The Demi-gods

By James Stephens

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Title: The Demi-gods

Author: James Stephens

Release Date: August 11, 2014 [EBook #46558]

Language: English


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                             THE DEMI-GODS




                             [Illustration]

                         THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
                  NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
                        ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO

                        MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
                       LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
                               MELBOURNE

                   THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
                                TORONTO




                             THE DEMI-GODS


                                   BY
                             JAMES STEPHENS
               AUTHOR OF "THE HILL OF VISION," "THE CROCK
                   OF GOLD," "HERE ARE LADIES," ETC.


                                New York
                         THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
                                  1921
                         _All rights reserved_




                            COPYRIGHT, 1914,
                       BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
           Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1914.


                             Norwood Press
                 J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
                         Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.




                                   To
                             THOMAS BODKIN




                                CONTENTS


                                 BOOK I
                                                                PAGE
    PATSY MAC CANN                                                 1


                                BOOK II
    EILEEN NI COOLEY                                              85


                                BOOK III
    BRIEN O'BRIEN                                                141


                                BOOK IV
    MARY MAC CANN                                                225




                                 BOOK I

                             PATSY MAC CANN




                               CHAPTER I


"Will you leave that donkey alone," said Patsy Mac Cann to his daughter.
"I never heard the like of it," he continued testily. "I tell you the
way you do be going on with the ass is enough to make a Christian man
swear, so it is."

"You let me be," she replied. "If I was doing hurt or harm to you I
wouldn't mind, and if I am fond of the ass itself what does it matter to
anybody?"

"It's this way, that I don't like to see a woman kissing an ass on the
snout, it's not natural nor proper."

"A lot you know about natural and proper. Let you leave me alone now;
and, besides that, doesn't the ass like it?"

"That's not a reason; sure it doesn't matter in the world what an ass
likes or dislikes, and, anyhow, an ass doesn't like anything except
carrots and turnips."

"This one does," said she stoutly.

"And a body might be kissing an ass until the black day of doom and he
wouldn't mind it."

"This one minds."

"Kissing an old ass!"

"One has to be kissing something."

"Let you kiss me then and get done with it," said he.

She regarded him in amazement.

"What would I kiss you for? Sure you're my father, and aren't you as old
as the hills?"

"Well, well, you're full of fun, and that's what I say. Take the winkers
off that donkey's face, and let him get a bit to eat; there's grass
enough, God knows, and it's good grass."

Mary busied herself with the winkers and the bit while her father
continued:

"What I wish is this, that Christian people were able to eat grass like
the beasts, and then there wouldn't be any more trouble in the world.
Are you listening to me, Mary, or are you listening to the donkey?"

"It's you I'm listening to."

"I say this, that if every person had enough to eat there'd be no more
trouble in the world and we could fight our fill. What have you got in
the basket?"

"I've the loaf that I bought in the shop at Knockbeg, and the half loaf
that you took out of the woman's window--it's fresher than the other
one."

"I was guided," said her father. "We'll eat that one first the way no
person can claim it. What else have you got?"

"I've the white turnip that I found in a field."

"There's great nourishment in turnips; the cattle do get fat on them in
winter."

"And I've the two handfuls of potatoes that you gathered at the bend of
the road."

"Roast themselves in the embers, for that's the only road to cook a
potato. What way are we going to eat to-night?"

"We'll eat the turnip first, and then we'll eat the bread, and after
that we'll eat the potatoes."

"And fine they'll taste. I'll cut the turnip for you with the
sailorman's jackknife."

                   *       *       *       *       *

The day had drawn to its close. The stars had not yet come, nor the
moon. Far to the west a red cloud poised on the horizon like a great
whale and, moment by moment, it paled and faded until it was no more
than a pink flush. On high, clouds of pearl and snow piled and fell and
sailed away on easy voyages. It was the twilight--a twilight of such
quietude that one could hear the soft voice of the world as it whispered
through leaf and twig. There was no breeze to swing the branches of the
trees or to creep among the rank grasses and set them dancing, and yet
everywhere there was unceasing movement and a sound that never ceased.
About them, for mile upon mile, there was no habitation of man; there
was no movement anywhere except when a bird dipped and soared in a hasty
flight homewards, or when a beetle went slugging by like a tired bullet.

Mary had unharnessed the ass and bade him, with an affectionate kiss, to
eat his full. The donkey stood for a moment with his ears and tail
hanging down, then he lifted both his ears and his tail, slung up his
ragged head, bared his solid teeth, and brayed furiously for two
minutes. That accomplished he trotted briskly a few paces, bent to the
grass, and began to eat so eagerly that one would think eating was more
of a novelty to him than it could be to an ass of his years.

"The sound of that beast's voice does get on my nerves," said Patsy.

"He has a powerful voice, sure enough, God bless him! Sit down there by
the hedge and light the fire while I'm getting the things ready; the
night will be on us in a few minutes and it will be a cold night."

While she moved busily from the cart to the hedge her father employed
himself lighting a fire of turf in a wrinkled bucket. When this was
under way he pulled out a pipe, black as a coal, and off which half the
shank was broken, and this he put into his mouth. At the moment he
seemed to be sunken in thought, his eyes to the grass and his feet
planted, and it was in a musing voice that he spoke:

"Do you know what I'd do, Mary, if I had a bottle of porter beside me in
this field?"

"I do well," she replied; "you'd drink it."

"I would so, but before I'd drink it I'd put the end of this pipe into
it, for it's newly cracked, and it sticks to my lips in a way that would
anger a man wanting a smoke, and if I could stick it into the porter it
would be cured. I don't suppose, now, that you have a sup of porter in
the cart!"

"I have not."

"Because if you had a small sup I'd be able to get a smoke this night,
as well as a drink."

"You're full of fun," said she sourly.

"I saw a bottle in your hand a while back," he continued musingly, "and
it looked like a weighty bottle."

"It's full to the neck with spring water."

"Ah!" said her father, and he regarded that distant horizon whereon the
pink cloud was now scarcely visible as a pinkness and was no longer the
shape of a great whale.

After a moment he continued in a careless voice:

"You might hand me the bottle of spring water, alanna, till I wet my
lips with it. It's a great thing for the thirst, I'm told, and it's
healthy beside that."

"I'm keeping that sup of water to make the tea when we'd be wanting it."

"Well, I'll only take a drop out of it, and I won't lose the cork."

"You can get it yourself, then," said Mary, "for I've plenty to do and
you haven't."

Her father, rolling his tough chin with his fingers, went to the cart.
He found the bottle, lifted the cork, smelt it, tasted:

"It is spring water indeed," said he, and he thumped the cork back again
with some irritation and replaced the bottle in the cart.

"I thought you wanted a drink," said his daughter mildly.

"So I do," he replied, "but I can't stand the little creatures that do
be wriggling about in spring water. I wouldn't like to be swallowing
them unknown. Ah! them things don't be in barrels that you buy in a
shop, and that's a fact."

She was preparing the potatoes when a remark from her father caused her
to pause.

"What is it?" said she.

"It's a bird. I saw it for a second against a white piece of a cloud,
and I give you my word that it's as big as a haystack. There it is
again," he continued excitedly, "there's three of them."

For a few minutes they followed the flight of these amazing birds, but
the twilight had almost entirely departed and darkness was brooding over
the land. They did not see them any more.




                               CHAPTER II


And yet it was but a short distance from where they camped that the
angels first put foot to earth.

It is useless to question what turmoil of wind or vagary of wing brought
them to this desert hill instead of to a place more worthy of their
grandeur, for, indeed, they were gorgeously apparelled in silken robes
of scarlet and gold and purple; upon their heads were crowns high in
form and of curious, intricate workmanship, and their wings, stretching
ten feet on either side, were of many and shining colours.

Enough that here they did land, and in this silence and darkness they
stood for a few moments looking about them.

Then one spoke:

"Art," said he, "we were too busy coming down to look about us
carefully; spring up again a little way, and see if there is any house
in sight."

At the word one of the three stepped forward a pace, and leaped twenty
feet into the air; his great wings swung out as he leaped, they beat
twice, and he went circling the hill in steady, noiseless flight.

He returned in a minute:

"There are no houses here, but a little way below I saw a fire and two
people sitting beside it."

"We will talk to them," said the other. "Show the way, Art."

"Up then," said Art.

"No," said the Angel who had not yet spoken. "I am tired of flying. We
will walk to this place you speak of."

"Very well," replied Art, "let us walk."

And they went forward.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Around the little bucket of fire where Mac Cann and his daughter were
sitting there was an intense darkness. At the distance of six feet they
could still see, but delicately, indistinctly, and beyond that the night
hung like a velvet curtain. They did not mind the night, they did not
fear it, they did not look at it: it was around them, full of
strangeness, full of mystery and terror, but they looked only at the
glowing brazier, and in the red cheer of that they were content.

They had eaten the bread and the turnip, and were waiting for the
potatoes to be cooked, and as they waited an odd phrase, an exclamation,
a sigh would pass from one to the other; and then, suddenly, the dark
curtain of night moved noiselessly, and the three angels stepped nobly
in the firelight.

For an instant neither Mac Cann nor his daughter made a movement; they
did not make a sound. Here was terror, and astonishment the sister of
terror: they gaped: their whole being was in their eyes as they stared.
From Mac Cann's throat came a noise; it had no grammatical significance,
but it was weighted with all the sense that is in a dog's growl or a
wolf's cry. Then the youngest of the strangers came forward:

"May we sit by your fire for a little time?" said he. "The night is
cold, and in this darkness one does not know where to go."

At the sound of words Patsy seized hold of his sliding civilization.

"To be sure," he stammered. "Why wouldn't your honour sit down? There
isn't a seat, but you're welcome to the grass and the light of the
fire."

"Mary," he continued, looking hastily around--

But Mary was not there. The same instant those tall forms strode from
the darkness in front Mary had slipped, swift and noiseless as the
shadow of a cat, into the darkness behind her.

"Mary," said her father again, "these are decent people, I'm thinking.
Let you come from wherever you are, for I'm sure they wouldn't hurt
yourself or myself."

As swiftly as she had disappeared she reappeared.

"I was looking if the ass was all right," said she sullenly.

She sat again by the brazier, and began to turn the potatoes with a
stick. She did not appear to be taking any heed of the strangers, but it
is likely that she was able to see them without looking, because, as is
well known, women and birds are able to see without turning their heads,
and that is indeed a necessary provision, for they are both surrounded
by enemies.




                              CHAPTER III


The remarkable thing about astonishment is that it can only last for an
instant. No person can be surprised for more than that time. You will
come to terms with a ghost within two minutes of its appearance, and it
had scarcely taken that time for Mac Cann and his daughter to become one
with the visitors.

If the surprisor and the surprisee are mutually astonished, then,
indeed, there is a tangle out of which anything may emerge, for two
explanations are necessary at the one moment, and two explanations can
no more hold the same position in time than two bodies can occupy the
same lodgment in space.

It needed alone that the angels should proclaim their quality for the
situation to arrange itself naturally.

Man is a scientific creature; he labels his ignorance and shelves it:
mystery affrights him, it bores him, but when he has given a name to any
appearance then mystery flies away, and reality alone remains for his
cogitation. Later, perhaps, reality will enrage and mystify him more
profoundly than any unexpectedness can do.

The Mac Canns, so far as they professed a religion, were Catholics.
Deeper than that they were Irish folk. From their cradles, if ever they
had cradles other than a mother's breast and shoulder, they had supped
on wonder. They believed as easily as an animal does, for most creatures
are forced to credit everything long before they are able to prove
anything. We have arranged to label these faculties of imagination and
prophecy among the lesser creatures Instinct, and with the label we have
thrown overboard more of mystery than we could afford to live with.
Later these may confront us again in our proper souls, and the wonder
and terror so long overdue will compel our tardy obeisance.

At the end of amazement, as of all else, we go to sleep, and, within an
hour of their meeting, the angels and the Mac Canns were stretched in
one common unconsciousness.

The angels were asleep, their attitudes proclaimed it. Patsy was asleep,
his nose, with the unpleasant emphasis of a cracked trumpet, pealed
wheezy confirmation of his slumber. His daughter was asleep, for there
by the brazier she lay, motionless as the ground itself.

Perhaps she was not asleep. Perhaps she was lying with her face to the
skies, staring through the darkness at the pale, scarce stars, dreaming
dreams and seeing visions, while, all around, down the invisible road
and across the vanished fields and the hills, night trailed her dusky
robes and crushed abroad her poppy.

Whether she had slept or not she was the first to arise in the morning.

A pale twilight was creeping over the earth, and through it one could
see chilly trees and shivering grass; the heavy clouds huddled together
as though they were seeking warmth on those grisly heights; the birds
had not yet left their nests; it was an hour of utter silence and
uncomeliness; an hour for blind and despairing creatures to move forward
spitefully, cursing themselves and the powers; an hour when imagination
has no function, and hope would fly again to the darkness rather than
remain in that livid wilderness, for this was not yet the thin child of
the dawn, crowned with young buds and active as a wintry leaf; it was
the abortion of the dawn, formless, heavy, and detestable.

Moving cautiously in that shade, Mary herself seemed no more than a
shadow; she diminished thin and formless as a wraith, while she trod
carefully to and fro from the cart to the hedge.

She sat down, unloosed her hair and commenced to brush it.

In this colourless light her hair had no colour, but was of astonishing
length and thickness; it flowed about her like a cloak, and as she sat
it rolled and crept on the grass. She did not often tend her hair thus.
Sometimes she plaited it for the sake of convenience, so that windy days
would not whip it into her eyes or lash her cheeks; sometimes, through
sheer laziness, she did not even plait it, she rolled it into a great
ball and drew a wide, masculine cap over its brightness; and now, before
the day had broken, sitting in a ghastly lightness, which was neither
light nor darkness, she was attending to her hair.

And this hair perplexed her, for she did not know what to do with it;
she did not know whether it was to be seen or not seen; whether to braid
it in two great ropes, or roll it carelessly or carefully above her
head, or let it hang loosely about her shoulders held only at the nape
with a piece of ribbon or stuff. An hesitation such as this was new to
her; she had never had occasion for such forethought; it was strange and
inquieting; more disturbing, indeed, than the visit at black of night of
those tall strangers whose eyes and voices were so quiet, and whose
appointments flashed in the firelight while they spoke to her father of
the things in which travellers are interested.

She looked at them where they lay, but they were scarcely more than
visible--a tangle of flowing cloths and great limbs fading away in the
rank grasses and the obscurity, and to her mind the real wonder was not
that they had come, but that they were still there, and that they were
sleeping deeply and peacefully as she had slept so often, with her head
pillowed on her arm and her limbs folded calmly between the earth and
the sky.




                               CHAPTER IV


Her hair was not braided; it was tied at the neck with a piece of
whitish cloth torn from some part of her clothing, and upon her
shoulders it billowed and rolled in magnificent living abundance.

Very gently she moved to where her father lay on his back with his mouth
open and his black chin jutting at the sky. He was breathing through his
mouth, so he was not snoring any longer. She lifted the three or four
sacks which covered him, and rocked his shoulders cautiously until he
awakened.

Her father awakened exactly as she did, exactly as every open-air animal
does; his eyes flew wide, instantly and entirely wakeful, and he looked
at her with full comprehension of their adventure. He raised softly on
an elbow and glanced to where the strangers were; then nodded to his
daughter and rose noiselessly to his feet. She beckoned him and they
stepped a few paces away so that they might talk in security.

Mary was about to speak but her father prevented her:

"Listen," he whispered, "the best thing we can do is to load the things
into the cart, without making any noise, mind you! then we'll yoke the
little ass as easy as anything, and then I'll get into the cart and I'll
drive off as hard as ever I can pelt, and you can run beside the ass
with a stick in your hand and you welting the devil out of him to make
him go quick. I'm no good myself at the running, and that's why I'll get
into the cart, but you can run like a hare, and that's why you'll wallop
the beast."

"Mind now," he continued fiercely, "we don't know who them fellows are
at all, and what would the priest say if he heard we were stravaiging
the country with three big, buck angels, and they full of tricks maybe;
so go you now and be lifting in the things and I'll give you good help
myself."

"I'll do nothing of the kind," whispered Mary angrily, "and it wasn't
for that I woke you up."

"Won't you, indeed?" said her father fiercely.

"What would they be thinking of us at all if they were to rouse and see
us sneaking off in that way? I'm telling you now that I won't do it, and
that you won't do it either, and if you make a move to the cart I'll
give a shout that will waken the men."

"The devil's in you, you strap!" replied her father, grinding his teeth
at her. "What call have we to be mixing ourselves up with holy angels
that'll be killing us maybe in an hour or half an hour; and maybe
they're not angels at all but men that do be travelling the land in a
circus and they full of fun and devilment?"

"It's angels they are," replied his daughter urgently, "and if they're
not angels itself they are rich men, for there's big rings of gold on
their fingers, and every ring has a diamond in it, and they've golden
chains across their shoulders, I'm telling you, and the stuff in their
clothes is fit for the children of a king. It's rich and very rich they
are."

Mac Cann rasped his chin with his thumb.

"Do you think they are rich folk?"

"I do, indeed."

"Then," said her father in an abstracted tone, "we won't say anything
more about it."

After a moment he spoke again:

"What were you thinking about yourself?"

"I was thinking," she replied, "that when they waken up in a little
while there won't be anything at all for them to eat and they
strangers."

"Hum!" said her father.

"There's two cold potatoes in the basket," she continued, "and a small
piece of bread, and there isn't anything more than that; so let you be
looking around for something to eat the way we won't be put to shame
before the men."

"It's easy talking!" said he; "where am I to look? Do you want me to
pick red herrings out of the grass and sides of bacon off the little
bushes?"

"We passed a house last night a mile down the road," said Mary; "go you
there and get whatever you're able to get, and if you can't get anything
buy it off the people in the house. I've three shillings in my pocket
that I was saving for a particular thing, but I'll give them to you
because I wouldn't like to be shamed before the strange men."

Her father took the money:

"I wish I knew that you had it yesterday," he growled, "I wouldn't have
gone to sleep with a throat on me like a mid-summer ditch and it full of
dust and pismires."

Mary pushed him down the road.

"Be back as quick as you are able, and buy every kind of thing that you
can get for the three shillings."

She watched him stamping heavily down the road, and then she returned
again to their encampment.




                               CHAPTER V


The visitors had not awakened.

Now the air was growing clearer; the first livid pallor of the dawn had
changed to a wholesome twilight, and light was rolling like clear smoke
over the land. The air looked cold, and it began to look sharp instead
of muddy; now the trees and bushes stood apart; they seemed lonely and
unguarded in that chill dawning; they seemed like living things which
were cold and a little frightened in an immensity to which they were
foreign and from which they had much to dread.

Of all unnatural things, if that word can be used in any context, there
is none more unnatural than silence, there is none so terrifying; for
silence means more than itself, it means also immobility; it is the
symbol and signature of death, and from it no one knows what may come at
an instant; for silence is not quietness, it is the enemy of quietness;
against it your watch must climb the tower and stare in vain; against it
your picket must be set, and he will thrust a lance to the sound of his
own pulses; he will challenge the beating of his own heart, and hear his
own harness threatening him at a distance.

To walk in a forest when there is no wind to stir the branches and set
the leaves tapping upon the boughs, this is terrifying; a lonely sea
stretching beyond sight and upon which there is no ripple holds the same
despair, and a grassy plain from whence there is no movement visible has
too its desolating horror.

But these things did not haunt the girl. She did not heed the silence
for she did not listen to it; she did not heed the immensity for she did
not see it. In space and silence she had been cradled; they were her
foster-parents, and if ever she looked or listened it was to see and
hear something quite other than these. Now she did listen and look. She
listened to the breathing of the sleepers, and soon, for she was a
female, she looked to see what they were like.

She leaned softly over one. He was a noble old man with a sweeping,
white beard and a great brow; the expression of his quiet features was
that of a wise infant; her heart went out to him and she smiled at him
in his sleep.

She trod to the next and bent again. He was younger, but not young; he
looked about forty years of age; his features were regular and very
determined; his face looked strong, comely as though it had been
chiselled from a gracious stone; there was a short coal-black beard on
his chin.

She turned to the third sleeper, and halted blushing. She remembered his
face, caught on the previous night in one lightning peep while she slid
away from their approach. It was from him she had fled in the night, and
for him that her hair was now draping her shoulders in unaccustomed
beauty.

She did not dare go near him; she was afraid that if she bent over him
he would flash open his eyes and look at her, and, as yet, she could not
support such a look. She knew that if she were stretched in sleep and he
approached to lean across her, she would awaken at the touch of his
eyes, and she would be ashamed and frightened.

She did not look at him.

She went again to her place and set to building a fire in the brazier,
and, while she sat, a voice began to sing in the dawn; not loud, but
very gently, very sweetly. It was so early for a bird to sing, and she
did not recognise that tune although the sound of it was thrilling
through all her body. Softly, more softly, O Prophetic Voice! I do not
know your speech; I do not know what happiness you are promising; is it
of the leaves you tell and of a nest that rocks high on a leafy spray;
there your mate swings cooing to herself. She swings and coos; she is
folded in peace, and the small, white clouds go sailing by and they do
not fall.

So through unimagined ways went that song, lifting its theme in terms
that she did not comprehend; but it was not a bird that sang to her, it
was her own heart making its obscure music and lilting its secret, wild
lyrics in the dawn.




                               CHAPTER VI


It was the donkey awakened them.

For some time he had been rolling along the ground in ecstasy; now his
agitated legs were pointing at the sky while he scratched his back
against little stones and clumps of tough clay; now he was lying flat
rubbing his jowl against these same clumps. He stood up suddenly, shook
himself, swung up his tail and his chin, bared his teeth, fixed his eye
on eternity, and roared "hee-haw" in a voice of such sudden mightiness,
that not alone did the sleepers bound from their slumbers, but the very
sun itself leaped across the horizon and stared at him with its wild
eye.

Mary ran and beat the ass on the nose with her fist, but whatever Mary
did to the ass was understood by him as a caress, and he willingly
suffered it--"hee-haw," said he again triumphantly, and he planted his
big head on her shoulder and stared sadly into space.

He was thinking, and thought always makes an ass look sad, but what he
was thinking about not even Mary knew; his eye was hazy with cogitation,
and he looked as wise and as kindly as the eldest of the three angels;
indeed, although he had never been groomed, he looked handsome also, for
he had the shape of a good donkey; his muzzle and his paws were white,
the rest of his body was black and his eyes were brown. That was the
appearance of the donkey.

The angels arose and, much as the ass did they shook themselves; there
was no further toilet than that practicable; they ran their hands
through their abundant hair, and the two who had beards combed these
also with their fingers--then they looked around them.

Now the birds were sweeping and climbing on the shining air; they were
calling and shrieking and singing; fifty of them, and all of the same
kind, came dashing madly together, and they all sang the one song, so
loud, so exultant, the heaven and earth seemed to ring and ring again of
their glee.

They passed, and three antic wings came tumbling and flirting together;
these had no song or their happiness went far beyond all orderly sound;
they squealed as they chased each other; they squealed as they dropped
twenty sheer feet towards the ground, and squealed again as they
recovered on a swoop, and as they climbed an hundred feet in three swift
zig-zags, they still squealed without intermission, and then the three
went flickering away to the west, each trying to bite the tail off the
others.

There came a crow whose happiness was so intense that he was not able to
move; he stood on the hedge for a long time, and all that time he was
trying hard to compose himself to a gravity befitting the father of many
families, but every few seconds he lost all control and bawled with
fervour. He examined himself all over; he peeped under his feathers to
see was his complexion good; he parted the plumage of his tail modishly;
he polished his feet with his bill, and then polished his bill on his
left thigh, and then he polished his left thigh with the back of his
neck. "I'm a hell of a crow," said he, "and everybody admits it." He
flew with admirable carelessness over the ass, and cleverly stole two
claws and one beak full of hair; but in mid-air he laughed incautiously
so that the hair fell out of his beak, and in grabbing at that portion
he dropped the bits in his claws, and he got so excited in trying to
rescue these before they reached the ground that his voice covered all
the other sounds of creation.

The sun was shining; the trees waved their branches in delight; there
was no longer murk or coldness in the air; it sparkled from every point
like a vast jewel, and the brisk clouds arraying themselves in fleeces
of white and blue raced happily aloft.

