[Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookDoctor Thorne CHAPTER VI 8/19
This latter sum the poor squire had undertaken to pay him. Mr Moffat had been for a year or two M.P.for Barchester; having been assisted in his views on that ancient city by all the de Courcy interest.
He was a Whig, of course.
Not only had Barchester, departing from the light of other days, returned a Whig member of Parliament, but it was declared, that at the next election, now near at hand, a Radical would be sent up, a man pledged to the ballot, to economies of all sorts, one who would carry out Barchester politics in all their abrupt, obnoxious, pestilent virulence.
This was one Scatcherd, a great railway contractor, a man who was a native of Barchester, who had bought property in the neighbourhood, and who had achieved a sort of popularity there and elsewhere by the violence of his democratic opposition to the aristocracy.
According to this man's political tenets, the Conservatives should be laughed at as fools, but the Whigs should be hated as knaves. Mr Moffat was now coming down to Courcy Castle to look after his electioneering interests, and Miss Gresham was to return with her aunt to meet him.
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