My first memories are fragmentary
and isolated and contemporaneous, as though one remembered
vaguely some early day of the Seven Days. It seems
as if time had not yet been created, for all are connected
with emotion and place and without sequence.
I remember sitting upon somebody’s
knee, looking out of a window at a wall covered with
cracked and falling plaster, but what wall I do not
remember, and being told that some relation once lived
there. I am looking out of another window in
London. It is at Fitzroy Road. Some boys
are playing in the road and among them a boy in uniform,
a telegraph boy perhaps. When I ask who the boy
is, a servant tells me that he is going to blow the
town up, and I go to sleep in terror.
After that come memories of Sligo,
where I live with my grandparents. I am sitting
on the ground looking at a mastless toy boat, with
the paint rubbed and scratched, and I say to myself
in great melancholy, “it is further away than
it used to be,” and while I am saying it I am
looking at a long scratch in the stern, for it is
especially the scratch which is further away.
Then one day at dinner my great-uncle William Middleton
says, “we should not make light of the troubles
of children. They are worse than ours, because
we can see the end of our trouble and they can never
see any end,” and I feel grateful for I know
that I am very unhappy and have often said to myself,
“when you grow up, never talk as grown-up people
do of the happiness of childhood.” I may
have already had the night of misery when, having
prayed for several days that I might die, I had begun
to be afraid that I was dying and prayed that I might
live. There was no reason for my unhappiness.
Nobody was unkind, and my grandmother has still after
so many years my gratitude and my reverence. The
house was so big that there was always a room to hide
in, and I had a red pony and a garden where I could
wander, and there were two dogs to follow at my heels,
one white with some black spots on his head and the
other with long black hair all over him. I used
to think about God and fancy that I was very wicked,
and one day when I threw a stone and hit a duck in
the yard by mischance and broke its wing, I was full
of wonder when I was told that the duck would be cooked
for dinner and that I should not be punished.
Some of my misery was loneliness and
some of it fear of old William Pollexfen my grandfather.
He was never unkind, and I cannot remember that he
ever spoke harshly to me, but it was the custom to
fear and admire him. He had won the freedom of
some Spanish city for saving life, but was so silent
that his wife never knew it till he was near eighty,
and then from the chance visit of some old sailor.
She asked him if it was true and he said it was true,
but she knew him too well to question and his old
shipmate had left the town. She too had the habit
of fear. We knew that he had been in many parts
of the world, for there was a great scar on his hand
made by a whaling-hook, and in the dining-room was
a cabinet with bits of coral in it and a jar of water
from the Jordan for the baptising of his children
and Chinese pictures upon rice-paper and an ivory
walking-stick from India that came to me after his
death. He had great physical strength and had
the reputation of never ordering a man to do anything
he would not do himself. He owned many sailing
ships and once, when a captain just come to anchor
at Rosses Point reported something wrong with the
rudder, had sent a messenger to say “send a man
down to find out what’s wrong.” “The
crew all refuse” was the answer. “Go
down yourself” was my grandfather’s order,
and when that was not obeyed, he dived from the main
deck, all the neighbourhood lined along the pebbles
of the shore. He came up with his skin torn but
well informed about the rudder. He had a violent
temper and kept a hatchet at his bedside for burglars
and would knock a man down instead of going to law,
and I once saw him hunt a group of men with a horsewhip.
He had no relation for he was an only child, and being
solitary and silent, he had few friends. He corresponded
with Campbell of Islay who had befriended him and his
crew after a shipwreck, and Captain Webb, the first
man who had swum the Channel and who was drowned swimming
the Niagara Rapids, had been a mate in his employ
and became a close friend. That is all the friends
I can remember and yet he was so looked up to and
admired that when he returned from taking the waters
at Bath his men would light bonfires along the railway
line for miles, while his partner William Middleton
whose father after the great famine had attended the
sick for weeks, and taken cholera from a man he carried
in his arms into his own house and died of it, and
was himself civil to everybody and a cleverer man than
my grandfather, came and went without notice.
I think I confused my grandfather with God, for I
remember in one of my attacks of melancholy praying
that he might punish me for my sins, and I was shocked
and astonished when a daring little girl a
cousin I think having waited under a group
of trees in the avenue, where she knew he would pass
near four o’clock on the way to his dinner,
said to him, “if I were you and you were a little
girl, I would give you a doll.”