That was what the angels saw when they looked abroad; a few paces
distant the cart was lying with its shafts up in the air, and a tumble
of miscellaneous rubbish was hanging half in and half out of it; a
little farther the ass, in a concentrated manner, was chopping grass as
quickly as ever he could, and, naturally enough, eating it; for after
thinking deeply we eat, and it is true wisdom to do so.

The eldest of the angels observed the donkey. He stroked his beard.

"One eats that kind of vegetable," said he.

The others observed also.

"And," that angel continued, "the time has come for us to eat."

The second eldest angel rolled his coal-black chin in his hand and his
gesture and attitude were precisely those of Patsy Mac Cann.

"I am certainly hungry," said he.

He picked a fistful of grass and thrust some of it into his mouth, but
after a moment of difficulty he removed it again.

"It is soft enough to eat," said he musingly, "but I do not care greatly
for its taste."

The youngest angel made a suggestion.

"Let us talk to the girl," said he.

And they all moved over to Mary.

"Daughter," said the eldest of the three, "we are hungry," and he beamed
on her so contentedly that all fear and diffidence fled from her on the
instant.

She replied:

"My father has gone down the road looking for food; he will be coming
back in a minute or two, and he'll be bringing every kind of thing
that's nourishing."

"While we are waiting for him," said the angel, "let us sit down and you
can tell us all about food."

"It is a thing we ought to learn at once," said the second angel.

So they sat in a half-circle opposite the girl, and requested her to
give them a lecture on food.

She thought it natural they should require information about earthly
matters, but she found, as all unpractised speakers do, that she did not
know at what point to begin on her subject. Still, something had to be
said, for two of them were stroking their beards, and one was hugging
his knees, and all three were gazing at her.

"Everything," said she, "that a body can eat is good to eat, but some
things do taste nicer than others; potatoes and cabbage are very good to
eat, and so is bacon; my father likes bacon when it's very salt, but I
don't like it that way myself; bread is a good thing to eat, and so is
cheese."

"What do you call this vegetable that the animal is eating?" said the
angel pointing to the ass.

"That isn't a vegetable at all, sir, that's only grass; every kind of
animal eats it, but Christians don't."

"Is it not good to eat?"

"Sure, I don't know. Dogs eat it when they are sick, so it ought to be
wholesome, but I never heard tell of any person that ate grass except
they were dying of the hunger and couldn't help themselves, poor
creatures! And there was a Jew once who was a king, and they do say that
he used to go out with the cattle and eat the grass like themselves, and
nobody says that he didn't get fat.

"But here's my father coming across the fields (which is a queer way for
him to come, because he went away by the road), and I'm thinking that he
has a basket under his arm and there will be food in it."




                              CHAPTER VII


It was true enough. Mac Cann was coming to them from a point at right
angles to where he was expected.

Now and again he turned to look over his shoulder, and as he was taking
advantage of dips in the ground, bushes, and such-like to shield his
advance his daughter divined that something had occurred in addition to
the purchase of food. She had often before observed her father moving
with these precautionary tactics, and had many times herself shared and
even directed a retreat which was full of interest.

When her father drew nigh he nodded meaningly at her, set down a basket
and a bundle, and stood for a moment looking at these while he thumbed
his chin.

"Faith!" said he, "the world is full of trouble, and that's a fact."

He turned to the strangers.

"And I'm telling you this, that if the world wasn't full of trouble
there'd be no life at all for the poor. It's the only chance we get is
when people are full of woe, God help them! and isn't that a queer
thing?

"Mary," he turned, and his voice was full of careless pride, "try if
there isn't some small thing or other in the basket, and let your
honours sit down on the grass while the young girl is getting your
breakfast."

So the angels and Patsy sat down peacefully on the grass, and Mary
opened the basket.

There were two loaves of bread in it, a fine square of butter, a piece
of cheese as big as a man's hand and four times as thick; there was a
leg of mutton in the basket, and only a little bit had been taken off
it, a big paper bag full of tea, a package of soft sugar, a bottle full
of milk, a bottle half full of whisky, two tobacco pipes having silver
bands on their middles, and a big bar of plug tobacco. Those were the
things in the basket.

Mary's eyes and her mouth opened when she saw them, and she blessed
herself, but she made no sound; and when she turned her face towards the
company there was no expression on it except that of hospitality.

She cut slices from each of these things and piled them on a large piece
of paper in the centre of the men; then she sat herself down and they
all prepared to eat.

The second angel turned courteously to Mac Cann.

"Will you kindly begin to eat," said he, "and by watching you we will
know what to do."

"There can be nothing more uncomely," said the first angel, "than to see
people acting in disaccord with custom; we will try to do exactly as you
do, and although you may be troubled by our awkwardness you will not be
shocked by a lapse from sacred tradition."

"Well!" said Patsy thoughtfully.

He stretched a hand towards the food.

"I'll stand in nobody's light, and teaching people is God's own work;
this is the way I do it, your worships, and any one that likes can
follow me up."

He seized two pieces of bread, placed a slice of cheese between them,
and bit deeply into that trinity.

The strangers followed his actions with fidelity, and in a moment their
mouths were as full as his was and as content.

Patsy paused between bites:

"When I've this one finished," said he, "I'll take two more bits of
bread and I'll put a lump of meat between them, and I'll eat that."

"Ah!" said that one of the angels whose mouth chanced to be free.

Patsy's eye roved over the rest of the food.

"And after that," he continued, "we will take a bit of whatever is
handy."

In a short time there was nothing left on the newspaper but soft sugar,
butter, tea, and tobacco. Patsy was abashed.

"I did think that there was more than that," said he.

"I've had enough myself," he continued, "but maybe your honours could
eat more."

Two of the angels assured him that they were quite satisfied, but the
youngest angel said nothing.

"I'm doubting that you had enough," said Patsy dubiously to him.

"I could eat more if I had it," returned that one with a smile.

Mary went to the cart and returned bearing two cold potatoes and a piece
of bread, and she placed these before the young angel. He thanked her
and ate these, and then he ate the package of soft sugar, and then he
ate a little piece of the butter, but he didn't care for it. He pointed
to the plug of tobacco:

"Does this be eaten?" he enquired.

"It does not," said Patsy. "If you ate a bit of that you'd get a pain
inside of your belly that would last you for a month. There's some
people do smoke it, and there's others do chew it; but I smoke it and
chew it myself, and that's the best way. There's two pipes there on the
paper, and I've a pipe in my own pocket, so whichever of you would like
a smoke can do exactly as I do."

With a big jack-knife he shredded pieces from the plug, and rolled these
between his palms, then he carefully stuffed his pipe, pulled at it to
see was it drawing well, lit the tobacco, and heaved a sigh of
contentment. He smiled around the circle.

"That's real good," said he.

The strangers examined the pipes and tobacco with curiosity, but they
did not venture to smoke, and they watched Patsy's beatific face with
kindly attention.




                              CHAPTER VIII


Now at this moment Mary was devoured with curiosity. She wanted to know
how her father had become possessed of the basketful of provisions. She
knew that three shillings would not have purchased a tithe of these
goods, and, as she had now no fear of the strangers, she questioned her
parent.

"Father," said she, "where did you get all the good food?"

The angels had eaten of his bounty, so Mac Cann considered that he had
nothing to fear from their side. He regarded them while he pulled
thoughtfully at his pipe.

"Do you know," said he, "that the hardest thing in the world is to get
the food, and a body is never done looking for it. We are after eating
all that we got this morning, so now we'll have to search for what we'll
eat to-night, and in the morning we'll have to look again for more of
it, and the day after that, and every day until we are dead we'll have
to go on searching for the food."

"I would have thought," said the eldest angel, "that of all problems
food would be the simplest in an organised society."

This halted Mac Cann for a moment.

"Maybe you're right, sir," said he kindly, and he dismissed the
interruption.

"I heard a man once, he was a stranger to these parts, and he had a
great deal of the talk, he said that the folk at the top do grab all the
food in the world, and that then they make every person work for them,
and that when you've done a certain amount of work they give you just
enough money to buy just enough food to let you keep on working for
them. That's what the man said: a big, angry man he was, with whiskers
on him like the whirlwind, and he swore he wouldn't work for any one.
I'm thinking myself that he didn't work either. We were great friends,
that man and me, for I don't do any work if I can help it; it's that I
haven't got the knack for work, and, God help me! I've a big appetite.
Besides that, the work I'd be able to do in a day mightn't give me
enough to eat, and wouldn't I be cheated then?"

"Father," said Mary, "where did you get all the good food this morning?"

"I'll tell you that. I went down to the bend of the road where the house
is, and I had the three shillings in my hand. When I came to the house
the door was standing wide open. I hit it a thump of my fist, but nobody
answered me. 'God be with all here,' said I, and in I marched. There was
a woman lying on the floor in one room, and her head had been cracked
with a stick; and in the next room there was a man lying on the floor,
and his head had been cracked with a stick. It was in that room I saw
the food packed nice and tight in the basket that you see before you. I
looked around another little bit, and then I came away, for, as they
say, a wise man never found a dead man, and I'm wise enough no matter
what I look like."

"Were the people all dead?" said Mary, horrified.

"They were not--they only got a couple of clouts. I'm thinking they are
all right by this, and they looking for the basket, but, please God,
they won't find it. But what I'd like to know is this, who was it hit
the people with a stick, and then walked away without the food and the
drink and the tobacco, for that's a queer thing."

He turned to his daughter.

"Mary, a cree, let you burn up that basket in the brazier, for I don't
like the look of it at all, and it empty."

So Mary burned the basket with great care while her father piled their
goods on the cart and yoked up the ass.

Meanwhile the angels were talking together, and after a short time they
approached Mac Cann.

"If it is not inconvenient," said their spokesman, "we would like to
remain with you for a time. We think that in your company we may learn
more than we might otherwise do, for you seem to be a man of ability,
and at present we are rather lost in this strange world."

"Sure," said Patsy heartily, "I haven't the least objection in the
world, only, if you don't want to be getting into trouble, and if you'll
take my advice, I'd say that ye ought to take off them kinds of clothes
you're wearing and get into duds something like my own, and let you put
your wings aside and your fine high crowns, the way folk won't be
staring at you every foot of the road, for I'm telling you that it's a
bad thing to have people looking after you when you go through a little
village or a town, because you can never know who'll remember you
afterwards, and you maybe not wanting to be remembered at all."

"If our attire," said the angel, "is such as would make us
remarkable----"

"It is," said Patsy. "People would think you belonged to a circus, and
the crowds of the world would be after you in every place."

"Then," replied the angel, "we will do as you say."

"I have clothes enough in this bundle," said Patsy, with a vague air. "I
found them up there in the house, and I was thinking of yourselves when
I took them. Let you put them on, and we will tie up your own things in
a sack and bury them here so that when you want them again you'll be
able to get them, and then we can travel wherever we please and no
person will say a word to us."

So the strangers retired a little way with the bundle, and there they
shed their finery.

When they appeared again they were clad in stout, ordinary clothing.
They did not look a bit different from Patsy Mac Cann except that they
were all taller men than he, but between his dilapidation and theirs
there was very little to choose.

Mac Cann dug a hole beside a tree and carefully buried their property,
then with a thoughtful air he bade Mary move ahead with the ass, while
he and the angels stepped forward at the tailboard.

They walked then through the morning sunlight, and for a time they had
little to say to each other.




                               CHAPTER IX


In truth Patsy Mac Cann was a very able person.

For forty-two years he had existed on the edges of a society which did
not recognise him in any way, and, as he might himself have put it, he
had not done so very badly at all.

He lived as a bird lives, or a fish, or a wolf. Laws were for other
people, but they were not for him; he crawled under or vaulted across
these ethical barriers, and they troubled him no more than as he had to
bend or climb a little to avoid them--he discerned laws as something to
be avoided, and it was thus he saw most things.

Religion and morality, although he paid these an extraordinary
reverence, were not for him either; he beheld them from afar, and,
however they might seem beautiful or foolish, he left them behind as
readily as he did his debts, if so weighty a description may be given to
his volatile engagements. He did not discharge these engagements; he
elongated himself from them; between himself and a query he interposed
distance, and at once that became foreign to him, for half a mile about
himself was his frontier, and beyond that, wherever he was, the enemy
lay.

He stood outside of every social relation, and within an organised
humanity he might almost have been reckoned as a different species. He
was very mobile, but all his freedom lay in one direction, and outside
of that pasturage he could never go. For the average man there are two
dimensions of space wherein he moves with a certain limited freedom; it
is for him a horizontal and a perpendicular world; he goes up the social
scale and down it, and in both these atmospheres there is a level
wherein he can exercise himself to and fro, his journeyings being
strictly limited by his business and his family. Between the place where
he works and the place where he lives lies all the freedom he can hope
for; within that range he must seek such adventures as he craves, and
the sole expansion to which he can attain is upwards towards another
social life if he be ambitious, or downward to the underworlds if he is
bored. For Mac Cann there was no upward and no downward movements, he
had plumbed to the very rocks of life, but his horizontal movements were
bounded only by the oceans around his country, and in this gigantic
underworld he moved with almost absolute freedom, and a knowledge which
might properly be termed scientific.

In despite of his apparent outlawry he was singularly secure; ambition
waved no littlest lamp at him; the one ill which could overtake him was
death, which catches on every man; no enmity could pursue him to any
wall, for he was sunken a whole sphere beneath malice as beneath
benevolence. Physical ill-treatment might come upon him, but in that
case it was his manhood and his muscle against another manhood and
another muscle--the simplest best would win, but there was no glory for
the conqueror nor any loot to be carried from the battle.

Casual warfares, such as these, had been frequent enough in his career,
for he had fought stubbornly with every kind of man, and had afterwards
medicined his wounds with the only unguents cheap enough for his
usage--the healing balsams of time and patience. He had but one
occupation, and it was an engrossing one--he hunted for food, and for it
he hunted with the skill and pertinacity of a wolf or a vulture.

With what skill he did hunt! He would pick crumbs from the lank chaps of
famine; he gathered nourishment from the empty air; he lifted it from
wells and watercourses; he picked it off clothes lines and hedges; he
stole so cleverly from the bees that they never felt his hand in their
pocket; he would lift the eggs from beneath a bird, and she would think
that his finger was a chicken; he would clutch a hen from the roost, and
the housewife would think he was the yard dog, and the yard dog would
think he was its brother.

He had a culture too, and if it was not wide it was profound; he knew
wind and weather as few astronomers know it; he knew the habit of the
trees and the earth; how the seasons moved, not as seasons, but as days
and hours; he had gathered all the sweets of summer, and the last rigour
of winter was no secret to him; he had fought with the winter every year
of his life as one fights with a mad beast, he had held off that
grizzliest of muzzles and escaped scatheless.

He knew men and women, and he knew them from an angle at which they
seldom caught themselves or each other; he knew them as prey to be
bitten and escaped from quickly. At them, charged with a thousand
preoccupations, he looked with an eye in which there was a single
surmise, and he divined them in a flash. In this quick vision he saw
man, one expression, one attitude for all; never did he see a man or
woman in their fullness, his microscopic vision caught only what it
looked for, but he saw that with the instant clarity of the microscope.
There were no complexities for him in humanity; there were those who
gave and those who did not give; there were those who might be cajoled,
and those who might be frightened. If there was goodness in a man he
glimpsed it from afar as a hawk sees a mouse in the clover, and he
swooped on that virtue and was away with booty. If there was evil in a
man he passed it serenely as a sheep passes by a butcher, for evil did
not affect him. Evil could never put a hand on him, and he was not evil
himself.

If the denominations of virtue or vice must be affixed to his innocent
existence, then these terms would have to be re-defined, for they had no
meaning in his case; he stood outside these as he did outside of the
social structure. But, indeed, he was not outside of the social
structure at all; he was so far inside of it that he could never get
out; he was at the very heart of it; he was held in it like a deer in an
ornamental park, or a cork that bobs peacefully in a bucket, and in the
immense, neglected pastures of civilisation he found his own quietude
and his own wisdom.

All of the things he knew and all of the things that he had done were
most competently understood by his daughter.




                               CHAPTER X


It is to be remarked that the angels were strangely like Patsy Mac Cann.
Their ideas of right and wrong almost entirely coincided with his. They
had no property and so they had no prejudices, for the person who has
nothing may look upon the world as his inheritance, while the person who
has something has seldom anything but that.

Civilisation, having built itself at hazard upon the Rights of Property,
has sought on many occasions to unbuild itself again in sheer
desperation of any advance, but from the great Ethic of Possession there
never has been any escape, and there never will be until the solidarity
of man has been really created, and until each man ceases to see the
wolf in his neighbour.

Is there actually a wolf in our neighbour? We see that which we are, and
our eyes project on every side an image of ourselves; if we look with
fear that which we behold is frightful; if we look with love then the
colours of heaven are repeated to us from the ditch and the dungeon. We
invent eternally upon one another; we scatter our sins broadcast and
call them our neighbours; let us scatter our virtues abroad and build us
a city to live in.

For Mac Cann and his daughter there was no longer any strangeness in
their companions. As day and night succeeded, as conversation and action
supplemented each other on their journeys, so each of them began to
unfold from the fleshy disguise, and in a short time they could each
have spoken of the others to an inquiring stranger, giving, within
bounds, reasonably exact information as to habit and mentality.

What conversations they had engaged in! Sitting now by a hedge close to
a tiny chaotic village, compact of ugliness and stupidity, now at
twilight as they camped in a disused quarry, leaning their shoulders
against great splintered rocks, and hearing no sound but the magnified,
slow trickle of water and the breeze that sung or screamed against a
razor edge of rock; or lying on the sheltered side of a pit of potatoes,
they stared at the moon as she sailed on her lonely voyages, or watched
the stars that glanced and shone from the drifting clouds; and as they
lifted their eyes to these sacred voyagers in whose charge is the
destiny of man they lifted their minds also and adored mutely that mind
of which these are the thoughts made visible.

Sometimes they discussed the problems of man in a thousand superficial
relationships. The angels were wise, but in the vocabulary which they
had to use wisdom had no terms. Their wisdom referred only to ultimates,
and was the unhandiest of tools when dug into some immediate, curious
problem. Before wisdom can be audible a new language must be invented,
and they also had to unshape their definitions and re-translate these
secular findings into terms wherein they could see the subject broadly,
and they found that what they gained in breadth they lost in outline,
and that the last generalisation, however logically it was framed, was
seldom more than an intensely interesting lie when it was dissected
again. No truth in regard to space and time can retain virtue for longer
than the beating of an artery; it too has its succession, its sidereal
tide, and while you look upon it, round and hardy as a pebble, behold,
it is split and fissured and transformed.

Sometimes when it rained, and it rained often, they would seek refuge in
a haystack, if one was handy; or they would creep into a barn and hide
behind hills of cabbages or piles of farming tools; or they slid into
the sheds among the cattle where they warmed and fed themselves against
those peaceful flanks; or, if they were nigh a town and had been lucky
that day, they would pay a few coppers to sleep on the well-trodden,
earthen floor of a house.

As for the ass, he slept wherever he could. When there was rain he would
stand with his tail against the wind sunken in a reverie so profound
that he no longer seemed to feel the rain or the wind. From these
abysses of thought he would emerge to the realisation that there was a
sheltered side to a wall or a clump of heather, and he also would take
his timely rest under the stars of God.

What did they say to him? Down the glittering slopes they peer and nod;
before his eyes the mighty pageant is unrolled in quiet splendour; for
him too the signs are set. Does the Waterman care nothing for his
thirst? Does the Ram not bless his increase? Against his enemies also
the Archer will bend his azure bow and loose his arrows of burning gold.

On their journeyings they met with many people; not the folk who lived
in the houses dotted here and there at great distances from each other
on the curving roads, for with these people they had nothing to do, they
had scarcely anything to say, and the housefolk looked on the strollers
with a suspicion which was almost a fear. The language of these was
seldom gracious, and often, on their approach, the man of the house was
sent for and the dog was unchained.

But for the vagabonds these people did not count; Mac Cann and his
daughter scarcely looked on them as human beings, and if he had
generalised about them at all, he would have said that there was no
difference between these folk and the trees that shaded their dwellings
in leafy spray, that they were rooted in their houses, and that they had
no idea of life other than the trees might have which snuff for ever the
same atmosphere and look on the same horizon until they droop again to
the clay they lifted from.

It was with quite other people they communed.

The wandering ballad singer with his wallet of songs slung at his ragged
haunch; the travelling musician whose blotchy fiddle could sneeze out
the ten strange tunes he had learned from his father and from his
father's generations before him; the little band travelling the world
carrying saplings and rushes from the stream which they wove cunningly
into tables and chairs warranted not to last too long; the folk who sold
rootless ferns to people from whose window-ledges they had previously
stolen the pots to plant them in; the men who went roaring along the
roads driving the cattle before them from fair to market and back again;
the hairy tinkers with their clattering metals, who marched in the
angriest of battalions and who spoke a language composed entirely of
curses.

These, and an hundred varieties of these, they met and camped with and
were friendly with, and to the angels these people were humanity, and
the others were, they did not know what.




                               CHAPTER XI


It might be asked why Patsy Mac Cann permitted the strangers to remain
with him.

Now that they were dressed like himself he had quite forgotten, or he
never thought of their celestial character, and they were undoubtedly a
burden upon his ingenuity. They ate as vigorously as he did, and the
food which they ate he had to supply.

There were two reasons for this kindliness--He had always wished to be
the leader of a troop. In his soul the Ancient Patriarch was alive and
ambitious of leadership. Had his wife given him more children he would
have formed them and their wives and children into a band, and the
affairs of this little world would have been directed by him with pride
and pleasure. He would have observed their goings-out and their
comings-in; he would have apportioned praise and reproach to his little
clann; he would have instructed them upon a multitude of things, and
passed on to them the culture which he had gathered so hardily, and,
when they arrived at the age of ingenuity, it would have still been his
ambition to dash their arguments with his superior knowledge, or put the
happy finish to any plan which they submitted for his approval; he would
have taken the road, like a prince of old, with his tail, and he would
have undertaken such raids and forays that his name and fame would ring
through the underworld like the note of a trumpet.

He could not do this because he only had one child (the others had died
wintry deaths) and she was a girl. But now heaven itself had blessed him
with a following and he led it with skill and enjoyment. Furthermore,
his daughter, of whom he stood in considerable awe, had refused flatly
to desert the strangers whom Providence had directed to them.

She had constituted herself in some strange way the mother of the four
men. She cooked for them, she washed and mended for them, and, when the
necessity arose, she scolded them with the heartiest good-will.

Her childhood had known nothing of dolls, and so her youth made dolls of
these men whom she dressed and fed. Sometimes her existence with them
was peaceful and happy; at other times she almost went mad with jealous
rage. Little by little she began to demand a domestic obedience which
they very willingly gave her; so they were her men and no one else's,
and the exercise of this power gave her a delight such as she had never
known.

She was wise also, for it was only in domestic affairs that she claimed
their fealty; with their masculine movements she did not interfere, nor
did she interfere with the task and apportioning of the day, although
her counsel was willingly listened to in these matters; but when night
came, when the camp was selected, the little cart unloaded, and the
brazier lit, then she stepped briskly to her kingdom and ruled like a
chieftainess.

With her father she often had trouble: he would capitulate at the end,
but not until he had set forth at length his distaste for her
suggestions and his assurance that she was a strap. She seldom treated
him as a father, for she seldom remembered that relationship; she loved
him as one loves a younger brother, and she was angry with him as one
can only be angry with a younger brother. Usually she treated him as an
infant; she adored him, and, if he had permitted it, she would have
beaten him soundly on many an occasion.

For she was a strong girl. She was big in build and bone, and she was
beautiful and fearless. Framed in a rusty shawl her face leaped out
instant and catching as a torch in darkness; under her clumsy garments
one divined a body to be adored as a revelation; she walked carelessly
as the wind walks, proudly as a young queen trained in grandeur. She
could leap from where she stood, as a wild-cat that springs terribly
from quietude; she could run as a deer runs, and pause at full flight
like a carven statue. Each movement of hers was complete and lovely in
itself; when she lifted a hand to her hair the free attitude was a
marvel of composure; it might never have begun, and might never cease,
it was solitary and perfect; when she bent to the brazier she folded to
such an economy of content that one might have thought her half her size
and yet perfect; she had that beauty which raises the mind of man to an
ecstasy which is murderous if it be not artistic; and she was so
conscious of her loveliness that she could afford to forget it, and so
careless that she had never yet used it as a weapon or a plea.

