Throth, yer ’ann’rs, I’ll tell ye wid pleasure; though, trooth to
tell, it’s only poor wurrk telling the same shtory over an’ over agin. But I
niver object to tell it to rale gintlemin, like yer ’ann’rs, what don’t forget
that a poor man has a mouth on to him as much as Creeshus himself has.
The place was a market town in Kilkenny—or maybe King’s
County or Queen’s County. At all evints,
it was wan of them counties what Cromwell—bad cess to him!—gev
his name to. An’ the house
was called after him that was the Lord Liftinint an’ invinted the polis—God forgive
him! It was kep’ be a man iv the name iv Misther Mickey
Byrne an’ his good lady—at laste it was till wan
dark night whin the bhoys mistuk him for another gindeman, an unknown man, what
had bought a contagious property—mind ye the impidence iv him. Mickey was
comin’ back from the Curragh Races wid his skin that tight wid the full of the whiskey
inside of him that he couldn’t open his eyes to see what was goin’
on, or his mouth to set the bhoys right afther he had got the first tap on the
head wid wan of the blackthorns what they done such jobs wid. The poor bhoys
was that full of sorra
for their
mishap whin they brung him home to his widdy that the crather hadn’t
the hearrt to be too sevare on thim. At the first iv course she was wroth,
bein’ only a woman afther all, an’ weemun not bein’ gave to rayson like nun is.
Millia murdher! but for a bit she was like a madwoman, and was nigh to have cut
the heads from affav thim wid the mate chopper, till, seein’ thim so white and
quite, she all at wance flung down the chopper an’ knelt down be the corp.
‘Lave me to me dead,’
she sez. ‘Oh mm! it’s no use more people
nor is needful bein’ made unhappy over this night’s terrible
wurrk. Mick Byrne would have no man worse for him whin he was living, and he’ll
have harm to none for his death! Now go; an’, oh bhoys, be dacent and quite,
an’ don’t thry a poor widdied sowl too hard!’
Well, afther that she made no change
in things ginerally, but kep’ on the hotel jist the same;
an’ whin some iv her friends wanted her to get help, she only sez: ‘Mick an’ me
run this house well enough;
an’ whin I’m thinkin’ of takun’ help I’ll tell yez. I’ll go on be meself,
as I mane to, till Mick an’ me comes together agun.’
An’, sure enough,
the ould place
wint on jist the same,
though, more betoken,
there wasn’t Mick wid his
shillelagh to kape the pace whin things got pretty hot on fair nights, an’ in
the gran’ ould election times, when heads was bruk like eggs—glory be to God!
My! but she was the fine woman, was the Widdy Byrne! A
gran’ crathur intirely: a fine upshtandin’ woman, nigh as tall as a
modheratesized man, wid a forrm on her that’d warrm yer hearrt to look at, it sthood out that way in the right places.
She had shkin like satin, wid a warrm flush in it, like the sun shinun’
on a crock iv yestherday’s crame; an’ her cheeks an’ her neck was that firrm that ye couldn’t
take a pinch iv thim—though sorra wan iver dar’d to thry, the worse luck! But her hair!
Begor, that was the finishing touch that set all the min crazy. It was jist wan mass iv red, like the heart iv a burnun’
furze-bush whin the smoke goes from aff iv it. Musha! but it’d make the blood come up in yer eyes to see the glint iv that hair wid the light shunun’ on it. There
was niver a man, what was a man at all at all, iver kem in be the door that he
didn’t want to put his two arrms round the widdy an’ giv’ her a hug immadiate.
They was fine min too, some iv thim—and warrm men—big graziers from Kildare, and the like,
that counted their cattle be scores, an’ used to come ridin’
in to market on huntin’ horses what they’d refuse hundlireds iv
pounds for from officers in the Curragh an’ the quality. Begor, but some iv
thim an’ the dhrovers was rare miii in a fight. More nor wance I seen them,
forty, maybe half a hundred, strong, clear the market-place at Banagher or Athy.
