The town of Peel was in a great commotion
that night. It was the night of St. Patrick’s
Day, and the mackerel fleet were leaving for Kinsale.
A hundred and fifty boats lay in the harbour, each
with a light in its binnacle, a fire in its cabin,
smoke coming from its stove-pipe, and its sails half-set.
The sea was fresh; there was a smart breeze from the
northwest, and the air was full of the brine.
At the turn of the tide the boats began to drop down
the harbour. Then there was a rush of women and
children and old men to the end of the pier. Mothers
were seeing their sons off, women their husbands,
children their fathers, girls their boys all
full of fun and laughter and joyful cries.
One of the girls remembered that the
men were leaving the island before the installation
of the new Governor. Straightway they started
a game of make-believe the make-believe
of electing the Governor for themselves.
“Who are you voting for, Mr.
Quayle?” “Aw, Dempster Christian,
of coorse.” “Throw us your
rope, then, and we’ll give you a pull.” “Heave
oh, girls.” And the rope would be whipped
round a mooring-post on the quay, twenty girls would
seize it, and the boat would go slipping past the
pier, round the castle rocks, and then away before
the north-wester like a gull.
“Good luck, Harry!” “Whips
of money coming home, Jem!” “Write
us a letter mind you write, now I “ “Goodnight,
father!”
No crying yet, no sign of tears nothing
but fresh young faces, bright eyes, and peals of laughter,
as one by one the boats slid out into the fresh, green
water of the bay, and the wind took them, and they
shot into the night. Even the dogs on the quay
frisked about, and barked as if they were going crazy
with delight.
In the midst of this happy scene,
a man, wearing a monkey-jacket and a wide-brimmed
soft hat, came up to the harbour with a little misshapen
dog at his heels. He stood for a moment as if
bewildered by the strange midnight spectacle before
him. Then he walked through the throng of young
people, and listened awhile to their talk and laughter.
No one spoke to him, and he spoke to no one.
His dog followed with its nose at his ankles.
If some other dog, in youthful frolic, frisked and
barked about it, it snarled and snapped, and then
croodled down at his master’s feet and looked
ashamed.
“Dempster, Dempster, getting
a bit ould, eh?” said the man.
After a little while he went quietly
away. Nobody missed him; nobody had observed
him. He had gone back to the town. At a baker’s
shop, which was still open for the convenience of
the departing fleet, he bought a seaman’s biscuit.
With this he returned to the harbour by way of the
shore. At the slip by the Rocket House he went
down to the beach and searched among the shingle until
he found a stone like a dumb-bell, large at the ends
and narrow in the middle. Then he went back to
the quay. The dog followed him and watched him.
The last of the boats was out in the
bay by this time. She could be seen quite plainly
in the moonlight, with the green blade of a wave breaking
on her quarter. Somebody was carrying a light
on her deck, and the giant shadow of a man’s
figure was cast up on the new lugsail. There were
shouts and answers across the splashing water.
Then a fresh young voice on the boat began to sing
“Lovely Mona, fare thee well.” The
women took it up, and the two companies sang it in
turns, verse by verse, the women on the quay and the
men on the boat, with the sea growing wider between
them.
An old fisherman on the skirts of
the crowd had a little girl on his shoulder.
“You’ll not be going to
Kinsale this time, mate?” said a voice behind
him.
“Aw, no, sir. I’ve
seen the day, though. Thirty years I was going,
and better. But I’m done now.”
“Well, that’s the way,
you see. It’s the turn of the young ones
now. Let them sing, God bless them! We’re
not going to fret, though, are we? There’s
one thing we can always do we can always
remember, and that’s some constilation, isn’t
it.”
“I’m doing it reg’lar.” said
the old fisherman.
“After all, it’s been
a good thing to live, and when a man’s time comes
it’ll not be such a darned bad thing to die neither.
Don’t you hould with me there, mate?”
“I do, sir, I do.”
The last boat had rounded the castle
rock, and its topsail had diminished and disappeared.
On the quay the song had ended, and the women and
children were turning their faces with a shade of sadness
towards the town.
“Well,” with a deep universal
inspiration, “wasn’t it beautiful?”
“Wasn’t it?” “Then
what are you crying about?”
The girls laughed at each other with
wet eyes, and went off with springless steps.
The mothers picked up their children and carried them
home whimpering; and the old men went a way with drooping
heads and shambling feet.
When all was gone, and the harbour-master
had taken his last look round, the man with the dog
went to the end of the empty quay, and sat on the
mooring post that had served for the running of the
ropes. All was quiet enough now. The voices,
the singing, the laughter were lost. There was
no sound but the gurgle of the ebbing tide, which was
racing out with the river’s flow between the
pier and the castle rock.
The man looked at his dog, stooped
to it, gave it the biscuit, and petted it and stroked
it while it munched its supper. “Dempster,
bogh! Dempster! Getting ould, eh? Travelled
far together, haven’t we? Tired a bit,
aren’t you? Couldn’t go through another
rough journey, anyway. Hard to part, though,
Machree! Machree!”
He took the stone out of his pocket,
tied it to one end of the string, made a noose on
the ether end, slipped it about the dog’s neck,
and without warning, picked up the dog and stone at
once, and dropped them over the pier. The old
creature gave a piteous cry as it descended; there
was a splash, and then the racing of the
water past the pier.
The man had turned away quickly, and
was going heavily along the quay.