I. [SIR THOMAS.]
II. [POPHAM VILLA.]
III. [WHAT HAPPENED ON THE LAWN AT POPHAM VILLA.]
IV. [MARY BONNER.]
V. [MR. NEEFIT AND HIS FAMILY.]
VI. [MRS. NEEFIT'S LITTLE DINNER.]
VII. [YOU ARE ONE OF US NOW.]
VIII. [RALPH NEWTON'S TROUBLES.]
IX. [ONTARIO MOGGS.]
X. [SIR THOMAS IN HIS CHAMBERS.]
XI. [NEWTON PRIORY.]
XII. [MRS. BROWNLOW.]
XIII. [MR. NEEFIT IS DISTURBED.]
XIV. [THE REV. GREGORY NEWTON.]
XV. [CLARISSA WAITS.]
XVI. [THE CHESHIRE CHEESE.]
XVII. [RALPH NEWTON'S DOUBTS.]
XVIII. [WE WON'T SELL BROWNRIGGS.]
XIX. [POLLY'S ANSWER.]
XX. [THE CONSERVATIVES OF PERCYCROSS.]
XXI. [THE LIBERALS OF PERCYCROSS.]
XXII. [RALPH NEWTON'S DECISION.]
XXIII. ["I'LL BE A HYPOCRITE IF YOU CHOOSE."]
XXIV. ["I FIND I MUST."]
XXV. ["MR. GRIFFENBOTTOM."]
XXVI. [MOGGS, PURITY, AND THE RIGHTS OF LABOUR.]
XXVII. [THE MOONBEAM.]
XXVIII. [THE NEW HEIR COUNTS HIS CHICKENS.]
XXIX. [THE ELECTION.]
XXX. ["MISS MARY IS IN LUCK."]
XXXI. [IT IS ALL SETTLED.]
XXXII. [SIR THOMAS AT HOME.]
XXXIII. ["TELL ME AND I'LL TELL YOU."]
XXXIV. [ALONE IN THE HOUSE.]
XXXV. ["SHE'LL ACCEPT YOU, OF COURSE."]
XXXVI. [NEEFIT MEANS TO STICK TO IT.]
XXXVII. ["HE MUST MARRY HER."]
XXXVIII. [FOR TWO REASONS.]
XXXIX. [HORSELEECHES.]
XL. [WHAT SIR THOMAS THOUGHT ABOUT IT.]
XLI. [A BROKEN HEART.]
XLII. [NOT BROKEN-HEARTED.]
XLIII. [ONCE MORE.]
XLIV. [THE PETITION.]
XLV. ["NEVER GIVE A THING UP."]
XLVI. [MR. NEEFIT AGAIN.]
XLVII. [THE WAY WHICH SHOWS THAT THEY MEAN IT.]
XLVIII. [MR. MOGGS WALKS TOWARDS EDGEWARE.]
XLIX. [AMONG THE PICTURES.]
L. [ANOTHER FAILURE.]
LI. [MUSIC HAS CHARMS.]
LII. [GUS EARDHAM.]
LIII. [THE END OF POLLY NEEFIT.]
LIV. [MY MARY.]
LV. [COOKHAM.]
LVI. [RALPH NEWTON IS BOWLED AWAY.]
LVII. [CLARISSA'S FATE.]
LVIII. [CONCLUSION.]

CHAPTER I.

SIR THOMAS.

There are men who cannot communicate themselves to others, as there are also men who not only can do so, but cannot do otherwise. And it is hard to say which is the better man of the two. We do not specially respect him who wears his heart upon his sleeve for daws to peck at, who carries a crystal window to his bosom so that all can see the work that is going on within it, who cannot keep any affair of his own private, who gushes out in love and friendship to every chance acquaintance; but then, again, there is but little love given to him who is always wary, always silent as to his own belongings, who buttons himself in a suit of close reserve which he never loosens. Respect such a one may gain, but hardly love. It is natural to us to like to know the affairs of our friends; and natural also, I think, to like to talk of our own to those whom we trust. Perhaps, after all that may be said of the weakness of the gushing and indiscreet babbler, it is pleasanter to live with such a one than with the self-constrained reticent man of iron, whose conversation among his most intimate friends is solely of politics, of science, of literature, or of some other subject equally outside the privacies of our inner life.