Yet for all my admiration and alarm,
neither I nor anyone else thought it wrong to outwit
his violence or his rigour; and his lack of suspicion
and a certain helplessness made that easy while it
stirred our affection. When I must have been
still a very little boy, seven or eight years old
perhaps, an uncle called me out of bed one night, to
ride the five or six miles to Rosses Point to borrow
a railway-pass from a cousin. My grandfather
had one, but thought it dishonest to let another use
it, but the cousin was not so particular. I was
let out through a gate that opened upon a little lane
beside the garden away from ear-shot of the house,
and rode delighted through the moonlight, and awoke
my cousin in the small hours by tapping on his window
with a whip. I was home again by two or three
in the morning and found the coachman waiting in the
little lane. My grandfather would not have thought
such an adventure possible, for every night at eight
he believed that the stable-yard was locked, and he
knew that he was brought the key. Some servant
had once got into trouble at night and so he had arranged
that they should all be locked in. He never knew,
what everybody else in the house knew, that for all
the ceremonious bringing of the key the gate was never
locked.
Even to-day when I read “King
Lear” his image is always before me and I often
wonder if the delight in passionate men in my plays
and in my poetry is more than his memory. He
must have been ignorant, though I could not judge
him in my childhood, for he had run away to sea when
a boy, “gone to sea through the hawse-hole”
as he phrased it, and I can but remember him with
two books his Bible and Falconer’s
“Shipwreck,” a little green-covered book
that lay always upon his table; he belonged to some
younger branch of an old Cornish family. His father
had been in the Army, had retired to become an owner
of sailing ships, and an engraving of some old family
place my grandfather thought should have been his hung
next a painted coat of arms in the little back parlour.
His mother had been a Wexford woman, and there was
a tradition that his family had been linked with Ireland
for generations and once had their share in the old
Spanish trade with Galway. He had a good deal
of pride and disliked his neighbours, whereas his
wife, a Middleton, was gentle and patient and did
many charities in the little back parlour among frieze
coats and shawled heads, and every night when she
saw him asleep went the round of the house alone with
a candle to make certain there was no burglar in danger
of the hatchet. She was a true lover of her garden
and before the care of her house had grown upon her,
would choose some favourite among her flowers and
copy it upon rice-paper. I saw some of her handiwork
the other day and I wondered at the delicacy of form
and colour and at a handling that may have needed
a magnifying glass it was so minute. I can remember
no other pictures but the Chinese paintings, and some
coloured prints of battles in the Crimea upon the
wall of a passage, and the painting of a ship at the
passage end darkened by time.
My grown-up uncles and aunts, my grandfather’s
many sons and daughters, came and went, and almost
all they said or did has faded from my memory, except
a few harsh words that convince me by a vividness out
of proportion to their harshness that all were habitually
kind and considerate. The youngest of my uncles
was stout and humorous and had a tongue of leather
over the keyhole of his door to keep the draught out,
and another whose bedroom was at the end of a long
stone passage had a model turret ship in a glass case.
He was a clever man and had designed the Sligo quays,
but was now going mad and inventing a vessel of war
that could not be sunk, his pamphlet explained, because
of a hull of solid wood. Only six months ago
my sister awoke dreaming that she held a wingless sea-bird
in her arms and presently she heard that he had died
in his mad-house, for a sea-bird is the omen that
announces the death or danger of a Pollexfen.
An uncle, George Pollexfen, afterwards astrologer
and mystic, and my dear friend, came but seldom from
Ballina, once to a race meeting with two postillions
dressed in green; and there was that younger uncle
who had sent me for the railway-pass. He was
my grandmother’s favourite, and had, the servants
told me, been sent away from school for taking a crowbar
to a bully.
I can only remember my grandmother
punishing me once. I was playing in the kitchen
and a servant in horseplay pulled my shirt out of my
trousers in front just as my grandmother came in and
I, accused of I knew not what childish indecency,
was given my dinner in a room by myself. But I
was always afraid of my uncles and aunts, and once
the uncle who had taken the crowbar to the bully found
me eating lunch which my grandmother had given me
and reproved me for it and made me ashamed. We
breakfasted at nine and dined at four and it was considered
self-indulgent to eat anything between meals; and
once an aunt told me that I had reined in my pony and
struck it at the same moment that I might show it off
as I rode through the town, and I, because I had been
accused of what I thought a very dark crime, had a
night of misery. Indeed I remember little of childhood
but its pain. I have grown happier with every
year of life as though gradually conquering something
in myself, for certainly my miseries were not made
by others but were a part of my own mind.