I
Pat Phelan’s bullocks were ready
for the fair, and so were his pigs; but the two fairs
happened to come on the same day, and he thought he
would like to sell the pigs himself. His eldest
son, James, was staying at home to help Catherine
Ford with her churning; Peter, his second son, was
not much of a hand at a bargain; it was Pat and James
who managed the farm, and when Peter had gone to bed
they began to wonder if Peter would be able to sell
the bullocks. Pat said Peter had been told the
lowest price he could take, James said there was a
good demand for cattle, and at last they decided that
Peter could not fail to sell the beasts.
Pat was to meet Peter at the cross-roads
about twelve o’clock in the day. But he
had sold his pigs early, and was half an hour in front
of him, and sitting on the stile waiting for his son,
he thought if Peter got thirteen pounds apiece for
the bullocks he would say he had done very well.
A good jobber, he thought, would be able to get ten
shillings apiece more for them; and he went on thinking
of what price Peter would get, until, suddenly looking
up the road, whom should he see but Peter coming down
the road with the bullocks in front of him. He
could hardly believe his eyes, and it was a long story
that Peter told him about two men who wanted to buy
the bullocks early in the morning. They had offered
him eleven pounds ten, and when he would not sell
them at that price they had stood laughing at the bullocks
and doing all they could to keep off other buyers.
Peter was quite certain it was not his fault, and
he began to argue. But Pat Phelan was too disappointed
to argue with him, and he let him go on talking.
At last Peter ceased talking, and this seemed to Pat
Phelan a good thing.
The bullocks trotted in front of them.
They were seven miles from home, and fifteen miles
are hard on fat animals, and he could truly say he
was at a loss of three pounds that day if he took into
account the animals’ keep.
Father and son walked on, and not
a word passed between them till they came to Michael
Quinn’s public-house. “Did you get
three pounds apiece for the pigs, father?”
“I did, and three pounds five.”
“We might have a drink out of that.”
It seemed to Peter that the men inside
were laughing at him or at the lemonade he was drinking,
and, seeing among them one who had been interfering
with him all day, he told him he would put him out
of the house, and he would have done it if Mrs. Quinn
had not told him that no one put a man out of her
house without her leave.
“Do you hear that, Peter Phelan?”
“If you can’t best them
at the fair,” said his father, “it will
be little good for you to put them out of the public-house
afterwards.”
And on that Peter swore he would never
go to a fair again, and they walked on until they
came to the priest’s house.
“It was bad for me when I listened
to you and James. If I hadn’t I might have
been in Maynooth now.”
“Now, didn’t you come home talking of
the polis?”
“Wasn’t that after?”
They could not agree as to when his
idea of life had changed from the priesthood to the
police, nor when it had changed back from the police
to the priesthood, and Peter talked on, telling of
the authors he had read with Father Tom Cæsar,
Virgil, even Quintillian. The priest had said
that Quintillian was too difficult for him, and Pat
Phelan was in doubt whether the difficulty of Quintillian
was a sufficient reason for preferring the police
to the priesthood.
“Any way it isn’t a girl
that’s troubling him,” he said to himself,
and he looked at Peter, and wondered how it was that
Peter did not want to be married. Peter was a
great big fellow, over six feet high, that many a
girl would take a fancy to, and Pat Phelan had long
had his eye on a girl who would marry him. And
his failure to sell the bullocks brought all the advantages
of this marriage to Pat Phelan’s mind, and he
began to talk to his son. Peter listened, and
seemed to take an interest in all that was said, expressing
now and then a doubt if the girl would marry him;
the possibility that she might seemed to turn his thoughts
again towards the priesthood.
The bullocks had stopped to graze,
and Peter’s indécisions threw Pat Phelan
fairly out of his humour.
“Well, Peter, I am tired listening
to you. If it’s a priest you want to be,
go in there, and Father Tom will tell you what you
must do, and I’ll drive the bullocks home myself.”
And on that Pat laid his hand on the priest’s
green gate, and Peter walked through.
II
There were trees about the priest’s
house, and there were two rooms on the right and left
of the front door. The parlour was on the left,
and when Peter came in the priest was sitting reading
in his mahogany arm-chair. Peter wondered if
it were this very mahogany chair that had put the
idea of being a priest into his head. Just now,
while walking with his father, he had been thinking
that they had not even a wooden arm-chair in their
house, though it was the best house in the village only
some stools and some plain wooden chairs.
The priest could see that Peter had
come to him for a purpose. But Peter did not
speak; he sat raising his pale, perplexed eyes, looking
at the priest from time to time, thinking that if he
told Father Tom of his failure at the fair, Father
Tom might think he only wished to become a priest
because he had no taste for farming.