Well do I remimber the way the big, red, hairy wrists
iv thim’d go up in the air, an’
down’d come the springy ground-ash saplins what they carried for switches. The
whole lot iv thim wanted to come coortun’ the widdy; but sorra wan iv her’d
look at thim. She’d flirt an’ be coy an’ taze thim and make thim mad for love
iv her, as weemin likes to do. Thank God for the same! for mayhap we min
wouldn’t love thim as we do only for their thricky ways; an’ thin what’d become
iv the counthry wid nothin’ in it at all except single min an’ ould maids jist dyin’, and growin’
crabbed for want iv chuidher
to kiss an’ tache an’ shpank
an’ make love to? Shure,
yer ’ann’rs, ’tis childher as makes the hearrt iv man green,
jist as it is fresh wather that makes the grass
grow. Divil a shtep nearer would the widdy iver let mortial man come. ‘No,’ she’d say; ‘whin I see a man fit to fill Mick’s place, I’ll let yez
know iv it; thank
ye kindly’; an’ wid that she’d shake her head till the beautiful red hair iv
it’d be like shparks iv fire—an’ the mm more mad for her nor iver.
But, mind ye, she wasn’t
no shpoil-shport; Mick’s
wife knew more nor that, an’ his widdy
didn’t forgit the thrick iv it. She’d lade the laugh herself if ’twas anything
a dacent woman could shmile at; an’ if it wasn’t, she’d send the girrls aff to
their beds, an’ tell the min they might go on talkin’ that way, for there was only herself
to be insulted; an’ that’d
shut thim up pretty quick I’m tellin’ yez. But av
any iv thim’d thry to git affectionate, as min do whin they’ve had all they can
carry, well, thin she had a playful way iv dalin’ wid thim what’d always turn
the laugh agin’ thim. She used to say that she lamed the beginnun’ iv it at the
school an’ the rest iv it from Mick. She always kep by her on the counther iv
the bar wan iv thim rattan canes wid
the curly ends, what the soldiers carries whin they can’t barry a whip, an’ are goin’ out wid their cap on
three hairs, an’ thim new oiled, to scorch the girrls. An’ thin whin any iv the shuitors’d get too affectionate she’d lift the cane an’ swish them wid it, her
laughin’ out iv her like mad all the time.
At first wan or two iv the min’d say that a kiss at the widdy was worth a clip iv a cane;
an’ wan iv thim, a warrm horse-fanner from Poul-a-Phoka, said he’d complate the
job av she was to cut him into ribbons. But she was a handy woman wid the
cane—which was shtrange enough, for she had no childer to be practisin’ on—an’ whin she threw what was left iv him back over the bar, wid his face like a
gridiron, the other min what was laughin’ along wid her tuk the lesson to
hearrt. Whiniver afther that she laid her hand on the cane, no matther how
quietly, there’d be no more talk iv thryin’ for kissin’ in that quarther.
Well, at the time I’m comm’ to there was great
divarshuns intirely goin’ on in the town. The
fair was on the morra,
an’ there was a power
iv people in the town;
an’ cattle, an’ geese,
an’ turkeys, an’ butther, an’ pigs, an’ vegetables, an’ all kinds iv divilment,
includin’ a berryin’—the same bein’ an ould attorney-man, savin’ yer prisince;
a lone man widout friends, lyin’ out there in the gran’ room iv the hotel what
they call the ‘Queen’s Room’. Well, I needn’t tell yer ’ann’rs that the place
was pretty full that night. Musha, but it’s the fleas thimselves what had the
bad time iv it, wid thim crowded out on the outside, an’ shakin’, an’
thrimblin’ wid the cowld. The widdy, av coorse, was in the bar passin’ the time
iv the day wid all that kem in, an’ keepin’ her eyes afore an’ ahint her to hould the girrls up to
their wurrk an’ not to be thriflin’ wid the mm. My! but there was a power iv
min at the bar that night; warrm farmers from four counties, an’ graziers wid
their ground-ash plants an’ big frieze coats, an’ plinty iv commercials, too. In the middle iv it all, up the shtreet at a hand gallop comes an Athy carriage wid two
horses, an’ pulls up at the door wid the horses shmokin’. An’ begor’, the man
in it was smokin’ too, a big cygar nigh ~s long as yer arrm. He jumps out an’ walks up as bould as brass to the bar, jist as if there was niver a livin’ sowl but
himself in the place. He chucks the widdy undher
the chin at wanst, an’, taking aff his hat, sez: ‘I want the best room in the house. I travel for Shorrox’, the greatest long-cotton firrm in the whole
worrld, an’ I want to open up a new line here! The best is what I want, an’
that’s not good enough for me!’
