Phineas Finn - The Irish Member by Anthony Trollope
page 18 of 955 (01%)
page 18 of 955 (01%)
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CHAPTER II Phineas Finn Is Elected for Loughshane One great difficulty about the borough vanished in a very wonderful way at the first touch. Dr. Finn, who was a man stout at heart, and by no means afraid of his great friends, drove himself over to Castlemorris to tell his news to the Earl, as soon as he got a second letter from his son declaring his intention of proceeding with the business, let the results be what they might. Lord Tulla was a passionate old man, and the doctor expected that there would be a quarrel;--but he was prepared to face that. He was under no special debt of gratitude to the lord, having given as much as he had taken in the long intercourse which had existed between them;--and he agreed with his son in thinking that if there was to be a Liberal candidate at Loughshane, no consideration of old pill-boxes and gallipots should deter his son Phineas from standing. Other considerations might very probably deter him, but not that. The Earl probably would be of a different opinion, and the doctor felt it to be incumbent on him to break the news to Lord Tulla. "The devil he is!" said the Earl, when the doctor had told his story. "Then I'll tell you what, Finn, I'll support him." "You support him, Lord Tulla!" |
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