“You said, Father Tom, if I
worked hard I should be able to read Quintillian in
six months.”
The priest’s face always lighted
up at the name of a classical author, and Peter said
he was sorry he had been taken away from his studies.
But he had been thinking the matter over, and his mind
was quite made up, and he was sure he would sooner
be a priest than anything else.
“My boy, I knew you would never
put on the policeman’s belt. The Bishop
will hold an examination for the places that are vacant
in Maynooth.” Peter promised to work hard
and he already saw himself sitting in an arm-chair,
in a mahogany arm-chair, reading classics, and winning
admiration for his learning.
He walked home, thinking that everything
was at last decided, when suddenly, without warning,
when he was thinking of something else, his heart
misgave him. It was as if he heard a voice saying:
“My boy, I don’t think you will ever put
on the cassock. You will never walk with the
biretta on your head.” The priest had said
that he did not believe he would ever buckle on the
policeman’s belt. He was surprised to hear
the priest say this, though he had often heard himself
thinking the same thing. What surprised and frightened
him now was that he heard himself saying he would
never put on the cassock and the biretta. It is
frightening to hear yourself saying you are not going
to do the thing you have just made up your mind you
will do.
He had often thought he would like
to put the money he would get out of the farm into
a shop, but when it came to the point of deciding he
had not been able to make up his mind. He had
always had a great difficulty in knowing what was
the right thing to do. His uncle William had never
thought of anything but the priesthood. James
never thought of anything but the farm. A certain
friend of his had never thought of doing anything
but going to America. Suddenly he heard some one
call him.
It was Catherine, and Peter wondered
if she were thinking to tell him she was going to
marry James. For she always knew what she wanted.
Many said that James was not the one she wanted, but
Peter did not believe that, and he looked at Catherine
and admired her face, and thought what a credit she
would be to the family. No one wore such beautifully
knitted stockings as Catherine, and no one’s
boots were so prettily laced.
But not knowing exactly what to say,
he asked her if she had come from their house, and
he went on talking, telling her that she would find
nobody in the parish like James. James was the
best farmer in the parish, none such a judge of cattle;
and he said all this and a great deal more, until
he saw that Catherine did not care to talk about James
at all.
“I daresay all you say is right,
Peter; but you see he’s your brother.”
And then, fearing she had said something
hurtful, she told him that she liked James as much
as a girl could like a man who was not going to be
her husband.
“And you are sure, Catherine,
that James is not going to be your husband?”
“Yes,” she said, “quite sure.”
Their talk had taken them as far as
Catherine’s door, and Peter went away wondering
why he had not told her he was going to Maynooth; for
no one would have been able to advise him as well
as Catherine, she had such good sense.
III
There was a quarter of a mile between
the two houses, and while Peter was talking to Catherine,
Pat Phelan was listening to his son James, who was
telling his father that Catherine had said she would
not marry him.
Pat was over sixty, but he did not
give one the impression of an old man. The hair
was not grey, there was still a little red in the
whiskers. James, who sat opposite to him, holding
his hands to the blaze, was not as good-looking a
man as his father, the nose was not as fine, nor were
the eyes as keen. There was more of the father
in Peter than in James.
When Peter opened the half-door, awaking
the dozen hens that roosted on the beam, he glanced
from one to the other, for he suspected that his father
was telling James how he had failed to sell the bullocks.
But the tone of his father’s voice when he asked
him what had detained him on the road told him he
was mistaken; and then he remembered that Catherine
had said she would not marry James, and he began to
pity his brother.
“I met Catherine on the road,
and I could do no less than walk as far as her door
with her.”
“You could do no less than that, Peter,”
said James.
“And what do you mean by that, James?”
“Only this, that it is always
the crooked way, Peter; for if it had been you that
had asked her she would have had you and jumping.”
“She would have had me!”
“And now don’t you think
you had better run after her, Peter, and ask her if
she’ll have you?”
“I’ll never do that; and
it is hurtful, James, that you should think such a
thing of me, that I would go behind your back and try
to get a girl from you.”
“I did not mean that, Peter;
but if she won’t have me, you had better try
if you can get her.”
And suddenly Peter felt a resolve
come into his heart, and his manner grew exultant.
“I’ve seen Father Tom,
and he said I can pass the examination. I’m
going to be a priest.”
And when they were lying down side
by side Peter said, “James, it will be all right.”
