Let the reader fancy a soft summer
evening, the fresh dews falling on bush and flower.
The sun has just gone down, and the thrilling vespers
of thrushes and blackbirds ring with a wild joy through
the saddened air; the west is piled with fantastic
clouds, and clothed in tints of crimson and amber,
melting away into a wan green, and so eastward into
the deepest blue, through which soon the stars will
begin to peep.
Let him fancy himself seated upon
the low mossy wall of an ancient churchyard, where
hundreds of grey stones rise above the sward, under
the fantastic branches of two or three half-withered
ash-trees, spreading their arms in everlasting love
and sorrow over the dead.
The narrow road upon which I and my
companion await the tax-cart that is to carry me and
my basket, with its rich fruitage of speckled trout,
away, lies at his feet, and far below spreads an undulating
plain, rising westward again into soft hills, and
traversed (every here and there visibly) by a winding
stream which, even through the mists of evening, catches
and returns the funereal glories of the skies.
As the eye traces its wayward wanderings,
it loses them for a moment in the heaving verdure
of white-thorns and ash, from among which floats from
some dozen rude chimneys, mostly unseen, the transparent
blue film of turf smoke. There we know, although
we cannot see it, the steep old bridge of Carrickadrum
spans the river; and stretching away far to the right
the valley of Lisnamoe: its steeps and hollows,
its straggling hedges, its fair-green, its tall scattered
trees, and old grey tower, are disappearing fast among
the discoloured tints and haze of evening.
Those landmarks, as we sit listlessly
expecting the arrival of our modest conveyance, suggest
to our companion — a bare-legged Celtic brother
of the gentle craft, somewhat at the wrong side of
forty, with a turf-coloured caubeen, patched frieze,
a clear brown complexion, dark-grey eyes, and a right
pleasant dash of roguery in his features — the
tale, which, if the reader pleases, he is welcome to
hear along with me just as it falls from the lips
of our humble comrade.
His words I can give, but your own
fancy must supply the advantages of an intelligent,
expressive countenance, and, what is perhaps harder
still, the harmony of his glorious brogue, that, like
the melodies of our own dear country, will leave a
burden of mirth or of sorrow with nearly equal propriety,
tickling the diaphragm as easily as it plays with
the heart-strings, and is in itself a national music
that, I trust, may never, never — scouted
and despised though it be — never cease, like
the lost tones of our harp, to be heard in the fields
of my country, in welcome or endearment, in fun or
in sorrow, stirring the hearts of Irish men and Irish
women.
My friend of the caubeen and naked
shanks, then, commenced, and continued his relation,
as nearly as possible, in the following words:
Av coorse ye often heerd talk of Billy
Malowney, that lived by the bridge of Carrickadrum.
‘Leum-a-rinka’ was the name they put on
him, he was sich a beautiful dancer. An’
faix, it’s he was the rale sportin’
boy, every way — killing the hares, and gaffing
the salmons, an’ fightin’ the men, an’
funnin’ the women, and coortin’ the girls;
an’ be the same token, there was not a colleen
inside iv his jurisdiction but was breakin’
her heart wid the fair love iv him.
Well, this was all pleasant enough,
to be sure, while it lasted; but inhuman beings is
born to misfortune, an’ Bill’s divarshin
was not to last always. A young boy can’t
be continially coortin’ and kissin’ the
girls (an’ more’s the pity) without exposin’
himself to the most eminent parril; an’ so signs
all’ what should happen Billy Malowney himself,
but to fall in love at last wid little Molly Donovan,
in Coolnamoe.
I never could ondherstand why in the
world it was Bill fell in love wid her, above
all the girls in the country. She was not within
four stone weight iv being as fat as Peg Brallaghan;
and as for redness in the face, she could not hould
a candle to Judy Flaherty. (Poor Judy! she was my
sweetheart, the darlin’, an’ coorted me
constant, ever antil she married a boy of the Butlers;
an’ it’s twenty years now since she was
buried under the ould white-thorn in Garbally.
But that’s no matther!)
Well, at any rate, Molly Donovan tuck
his fancy, an’ that’s everything!
She had smooth brown hair — as smooth as silk-an’
a pair iv soft coaxin’ eyes — an’
the whitest little teeth you ever seen; an’,
bedad, she was every taste as much in love wid himself
as he was.
