In ’95 I was agent of the Irish
Industrial Society, and I spent three days with Father
O’Hara making arrangements for the establishment
of looms, for the weaving of homespuns and for
acquiring plots of ground whereon to build schools
where the village girls could practice lace-making.
The priest was one of the chief supporters
of our movement. He was a wise and tactful man,
who succeeded not only in living on terms of friendship
with one of the worst landlords in Ireland, but in
obtaining many concessions from him. When he
came to live in Culloch the landlord had said to him
that what he would like to do would be to run the
ploughshare through the town, and to turn “Culloch”
into Bullock. But before many years had passed
Father O’Hara had persuaded this man to use
his influence to get a sufficient capital to start
a bacon factory. And the town of Culloch possessed
no other advantages except an energetic and foreseeing
parish priest. It was not a railway terminus,
nor was it a seaport.
But, perhaps because of his many admirable
qualities, Father O’Hara is not the subject
of this story. We find stories in the lives of
the weak and the foolish, and the improvident, and
his name occurs here because he is typical of not
a few priests I have met in Ireland.
I left him early one Sunday morning,
and he saying that twenty odd miles lay before me,
and my first stopping place would be Ballygliesane.
I could hear Mass there at Father Madden’s chapel,
and after Mass I could call upon him, and that when
I had explained the objects of our Society I could
drive to Rathowen, where there was a great gathering
of the clergy. All the priests within ten miles
round would be there for the consecration of the new
church.
On an outside car one divides one’s
time in moralising on the state of the country or
in chatting with the driver, and as the driver seemed
somewhat taciturn I examined the fields as we passed
them. They were scanty fields, drifting from
thin grass into bog, and from bog into thin grass
again, and in the distance there was a rim of melancholy
mountains, and the peasants I saw along the road seemed
a counterpart of the landscape. “The land
has made them,” I said, “according to its
own image and likeness,” and I tried to find
words to define the yearning that I read in their
eyes as we drove past. But I could find no words
that satisfied me.
“Only music can express their
yearning, and they have written it themselves in their
folk tunes.”
My driver’s eyes were the eyes
that one meets everywhere in Ireland, pale, wandering
eyes that the land seems to create, and I wondered
if his character corresponded to his eyes; and with
a view to finding if it did I asked him some questions
about Father Madden. He seemed unwilling to talk,
but I soon began to see that his silence was the result
of shyness rather than dislike of conversation.
He was a gentle, shy lad, and I told him that Father
O’Hara had said I would see the loneliest parish
in Ireland.
“It’s true for him,”
he answered, and again there was silence. At the
end of a mile I asked him if the land in Father Madden’s
parish was poor, and he said no, it was the best land
in the country, and then I was certain that there
was some mystery attached to Father Madden.
“The road over there is the mearing.”
And soon after passing this road I
noticed that although the land was certainly better
than the land about Culloch, there seemed to be very
few people on it; and what was more significant than
the untilled fields were the ruins, for they were
not the cold ruins of twenty, or thirty, or forty
years ago when the people were evicted and their tillage
turned into pasture, but the ruins of cabins that had
been lately abandoned. Some of the roof trees
were still unbroken, and I said that the inhabitants
must have left voluntarily.
“Sure they did. Arn’t we all going
to America.”
“Then it was not the landlord?”
“Ah, it’s the landlord who’d have
them back if he could.”
“And the priest? How does he get his dues?”
“Those on the other side are
always sending their money to their friends and they
pay the priest. Sure why should we be staying?
Isn’t the most of us over there already.
It’s more like going home than leaving home.”
I told him we hoped to establish new
looms in the country, and that Father O’Hara
had promised to help us.
“Father O’Hara is a great man,”
he said.
“Well, don’t you think
that with the revival of industries the people might
be induced to stay at home?”
“Sorra stay,” said he.
I could see that he was not so convinced
about the depopulation of Father O’Hara’s
parish as he was about Father Madden’s, and I
tried to induce him to speak his mind.
“Well, your honour, there’s
many that think there’s a curse on the parish.”
“A curse! And who put the curse on the
parish?”
“Isn’t that the bell ringing for Mass,
your honour?”
And listening I could head a doleful pealing in the
grey sky.
“Does Father Madden know of this curse?”
“Indeed he does; none better.”
“And does he believe in it?”
“There’s many who will
tell you that he has been saying Masses for the last
ten years, that the curse may be taken off the parish.”
We could now hear the bell tolling
quite distinctly, and the driver pointed with his
whip, and I could see the cross above the fir-trees.