Knowing there was a great heart-sickness on his brother,
he put out his hand. “As sure as I lie here
she will be lying next you before this day twelvemonths.
Yes, James, in this very bed, lying here where I am
lying now.”
“I don’t believe it, Peter.”
Peter loved his brother, and to bring
the marriage about he took some money from his father
and went to live at Father Tom’s, and he worked
so hard during the next two months that he passed the
Bishop’s examination. And it was late one
night when he went to bid them good-bye at home.
“What makes you so late, Peter?”
“Well, James, I didn’t want to meet Catherine
on the road.”
“You are a good boy, Peter,”
said the father, “and God will reward you for
the love you bear your brother. I don’t
think there are two better men in the world.
God has been good to me to give me two such sons.”
And then the three sat round the fire,
and Pat Phelan began to talk family history.
“Well, Peter, you see, there
has always been a priest in the family, and it would
be a pity if there’s not one in this generation.
In ’48 your grand-uncles joined the rebels,
and they had to leave the country. You have an
uncle a priest, and you are just like your uncle William.”
And then James talked, but he did
not seem to know very well what he was saying, and
his father told him to stop that Peter was
going where God had called him.
“And you will tell her,”
Peter said, getting up, “that I have gone.”
“I haven’t the heart for
telling her such a thing. She will be finding
it out soon enough.”
Outside the house for he
was sleeping at Father Tom’s that night Peter
thought there was little luck in James’s eyes;
inside the house Pat Phelan and James thought that
Peter was settled for life.
“He will be a fine man standing
on an altar,” James said, “and perhaps
he will be a bishop some day.”
“And you’ll see her when
you’re done reaping, and you won’t forget
what Peter told you,” said Pat Phelan.
And, after reaping, James put on his
coat and walked up the hillside, where he thought
he would find Catherine.
“I hear Peter has left you,”
she said, as he opened the gate to let the cows through.
“He came last night to bid us good-bye.”
And they followed the cows under the tall hedges.
“I shall be reaping to-morrow,”
he said. “I will see you at the same time.”
And henceforth he was always at hand
to help her to drive her cows home; and every night,
as he sat with his father by the fire, Pat Phelan
expected James to tell him about Catherine. One
evening he came back overcome, looking so wretched
that his father could see that Catherine had told
him she would not marry him.
“She won’t have me,” he said.
“A man can always get a girl
if he tries long enough,” his father said, hoping
to encourage him.
“That would be true enough for
another. Catherine knows she will never get Peter.
Another man might get her, but I’m always reminding
her of Peter.”
She told him the truth one day, that
if she did not marry Peter she would marry no one,
and James felt like dying. He grew pale and could
not speak.
At last he said, “How is that?”
“I don’t know. I
don’t know, James. But you mustn’t
talk to me about marriage again.”
And he had to promise her not to speak
of marriage again, and he kept his word. At the
end of the year she asked him if he had any news of
Peter.
“The last news we had of him
was about a month ago, and he said he hoped to be
admitted into the minor orders.”
And a few days afterwards he heard
that Catherine had decided to go into a convent.
“So this is the way it has ended,”
he thought. And he seemed no longer fit for work
on the farm. He was seen about the road smoking,
and sometimes he went down to the ball-alley, and
sat watching the games in the evening. It was
thought that he would take to drink, but he took to
fishing instead, and was out all day in his little
boat on the lake, however hard the wind might blow.
The fisherman said he had seen him in the part of
the lake where the wind blew the hardest, and that
he could hardly pull against the waves.
“His mind is away. I don’t
think he’ll do any good in this country,”
his father said.
And the old man was very sad, for
when James was gone he would have no one, and he did
not feel he would be able to work the farm for many
years longer. He and James used to sit smoking
on either side of the fireplace, and Pat Phelan knew
that James was thinking of America all the while.
One evening, as they were sitting like this, the door
was opened suddenly.
“Peter!” said James.
And he jumped up from the fire to welcome his brother.
“It is good for sore eyes to
see the sight of you again,” said Pat Phelan.
“Well, tell us the news. If we had known
you were coming we would have sent the cart to meet
you.”
As Peter did not answer, they began
to think that something must have happened. Perhaps
Peter was not going to become a priest after all, and
would stay at home with his father to learn to work
the farm.
“You see, I did not know myself
until yesterday. It was only yesterday that ”
“So you are not going to be
a priest? We are glad to hear that, Peter.”
“How is that?”
He had thought over what he should
say, and without waiting to hear why they were glad,
he told them the professor, who overlooked his essays,
had refused to recognize their merits he
had condemned the best things in them; and Peter said
it was extraordinary that such a man should be appointed
to such a place. Then he told that the Church
afforded little chances for the talents of young men
unless they had a great deal of influence.