Well, gintlemun, ivery wan in the place was spacheless
at his impidence; an’, begor! that was the only time in her life I’m tould whin
the widdy was tuk back. But, glory be, it didn’t take long for her to recover
herself, an’ sez she quitely:
‘I don’t doubt
ye, sur! The best can’t
be too good for a gintleman what makes himself
so aisy at home!’ an’ she shmiled
at him till her teeth shone like jools.
God knows, gintlemin, what does be in weemin’s minds
whin they’re dalin’ wid a man! Maybe it was that Widdy Byrne only wanted to
kape the pace wid all thim min crowdin’ roun’
her, an’ thim clutchin’ on tight to their shticks
an’ aiger for a fight
wid any man on her account. Or maybe it was that she forgive
him his impidence; for well I know that it’s not the
most modest man, nor him what kapes his distance, that the girrls, much less
the widdies, like the best. But anyhow
she spake out iv her to the man from Manchesther: ‘I’m sorry, sur, that I can’t give ye the best
room—what we call the best—for it is engaged
already.’
‘Then turn him
out!’ sez he.
‘I can’t,’ she says—‘at
laste not till tomorra; an’ ye can have the room thin iv ye like.’ There was a
kind iv a sort iv a shnicker among some iv the min, thim knowin’ iv the corp,
an’ the Manchesther man
tuk it that they was laughin’ at him; so he sez: ‘I’ll shleep in that
room tonight; the other gintleman can put up wid me iv I can wid him. Unless,’
sez he, oglin’ the widdy, ‘I can have the place iv
the masther iv the house, if there’s a priest or a parson handy in this
town—an’ sober,’ sez he.
Well, tho’ the widdy got as red as a Claddagh cloak,
she jist laughed an’ turned aside, sayin’: ‘Throth, sur, but it’s poor Mick’s
place ye might have, an’ welkim, this night.’
‘An’ where might that be now, ma’am?’ sez he, lanin’
over the bar; an’ him would have chucked her under the chin agun, only that she
moved her head away that quick.
‘In the churchyard!’ she sez. ‘Ye might take Mick’s
place there, av ye like, an’ I’ll not be wan to say ye no.’
At that the min round
all laughed, an’ the man from Manchesther got mad, an’ shpoke out, rough enough too it seemed: ‘Oh, he’s all right where
he is. I daresay he’s quiter times
where he is than whin he had my luk out. Him an’ the Devil can toss for
choice in bein’ lonely or bein’ quite.’
Wid that the widdy blazes up all iv a suddunt, like a
live sod shtuck in the thatch, an’ sez she: ‘Who are ye that dares to shpake ill iv the dead, an’ to couple his name wid the Divil, an’ to his widdy’s very face? It’s aisy
seen that poor Mick is gone!’ an’ wid that she threw her apron over her head an’ sot down an’ rocked herself
to and fro, as widdies
do whin the fit is on thim iv missin’ the dead.
There was more nor wan man there what’d like to have
shtud opposite the Manchesther man wid a bit iv a blackthorn in his hand; but
they knew the widdy too well to dar to intherfere till they were let. At length
wan iv thim—Mr Hogan, from nigh Portarlington, a warrm man, that’d put down a
thousand pounds iv dhry money any day in the week—kem over to the bar an’ tuk
aff his hat, an’ sez he: ‘Mrs Byrne, ma’am, as a friend of poor dear
ould Mick, I’d be
glad to take his quarrel on meself on his account, an’ more than proud to take
it on his widdy’s, if, ma’am, ye’ll only honour me be saying the wurrd.’
Wid that she tuk down the apron from aff iv her head an’ wiped away the tears in her jools
iv eyes wid the corner iv it.
‘Thank ye kindly,’ sez she; ‘but, guntlemin, Mick an’
me run this hotel long together, an’ I’ve run it alone since thin, an’ I mane
to go on running’ it be meself, even if new min from Manchesther itself does be
bringin’ us new ways. As to you, sur,’ sez she, turnin’ to him, ‘it’s powerful afraid
I am that there isn’t accommodation here for a guntlemin what’s so requireful.
An’ so I think I’ll be askin’ ye to find convanience in some other hotel in the
town.’
Wid that he turned on her an’ sez, ‘I’m here now, an’ I offer to pay me charges. Be the law ye can’t refuse to resave me or
refuse me lodgmint, especially whin I’m on the
primises.’
