Chapter XVIII. Limavady love-letters.
'As beautiful Kitty one morning was tripping
With a
pitcher of milk from the fair of Coleraine,
When she saw me she stumbled, the
pitcher it tumbled,
And all the sweet buttermilk watered the plain.'
Anonymous.
We wanted to cross to Rathlin Island, which is 'like an Irish
stockinge, the toe of which pointeth to the main lande.' That would
bring Francesca six miles nearer to Scotland and her Scottish lover;
and we wished to see the castle of Robert the Bruce, where,
according to the legend, he
learned his lesson from the 'six times
baffled spider.' We delayed too long, however, and the Sea of Moyle
looked as bleak and stormy as it did to the children of Lir. We had
no mind to be swallowed up in Brecain's Caldron, where the grandson
of Niall and the Nine Hostages sank with his fifty curraghs, so we
took a day of golf at the Ballycastle links. Salemina, who is a
neophyte, found a
forlorn lady driving and putting about by herself,
and they made a match just to increase the interest of the game.
There was but one boy in evidence, and the versatile Benella offered
to caddie for them, leaving the more
experienced gossoon to
Francesca and me. The Irish caddie does not, on the whole, perhaps
manifest so keen an interest in the fine points of the game as his
Scottish brother. He is somewhat
languid in his search for a ball,
and will
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occasionally, when serving
amiable ladies, sit under a tree
in the sun and
speculate as to its
whereabouts. As for staying by
you while you 'hole out' on your last green, he has no possible
interest in that
proceeding, and is off and away, giving his
perfunctory and half-hearted
polish to your clubs while you are
passing through this thrilling
crisis. Salemina, wishing to know
what was considered a good score by local players on these links,
asked our young friend 'what they got round in, here,' and was
answered, 'They tries to go round in as few as possible, ma'am, but
they
mostly takes more!' We all came together again at luncheon,
and Salemina returned flushed with
victory. She had made the nine
hole course in one hundred and sixty, and had
beaten her adversary
five up and four to play.
The next morning, bright and early, we left for Coleraine, a great
Presbyterian
stronghold in what is called by the Roman Catholics the
'black north.' If we liked it, and saw anything of Kitty's
descendants, or any nice
pitchers to break, or any reason for
breaking them, we intended to stop; if not, then to push on to the
walled town of Derry,-
'Where Foyle his swelling waters
Rolls
northward to the main.'
We thought it Francesca's duty, as she was to be the wife of a
Scottish
minister of the Established Church, to look up
Presbyterianism in Ireland
whenever and
wherever possible, with a
view to discoursing
learnedly about it in her letters,--though, as
she confesses ingenuously, Ronald, in his, never so much as mentions
Presbyterianism. As for ourselves, we determined to observe all
theological differences between Protestants and Roman Catholics, but
leave Presbyterianism to gang its ain gait. We had
devoted hours--
yes, days--in Edinburgh to the under
standing of the subtle and
technical barriers which separated the Free Kirkers and the United
Presbyterians; and the first thing they did, after we had completely
mastered the subject, was to unite. It is all very well for
Salemina, who condenses her information and stows it away neatly;
but we who have small
storage room and
inferior methods of packing
must be as
economical as possible in amassing facts.
If we had been touring
properly, of course we should have been going
to the Giant's Causeway and the swinging Bridge at Carrick-a-rede;
but
propriety is the last thing we aim at in our itineraries. We
were within worshipping distance of two rather important shrines in
our
literarypilgrimage; for we had met a very knowledgeable
traveller at the Sorley Boy, and after a little chat with him had
planned a day of surprises for the
academic Miss Peabody. We
proposed to halt at Port Stewart, lunch at Coleraine, sleep at
Limavady; and
meantime Salemina was to read all the books at her
command, and guess, we hoped
vainly, the why and
wherefore of these
stops.
On the appointed day, the lady in question drove in state on a car
with Benella, but Francesca and I hired a couple of very wheezy
bicycles for the journey. We had a thrilling start; for it chanced
to be a fair day in Ballycastle, and we wheeled through a sea of
squealing, bolting pigs,
stupid sheep, and
unruly cows, all pursued
on every side by their drivers. To
alight from a
bicycle in such a
whirl of beasts always seems certain death; to remain seated
diminishes, I believe, the number of one's days of life to an
appreciable
extent. Francesca chose the first course, and,
standingstill in the middle of the street, called upon everybody within
hearing to save her, and that right
speedily. A crowd of 'jibbing'
heifers encircled her on all sides, while a fat porker, 'who (his
driver said) might be a prize pig by his impidence,' and a donkey
that was feelin' blue-mouldy for want of a batin', tried to poke
their noses into the group. Salemina's only
weapon was her scarlet
parasol, and,
standing on the step of her side-car, she brandished
this with such terrible effect that the only bull in the cavalcade
put up his head and roared. "Have conduct, woman dear!" cried his
owner to Salemina. "Sure if you kape on moidherin' him wid that
ombrelly, you'll have him ugly on me immajently, and the divil a bit
o' me can stop him." "Don't be cryin' that way, asthore," he went
on, going to Francesca's side, and piloting her
tenderly to the
hedge. "Sure I'll
nourish him wid the whip whin I get him to a more
remoted place."
We had no more adventures, but Francesca was so unhinged by her
unfortunate exit from Ballycastle that, after a few miles, she
announced her
intention of putting her machine and herself on the
car;
whereupon Benella proclaimed herself a
competent cyclist, and
climbed down blithely to mount the discarded wheel. Her ideas of
propriety were by this time so developed that she rode ten or twelve
feet behind me, where she looked
quaint enough, in her black dress
and little black
bonnet with its white lawn strings.
"Sure it's a quare
footman ye have, me lady," said a
genial and
friendly person who was sitting by the
roadside smoking his old
dudeen. An Irishman, somehow, is always going to his work 'jist,'
or coming from it, or thinking how it shall
presently be done, or
meditating on the next step in the process, or resting a bit before
taking it up again, or reflecting whether the weather is on the
whole favourable to its proper
performance; but however poor and
needy he may be, it is somewhat difficult to catch him at the
precise
working moment. Mr. Alfred Austin says of the Irish
peasants that
idleness and
poverty seem natural to them. "Life to
the Scotsman or Englishman is a business to conduct, to extend, to
render
profitable. To the Irishman it is a dream, a little bit of
passing
consciousness on a rather hard pillow; the hard part of it
being the
occasional necessity for work, which spoils the tenderness
and continuity of the dream."
Presently we passed the Castle, rode along a neat quay with a row of
houses
advertising lodgings to let; and here is Lever Cottage, where
Harry Lorrequer was written; for Lever was dispensary doctor in Port
Stewart when his first book was appearing in the Dublin University
Magazine.
We did not fancy Coleraine; it looked like anything but Cuil-
rathain, a ferny corner. Kitty's sweet buttermilk may have watered,
but it had not fertilised the plain, though the town itself seemed
painfully
prosperous. Neither the Clothworkers' Inn nor the
Corporation Arms looked a pleasant stopping-place, and the
humbleinn we finally selected for a brief rest proved to be about as gay
as a family vault, with a
landlady who had all the characteristics
of a poker except its
occasionalwarmth, as the Liberator said of
another stiff and
formal person. Whether she was Scot or Saxon I