And they sat listening to him, hearing
how the college might be reformed. He had a gentle,
winning way of talking, and his father and brother
forgot their own misfortunes thinking how they might
help him.
“Well, Peter, you have come back none too soon.”
“And how is that? What
have you been doing since I went away? You all
wanted to hear about Maynooth.”
“Of course we did, my boy. Tell him, James.”
“Oh! it is nothing particular,”
said James. “It is only this, Peter I
am going to America.”
“And who will work the farm?”
“Well, Peter, we were thinking that you might
work it yourself.”
“I work the farm! Going to America, James!
But what about Catherine?”
“That’s what I’m
coming to, Peter. She has gone into a convent.
And that’s what’s happened since you went
away. I can’t stop here, Peter I
will never do a hand’s turn in Ireland and
father is getting too old to go to the fairs.
That’s what we were thinking when you came in.”
There was a faint tremble in his voice,
and Peter saw how heart-sick his brother was.
“I will do my best, James.”
“I knew you would.”
“Yes, I will,” said Peter; and he sat
down by the fire.
And his father said:
“You are not smoking, Peter.”
“No,” he said; “I’ve given
up smoking.”
“Will you drink something?”
said James. “We have got a drain of whiskey
in the house.”
“No, I have had to give up spirits.
It doesn’t agree with me. And I don’t
take tea in the morning. Have you got any cocoa
in the house?”
It was not the cocoa he liked, but he said he would
be able to manage.
IV
And when the old man came through
the doorway in the morning buttoning his braces, he
saw Peter stirring his cocoa. There was something
absurd as well as something attractive in Peter, and
his father had to laugh when he said he couldn’t
eat American bacon.
“My stomach wouldn’t retain
it. I require very little, but that little must
be the best.”
And when James took him into the farmyard,
he noticed that Peter crossed the yard like one who
had never been in a farmyard before; he looked less
like a farmer than ever, and when he looked at the
cows, James wondered if he could be taught to see
the difference between an Alderney and a Durham.
“There’s Kate,”
he said; “she’s a good cow; as good a cow
as we have, and we can’t get any price for her
because of that hump on her back.”
They went to the styes; there were
three pigs there and a great sow with twelve little
bonhams, and the little ones were white with silky
hair, and Peter asked how old they were, and when they
would be fit for killing. And James told Peter
there were seven acres in the Big field.
“Last year we had oats in the
Holly field; next year you’ll sow potatoes there.”
And he explained the rotation of crops. “And,
now,” he said, “we will go down to Crow’s
Oak. You have never done any ploughing, Peter;
I will show you.”
It was extraordinary how little Peter
knew. He could not put the harness on the horse,
and he reminded James that he had gone into the post-office
when he left school. James gave in to him that
the old red horse was hard to drive, but James could
drive him better than Peter could lead him; and Peter
marvelled at the skill with which James raised his
hand from the shaft of the plough and struck the horse
with the rein whilst he kept the plough steady with
the other hand.
“Now, Peter, you must try again.”
At the end of the headland where the
plough turned, Peter always wanted to stop and talk
about something; but James said they would have to
get on with the work, and Peter walked after the plough,
straining after it for three hours, and then he said:
“James, let me drive the horse. I can do
no more.”
“You won’t feel it so
much when you are accustomed to it,” said James.
Anything seemed to him better than
a day’s ploughing: even getting up at three
in the morning to go to a fair.
He went to bed early, as he used to,
and they talked of him over the fire, as they used
to. But however much they talked, they never seemed
to find what they were seeking his vocation until
one evening an idea suddenly rose out of their talk.
“A good wife is the only thing for Peter,”
said Pat.
And they went on thinking.
“A husband would be better for her,” said
Pat Phelan, “than a convent.”
“I cannot say I agree with you
there. Think of all the good them nuns are doing.”
“She isn’t a nun yet,” said Pat
Phelan.
And the men smoked on a while, and they ruminated
as they smoked.
“It would be better, James,
that Peter got her than that she should stay in a
convent.”
“I wouldn’t say that,” said James.
“You see,” said his father,
“she did not go into the convent because she
had a calling, but because she was crossed in love.”
And after another long while James
said, “It is a bitter dose, I am thinking, father,
but you must go and tell her that Peter has left Maynooth.”
“And what would the Reverend
Mother be saying to me if I went to her with such
a story as that? Isn’t your heart broken
enough already, James, without wanting me to be breaking
it still more? Sure, James, you could never see
her married to Peter?”
