[The Mirrors of Downing Street by Harold Begbie]@TWC D-Link bookThe Mirrors of Downing Street CHAPTER VII 2/11
A little later came another political experience which afforded him real insight into this new world of Party faction, one of those experiences not to be lightly dismissed with a jest. He discovered at the War Office that preparations had been made for just such an emergency as had now occurred.
The thoughtfulness and thoroughness of this work struck him with surprise, and he inquired the name of its author.
He was told that Lord Haldane had made these preparations.
"Haldane!" he exclaimed; "but isn't he the man who is being attacked by the newspapers ?" A chivalrous feeling which does not seem to have visited the bosoms of any of Lord Haldane's colleagues visited the bosom of this honest soldier.
Someone about him who had enjoyed personal relations with various editors was dispatched to one of the most offending editors conducting the campaign against Lord Haldane with the object of stopping this infamous vendetta. "I know what you say is true," replied this editor, "and I regret the attack as much as Lord Kitchener does; but I have received my orders and they come from so important a quarter that I dare not disobey them." He gave Lord Kitchener's emissary the name of a much respected leader of the Unionist Party. Thus early in his career at the War Office Lord Kitchener learnt that the spirit of the public school does not operate in Westminster and that politics are a dirty business. At no time in his life was Lord Kitchener "a racehorse amongst cows," as the Greeks put it, being, even in his greatest period, of a slow, heavy, and laborious turn of mind; but when he entered Mr.Asquith's Cabinet he was at least an honest man amongst lawyers.
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