but the old dame was inclined to think that the angels and saints
had taken her in
charge, and nothing could
exceed her gratitude.
She offered us a potato from the pot, a cup of tea or goat's milk,
and a bunch of wildflowers from a
cracked cup; and this last we
accepted as we
departed in a
shower of
blessings, the most
interesting of them being, "May the Blessed Virgin twine your brow
with roses when ye sit in the sates of glory!" and "The Lord be good
to ye, and sind ye a duke for a husband!" We felt more than repaid
for our
impulsive interest, and as we disappeared from sight a last
'Bannact dea leat!' ('God's
blessing be on your way!') was wafted to
our ears.
I seem to have known all these people before, and indeed I have met
them between the covers of a book; for Connemara has one prophet,
and her name is Jane Barlow. In how many of these wild bog-lands of
Connaught have we seen a
huddle of
desolate cabins on a rocky
hillside, turf stacks looking
darkly at the doors, and empty black
pots sitting on the thresholds, and fancied we have found Lisconnel!
I should recognise Ody Rafferty, the widow M'Gurk, Mad Bell, old
Mrs. Kilfoyle, or Stacey Doyne, if I met them face to face, just as
I should know other real human creatures of a higher type,--Beatrix
Esmond, Becky Sharp, Meg Merrilies, or Di Vernon.
Chapter XXIII. Beams and motes.
'Mud cabins swarm in
This place so charming,
With sailor garments
Hung out to dry;
And each abode is
Snug and commodious,
With pigs melodious
In their straw-built sty.'
Father Prout.
'"Did the Irish elves ever explain themselves to you, Red Rose?"
'"I can't say that they did," said the English Elf. "You can't call
it an
explanation to say that a thing has always been that way,
just: or that a thing would be a heap more
bother any other way."'
The west of Ireland is depressing, but it is very beautiful; at
least if your taste includes an
appreciation of what is wild,
magnificent, and sombre. Oppressed you must be, even if you are an
artist, by its bleakness and its dreariness, its
lonely lakes
reflecting a dull, grey sky, its
desolate boglands, its solitary
chapels, its
wretched cabins perched on
hillsides that are very
wildernesses of rocks. But for cloud effects, for wonderful
shadows, for
fantastic and unbelievable sunsets, when the mountains
are
violet, the lakes silver with red flashes, the islets gold and
crimson and
purple, and the whole cloudy west in a flame, it is
unsurpassed; only your standard of beauty must not be a
velvet lawn
studded with
copper beeches, or a primary-hued
landscape bathed in
American
sunshine. Connemara is
austere and
gloomy under a dull
sky, but it has the
poetic charm that belongs to all
mystery, and
its bare cliffs and ridges are
delicately pencilled on a
violetbackground, in a way
peculiar to itself and enchantingly lovely.
The waste of all God's gifts; the
incrediblepoverty; the miserable
huts, often without window or chimney; the sad-eyed women, sometimes
nothing but 'skins, bones, and grief'; the wild, beautiful children,
springing up like startled deer from behind piles of rocks or
growths of
underbrush; the stony little bits of earth which the
peasants cling to with such
passion, while good grasslands lie
unused, yet seem for ever out of reach,--all this makes one dream,
and wonder, and
speculate, and hope against hope that the worst is
over and a better day dawning. We passed within sight of a hill
village without a single road to connect it with the outer world.
The only supply of turf was on the mountain-top, and from
thence it
had to be brought, basket by basket, even in the snow. The only
manure for such land is
seaweed, and that must be carried from the
shore to the tiny plats of
sterile earth on the
hillside. I
remember it all, for I refused to buy a pair of stockings of a woman
along the road. We had taken so many that my courage failed; but I
saw her climbing the slopes
patiently,
wearily, a shawl over her
white hair,--
knitting,
knitting,
knitting, as she walked in the rain
to her cabin somewhere behind the high hills. We never give to
beggars in any case, but we buy
whatever we can as we are able; and
why did I draw the line at that particular pair of stockings, only
to be
haunted by that
pathetic figure for the rest of my life?
Beggars there are by the score,
chiefly in the
tourist districts;
but it is only fair to add that there are hundreds of huts where it
would be a dire
insult to offer a penny for a glass of water, a sup
of milk, or the shelter of a turf fire.
As we drive along the road, we see, if the
umbrellas can be closed
for a
half-hour, flocks of sheep grazing on the tops of the hills,
where it is sunnier, where food is better and flies less numerous.
Crystal streams and waterfalls are pouring down the
hillsides to
lose themselves in one of Connemara's many bays, and we have a
glimpse of osmunda fern, golden green and beautiful. It was under a
branch of this Osmunda regalis that the Irish
princess lay hidden,
they say, till she had evaded her pursuers. The blue turf smoke
rises here and there,--now from a cabin with house-leek growing on
the crumbling
thatch, now from one whose roof is held on by ropes
and stones,--and there is always a turf bog, stacks and stacks of
the cut blocks, a woman in a gown of dark-red
flannel resting for a
moment, with the empty creel beside her, and a man cutting in the
distance. After climbing the long hill beyond the 'station' we are
rewarded by a
glimpse of more
fertile fields; the clumps of ragwort
and
purple loosestrife are reinforced with kingcups and lilies
growing near the
wayside, and the rare sight, first of a pot of
geraniums in the window, and then of a garden all aglow with red
fuchsias, torch plants, and huge dahlias, so cheers Veritas that he
takes heart again. "This is something like home!" he exclaims
breezily;
whereupon Mr. Shamrock murmurs that if people find nothing
to admire in a foreign country save what resembles their own, he
wonders that they take the trouble to be travelling.
"It is a darlin' year for the pitaties," the drivers says; and there
are plenty of them planted hereabouts, even in stony spots not worth
a keenogue for anything else, for "pitaties doesn't require anny
inTHRICKet farmin', you see, ma'am."
The
clergyman remarks that only three things are required to make
Ireland the most
attractive country in the world: "Protestantism,
cleanliness, and gardens"; and Mr. Shamrock, who is of course a
Roman Catholic, answers this tactful speech in a way that surprises
the
speaker and keeps him silent for hours.
The Birmingham cutler, who has a copy of Ismay's Children in his
pocket,
triumphantly reads aloud, at this moment, a remark put into
the mouth of an Irish
character: "The low Irish are quite destitute
of all notion of beauty,--have not the remotest
particle of artistic
sentiment or taste; their cabins are exactly as they were six
hundred years ago, for they never want to improve themselves."
Then Mr. Shamrock asserts that any show of
prosperity on a tenant's
part would only mean an advance of rent on the landlord's; and Mr.
Rose retorts that while that might have been true in former times,
it is utterly false to-day.
Mrs. Shamrock, who is a natural apologist, pleads that the Irish
gentry have the most beautiful gardens in the world and the greatest
natural taste in gardening, and there must be some reason why the
lower classes are so different in this respect. May it not be due
partly to lack of ground, lack of money to spend on seeds and
fertilisers, lack of all refining, civilising and educating
influences? Mr. Shamrock adds that the dwellers in cabins cannot
successfully train creepers against the walls or flowers in the
dooryard, because of the goat, pig,
donkey, ducks, hens, and
chickens; and Veritas asks
triumphantly, "Why don't you keep the pig
in a sty, then?"
The man with the
evergreen heart (who has already been told this
morning that I am happily married, Francesca engaged, Salemina a
determined celibate, but Benella quite at liberty) peeps under
Salemina's
umbrella at this juncture, and says
tenderly, "And what