“If she were to marry Peter
I should be able to go to America, and that is the
only thing for me.”
“That would be poor consolation for you, James.”
“Well, it is the best I shall
get, to see Peter settled, and to know that there
will be some one to look after you, father.”
“You are a good son, James.”
They talked on, and as they talked
it became clearer to them that some one must go to-morrow
to the convent and tell Catherine that Peter had left
Maynooth.
“But wouldn’t it be a
pity,” said Pat Phelan, “to tell her this
if Peter is not going to marry her in the end?”
“I’ll have him out of
his bed,” said James, “and he’ll
tell us before this fire if he will or won’t.”
“It’s a serious thing
you are doing, James, to get a girl out of a convent,
I am thinking.”
“It will be on my advice that
you will be doing this, father; and now I’ll
go and get Peter out of his bed.”
And Peter was brought in, asking what
they wanted of him at this hour of the night; and
when they told him what they had been talking about
and the plans they had been making, he said he would
be catching his death of cold, and they threw some
sods of turf on the fire.
“It is against myself that I
am asking a girl to leave the convent, even for you,
Peter,” said James. “But we can think
of nothing else.”
“Peter will be able to tell
us if it is a sin that we’d be doing.”
“It is only right that Catherine
should know the truth before she made her vows,”
Peter said. “But this is very unexpected,
father. I really ”
“Peter, I’d take it as
a great kindness. I shall never do a hand’s
turn in this country. I want to get to America.
It will be the saving of me.”
“And now, Peter,” said
his father, “tell us for sure if you will have
the girl?”
“Faith I will, though I never
thought of marriage, if it be to please James.”
Seeing how heart-sick his brother was, he said, “I
can’t say I like her as you like her; but if
she likes me I will promise to do right by her.
James, you’re going away; we may never see you
again. It is all very sad. And now you’ll
let me go back to bed.”
“Peter, I knew you would not
say no to me; I can’t bear this any longer.”
“And now,” said Peter,
“let me go back to bed. I am catching my
death.”
And he ran back to his room, and left
his brother and father talking by the fire.
V
Pat thought the grey mare would take
him in faster than the old red horse; and the old
man sat, his legs swinging over the shaft, wondering
what he should say to the Reverend Mother, and how
she would listen to his story; and when he came to
the priest’s house a great wish came upon him
to ask the priest’s advice. The priest was
walking up his little lawn reading his breviary, and
a great fear came on Pat Phelan, and he thought he
must ask the priest what he should do.
The priest heard the story over the
little wall, and he was sorry for the old man.
It took him a long time to tell the
story, and when he was finished the priest said:
“But where are you going, Pat?”
“That’s what I stopped
to tell you, your reverence. I was thinking I
might be going to the convent to tell Catherine that
Peter has come back.”
“Well it wasn’t yourself
that thought of doing such a thing as that, Pat Phelan.”
But at every word the priest said
Pat Phelan’s face grew more stubborn, and at
last he said:
“Well, your reverence, that
isn’t the advice I expected from you,”
and he struck the mare with the ends of the reins
and let her trot up the hill. Nor did the mare
stop trotting till she had reached the top of the
hill, and Pat Phelan had never known her do such a
thing before. From the top of the hill there
was a view of the bog, and Pat thought of the many
fine loads of turf he had had out of that bog, and
the many young fellows he had seen there cutting turf.
“But every one is leaving the country,”
the old man said to himself, and his chin dropped into
his shirt-collar, and he held the reins loosely, letting
the mare trot or walk as she liked. And he let
many pass him without bidding them the hour of the
day, for he was too much overcome by his own grief
to notice anyone.
The mare trotted gleefully; soft clouds
curled over the low horizon far away, and the sky
was blue overhead; and the poor country was very beautiful
in the still autumn weather, only it was empty.
He passed two or three fine houses that the gentry
had left to caretakers long ago. The fences were
gone, cattle strayed through the woods, the drains
were choked with weeds, the stagnant water was spreading
out into the fields, and Pat Phelan noticed these
things, for he remembered what this country was forty
years ago. The devil a bit of lonesomeness there
was in it then.
He asked a girl if they would be thatching
the house that autumn; but she answered that the thatch
would last out the old people, and she was going to
join her sister in America.
“She’s right they’re
all there now. Why should anyone stop here?”
the old man said.
The mare tripped, and he took this
to be a sign that he should turn back. But he
did not go back. Very soon the town began, in
broken pavements and dirty cottages; going up the
hill there were some slated roofs, but there was no
building of any importance except the church.
