The two friends were deposited at
the Moate station at a few minutes after midnight,
and their available resources amounting to something
short of two shillings, and the fare of a car and
horse to Kilgobbin being more than three times that
amount, they decided to devote their small balance
to purposes of refreshment, and then set out for the
castle on foot.
’It is a fine moonlight; I know
all the short cuts, and I want a bit of walking besides,’
said Kearney; and though Joe was of a self-indulgent
temperament, and would like to have gone to bed after
his supper and trusted to the chapter of accidents
to reach Kilgobbin by a conveyance some time, any
time, he had to yield his consent and set out on the
road.
‘The fellow who comes with the
letter-bag will fetch over our portmanteau,’
said Dick, as they started.
‘I wish you’d give him
directions to take charge of me, too,’ said Joe,
who felt very indisposed to a long walk.
‘I like you,’ said
Dick sneeringly; ’you are always telling me that
you are the sort of fellow for a new colony, life
in the bush, and the rest of it, and when it conies
to a question of a few miles’ tramp on a bright
night in June, you try to skulk it in every possible
way. You’re a great humbug, Master Joe.’
’And you a very small humbug,
and there lies the difference between us. The
combinations in your mind are so few, that, as in a
game of only three cards, there is no skill in the
playing; while in my nature, as in that game called
tarocco, there are half-a-dozen packs mixed up together,
and the address required to play them is considerable.’
‘You have a very satisfactory
estimate of your own abilities, Joe.’
’And why not? If a clever
fellow didn’t know he was clever, the opinion
of the world on his superiority would probably turn
his brain.’
‘And what do you say if his own vanity should
do it?’
‘There is really no way of explaining to a fellow
like you ’
‘What do you mean by a fellow like me?’
broke in Dick, somewhat angrily.
’I mean this, that I’d
as soon set to work to explain the theory of exchequer
bonds to an Eskimo, as to make an unimaginative man
understand something purely speculative. What
you, and scores of fellows like you, denominate vanity,
is only another form of hopefulness. You and your
brethren for you are a large family do
you know what it is to Hope! that is, you have no
idea of what it is to build on the foundation of certain
qualities you recognise in yourself, and to say that
“if I can go so far with such a gift, such another
will help me on so much farther."’
’I tell you one thing I do hope,
which is, that the next time I set out a twelve miles’
walk, I’ll have a companion less imbued with
self-admiration.’
’And you might and might not
find him pleasanter company. Cannot you see,
old fellow, that the very things you object to in me
are what are wanting in you? they are, so to say,
the compliments of your own temperament.’
‘Have you a cigar?’
‘Two take them both. I’d
rather talk than smoke just now.’
‘I am almost sorry for it, though it gives me
the tobacco.’
‘Are we on your father’s property yet?’
’Yes; part of that village we
came through belongs to us, and all this bog here
is ours.’
’Why don’t you reclaim
it? labour costs a mere nothing in this country.
Why don’t you drain those tracts, and treat the
soil with lime? I’d live on potatoes, I’d
make my family live on potatoes, and my son, and my
grandson, for three generations, but I’d win
this land back to culture and productiveness.’
’The fee-simple of the soil
wouldn’t pay the cost. It would be cheaper
to save the money and buy an estate.’
’That is one, and a very narrow
view of it; but imagine the glory of restoring a lost
tract to a nation, welcoming back the prodigal, and
installing him in his place amongst his brethren.
This was all forest once. Under the shade of
the mighty oaks here those gallant O’Caharneys
your ancestors followed the chase, or rested at noontide,
or skedaddled in double-quick before those smart English
of the Pale, who I must say treated your forbears
with scant courtesy.’
‘We held our own against them for many a year.’
’Only when it became so small
it was not worth taking. Is not your father a
Whig?’
‘He’s a Liberal, but he
troubles himself little about parties.’
‘He’s a stout Catholic, though, isn’t
he?’
‘He is a very devout believer
in his Church,’ said Dick with the tone of one
who did not desire to continue the theme.
’Then why does he stop at Whiggery?
why not go in for Nationalism and all the rest of
it?’
‘And what’s all the rest of it?’
’Great Ireland no
first flower of the earth or gem of the sea humbug but
Ireland great in prosperity, her harbours full of ships,
the woollen trade, her ancient staple, revived:
all that vast unused water-power, greater than all
the steam of Manchester and Birmingham tenfold, at
full work; the linen manufacture developed and promoted ’
‘And the Union repealed?’
