It was during the second year of Hyacinth’s
residence in Ballymoy that the station-master at Clogher
died. The poor man caught a cold one February
night while waiting for a train which had broken down
three miles outside his station. From the cold
came first pneumonia, and then the end. Now,
far to the east of Clogher, on a different branch of
the railway-line, is a town with which the people
of Mayo have no connection whatever. In it is
a very flourishing Masonic lodge. Almost every
male Protestant in the town and the neighbourhood
belongs to it, and the Rector of the parish is its
chaplain. Among its members at that time was
an intelligent young man who occupied the position
of goods clerk on the railway. The Masonic brethren,
as in duty bound, used their influence to secure his
promotion, and brought considerable pressure to bear
on the directors of the company to have him made station-master
at Clogher.
It is said with some appearance of
truth that no appointment in Ireland is ever made
on account of the fitness of the candidate for the
post to be filled. Whether the Lord Lieutenant
has to nominate a Local Government Board Inspector,
or an Urban Council has to select a street scavenger,
the principle acted on is the same. No investigation
is made about the ability or character of a candidate.
Questions may be asked about his political opinions,
his religious creed, and sometimes about the social
position of his wife, but no one cares in the least
about his ability. The matter really turns upon
the amount of influence which he can bring to bear.
So it happened that John Crawford, Freemason and Protestant,
was appointed station-master at Clogher. Of course,
nobody really cared who got the post except a few
seniors of John Crawford’s, who wanted it for
themselves. Probably even they would have stopped
grumbling after a month or two if it had not happened
that a leading weekly newspaper, then at the height
of its popularity and influence, was just inaugurating
a crusade against Protestants and Freemasons.
The case of John Crawford became the subject of a series
of bitter and vehement articles. It was pointed
out that although Roman Catholics were beyond all
question more intelligent, better educated, and more
upright than Protestants, they were condemned by the
intolerance of highly-paid officials to remain hewers
of wood and drawers of water. It was shown by
figures which admitted of no controversy that Irish
railways, banks, and trading companies were, without
exception, on the verge of bankruptcy, entirely owing
to the apathy of shareholders who allowed their interests
to be sacrificed to the bigotry of directors.
It was urged that a public meeting should be held
at Clogher to protest against the new appointment.
The meeting was convened, and Father
Fahey consented to occupy the chair. He was supported
by a dispensary doctor, anxious to propitiate the
Board of Guardians with a view to obtaining a summer
holiday; a leading publican, who had a son at Maynooth;
a grazier, who dreaded the possible partition of his
ranch by the Congested Districts Board; and Mr. O’Reilly,
who saw a hope of drawing custom from the counter of
his rival draper, the Scotchman.
Father Fahey opened the proceedings
with a speech. He assured his audience that he
was not actuated by any spirit of religious bigotry
or intolerance. He wished well to his Protestant
fellow-countrymen, and hoped that in the bright future
which lay before Ireland men of all creeds would be
united in working for the common good of their country.
These sentiments were not received with vociferous
applause. The audience was perfectly well aware
that something much more to the point was coming,
and reserved their cheers. Father Fahey did not
disappoint them. He proceeded to show that the
appointment of the new station-master was a deliberate
insult to the faith of the inhabitants of Clogher.
‘Are we,’ he asked, ’to
submit tamely to having the worst evils of the old
ascendancy revived in our midst?’
He was followed by the dispensary
doctor, who also began by declaring his freedom from
bigotry. He confused the issue slightly by complaining
that the new station-master was entirely ignorant of
the Irish language. It was perfectly well known
that in private life the doctor was in the habit of
expressing the greatest contempt for the Gaelic League,
and that he could not, if his life depended on it,
have translated even Mr. O’Reilly’s advertisements;
but his speech was greeted with tumultuous cheers.