“And there,” he said,
“is Bridget Coyne,” and I saw a blind woman
being led along the road. At the moment I supposed
he had pointed the woman out because she was blind,
though this did not seem a sufficient reason for the
note of wonder in his voice; but we were within a few
yards of the chapel and there was no time to ask him
who Bridget Coyne was. I had to speak to him
about finding stabling for the horse. That, he
said, was not necessary, he would let the horse graze
in the chapel-yard while he himself knelt by the door,
so that he could hear Mass and keep an eye on his
horse. “I shall want you half an hour after
Mass is over.” Half an hour, I thought,
would suffice to explain the general scope of our
movement to Father Madden. I had found that the
best way was to explain to each priest in turn the
general scope of the movement, and then to pay a second
visit a few weeks later. The priest would have
considered the ideas that I had put into his head,
he would have had time to assimilate them in the interval,
and I could generally tell in the second visit if
I should find in him a friend, an enemy, or an indifferent.
There was something extraordinary
in the appearance of Father Madden’s church,
a few peasants crouched here and there, and among them
I saw the blind woman that the driver had pointed
out on the road. She did not move during Mass;
she knelt or crouched with her shawl drawn over her
head, and it was not until the acolyte rang the communion
bell that she dared to lift herself up. That
day she was the only communicant, and the acolyte
did not turn the altar cloth over the rails, he gave
her a little bit of the cloth to hold, and, holding
it firmly in her fingers, she lifted up her blind
face, and when the priest placed the Host on her tongue
she sank back overcome.
“This blind woman,” I
said to myself, “will be the priest’s last
parishioner,” and I saw the priest saying Mass
in a waste church for the blind woman, everyone else
dead or gone.
All her days I said are spent by the
cabin fire hearing of people going to America, her
relations, her brothers and sisters had gone, and every
seventh day she is led to hear Mass, to receive the
Host, and to sink back. To-day and to-morrow
and the next day will be spent brooding over her happiness,
and in the middle of the week she will begin to look
forward to the seventh day.
The blind woman seemed strangely symbolical
and the parish, the priest too. A short, thick-set
man, with a large bald head and a fringe of reddish
hair; his hands were fat and short, the nails were
bitten, the nose was fleshy and the eyes were small,
and when he turned towards the people and said “Pax
Vobiscum” there was a note of command in his
voice. The religion he preached was one of fear.
His sermon was filled with flames and gridirons, and
ovens and devils with pitchforks, and his parishioners
groaned and shook their heads and beat their breasts.
I did not like Father Madden or his
sermon. I remembered that there were few young
people left in his parish, and it seemed waste of time
to appeal to him for help in establishing industries;
but it was my business to seek the co-operation of
every priest, and I could not permit myself such a
licence as the passing over of any priest. What
reason could I give? that I did not like his sermon
or his bald head? And after Mass I went round
to see him in the sacristy.
The sacristy was a narrow passage,
and there were two acolytes in it, and the priest
was taking off his vestments, and people were knocking
constantly at the door, and the priest had to tell
the acolyte what answer to give. I had only proposed
to myself to sketch the objects of our organisation
in a general outline to the priest, but it was impossible
even to do this, so numerous were the interruptions.
When I came to unfold our system of payments, the
priest said:
“It is impossible for me to
listen to you here. You had better come round
with me to my house.”
The invitation was not quite in accordance
with the idea I had formed of the man, and while walking
across the fields he asked me if I would have a cup
of tea with him, and we spoke of the new church at
Rathowen. It seemed legitimate to deplore the
building of new churches, and I mentioned that while
the churches were increasing the people were decreasing,
and I ventured to regret that only two ideas seemed
to obtain in Ireland, the idea of the religious vocation
and the idea of emigration.
“I see,” said Father Madden,
“you are imbued with all the new ideas.”
“But,” I said, “you
don’t wish the country to disappear.”
“I do not wish it to disappear,”
he said, “but if it intends to disappear we
can do nothing to prevent it from disappearing.
Everyone is opposed to emigration now, but I remember
when everyone was advocating it. Teach them English
and emigrate them was the cure. Now,” he
said, “you wish them to learn Irish and to stay
at home. And you are quite certain that this
time you have found out the true way. I live
very quiet down here, but I hear all the new doctrines.
Besides teaching Paddy Durkin to feed his pig, I hear
you are going to revive the Gothic. Music and
literature are to follow, and among these resurrections
there is a good deal of talk about pagan Ireland.”
We entered a comfortable, well-furnished
cottage, with a good carpet on the floor, and the
walls lined with books, and on either side of the
fireplace there were easy chairs, and I thought of
the people “on the other side.”