She could not but be aware of her beauty, for her mirrors had tongues;
they were the eyes of those she met and paused with. No man had yet said
anything to her, saving in rough jest as to a child, but no woman could
speak of anything else in her presence, and these exclamations drummed
through all their talk.

She had been worshipped by many women, for to physical loveliness in
their own sex women are the veriest slaves. They will love a man for his
beauty, but a woman they will adore as a singularity, as something
almost too good to be true, as something which may vanish even while
they gaze at it. Prettiness they understand and like or antagonise, but
they have credited beauty as a masculine trait; and as a race long
sunken in slavery, and who look almost despairingly for a saviour, so
the female consciousness prostrates itself before female beauty as
before a messiah who will lead them to the unconscious horrible
ambitions which are the goal of femininity. But, and it is humanity's
guard against a solitary development, while women worship a beautiful
woman the beauty does not care for them; she accepts their homage and
flies them as one flies from the deadliest boredom; she is the widest
swing of their pendulum, and must hurry again from the circumference to
the centre with the violent speed of an outcast who sees from afar the
smoke of his father's house and the sacred roof-tree.

There is a steadying influence; an irreconcilable desire and ambition;
the desire of every woman to be the wife of a fool, her ambition to be
the mother of a genius; but they postulate genius, it is their outlet
and their justification for that leap at a tangent which they have
already taken.

Out there they have discovered the Neuter. Is the Genius always to be
born from an unfertilised womb, or rather a self-fertilised one?
Singular Messiahs! scorners of paternity! claiming no less than the
Cosmos for a father; taking from the solitary mother capacity for
infinite suffering and infinite love, whence did ye gather the rough
masculine intellect, the single eye, all that hardiness of courage and
sensibility of self that made of your souls a battlefield, and of your
memory a terror to drown love under torrents of horrid red! Deluded so
far and mocked! No genius has yet sprung from ye but the Genius of War
and Destruction, those frowning captains that have ravaged our vineyards
and blackened our generations with the torches of their egotism.

To woman beauty is energy, and they would gladly take from their own sex
that which they have so long accepted from man. They are economical; the
ants and the bees are not more amazingly parsimonious than they, and,
like the ants and the bees, their subsequent extravagance is a thing to
marvel at. Food and children they will hoard, and when these are
safeguarded their attitude to the life about them is ruinous. They will
adorn themselves at the expense of all creation, and in a few years they
crush from teeming life a species which nature has toiled through
laborious ages to perfect. They adorn themselves, and too often
adornment is the chief manifestation of boredom. They are world-weary,
sex-weary, and they do not know what they want; but they want power, so
that they may rule evolution once more as long ago they ruled it; their
blood remembers an ancient greatness; they crave to be the queens again,
to hold the sceptre of life in their cruel hands, to break up the mould
which has grown too rigid for freedom, to form anew the chaos which is a
womb, and which they conceive is their womb, and to create therein
beauty and freedom and power. But the king whom they have placed on the
throne has grown wise in watching them; he is their bone terribly
separated, terribly endowed; he uses their cruelty, their fierceness, as
his armies against them--and so the battle is set, and wild deeds may
flare from the stars of rebellion and prophecy.

Mary, who could make women do anything for her, was entirely interested
in making men bow to her will, and because, almost against her
expectation they did bow, she loved them, and could not sacrifice
herself too much for their comfort or even their caprice. It was the
mother-spirit in her which, observing the obedience of her children, is
forced in very gratitude to become their slave; for, beyond all things,
a woman desires power, and, beyond all things, she is unable to use it
when she gets it. If this power be given to her grudgingly she will
exercise it mercilessly; if it is given kindly then she is bound by her
nature to renounce authority, and to live happy ever after, but it must
be given to her.




                              CHAPTER XII


It may be surprising to learn that the names of the angels were Irish
names, but more than eight hundred years ago a famous Saint informed the
world that the language spoken in heaven was Gaelic, and, presumably, he
had information on the point. He was not an Irishman, and he had no
reason to exalt Fodhla above the other nations of the earth, and,
therefore, his statement may be accepted on its merits, the more
particularly as no other saint has denied it, and every Irish person is
prepared to credit it.

It was also believed in ancient times, and the belief was world-wide,
that the entrance to heaven, hell, and purgatory yawned in the Isle of
the Saints, and this belief also, although it has never been proved, has
never been disproved, and it does assist the theory that Irish is the
celestial language. Furthermore, Gaelic is the most beautiful and
expressive fashion of speech in the whole world, and, thus, an artistic
and utilitarian reinforcement can be hurried to the support of that
theory should it ever be in danger from philologists with foreign axes
to grind.

The names of the angels were Finaun and Caeltia and Art.

Finaun was the eldest angel; Caeltia was that one who had a small
coal-black beard on his chin, and Art was the youngest of the three, and
he was as beautiful as the dawn, than which there is nothing more
beautiful.

Finaun was an Archangel when he was in his own place; Caeltia was a
Seraph, and Art was a Cherub. An Archangel is a Councillor and a
Guardian; a Seraph is one who accumulates knowledge; a Cherub is one who
accumulates love. In heaven these were their denominations.

Finaun was wise, childish, and kind, and between him and the little ass
which drew their cart there was a singular and very pleasant
resemblance.

Caeltia was dark and determined, and if he had cropped his beard with a
scissors, the way Patsy Mac Cann did, he would have resembled Patsy Mac
Cann as closely as one man can resemble another.

Art was dark also, and young and swift and beautiful. Looking carelessly
at him one would have said that, barring the colour, he was the brother
of Mary Mac Cann, and that the two of them were born at a birth, and a
good birth.

Mary extended to Finaun part of the affection which she already had for
the ass, and while they were marching the roads these three always went
together; the archangel would be on one side of the donkey and Mary
would be on the other side, and (one may say so) the three of them never
ceased talking for an instant.

The ass, it will be admitted, did not speak, but he listened with such
evident intention that no one could say he was out of the conversation;
his right-hand ear hearkened agilely to Mary; his left-hand ear sprang
to attention when Finaun spoke, and when, by a chance, they happened to
be silent at the one moment then both his ears drooped forward towards
his nose, and so he was silent also. A hand from either side continually
touched his muzzle caressingly, and at moments entirely unexpected he
would bray affectionately at them in a voice that would have tormented
the ears of any but a true friend.

Patsy Mac Cann and the seraph Caeltia used to march exactly at the tail
of the cart, and they, also, talked a lot.

At first Patsy talked the most, for he had much information to impart,
and the seraph listened with intent humility, but, after a while,
Caeltia, having captured knowledge, would dispute and argue with great
vivacity. They spoke of many things, but a person who listened closely
and recorded these things would have found that they talked oftener
about strong drinks than about anything else. Mac Cann used to speak
longingly about strange waters which he had heard were brewed in foreign
lands, potent brewings which had been described to him by emphatic
sailormen with tarry thumbs; but at this stage Caeltia only spoke about
porter and whisky, and was well contented to talk of these.

The cherub Art was used to promenade alone behind them all, but
sometimes he would go in front and listen to the conversation with the
ass; sometimes he would join the two behind and force them to consider
matters in which they were not interested, and sometimes again he would
range the fields on either side, or he would climb a tree, or he would
go alone by himself shouting a loud song that he had learned at the fair
which they had last journeyed to, or he would prance silently along the
road as though his body was full of jumps and he did not know what to do
with them, or he would trudge forlornly in a boredom so profound that
one expected him to drop dead of it in his tracks.

So life fell into a sort of routine.

When they were camped for the night Caeltia and Art would always sit on
one side of the brazier with Patsy Mac Cann sitting between them; on the
other side of the brazier the archangel and Mary would sit; Finaun
always sat very close to her when they had finished eating and were all
talking together; he used to take her long plait of hair into his lap,
and for a long time he would unplait and plait again the end of that
lovely rope.

Mary liked him to do this, and nobody else minded it.




                                BOOK II

                            EILEEN NI COOLEY




                              CHAPTER XIII


Early in the morning the sun had been shining gloriously, and there was
a thump of a wind blowing across the road that kept everything gay; the
trees were in full leaf and every bough went jigging to its neighbour,
but on the sky the clouds raced so fast that they were continually
catching each other up and getting so mixed that they could not
disentangle themselves again, and from their excessive gaiety black
misery spread and the sun took a gloomy cast.

Mac Cann screwed an eye upwards like a bird and rubbed at his chin.

"There will be rain soon," said he, "and the country wants it."

"It will be heavy rain," said his daughter.

"It will so," he replied; "let us be getting along now the way we'll be
somewhere before the rain comes, for I never did like getting wetted by
rain, and nobody ever did except the people of the County Cork, and they
are so used to it that they never know whether it's raining or whether
it isn't."

So they encouraged the ass to go quicker and he did that.

As they hastened along the road they saw in front of them two people
marching close together, and in a little time they drew close to these
people.

"I know the look of that man's back," said Patsy, "but I can't tell you
where I saw it. I've a good memory for faces, though, and I'll tell you
all about him in a minute."

"Do you know the woman that is with him?" said Caeltia.

"You can't tell a woman by her back," replied Patsy, "and nobody could,
for they all have the same back when they have a shawl on."

Mary turned her head to them:

"Every woman's back is different," said she, "whether there's a shawl on
it or not, and I know from the way that woman is wearing her shawl that
she is Eileen Ni Cooley and no one else."

"If that is so," said her father hastily, "let us be going slower the
way we won't catch up on her. Mary, a grah, whisper a word in the ass's
ear so that he won't be going so quick, for he is full of fun this day."

"I'll do that," said Mary, and she said "whoa" into the ear of the
little ass, and he stopped inside the quarter of a pace.

"Do you not like that woman?" Caeltia enquired.

"She's a bad woman," replied Patsy.

"What sort of a bad woman is she?"

"She's the sort that commits adultery with every kind of man," said he
harshly.

Caeltia turned over that accusation for a moment.

"Did she ever commit adultery with yourself?" said he.

"She did not," said Patsy, "and that's why I don't like her."

Caeltia considered that statement also, and found it reasonable:

"I think," said he, "that the reason you don't like that woman is
because you like her too much."

"It's so," said Patsy, "but there is no reason for her taking on with
every kind of man and not taking on with me at all."

He was silent for a moment.

"I tell you," said he furiously, "that I made love to that woman from
the dawn to the dark, and then she walked off with a man that came down
a little road."

"That was her right," said Caeltia mildly.

"Maybe it was, but for the weight of a straw I would have killed the
pair of them that night in the dark place."

"Why didn't you?"

"She had me weakened. My knees gave under me when she walked away and
there wasn't even a curse in my mouth."

Again he was silent, and again he broke into angry speech!

"I don't want to see her at all, for she torments me, so let the pair of
them walk their road until they come to a ditch that is full of thorns
and is fit for them to die in."

"I think," said Caeltia, "that the reason you don't want to see her is
because you want to see her too much."

"It's so," growled Mac Cann, "and it's so too that you are a prying kind
of a man and that your mouth is never at rest, so we'll go on now to the
woman yonder, and let you talk to her with your tongue and your nimble
questions."

Thereupon he rushed forward and kicked the ass so suddenly in the belly
that it leaped straight off the ground and began to run before its legs
touched earth again.

When they had taken a few dozen steps Mac Cann began to roar furiously:

"What way are you, Eileen Ni Cooley? What sort of a man is it that's
walking beside yourself?"

And he continued roaring questions such as that until they drew on the
people.

The folk stopped at his shouts.

The woman was big and thin and she had red hair. Her face was freckled
all over so that one could only see her delicate complexion in little
spots, and at the first glance the resemblance between herself and
Finaun was extraordinary. In the sweep of the brow, the set of the
cheek-bones, a regard of the eyes, that resemblance was seen, and then
the look vanished in a poise of the head and came again in another one.

At the moment her blue eyes seemed the angriest that ever were in a
woman's head. She stood leaning on a thick ash-plant and watched the
advancing company, but she did not utter a word to them.

The man by her side was tall also and as thin as a pole; he was
ramshackle and slovenly; there was not much pith in his body, for he was
weak at the knees and his big feet splayed outwards at a curious angle;
but his face was extraordinary intelligent, and when he was younger must
have been beautiful. Drink and ill-health had dragged and carved his
flesh, and nothing of comeliness remained to him but his eyes, which
were timid and tender as those of a fawn, and his hands which had never
done anything but fumble with women. He also leaned quietly on a cudgel
and watched Patsy Mac Cann.

And it was to him that Patsy came. He did not look once at the woman,
though all the time he never ceased shouting salutations and questions
at her by her name.

He walked directly to the man, eyeing him intently.

"And how is yourself?" he roared with horrible heartiness. "It's a while
since I saw you, and it was the pitch night that time."

"I'm all right," said the man.

"So you are," said Patsy, "and why wouldn't you be? Weren't you born in
the wide lap of good luck, and didn't you stay there? Ah, it's the way
that the men that come down little, narrow paths do have fortune, and
the ones that tramp the wide roads do have nothing but their broken
feet. Good luck to you, my soul, and long may you wave--Eh!"

"I didn't say a word," said the man.

"And there's a stick in your hand that would crack the skull of a
mountain, let alone a man."

"It's a good stick," said the man.

"Would you be calling it the brother or the husband of the one that the
woman has in her happy hands."

"I would be calling it a stick only," replied the man.

"That's the name for it surely," said Patsy, "for a stick hasn't got a
soul any more than a woman has, and isn't that a great mercy and a great
comfort, for heaven would be full of women and wood, and there would be
no room for the men and the drink."

The red-haired woman strode to Patsy and, putting her hand against his
breast, she gave him a great push:

"If you're talking," said she, "or if you're fighting, turn to myself,
for the man doesn't know you."

Patsy did turn to her with a great laugh:

"It's the one pleasure of my life to have your hands on me," he gibed.
"Give me another puck now, and a hard one, the way I'll feel you well."

The woman lifted her ash-plant threateningly and crouched towards him,
but the look on his face was such that she let her hand fall again.

"You're full of fun," said Patsy, "and you always were, but we're going
to be the great friends from now on, yourself and myself and the man
with the stick; we'll be going by short cuts everywhere in the world,
and having a gay time."

"We're not going with you, Padraig," said the woman, "and whatever road
you are taking this day the man and myself will be going another road."

"Whoo!" said Patsy, "there are roads everywhere, so you're all right,
and there are men on every one of the roads."




                              CHAPTER XIV


While this conversation had been taking place the others stood in a
grave semicircle, and listened intently to their words.

Caeltia, regarding the sky, intervened:

"The rain will be here in a minute, so we had better walk on and look
for shelter."

Mac Cann detached his heavy regard from Eileen Ni Cooley, and swept the
sky and the horizon.

"That is so," said he. "Let us go ahead now, for we've had our talk, and
we are all satisfied."

"There is a broken-down house stuck up a bohereen," he continued. "It's
only a few perches up this road, for I remember passing the place the
last time I was this way; that place will give us shelter while the rain
spills."

He turned his stubborn face to the woman:

"You can come with us if you like, and you can stay where you are if you
like, or you can go to the devil," and, saying so, he tramped after his
daughter.

The woman had just caught sight of Art the cherub, and was regarding him
with her steady eyes.

"Whoo!" said she, "I'm not the one to be frightened and I never was, so
let us all go along and talk about our sins in the wet weather."

They started anew on the road, Patsy's company in advance, and behind
marched the woman and the man and Art the cherub.

The sun had disappeared; wild clouds were piling themselves in rugged
hills along the sky, and the world was growing dull and chill. Against
the grey atmosphere Art's face was in profile, an outline sharp and calm
and beautiful.

Eileen Ni Cooley was regarding him curiously as they walked together,
and the strange man, with a wry smile on his lips, was regarding her
with a like curiosity.

She pointed towards Patsy Mac Cann, who was tramping vigorously a dozen
yards ahead.

"Young boy," said she, "where did you pick up with the man yonder, for
the pair of you don't look matched?"

Art had his hands in his pockets; he turned and looked at her
tranquilly.

"Where did you pick up with that man," he nodded towards her companion,
"and where did the man pick up with you, for you don't look matched
either?"

"We're not," said the woman quickly; "we're not matched a bit. That man
and myself do be quarrelling all day and all night, and threatening to
walk away from each other every minute of the time."

The man stared at her.

"Is that how it is with us?" said he.

"It is," said she to Art, "that's the way it is with us, honey. The man
and myself have no love for each other now, and we never had."

The man halted suddenly; he changed the cudgel to his left hand and
thrust out his right hand to her.

"Put your own hand there," said he, "and shake it well, and then be
going along your road."

"What are you talking about?" said she.

He replied, frowning sternly from his wild eyes:

"I wouldn't hold the grace of God if I saw it slipping from me, so put
your hand into my hand and go along your road."

Eileen Ni Cooley put her hand into his with some awkwardness and turned
away her head.

"There it is for you," said she.

Then the man turned about and flapped quickly along the path they had
already travelled; his cudgel beat the ground with a sharp noise, and he
did not once look back.

Before he had taken an hundred paces the rain came, a fine, noiseless
drizzle.

"It will be heavy in a minute," said the woman, "let us run after the
cart."

With a quick movement she tucked her shawl about her head and shoulders
and started to run, and Art went after her in alternate long hops of
each foot.

They had reached a narrow path running diagonally from the main road.

"Up this way," shouted Patsy, and the company trooped after him, leaving
the ass and cart to the storm.

Two minutes' distance up the road stood a small, dismantled house. There
was a black gape where the window had been, and there were holes in the
walls. In these holes grass and weeds were waving, as they were along
the window-ledge. The roof was covered with a rusty thatch and there
were red poppies growing on that.

Patsy climbed through the low window-space, and the others climbed in
after him.




                               CHAPTER XV


Inside the house was an earthen floor, four walls, and plenty of air.
There were breezes blowing in the empty house, for from whatever
direction a wind might come it found entrance there. There were stones
lying everywhere on the floor; some of them had dropped from the walls,
but most had been jerked through the window by passing children. There
were spider's webs in that house; the roof was covered with them, and
the walls were covered with them too. It was a dusty house, and when it
would be wet enough it would be a muddy house, and it was musty with
disuse and desolation.

But the company did not care anything about dust or stones or spiders.
They kicked the stones aside and sat on the floor in the most sheltered
part of the place where there had once been a fireplace, and if a spider
walked on any of them it was permitted.

Patsy produced a clay pipe and lit it, and Caeltia took a silver-mounted
briar from his pocket and he lit that and smoked it.

Outside the rain suddenly began to fall with a low noise and the room
grew dark. Within there was a brooding quietness, for none of the people
spoke; they were all waiting for each other to speak.

Indeed, they had all been agitated when they came in, for the wrung face
of Patsy and the savage eyes of Eileen Ni Cooley had whipped their
blood. Tragedy had sounded her warning note on the air, and they were
each waiting to see had they a part in the play.

But the sudden change of atmosphere wrought like a foreign chemical in
their blood, the sound of the falling rain dulled their spirits, the
must of that sleeping house went to their brains like an opiate, and the
silence of the place folded them about, compelling them to a similar
quietude.

We are imitative beings; we respond to the tone and colour of our
environment almost against ourselves, and still have our links with the
chameleon and the moth; the sunset sheds its radiant peace upon us and
we are content; the silent mountain-top lays a finger on our lips and we
talk in whispers; the clouds lend us of their gaiety and we rejoice. So
for a few moments they sat wrestling with the dull ghosts of that broken
house, the mournful phantasms that were not dead long enough to be
happy, for death is sorrowful at first and for a long time, but
afterwards the dead are contented and learn to shape themselves anew.

Patsy, drawing on his pipe, looked around the people.

"Eh!" he exclaimed with heavy joviality, "where has the man got to, the
man with the big stick? If he's shy let him come in, and if he's angry
let him come in too."

Eileen Ni Cooley was sitting close beside Art. She had let her shawl
droop from her head, and her hair was showing through the dusk like a
torch.

"The man has gone away, Padraig," said she; "he got tired of the
company, and he's gone travelling towards his own friends."

Patsy regarded her with shining eyes. The must of the house was no
longer in his nostrils; the silence lifted from him at a bound.

"You are telling me a fine story, Eileen," said he, "tell me this too,
did the man go away of his own will, or did you send him away?"

"It was a bit of both, Padraig."

"The time to get good news," said Patsy, "is when it's raining, and that
is good news, and it's raining now."

"News need not be good or bad, but only news," she replied, "and we will
leave it at that."

Caeltia spoke to her:

"Do you have a good life going by yourself about the country and making
acquaintances where you please?"

"I have the life I like," she answered, "and whether it's good or bad
doesn't matter."

"Tell me the reason you never let himself make love to you when he wants
to make it?"

"He is a domineering man," said she, "and I am a proud woman, and we
would never give in to each other. When one of us would want to do a
thing the other one wouldn't do it, and there would be no living between
us. If I said black he would say white, and if he said yes I would say
no, and that's how we are."

"He has a great love for you."

"He has a great hate for me. He loves me the way a dog loves bones, and
in a little while he'd kill me in a lonely place with his hands to see
what I would look like and I dying."

She turned her face to Mac Cann:

"That's the kind of man you are to me, Padraig, although you're
different to other people."

"I am not that sort of man, but it's yourself is like that. I tell you
that if I took a woman with me I'd be staunch to her the way I was with
the mother of the girl there, and if you were to come with me you
wouldn't have any complaint from now on."

"I know every thing I'm talking about," she replied sternly, "and I
won't go with you, but I'll go with the young man here beside me."

With the words she put her hand on Art's arm and kept it there.

Mary Mac Cann straightened up where she was sitting and became deeply
interested.

Art turned and burst into a laugh as he looked critically at Eileen.

"I will not go with you," said he. "I don't care for you a bit."

She gave a hard smile and removed her hand from his arm.

"It's all the worse for me," said she, "and it's small harm to you,
young boy."

"That's a new answer for yourself," said Patsy, grinning savagely.

"It is, and it's a new day for me, and a poor day, for it's the first
day of my old age."

"You'll die in a ditch," cried Patsy, "you'll die in a ditch like an old
mare with a broken leg."

"I will," she snarled, "when the time comes, but you'll never have the
killing of me, Padraig."

Finaun was sitting beside Mary with her hand in his, but she snatched
her hand away and flared so fiercely upon Eileen that the woman looked
up.

"Don't be angry with me, Mary," said she; "I never did you any harm yet
and I'll never be able to do it now, for there are years between us, and
they're going to break my back."

Finaun was speaking, more, it seemed, to himself than to the company. He
combed his white beard with his hand as he spoke, and they all looked at
him.

"He is talking in his sleep," said Eileen pensively, "and he an old man,
and a nice old man."

"My father," said Caeltia, in an apologetic voice; "there is no need to
tell about that."

"There is every need, my beloved," replied Finaun with his slow smile.

"I would rather you did not," murmured Caeltia, lifting his hand a
little.

"I ask your permission, my son," said Finaun gently.

Caeltia spread out his open palms and dropped them again.

"Whatever you wish to do is good, my father," and, with a slight blush,
he slid the pipe into his pocket.

Finaun turned to Eileen Ni Cooley:

"I will tell you a story," said he.

"Sure," said Eileen, "I'd love to hear you, and I could listen to a
story for a day and a night."

Mac Cann pulled solemnly at his pipe and regarded Finaun who was looking
at him peacefully from a corner.

"You're full of fun," said he to the archangel.




                              CHAPTER XVI


Said Finaun:

"While generation succeeds generation a man has to fight the same fight.
At the end he wins, and he never has to fight that battle again, and
then he is ready for Paradise.

"Every man from the beginning has one enemy from whom he can never
escape, and the story of his lives is the story of his battles with that
enemy whom he must draw into his own being before he can himself attain
to real being, for an enemy can never be crushed, but every enemy can be
won.

"Long before the foundations of this world were laid, when the voice was
heard and the army of the voice went through the darkness, two people
came into being with the universe that was their shell. They lived
through myriad existences knowing star after star grow hot and cold in
the broad sky, and they hated each other through the changing of the
stars and the ebbing and flooding of their lives.

"At a time this one of them would be a woman and that other would be a
man, and again in due period the one that had been a woman would be a
man and the other would be a woman, that their battle might be joined in
the intimacy which can only come through difference and the distance
that is attraction.

"No one can say which of these did most harm to the other; no one can
say which was the most ruthless, the most merciless, for they were born,
as all enemies are, equal in being and in power.