Well, now, he was raly stupid wid
love: there was not a bit of fun left in him.
He was good for nothin’ an airth bud sittin’
under bushes, smokin’ tobacky, and sighin’
till you’d wonder how in the world he got wind
for it all.
An’, bedad, he was an illigant
scholar, moreover; an’, so signs, it’s
many’s the song he made about her; an’
if you’d be walkin’ in the evening, a
mile away from Carrickadrum, begorra you’d hear
him singing out like a bull, all across the country,
in her praises.
Well, ye may be sure, ould Tim Donovan
and the wife was not a bit too well plased to see
Bill Malowney coortin’ their daughter Molly;
for, do ye mind, she was the only child they had,
and her fortune was thirty-five pounds, two cows,
and five illigant pigs, three iron pots and a skillet,
an’ a trifle iv poultry in hand; and no one knew
how much besides, whenever the Lord id be plased to
call the ould people out of the way into glory!
So, it was not likely ould Tim Donovan
id be fallin’ in love wid poor Bill Malowney
as aisy as the girls did; for, barrin’ his
beauty, an’ his gun, an’ his dhudheen,
an’ his janius, the divil a taste of property
iv any sort or description he had in the wide world!
Well, as bad as that was, Billy would
not give in that her father and mother had the smallest
taste iv a right to intherfare, good or bad.
‘An’ you’re welcome
to rayfuse me,’ says he, ‘whin I ax your
lave,’ says he; ‘an’ I’ll
ax your lave,’ says he, ’whenever I want
to coort yourselves,’ says he; ‘but it’s
your daughter I’m coortin’ at the present,’
says he, ‘an that’s all I’ll say,’
says he; ’for I’d as soon take a doase
of salts as be discoursin’ ye,’ says he.
So it was a rale blazin’ battle
betune himself and the ould people; an’, begorra,
there was no soart iv blaguardin’ that did not
pass betune them; an’ they put a solemn injection
on Molly again seein’ him or meetin’ him
for the future.
But it was all iv no use. You
might as well be pursuadin’ the birds agin flying,
or sthrivin’ to coax the stars out iv the sky
into your hat, as be talking common sinse to them
that’s fairly bothered and burstin’ wid
love. There’s nothin’ like it.
The toothache an’ cholic together id compose
you betther for an argyment than itself. It leaves
you fit for nothin’ bud nansinse.
It’s stronger than whisky, for
one good drop iv it will make you drunk for one year,
and sick, begorra, for a dozen.
It’s stronger than the say,
for it’ll carry you round the world an’
never let you sink, in sunshine or storm; an’,
begorra, it’s stronger than Death himself, for
it is not afeard iv him, bedad, but dares him in every
shape.
But lovers has quarrels sometimes,
and, begorra, when they do, you’d a’most
imagine they hated one another like man and wife.
An’ so, signs an’, Billy Malowney and
Molly Donovan fell out one evening at ould Tom Dundon’s
wake; an’ whatever came betune them, she made
no more about it but just draws her cloak round her,
and away wid herself and the sarvant-girl home again,
as if there was not a corpse, or a fiddle, or a taste
of divarsion in it.
Well, Bill Malowney follied her down
the boreen, to try could he deludher her back again;
but, if she was bitther before, she gave it to him
in airnest when she got him alone to herself, and to
that degree that he wished her safe home, short and
sulky enough, an’ walked back again, as mad
as the devil himself, to the wake, to pay a respect
to poor Tom Dundon.
Well, my dear, it was aisy seen
there was something wrong avid Billy Malowney, for
he paid no attintion the rest of the evening to any
soart of divarsion but the whisky alone; an’
every glass he’d drink it’s what he’d
be wishing the divil had the women, an’ the worst
iv bad luck to all soarts iv courting, until, at last,
wid the goodness iv the sperits, an’ the badness
iv his temper, an’ the constant flusthration
iv cursin’, he grew all as one as you might
say almost, saving your presince, bastely drunk!
Well, who should he fall in wid, in
that childish condition, as he was deploying along
the road almost as straight as the letter S, an’
cursin’ the girls, an’ roarin’ for
more whisky, but the recruiting-sargent iv the Welsh
Confusileers.