He took a pot of tea from the hob, and said:
“Now let me pour you out a cup
of tea, and you shall tell me about the looms.”
“But,” I said, “Father
Madden, you don’t believe much in the future
of Ireland, you don’t take very kindly to new
ideas.”
“New ideas! Every ten years
there is a new set. If I had said teach them
Irish ten years ago I should have been called a fool,
and now if I say teach them English and let them go
to America I am called a reactionist. You have
come from Father O’Hara;” I could see from
the way he said the name that the priests were not
friends; “and he has told you a great many of
my people have gone to America. And perhaps you
heard him say that they have not gone to America for
the sake of better wages but because my rule is too
severe, because I put down cross-road dances.
Father O’Hara and I think differently, and I
have no doubt he thinks he is quite right.”
While we breakfasted Father Madden
said some severe things about Father O’Hara,
about the church he had built, and the debt that was
still upon it. I suppose my face told Father
Madden of the interest I took in his opinions, for
during breakfast he continued to speak his mind very
frankly on all the subjects I wished to hear him speak
on, and when breakfast was over I offered him a cigar
and proposed that we should go for a walk on his lawn.
“Yes,” he said, “there
are people who think I am a reactionist because I
put down the ball-alley.”
“The ball-alley!”
“There used to be a ball-alley
by the church, but the boys wouldn’t stop playing
ball during Mass, so I put it down. But you will
excuse me a moment.” The priest darted
off, and I saw him climb down the wall into the road;
he ran a little way along the road calling at the top
of his voice, and when I got to the wall I saw him
coming back. “Let me help you,” I
said. I pulled him up and we continued our walk;
and as soon as he had recovered his breath he told
me that he had caught sight of a boy and girl loitering.
“And I hunted them home.”
I asked him why, knowing well the reason, and he said:
“Young people should not loiter
along the roads. I don’t want bastards
in my parish.”
It seemed to me that perhaps bastards
were better than no children at all, even from a religious
point of view one can’t have religion
without life, and bastards may be saints.
“In every country,” I
said, “boys and girls walk together, and the
only idealism that comes into the lives of peasants
is between the ages of eighteen and twenty, when young
people meet in the lanes and linger by the stiles.
Afterwards hard work in the fields kills aspiration.”
“The idealism of the Irish people
does not go into sex, it goes into religion.”
“But religion does not help
to continue the race, and we’re anxious to preserve
the race, otherwise there will be no religion, or a
different religion in Ireland.”
“That is not certain.”
Later on I asked him if the people
still believed in fairies. He said that traces
of such beliefs survived among the mountain folk.
“There is a great deal of Paganism
in the language they wish to revive, though it may
be as free from Protestantism as Father O’Hara
says it is.”
For some reason or other I could see
that folk-lore was distasteful to him, and he mentioned
causally that he had put a stop to the telling of
fairy-tales round the fire in the evening, and the
conversation came to a pause.
“Now I won’t detain you
much longer, Father Madden. My horse and car
are waiting for me. You will think over the establishment
of looms. You don’t want the country to
disappear.”
“No, I don’t! And
though I do not think the establishment of work-rooms
an unmixed blessing I will help you. You must
not believe all Father O’Hara says.”
The horse began to trot, and I to
think. He had said that the idealism of the Irish
peasant goes into other things than sex.
“If this be true, the peasant
is doomed,” I said to myself, and I remembered
that Father Madden would not admit that religion is
dependent on life, and I pondered. In this country
religion is hunting life to the death. In other
countries religion has managed to come to terms with
Life. In the South men and women indulge their
flesh and turn the key on religious inquiry; in the
North men and women find sufficient interest in the
interpretation of the Bible and the founding of new
religious sects. One can have faith or morals,
both together seem impossible. Remembering how
the priest had chased the lovers, I turned to the
driver and asked if there was no courting in the country.
“There used to be courting,”
he said, “but now it is not the custom of the
country any longer.”
“How do you make up your marriages?”
“The marriages are made by the
parents, and I’ve often seen it that the young
couple did not see each other until the evening before
the wedding sometimes not until the very
morning of the wedding. Many a marriage I’ve
seen broken off for a half a sovereign well,”
he said, “if not for half a sovereign, for a
sovereign. One party will give forty-nine pounds
and the other party wants fifty, and they haggle over
that pound, and then the boy’s father will say,
“Well, if you won’t give the pound you
can keep the girl.”
“But do none of you ever want
to walk out with a young girl?” I said.