"Through their lives they had many names and they lived in many lands,
but their names in eternity were Finaun Mac Dea and Caeltia Mac Dea, and
when the time comes, their name will be Mac Dea and nothing else: then
they will become one in each other, and one in Infinite Greatness, and
one in the unending life of Eternity which is God: but still, in world
under world, in star under flaming star, they pursue each other with a
hate which is slowly changing into love.

"It was not on earth, nor in any planet, that the beginning of love came
to these two, it was in the hell that they had fashioned for themselves
in terror and lust and cruelty. For, as they sat among their demons, a
seed germinated in the soul of one, the seed of knowledge which is the
parent of love and the parent of every terrible and beautiful thing in
the worlds and the heavens.

"While that one looked on his companion, writhing like himself in
torment, he grew conscious, and although he looked at the other with
fury it was with a new fury, for with it came contempt, and they were no
longer equal in power or in hate.

"Now, for the first time, that one in whom knowledge had been born
desired to escape from his companion; he wished to get away so that he
might never behold that enemy again; suddenly the other appeared to him
hideous as a toad that couches in slime and spits his poison at random,
but he could not escape, and he could never escape.

"As that one increased in knowledge so he increased in cruelty and
power, so his lust became terrible, for now there was fear in his
contempt because he could never escape. Many a time they fled from one
another, but always, and however they fled, it was towards each other
their steps were directed. At the feast, in the camp, and in the
wilderness they found themselves and undertook anew the quarrel which
was their blood and their being.

"And that other in whom knowledge had not awakened--He raged like a
beast; he thought in blood and fever; his brains were his teeth and the
nails of his hands. Cunning came creepingly to his aid against
knowledge; he lay in wait for his enemy in gloomy places; he spread
snares for him in the darkness and baited traps. He feigned humility to
get closer to his vengeance, but he could not combat knowledge.

"Time and again he became the slave of that other, and as slave and
master their battle was savagely joined, until at last knowledge stirred
also in that mind and he grew conscious.

"Then the age-long enmity drew to its change. For him there was no
contempt possible, the other was older than he and wiser, for to be wise
is to be old; there was no vantage for contempt, but envy sharpened his
sword, it salted his anger, and they fought anew and unceasingly.

"But now their hands were not seeking each other's throats with such
frank urgency; they fought subterraneously, with smiles and polite words
and decent observances, but they did not cease for an instant to strive
and never did they forsake an advantage or lift up the one that had
fallen.

"Again the change: and now they battled not in the name of hate but
under the holy superscription of love; again and again, life after life,
they harried and ruined each other; their desire for one another was a
madness, and in that desire they warred more bitterly than before. They
blasted each other's lives, they dashed their honour to the mud, they
slew one another. Than this none of their battles had been so terrible.
Here there was no let, no respite even for an instant. They knew each
other with that superficial knowledge which seems so clear although it
shows no more than the scum floating upon existence; they knew the
scumminess of each other and exhausted to the dregs their abundant evil
until of evil they could learn no further, and their lives, alternating
in a fierce energy and a miserable weariness, came towards but could not
come to stagnation.

"The horizon vanished from them; there were irons on the feet of the
winds; the sun peered from a hood through a mask, and life was one room
wherein dull voices droned dully, wherein something was for ever uttered
and nothing was said, where hands were for ever lifted and nothing was
done, where the mind smouldered and flared to lightning and no thought
came from the spark.

"They had reached an end, and it was a precipice down which they must
spin giddily to the murk, or else shape wings for themselves and soar
from that completion, for completion is a consciousness, and once again
they were powerfully aware of themselves. They were vice-conscious, and
virtue did not abide in their minds than as a dream which was an
illusion and a lie.

"Then, and this too was long ago! how long! When the moon was young;
when she gathered rosy clouds about her evening and sang at noon from
bush and mountain-ledge; when she folded her breasts in dewy darkness
and awakened with cries of joy to the sun; then she tended her flowers
in the vale; she drove her kine to deep pasture: she sang to her
multitudes of increase and happiness while her feet went in the furrow
with the plough and her hand guided the sickle and the sheaf. Great love
didst thou give when thou wast a mother, O Beautiful! who art now white
as silver and hath ice upon thine ancient head.

"Again they lived and were wed.

"Which of them was which in that sad pilgrimage it is not now possible
to know. Memory faints at the long tale of it, and they were so
intermingled, so alike through all their difference that they were
becoming one in the great memory. Again they took up the time-long
burden, and again desire drew them wildly to the embrace which was much
repugnance and very little love. So, behold these two, a man and a
woman, walking through the pleasant light, taking each other's hands in
a kindness that had no roots, speaking words of affection that their
souls groaned the lie to.

"The woman was fair--she was fair as one star that shines on the void
and is not abashed before immensity; she was beautiful as a green tree
by a pool that bows peacefully to the sun; she was lovely as a field of
mild corn waving to the wind in one slow movement. Together they plumbed
their desire and found wickedness glooming at the bottom, and they were
conscious of themselves and of all evil.

"There was a demon in the pit that they had digged, and always, when
they founded anew their hell, he tormented them; he was the accumulation
of their evil; age after age they re-created him until he showed
gigantic and terrible as a storm, and as they lusted after each other so
he lusted after them.

"On a time that Misery shaped itself as a man and came privily to the
woman while she walked under heavy apple boughs in a garden. Their feet
went to and fro closely together in the grass and their voices communed
together, until one day the woman cried bitterly that there were no
wings, and with the Spectre she leaped forthright to the chasm and went
down shrieking a laughter that was woe. There she found herself and her
demon and was the concubine of that one; and there, in the gulf and
chasm of evil, she conjured virtue to her tortured soul and stole energy
from the demon.

"She sat among the rocks of her place.

"Old Misery beside her laughed his laugh, and while she looked at him
her eyes went backwards in her head, and when she looked again she saw
differently, for in that space knowledge had put forth a bud and a
blossom and she looked through knowledge. She saw herself and the demon
and the man, and she prayed to the demon. As she prayed she gathered
small blue flowers that peered sparsely among the crags, and she made a
chaplet of these. She wove them with tears and sighs, and when the
chaplet was made she put it to the demon's hand, praying him to bear it
to the man.

"He did that for her because he loved to laugh at their trouble, and he
divined laughter for his iron chaps.

"So the demon came terribly to the man as he walked under the swaying
and lifting of green boughs in the long grass of an orchard, and he put
the chaplet in the man's hand, saying:

"'My concubine, your beloved, sends a greeting to you with her love and
this garland of blue flowers which she has woven with her two hands in
hell.'

"The man, looking on these flowers, felt his heart move within him like
water.

"'Bring her to me,' said he to the demon.

"'I will not do so,' replied the Misery.

"And, suddenly, the man leaped on the Spectre. He locked his arms about
that cold neck, and clung furiously with his knees.

"'Then I will go to her with you,' said he.

"And together they went headlong down the pit, and as they fell they
battled frightfully in the dark pitch."




                              CHAPTER XVII


Mac Cann was asleep, but when Finaun's voice ceased he awakened and
stretched himself with a loud yawn.

"I didn't hear a word of that story," said he.

"I heard it," said Eileen Ni Cooley; "it was a good story."

"What was it about?"

"I don't know," she replied.

"Do you know what it was about, Mary?"

"I do not, for I was thinking about other things at the time."

Finaun took her hand.

"There was no need for any of you to know what that story was about,
excepting you only," and he looked very kindly at Eileen Ni Cooley.

"I listened to it," said she; "and it was a good story. I know what it
was about, but I would not know how to tell what it was about."

"It must have been the queer yarn," said Patsy regretfully; "I wish I
hadn't gone to sleep."

"I was awake for you," said Caeltia.

"What's the use of that?" said Patsy testily.

It was still raining.

The day was far advanced and evening was spinning her dull webs athwart
the sky. Already in the broken house the light had diminished to a brown
gloom, and their faces looked watchful and pale to each other as they
crouched on the earthen floor. Silence was again seizing on them, and
each person's eyes were focussing on some object or point on the wall or
the floor as their thoughts began to hold them.

Mac Cann roused himself.

"We are here for the night; that rain won't stop as long as there's a
drop left in its can."

Mary bestirred herself also.

"I'll slip down to the cart and bring back whatever food is in it. I
left every thing covered and I don't think they'll be too wet."

"Do that," said her father.

"There's a big bottle rolled up in a sack," he continued; "it's in a
bucket at the front of the cart by the right shaft, and there's a little
sup of whisky in the big bottle."

"I'll bring that too."

"You're a good girl," said he.

"What will I do with the ass this night?" said Mary.

"Hit him a kick," said her father.




                             CHAPTER XVIII


The ass stood quietly where he had been left.

Rain was pouring from him as though he were the father of rivers and
supplied the world with running water. It dashed off his flanks; it
leaped down his tail; it foamed over his forehead to his nose, and hit
the ground from there with a thump.

"I'm very wet," said the ass to himself, "and I wish I wasn't."

His eyes were fixed on a brown stone that had a knob on its back. Every
drop of rain that hit the stone jumped twice and then spattered to the
ground. After a moment he spoke to himself again:

"I don't care whether it stops raining or not, for I can't be any wetter
than I am, however it goes."

Having said this, he dismissed the weather and settled himself to think.
He hung his head slightly and fixed his eyes afar off, and he stared
distantly like that without seeing anything while he gathered and
revolved his thoughts.

The first thing he thought about was carrots.

He thought of their shape, their colour, and the way they looked in a
bucket. Some would have the thick end stuck up, and some would have the
other end stuck up, and there were always bits of clay sticking to one
end or the other. Some would be lying on their sides as though they had
slipped quietly to sleep, and some would be standing in a slanting way
as though they were leaning their backs against a wall and couldn't make
up their minds what to do next. But, however they looked in the bucket,
they all tasted alike, and they all tasted well. They are a
companionable food; they make a pleasant, crunching noise when they are
bitten, and so, when one is eating carrots, one can listen to the sound
of one's eating and make a story from it.

Thistles make a swishing noise when they are bitten; they have their
taste.

Grass does not make any noise at all; it slips dumbly to the sepulchre,
and makes no sign.

Bread makes no sound when it is eaten by an ass; it has an interesting
taste, and it clings about one's teeth for a long time.

Apples have a good smell and a joyful crunch, but the taste of sugar
lasts longer in the mouth, and can be remembered for longer than
anything else; it has a short, sharp crunch that is like a curse, and
instantly it blesses you with the taste of it.

Hay can be eaten in great mouthfuls. It has a chip and a crack at the
first bite, and then it says no more. It sticks out of one's mouth like
whiskers, and you can watch it with your eye while it moves to and fro
according as your mouth moves. It is a friendly food, and very good for
the hungry.

Oats are not a food; they are a great blessing; they are a debauch; they
make you proud, so that you want to kick the front out of a cart, and
climb a tree, and bite a cow, and chase chickens.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Mary came running and unyoked him from the cart. She embraced him on the
streaming nose. "You poor thing, you!" said she, and she took a large
paper bag from the cart and held it to his muzzle. There was soft sugar
in the bag, and half a pound of it clove to his tongue at the first
lick.

As she went back to the house with the bundle of food the ass regarded
her.

"You are a good girl," said the ass.

He shook himself and dissipated his thoughts; then he trotted briskly
here and there on the path to see if there was anything worth looking
for.




                              CHAPTER XIX


They shared the food: there was little of it, and some of it was wet;
but they each had a piece of bread, a knuckle of cheese, and three cold
potatoes.

Mary said there was something wrong with her, and she passed two of her
cold potatoes to the cherub Art, who ate them easily.

"I wish you had given them to me," said her father.

"I'll give you one of mine," said Eileen Ni Cooley, and she thrust one
across to him.

Mac Cann pushed it entire into his mouth, and ate it as one who eats in
a trance: he stared at Eileen.

"Why did you give me your potato?" said he.

Eileen blushed until not a single freckle in her face was visible.

"I don't know," she answered.

"You don't seem to know anything at all this day," he complained.
"You're full of fun," said he.

He lit his pipe, and, after pulling for a while at it, he handed it to
the woman.

"Take a draw at that pipe," he commanded, "and let us be decent with
each other."

Eileen Ni Cooley did take a draw at the pipe, but she handed it back
soon.

"I never was much at the smoking," said she.

Caeltia had his pipe going at full blast. He was leaning against the
wall with his eyes half closed, and was thinking deeply between puffs.

Finaun had a good grip on Mary's hair, which he was methodically
plaiting and unloosening again. He was sunken in reverie.

Mary was peeping from beneath her lids at Art, and was at the same time
watching everybody else to see that she was not observed.

Art was whistling to himself in a low tone, and he was looking fixedly
at a spider.

The spider was hauling on a loose rope of his tent, and he was very
leisurely. One would have thought that he was smoking also.

"What did you have for dinner?" said Art to the spider.

"Nothing, sir, but a little, thin, wisp of a young fly," said the
spider.

He was a thick-set, heavy kind of spider, and he seemed to be
middle-aged, and resigned to it.

"That is all I had myself," said Art. "Are the times bad with you now,
or are they middling?"

"Not so bad, glory be to God! The flies do wander in through the holes,
and when they come from the light outside to the darkness in here, sir,
we catch them on the wall, and we crunch their bones."

"Do they like that?"

"They do not, sir, but we do. The lad with the stout, hairy legs, down
there beside your elbow, caught a blue-bottle yesterday; there was
eating on that fellow, I tell you, and he's not all eaten yet, but that
spider is always lucky, barring the day he caught the wasp."

"That was a thing he didn't like?" queried Art.

"Don't mention it to him, sir, he doesn't care to talk about it."

"What way are you going to fasten up your rope?" said Art.

"I'll put a spit on the end of it, and then I'll thump it with my head
to make it stick."

"Well, good luck to yourself."

"Good luck to your honour."

                   *       *       *       *       *

Said Patsy to Caeltia, pointing to Finaun:

"What does he be thinking about when he gets into them fits?"

"He does be talking to the hierarchy," replied Caeltia.

"And who are themselves?"

"They are the people in charge of this world."

"Is it the kings and the queens and the Holy Pope?"

"No, they are different kinds of people."

Patsy yawned.

"What does he be talking to them about?"

"Every kind of thing," replied Caeltia, and yawned also. "They are
asking him for advice now."

"What is he saying?"

"He is talking about love," said Caeltia.

"He is always talking about that," said Patsy.

"And," said Caeltia, "he is talking about knowledge."

"It's another word of his."

"And he is saying that love and knowledge are the same thing."

"I wouldn't put it past him," said Patsy.

                   *       *       *       *       *

For he was in a bad temper. Either the close confinement, or the dull
weather, or the presence of Eileen Ni Cooley, or all of these, had made
him savage.

He arose and began striding through the narrow room, kicking stones from
one side of the place to the other and glooming fiercely at everybody.
Twice he halted before Eileen Ni Cooley, staring at her, and twice,
without a word said, he resumed his marching.

Suddenly he leaned his back against the wall facing her, and shouted:

"Well, Eileen a grah, the man went away from you, the man with the big
stick and the lengthy feet. Ah! that's a man you'd be crying out for and
you all by yourself in the night."

"He was a good man," said Eileen; "there was no harm in that man,
Padraig."

"Maybe he used to be putting his two arms around you now and then beside
a hedge and giving you long kisses on the mouth?"

"He used to be doing that."

"Aye did he, indeed, and he wasn't the first man to do that, Eileen."

"Maybe you're right, Padraig."

"Nor the twenty-first."

"You've got me here in the house, Padraig, and the people around us are
your own friends."

Caeltia also had arisen to his feet and was staring morosely at Eileen.
Suddenly he leaped to her, wrenched the shawl from her head with a wide
gesture, and gripped her throat between his hands; as her head touched
the ground she gasped, and then, and just as suddenly, he released her.
He stood up, looking wildly at Patsy, who stared back at him grinning
like a madman, then he stumbled across to Finaun and took his hands
between his own.

"You must not hurt me, my dear," said Finaun, smiling gravely at him.

Mary had leaped to Art, whose arm she took, and they backed to the end
of the room.

Eileen stood up; she arranged her dress and wrapped the shawl about her
head again; she gazed fearlessly at Mac Cann.

"The house is full of your friends, Padraig, and there's nobody here
with me at all; there's no man could want better than that for himself."

Patsy's voice was hoarse.

"You're looking for fight?"

"I'm looking for whatever is coming," she replied steadily.

"I'm coming, then," he roared, and he strode to her. He lifted his hands
above his head, and brought them down so heavily on her shoulders that
she staggered.

"Here I am," said he, staring into her face.

She closed her eyes.

"I knew it wasn't love you wanted, Padraig; it was murder you wanted,
and you have your wish."

She was swaying under his weight as she spoke; her knees were giving
beneath her.

"Eileen," said Patsy, in a small voice, "I'm going to tumble; I can't
hold myself up, Eileen; my knees are giving way under me, and I've only
got my arms round your neck."

She opened her eyes and saw him sagging against her, with his eyes half
closed and his face gone white.

"Sure, Padraig!" said she.

She flung her arms about his body and lifted him, but the weight was too
much, and he went down.

She crouched by him on the floor, hugging his head against her breast.

"Sure, listen to me, Padraig; I never did like any one in the world but
yourself; there wasn't a man of them all was more to me than a blast of
wind; you were the one I liked always. Listen to me now, Padraig. Don't
I be wanting you day and night, and saying prayers to you in the
darkness and crying out in the dawn; my heart is sore for you, so it is:
there's a twist in us, O my dear. Don't you be minding the men; whatever
they did it was nothing, it was nothing more than beasts playing in a
field and not caring anything. We are beside one another for a minute
now. When I would put my hand on my breast in the middle of a laugh it
was you I was touching, and I do never stop thinking of you in any place
under the sky."

They were kissing each other like lost souls; they babbled and clung to
each other; they thrust one another's head back to stare at it, and
pursued the head with their violent lips.

                   *       *       *       *       *

It was a time before they all got to sleep that night, but they did
sleep at the end of it.

They stretched in the darkness with their eyes closed, and the night
folded them around, separating each one from his fellow, and putting on
each the enchantment of silence and blindness. They were no longer
together although they were lying but a few inches apart; there was only
the darkness that had no inches to it; the darkness that has no
beginning and no end; that appears and disappears, calling hush as it
comes and goes, and holding peace and terror in either invisible hand;
there was no silver moon in the sky and no sparkle of white stars; there
was only darkness and silence and the steady hushing of the rain.

                   *       *       *       *       *

When he awoke in the morning Mac Cann rolled urgently on his elbow and
stared to where Eileen Ni Cooley had stretched herself for sleep--but
she was not there, she was not anywhere.

He shouted, and the company sprang to their feet.

"She got out through the window," he roared.

"The devil damn the soul of her," said he.




                                BOOK III

                             BRIEN O'BRIEN




                               CHAPTER XX


They continued their travels.

It would be more correct to say they continued their search for food,
for that in reality was the objective of each day's journeying.

Moving thus, day by day, taking practically any road that presented
itself, they had wandered easily through rugged, beautiful Donegal down
into Connaught. They had camped on the slopes of rough mountains, slept
peacefully in deep valleys that wound round and round like a corkscrew,
traversed for weeks in Connemara by the clamorous sea where they lived
sumptuously on fish, and then they struck to the inland plains again,
and away by curving paths to the County Kerry.

At times Mac Cann got work to do--to mend a kettle that had a little
hole in it, to stick a handle on a pot, to stiffen the last days of a
bucket that was already long past its labour, and he did these jobs
sitting in the sunlight on dusty roads, and if he did not do them Mary
did them for him while he observed her critically and explained both to
her and to his company the mystery of the tinker's craft.

"There's a great deal," he would say, "in the twist of the hand."

And again, but this usually to Art when that cherub tried his skill on a
rusty pot:

"You'll never make a good tinker unless you've got a hand on you. Keep
your feet in your boots and get to work with your fingers."

And sometimes he would nod contentedly at Mary and say:

"There's a girl with real hands on her that aren't feet."

Hands represented to him whatever of praiseworthy might be spoken of by
a man, but feet were in his opinion rightly covered, and ought not to be
discovered except in minatory conversation. One ran on them! Well, it
was a dog's trade, or a donkey's; but hands! he expanded to that
subject, and could loose thereon a gale of praise that would blow all
other conversation across the border.

They set their camp among roaring fairs where every kind of wild man and
woman yelled salutation at Patsy and his daughter, and howled
remembrance of ten and twenty-year old follies, and plunged into drink
with the savage alacrity of those to whom despair is a fairer brother
than hope, and with some of these people the next day's journey would be
shared, rioting and screaming on the lonely roads, and these people also
the angels observed and were friendly with.

One morning they were pacing on their journey. The eyes of the little
troop were actively scanning the fields on either hand. They were all
hungry, for they had eaten nothing since the previous midday. But these
fields were barren of food. Great stretches of grass stretched away to
either horizon, and there was nothing here that could be eaten except by
the donkey.

As they went they saw a man sitting on a raised bank. His arms were
folded; he had a straw in his mouth; there was a broad grin on his red
face; a battered hat was thrust far back on his head, and from beneath
this a brush of stiff hair poked in any direction like an ill-tied
bundle of black wire.

Mac Cann stared at that red joviality.

"There's a man," said he to Caeltia, "that hasn't got a care in the
world."

"It must be very bad for him," commented Caeltia.

"Holloa, mister," cried Patsy heartily, "how's everything?"

"Everything's fine," beamed the man, "how's yourself?"

"We're holding up, glory be to God!"

"That's the way."

He waved his hand against the horizon.

"There's weather for you," and he spoke with the proud humility of one
who had made that weather, but would not boast. His eye was steady on
Mac Cann.

"I've got a hunger on me that's worth feeding, mister."

"We've all got that," replied Patsy, "and there's nothing in the cart
barring its timbers. I'm keeping an eye out, tho', and maybe we'll trip
over a side of bacon in the middle of the road or a neat little patch of
potatoes in the next field and it full of the flowery boyoes."

"There's a field a mile up this road," said the man, "and everything you
could talk about is in that field."

"Do you tell me!" said Patsy briskly.

"I do: every kind of thing is in that field, and there's rabbits at the
foot of the hill beyond it."

"I used to have a good shot with a stone," said Patsy.

"Mary," he continued, "when we come to the field let yourself and Art
gather up the potatoes while Caeltia and myself take stones in our hands
to kill the rabbits."

"I'm coming along with you," said the man, "and I'll get my share."

"You can do that," said Patsy.

The man scrambled down the bank. There was something between his knees
of which he was very careful.

"What sort of a thing is that?" said Mary.

"It's a concertina and I do play tunes on it before the houses, and
that's how I make my money."

"The musiciner will give us a tune after we get a feed," said Patsy.

"Sure enough," said the man.

Art stretched out his hand.

"Let me have a look at the musical instrument," said he.

The man handed it to him and fell into pace beside Patsy and Caeltia.
Mary and Finaun were going as usual one on either side of the ass, and
the three of them returned to their interrupted conversation. Every
dozen paces Finaun would lean to the border of the road and pluck a
fistful of prime grass or a thistle or a clutch of chickweed, and he
would put these to the ass's mouth.

Patsy was eyeing the man.

"What's your name, mister?" said he.

"I was known as Old Carolan, but now the people call me Billy the
Music."

"How is it that I never met you before?"

"I'm from Connemara."

"I know every cow-track and bohereen in Connemara, and I know every road
in Donegal and Kerry, and I know everybody that's on them roads, but I
don't know you, mister."

The man laughed at him.

"I'm not long on the roads, so how could you know me? What are you
called yourself?"

"I'm called Padraig Mac Cann."

"I know you well, for you stole a hen and a pair of boots off me ten
months ago when I lived in a house."

"Do you tell me?" said Mac Cann.

"I do; and I never grudged them to you, for that was the day that
everything happened to me."

Mac Cann was searching his head to find from whom he had stolen a hen
and a pair of boots at the one time.

"Well, glory be to God!" he cried. "Isn't it the queer world! Are you
old Carolan, the miserly man of Temple Cahill?"

The man laughed and nodded.

"I used to be him, but now I'm Billy the Music, and there's my
instrument under the boy's oxter."

Patsy stared at him.

"And where's the house and the cattle, and the hundred acres of grass
land and glebe, and the wife that people said you used to starve the
stomach out of?"

"Faith, I don't know where they are, and I don't care either," and he
shook with the laughter as he said it.