Sir Thomas Underwood, whom I, and I hope my readers also, will have to know very intimately, was one of those who are not able to make themselves known intimately to any. I am speaking now of a man of sixty, and I am speaking also of one who had never yet made a close friend,—who had never by unconscious and slow degrees of affection fallen into that kind of intimacy with another man which justifies and renders necessary mutual freedom of intercourse in all the affairs of life. And yet he was possessed of warm affections, was by no means misanthropic in his nature, and would, in truth, have given much to be able to be free and jocund as are other men. He lacked the power that way, rather than the will. To himself it seemed to be a weakness in him rather than a strength that he should always be silent, always guarded, always secret and dark. He had lamented it as an acknowledged infirmity;—as a man grieves that he should be short-sighted, or dull of hearing; but at the age of sixty he had taken no efficient steps towards curing himself of the evil, and had now abandoned all idea of any such cure.

Whether he had been, upon the whole, fortunate or unfortunate in life shall be left to the reader's judgment. But he certainly had not been happy. He had suffered cruel disappointments; and a disappointment will crush the spirit worse than a realised calamity. There is no actual misfortune in not being Lord Mayor of London;—but when a man has set his heart upon the place, has worked himself into a position within a few feet of the Mansion House, has become alderman with the mayoralty before him in immediate rotation, he will suffer more at being passed over by the liverymen than if he had lost half his fortune. Now Sir Thomas Underwood had become Solicitor-General in his profession, but had never risen to the higher rank or more assured emoluments of other legal offices.

We will not quite trace our Meleager back to his egg, but we will explain that he was the only son of a barrister of moderate means, who put him to the Bar, and who died leaving little or nothing behind him. The young barrister had an only sister, who married an officer in the army, and who had passed all her latter life in distant countries to which her husband had been called by the necessity of living on the income which his profession gave him. As a Chancery barrister, Mr. Underwood,—our Sir Thomas,—had done well, living on the income he made, marrying at thirty-five, going into Parliament at forty-five, becoming Solicitor-General at fifty,—and ceasing to hold that much-desired office four months after his appointment. Such cessation, however, arising from political causes, is no disappointment to a man. It will doubtless be the case that a man so placed will regret the weakness of his party, which has been unable to keep the good things of Government in its hands; but he will recognise without remorse or sorrow the fact that the Ministry to which he has attached himself must cease to be a Ministry;—and there will be nothing in his displacement to gall his pride, or to create that inner feeling of almost insupportable mortification which comes from the conviction of personal failure. Sir Thomas Underwood had been Solicitor-General for a few months under a Conservative Prime Minister; and when the Conservative Minister went out of office, Sir Thomas Underwood followed him with no feeling of regret that caused him unhappiness. But when afterwards the same party came back to power, and he, having lost his election at the borough which he had represented, was passed over without a word of sympathy or even of assumed regret from the Minister, then he was wounded. It was true, he knew, that a man, to be Solicitor-General, should have a seat in Parliament. The highest legal offices in the country are not to be attained by any amount of professional excellence, unless the candidate shall have added to such excellence the power of supporting a Ministry and a party in the House of Commons. Sir Thomas Underwood thoroughly understood this;—but he knew also that there are various ways in which a lame dog may be helped over a stile,—if only the lame dog be popular among dogs. For another ex-Solicitor-General a seat would have been found,—or some delay would have been granted,—or at least there would have been a consultation, with a suggestion that something should be tried. But in this case a man four years his junior in age, whom he despised, and who, as he was informed, had obtained his place in Parliament by gross bribery, was put into the office without a word of apology to him. Then he was unhappy, and acknowledged to himself that his spirit was crushed.

But he acknowledged to himself at the same time that he was one doomed by his nature to such crushing of the spirit if he came out of the hole of his solitude, and endeavoured to carry on the open fight of life among his fellow-men. He knew that he was one doomed to that disappointment, the bitterest of all, which comes from failure when the prize has been all but reached. It is much to have become Solicitor-General, and that he had achieved;—but it is worse than nothing to have been Solicitor-General for four months, and then to find that all the world around one regards one as having failed, and as being, therefore, fit for the shelf. Such were Sir Thomas Underwood's feelings as he sat alone in his chambers during those days in which the new administration was formed,—in which days he was neither consulted nor visited, nor communicated with either by message or by letter. But all this,—this formation of a Ministry, in which the late Solicitor-General was not invited to take a part,—occurred seven years before the commencement of our story.