He proceeded to harrow the feelings of his audience
by describing what he had heard at the railway-station
one evening while waiting for the train. As he
paced the platform his attention was attracted by
the sound of a piano in the station-master’s
house. He listened, and, to his amazement and
disgust, heard the tune of a popular song, ’a
song’ he brought down his fist on
the table as he uttered the awful indictment ’imported
from England.’
‘I ask,’ he went on ’I
ask our venerated and beloved parish priest; I ask
you, fathers of innocent families; I ask every right-thinking
patriot in this room, are our ears to be insulted,
our morals corrupted, our intellects depraved, by
sounds like these?’
He closed his speech by proposing
a resolution requiring the railway company to withdraw
the obnoxious official from their midst.
The oratory of the grazier, who seconded
the resolution, was not inferior. It filled his
heart with a sense of shame, so he said, to think
of his cattle, poor, innocent beasts of the field,
being handled by a Protestant. They had been
bred, these bullocks of his, by Catholics, fed by
Catholics, were owned by a Catholic, bought with Catholic
money at the fairs, and yet they were told that in
all Ireland no Catholic could be discovered fit to
put them into a train.
Neither the resolution itself nor
the heart-rending appeal of the grazier produced the
slightest effect on the railway company. John
Crawford continued to sell tickets, even to Father
Fahey himself, and appeared entirely unconcerned by
the fuss.
About a fortnight after the meeting
Hyacinth spent a night in Clogher. Mr. Holywell,
the cigarette man, happened to be in the hotel, and,
as usual, got through a good deal of desultory conversation
while he drank his whisky-and-water. Quite unexpectedly,
and apropos of nothing that had been said, he plumped
out the question:
‘What religion are you, Conneally?’
The inquiry was such an unusual one,
and came so strangely from Mr. Holywell, who had always
seemed a Gallio in matters spiritual, that Hyacinth
hesitated.
‘I’m a Baptist myself,’
he went on, apparently with a view to palliating his
inquisitiveness by a show of candour. ’I
find it a very convenient sort of religion in Connaught.
There isn’t a single place of worship belonging
to my denomination in the whole province, so I’m
always able to get my Sundays to myself. I don’t
want to convert you to anything or to argue with you,
but I have a fancy that you are a Church of Ireland
Protestant.’
Hyacinth admitted the correctness
of the guess, and wondered what was coming next.
‘Ever spend a Sunday here?’
‘Never,’ said Hyacinth;
’I always get back home for the end of the week
if I can.’
’Ah! Well, do you know,
if I were you, I should spend next Sunday here, and
go to Mass.’
‘I shall not do anything of the sort.’
’Well, it’s your own affair,
of course; only I just think I should do it if I were
you. Good-night.’
‘Wait a minute,’ said
Hyacinth. ‘I want to know what you mean.’
Mr. Holywell sat down again heavily.
‘Been round your customers here lately?’
’No. I only arrived this
evening, and have done nothing yet. I mean to
go round them to-morrow.’
’You may just as well go home
by the early train for all the good you’ll do.’
Hyacinth restrained himself with an
effort. He reflected that he was more likely
to get at the meaning of these mysterious warnings
if he refrained from direct questioning. After
a minute of two of silence Mr. Hollywell went on:
’They had a meeting here a little
while ago about the appointment of a Protestant station-master.
They didn’t take much by it so far as the railway
company is concerned, but I happen to know that word
has gone round that every shopkeeper in the town is
to order his goods as far as possible from Catholics.
Now, everybody knows your boss is a Protestant, but
the people are a little uncertain about you. They’ve
never seen you at Mass, which is suspicious, but,
on the other hand, the way you gas on about Irish
manufactures makes them think you can’t be a
Protestant. The proper thing for you to do is
to lie low till you’ve put in an appearance
at Mass, and then go round and try for orders.’
‘That’s the kind of thing,’
said Hyacinth, ’that I couldn’t do if I
had no religion at all; but it happens that I have
convictions of a sort, and I don’t mean to go
against them.’
’Oh, well, as I said before,
it’s your own affair; only better Protestants
than you have done as much. Why, I do it myself
constantly, and everyone knows that a Baptist is the
strongest kind of Protestant there is.’