"And your sister that killed herself climbing out of a high window on a
windy night to search for food among the neighbours?"

"She's dead still," said the man, and he doubled up with glee.

"I declare," said Patsy, "that it's the end of the world."

The man broke on his eloquence with a pointed finger.

"There's the field I was telling you about and it's weighty to the ribs
with potatoes and turnips."

Patsy turned to his daughter.

"Gather in the potatoes; don't take them all from the one place, but
take them from here and there the way they won't be missed, and then go
along the road with the cart for twenty minutes and be cooking them.
Myself and Caeltia will catch up on you in a little time and we'll bring
good meat with us."

Caeltia and he moved to the right where a gentle hill rose against the
sky. The hill was thickly wooded, massive clumps of trees were dotted
every little distance, and through these one could see quiet, green
spaces drowsing in the sun.

When they came to the fringing trees Patsy directed his companion to go
among them some little distance and then to charge here and there,
slashing against the trees and the ground with a stick.

Caeltia did that, and at the end of a quarter of an hour Patsy had three
rabbits stretched under his hand.

"That's good enough," he called; "we'll go on now after the people."

They stowed the rabbits under their coats and took the road.

They soon caught on their companions. The cart was drawn to the side of
the road, at a little distance the ass was browsing, and Mary had a fire
going in the brazier and the potatoes ready for the pot.

Patsy tossed the rabbits to her.

"There you are, my girl," said he, and, with Caeltia, he sank down on
the grassy margin of the road and drew out his pipe.

The strange man was sitting beside Art, to whom he was explaining the
mechanism of a concertina.

"While we are waiting," said Patsy to him, "you can tell us all the
news; tell us what happened to the land and what you're doing on the
road; and there is a bit of twist to put in your pipe so that you'll
talk well."

Mary broke in:

"Wait a minute now, for I want to hear that story; let yourself help me
over with the brazier and we can all sit together."

There was a handle to the bucket and through this they put a long stick
and lifted all bodily to the butt of the hedge.

"Now we can sit together," said Mary, "and I can be cooking the food and
listening to the story at the same time."

"I'd sooner give you a tune on the concertina," said Billy the Music.

"You can do that afterwards," replied Patsy.




                              CHAPTER XXI


"I'll tell you the story," said Billy the Music, "and here it is:

"A year ago I had a farm in the valley. The sun shone into it, and the
wind didn't blow into it for it was well sheltered, and the crops that I
used to take off that land would astonish you.

"I had twenty head of cattle eating the grass, and they used to get fat
quick and they used to give good milk into the bargain. I had cocks and
hens for the eggs and the market, and there was a good many folk would
have been glad to get my farm.

"There were ten men always working on the place, but at harvest-time
there would be a lot more, and I used to make them work too. Myself and
my son and my wife's brother (a lout, that fellow!) used to run after
the men, but it was hard to keep up with them, for they were great
schemers. They tried to do as little work as ever they were able, and
they tried to get as much money out of me as they could manage. But I
was up to them lads, and it's mighty little they got out of me without
giving twice as much for it.

"Bit by bit I weeded out the men until at last I only had the ones I
wanted, the tried and trusty men. They were a poor lot, and they didn't
dare to look back at me when I looked at them; but they were able to
work, and that is all I wanted them to do, and I saw that they did it.

"As I'm sitting beside you on this bank to-day I'm wondering why I took
all the trouble I did take, and what, in the name of this and that, I
expected to get out of it all. I usen't go to bed until twelve o'clock
at night, and I would be up in the dawn before the birds. Five o'clock
in the morning never saw me stretching in the warm bed, and every day I
would root the men out of their sleep; often enough I had to throw them
out of bed, for there wasn't a man of them but would have slept rings
round the clock if he got the chance.

"Of course I knew that they didn't want to work for me, and that, bating
the hunger, they'd have seen me far enough before they'd lift a hand for
my good; but I had them by the hasp, for as long as men have to eat, any
man with the food can make them do whatever he wants them to do;
wouldn't they stand on their heads for twelve hours a day if you gave
them wages? Aye would they, and eighteen hours if you held them to it.

"I had the idea too that they were trying to rob me, and maybe they
were. It doesn't seem to matter now whether they robbed me or not, for I
give you my word that the man who wants to rob me to-day is welcome to
all he can get and more if I had it."

"Faith, you're the kind man!" said Patsy.

"Let that be," said Billy the Music.

"The secret of the thing was that I loved money, hard money, gold and
silver pieces, and pieces of copper. I liked it better than the people
who were round me. I liked it better than the cattle and the crops. I
liked it better than I liked myself, and isn't that the queer thing? I
put up with the silliest ways for it, and I lived upside down and inside
out for it. I tell you I would have done anything just to get money, and
when I paid the men for their labour I grudged them every penny that
they took from me.

"It did seem to me that in taking my metal they were surely and openly
robbing me and laughing at me as they did it. I saw no reason why they
shouldn't have worked for me for nothing, and if they had I would have
grudged them the food they ate and the time they lost in sleeping, and
that's another queer thing, mind you!"

"If one of them men," said Patsy solemnly, "had the spunk of a wandering
goat or a mangy dog he'd have taken a graipe to yourself, mister, and
he'd have picked your soul out of your body and slung it on a
dung-heap."

"Don't be thinking," replied the other, "that men are courageous and
fiery animals, for they're not, and every person that pays wages to men
knows well that they're as timid as sheep and twice as timid. Let me
tell you too that all the trouble wasn't on their side; I had a share of
it and a big share."

Mac Cann interrupted solemnly--

"That's what the fox told the goose when the goose said that the teeth
hurted him. 'Look at the trouble I had to catch you,' said the fox."

"We won't mind that," said Billy the Music.

"I was hard put to it to make the money. I was able to knock a good
profit out of the land and the beasts and the men that worked for me;
and then, when I came to turn the profit into solid pieces, I found that
there was a world outside of my world, and it was truly bent on robbing
me, and, what's more, it had thought hard for generations about the best
way of doing it. It had made its scheme so carefully that I was as
helpless among them people as the labourers were with me. Oh! they got
me, and they squeezed me, and they marched off smiling with the heaviest
part of my gain, and they told me to be a bit more polite or they'd
break me into bits, and I was polite too. Ah! there's a big world
outside the little world, and maybe there's a bigger world outside that,
and grindstones in it for all the people that are squeezers in their own
place.

"The price I thought fair for the crop was never the price I got from
the jobbers. If I sold a cow or a horse I never got as much as half of
what I reckoned on. There were rings and cliques in the markets
everywhere, and they knew how to manage me. It was they who got more
than half the money I made, and they had me gripped so that I couldn't
get away. It was for these people I used to be out of bed at twelve
o'clock at night and up again before the fowl were done snoring, and it
was for them I tore the bowels out of my land, and hazed and bedevilled
every man and woman and dog that came in sight of me, and when I thought
of these market-men with their red jowls and their 'take it or leave it'
I used to get so full of rage that I could hardly breathe.

"I had to take it because I couldn't afford to leave it, and then I'd go
home again trying to cut it finer, trying to skin an extra chance profit
off the land and workers, and I do wonder now that the men didn't try to
kill me or didn't commit suicide. Aye, I wonder that I didn't commit
suicide myself by dint of the rage and greed and weariness that was my
share of life day and night.

"I got the money anyhow, and, sure enough, the people must have thought
I was the devil's self; but it was little I cared what they thought, for
the pieces were beginning to mount up in the box, and one fine day the
box got so full that not another penny-piece could have been squeezed
sideways into it, so I had to make a new box, and it wasn't so long
until I made a third box and a fourth one, and I could see the time
coming when I would be able to stand in with the market-men, and get a
good grip on whatever might be going."

"How much did you rob in all?" said Patsy.

"I had all of two thousand pounds."

"That's a lot of money, I'm thinking."

"It is so, and it took a lot of getting, and there was twenty damns went
into the box with every one of the yellow pieces."

"A damn isn't worth a shilling," said Patsy. "You can have them from me
at two for a ha'penny, and there's lots of people would give them to
yourself for nothing, you rotten old robber of the world! And if I had
the lump of twist back that I gave you a couple of minutes ago I'd put
it in my pocket, so I would, and I'd sit on it."

"Don't forget that you're talking about old things," said Billy the
Music.

"If I was one of your men," shouted Patsy, "you wouldn't have treated me
that way."

Billy the Music smiled happily at him.

"Wouldn't I?" said he, with his head on one side.

"You would not," said Patsy, "for I'd have broken your skull with a
spade."

"If you had been one of my men," the other replied mildly, "you'd have
been as tame as a little kitten; you'd have crawled round me with your
hat in your hand and your eyes turned up like a dying duck's, and you'd
have said, 'Yes, sir,' and 'No, sir,' like the other men that I welted
the stuffing out of with my two fists, and broke the spirits of with
labour and hunger. Don't be talking now, for you're an ignorant man in
these things, although you did manage to steal a clocking hen off me the
day I was busy."

"And a pair of good boots," said Patsy triumphantly.

"Do you want to hear the rest of the story?"

"I do so," said Patsy; "and I take back what I said about the tobacco;
here's another bit of it for your pipe."

"Thank you kindly," replied Billy.

He shook the ashes from his pipe, filled it, and continued his tale.

"On the head of all these things a wonderful thing happened to me."

"That's the way to start," said Patsy approvingly. "You're a good
story-teller, mister."

"It isn't so much that," replied Billy, "but it's a good story and a
wonderful story."

"The potatoes are nearly done, Mary, a grah?"

"They'll be done in a short while."

"Hold your story for a few minutes until we eat the potatoes and a few
collops of the rabbits, for I tell you that I'm drooping with the
hunger."

"I didn't eat anything myself," replied Billy, "since the middle of
yesterday, and the food there has a smell to it that's making me mad."

"It's not quite done yet," said Mary.

"It's done enough," replied her father. "Aren't you particular this day!
Pull them over here and share them round, and don't be having the men
dying on your hands."

Mary did so, and for five minutes there was no sound except that of
moving jaws, and by that time there was no more food in sight.

"Ah!" said Patsy with a great sigh.

"Aye, indeed!" said Billy the Music with another sigh.

"Put on more of the potatoes now," Patsy commanded his daughter, "and be
cooking them against the time this story will be finished."

"I wish I had twice as much as I had," said Art.

"You got twice as much as me," cried Patsy angrily, "for I saw the girl
giving it to you."

"I'm not complaining," replied Art; "I'm only stating a fact."

"That's all right," said Patsy.

The pipes were lit, and all eyes turned to Billy the Music. Patsy leaned
back on his elbow, and blew his cloud.

"Now we'll have the rest of the story," said he.




                              CHAPTER XXII


"This," continued Billy the Music, "is the wonderful thing that happened
to me.

"Bit by bit I got fonder of the money. The more I got of it the more I
wanted. I used to go away by myself to look at it and handle it and
count it. I didn't store it all in the house; I only kept enough there
to make the people think it was all there, and as every one was watching
that and watching each other (for they all wanted to steal it) it was
safe enough.

"They didn't know it was mostly copper was in that box, but copper it
was, and some silver that I couldn't fit into the other boxes.

"There was a place at the end of the big barn, just underneath the dog's
kennel--maybe you remember my dog, Patsy?"

"A big black-and-white snarly devil of a bull-terrier?" said Patsy,
thoughtfully.

"That's him."

"I remember him well," said Patsy. "I fed him once."

"You poisoned him," said Billy the Music quickly.

"That's a hard word to say," replied Patsy, scraping at his chin.

Billy the Music looked very fixedly at him, and he also scraped
meditatively at his bristles.

"It doesn't matter now," said he. "That was the dog. I made a place
under his kennel. It was well made. If you had pulled the kennel aside
you'd have seen nothing but the floor. Down there I kept the three boxes
of gold, and while I'd be looking at them the dog would be lurching
around wondering why he wasn't allowed to eat people--I was a bit timid
with that dog myself--and it was one day while I was handling the money
that the thing happened.

"There came a thump on the barn door. The dog made a noise away down in
the heel of his throat and loped across; he stuck his nose against the
crack at the bottom and began to sniff and scratch.

"'Strangers there,' said I. I put the money away quietly, lifted the
kennel back to its place, and went over to open the door.

"There were two men standing outside, and the dog sprang for one of them
as if he had been shot out of a gun.

"But that man was quick. He took the beast on the jump, caught him by
the chaps, and slung him with a heave of his arm. I don't know where he
slung him to; I never saw the dog alive after that, and I did think it
was that jerk killed him."

"Begor!" said Patsy.

"It must have been within half an hour or so that you gave him the
poisoned meat, Patsy."

"It was a lengthy mutton bone," murmured Mac Cann.

"Whatever it was!" said Billy the Music.

"The men walked in, they shut the barn door behind them and locked it,
for the key was inside whenever I was.

"Well! I always had the use of my hands and my feet and my teeth, but I
had no chance there, so in a few minutes I sat down on the kennel to get
my breath back and to mop up the blood that was teeming out of my nose.
The two men, I will say, were very quiet with it all--they waited for
me.

"One of them was a middle-sized block of a man, and he looked as if his
head had been rolled in tar--"

"Eh!" said Patsy loudly.

"The other one was a big, young man with a girl's face; he had blue eyes
and curls of gold, and he was wearing a woman's skirt--the raggedest
old----"

"Begor!" cried Patsy, and he leaped furiously to his feet.

"What's wrong with you?" said Billy the Music.

Patsy beat his fists together.

"I've been looking for that pair of playboys for a full year," he
barked.

"Do you know them?" said Billy the Music, with equal excitement.

"I don't know them, but I met them, and the girl yonder met them too,
the thieves!"

"They are a pair of dirty dogs," said Mary coldly.

"And when I do meet them," said Patsy savagely, "I'll kill the pair of
them: I will so.

Billy the Music laughed.

"I wouldn't try killing them lads; I did try it once, but they wouldn't
let me. Tell us what they did to yourself, and then I'll go on with my
story, for I'm real curious about those two."

Mac Cann put his pipe into his pocket.




                             CHAPTER XXIII


Said Patsy:

"There isn't very much to tell, but this is how it happened.

"About two weeks before your dog died myself and the girl were tramping
up towards Dublin. We hadn't got the ass with us that time, for it was
in pawn to a woman that peddled fish in the south-west of Connemara. She
was keeping the ass and cart for us while we were away, and she was
going to give us something for their loan at the heel of the season. She
was an old rip, that one, for she sold the ass on us to one man and she
sold the cart to another man, and we had the trouble of the world
getting the pair of them together again--but that's no matter.

"One morning, fresh and early, we were beating along a road that comes
down from the mountains and runs away into Donnybrook. I had just picked
up a little goose that I found walking along with its nose up, and I
thought maybe we could sell the creature to some person in the city who
wanted a goose.

"We turned a bend in the road (it's a twisty district), and there I saw
two men sitting on the grass on each side of the path. The two men were
sitting with the full width of the road between them, and they were
clean, stark, stone naked.

"They hadn't got as much as a shirt; they hadn't a hat; they hadn't got
anything at all on them barring their skins.

"'Whoo!' said I to myself, and I caught a grip of the girl. 'We'll be
taking another road,' said I, and round we sailed with the goose and
all.

"But the two men came after us, and what with the goose and the girl,
they caught up on us too.

"One of them was a bullet-headed thief and he did look as if he had been
rolled in tar, and I hope he was. The other was a dandy lad that never
got his hair cut since he was a mother's boy.

"'Be off with the pair of you,' said I, 'ye indecent devils. What do ye
want with honest folk and you in your pelt?'

"The bullet-headed one was bouncing round me like a rubber ball.

"'Take off your clothes, mister,' said he.

"'What!' said I.

"'Take off your clothes quick,' said he, 'or I'll kill you.'

"So, with that I jumped into the middle of the road, and I up with the
goose, and I hit that chap such a welt on the head that the goose
bursted. Then the lad was into me and we went round the road like
thunder and lightning till the other fellow joined in, and then Mary
welted into the lot of us with a stick that she had, but they didn't
mind her any more than a fly. Before you could whistle, mister, they had
me stripped to the buff, and before you could whistle again they had the
girl stripped, and the pair of them were going down the road as hard as
ever they could pelt with our clothes under their oxters."

"Begor!" said Billy the Music.

"I tell you so," grinned Patsy.

"There was herself and myself standing in the middle of the road with
nothing to cover our nakedness but a bursted goose."

"That was the queer sight," said Billy the Music looking thoughtfully at
Mary.

"You keep your eyes to yourself, mister," said Mary hotly.

"What did you do then?" said Billy.

"We sat down on the side of the road for a long time until we heard
footsteps and then we hid ourselves.

"I peeped over the hedge and there was a man coming along the path. He
was a nice-looking man with a black bag in his hand and he was walking
fast. When he came exactly opposite me I jumped the hedge and I took the
clothes off him--"

Billy the Music slapped his palm on his knee.

"You did so!"

"I did so," said Patsy.

"He was grumbling all the time, but as soon as I let him loose he
started to run, and that was the last I saw of him.

"After a bit a woman came along the road, and Mary took the clothes off
her. She was a quiet, poor soul, and she didn't say a word to either of
us. We left her the goose and the man's black bag for payment, and then
the pair of us started off, and we didn't stop running till we came to
the County Kerry.

"These are the clothes I'm telling you about," said Patsy; "I have them
on me this minute."

"It's a great story," said Billy the Music.

"I can tell you something further about these people," said Caeltia
smiling.

"Can you so?" cried Patsy.

"I can, but the man here hasn't finished what he was telling us."

"I was forgetting him," said Mac Cann. "Put another pinch in your pipe,
mister, and tell us what happened to you after that."




                              CHAPTER XXIV


Billy the Music did put another pinch of tobacco into his pipe, and
after drawing on it meditatively for a few minutes he snuffed it out
with his thumb and put it into his pocket. Naturally he put it in upside
down, so that the tobacco might drop from the pipe, for he was no longer
a saving man.

"They were surely the two men that I'm telling you about," said he, "and
there they were standing up in front of me while I was sneezing the
blood out of my nose.

"'What do you want?' said I to themselves, and all the time I was
peeping here and there to see if there wasn't a bit of a stick or a
crowbar maybe lying handy.

"It was the boyo in the skirt that answered me:

"'I wanted to have a look at yourself,' said he.

"'Take your eye-full and go away, for God's sake,' said I.

"'You dirty thief!' said he to me.

"'What's that for?' said I.

"'What do you mean by getting me thrown out of heaven?' said he.

"...! Well, mister honey, that was a question to worry any man, and it
worried me. I couldn't think what to say to him. 'Begor!' said I, and I
sneezed out some more of my blood.

"But the lad was stamping mad.

"'If I could blot you from the light of life without doing any hurt to
myself, I'd smash you this mortal minute,' said he.

"'For the love of heaven,' said I, 'tell me what I did to yourself, for
I never did see you before this day, and I wish I didn't see you now.'

"The bullet-headed man was standing by all the time, and he chewing
tobacco.

"'Have it out with him, Cuchulain,' said he. 'Kill him,' said he, 'and
send him out among the spooks.'

"But the other man calmed down a bit, and he came over to me wagging the
girl's skirts.

"'Listen!' said he, 'I'm the Seraph Cuchulain.'

"'Very good,' said I.

"'I'm your Guardian Angel,' said he.

"'Very good,' said I.

"'I'm your Higher Self,' said he, 'and every rotten business you do down
here does be vibrating against me up there. You never did anything in
your life that wasn't rotten. You're a miser and a thief, and you got me
thrown out of heaven because of the way you loved money. You seduced me
when I wasn't looking. You made a thief of me in a place where it's no
fun to be a robber, and here I am wandering the dirty world on the head
of your unrighteous ways. Repent, you beast,' said he, and he landed me
a clout on the side of the head that rolled me from one end of the barn
to the other.

"'Give him another one,' said the bullet-headed man, and he chewing
strongly on his plug.

"'What have you got to do with it?' said I to him. 'You're not my
Guardian Angel, God help me!'

"'How dare you,' said the bullet-headed man. 'How dare you set this
honest party stealing the last threepenny bit of a poor man?' and with
that he made a clout at me.

"'What threepenny bit are you talking about?' said I.

"'My own threepenny bit,' said he. 'The only one I had. The one I
dropped outside the gates of hell.'

"Well, that beat me! 'I don't care what you say any longer,' said I,
'you can talk till you're blue and I won't care what you say,' and down
I sat on the kennel and shed my blood.

"'You must repent of your own free will,' said Cuchulain, marching to
the door.

"'And you'd better hurry up, too,' said the other fellow, 'or I'll
hammer the head off you.'

"The queer thing is that I believed every word the man said. I didn't
know what he was talking about, but I did know that he was talking about
something that was real although it was beyond me. And there was the way
he said it too, for he spoke like a bishop, with fine, shouting words
that I can't remember now, and the months gone past. I took him at his
word anyhow, and on the minute I began to feel a different creature,
for, mind you, a man can no more go against his Guardian Angel than he
can climb a tree backwards.

"As they were going out of the barn Cuchulain turned to me:

"'I'll help you to repent,' said he, 'for I want to get back again, and
this is the way I'll help you. I'll give you money, and I'll give you
piles of it.'

"The two of them went off then, and I didn't venture out of the barn for
half-an-hour.

                   *       *       *       *       *

"I went into the barn next day, and what do you think I saw?"

"The floor was covered with gold pieces," said Patsy.

Billy nodded:

"That's what I saw. I gathered them up and hid them under the kennel.
There wasn't room for the lot of them, so I rolled the rest in a bit of
a sack and covered them up with cabbages.

"The next day I went in and the floor was covered with gold pieces, and
I swept them up and hid them under the cabbages too. The day after that
and the next day and the day after that again it was the same story. I
didn't know where to put the money. I had to leave it lying on the
floor, and I hadn't as much as a dog to guard it from the robbers."

"You had not," said Patsy, "and that's the truth."

"I locked the barn; then I called up all the men; I paid them their
wages, for what did I want with them any longer and I rolling in gold? I
told them to get out of my sight, and I saw every man of them off the
land. Then I told my wife's brother that I didn't want him in my house
any longer, and I saw him off the land. Then I argued my son out of the
house, and I told my wife that she could go with him if she wanted to,
and then I went back to the barn.

"But, as I told you a minute ago, I was a changed man. The gold was
mounting up on me, and I didn't know what to do with it. I could have
rolled in it if I wanted to, and I did roll in it, but there was no fun
in that.

"This was the trouble with me--I couldn't count it; it had gone beyond
me; there were piles of it; there were stacks of it; it was four feet
deep all over the floor, and I could no more move it than I could move a
house.

"I never wanted that much money, for no man could want it: I only wanted
what I could manage with my hands; and the fear of robbers was on me to
that pitch that I could neither sit nor stand nor sleep.

"Every time I opened the door the place was fuller than it was the last
time, and, at last, I got to hate the barn. I just couldn't stand the
look of the place, and the light squinting at me from thousands and
thousands of gold corners.

"It beat me at last. One day I marched into the house, and I picked up
the concertina that my son bought (I was able to play it well myself)
and said I to the wife:

"'I'm off.'

"'Where are you off?'

"'I'm going into the world.'

"'What will become of the farm?'

"'You can have it yourself,' said I, and with that I stepped clean out
of the house and away to the road. I didn't stop walking for two days,
and I never went back from that day to this.

"I do play on the concertina before the houses, and the people give me
coppers. I travel from place to place every day, and I'm as happy as a
bird on a bough, for I've no worries and I worry no one."

"What did become of the money?" said Patsy.

"I'm thinking now that it might have been fairy gold, and, if it was,
nobody could touch it."

"So," said Mac Cann, "that's the sort of boys they were?"

"That's the sort."

"And one of them was your own Guardian Angel!"

"He said that."

"And what was the other one?"

"I don't know, but I do think that he was a spook."

Patsy turned to Finaun:

"Tell me, mister, is that a true story now, or was the lad making it
up?"

"It is true," replied Finaun.

Patsy considered for a moment.

"I wonder," said he musingly, "who is my own Guardian Angel?"

Caeltia hastily put the pipe into his pocket.

"I am," said he.

"Oh, bedad!"

Mac Cann placed his hands on his knees and laughed heartily.

"You are! and I making you drunk every second night in the little pubs!"

"You never made me drunk."

"I did not, for you've got a hard head surely, but there's a pair of us
in it, mister."