So, cute enough, the sargent begins
to convarse him, an’ it was not long until he
had him sitting in Murphy’s public-house, wid
an elegant dandy iv punch before him, an’ the
king’s money safe an’ snug in the lowest
wrinkle of his breeches-pocket.
So away wid him, and the dhrums and
fifes playing, an’ a dozen more unforthunate
bliggards just listed along with him, an’ he
shakin’ hands wid the sargent, and swearin’
agin the women every minute, until, be the time he
kem to himself, begorra, he was a good ten miles on
the road to Dublin, an’ Molly and all behind
him.
It id be no good tellin’ you
iv the letters he wrote to her from the barracks there,
nor how she was breaking her heart to go and see him
just wanst before he’d go; but the father an’
mother would not allow iv it be no manes.
An’ so in less time than you’d
be thinkin’ about it, the colonel had him polished
off into it rale elegant soger, wid his gun exercise,
and his bagnet exercise, and his small sword, and
broad sword, and pistol and dagger, an’ all
the rest, an’ then away wid him on boord a man-a-war
to furrin parts, to fight for King George agin Bonyparty,
that was great in them times.
Well, it was very soon in everyone’s
mouth how Billy Malowney was batín’ all
before him, astonishin’ the ginerals, an frightenin’
the inimy to that degree, there was not a Frinchman
dare say parley voo outside of the rounds iv his camp.
You may be sure Molly was proud iv
that same, though she never spoke a word about it;
until at last the news kem home that Billy Malowney
was surrounded an’ murdered by the Frinch army,
under Napoleon Bonyparty himself. The news was
brought by Jack Brynn Dhas, the peddlar, that said
he met the corporal iv the regiment on the quay iv
Limerick, an’ how he brought him into a public-house
and thrated him to a naggin, and got all the news
about poor Billy Malowney out iv him while they war
dhrinkin’ it; an’ a sorrowful story it
was.
The way it happened, accordin’
as the corporal tould him, was jist how the Jook iv
Wellington detarmined to fight a rale tarin’
battle wid the Frinch, and Bonyparty at the same time
was aiqually detarmined to fight the divil’s
own scrimmidge wid the British foorces.
Well, as soon as the business was
pretty near ready at both sides, Bonyparty and the
general next undher himself gets up behind a bush,
to look at their inimies through spyglasses, and thry
would they know any iv them at the distance.
‘Bedadad!’ says the gineral,
afther a divil iv a long spy, ’I’d bet
half a pint,’ says he, ‘that’s Bill
Malowney himself,’ says he, ‘down there,’
says he.
‘Och!’ says Bonypart,
‘do you tell me so?’ says he — ’I’m
fairly heart-scalded with that same Billy Malowney,’
says he; ‘an’ I think if I was wanst shut
iv him I’d bate the rest iv them aisy,’
says he.
‘I’m thinking so myself,’
says the gineral, says he; ’but he’s a
tough bye,’ says he.
‘Tough!’ says Bonypart, ‘he’s
the divil,’ says he.
‘Begorra, I’d be better
plased.’ says the gineral, says he, ’to
take himself than the Duke iv Willinton,’ says
he, ‘an’ Sir Edward Blakeney into the
bargain,’ says he.
‘The Duke of Wellinton and Gineral
Blakeney,’ says Bonypart, ’is great for
planning, no doubt,’ says he; ’but Billy
Malowney’s the boy for action,’ says
he — ’an’ action’s everything,
just now,’ says he.
So wid that Bonypart pushes up his
cocked hat, and begins scratching his head, and thinning
and considherin’ for the bare life, and at last
says he to the gineral:
‘Gineral Commandher iv all the
Foorces,’ says he, ‘I’ve hot it,’
says he: ‘ordher out the forlorn hope,’
says he, ‘an’ give them as much powdher,
both glazed and blasting,’ says he, ‘an’
as much bullets do ye mind, an’ swan-dhrops
an’ chain-shot,’ says he, ‘an’
all soorts iv waipons an’ combustables as they
can carry; an’ let them surround Bill Malowney,’
says he, ‘an’ if they can get any soort
iv an advantage,’ says he, ‘let them knock
him to smithereens,’ says he, ‘an’
then take him presner,’ says he; ‘an’
tell all the bandmen iv the Frinch army,’ says
he, ‘to play up “Garryowen,” to keep
up their sperits,’ says he, ‘all the time
they’re advancin’. An’ you may
promise them anything you like in my name,’
says he; for, by my sowl, I don’t think its many
iv them ‘ill come back to throuble us,’
says he, winkin’ at him.