So the Widdy Byrne drewed herself up, an’ sez she,
‘Sur, ye ask yer legal rights; ye shall have them. Tell me what it is ye
require.’
Sez he
sthraight out: ‘I want the best room.’
‘I’ve tould you already,’ sez she, ‘there’s a gintleman
in it.’ ‘Well,’ sez he, ‘what other room have ye vacant?’
‘Sorra wan at all,’ sez she. ‘Every
room in the house is tuk. Perhaps,
sur, ye don’t
think or remimber that
there’s a fair on tomorra.’
She shpoke so polite that ivery man in the place knew
there was somethin’ comin’—later on. The Manchesther man felt that the laugh
was on him; but he didn’t want for impidence, so he up, an’ sez he: ‘Thin, if I
have to share wid another, I’ll share wid the best! It’s the Queen’s Room I’ll
be shleepin’ in this night.’
Well, the min shtandin’ by wasn’t too well plazed wid
what was going on; for the man from Manchesther he was plumin’ himself for all
the world like a cock on a dunghill. He laned agin over the bar an’ began
makin’ love to the widdy hot an’ fast. He was a fine, shtout-made man, wid a
bull neck on to him an’ short hair, like wan iv thim ‘two-to-wan-bar-wans’ what
I’ve seen at Punchestown an’ Fairy House an’ the Galway races. But he seemed to
have no manners at all in his coortin’, but done it as quick an’ business-like
as takun’ his commercial ordhers. It was like this: ‘I want to make love; you
want to be made love to, bein’ a woman. Hould up yer head!’
We all could see the widdy was boilin’ mad; but, to do him fair, the man from Manchesther
didn’t seem to care what any wan thought. But we all seen what he didn’t see at first, that the
widdy began widout thinkin’ to handle the rattan cane on the bar. Well,
prisintly he began agun to ask about his room, an’ what kind iv a man it was
that was to share it wid him.
So sez the widdy, ‘A man wid less wickedness in him nor you have,
an’ less impidence.’ ‘I hope he’s a quite man,’ sez he.
So the widdy began to laugh, an’ sez she: ‘I’ll warrant he’s quite
enough.’ ‘Does he shnore? I hate a man—or a woman ayther—what shnores.’
‘Throth,’ sez she, ‘there’s no shnore in him’; an’ she laughed agin.
Some iv the min round what knew iv the ould
attorney-man—saving yer prisince—began to laugh too; and this made the
Manchesther man suspicious. When the likes iv him gets suspicious he gets rale
nasty; so he sez, wid a shneer: ‘You seem to be pretty well up in his habits, ma’am!’
The widdy looked round at the graziers,
what was clutchin’
their ash plants hard, an’ there
was a laughin’ divil in her eye that kep’ thim quite;
an’ thin she turned round
to the man, and sez she: ‘Oh, I know that much, anyhow,
wid wan thing
an’ another, begor!’
But she looked more enticin’ nor iver at that moment. For sure the man from Manchesther thought
so, for he laned
nigh his whole
body over the counther, an’ whispered somethin’ at her, puttin’
out his hand as he did so, an’ layin’ it on her neck to dhraw
her to him. The widdy seemed to know
what was comm’, an’ had her hand on the rattan; so whin he was draggin’ her to
him an’ puttin’ out his lips to kiss her—an’ her first as red as a turkey-cock
an’ thin as pale as a sheet—she ups wid the cane and gev him wan skelp across the face wid it, shpringin’ back as
she done so. Oh jool! but that was a skelp! A big wale iv blood riz up as quick
as the blow was shtruck, jist as I’ve seen on the pigs’ backs whin they do be
prayin’ aloud not to be tuk where they’re wanted.
‘Hands off, Misther
Impidence!’ sez she. The man from Manchesther was that mad that he ups wid the tumbler formnst him an’
was goin’ to throw it at her, whin there kem an odd sound from the graziers—a
sort of ‘Ach!’ as whin a man is workin’ a sledge, an’ I seen the ground-ash
plants an’ the big fists what held thim, and the big hairy wrists go up in the
air. Begor, but polis thimselves wid bayonets wouldn’t care to face thim like
that! In the half of two twos the man from Manchesther would have been cut in
ribbons, but there came a cry from the widdy what made the glasses
ring: ‘Shtop! I’m not goin’
to have any fightin’ here; an’ besides, there’s bounds to the
bad manners iv even a man from Shorrox’. He wouldn’t dar to shtrike me—though
I have no head! Maybe I hit a thought
too hard; but I had rayson to remimber that somethin’ was due on Mick’s account
too. I’m sorry,
sur,’ sez she to the man,
quite polite, ‘that I had to defind
meself; but whin a gintleman claims the law to come into a house, an’ thin assaults th’ owner iv
it, though she has no head, it’s more restrainful he should be intirely!’