He was silent again, then:

"I wonder who is the Guardian Angel of Eileen Ni Cooley? for he has his
work cut out for him, I'm thinking."

"I am her Guardian Angel," said Finaun.

"Are you telling me that?"

Mac Cann stared at Finaun, and he lapsed again to reverie.

"Ah, well!" said he to Billy the Music, "it was a fine story you told
us, mister, and queer deeds you were mixed up in; but I'd like to meet
the men that took our clothes, I would so."

"I can tell you something more about them," Caeltia remarked.

"So you said a while back. What is it you can tell us?"

"I can tell you the beginning of all that tale."

"I'd like to hear it," said Billy the Music.

"There is just a piece I will have to make up from what I heard since we
came here, but the rest I can answer for because I was there at the
time."

"I remember it too," said Art to Caeltia, "and when you have told your
story I'll tell another one."

"Serve out the potatoes, Mary," said Mac Cann, "and then you can go on
with the story. Do you think is that ass all right, alannah?"

"He's eating the grass still, but I think he may be wanting a drink."

"He had a good drink yesterday," said her father, and he shifted to a
more comfortable position.




                              CHAPTER XXV


Said Caeltia:

"When Brien O'Brien died people said that it did not matter very much
because he would have died young in any case. He would have been hanged,
or his head would have been split in two halves with a hatchet, or he
would have tumbled down the cliff when he was drunk and been smashed
into jelly. Something like that was due to him, and everybody likes to
see a man get what he deserves to get.

"But, as ethical writs cease to run when a man is dead, the neighbours
did not stay away from his wake. They came, and they said many
mitigating things across the body with the bandaged jaws and the sly
grin, and they reminded each other of this and that queer thing which he
had done, for his memory was crusted over with stories of wild,
laughable things, and other things which were wild but not laughable.

"Meanwhile he was dead, and one was at liberty to be a trifle sorry for
him. Further, he belonged to the O'Brien nation--a stock to whom
reverence was due. A stock not easily forgotten. The historic memory
could reconstruct forgotten glories of station and battle, of terrible
villainy and terrible saintliness, the pitiful, valorous, slow descent
to the degradation which was not yet wholly victorious. A great stock!
The O'Neills remembered it. The O'Tools and the Mac Sweeneys had stories
by the hundred of love and hate. The Burkes and the Geraldines and the
new strangers had memories also.

"His family was left in the poorest way, but they were used to that, for
he had kept them as poor as he left them, or found them, for that
matter. They had shaken hands with Charity so often that they no longer
disliked the sallow-faced lady, and so certain small gifts made by the
neighbours were accepted, not very thankfully, but very readily. These
gifts were almost always in kind. A few eggs. A bag of potatoes. A
handful of meal. A couple of twists of tea--such like.

"One of the visitors, however, moved by an extraordinary dejection,
slipped a silver threepenny-piece into the hand of Brien's little
daughter, Sheila, aged four years, and later on she did not like to ask
for it back again.

"Little Sheila had been well trained by her father. She knew exactly
what should be done with money, and so, when nobody was looking, she
tip-toed to the coffin and slipped the threepenny-piece into Brien's
hand. That hand had never refused money when it was alive, it did not
reject it either when it was dead.

"They buried him the next day.

"He was called up for judgment the day after, and made his appearance
with a miscellaneous crowd of wretches, and there he again received what
was due to him. He was removed, protesting and struggling, to the place
decreed:

"'Down,' said Rhadamanthus, pointing with his great hand, and down he
went.

"In the struggle he dropped the threepenny-piece, but he was so bustled
and heated that he did not observe his loss. He went down, far down, out
of sight, out of remembrance, to a howling black gulf with others of his
unseen kind.

"A young seraph, named Cuchulain, chancing to pass that way shortly
afterwards, saw the threepenny-piece peeping brightly from the rocks,
and he picked it up.

"He looked at it in astonishment. He turned it over and over, this way
and that way. Examined it at the stretch of his arm, and peered minutely
at it from two inches distance.

"'I have never in my life seen anything so beautifully wrought,' said
he, and, having stowed it in his pouch along with some other trinkets,
he strolled homewards again through the massy gates.

"It was not long until Brien discovered his loss, and suddenly, through
the black region, his voice went mounting and brawling.

"'I have been robbed,' he yelled. 'I have been robbed in heaven!'

"Having begun to yell he did not stop. Sometimes he was simply angry and
made a noise. Sometimes he became sarcastic and would send his query
swirling upwards.

"'Who stole the threepenny-bit?' he roared. He addressed the surrounding
black space:

"'Who stole the last threepenny-bit of a poor man?'

"Again and again his voice pealed upwards. The pains of his habitation
lost all their sting for him. His mind had nourishment, and the heat
within him vanquished the fumes without. He had a grievance, a righteous
cause, he was buoyed and strengthened, nothing could silence him. They
tried ingenious devices, all kinds of complicated things, but he paid no
heed, and the tormentors were in despair.

"'I hate these sinners from the kingdom of Kerry,' said the Chief
Tormentor, and he sat moodily down on his own circular saw; and that
worried him also, for he was clad only in a loin-cloth.

"'I hate the entire Clann of the Gael,' said he; 'why cannot they send
them somewhere else?' and then he started practising again on Brien.

"It was no use. Brien's query still blared upwards like the sound of the
great trump itself. It wakened and rung the rocky caverns, screamed
through fissure and funnel, and was battered and slung from pinnacle to
crag and up again. Worse! his companions in doom became interested and
took up the cry, until at last the uproar became so appalling that the
Master himself could not stand it.

"'I have not had a wink of sleep for three nights,' said that harassed
one, and he sent a special embassy to the powers.

"Rhadamanthus was astonished when they arrived. His elbow was leaning on
his vast knee, and his heavy head rested on a hand that was acres long,
acres wide.

"'What is all this about?' said he.

"'The Master cannot go to sleep,' said the spokesman of the embassy, and
he grinned as he said it, for it sounded queer even to himself.

"'It is not necessary that he should sleep,' said Rhadamanthus. 'I have
never slept since time began, and I will never sleep until time is over.
But the complaint is curious. What has troubled your master?'

"'Hell is turned upside down and inside out,' said the fiend. 'The
tormentors are weeping like little children. The principalities are
squatting on their hunkers doing nothing. The orders are running here
and there fighting each other. The styles are leaning against walls
shrugging their shoulders, and the damned are shouting and laughing and
have become callous to torment.'

"'It is not my business,' said the judge.

"'The sinners demand justice,' said the spokesman.

"'They've got it,' said Rhadamanthus, 'let them stew in it.'

"'They refuse to stew,' replied the spokesman, wringing his hands.

"Rhadamanthus sat up.

"'It is an axiom in law,' said he, 'that however complicated an event
may be, there can never be more than one person at the extreme bottom of
it. Who is the person?'

"'It is one Brien of the O'Brien nation, late of the kingdom of Kerry. A
bad one! He got the maximum punishment a week ago.'

"For the first time in his life Rhadamanthus was disturbed. He scratched
his head, and it was the first time he had ever done that either.

"'You say he got the maximum,' said Rhadamanthus, 'then it's a fix! I
have damned him for ever, and better or worse than that cannot be done.
It is none of my business,' said he angrily, and he had the deputation
removed by force.

"But that did not ease the trouble. The contagion spread until ten
million billions of voices were chanting in unison, and uncountable
multitudes were listening between their pangs.

"'Who stole the threepenny-bit? Who stole the threepenny-bit?'

"That was still their cry. Heaven rang with it as well as hell. Space
was filled with that rhythmic tumult. Chaos and empty Nox had a new
discord added to their elemental throes. Another memorial was drafted
below, showing that unless the missing coin was restored to its owner
hell would have to close its doors. There was a veiled menace in the
memorial also, for Clause 6 hinted that if hell was allowed to go by the
board heaven might find itself in some jeopardy thereafter.

"The document was despatched and considered. In consequence a
proclamation was sent through all the wards of Paradise, calling on
whatever person, archangel, seraph, cherub, or acolyte, had found a
threepenny-piece since mid-day of the tenth August then instant, that
the same person, archangel, seraph, cherub, or acolyte, should deliver
the said threepenny-piece to Rhadamanthus at his Court, and should
receive in return a free pardon and a receipt.

"The coin was not delivered.

                   *       *       *       *       *

"The young seraph, Cuchulain, walked about like a person who was strange
to himself. He was not tormented: he was angry. He frowned, he cogitated
and fumed. He drew one golden curl through his fingers until it was lank
and drooping; save the end only, that was still a ripple of gold. He put
the end in his mouth and strode moodily chewing it. And every day his
feet turned in the same direction--down the long entrance boulevard,
through the mighty gates, along the strip of carved slabs, to that piled
wilderness where Rhadamanthus sat monumentally.

"Here delicately he went, sometimes with a hand outstretched to help his
foothold, standing for a space to think ere he jumped to a farther rock,
balancing himself for a moment ere he leaped again. So he would come to
stand and stare gloomily upon the judge.

"He would salute gravely, as was meet, and say, 'God bless the work';
but Rhadamanthus never replied, save by a nod, for he was very busy.

"Yet the judge did observe him, and would sometimes heave ponderous lids
to where he stood, and so, for a few seconds, they regarded each other
in an interval of that unceasing business.

"Sometimes for a minute or two the young seraph Cuchulain would look
from the judge to the judged as they crouched back or strained forward,
the good and the bad all in the same tremble of fear, all unknowing
which way their doom might lead. They did not look at each other. They
looked at the judge high on his ebon throne, and they could not look
away from him. There were those who knew, guessed clearly their doom;
abashed and flaccid they sat, quaking. There were some who were
uncertain--rabbit-eyed these, not less quaking than the others, biting
at their knuckles as they peeped upwards. There were those hopeful, yet
searching fearfully backwards in the wilderness of memory, chasing and
weighing their sins; and these last, even when their bliss was sealed
and their steps set on an easy path, went faltering, not daring to look
around again, their ears strained to catch a--'Halt, miscreant! this
other is your way!'

"So, day by day, he went to stand near the judge; and one day
Rhadamanthus, looking on him more intently, lifted his great hand and
pointed:

"'Go you among those to be judged,' said he.

"For Rhadamanthus knew. It was his business to look deep into the heart
and the mind, to fish for secrets in the pools of being,

"And the young seraph Cuchulain, still rolling his golden curl between
his lips, went obediently forward and set down his nodding plumes
between two who whimpered and stared and quaked.

"When his turn came, Rhadamanthus eyed him intently for a long time:

"'Well!' said Rhadamanthus.

"The young seraph Cuchulain blew the curl of gold from his lips:

"'Findings are keepings,' said he loudly, and he closed his mouth and
stared very impertinently at the judge.

"'It is to be given up,' said the judge.

"'Let them come and take it from me,' said the seraph Cuchulain. And
suddenly (for these things are at the will of spirits) around his head
the lightnings span, and his hands were on the necks of thunders.

"For the second time in his life Rhadamanthus was disturbed, again he
scratched his head:

"'It's a fix,' said he moodily. But in a moment he called to those whose
duty it was:

"'Take him to this side,' he roared.

"And they advanced. But the seraph Cuchulain swung to meet them, and his
golden hair blazed and shrieked; and the thunders rolled at his feet,
and about him a bright network that hissed and stung--and those who
advanced turned haltingly backwards and ran screaming.

"'It's a fix,' said Rhadamanthus; and for a little time he stared
menacingly at the seraph Cuchulain.

"But only for a little time. Suddenly he put his hands on the rests of
his throne and heaved upwards his terrific bulk. Never before had
Rhadamanthus stood from his ordained chair. He strode mightily forward
and in an instant had quelled that rebel. The thunders and lightnings
were but moonbeams and dew on that stony carcass. He seized the seraph
Cuchulain, lifted him to his breast as one lifts a sparrow, and tramped
back with him:

"'Fetch me that other,' said he sternly, and he sat down.

"Those whose duty it was sped swiftly downwards to find Brien of the
O'Brien nation; and while they were gone, all in vain the seraph
Cuchulain crushed flamy barbs against that bosom of doom. Now, indeed,
his golden locks were drooping and his plumes were broken and tossed;
but his fierce eye still glared courageously against the nipple of
Rhadamanthus.

"Soon they brought Brien. He was a sight of woe--howling, naked as a
tree in winter, black as a tarred wall, carved and gashed, tattered in
all but his throat, wherewith, until one's ears rebelled, he bawled his
one demand.

"But the sudden light struck him to a wondering silence, and the sight
of the judge holding the seraph Cuchulain like a limp flower to his
breast held him gaping.

"'Bring him here,' said Rhadamanthus.

"And they brought him to the steps of the throne.

"'You have lost a medal!' said Rhadamanthus. 'This one has it.'

"Brien looked straitly at the seraph Cuchulain.

"Rhadamanthus stood again, whirled his arm in an enormous arc, jerked,
and let go, and the seraph Cuchulain went swirling through space like a
slung stone.

"'Go after him, Kerryman' said Rhadamanthus, stooping; and he seized
Brien by the leg, whirled him wide and out and far; dizzy, dizzy as a
swooping comet, and down, and down, and down.

"Rhadamanthus seated himself. He motioned with his hand.

"'Next,' said he coldly.

"Down went the seraph Cuchulain, swirling in wide tumbles, scarcely
visible for quickness. Sometimes, with outstretched hands, he was a
cross that dropped plumb. Anon, head urgently downwards, he dived
steeply. Again, like a living hoop, head and heels together, he spun
giddily. Blind, deaf, dumb, breathless, mindless; and behind him Brien
of the O'Brien nation came pelting and whizzing.

"What of that journey? Who could give it words? Of the suns that
appeared and disappeared like winkling eyes. Comets that shone for an
instant, went black and vanished. Moons that came, and stood, and were
gone. And around all, including all, boundless space, boundless silence;
the black unmoving void--the deep, unending quietude, through which they
fell with Saturn and Orion, and mildly-smiling Venus, and the fair,
stark-naked moon, and the decent earth wreathed in pearl and blue. From
afar she appeared, the quiet one, all lonely in the void. As sudden as a
fair face in a crowded street. Beautiful as the sound of falling waters.
Beautiful as the sound of music in a silence. Like a white sail on a
windy sea. Like a green tree in a solitary place. Chaste and wonderful
she appeared. Flying afar. Flying aloft like a joyous bird when the
morning breaks on the darkness and he shrills sweet tidings. She soared
and sang. Gently she sang to timid pipes and flutes of tender straw and
murmuring, distant strings. A song that grew and swelled, gathering to a
multitudinous, deep-thundered harmony, until the overburdened ear failed
before the appalling uproar of her ecstasy, and denounced her. No longer
a star! No longer a bird! A plumed and horned fury! Gigantic, gigantic,
leaping and shrieking tempestuously, spouting whirlwinds of lightning,
tearing gluttonously along her path, avid, rampant, howling with rage
and terror she leaped, dreadfully she leaped and flew....

                   *       *       *       *       *

"Enough! They hit the earth--they were not smashed, there was that
virtue in them. They hit the ground just outside the village of
Donnybrook where the back road runs to the hills; and scarcely had they
bumped twice when Brien of the O'Brien nation had the seraph Cuchulain
by the throat.

"'My threepenny-bit,' he roared, with one fist up.

"But the seraph Cuchulain only laughed:

"'That!' said he. 'Look at me, man. Your little medal dropped far beyond
the rings of Saturn.'

"And Brien stood back looking at him--He was as naked as Brien was. He
was as naked as a stone, or an eel, or a pot, or a new-born babe. He was
very naked.

"So Brien of the O'Brien nation strode across the path and sat down by
the side of a hedge:

"'The first man that passes this way,' said he, 'will give me his
clothes, or I'll strangle him.'

"The seraph Cuchulain walked over to him:

"'I will take the clothes of the second man that passes,' said he, and
he sat down."




                              CHAPTER XXVI


"And then," said Mac Cann thoughtfully, "we came along, and they stole
our clothes."

"That wasn't a bad tale," he continued to Caeltia. "You are as good a
story-teller, mister, as the man himself," pointing to Billy the Music.

Billy replied modestly:

"It's because the stories were good ones that they were well told, for
that's not my trade, and what wonder would it be if I made a botch of
it? I'm a musician myself, as I told you, and there's my instrument, but
I knew an old man in Connaught one time, and he was a great lad for the
stories. He used to make his money at it, and if that man was to break
off in the middle of a tale the people would stand up and kill him, they
would so. He was a gifted man, for he would tell you a story about
nothing at all, and you'd listen to him with your mouth open and you
afraid that he would come to the end of it soon, and maybe it would be
nothing more than the tale of how a white hen laid a brown egg. He would
tell you a thing you knew all your life, and you would think it was a
new thing. There was no old age in that man's mind, and that's the
secret of story-telling."

Said Mary:

"I could listen to a story for a day and a night."

Her father nodded acquiescence:

"So could I, if it was a good story and well told, and I would be ready
to listen to another one after that."

He turned to Art:

"You were saying yourself, sonny, that there was a story in your head,
and if that's so, now is your chance to tell it; but I'm doubting you'll
be able to do it as well as the two men here, for you are a youngster,
and story-telling is an old man's trade."

"I'll do my best," said Art, "but I never told a story in my life, and
it may not be a good one at the first attempt."

"That's all right," replied Mac Cann encouragingly. "We won't be hard on
you."

"Sure enough," said Billy the Music, "and you've listened to the lot of
us, so you will know the road."

"What are you going to talk about?" said Caeltia.

"I'm going to talk about Brien O'Brien, the same as the rest of you."

"Did you know him too?" cried Billy.

"I did."

"There isn't a person doesn't know that man," growled Patsy. "Maybe,"
and he grinned ferociously as he said it, "maybe we'll meet him on the
road and he tramping, and perhaps he will tell us a story himself."

"That man could not tell a story," Finaun interrupted, "for he has no
memory, and that is a thing a good story-teller ought to have."

"If we meet him," said Mac Cann grimly, "I'll do something to him and
he'll remember it, and it's likely that he will be able to make a story
out of it too."

"I only saw him once," said Art, "but when Rhadamanthus tossed him
through the void I recognised his face, although so long a time had
elapsed since I did see him. He is now less than he was, but he is,
nevertheless, much more than I had expected he would be."

"What is he now?" said Billy the Music.

"He is a man."

"We are all that," said Patsy, "and it isn't any trouble to us."

"It was more trouble than you imagine," said Finaun.

"I had expected him to be no more than one of the higher animals, or
even that he might have been dissipated completely from existence."

"What was he at the time you met him?"

"He was a magician, and he was one of the most powerful magicians that
ever lived. He was a being of the fifth round, and he had discovered
many secrets."

"I have known magicians," commented Finaun, "and I always found that
they were fools."

"Brien O'Brien destroyed himself," Art continued, "he forfeited his
evolution and added treble to his karmic burden because he had not got a
sense of humour."

"No magician has a sense of humour," remarked Finaun, "he could not be a
magician if he had--Humour is the health of the mind."

"That," Art broke in, "is one of the things he said to me. So you see he
had discovered something. He was very near to being a wise man. He was
certainly a courageous man, or, perhaps, foolhardy; but he was as
serious as a fog, and he could not bring himself to believe it."

"Tell us the story," said Caeltia.

"Here it is," said Art.




                             CHAPTER XXVII


"On a day long ago I laboured with the Army of the Voice. The first
syllable of the great word had been uttered, and in far eastern space,
beyond seven of the flaming wheels, I and the six sons drew the lives
together and held them for the whirlwind which is the one. We were
waiting for the second syllable to form the wind.

"As I stood by my place holding the north in quietness, I felt a strong
vibration between my hands. Something was interfering with me. I could
not let go, but I looked behind me, and there I saw a man standing, and
he was weaving spells.

"It was a short, dark man with a little bristle of black whisker on his
chin and a stiff bristle of black hair on his head. He was standing
inside a double triangle having the points upwards, and there were
magical signs at each point of the triangles. While I looked, he threw
around him from side to side a flaming circle, and then he threw a
flaming circle about him from front to back, and he span these so
quickly that he was surrounded by a wall of fire.

"At him, on the instant, I charged a bolt, but it could not penetrate
his circles; it hit them and fell harmless, for the circles had a
greater speed than my thunderbolt.

"He stood so in the triangles, laughing at me and scratching his chin.

"I dared not loose my hands again lest the labour of a cycle should be
dissipated in an instant, and it was no use shouting to the others, for
they also were holding the lives in readiness for the whirlwind which
would shape them to a globe, so the man had me at his mercy.

"He was working against my grip, and he had amazing power. He had
somehow discovered part of the first syllable of the great word, and he
was intoning this on me between giggles, but he could not destroy us,
for together we were equal to the number of that syllable.

"When I looked at him again he laughed at me, and what he said
astonished me greatly.

"'This,' said he, 'is very funny.'

"I made no reply to him, being intent only on holding my grip; but I was
reassured, for, although he poured on me incessantly the great sound,
its effect was neutralised, for I am a number, and in totality we were
the numbers; nevertheless the substance did strain and heave so
powerfully that I could do no more than hold it in place.

"The man spoke to me again. Said he:

"'Do you not think that this is very funny?'

"I made no answer for a time, and then I said:

"'Who are you?'

"'A name,' he replied, 'is a power; I won't give you my name although I
would like to, for this is a great deed and a funny one.'

"'What is your planet?' quoth I.

"'I won't tell you that,' he replied; 'you might read my signs and come
after me later on.'

"I could not but admire the immense impertinence of his deed.

"'I know your sign,' said I, 'for you have already made it three times
with your hand, and there is only one planet of these systems which has
evolved the fifth race, so I know your planet. Your symbol is the Mule,
and Uriel is your Regent; he will be coming after you soon, so you had
better go away while you have time.'

"'If he comes,' said the man, 'I'll put him in a bottle, and I'll put
you in a bottle too. I won't go for another while, the joke is too good,
and this is only the commencement of it.'

"'You will be caught by the second syllable,' I warned him.

"'I'll put it in a bottle,' said he grinning at me. 'No,' he continued,
'I won't be caught, I've made my calculations, and it's not due yet a
while.'

"Again he poured on me the great sound until I rocked to and fro like a
bush in the wind; but he could not loose my grip, for I was a part of
the word.

"'Why are you doing this?' I asked him.

"'I'll tell you that,' he replied.

"'I am two things, and I am great in each of these two things. I am a
great magician, and I am a great humourist. Now, it is very easy to
prove that one is a magician, for one has only to do things and then
people are astonished; they are filled with fear and wonder; they fall
down and worship and call one god and master. But it is not so easy to
be a humourist, because in that case it is necessary to make people
laugh. If a man is to be a magician it is necessary, if his art is to be
appreciated, that the people around him be fools. If a person desires to
be a humourist it is necessary that the people around him shall be at
least as wise as he is, otherwise his humour will not be comprehended.
You see my predicament! and it is a cruel one, for I cannot forego
either of these ambitions--they are my karma. Laughter is purely an
intellectual quality, and in my planet I have no intellectual equals: my
jokes can only be enjoyed by myself, and it is of the essence of humour
that one share it, or it turns to ill-health and cynicism and mental
sourness. My humour cannot be shared with the people of my planet, for
they are all half a round beneath me--they can never see the joke, they
only see consequences, and these blind them to the rich drollery of any
affair, and render me discontented and angry. My humour is too great for
them, for it is not terrestrial but cosmic; it can only be appreciated
by the gods, therefore, I have come out here to seek my peers and to
have at least one hearty laugh with them.'

"'One must laugh,' he continued, 'for laughter is the health of the
mind, and I have not laughed for a crore of seasons.'

"Thereupon he took up the syllable and intoned its flooding sound so
that the matter beneath my hands strained against me almost unbearably.

"I turned my head and stared at the little man as he laughed happily to
himself and scraped his chin.

"'You are a fool,' said I to that man.

"The smile vanished from his face and a shade of dejection took its
place.

"'Is it possible, Regent, that you have no sense of humour!' said he.

"'This,' I replied, 'is not humorous; it is only a practical joke; it is
no more than incipient humour; there is no joke in it but only mischief,
for to interfere with work is the humour of a babe or a monkey. You are
a thoroughly serious person, and you will not make a joke in ten
eternities; that also is in your karma.'

"At these words his eyes brooded on me darkly, and an expression of real
malignancy came on his face: he stamped at me from the triangles and
hissed with rage.

"'I'll show you something else,' said he, 'and if it doesn't make you
laugh it will make everybody else who hears about it laugh for an age.'

