True, Mama, but he'll find it a difficult job to govern the country with nothing but the High Tories to support him. And whatever you think of their politics, Huskisson and Palmerston are very able men the country can ill afford to lose. William Lamb was doing a good job in Ireland, too.' 'Poor William Lamb,' Lucy said - his name always seemed to couple itself with the epithet quite automatically. 'He needs office to keep his mind from his domestic troubles.' 'Sendin' him to Ireland was goin' rather too far, though,' Theakston commented solemnly. 'No good cuttin' off a man's head to cure him of a headache.' 'Well, he'd have been back soon enough anyway,' said Lucy. 'That drunken ruin of a father of his can't last much longer, and then he'll be taking his seat in the Lords as Lord Melbourn.' 'His sister thinks he'll be Prime Minister one day,' said her husband. 'Said so to Mrs Arbuthnot yesterday.' Lucy was dismissive. 'She would say something like that! I can't bear Emily Cowper at any price,' she said impatiently; and then, 'Where did you see Mrs Arbuthnot?
( Cynthia Harrod-Eagles )
[ The Devil's Horse ]
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