So away with the gineral, an’
he ordhers out the forlorn hope, all’ tells
the band to play, an’ everything else, just as
Bonypart desired him. An’ sure enough,
whin Billy Malowney heerd the music where he was standin’
taking a blast of the dhudheen to compose his mind
for murdherin’ the Frinchmen as usual, being
mighty partial to that tune intirely, he cocks his
ear a one side, an’ down he stoops to listen
to the music; but, begorra, who should be in his rare
all the time but a Frinch grannideer behind a bush,
and seeing him stooped in a convanient forum, bedad
he let flies at him sthraight, and fired him right
forward between the legs an’ the small iv the
back, glory be to God! with what they call (saving
your presence) a bum-shell.
Well, Bill Malowney let one roar out
iv him, an’ away he rowled over the field iv
battle like a slitther (as Bonypart and the Duke iv
Wellington, that was watching the manoeuvres from
a distance, both consayved) into glory.
An’ sure enough the Frinch was
overjoyed beyant all bounds, an’ small blame
to them — an’ the Duke of Wellington,
I’m toult, was never all out the same man sinst.
At any rate, the news kem home how
Billy Malowney was murdhered by the Frinch in furrin
parts.
Well, all this time, you may be sure,
there was no want iv boys comin’ to coort purty
Molly Donovan; but one way ar another, she always
kept puttin’ them off constant. An’
though her father and mother was nathurally anxious
to get rid of her respickably, they did not like to
marry her off in spite iv her teeth.
An’ this way, promising one
while and puttin’ it off another, she conthrived
to get on from one Shrove to another, until near seven
years was over and gone from the time when Billy Malowney
listed for furrin sarvice.
It was nigh hand a year from the time
whin the news iv Leum-a-rinka bein’ killed by
the Frinch came home, an’ in place iv forgettin’
him, as the saisins wint over, it’s what Molly
was growin’ paler and more lonesome every day,
antil the neighbours thought she was fallin’
into a decline; and this is the way it was with her
whin the fair of Lisnamoe kem round.
It was a beautiful evenin’,
just at the time iv the reapin’ iv the oats,
and the sun was shinin’ through the red clouds
far away over the hills iv Cahirmore.
Her father an’ mother, an’
the boys an’ girls, was all away down in the
fair, and Molly Sittin’ all alone on the step
of the stile, listening to the foolish little birds
whistlin’ among the leaves — and the
sound of the mountain-river flowin’ through
the stones an’ bushes — an’ the
crows flyin’ home high overhead to the woods
iv Glinvarlogh — an’ down in the glen,
far away, she could see the fair-green iv Lisnamoe
in the mist, an’ sunshine among the grey rocks
and threes — an’ the cows an’
the horses, an’ the blue frieze, an’ the
red cloaks, an’ the tents, an’ the smoke,
an’ the ould round tower — all as soft
an’ as sorrowful as a dhrame iv ould times.
An’ while she was looking this
way, an’ thinking iv Leum-a-rinka — poor
Bill iv the dance, that was sleepin’ in his lonesome
glory in the fields iv Spain — she began
to sing the song he used to like so well in the ould
times —
‘Shule,
shule, shale a-roon;’
an’ when she ended the verse,
what do you think but she heard a manly voice just
at the other side iv the hedge, singing the last words
over again!
Well she knew it; her heart flutthered
up like a little bird that id be wounded, and then
dhropped still in her breast. It was himself.
In a minute he was through the hedge and standing
before her.
‘Leum!’ says she.
‘Mavourneen cuishla machree!’
says he; and without another word they were locked
in one another’s arms.