"I saw that he was meditating a personal evil to me, but I was
powerless, for I could not let go my grip on the substance.

"He lifted his hands against me then, but, at the moment, there came a
sound, so low, so deep, it could scarcely be heard, and with equal
strong intensity the sound pervaded all the spaces and brooded in every
point and atom with its thrilling breath--we were about to shape to the
whirlwind.

"The man's hands fell, and he stared at me.

"'Oh!' said he, and he said 'Oh' three times in a whisper.

"The sound was the beginning of the second syllable.

"'I thought I had time,' he gasped: 'my calculations were wrong.'

"'The joke is against you,' said I to the man.

"'What will I do?' he screamed.

"'Laugh,' I replied, 'laugh at the joke.'

"Already his flying circles had ceased to revolve, and their broad flame
was no more than a blue flicker that disappeared even as I looked at
them. He stood only in the triangles, and he was open to my vengeance.
His staring, haggard eyes fell on the bolt in my hand.

"'There is no need for that,' said he, and he did speak with some small
dignity, 'I am caught by the sound, and there is an end to me.'

"And that was true, so I did not loose my bolt.

"Already his triangles were crumbling. He sank on his haunches, clasped
his hands about his legs and bowed his head on his knees. I could see
that he knew all was lost, and that he was making a last desperate
effort to guard his entity from dissolution, and he succeeded, for, one
instant before the triangles had disappeared, he had vanished, but he
could not have entirely escaped the sound, that was impossible, and if
he reached his planet it must have been as a life of the third round
instead of the fifth to which he had attained. He had the entire of his
evolution to perform over again and had, moreover, added weightily to
his karmic disabilities.

"I saw him no more, nor did I hear of him again until the day when Brien
O'Brien was thrown from the gates, and then I knew that he and O'Brien
were the same being, and that he had really escaped and was a fourth
round life of the lowest globe.

"Perhaps he will be heard of again, for he is an energetic and restless
being to whom an environment is an enemy and to whom humour is an
ambition and a mystery."

                   *       *       *       *       *

"That is the end of my story," said Art modestly.

Mac Cann regarded him indulgently from a cloud of smoke:

"It wasn't as good as the other ones," he remarked, "but that's not your
fault, and you're young into the bargain."

"He is not as young as he looks," remarked Finaun.

"A good story has to be about ordinary things," continued Patsy, "but
there isn't anybody could tell what your story was about."

Billy the Music here broke in:

"The person I would have liked to hear more of is Cuchulain, for he is
my own guardian angel and it's him I'm interested in. The next time I
meet him I'll ask him questions."

He glanced around the circle:

"Is there anybody would like to hear a tune on the concertina? I have it
by my hand here, and the evening is before us."

"You can play it for us the next time we meet," said Patsy, "for we are
all tired listening to the stories, and you are tired yourself."

He lifted to his feet then and yawned heartily with his arms at full
stretch and his fists clenched:

"We had better be moving," he continued, "for the evening is coming on
and it's twenty miles to the fair."

They harnessed the ass.

"I'm going the opposite way to you," said Billy the Music.

"All right," said Patsy. "God be with you, mister."

"God be with yourselves," replied Billy the Music.

He tramped off then in his own direction, while Mac Cann and his
companions took their road with the ass.




                                BOOK IV

                             MARY MAC CANN




                             CHAPTER XXVIII


The search for work and food led them back, but by different paths,
through Kerry, up into Connemara, and thence by stony regions to Donegal
again and the rugged hills.

Their days were uneventful but they were peaceful: their nights were
pleasant, and seldom did they lack for even one meal in the day. When
they did so lack they passed the unwelcome hour in the silence of those
to whom such an hiatus was not singular. Under Mac Cann's captaincy the
tiny band moved from meal to meal as another army would invest and sack
and depart from the cities on its route.

Sometimes at night a ballad-singer would stray on their road, an angry
man from whom no person had purchased songs for two days, and in return
for victual this one would entertain them with his lays and recite the
curses he had composed against those who did not pay the musician.

Sometimes they came on gatherings of tinkers and pedlars, tramps, and
trick-men, and in the midst of these they would journey towards a fair.
Uproarious nights then! Wild throats yelling at the stars and much loud
trampling on the roads as the women fought and screeched, and the men
howled criticism and encouragement, and came by mere criticism
themselves to the battle. Paltry onslaughts these, more of word than of
weapon to the fray that left some blooded noses and swollen lips as the
one hour memorial of their deeds.

And again the peaceful nights, the calm stars, the quiet moon strewing
her path in silver; space for the eye, the ear, and the soul; the
whispering of lovely trees; the unending rustle of the grass, and the
wind that came and went away and came, chanting its long rhythms or
hushing its chill lullaby by the fields and the hills.

On a day when they had finished eating Finaun beckoned Caeltia and Art
aside and they spoke closely together. Turning to Mac Cann and his
daughter Finaun said:

"We have finished what we came to do, my friends."

Patsy nodded frowningly at him.

"What was it you came to do?"

"I came to give help to the powers," said Finaun mildly.

"I didn't see you doing much," replied Patsy.

"And," Finaun continued smilingly, "the time has come for us to go
away."

"You're in a hurry, I suppose?"

"We are not in a great hurry, but the time has come for us to go back."

"Very well!" said Patsy. "We aren't so far from where we started. If we
take one of the turns on the right here and bear away to the west by
Cnuc-Mahon and Tober-Fola and Rath-Cormac we'll come to the place where
your things are buried, and then I suppose--we can get there in three
days, if that will do you?"

"That will do," said Finaun.

During the remainder of the day he and his companions walked together
talking among themselves while Mac Cann and his daughter went with the
ass.

Patsy also was preoccupied all that day and she had her own thoughts;
they scarcely spoke at all and the ass was bored.

At night they camped under a broken arch, the vestige of they knew not
what crumbled building, and, seated around the brazier, they sunk to
silence, each staring at the red glow and thinking according to their
need, and it was then that Art, lifting his eyes from the brazier,
looked for the first time at Mary and saw that she was beautiful.

She had been looking at him--that was now her one occupation. She
existed only in these surreptitious examinations. She dwelt on him
broodingly as a miser burns on his gold or a mother hovers hungrily upon
her infant, but he had never given her any heed. Now he was looking at
her, and across the brazier their eyes communed deeply.

There was birth already between them--sex was born, and something else
was shaping feebly to existence. Love, that protection and cherishing,
that total of life, the shy prince scarcely to be known among the
teeming populations of the world, raised languidly from enchanted sleep
a feeble hand.

What fire did their eyes utter! The quiet night became soundingly vocal.
Winged words were around her again as in that twilight when her heart
loosed its first trials of song. Though the night was about her black
and calm there was dawn and sunlight in her heart, and she bathed
herself deeply in the flame.

And he! There is no knowing but this, that his eyes poured soft fire,
enveloping, exhaustless. He surrounded her as with a sea. There she slid
and fell and disappeared, to find herself again, renewed, reborn,
thrilling to the embrace of those waters, wondrously alive and yet so
languid that she could not move. There she rocked like a boat on the
broad waves and, saving the limitless sea, there was nothing in sight.
Almost he even had disappeared from her view but not from her sensation:
he was an influence wide as the world, deep and steep and tremendous as
all space.

They were alone. The quiet men seated beside them thinned and faded and
disappeared: the night whisked from knowledge as a mounting plume of
smoke that eddies and is gone: the trees and the hills tripped softly
backwards and drooped away. Now they were in a world of their own,
microscopic, but intense: a sphere bounded by less than the stretching
of their arms: a circle of such violent movement that it was stationary
as a spinning-top, and her mind whirled to it, and was still from very
activity. She could not think, she could not try to think, that was her
stillness, but she could feel and that was her movement; she was no
longer a woman but a responsiveness: she was an universal contact
thrilling at every pore and point: she was surrendered and lost and
captured and no longer pertained to herself.

So much can the eye do when the gathered body peers meaningly through
its lens. They existed in each other: in and through each other: the
three feet of distance was no longer there: it had disappeared, and they
were one being swinging on league-long wings through vast spaces.

When they dropped to sleep it was merely a slipping backwards, a motion
that they did not feel: they were asleep before they dropped asleep:
they were asleep long before that, drugged and senseless with the strong
potion of the body, stronger than aught in the world but the sharp
essence of the mind that awakens all things and never permits them to be
lulled again.

                   *       *       *       *       *

When morning dawned and the camp awakened there was some little
confusion, for Mac Cann was not in the place where he had slept and they
could not imagine where he had gone to.

Mary discussed his disappearance in all kinds of terms, Caeltia alone,
with a downcast air, refusing to speak of it. They waited during hours
for him, but he did not return, and at noon they decided to wait no
longer but to go on their journey leaving him to catch on them if he was
behind or hoping to gain on him if he was in advance, for their route
was marked.

The angels did seem a trifle lost in his absence, and they looked with
some dubiety at Mary when she took charge of their journey and of the
daily provision of their food.

Food had to be gotten, and she had to discover it not alone for herself
but for these other mouths. It was the first time she had been alone
and, although her brows and lips were steady, her heart beat terror
through her body.

For she had to do two things which she had never done and had never
surmised really had to be done. She had to think, and she had to follow
her thought by doing the thing she thought of. Which of these two were
the more terrible she did not know, but there was no difficulty as to
which she must do first, the simple orderliness of logic clamoured that
she must think before she could do anything, and, so, her brain set to
the painful weaving of webs too flimsy at first for any usage; but on
this day she discovered where her head lay and how to use it without any
assistance. She had memory to work with also, the recollection of her
father's activities, and memory is knowledge; a well-packed head and
energy--that is the baggage for life, it is the baggage for eternity.

She moved to the head of the ass and pulled his ear to advance. Caeltia
and Finaun trod beside and they went forward. Behind came Art sniffing
with the hungriest of nostrils on the sunny air, for it was five hours
since they had eaten and more than three hours' abstinence was painful
to him.




                              CHAPTER XXIX


She did get food. She nourished her three children sumptuously, but she
made them help her to get it.

She looked at Finaun's high nose, his sweeping beard, his air as of a
good child well matured, and she sent it to the market:

"One must eat," said she.

When they came to a house by the roadside she ordered Finaun to the door
to ask for bread; he got it too and had eaten but the slowest mouthful
when she seized it from him and stocked it for the common good.

She charged Caeltia through the open door of a cottage, and his
expedition was famous for eight hours afterwards.

She performed feats herself in a fowl-house and a cattle-pen, but she
did not issue any commands to Art except at the falling-to, when he
obeyed adequately.

She recalled the deeds of her father in many predicaments, and for the
first time she really understood his ceaseless skill and activity. She
found too that she could recollect his tactics, beside which her own
were but childish blunderings, and, with that memory she mended her
hand, and life became the orderly progression which everybody expects it
to be.

That night by the glow of the brazier she rested a mind that had never
been weary before, and she craved for the presence of her father that
she might gain from him the praise which her present companions did not
know was due to her.

                   *       *       *       *       *

"Two days more," said her heart, communicating to her bitterly as they
proceeded on the morrow morning, but she banished the thought and set to
her plots and plans. She banished it, but it clung with her, vague and
weighty as a nightmare, and when she looked backwards on the road Art's
eyes were looking into hers with a quietness that almost drove her mad.
She could not understand him.

They had never spoken to each other; not once had they spoken directly
since that night when he stepped into the glow of the brazier. At first
she had fled from him in a fear which was all shyness and wildness, and
so an overlooking habit had been formed between them which he had never
sought to break, and which she did not know how to put an end to.

"Two days!" said her heart again, pealing it to her through her webs,
and again she exiled her heart, and could feel its wailing when she
could hear it no longer.

                   *       *       *       *       *

They stopped for the mid-day meal; bread and potatoes and a morsel of
cheese; the fare was plentiful, and from a stream near by good water
washed it down.

The reins of the donkey were thrown across the limb of a tree, and he
had liberty to browse in a circle. He also had his drink from the
running stream, and was glad of it.

As they sat three people marched the road behind them; they saw these
people, and studied their advance.

A talkative, a disorderly advance it was. An advance that halted every
few paces for parley, and moved on again like a battle.

Two men and a woman were in that party, and it did seem that they were
fighting every inch of their way. Certainly, they were laughing also,
for a harsh peal came creaking up the road, and came again. Once the
laugh broke abruptly on its gruff note as though a hand had pounded into
its middle. Then the party parleyed again and moved again.

What they said could not be distinguished, but the rumour of their
conversation might have been heard across the world. They bawled and
screamed, and always through the tumult came the gruff hoot of laughter.

Said Caeltia:

"Do you know these people?"

"The woman is Eileen Ni Cooley," replied Mary, "for I know her walk, but
I don't know the shape of the men."

Caeltia laughed quietly to himself.

"The taller of these men," said he, "is the Seraph Cuchulain, the other
man is that Brien O'Brien we were telling you of."

Mary's face flamed, but she made no remark.

In a few minutes these people drew near.

Eileen Ni Cooley was dishevelled. Her shawl hung only from one shoulder
and there were holes in it, her dress was tattered, and a long wisp of
red hair streamed behind her like a flame. Her face was red also, and
her eyes were anxious as they roved from one to the other.

She came directly to the girl and sat beside her; young Cuchulain set
himself down beside Art, but Brien O'Brien stood a few paces distant
with his fists thrust in his pockets and he chewing strongly on tobacco.
Every now and then he growled a harsh creak of a laugh and then covered
it ostentatiously with his hand.

"God be with you, Mary Ni Cahan," said Eileen Ni Cooley, and she twisted
up her flying hair and arranged her shawl.

"What's wrong with you?" said Mary.

"Where's your father?" said Eileen.

"I don't know where he is. When we lifted from sleep a morning ago he
wasn't in his place, and we haven't seen him since that time."

"What am I going to do at all?" said Eileen in a low voice. "These men
have me tormented the way I don't know how to manage."

"What could my father do?" said Mary sternly, "and you playing tricks on
him since the day you were born."

"That's between myself and him," replied Eileen, "and it doesn't matter
at all. I wanted your father to beat O'Brien for me, for he won't leave
me alone day or night, and I can't get away from him."

Mary leaned to her whispering:

"My father couldn't beat that man, for I saw the two of them fighting on
the Donnybrook Road, and he had no chance against him."

"He could beat him, indeed," said Eileen indignantly, "and I'd give him
good help myself."

"If my father owes you anything," said Mary, "I'm ready to pay it for
him, so let us both rise against the man, and maybe the pair of us would
make him fly."

Eileen stared at her.

"I hit him once," continued Mary, "and I would like well to hit him
again; my people here would keep his friend from joining against us."

The blue eyes of Eileen Ni Cooley shone with contentment; she slipped
the shawl from her shoulders and let it drop to the ground.

"We'll do that, Mary," said she, "and let us do it now."

So the women lifted to their feet and they walked towards Brien O'Brien,
and suddenly they leaped on him like a pair of panthers, and they leaped
so suddenly that he went down against the road with a great bump. But he
did not stay down.

He rose after one dumbfounded moment, and he played with the pair of
them the way a conjurer would play with two balls, so that the breath
went out of their bodies, and they had to sit down or suffocate.

"That's the kind of man he is," panted Eileen.

"Very well!" said Mary fiercely, "we'll try him again in a minute."

The camp was in confusion, and from that confusion Art leaped towards
Brien O'Brien, but the Seraph Cuchulain leaped and outleaped Art, and
set himself bristling by the elbow of his friend; then Caeltia, with his
face shining happily, tip-toed forward and ranged with Art against these
two, but Finaun went quicker than they all; he leaped between the
couples, and there was not a man of the four dared move against his
hand.

In a second that storm blew itself out, and they returned to their seats
smiling foolishly.

"Let the women be quiet," said Brien O'Brien harshly.

He also seated himself, with his back touching against the donkey's
legs.

The ass had finished eating and drinking, and was now searching the
horizon with the intent eye of one who does not see anything, but only
looks on the world without in order to focus steadily the world within.

Brien O'Brien stared with a new interest at Finaun, and revolved his
quid. Said he to Cuchulain:

"Would the old lad be able to treat us the way Rhadamanthus did, do you
think?"

"He could do that," laughed Cuchulain, "and he could do it easily."

O'Brien moved the quid to the other side of his jaw.

"If he slung us out of this place we wouldn't know where we might land,"
said he.

"That is so," replied Cuchulain, thrusting a sleek curl between his
teeth. "I don't know these regions, and I don't know where we might
land, or if we would ever land. Only for that I would go against him,"
and he waggled his finger comically at Finaun.

Art commenced to snigger and Finaun laughed heartily, but Caeltia eyed
Cuchulain so menacingly that the seraph kept a quiet regard on him for
the rest of the day.

Peace was restored, and while they were revolving peace and wondering
how to express it Patsy Mac Cann came on them from a side path that ran
narrowly between small hills.




                              CHAPTER XXX


When Mac Cann saw the visitors he halted for an instant and then came
forward very slowly, with his head on one side and his thumb rasping
steadily on his chin.

He was staring at Brien O'Brien, and as he stared he bristled like a
dog.

"It's the man himself," said he, "the man that stole my clothes."

O'Brien peeped upwards at him but did not move.

"Sit down and hold your prate," said he, "or I'll steal your life."

Mac Cann would have thrown himself on his enemy, but at that moment he
caught sight of Eileen Ni Cooley and her face drove the other out of his
head.

He stared.

"It's yourself!" said he.

"It is me, sure enough, Padraig."

"You'll be going away in a minute, I suppose," said he grimly.

He sat on the grass and there was peace once more. He was sitting beside
O'Brien, and the ass was still thinking deeply with his hocks touching
against their shoulder-blades.

When he seated himself they were all silent, for, in face of everything,
Mac Cann took the lead, and they waited for him to speak.

O'Brien was looking at him sideways with a grin on his hard jaw. He
creaked out a little laugh and then covered it up with his hand as one
who was abashed, but Mac Cann paid no attention to him.

His attention was on Eileen Ni Cooley.

"You're a great woman," said he, "and you're full of fun surely."

"I'm everything you like to call me," replied Eileen.

"Which of the men are you with this time, or are you travelling with the
pair of them?"

"I don't want either of them, Padraig, but I can't get away from them
anyhow. They won't let me go my own road, and they're marching at my
elbows for two days and two nights, cursing and kicking and making a
noise every step of the way."

"They're doing that!" said Patsy.

"They are doing that, Padraig. It's O'Brien is the worst, for the other
fellow is only helping him and doesn't care for me at all. Catching me
they do be, and holding me...."

"Aye!" said Patsy.

"I can't get away from O'Brien," said she, "and I thought that if I
could find yourself----"

"You were looking for me?"

"I was looking for you this time, Padraig."

"Aye!" said Patsy, and he turned a black eye on Brien O'Brien, and his
eye looked like a little, hard ball of stone.

"You'll be left alone from this day out," said Patsy.

"Mind yourself!" growled Brien O'Brien. "Mind yourself, my hardy man, or
you'll waken up among the spooks."

Patsy held him with that solid eye.

"Spooks!" said he, and suddenly he rolled on top of Brien O'Brien, his
left hand grabbing at the throat, his right fist jabbing viciously with
packed knuckles.

Down went Brien O'Brien's head and up went his heels; then he gave a
mighty wriggle and started to come up, his hands threshing like the
wings of a mill. As he came up they rolled, and now Mac Cann was below;
but Brien O'Brien's head had disturbed the donkey, and, without emerging
from cogitation, the ass let his two heels fly at the enemy of thought
behind him; Patsy saw for an instant the white flash of those little
hoofs across his face, but Brien of the O'Brien Nation took them full on
his forehead and his brows crackled in like the shell of an egg; he
relaxed, he sagged, he drooped and huddled limply to Patsy's bosom, and
for three seconds Mac Cann lay quietly beneath him, captured by
astonishment.

The donkey had again related the infinity without to the eternity
within, and his little hoofs were as peaceful as his mild eye.

Mac Cann tugged himself from beneath that weighty carcass and came to
his feet.

Mary and Eileen were both sitting rigid, with arms at full stretch and
their fingers tipping straitly on the ground, while their round eyes
were wide in an unwinking stare.

Caeltia was on his feet and was crouching at an equally crouching
Cuchulain. Patsy saw the curl jerking as the lips of the seraph laughed.

Art was frozen on one knee in the mid-act of rising, and Finaun was
combing his beard while he looked fixedly at Eileen Ni Cooley.

Twenty seconds only had elapsed since Mac Cann rolled sideways on Brien
O'Brien.

The seraph Cuchulain was staring under Caeltia's arm. He blew the golden
curl from his lips and sounded a laugh that was like the ringing of
silver bells.

"What will Rhadamanthus say this time?" quoth he, and with that he
turned and tripped happily down the road and away.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Mac Cann regarded the corpse.

"We had better bury the man," said he gloomily.

He took a short spade from the cart, and with it he made a hole in the
roadside.

They laid Brien O'Brien in that hole.

"Wait for a minute," said Mac Cann. "It's not decent to send him off
that way."

He pushed a hand into his pocket and pulled it out again with money in
it.

"He should have something with himself and he taking the long journey."

He lifted O'Brien's clenched fist, forced it open, and put a silver
threepenny-piece into it; then he tightened the pale hand again and
folded it with the other on his breast.

They wrapped a newspaper about his face, and they threw the clay over
Brien of the O'Brien Nation and stamped it down well with their feet,
and as they left him the twilight stole over the land, and a broad star
looked peacefully down through the grey distances.




                              CHAPTER XXXI


They walked through the evening.

Dusk had fallen and in the drowsy half-lights the world stretched itself
in peacefulness.

They had come to a flat country that whispered in grass; there were no
more of the little hills that roll and fall and roll; there were
scarcely any trees; here and there in great space a beech swung its slow
boughs and made a quiet noise in the stillness; here and there a stiff
tree lifted its lonely greenness, and around it the vast horizon
stretched away and away to sightlessness.

There was silence here, there was deep silence, and over all the dusk
drowsed and folded and increased.

With what slow veils the darkness deepened! the gentle weaver spun her
thin webs and drooped soft coverings from the sky to the clay; momently
the stars came flashing their tiny signals, gathering their bright hosts
by lonely clusters, and one thin sickle of the moon grew from a cloud
and stood distantly as a sign of gold.

But the quiet beauty of the heavens and the quiet falling to sleep of
the earth had for this night no effect on one of our travellers.

Mac Cann was ill at ease. He was moody and irritable, and he moved from
Eileen Ni Cooley to his daughter and back again to Eileen Ni Cooley and
could not content himself with either of them.

The angels were treading at the rear of the cart talking among
themselves; the slow drone of their voices drifted up the road, and from
this murmuring the words God and Beauty and Love would detach themselves
and sing recurringly on the air like incantations.

Eileen Ni Cooley trod on the left side of the ass. She trod like a
featureless shade; her shawl wrapped blottingly about her face and her
mind moving within herself and for herself.

Mac Cann and his daughter went together by the right side of the donkey,
and, as he looked constantly at his daughter, his eyes were furtive and
cunning.

He tapped her elbow.

"Mary," he whispered, "I want to talk to you."

She replied in a voice that was low from his contact.

"I want to talk to yourself," said she.

"What do you want to say?"

"I want to know where you got the money that I saw in your hand when you
buried the man?"

"That's what I'm going to tell you about," he whispered. "Be listening
to me now and don't make any noise."

"I'm listening to you," said Mary.

"What have we got to do with these lads behind us?" said Patsy urgently.
"They are nothing to us at all, and I'm tired of them."

"There's a thing to say!" quoth she.

"This is what we'll do. To-night we won't unyoke the ass, and when they
are well asleep we'll walk quietly off with ourselves and leave them
there. Eileen Ni Cooley will come with us and in the morning we'll be
distant."

"I won't do that," said Mary.

He darted at her a sparkle of rage.

"You'll do what I say, you strap, or it'll be the worse for you!" said
his violent whisper.

"I won't do that," she hissed, "and I tell you I won't."

"By the living Jingo...!" said Patsy.

She came at him whispering with equal fierceness.

"What have you done on the men?" said she. "What did you do on them that
you want to run away from them in the night?"

"Keep your tongue in your teeth, you----!"

"Where were you for a day and a half? Where did you get the money from
that I saw in your hand when you buried the man?"

Patsy composed himself with difficulty; he licked his dry lips.

"There's no fooling you, alannah, and I'll tell you the truth."

He glanced cautiously to where the others were coming deep in talk.