“We’re like other people,
sir. We would like it well enough, but it isn’t
the custom of the country, and if we did it we would
be talked about.”
I began to like my young carman, and
his answer to my question pleased me as much as any
answer he had yet given me, and I told him that Father
Madden objected to the looms because they entailed
meetings, etc., and if he were not present the
boys would talk on subjects they should not talk about.
“Now, do you think it is right
for a priest to prevent men from meeting to discuss
their business?” I said, turning to the driver,
determined to force him into an expression of opinion.
“It isn’t because he thinks
the men would talk about things they should not talk
about that he is against an organization. Didn’t
he tell your honour that things would have to take
their course. That is why he will do nothing,
because he knows well enough that everyone in the parish
will have to leave it, that every house will have to
fall. Only the chapel will remain standing, and
the day will come when Father Tom will say Mass to
the blind woman and to no one else. Did you see
the blind woman to-day at Mass, sir, in the right-hand
corner, with the shawl over her head?”
“Yes,” I said, “I
saw her. If any one is a saint, that woman seems
to be one.”
“Yes, sir, she is a very pious
woman, and her piety is so well known that she is
the only one who dared to brave Father Madden; she
was the only one who dared to take Julia Cahill to
live with her. It was Julia who put the curse
on the parish.”
“A curse! But you are joking.”
“No, your honour, there was
no joke in it. I was only telling you what must
come. She put her curse on the village twenty
years ago, and every year a roof has fallen in and
a family has gone away.”
“And you believe that all this
happens on account of Julia’s curse?”
“To be sure I do,” he
said. He flicked his horse pensively with the
whip, and my disbelief seemed to disincline him for
further conversation.
“But,” I said, “who
is Julia Cahill, and how did she get the power to
lay a curse upon the village? Was she a young
woman or an old one?”
“A young one, sir.”
“How did she get the power?”
“Didn’t she go every night
into the mountains? She was seen one night over
yonder, and the mountains are ten miles off, and whom
would she have gone to see except the fairies?
And who could have given her the power to curse the
village?”
“But who saw her in the mountains?
She would never walk so far in one evening.”
“A shepherd saw her, sir.”
“But he may have been mistaken.”
“He saw her speaking to some
one, and nobody for the last two years that she was
in this village dared to speak to her but the fairies
and the old woman you saw at Mass to-day, sir.”
“Now, tell me about Julia Cahill; what did she
do?”
“It is said, sir, she was the
finest girl in these parts. I was only a gossoon
at the time, about eight or nine, but I remember that
she was tall, sir, nearly as tall as you are, and
she was as straight as one of those poplar-trees,”
he said, pointing to three trees that stood against
the sky. “She walked with a little swing
in her walk, so that all the boys, I have heard, who
were grown up used to look after her, and she had
fine black eyes, sir, and she was nearly always laughing.
This was the time when Father Madden came to the parish.
There was courting in it then, and every young man
and every young woman made their own marriages, and
their marriages were made at the cross-road dancing,
and in the summer evenings under the hedges. There
was no dancer like Julia; they used to gather about
to see her dance, and whoever walked with her under
the hedges in the summer, could never think about
another woman. The village was fairly mad about
her, many a fight there was over her, so I suppose
the priest was right. He had to get rid of her;
but I think he might not have been so hard upon her
as he was. It is said that he went down to her
house one evening; Julia’s people were well-to-do
people; they kept a shop; you might have seen it as
we came along the road, just outside of the village
it is. And when he came in there was one of the
richest farmers in the country who was trying to get
Julia for his wife. Instead of going to Julia,
he had gone to the father. There are two counters
in the shop, and Julia was at the other, and she had
made many a good pound for her parents in that shop;
and he said to the father: ’Now, what fortune
are you going to give with Julia?’ And the father
said there was many a man who would take her without
any, and Julia was listening quietly all the while
at the opposite counter. The man who had come
to marry her did not know what a spirited girl she
was, and he went on till he got the father to say
that he would give L70, and, thinking he had got him
so far, he said, ‘Julia will never cross my
doorway unless you give her L80.’ Julia
said never a word, she just sat there listening, and
it was then that the priest came in. He listened
for awhile, and then he went over to Julia and said,
’Are you not proud to hear that you will have
such a fine fortune?’ And he said, ’I
shall be glad to see you married. I would marry
you for nothing, for I cannot have any more of your
goings-on in my parish. You’re the beginning
of the dancing and courting here; the ball-alley,
too I am going to put all that down.’
Julia did not answer a single word to him, and he went
over to them that were disputing about the L80, and
he said, ’Now, why not make it L75,’ and
the father agreed to that, since the priest said it,
and the three men thought the marriage was settled.
