fact that I had seen Salemina's ivory-backed hairbrush put to
excellent if somewhat
unusual and unaccustomed service.
Each party in the house eats in
solitary splendour, like the
MacDermott, Prince of Coolavin. That royal
personage of County
Sligo did not, I believe, allow his wife or his children (who must
have had the MacDermott blood in their veins, even if somewhat
diluted) to sit at table with him. This method introduces the last
element of
confusion into the household arrangements, and on two
occasions we have had our
custardpudding or stewed fruit served in
our bedrooms a full hour after we had finished dinner. We have
reasons for wishing to be first to enter the dining-room, and we
walk in with eyes fixed on the ceiling, by far the cleanest part of
the place. Having wended our way through an
underbrush of corks
with an empty bottle here and there, and stumbled over the holes in
the
carpet, we arrive at our table in the window. It is as
beautiful as heaven outside, and the table-cloth is at least cleaner
than it will be later, for Mrs. Waterford of Mullinavat has an
unsteady hand.
When Oonah brings in the toast rack now she balances it carefully,
remembering the morning when she dropped it on the floor, but picked
up the slices and offered them to Salemina. Never shall I forget
that dear martyr's expression, which was as if she had made up her
mind to
renounce Ireland and leave her to her fate. I know she
often must wonder if Dr. La Touche's servants, like Mrs.
Mullarkey's, feel of the potatoes to see whether they are warm or
cold!
At ten thirty there is great
confusion and
laughter and excitement,
for the sportsmen are
setting out for the day and the car has been
waiting at the door for an hour. Oonah is carolling up and down the
long passage, laden with dishes, her
cheerfulness not in the least
impaired by having served seven or eight separate breakfasts. Molly
has spilled a jug of milk, and is wiping it up with a child's
undershirt. The Glasgy man is telling them that
yesterday they
forgot the corkscrew, the salt, the cup, and the jam from the
luncheon basket,--facts so mirth-provoking that Molly wipes tears of
pleasure from her eyes with the milky undershirt, and Oonah sets the
hot-water jug and the coffee-pot on the stairs to have her laugh out
comfortably. When once the car departs,
comparative quiet reigns in
and about the house until the passing bicyclers appear for luncheon
or tea, when Oonah picks up the napkins that we have rolled into
wads and flung under the dining-table, and spreads them on tea-
trays, as appetising details for the weary traveller. There would
naturally be more time for
housework if so large a
portion of the
day were not spent in pleasant
interchange of thought and speech. I
can well understand Mrs. Colquhoun's objections to the housing of
the Dublin poor in tenements,--even in those of a better kind than
the present
horrible examples; for
wherever they are huddled
together in any numbers they will devote most of their time to
conversation. To them talking is more
attractive than eating; it
even adds a new joy to drinking; and if I may judge from the groups
I have seen gossiping over a turf fire till
midnight, it is
preferable to
sleeping. But do not suppose they will
bubble over
with joke and repartee, with racy
anecdote, to every casual
newcomer. The
tourist who looks upon the Irishman as the merry-
andrew of the English-speaking world, and who expects every jarvey
he meets to be as whimsical as Mickey Free, will be disappointed. I
have strong suspicions that
ragged, jovial Mickey Free himself,
delicious as he is, was created by Lever to satisfy the Anglo-Saxon
idea of the low-comedy Irishman. You will live in the Emerald Isle
for many a month, and not meet the clown or the
villain so familiar
to you in modern Irish plays. Dramatists have made a stage Irishman
to suit themselves, and the public and the
gallery are disappointed
if anything more
reasonable is substituted for him. You will find,
too, that you do not easily gain Paddy's confidence. Misled by his
careless,
reckless impetuosity of
demeanour, you might expect to be
the confidant of his joys and sorrows, his hopes and expectations,
his faiths and
beliefs, his aspirations, fears, longings, at the
first
interview. Not at all; you will sooner be admitted to a
glimpse of the travelling Scotsman's or the Englishman's inner life,
family history, personal
ambition. Glacial enough at first and far
less voluble, he melts soon enough, if he likes you. Meantime, your
impulsive Irish friend gives himself as
freely at the first
interview as at the twentieth; and you know him as well at the end
of a week as you are likely to at the end of a year. He is a
product of the past, be he gentleman or
peasant. A few hundred
years of necessary reserve
concerning articles of political and
religious
belief have bred
caution and
prudence in stronger natures,
cunning and
hypocrisy in weaker ones.
Our days are very
varied. We have been several times into the town
and spent an hour in the Petty Sessions Court with Mr. Colquhoun,
who sits on the bench. Each time we have come home laden with
stories 'as good as any in the books,' so says Francesca. Have we
not with our own eyes seen the settlement of an
assault and battery
case between two of the most
notorious brawlers in that alley of the
town which we have dubbed 'The Pass of the Plumes.'* Each barrister
in the case had a
handful of hair which he introduced on
behalf of
his
client, both ladies
apparently having pulled with equal energy.
These most un
attractive exhibits were shown to the women themselves,
each recognising her own hair, but denying the validity of the other
exhibit
firmly and vehemently. Prisoner number one kneeled at the
rail and insisted on exposing the place in her head from which the
hair had been plucked; upon which prisoner number two
promptly tore
off her hat, scattered hairpins to the four winds, and exposed her
own wounds to the
judicial eye. Both prisoners 'had a dhrop taken'
just before the affair; that soft impeachment they could not deny.
One of them explained, however, that she had taken it to help her
over a hard job of work, and through a little miscalculation of
quantity it had 'overaided her.' The other termagant was asked
flatly by the magistrate if she had ever seen the inside of a jail
before, but evaded the point with much grace and
ingenuity by
telling his Honour that he couldn't expect to meet a woman anywhere
who had not suffered a misforchin somewhere betwixt the
cradle and
the grave.
*The original Pass of the Plumes is near Maryborough, and was
so called from the number of English
helmet plumes that were strewn
about after O'Moore's fight with five hundred of the Earl of Essex's
men.
Even the all too common drunk-and-disorderly cases had a flavour of
their own, for one man, being dismissed with a small fine under
condition that he would sign the
pledge, assented
willingly; but on
being asked for how long he would take it, replied, 'I
mostly take
it for life, your
worship.'
We also heard the
testimony of a girl who had run away from her
employer before the
completion of her six months' contract, her plea
being that the fairies pulled her great toe at night so that she
could not sleep,
whereupon she finally became so lame that she was
unable to work. She left her employer's house one evening,
therefore, and went home, and
curiously enough the fairies 'shtopped
pulling the toe on her as soon as iver she got there!'
Not the least enlivening of the prisoners was a decently educated
person who had been arrested for
disturbing the peace. The
constable asserted that he was intoxicated, but the gentleman
himself insisted that he was merely a poet in a more than usually
inspired state.
"I am in the
poeticaladvertising line, your
worship. It is true I
was surrounded by a crowd, but I was merely practising my trade. I
don't mind telling your
worship that this holiday-time makes things
a little
lively, and the tradesmen drink my health a
trifle oftener
than usual;
poetry is dry work, your
worship, and a poet needs a
good deal of
liquidrefreshment. I do not
disturb the peace, your
worship, at least not more than any other poet. I go to a grocer's,
and,
standing outside, I make up some rhymes about his nice sweet
sugar or his ale. If I want to please a
butcher--well, I'll give
you a specimen:-