At the end of the main street, where
the trees began again, the convent stood in the middle
of a large garden, and Pat Phelan remembered he had
heard that the nuns were doing well with their dairy
and their laundry.
He knocked, and a lay-sister peeped
through the grating, and then she opened the door
a little way, and at first he thought he would have
to go back without seeing either Catherine or the
Reverend Mother. For he had got no further than
“Sister Catherine,” when the lay-sister
cut him short with the news that Sister Catherine
was in retreat, and could see no one. The Reverend
Mother was busy.
“But,” said Pat, “you’re
not going to let Catherine take vows without hearing
me.”
“If it is about Sister Catherine’s vows ”
“Yes, it is about them I’ve come, and
I must see the Reverend Mother.”
The lay-sister said Sister Catherine
was going to be clothed at the end of the week.
“Well, that is just the reason I’ve come
here.”
On that the lay-sister led him into
the parlour, and went in search of the Reverend Mother.
The floor was so thickly bees-waxed
that the rug slipped under his feet, and, afraid lest
he might fall down, he stood quite still, impressed
by the pious pictures on the walls, and by the large
books upon the table, and by the poor-box, and by
the pious inscriptions. He began to think how
much easier was this pious life than the life of the
world the rearing of children, the failure
of crops, and the loneliness. Here life slips
away without one perceiving it, and it seemed a pity
to bring her back to trouble. He stood holding
his hat in his old hands, and the time seemed very
long. At last the door opened, and a tall woman
with sharp, inquisitive eyes came in.
“You have come to speak to me about Sister Catherine?”
“Yes, my lady.”
“And what have you got to tell me about her?”
“Well, my son thought and I
thought last night we were all thinking
we had better tell you last night was the
night that my son came back.”
At the word Maynooth a change of expression
came into her face, but when he told that Peter no
longer wished to be a priest her manner began to grow
hostile again, and she got up from her chair and said:
“But really, Mr. Phelan, I have
got a great deal of business to attend to.”
“But, my lady, you see that
Catherine wanted to marry my son Peter, and it is
because he went to Maynooth that she came here.
I don’t think she’d want to be a nun if
she knew that he didn’t want to be a priest.”
“I cannot agree with you, Mr.
Phelan, in that. I have seen a great deal of
Sister Catherine she has been with us now
for nearly a year and if she ever entertained
the wishes you speak of, I feel sure she has forgotten
them. Her mind is now set on higher things.”
“Of course you may be right,
my lady, very likely. It isn’t for me to
argue with you about such things; but you see I have
come a long way, and if I could see Catherine herself ”
“That is impossible. Catherine is in retreat.”
“So the lay-sister told me; but I thought ”
“Sister Catherine is going to
be clothed next Saturday, and I can assure you, Mr.
Phelan, that the wishes you tell me of are forgotten.
I know her very well. I can answer for Sister
Catherine.”
The rug slipped under the peasant’s
feet and his eyes wandered round the room; and the
Reverend Mother told him how busy she was, she really
could not talk to him any more that day.
“You see, it all rests with Sister Catherine
herself.”
“That’s just it,”
said the old man; “that’s just it, my lady.
My son Peter, who has come from Maynooth, told us
last night that Catherine should know everything that
has happened, so that she may not be sorry afterwards,
otherwise I wouldn’t have come here, my lady.
I wouldn’t have come to trouble you.”
“I am sorry, Mr. Phelan, that
your son Peter has left Maynooth. It is sad indeed
when one finds that one has not a vocation. But
that happens sometimes. I don’t think that
it will be Catherine’s case. And now, Mr.
Phelan, I must ask you to excuse me,” and the
Reverend Mother persuaded the unwilling peasant into
the passage, and he followed the lay-sister down the
passage to the gate and got into his cart again.
“No wonder,” he thought,
“they don’t want to let Catherine out,
now that they have got that great farm, and not one
among them, I’ll be bound, who can manage it
except Catherine.”
At the very same moment the same thoughts
passed through the Reverend Mother’s mind.
She had not left the parlour yet, and stood thinking
how she should manage if Catherine were to leave them.
“Why,” she asked, “should he choose
to leave Maynooth at such a time? It is indeed
unfortunate. There is nothing,” she reflected,
“that gives a woman so much strength as to receive
the veil. She always feels stronger after her
clothing. She feels that the world is behind her.”
The Reverend Mother reflected that
perhaps it would be better for Catherine’s sake
and for Peter’s sake indeed, for everyone’s
sake if she were not to tell Catherine
of Pat Phelan’s visit until after the clothing.