‘Hear, hear!’ cried some iv the mm, an’ wan iv thim sez ‘Amen’,
sez he, an’ they all begin
to laugh. The Manchesther man he didn’t know what to do; for begor he didn’t like the look
of thim ash plants up in the air, an’ yit he was not wan to like the laugh agin’
him or to take it aisy. So he turns to the widdy an’ he
lifts his hat an’ sez he wid mock politeness: ‘I must complimint ye,
ma’am, upon the
shtrength iv yer
arrm, as upon
the mildness iv yer
disposition. Throth, an’ I’m thinkin’ that it’s misther Mick that
has the best iv it, wid his body lyin’ paceful in the churchyard, anyhow; though
the poor sowi doesn’t seem to have much good in changin’ wan devil for
another!’ An’ he looked at her rale spiteful.
Well, for a minit her eyes blazed,
but thin she shmiled at him, an’ made a low curtsey,
an’ sez she—oh! mind ye, she was a gran’ woman at givin’ back as good as she got—‘Thank ye kindly, sur, for yer polite remarks about me arrm. Sure me
poor dear Mick often said the same; only he said more an’ wid shuparior
knowledge! “Molly”, sez he—“I’d mislike the shtrength iv yer arrm whin ye shtrike,
only that I forgive ye for it whin it comes to the huggin’!” But as to poor
Mick’s prisint condition I’m not goin’ to argue wid ye, though I can’t say that
I forgive ye for the way you’ve shpoke iv him that’s gone. Bedad, it’s fond iv
the dead y’are, for ye seem onable to kape thim out iv yer mouth. Maybe ye’ll
be more respectful to thim before ye die!’
‘I don’t want no sarmons!’ sez he, wery savage. ‘Am I
to have me room tonight, or am I not?’
‘Did I undherstand ye to say,’ sez she, ‘that ye wanted a share iv
the Queen’s Room?’ ‘I did! an’ I demand it.’
‘Very well, sur,’
sez she very quitely, ‘ye shall have it!’ Jist thin the supper war ready, and most iv the mm at the bar thronged
into the coffee-room, an’ among thim the man from Manchesther, what wint bang
up to the top iv the table an sot down as though he owned the place, an’ him
niver in the house before.
A few iv the bhoys shtayed a minit to say another word
to the widdy, an’ as soon as they was alone Misther
Hogan up, an’ sez he: ‘Oh, darlint!
but it’s a jool iv a woman
y’ are! Do ye
raly mane to put him in the room wid the corp?’
‘He said he insisted on being in that
room!’ she says, quite sarious; an’ thin givin’ a look undher her lashes at the bhoys as made thim lep, sez she: ‘Oh!
min, an ye love me give him his shkin that full that he’ll tumble
into his bed this night wid his sinses obscurifled. Dhrink
toasts till he misremimbers where he is! Whist! Go, quick, so that he won’t suspect
nothin’!’
That was a warrm night, I’m telling ye! The man from
Shorrox’ had wine galore wid his mate; an’ afther,
whin the plates
an’ dishes was tuk away an’ the nuts was brought in, Hogan
got up an’ proposed his health, an’ wished him prosperity in his new line. Iv coorse he had to dhrink that; an’ thin others got up,
an’ there was more toasts dhrunk than there was min in the room, till the man,
him not bein’ used to whiskey-punch, began to git onsartin in his shpache. So
they gev him more toasts — ‘Ireland as a nation’, an’ ‘Home Rule’, an’ ‘The
ruimory iv Dan O’Connell’, an’ ‘Bad luck to Boney’, an’ ‘God save the Queen’,
an’ ‘More power to Manchesther’, an’ other things what they thought would plaze
him, him bein’ English. Long hours before it was time for the house to shut, he
was as dhrunk as a whole row of fiddlers, an’ kep shakin’ hands wid ivery man
an’ promisin’ thim to open a new line in Home Rule, an’ sich nonsinse. So they
tuk him up to the door iv the Queen’s Room an’ left him there.