This reasoning, curiously enough, proved unconvincing.
‘I can’t believe,’
said Hyacinth, ’that a religious boycott of the
kind is possible. People won’t be such
fools as to act clean against their own interests.
Considering that nine-tenths of the drapery goods in
the country come from England and are sold by Protestant
travellers, I don’t see how the shopkeepers
could act as you say.’
’Oh, of course they won’t
act against their own interests. I’ve never
come across a religion yet that made men do that.
They won’t attempt to boycott the English firms,
because, as you say, they couldn’t; but they
can boycott you. Everything your boss makes is
turned out just as well and just as cheap, or cheaper,
by the nuns at Robeen. Perhaps you didn’t
know that these holy ladies have hired a traveller.
Well, they have, and he’s a middling smart man,
too quite smart enough to play the trumps
that are put into his hand; and he’s got a fine
flush of them now. What with the way that wretched
rag of a paper, which started all the fuss, goes on
rampaging, and the amount of feeling that’s got
up over the station-master, the peaceablest people
in the place would be afraid to deal with a Protestant
at the present moment. The Robeen man has the
game in his own hands, and I’m bound to say he’d
be a fool if he didn’t play it for all it’s
worth. I’d do it myself if I was in his
shoes.’
Hyacinth discovered next day that
Mr. Holywell had summed up the situation very accurately.
No point-blank questions were asked about his religion,
but he could by no means persuade his customers to
give him even a small order. Every shop-window
was filled with goods placarded ostentatiously as
‘made in Robeen.’ Every counter had
tweeds, blankets, and flannels from the same
factory. No one was in the least uncivil to him,
and no one assigned any plausible reason for refusing
to deal with him. He was simply bowed out as
quickly as possible from every shop he entered.
He returned home disgusted and irritated,
and told his tale to his employer. Mr. Quinn
recognised the danger that threatened him. For
the first time, he admitted that his business was
being seriously injured by the competition of Robeen.
He took Hyacinth into his confidence more fully than
he had ever done before, and explained what seemed
to be a hopeful plan.
’I may tell you, Conneally,
that I have very little capital to fall back upon
in my business. Years ago when things were better
than they are now, I had a few thousands put by, but
most of it went on buying my brother Albert’s
share of the mill. Lately I have not been able
to save, and at the present moment I can lay hands
on very little money. Still, I have something,
and what I mean to do is this: I shall give up
all idea of making a profit for the present.
I shall even sell my goods at a slight loss, and try
to beat the nunnery out of the market. I think
this religious animosity will weaken after a while,
and if we offer the cheapest goods we must in the
end get back our customers.’
Hyacinth was not so sanguine.
‘You forget,’ he said,
’that these people have Government money at their
backs, and are likely to get more of it. If you
sell at a loss they will do so, too, and ask for a
new grant from the Congested Districts Board to make
good their deficiency.’
Mr. Quinn sighed.
‘That is quite possible,’
he said. ’But what can I do? I must
make a fight for my business.’
Hyacinth hesitated.
’Perhaps I have no right to
make the suggestion, but it seems to me that you are
bound to be beaten. Would it not be better to
give in at once? Don’t risk the money you
have safe. Keep it, and try to sell the mill
and the business.’
‘I shall hold on,’ said Mr. Quinn.
’Ought you not to think of your
wife? Remember what it will mean to her if you
are beaten in the end, when your savings are gone and
your business unsaleable.’
For a moment there were signs of wavering
in Mr. Quinn’s face. The fingers of his
hands twisted in and out of each other, and a pitiable
look of great distress came into his eyes. Then
he unclasped his hands and placed them flat on the
table before him.
‘I shall hold on,’ he
said. ’I shall not close my mill while I
have a shilling left to pay my workers with.’
‘Well,’ said Hyacinth,
’it is for you to decide. At least, you
can count on my doing my best, my very best.’