She might tell Catherine three months hence. The
disadvantage of this would be that Catherine might
hear that Peter had left Maynooth. In a country
place news of this kind cannot be kept out of a convent.
And if Catherine were going to leave, it were better
that she should leave them now than leave them six
months hence, after her clothing.
“There are many ways of looking
at it,” the Reverend Mother reflected.
“If I don’t tell her, she may never hear
it. I might tell her later when she has taught
one of the nuns how to manage the farm.”
She took two steps towards the door and stopped to
think again, and she was thinking when a knock came
to the door. She answered mechanically, “Come
in,” and Catherine wondered at the Reverend Mother’s
astonishment.
“I wish to speak to you, dear
mother,” she said timidly. But seeing the
Reverend Mother’s face change expression, she
said, “Perhaps another time will suit you better.”
The Reverend Mother stood looking
at her, irresolute; and Catherine, who had never seen
the Reverend Mother irresolute before, wondered what
was passing in her mind.
“I know you are busy, dear mother,
but what I have come to tell you won’t take
very long.”
“Well, then, tell it to me, my child.”
“It is only this, Reverend Mother.
I had better tell you now, for you are expecting the
Bishop, and my clothing is fixed for the end of the
week, and ”
“And,” said the Reverend
Mother, “you feel that you are not certain of
your vocation.”
“That is it, dear mother.
I thought I had better tell you.” Reading
disappointment in the nun’s face, Catherine said,
“I hesitated to tell you before. I had
hoped that the feeling would pass away; but, dear
mother, it isn’t my fault; everyone has not a
vocation.”
Then Catherine noticed a softening
in the Reverend Mother’s face, and she asked
Catherine to sit down by her; and Catherine told her
she had come to the convent because she was crossed
in love, and not as the others came, because they
wished to give up their wills to God.
“Our will is the most precious
thing in us, and that is why the best thing we can
do is to give it up to you, for in giving it up to
you, dear mother, we are giving it up to God.
I know all these things, but ”
“You should have told me of
this when you came here, Catherine, and then I would
not have advised you to come to live with us.”
“Mother, you must forgive me.
My heart was broken, and I could not do otherwise.
And you have said yourself that I made the dairy a
success.”
“If you had stayed with us,
Catherine, you would have made the dairy a success;
but we have got no one to take your place. However,
since it is the will of God, I suppose we must try
to get on as well as we can without you. And
now tell me, Catherine, when it was that you changed
your mind. It was only the other day you told
me you wished to become a nun. You said you were
most anxious for your clothing. How is it that
you have changed your mind?”
Catherine’s eyes brightened,
and speaking like one illuminated by some inward light,
she said:
“It was the second day of my
retreat, mother. I was walking in the garden
where the great cross stands amid the rocks. Sister
Angela and Sister Mary were with me, and I was listening
to what they were saying, when suddenly my thoughts
were taken away and I remembered those at home.
I remembered Mr. Phelan, and James, who wanted to marry
me, but whom I would not marry; and it seemed to me
that I saw him leaving his father it seemed
to me that I saw him going away to America. I
don’t know how it was you will not
believe me, dear mother but I saw the ship
lying in the harbour, that is to take him away.
And then I thought of the old man sitting at home
with no one to look after him, and it was not a seeming,
but a certainty, mother. It came over me suddenly
that my duty was not here, but there. Of course
you can’t agree with me, but I cannot resist
it, it was a call.”
“But the Evil One, my dear child,
calls us too; we must be careful not to mistake the
devil’s call for God’s call.”
“Mother, I daresay.”
Tears came to Catherine’s eyes, she began to
weep. “I can’t argue with you, mother,
I only know ” She could not speak
for sobbing, and between her sobs she said, “I
only know that I must go home.”
She recovered herself very soon, and
the Reverend Mother took her hand and said:
“Well, my dear child, I shall not stand in your
way.”
Even the Reverend Mother could not
help thinking that the man who got her would get a
charming wife. Her face was rather long and white,
and she had long female eyes with dark lashes, and
her eyes were full of tenderness. She had spoken
out of so deep a conviction that the Reverend Mother
had begun to believe that her mission was perhaps to
look after this hapless young man; and when she told
the Reverend Mother that yesterday she had felt a
conviction that Peter was not going to be a priest,
the Reverend Mother felt that she must tell her of
Pat Phelan’s visit.
“I did not tell you at once,
my dear child, because I wished to know from yourself
how you felt about this matter,” the nun said;
and she told Catherine that she was quite right, that
Peter had left Maynooth. “He hopes to marry
you, Catherine.”