And Father Tom thought that he would get not less
than L10 for the marrying of her. They did not
even think to ask her, and little did they think what
she was going to say, and what she said was that she
would not marry any one until it pleased herself,
and that she would pick a man out of this parish or
out of the next that pleased her. Her husband
should marry her, and not so many pounds to be paid
when they signed the book or when the first baby was
born. This is how marriages are settled now.
Well, sir, the priest went wild when he heard Julia
speak like this; he had only just come to the parish,
and did not know how self-minded Julia was. Her
father did, though, and he said nothing; he let Julia
and the priest fight it out, and he said to the man
who had come to marry her, ’My good man, you
can go your way; you will never get her, I can tell
that.’ And the priest was heard saying,
’Do you think I am going to let you go on turning
the head of every boy in the parish? Do you think
I am going to see fighting and quarrelling for you?
Do you think I am going to see you first with one
boy and then with the other? Do you think I am
going to hear stories like I heard last week about
poor Peter Carey, who they say, has gone out of his
mind on account of your treatment? No,’
he said, ’I will have no more of you; I will
have you out of my parish, or I will have you married.’
Julia tossed her head, and her father got frightened.
He promised the priest that she should walk no more
with the young men in the evenings, for he thought
he could keep her at home; but he might just as well
have promised the priest to tie up the winds.
Julia was out the same evening with a young man, and
the priest saw her; and next evening she was out with
another, and the priest saw her; and not a bit minded
was she at the end of the month to marry any of them.
It is said that he went down to speak to her a second
time, and again a third time; it is said that she laughed
at him. After that there was nothing for him to
do but to speak against her from the altar. The
old people say there were some terrible things in
the sermon. I have heard it said that the priest
called her the evil spirit that sets men mad.
I don’t suppose Father Madden intended to say
so much, but once he is started the words come pouring
out. The people did not understand half of what
he said, but they were very much frightened, and I
think more frightened at what they did not understand
than at what they did. Soon after that the neighbours
began to be afraid to go to buy anything in Cahill’s
shop; even the boys who were most mad after Julia
were afraid to speak to her, and her own father put
her out. No one in the parish would speak to her;
they were all afraid of Father Madden. If it
had not been for the blind woman you saw in the chapel
to-day, sir, she would have had to go to the poor-house.
The blind woman has a little cabin at the edge of the
bog, and there Julia lived. She remained for
nearly two years, and had hardly any clothes on her
back, but she was beautiful for all that, and the boys,
as they came back, sir, from the market used to look
towards the little cabin in the hopes of catching
sight of her. They only looked when they thought
they were not watched, for the priest still spoke against
her. He tried to turn the blind woman against
Julia, but he could not do that; the blind woman kept
her until money came from America. Some say that
she went to America; some say that she joined the fairies.
But one morning she surely left the parish. One
morning Pat Quinn heard somebody knocking at his window,
somebody asking if he would lend his cart to take
somebody to the railway station. It was five o’clock
in the morning, and Pat was a heavy sleeper, and he
would not get up, and it is said that she walked barefooted
all the way to the station, and that is a good ten
miles.”
“But you said something about a curse.”
“Yes, sir, a man who was taking
some sheep to the fair saw her: there was a fair
that day. He saw her standing at the top of the
road. The sun was just above the hill, and looking
back she cursed the village, raising both hands, sir,
up to the sun, and since that curse was spoken, every
year a roof has fallen in.”
There was no doubt that the boy believed
what he had told me; I could see that he liked to
believe the story, that it was natural and sympathetic
to him to believe in it; and for the moment I, too,
believed in a dancing girl becoming the evil spirit
of a village that would not accept her delight.
“He has sent away Life,”
I said to myself, “and now they are following
Life. It is Life they are seeking.”
“It is said, your honour, that
she’s been seen in America, and I am going there
this autumn. You may be sure I will keep a look
out for her.”
“But all this is twenty years
ago. You will not know her. A woman changes
a good deal in twenty years.”
“There will be no change in
her, your honour. She has been with the fairies.
But, sir, we shall be just in time to see the clergy
come out of the cathedral after the consecration,”
he said, and he pointed to the town.
It stood in the middle of a flat country,
and as we approached it the great wall of the cathedral
rose above dirty and broken cottages, and great masses
of masonry extended from the cathedral into the town;
and these were the nunnery, its schools and laundry;
altogether they seemed like one great cloud.
When, I said, will a ray from the
antique sun break forth and light up this country
again?