Well, it id only be nansinse for me
thryin’ an’ tell ye all the foolish things
they said, and how they looked in one another’s
faces, an’ laughed, an’ cried, an’
laughed again; and how, when they came to themselves,
and she was able at last to believe it was raly Billy
himself that was there, actially holdin’ her
hand, and lookin’ in her eyes the same way as
ever, barrin’ he was browner and boulder, an’
did not, maybe, look quite as merry in himself as
he used to do in former times — an’
fondher for all, an’ more lovin’ than ever — how
he tould her all about the wars wid the Frinchmen — an’
how he was wounded, and left for dead in the field
iv battle, bein’ shot through the breast, and
how he was discharged, an’ got a pinsion iv
a full shillin’ a day — and how he
was come back to liv the rest iv his days in the sweet
glen iv Lisnamoe, an’ (if only she’d
consint) to marry herself in spite iv them all.
Well, ye may aisily think they had
plinty to talk about, afther seven years without once
seein’ one another; and so signs on, the time
flew by as swift an’ as pleasant as a bird on
the wing, an’ the sun wint down, an’ the
moon shone sweet an’ soft instead, an’
they two never knew a ha’porth about it, but
kept talkin’ an’ whisperin’, an’
whisperin’ an’ talkin’; for it’s
wondherful how often a tinder-hearted girl will bear
to hear a purty boy tellin’ her the same story
constant over an’ over; ontil at last, sure
enough, they heerd the ould man himself comin’
up the boreen, singin’ the ‘Colleen Rue’ — a
thing he never done barrin’ whin he had a dhrop
in; an’ the misthress walkin’ in front
iv him, an’ two illigant Kerry cows he just
bought in the fair, an’ the sarvint boys dhriving
them behind.
‘Oh, blessed hour!’ says Molly, ‘here’s
my father.’
‘I’ll spake to him this minute,’
says Bill.
‘Oh, not for the world,’
says she; ‘he’s singin’ the “Colleen
Rue,"’ says she, ‘and no one dar
raison with him,’ says she.
‘An’ where ‘ll I
go, thin?’ says he, ’for they’re
into the haggard an top iv us,’ says he, ‘an’
they’ll see me iv I lep through the hedge,’
says he.
‘Thry the pig-sty,’ says
she, ‘mavourneen,’ says she, ’in
the name iv God,’ says she.
‘Well, darlint,’ says
he, ‘for your sake,’ says he, ’I’ll
condescend to them animals,’ says he.
An’ wid that he makes a dart
to get in; bud, begorra, it was too late — the
pigs was all gone home, and the pig-sty was as full
as the Burr coach wid six inside.
‘Och! blur-an’-agers,’
says he, ‘there is not room for a suckin’-pig,’
says he, ‘let alone a Christian,’ says
he.
‘Well, run into the house, Billy,’
says she, ‘this minute,’ says she, ‘an’
hide yourself antil they’re quiet,’ says
she, ‘an’ thin you can steal out,’
says she, ‘anknownst to them all,’ says
she.
‘I’ll do your biddin’, says he,
‘Molly asthore,’ says he.
‘Run in thin,’ says she, ‘an’
I’ll go an’ meet them,’ says she.
So wid that away wid her, and in wint
Billy, an’ where ’id he hide himself bud
in a little closet that was off iv the room where the
ould man and woman slep’. So he closed
the doore, and sot down in an ould chair he found
there convanient.
Well, he was not well in it when all
the rest iv them comes into the kitchen, an’
ould Tim Donovan singin’ the ‘Colleen Rue’
for the bare life, an’ the rest iv them sthrivin’
to humour him, and doin’ exactly everything
he bid them, because they seen he was foolish be the
manes iv the liquor.
Well, to be sure all this kep’
them long enough, you may be sure, from goin’
to bed, so that Billy could get no manner iv an advantage
to get out iv the house, and so he sted sittin’
in the dark closet in state, cursin’ the ‘Colleen
Rue,’ and wondherin’ to the divil whin
they’d get the ould man into his bed. An’,
as if that was not delay enough, who should come in
to stop for the night but Father O’Flaherty,
of Cahirmore, that was buyin’ a horse at the
fair! An’ av course, there was
a bed to be med down for his raverence, an’ some
other attintions; an’ a long discoorse himself
an’ ould Mrs. Donovan had about the slaughter
iv Billy Malowney, an’ how he was buried on
the field iv battle; an’ his raverence hoped
he got a dacent funeral, an’ all the other convaniences
iv religion. An’ so you may suppose it was
pretty late in the night before all iv them got to
their beds.