He managed to undhress himself all except his hat, and
got into bed wid the corp iv th’ ould attorney-man, an’ thin an’ there fell
asleep widout noticin’ him.
Well, prisintly he woke wid a cowid feelin’ all over
him. He had lit no candle, an’ there was only the light from the passage
comm’ in through
the glass over the door.
He felt himself nigh fallin’ out iv the bed wid him almost on the edge,
an’ the cowld shtrange gindeman
lyin’ shlap on the broad iv his back in the middle. He had enough iv the
dhrink in him to be quarrelsome.
‘I’ll throuble ye,’ sez he, ‘to kape over yer own side
iv the bed—or I’ll soon let ye know the rayson why.’ An’ wid that he give him a
shove. But iv coorse the ould attorney-man tuk no notice whatsumiver.
‘Y’are not that warrm that one’d like to lie contagious to ye,’ sez he. ‘Move over, I say, to yer own side!’ But divil a shtir iv the corp.
Well, thin he began to get fightin’
angry, an’ to kick an’ shove the corp; but not gittin’
any answer at all, he turned round an’ hit him a clip on the side iv the head.
‘Gitup,’ he
sez, ‘iv ye’re a man at all, an’ put up yer dooks.’
Then he got more madder shrill, for the dhrink was
shtirrin’ in him, an’ he kicked an’ shoved an’ grabbed him be the leg an’ the
arrm to move him.
‘Begor!’ sez he, ‘but ye’re the cowldest chap I iver
kem anigh iv. Musha! but yer hairs is like icicles.’
Thin he tuk him be the head, an’ shuk him an’ brung him
to the bedside, an’ kicked him clane out on to the flure on the far side iv the
bed.
‘Lie there,’ he sez, ‘ye ould blast furnace! Ye can
warrm yerself up on the flure till tomorra.’
Be this time the power iv the dhrink he had tuk got
ahoult iv him agin, an’ he fell back in the middle iv the bed, wid his head on the pilla an’ his toes up, an’ wint aff ashleep,
like a cat in the frost.
By-an’-by, whin the house was about shuttin’ up, the
watcher from th’ undhertaker’s kem to sit be the corp till the mornin’, an’ th’ attorney
him bein’ a Protestan’ there
was no candles. Whin the house was quite, wan iv the girris, what was
coortin’ wid the watcher, shtole into the room.
‘Are ye there,
Michael?’ sez she.
‘Yis, me darlint!’
he sez, comm’ to her; an’ there they shtood be the door, wid the lamp in
the passage shinin’ on the red heads iv the two iv thim.
‘I’ve come,’ sez Katty, ‘to kape ye company for a bit,
Michael; for it’s crool lonesome worrk sittin’ there alone all night. But I mustn’t
shtay long, for they’re all goin’ to bed soon, when the dishes is washed up.’
‘Give us a
kiss,’ sez Michael.
‘Oh, Michael!’
sez she: ‘kissin’ in the prisince iv a corp! It’s ashamed iv ye I am.’
‘Sorra cause, Katty.
Sure, it’s more respectful than any other way. Isn’t it next to kissin’
in the chapel? — an’ ye do that whin ye’re bein’ married. If ye kiss me
now, begor but I don’t know as it’s mortial nigh a weddin’
it is! Anyhow, give us a kiss, an’ we’ll talk iv the rights an’ wrongs iv it aftherwards.’
Well, somehow, yer ’ann’rs, that kiss was bern’ gave—an’
a kiss in the prisince
iv a corp is a sarious
thing an’ takes a long time. Thim two was payin’ such attintion to what was going on betune thim that they didn’t
heed nothin’, whin suddint Katty stops, and sez: ‘Whist! what is that?’
Michael felt creepy
too, for there
was a quare sound comm’ from the bed. So they grabbed one another as they shtud in the doorway
an looked at the bed almost afraid to breathe
till the hair on both iv thim
began to shtand up in horror; for the corp rose up in the bed, an’ they seen it
pointin’ at thim, an’ heard a hoarse voice say, ‘It’s in hell I am —Divils
around me! Don’t I see thim burnin’ wid their heads like flames? an’ it’s
burnin’ lam too—burnin’, burnin’, burnin’! Me throat is on fire, an’ me face is
burnin’! Wather! wather! Give me wather, if only a dhrop on me tongue’s tip!’