A quiet glow came into the postulant’s
eyes, and she seemed engulfed in some deep joy.
“How did he know that I cared
for him?” the girl said, half to herself, half
to the nun.
“I suppose his father or his
brother must have told him,” the nun answered.
And then Catherine, fearing to show
too much interest in things that the nun deemed frivolous,
said, “I am sorry to leave before my work is
done here. But, mother, so it has all come true;
it was extraordinary what I felt that morning in the
garden,” she said, returning to her joy.
“Mother, do you believe in visions?”
“The saints, of course, have
had visions. We believe in the visions of the
saints.”
“But after all, mother, there
are many duties besides religious duties.”
“I suppose, Catherine, you feel
it to be your duty to look after this young man?”
“Yes, I think that is it.
I must go now, mother, and see Sister Angela, and
write out for her all I know about the farm, and what
she is to do, for if one is not very careful with
a farm one loses a great deal of money. There
is no such thing as making two ends meet. One
either makes money or loses money.”
And then Catherine again seemed to
be engulfed in some deep joy, out of which she roused
herself with difficulty.
VI
When her postulant left the room,
the Reverend Mother wrote to Pat Phelan, asking him
to come next morning with his cart to fetch Catherine.
And next morning, when the lay-sister told Catherine
that he was waiting for her, the Reverend Mother said:
“We shall be able to manage,
Catherine. You have told Sister Angela everything,
and you will not forget to come to see us, I hope.”
“Mr. Phelan,” said the
lay-sister, “told me to tell you that one of
his sons is going to America to-day. Sister Catherine
will have to go at once if she wishes to see him.”
“I must see James. I must
see him before he leaves for America. Oh,”
she said, turning to the Reverend Mother, “do
you remember that I told you I had seen the ship?
Everything has come true. You can’t believe
any longer that it is not a call.”
Her box was in the cart, and as Pat
turned the mare round he said: “I hope
we won’t miss James at the station. That’s
the reason I came for you so early. I thought
you would like to see him.”
“Why did you not come earlier?”
she cried. “All my happiness will be spoilt
if I don’t see James.”
The convent was already behind her,
and her thoughts were now upon poor James, whose heart
she had broken. She knew that Peter would never
love her as well as James, but this could not be helped.
Her vision in the garden consoled her, for she could
no longer doubt that she was doing right in going
to Peter, that her destiny was with him.
She knew the road well, she knew all
the fields, every house and every gap in the walls.
Sign after sign went by; at last they were within
sight of the station. The signal was still up,
and the train had not gone yet; at the end of the
platform she saw James and Peter. She let Pat
Phelan drive the cart round; she could get to them
quicker by running down the steps and crossing the
line. The signal went down.
“Peter,” she said, “we
shall have time to talk presently. I want to
speak to James now.”
And they walked up to the platform,
leaving Peter to talk to his father.
“Paddy Maguire is outside,”
Pat said; “I asked him to stand at the mare’s
head.”
“James,” said Catherine,
“it is very sad you are going away. We may
never see you again, and there is no time to talk,
and I’ve much to say to you.”
“I am going away, Catherine,
but maybe I will be coming back some day. I was
going to say maybe you would be coming over after me;
but the land is good land, and you’ll be able
to make a living out of it.”
And then they spoke of Peter.
James said he was too great a scholar for a farmer,
and it was a pity he could not find out what he was
fit for for surely he was fit for something
great after all.
And Catherine said:
“I shall be able to make something out of Peter.”
His emotion almost overcame him, and
Catherine looked aside so that she should not see
his tears.
“This is no time for talking
of Peter,” she said. “You are going
away, James, but you will come back. You will
find another woman better than I am in America, James.
I don’t know what to say to you. The train
will be here in a minute. I am distracted.
But one day you will be coming back, and we shall
be very proud of you when you come back. I shall
rebuild the house, and we shall be all happy then.
Oh! here’s the train. Good-bye; you have
been very good to me. Oh, James! shall I ever
see you again?”
Then the crowd swept them along, and
James had to take his father’s hand and his
brother’s hand. There were a great many
people in the station hundreds were going
away in the same ship that James was going in.
The train was followed by wailing relatives. They
ran alongside of the train, waving their hands until
they could no longer keep up with the train.
James waved a red handkerchief until the train was
out of sight. It disappeared in a cutting, and
a moment after Catherine and Peter remembered they
were standing side by side. They were going to
be married in a few days! They started a little,
hearing a step beside them. It was old Phelan.
“I think,” he said, “it is time
to be getting home.”