Well, Tim Donovan could not settle
to sleep at all at all, an’ so he kep’
discoorsin’ the wife about the new cows he bought,
an’ the stripphers he sould, an’ so an
for better than an hour, ontil from one thing to another
he kem to talk about the pigs, an’ the poulthry;
and at last, having nothing betther to discoorse about,
he begun at his daughter Molly, an’ all the
heartscald she was to him be raison iv refusin’
the men. An’ at last says he:
‘I onderstand,’ says he,
‘very well how it is,’ says he. ’It’s
how she was in love,’ says he, ‘wid that
bliggard, Billy Malowney,’ says he, ‘bad
luck to him!’ says he; for by this time he was
coming to his raison.
‘Ah!’ says the wife, says
she, ‘Tim darlint, don’t be cursin’
them that’s dead an’ buried,’ says
she.
‘An’ why would not I,’
says he, ‘if they desarve it?’ says he.
‘Whisht,’ says she, ‘an’
listen to that,’ says she. ’In the
name of the Blessed Vargin,’ says she, ‘what
is it?’ says she.
An’ sure enough what was it
but Bill Malowney that was dhroppin’ asleep
in the closet, an’ snorin’ like a church
organ.
‘Is it a pig,’ says he, ‘or is it
a Christian?’
‘Arra! listen to the tune iv
it,’ says she; ’sure a pig never done the
like is that,’ says she.
‘Whatever it is,’ says
he, ‘it’s in the room wid us,’ says
he. ’The Lord be marciful to us!’
says he.
‘I tould you not to be cursin’,’
says she; ‘bad luck to you,’ says she,
‘for an ommadhaun!’ for she was a very
religious woman in herself.
‘Sure, he’s buried in
Spain,’ says he; ‘an’ it is not for
one little innocent expression,’ says he, ‘he’d
be comin’ all that a way to annoy the house,’
says he.
Well, while they war talkin’,
Bill turns in the way he was sleepin’ into an
aisier imposture; and as soon as he stopped snorin’
ould Tim Donovan’s courage riz agin,
and says he:
‘I’ll go to the kitchen,’
says he, ‘an’ light a rish,’ says
he.
An’ with that away wid him,
an’ the wife kep’ workin’ the beads
all the time, an’ before he kem back Bill was
snorin’ as loud as ever.
’Oh! bloody wars — I
mane the blessed saints about us! — that deadly
sound,’ says he; ‘it’s going on as
lively as ever,’ says he.
‘I’m as wake as a rag,’
says his wife, says she, ’wid the fair anasiness,’
says she. ‘It’s out iv the little
closet it’s comin,’ says she.
‘Say your prayers,’ says
he, ‘an’ hould your tongue,’ says
he, ’while I discoorse it,’ says he.
‘An’ who are ye,’ says he, ’in
the name iv of all the holy saints?’ says he,
givin’ the door a dab iv a crusheen that wakened
Bill inside. ‘I ax,’ says he, ‘who
are you?’ says he.
Well, Bill did not rightly remember
where in the world he was, but he pushed open the
door, an’ says he:
‘Billy Malowney’s my name,’
says he, ‘an’ I’ll thank ye to tell
me a betther,’ says he.
Well, whin Tim Donovan heard that,
an’ actially seen that it was Bill himself that
was in it, he had not strength enough to let a bawl
out iv him, but he dhropt the candle out iv his hand,
an’ down wid himself on his back in the dark.
Well, the wife let a screech you’d
hear at the mill iv Killraghlin, an’ —
‘Oh,’ says she, ‘the
spirit has him, body an’ bones!’ says she.
’Oh, holy St. Bridget — oh, Mother
iv Marcy — oh, Father O’Flaherty!’
says she, screechin’ murdher from out iv her
bed.
Well, Bill Malowney was not a minute
remimberin’ himself, an’ so out wid him
quite an’ aisy, an’ through the kitchen;
bud in place iv the door iv the house, it’s
what he kem to the door iv Father O’Flaherty’s
little room, where he was jist wakenin’ wid
the noise iv the screechin’ an’ battherin’;
an’ bedad, Bill makes no more about it, but he
jumps, wid one boult, clever an’ clane into
his raverance’s bed.
‘What do ye mane, you uncivilised
bliggard?’ says his raverance. ’Is
that a venerable way,’ says he, ‘to approach
your clargy?’ says he.