’Of course; that should be first
of all. Not that I object to the Union, as many
do, on the grounds of English ignorance as to Ireland.
My dislike is, that, for the sake of carrying through
certain measures necessary to Irish interests, I must
sit and discuss questions which have no possible concern
for me, and touch me no more than the debates in the
Cortes, or the Reichskammer at Vienna. What do
you or I care for who rules India, or who owns Turkey?
What interest of mine is it whether Great Britain has
five ironclads or fifty, or whether the Yankees take
Canada, and the Russians Kabul?’
‘You’re a Fenian, and I am not.’
‘I suppose you’d call yourself an Englishman?’
‘I am an English subject, and I owe my allegiance
to England.’
’Perhaps for that matter, I
owe some too; but I owe a great many things that I
don’t distress myself about paying.’
’Whatever your sentiments are
on these matters and, Joe, I am not disposed
to think you have any very fixed ones pray
do me the favour to keep them to yourself while under
my father’s roof. I can almost promise you
he’ll obtrude none of his peculiar opinions
on you, and I hope you will treat him
with a like delicacy.’
’What will your folks talk,
then? I can’t suppose they care for books,
art, or the drama. There is no society, so there
can be no gossip. If that yonder be the cabin
of one of your tenants, I’ll certainly not start
the question of farming.’
‘There are poor on every estate,’ said
Dick curtly.
‘Now what sort of a rent does that fellow pay five
pounds a year?’
‘More likely five-and-twenty or thirty shillings.’
’By Jove, I’d like to
set up house in that fashion, and make love to some
delicately-nurtured miss, win her affections, and bring
her home to such a spot. Wouldn’t that
be a touchstone of affection, Dick?’
’If I could believe you were
in earnest, I’d throw you neck and heels into
that bog-hole.’
‘Oh, if you would!’ cried
he, and there was a ring of truthfulness in his voice
now there could be no mistaking. Half-ashamed
of the emotion his idle speech had called up, and
uncertain how best to treat the emergency, Kearney
said nothing, and Atlee walked on for miles without
a word.
‘You can see the house now.
It tops the trees yonder,’ said Dick.
‘That is Kilgobbin Castle, then?’ said
Joe slowly.
’There’s not much of castle
left about it. There is a square block of a tower,
and you can trace the moat and some remains of outworks.’
’Shall I make you a confession,
Dick? I envy you all that! I envy you what
smacks of a race, a name, an ancestry, a lineage.
It’s a great thing to be able to “take
up the running,” as folks say, instead of making
all the race yourself; and there’s one inestimable
advantage in it, it rescues you from all indecent
haste about asserting your station. You feel yourself
to be a somebody and you’ve not hurried to proclaim
it. There now, my boy, if you’d have said
only half as much as that on the score of your family,
I’d have called you an arrant snob. So
much for consistency.’
‘What you have said gave me pleasure, I’ll
own that.’
’I suppose it was you planted
those trees there. It was a nice thought, and
makes the transition from the bleak bog to the cultivated
land more easy and graceful. Now I see the castle
well. It’s a fine portly mass against the
morning sky, and I perceive you fly a flag over it.’
‘When the lord is at home.’
‘Ay, and by the way, do you give him his title
while talking to him here?’
’The tenants do, and the neighbours
and strangers do as they please about it.’
‘Does he like it himself?’
’If I was to guess, I should
perhaps say he does like it. Here we are now.
Inside this low gate you are within the demesne, and
I may bid you welcome to Kilgobbin. We shall
build a lodge here one of these days. There’s
a good stretch, however, yet to the castle. We
call it two miles, and it’s not far short of
it.’
’What a glorious morning.
There is an ecstasy in scenting these nice fresh woods
in the clear sunrise, and seeing those modest daffodils
make their morning toilet.’
’That’s a fancy of Kate’s.
There is a border of such wild flowers all the way
to the house.’
’And those rills of clear water
that flank the road, are they of her designing?’
’That they are. There was
a cutting made for a railroad line about four miles
from this, and they came upon a sort of pudding-stone
formation, made up chiefly of white pebbles.
Kate heard of it, purchased the whole mass, and had
these channels paved with them from the gate to the
castle, and that’s the reason this water has
its crystal clearness.’
’She’s worthy of Shakespeare’s
sweet epithet, the “daintiest Kate in Christendom.”
Here’s her health!’ and he stooped down,
and filling his palm with the running water, drank
it off.
’I see it’s not yet five
o’clock. We’ll steal quietly off to
bed, and have three or four hours sleep before we
show ourselves.’