
falsehood and malice, and had been written with the express intention
of creating prejudice against the man who had offended the writer.
But Mr. Slide did not know that he was lying, and did not know that
he was malicious. The weapon which he used was one to which his hand
was accustomed, and he had been led by practice to believe that the
use of such weapons by one in his position was not only fair, but
also beneficial to the public. Had anybody suggested to him that he
was stabbing his enemy in the dark, he would have averred that he was
doing nothing of the kind, because the anonymous accusation of
sinners in high rank was, on behalf of the public, the special duty
of writers and editors attached to the public press. Mr. Slide's
blood was running high with virtuous indignation against our hero as
he inserted those last cruel words as to the choice of an obscure but
honest profession.</p>
<p>Phineas Finn read the article before he sat down to breakfast on the
following morning, and the dagger went right into his bosom. Every
word told upon him. With a jaunty laugh within his own sleeve he had
assured himself that he was safe against any wound which could be
inflicted on him from the columns of the <i>People's Banner</i>. He had
been sure that he would be attacked, and thought that he was armed to
bear it. But the thin blade penetrated every joint of his harness,
and every particle of the poison curdled in his blood. He was hurt
about Lady Laura; he was hurt about his borough of Tankerville; he
was hurt by the charges against him of having outraged delicacy; he
was hurt by being handed over to the tender mercies of Major
Mackintosh; he was hurt by the craft with which the Vice-Chancellor's
injunction had been evaded; but he was especially hurt by the
allusions to his own poverty. It was necessary that he should earn
his bread, and no doubt he was a seeker after place. But he did not
wish to obtain wages without working for them; and he did not see why
the work and wages of a public office should be less honourable than
those of any other profession. To him, with his ideas, there was no
profession so honourable, as certainly there were none which demanded
greater sacrifices or were more precarious. And he did believe that
such an article as that would have the effect of shutting against him
the gates of that dangerous Paradise which he desired to enter. He
had no great claim upon his party; and, in giving away the good
things of office, the giver is only too prone to recognise any
objections against an individual which may seem to relieve him from
the necessity of bestowing aught in that direction. Phineas felt that
he would almost be ashamed to show his face at the clubs or in the
House. He must do so as a matter of course, but he knew that he could
not do so without confessing by his visage that he had been deeply
wounded by the attack in the <i>People's Banner</i>.</p>
<p>He went in the first instance to Mr. Low, and was almost surprised
that Mr. Low should not have yet even have heard that such an attack
had been made. He had almost felt, as he walked to Lincoln's Inn,
that everybody had looked at him, and that passers-by in the street
had declared to each other that he was the unfortunate one who had
been doomed by the editor of the <i>People's Banner</i> to seek some
obscure way of earning his bread. Mr. Low took the paper, read, or
probably only half read, the article, and then threw the sheet aside
as worthless. "What ought I to do?"</p>
<p>"Nothing at all."</p>
<p>"One's first desire would be to beat him to a jelly."</p>
<p>"Of all courses that would be the worst, and would most certainly
conduce to his triumph."</p>
<p>"Just so;—I only allude to the pleasure one would have, but which
one has to deny oneself. I don't know whether he has laid himself
open for libel."</p>
<p>"I should think not. I have only just glanced at it, and therefore
can't give an opinion; but I should think you would not dream of such
a thing. Your object is to screen Lady Laura's name."</p>
<p>"I have to think of that first."</p>
<p>"It may be necessary that steps should be taken to defend her
character. If an accusation be made with such publicity as to enforce
belief if not denied, the denial must be made, and may probably be
best made by an action for libel. But that must be done by her or her
friends,—but certainly not by you."</p>
<p>"He has laughed at the Vice-Chancellor's injunction."</p>
<p>"I don't think that you can interfere. If, as you believe, Mr.
Kennedy be insane, that fact will probably soon be proved, and will
have the effect of clearing Lady Laura's character. A wife may be
excused for leaving a mad husband."</p>
<p>"And you think I should do nothing?"</p>
<p>"I don't see what you can do. You have encountered a chimney sweeper,
and of course you get some of the soot. What you do do, and what you
do not do, must depend at any rate on the wishes of Lady Laura
Kennedy and her father. It is a matter in which you must make
yourself subordinate to them."</p>
<p>Fuming and fretting, and yet recognising the truth of Mr. Low's
words, Phineas left the chambers, and went down to his club. It was a
Wednesday, and the House was to sit in the morning; but before he
went to the House he put himself in the way of certain of his
associates in order that he might hear what would be said, and learn
if possible what was thought. Nobody seemed to treat the accusations
in the newspaper as very serious, though all around him congratulated
him on his escape from Mr. Kennedy's pistol. "I suppose the poor man
really is mad," said Lord Cantrip, whom he met on the steps of one of
the clubs.</p>
<p>"No doubt, I should say."</p>
<p>"I can't understand why you didn't go to the police."</p>
<p>"I had hoped the thing would not become public," said Phineas.</p>
<p>"Everything becomes public;—everything of that kind. It is very hard
upon poor Lady Laura."</p>
<p>"That is the worst of it, Lord Cantrip."</p>
<p>"If I were her father I should bring her to England, and demand a
separation in a regular and legal way. That is what he should do now
in her behalf. She would then have an opportunity of clearing her
character from imputations which, to a certain extent, will affect
it, even though they come from a madman, and from the very scum of
the press."</p>
<p>"You have read that article?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—I saw it but a minute ago."</p>
<p>"I need not tell you that there is not the faintest ground in the
world for the imputation made against Lady Laura there."</p>
<p>"I am sure that there is none;—and therefore it is that I tell you
my opinion so plainly. I think that Lord Brentford should be advised
to bring Lady Laura to England, and to put down the charges openly in
Court. It might be done either by an application to the Divorce Court
for a separation, or by an action against the newspaper for libel. I
do not know Lord Brentford quite well enough to intrude upon him with
a letter, but I have no objection whatever to having my name
mentioned to him. He and I and you and poor Mr. Kennedy sat together
in the same Government, and I think that Lord Brentford would trust
my friendship so far." Phineas thanked him, and assured him that what
he had said should be conveyed to Lord Brentford.</p>
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