Well, thin Katty let one screetch out iv her, like to
wake the dead, an’ tore down the passage till she kem to the shtairs,
and tuk a flyin’ lep down an’ fell in a dead faint on the mat below; and Michael yelled ‘murdher’
wid all his might.
It wasn’t long till there was a crowd in that room, I
tell ye; an’ a mighty shtrange thing it was that sorra wan iv the graziers had
even tuk his coat from aff iv him to go to bed, or laid by his shtick. An’ the
widdy too, she was as nate an’ tidy as iver, though seemin’ surprised out iv a
sound shleep, an’ her clothes onto her, all savin’ a white bedgown, an’ a
candle in her hand. There was some others what had been in bed, min an’ wimin wid their bare feet an’ slippers on to some iv thim, wid their bracers down their backs, an’ their petticoats flung on
anyhow. An’ some iv thim in big nightcaps, an’ some wid their hair all screwed
up in knots wid little wisps iv paper, like farden screws iv Limerick twist or
Lundy Foot snuff. Musha! but it was the ould weemin what was afraid iv things
what didn’t alarrm the young wans at all. Divil resave me! but the sole thing
they seemed to dhread was the min—dead or alive it was all wan to thim—an’ ’twas
ghosts an’ corpses
an’ mayhap divils that the rest was afeard
iv.
Well, whin the Manchesther man seen thim all come tumblin’ into the room he began to git his wits about him; for the dhrink was
wearin’ aff, an’ he was thryin’ to remimber where he was. So whin he seen the widdy
he put his hand up to his face where
the red welt was, an’ at
wance seemed to
undhershtand, for he got mad agin an’ roared out: ‘What does this mane? Why
this invasion iv me chamber? Clear out the whole kit, or I’ll let yez know!’
Wid that he was goin’ to jump out of bed, but the
moment they seen his toes the ould weemin let a screech out iv thim, an’ clung
to the mm an’ implored thim to save thim from murdher—an’ worse. An’ there was the Widdy Byrne
laughin’ like mad; an’ Misther
Hogan shtepped out, an’ sez he: ‘Do jump out, Misther Shorrox! The boys
has their switches, an’ it’s a mighty handy costume ye’re in for a leatherin’!’
So wid that he jumped back into bed an’ covered the
clothes over him. ‘In the name of God,’ sez he, ‘what does it all mane?’
‘It manes this,’
sez Hogan, goin’
round the bed an’ draggin’
up the corp an’ layin’
it on the bed beside him. ‘Begorra! but it’s cantankerous kind iv a
scut y’are. First nothin’ will do ye
but sharin’ a room wid a corp; an’ thin ye want the whole place to yerself.’
‘Take it
away! Take it away,’ he yells out.
‘Begorra,’ sez Mister Hogan, ‘I’ll do no such thing. The gintleman
ordhered the room first,
an’ it’s he has the right to ordher you to be brung out!’
‘Did he shnore much, sur?’ says the widdy; an’ wid
that she burst out laughin’ an’ cryin’ all at wanst. ‘That’ll tache ye to shpake ill iv the dead agin!’ An’ she flung her petticoat over her head an’ run out iv the room.
Well, we turned the min all back to their own rooms; for the most part iv thim had plenty iv
dhrink on board, an’ we feared for a row. Now that the fun was over, we didn’t
want any unplisintness to follow. So two iv the graziers wint into wan bed, an’
we put the man from Manchesther in th’ other room,
an’ gev him a screechin’ tumbler iv punch
to put the hearrt in him
agin.
I thought the widdy had gone to her bed; but whin I wint to put out the lights I seen one in
the little room behind the bar, an’ I shtepped
quite, not to dishturb her, and peeped in. There she was on a low shtool rockin’
herself to an’ fro, an’ goin’ on wid her laughin’ an’ cryin’ both together, while she tapped
wid her fut on the flume. She was talkin’
to herselfin a kind
iv a whisper, an’ I heerd her say: ‘Oh, but it’s the crool woman I am to have
such a thing done in me house—an’ that poor sowl, wid none to weep for him, knocked about that a way
for shport iv dhrunken min while me poor dear darlin’ himself
is in the cowid clay!—But
oh! Mick, Mick, if ye were only here! Wouldn’t it be you—you wid the fun
iv ye an’ yer merry hearrt—that’d be plazed wid the doin’s iv this night!’
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