‘Hould your tongue,’ says
Bill, ‘an’ I’ll do ye no harum,’
says he.
‘Who are you, ye scoundhrel
iv the world?’ says his raverance.
‘Whisht!’ says he? ‘I’m
Billy Malowney,’ says he.
‘You lie!’ says his raverance
for he was frightened beyont all bearin’ — an’
he makes but one jump out iv the bed at the wrong side,
where there was only jist a little place in the wall
for a press, an’ his raverance could not as
much as turn in it for the wealth iv kingdoms.
‘You lie,’ says he; ’but for feared
it’s the truth you’re tellin’,’
says he, ’here’s at ye in the name iv all
the blessed saints together!’ says he.
An’ wid that, my dear, he blazes
away at him wid a Latin prayer iv the strongest description,
an’, as he said himself afterwards, that was
iv a nature that id dhrive the divil himself up the
chimley like a puff iv tobacky smoke, wid his tail
betune his legs.
‘Arra, what are ye sthrivin’
to say,’ says Bill; says he, ’if ye don’t
hould your tongue,’ says he, ‘wid your
parly voo;’ says he, ’it’s what
I’ll put my thumb on your windpipe,’ says
he, ‘an’ Billy Malowney never wint back
iv his word yet,’ says he.
‘Thundher-an-owns,’ says
his raverance, says he — seein’ the
Latin took no infect on him, at all at all an’
screechin’ that you’d think he’d
rise the thatch up iv the house wid the fair fright — ’and
thundher and blazes, boys, will none iv yes come here
wid a candle, but lave your clargy to be choked by
a spirit in the dark?’ says he.
Well, be this time the sarvint boys
and the rest iv them wor up an’ half dressed,
an’ in they all run, one on top iv another, wid
pitchforks and spades, thinkin’ it was only
what his raverence slep’ a dhrame iv the like,
by means of the punch he was afther takin’ just
before he rowl’d himself into the bed.
But, begorra, whin they seen it was raly Bill Malowney
himself that was in it, it was only who’d be
foremost out agin, tumblin’ backways, one over
another, and his raverence roarin’ an’
cursin’ them like mad for not waitin’ for
him.
Well, my dear, it was betther than
half an hour before Billy Malowney could explain to
them all how it raly was himself, for begorra they
were all iv them persuadin’ him that he was
a spirit to that degree it’s a wondher he did
not give in to it, if it was only to put a stop to
the argiment.
Well, his raverence tould the ould
people then, there was no use in sthrivin’ agin
the will iv Providence an’ the vagaries iv love
united; an’ whin they kem to undherstand to
a sartinty how Billy had a shillin’ a day for
the rest iv his days, begorra they took rather a likin’
to him, and considhered at wanst how he must have riz
out of all his nansinse entirely, or his gracious
Majesty id never have condescinded to show him his
countenance that way every day of his life, on a silver
shillin’.
An’ so, begorra, they never
stopt till it was all settled — an’
there was not sich a weddin’ as that in
the counthry sinst. It’s more than forty
years ago, an’ though I was no more nor a gossoon
myself, I remimber it like yestherday. Molly
never looked so purty before, an’ Billy Malowney
was plisant beyont all hearin,’ to that degree
that half the girls in it was fairly tarin’
mad — only they would not let on — they
had not him to themselves in place iv her. An’
begorra I’d be afeared to tell ye, because you
would not believe me, since that blessid man Father
Mathew put an end to all soorts of sociality, the
Lord reward him, how many gallons iv pottieen whisky
was dhrank upon that most solemn and tindher occasion.
Pat Hanlon, the piper, had a faver
out iv it; an’ Neddy Shawn Heigue, mountin’
his horse the wrong way, broke his collarbone, by the
manes iv fallin’ over his tail while he was
feelin’ for his head; an’ Payther Brian,
the horse-docther, I am tould, was never quite right
in the head ever afther; an’ ould Tim Donovan
was singin’ the ‘Colleen Rue’ night
and day for a full week; an’ begorra the weddin’
was only the foundation iv fun, and the beginning
iv divarsion, for there was not a year for ten years
afther, an’ more, but brought round a christenin’
as regular as the sasins revarted.