CHAP, viii.] THE CJLUB AND ITS FIRST MEMBEBS. enough to the situation in life of an Irish adventurer; and 1768. the incident may illustrate his vulgar and insolent phrase. JEt.35. Let it always he remembered, when Burke's vehemence of will and sharp impetuosity of temper are remembered. These were less his natural defects, than his painful sense of what he wanted in the eyes of others. When, in later years, he proudly reviewed those exertions which had been the soul of the revived whig party, which had re-established their strength, consolidated their power and influence, and been rewarded with insignificant office and uniform exclusion from the cabinet, he had to reflect that at every step in the progress of his life he had been traversed and opposed, and forced to make every inch of his way in the teeth of prejudice and dislike. " The narrowness of his fortune," says Walpole, " kept him down." * At every turnpike he met, he had been? called to show his passport; otherwise no admission, no toleration for him. Improved by this, his manners could hardly be;—the more other spheres of consideration were closed to him, the more would he be driven to dominate in his own;—and I have little doubt that he somewhat painfully at times, in the first few years of the club, impressed others as well as Hawkins with a sense of his predominance. He had to " talk his way in the world that was to furnish his " means of living," and this was the only theatre open to him yet. Here only could he as yet pour forth, to an audience worth exciting, the stores of argument and eloquence he was thirsting to employ upon a wider stage; the variety of knowledge and its practical application, the fund of astonish- ing imagery, the ease of philosophic illustration, the over- powering copiousness of words, in which he has never had a rival. A civil guest, says Herbert, will no more talk all, than eat all, the feast; and perhaps this might be forgotten now * Memoirs of George III. ii. 273-4. hought a