"This is what I did. I went to that place by Ard-Martin where we buried
the things, and I dug them up."

"Oh!" said Mary.

"I dug them up, and I took them away, and I sold them to a man for
money."

"Oh!" said Mary.

"They're sold, do you hear? And there's no going back on it; so do what
I tell you about the ass this night and we'll take our own road from now
on."

"I won't do it," whispered Mary, and she was almost speechless with
rage.

Mac Cann thrust his face close to hers grinning like a madman.

"You won't do it!" said he. "What will you do then against your father?"

"I'll go on to the place with the men," she stammered.

"You'll come with me this night."

"I'll not go," said she harshly.

"You'll come with me this night," said he.

"I'll not go," she screamed at him.

At the sound of her scream everybody came running to them.

"Is there anything wrong?" said Art.

"She's only laughing at a joke I told her," said Patsy. "Make that ass
go on, Mary a grah, for it's walking as if it was going asleep."

Caeltia was looking at Mac Cann so fixedly, with such a severe gravity
of eye, that the blood of the man turned to water and he could scarcely
hold himself upright. For the first time in his life Mac Cann knew what
fear was.

"To-morrow," said Caeltia, "we will be going away from you, let us be
peaceful then for our last night together."

"Aye," said Patsy, "let us be comfortable for this night of all nights."

He turned away, and with a great effort at carelessness he moved to the
donkey's head.

"Come on, Mary," said he.

Eileen Ni Cooley trod beside him for a moment.

"What's wrong with you, Padraig?" said she.

"Nothing at all, Eileen, just leave me alone for a minute for I want to
talk to the girl."

"You can count on me for anything, Padraig."

"I don't know whether I can or not," he muttered savagely. "Keep quiet
for ten minutes, in the name of God."

For a few dull seconds they paced in quiet. Patsy moistened his lips
with his tongue.

"What are you going to do, Mary?"

"I don't know," she replied. "What man did you sell the things to?"

"I sold them to a man that lives near by--a rich man in a big house."

"There's only one big house about here."

"That's the house."

She was silent.

"If you're going to tell the men," said her father, "give me two hours'
law this night until I get away, and then you can tell them and be
damned to you."

"Listen to me!" said the girl.

"I'm listening."

"There is only one thing to be done, and it has got to be done at once:
go you to the place of that rich man and take the things away from his
house and bury them back again in the place they were buried. If you
want any help I'll go with you myself."

Mac Cann's thumb wandered to his chin and a sound as of filing was heard
while he rubbed it. His voice was quite changed as he replied:

"Begor!" said he.

"You're full of fun," said he, thoughtfully. He covered his mouth with
his hand then and stared thoughtfully down the road.

"Will you do that?" said Mary.

He thumped a hand heavily on her shoulder.

"I will so, and I do wonder that I didn't think of it myself, for it's
the thing that ought to be done."

And now as they marched the atmosphere had changed; there was once more
peace or the precursor of it; from Mac Cann a tempered happiness
radiated as of old: he looked abroad without misgiving and he looked at
his daughter with the cynical kindliness habitual to him. They trod so
for a little time arranging their thoughts, then:

"We are near enough to that house to be far enough from it if there's
any reason to be far," said Mac Cann, "so this is what I say, let us
stop where we are for the night and in the morning we'll go on from
here."

"Very well," said Mary, "let us stop here."

Her father drew the ass to the side of the road and there halted it.

"We'll go to bed now," he shouted to the company, and they all agreed to
that.

"I'm going to unyoke the beast," said Mary with a steady eye on her
father.

He replied heartily.

"Why wouldn't you do that? Let him out to get something to eat like the
rest of us."

"There isn't any water," he complained a minute later. "What will that
animal do? and what will we do ourselves?"

"I have two big bottles of water in the cart," said Mary.

"And I have a little bottle in my pocket," said he, "so we're all
right."

The donkey was unyoked, and he went at once to stand with his feet in
the wet grass. He remained so for a long time without eating, but he did
eat when that idea occurred to him.

The brazier was lit, the sacks strewn on the ground, and they sat about
the fire in their accustomed places and ate their food. After a smoke
and a little conversation each person stretched backwards, covering
themselves with other sacks, and they went heartily to sleep.

"We will have to be up early in the morning," was Patsy's last remark,
"for you are in a hurry to get back your things," and saying so he
stretched his length with the others.

                   *       *       *       *       *

When a still hour had drifted by Mary raised cautiously and tip-toed to
her father. As she stood by him he slid the sacks aside and came to his
feet, and they moved a little way down the road.

"Now," said Mary, "you can do what you said you'd do."

"I'll do that," said he.

"And get back as quick as you can."

"It's a distance there and back again. I'll be here in the morning, but
I'll be late."

"Bury the things the way they were before."

"That's all right," and he moved a step backwards.

"Father!" said Mary softly.

He returned to her.

"What more do you want?" said he impatiently.

She put her arms about his neck.

"What the devil are you doing?" said he in astonishment, and he tried to
wriggle loose from her.

But she did not say another word, and after a moment he put his own arms
about her with a grunt and held her tightly.

"I'm away now," said he, and, moving against the darkness, he
disappeared.

For half a minute the sound of his feet was heard, and then the darkness
covered him.

Mary returned to her place by the brazier. She stretched close to Eileen
Ni Cooley and lay staring at the moving clouds.

In a few minutes she was asleep, although she had not felt any heaviness
on her eyes.




                             CHAPTER XXXII


No one was awake.

In the brazier a faint glow peeped from the white turf-ash; the earth
seemed to be holding its breath, so still it was; the clouds hung
immovably each in its place; a solitary tree near by folded its wide
limbs into the darkness and made no sound.

Nothing stirred in the world but the ass as he lifted his head slowly
and drooped it again; his feet were sunken in a plot of grass and he was
quiet as the earth.

Then I came softly, and I spoke to the ass in the darkness.

"Little ass," quoth I, "how is everything with you?"

"Everything is very well," said the ass.

"Little ass," said I, "tell me what you do be thinking of when you fix
your eye on vacancy and stare there for a long time?"

"I do be thinking," said the ass, "of my companions, and sometimes I do
be looking at them."

"Who are your companions?"

"Last night I saw the Cyclops striding across a hill; there were forty
of them, and each man was forty feet high; they had only one eye in
their heads and they looked through that; they looked through it the way
a fire stares through a hole and they could see well."

"How do you know they could see well?"

"One of them saw me and he called out to the others; they did not wait,
but he waited for a moment; he took me in his arms and he stroked my
head; then he put me on the ground and went away, and in ten strides he
crossed over the mountain."

"That was a good sight to see!"

"That was a good sight."

"Tell me something else you saw."

"I saw seven girls in a meadow and they were playing together; when they
were tired playing they lay on the grass and they went to sleep; I drew
near and stretched beside them on the grass, and I watched them for a
long time; but when they awakened they disappeared into the air and were
gone like puffs of smoke.

"I saw the fairy host marching through a valley in the hills; wide,
silken banners were flying above their heads; some had long swords in
their hands and some had musical instruments, and there were others who
carried a golden apple in their hands, and others again with silver
lilies and cups of heavy silver; they were beautiful and proud and they
marched courageously; they marched past me for three gay hours while I
stood on the slope of a hill.

"I saw three centaurs riding out of a wood; they raced round and round
me shouting and waving their hands; one of them leaned his elbows on my
back, and they talked of a place in the middle of a forest; they pelted
me with tufts of grass; then they went by a narrow path into the wood,
and they rode away.

"I saw a herd of wild asses in a plain; men were creeping around them in
the long grass, but the asses ran suddenly, and they killed the men with
their hoofs and their teeth; I galloped in the middle of them for half a
night, but I remembered Mary Ni Cahan, and when I remembered her I
turned from all my companions and I galloped home again."

"Those were all good sights to see!"

"They were all good sights."

"Good-bye, little ass," said I.

"Good-bye, you," said he.

He lay along the grass then and he closed his eyes, but I turned back
and crouched by the brazier, watching the people while they slept, and
staring often into the darkness to see did anything stir before the
light came.




                             CHAPTER XXXIII


Mac Cann strode through the darkness for a little time, but when he
found himself at sufficient distance from the camp he began to run.

There was not very much time wherein to do all that he had engaged
before the morning dawned, and so he took to this mode of activity,
which was not one for which he had any reverence. He was a heavy man and
did not run with either grace or ease, but he could hasten his movements
to a jog-trot, and, as his physical condition was perfect, he could
continue such a trot until hunger brought it to a halt, for he was never
fatigued, being as strong and tireless as a bear.

He was the most simple-minded of men. When he was engaged in one affair
he could not meddle with anything else, and now that he was running he
could do nothing but run--he could not think, for instance. When it was
necessary to think he would either walk very slowly or stand
stock-still, and then he would think with great speed and with great
simplicity. His head bade his legs be quiet while it was occupied, and,
when they were in motion, his legs tramped hush to his head, which
obeyed instantly; and he was so well organised on these lines that there
was never any quarrel between the extremities.

It was, therefore, the emptiest of men that now pounded the road. He
would deal with an emergency when it was visible, but until then he
snapped a finger and forgot it, for he had learned that the first word
of an emergency is a warning, the second a direction for escape, its
third utterance is in action, and it will only be waited for by a fool.

Exactly what he would do when he arrived at the house he did not know,
and as yet he made no effort to deal with that problem: he obeyed the
prime logical necessity, which was to get there: once there and the
second step would push itself against him, and from that cause the most
orderly of results would ensue. If there was no trouble he would succeed
in his enterprise; if there was trouble he would fly--that was his
simple programme.

And meantime there was nothing in the world but darkness and the
rhythmic tramping of his feet. These, with a faintly hushing wind, kept
his ears occupied. He had much of the cat's facility for seeing in the
dark, and he had the sense of direction which some birds have, so he
made good progress.

After half an hour's steady movement he came to the house for which he
was seeking, and halted there.

It was a long, low building, standing back from the road. There was a
stone wall around this house, and the entrance was by an iron gate.

Mac Cann touched the gate, for experience had taught him that gates are
not always locked, but this one was locked securely. By the gate was a
caretaker's lodge, so he moved quietly from that place and walked by the
wall.

There was glass on the top of the wall which halted him for a few
moments while he sucked his incautious hand. To cope with this he
gathered several large stones and placed them on top of each other and
he stood on these, then he threw his coat and waistcoat over the glass
and climbed easily across.

He was in a shrubbery. About him every few paces were short, stiff
bushes, some of which were armed with spines, which did their duty on
his hands and the legs of his trousers; but he regarded these with an
inattention which must have disgusted them. He tip-toed among these
guardians and was shortly free of them and on a gravel pathway. Crossing
this he came on quiet flower-beds, which he skirted: the house was now
visible as a dark mass distant some hundred yards.

Saving for one window the place was entirely dark, and it was towards
that window he directed his careful steps.

"It's better to look at something than at nothing," quoth he.

He was again on a gravel path, and the stones tried to crunch and
wriggle under his feet, but he did not allow that to happen.

He came to the window and, standing well to the side, peeped in.

He saw a square room furnished as a library. The entire section of the
walls which he could spy was covered from floor to ceiling with books.
There were volumes of every size, every shape, every colour. There were
long, narrow books that held themselves like grenadiers at stiff
attention. There were short, fat books that stood solidly like aldermen
who were going to make speeches and were ashamed but not frightened.
There were mediocre books bearing themselves with the carelessness of
folk who are never looked at and have consequently no shyness. There
were solemn books that seemed to be feeling for their spectacles; and
there were tattered, important books that had got dirty because they
took snuff, and were tattered because they had been crossed in love and
had never married afterwards. There were prim, ancient tomes that were
certainly ashamed of their heroines and utterly unable to obtain a
divorce from the hussies; and there were lean, rakish volumes that
leaned carelessly, or perhaps it was with studied elegance, against
their neighbours, murmuring in affected tones, "All heroines are
charming to us."

In the centre of the room was a heavy, black table, and upon the highly
polished surface of this a yellow light fell from globes on the ceiling.

At this table a man was seated, and he was staring at his hands. He was
a man of about thirty years of age. A tall, slender man with a lean
face, and, to Patsy, he was of an appalling cleanliness--a cleanliness
really to make one shudder: he was shaved to the last closeness; he was
washed to the ultimate rub; on him both soap and water had wrought their
utmost, and could have no further ambitions; his wristlets gleamed like
snow on a tree, and his collar rose upon a black coat as the plumage of
a swan emerges spotlessly from water.

His cleanliness was a sight to terrify any tramp, but it only angered
Mac Cann, who was not liable to terror of anything but hunger.

"I would like to give you a thump on the head, you dirty dog!" said
Patsy, breathing fiercely against the corner of the window-pane, and his
use of the adjective was singular as showing in what strange ways
extremes can meet.

This was the man to whom he had sold the gear of his companions: an
indelicate business indeed, and one which the cleanliness of the
purchaser assisted him to rectify, and it was in this room that the
barter had been conducted. By craning his neck a little he could see an
oaken settle, and upon this his sacks were lying with their mouths open
and the gleaming cloths flooding at the entry.

While he stared, the man removed his fingers from his eyes and put them
in his pocket, then he arose very slowly and paced thoughtfully towards
the window.

Mac Cann immediately ducked beneath the window-ledge. He heard the
window opened and knew the man was leaning his elbows on the sill while
he stared into the darkness.

"Begor!" said Patsy to himself, and he flattened his body against the
wall.

After a time, which felt longer than it could have been, he heard the
man moving away, and he then popped up and again peeped through the
window.

The man had opened the door of the room which faced the window and was
standing in the entry. Now his hands were clasped behind his back, his
head was sunken forward, and he seemed to be looking at his feet, which
is the habit of many men when they think, for when the eyes touch the
feet a circuit is formed and one's entire body is able to think at ease.

Suddenly the man stepped into a black corridor and he disappeared. Mac
Cann heard about ten steps ringing from a solid flooring, then he
heard a door open and shut, then he heard nothing but the shifting and
rubbing of his own clothes and the sound his own nose made when he
breathed outwards: there was a leathern belt about his middle, and
from the noise which it made one would have fancied that it was woven
of thunders--there was a great silence; the lighted room was both
inviting and terrifying, for it was even more silent than the world
outside; the steady globes stared at the window like the eyes of a mad
fish, and one could imagine that the room had pricked up invisible
ears and was listening towards the window, and one could imagine also
that the room would squeak and wail if any person were to come through
anywhere but a door and stand in it.

Mac Cann did not imagine any of these things. He spat on his hands, and
in the twinkling of an eye he was inside the window. In three long and
hasty paces he placed a hand on each of the sacks, and just as he
gripped them he heard a door opening, and he heard the footsteps ringing
again on a solid flooring.

"I'm in," said he, viciously, "and I won't go out."

His eyes blinked around like the flash of lightning but there was no
place to hide. He stepped across the oaken chest and crouched down.
Behind him, from the floor upwards, were books, in front was the big
chest, and on top of it the two bulging sacks. He was well screened and
he could peep between the sacks.

He stared towards the door.

The clean man came in and stood aside. Following him came a woman who
was, if anything, more rigorously washed than he was. Somehow, although
she was a tall woman, she seemed as light as a feather. She was clad in
a delicate pink gown of such gossamer quality that it balanced and swam
on the air with every movement she made. Across her bare shoulders was a
lawn veiling, which also sailed and billowed as she moved. Her hair
seemed to be of the finest spun gold, light as thistle-down, and it,
too, waved and floated in little strands and ringlets.

These two people sat down at different sides of the table, and for a
time they did not speak to each other. Then the man raised his head:

"I got a letter from your mother this morning," said he in a low voice.

The woman answered him in a tone that was equally low:

"I did not know you corresponded with her."

The man made a slight gesture:

"Nor did I know that your correspondence was as peculiar as I have found
it," said he.

Said the woman coldly:

"You are opening this subject again."

"I am: I have to: your mother confirms everything that I have charged
you with."

"My mother hates me," said the woman, "she would confirm anything that
was said of me, if it was bad enough."

"She is your mother."

"Oh no, she is not! When I ceased to be a child she ceased to be a
mother. We are only two women who are so well acquainted that we can be
enemies without any shame of each other."

"Are you not talking nonsense?"

"I have committed a crime against her. She will never forgive me for
being younger than she is, and for being pretty in her own fashion. She
left my father because he said I was good-looking."

"All that...!" said the man with a movement of his shoulder.

"As to what she would do against me, you should know it well enough
considering the things she told you before we were married."

"You admitted that they were not all lies."

"Some of the facts were true, all of the colouring was false--they are
the things a loving mother says about her daughter! but that is an old
story now, or I had fancied so."

"One forgets the old story until the new story drags it to memory," said
he.

She also moved her shoulders slightly.

"I begin to find these conversations tiresome."

"I can understand that.... With her letter your mother enclosed some
other letters from her friends--they insist on the facts, and add
others."

"Are they letters, or copies of letters?"

"They are copies."

"Of course my mother has forbidden you to disclose the fact that she
forwarded her friends' private correspondence to you."

"Naturally."

"Very naturally; the reason being that she wrote these letters herself
to herself. There are no originals of these copies."

"Again you are talking nonsense."

"I know her better than you do, better than she knows herself."

There was silence between them again for a few moments, and again it was
broken by the man.

"There are some things I cannot do," said he, and paused:

"I cannot search in unclean places for unclean information," he
continued, and again the silence fell between these two people.

She could bear that silence, but he could not:

"You do not say anything!" said he.

"This seems to be so entirely your business," was her quiet reply.

He moved a hand at that:

"You cannot divorce yourself from me with such ease. This is our
business, and we must settle it between us."

Her hand was resting on the table, and suddenly he reached to her and
laid his own hand on hers. She did not withdraw, but the stiffening of
her body was more than withdrawal. He drew his hand away again.

"We are reasonable creatures and must question our difficulties," said
he gently, "we must even help each other to resolve them."

"These difficulties are not of my making."

"They are, and you are lying to me shamelessly."

Again between these people a silence fell which was profound but not
quiet. That soundlessness was tingling with sound; there were screams
latent in it; it was atrocious and terrifying. The man's hand was
pressed against his forehead and his eyes were closed, but what he was
looking at was known only to himself in the silence of his being. The
woman sat upright an arm's-length from him, and although her eyes were
wide and calm, she also was regarding that which was free within
herself, and very visible to her.

"There are things I cannot do," said the man, emerging as with an effort
from subterranean caves and secret prospects. He continued speaking,
calmly but tonelessly:

"I have striven to make a rule of life for myself and to follow it, but
I have not sought to impose my laws on any one else--not on you,
certainly. Still there are elementary duties which we owe to one another
and which cannot be renounced by either of us. There is a personal, I
might say, a domestic loyalty expected by each of us...."

"I expect nothing," said she.

"I exact nothing," said the man, "but I expect that--I expect it as I
expect air for my lungs and stability under my feet. You must not
withdraw that from me. You are not the individual you think; you are a
member of society, and you live by it; you are a member of my household,
and you live by it."

She turned her face to him but not her eyes.

"I do not ask anything from you," said she, "and I have accepted as
little as was possible."

He clenched his hand on the table, but when he spoke his voice was
without emphasis:

"That is part of my grievance against you. Life is to give and take
without any weighing of the gifts. You will do neither, and yet our
circumstances are such that we must accommodate each other whether we
will or not."

"I am an exact man," he continued, "perhaps you find that trying, but I
cannot live in doubt. Whatever happens to hinder or assist my
consciousness must be known to me. It is a law of my being: it is my
ancestral heritage, and I have no command over it."

"I also," said she coldly, "am an heir of the ages, and must take my
bequests whether I like them or not."

"I love you," said the man, "and I have proved it many times. I am not
demonstrative, and I am shy of this fashion of speech. Perhaps that
shyness of speech is responsible for more than is apparent to either of
us in a world eager for speech and gesture, but I say the word now in
all sincerity, with a gravity, perhaps, which you find repulsive. Be at
least as honest with me, no matter how cruel you are. I cannot live in
the half-knowledge which is jealousy. It tears my heart. It makes me
unfit for thought, for life, for sleep, even for death. I must know, or
I am a madman and no man any longer, a wild beast that will bite itself
in despair of hurting its enemy."

The woman's tongue slipped over her pale lips in a quick, red flash.

"Have you anything to say to me?" said he.

There was no reply.

He insisted:

"Are the statements in your mother's letter true?"

"My mother's letter!" said she.

"Have I reason for this jealousy?" he breathed.

Her reply was also but a breathing:

"I will not tell you anything," said she.

Once again the silence drowsed and droned between the two people, and
again they repaired to the secret places of their souls where energy was
sucked from them until they existed only in a torpor. The woman rose
languidly from her chair, and, after an instant, the man stood also.

Said he:

"I will leave here in the morning."

"You will let me see the boy," she murmured.

"If," said he, "I ever learn that you have spoken to the boy I will kill
you, and I will kill the boy."

The woman went out then, and her feet tapped lightly along the corridor.
The man turned down the lights in the yellow globes and stepped to the
door; his footsteps also died away in the darkness, but in a different
direction.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Mac Cann stood up:

"Begor!" said he, stretching his cramped knees.

About him was a great darkness and a great silence, and the air of that
room was more unpleasant than any atmosphere he had ever breathed. But
he had the nerves of a bear and a resolute adherence to his own
business, so the excitement of another person could only disturb him for
a moment. Still, he did not like the room, and he made all haste to get
out of it.

He lifted the sacks, stepped carefully to the window, and dropped them
out. Then he climbed through and picked them up.

In five minutes he was on the road again. Along it for some dozen yards
he trod like a great cat until he had left the gate-keeper's lodge well
behind him; then, with the sacks across his shoulders, he shook to the
steady jog-trot which was to last for about three hours.




                             CHAPTER XXXIV


Mary awakened early.

The morning was grey and the sky flat and solid, with here and there
thin furrows marking its gathered fields.

She raised her head, and looked towards her father's place, but he was
not there, and the sacks were crumpled on the ground.

Finaun's great length was lying along the ground, and he was straight as
a rod. Caeltia was curved a little, and one hand was flung above his
head. Art was rolled up like a ball; his hands were gripped about his
knees, and he had kicked the sacks off his body. Eileen Ni Cooley had
her two arms under her face; she was lying on her breast, and her hair
streamed sidewards from her head along the dull grass.

As Mary lay back, for it was still too early to rise, a thought came to
her and she rose to her feet again. She thought that perhaps her father
had come softly in the night and moved the ass and cart away with him,
and that thought lifted her breast in panic.

She ran down the road and saw the cart with its shafts poked in the air,
and further away the donkey was lying on his side.

She came back on tip-toe smiling happily to herself, and, with infinite
precaution, she restored the sacks to Art's body and composed herself
again to sleep. She did not raise the camp, for she wished to give her
father all possible time so that he might return unnoticed.

And while she slept the sky unpacked its locked courses; the great
galleons of cloud went sailing to the west, and thus, fleet by fleet,
relieved those crowded harbours. The black cloud-masses went rolling on
the sky--They grew together, touched and swung apart and slipped away
with heavy haste, as when down narrow waters an armada weighs, filling
listlessly her noisy sails, while the slender spars are hauled to the
breeze; the watchmen stand at the posts, and the fenders are still hung
from the pitching sides; almost the vessels touch; the shipmen shout as
they bear heavily on their oaken poles; and then they swing again, the
great prows bear away, the waters boil between, and the loud farewells
sing faintly to the waves.

And now the sky was a bright sea sown with islands; they shrank and
crumbled and drifted away, islands no more, but a multitude of plumes
and flakes and smoky wreaths hastily scudding, for the sun had lifted
his tranquil eye on the heavens; he stared afar down the grey spaces,
and before his gaze the mists went huddling and hiding in lovely haste;
the dark spaces became white, the dark blue spaces became light blue,
and earth and sky sparkled and shone in his radiant beam.

                   *       *       *       *       *

The camp awakened before Mary did, and again the enquiry went as to the
whereabouts of her father:

"He will be here shortly," said Mary. "He must have gone along the road
to see if there was anything he could find for us to eat," and she
delayed the preparation of their breakfast to the last possible moment.
She spilled a pot of boiling water to that end, and she overturned the
brazier when the water boiled again.

They were about sitting to their food when Mac Cann came in sight, and
she held the meal until his arrival with his hat far to the back of his
head, the happiest of smiles on his face, and a newspaper bundle in his
hand.

Mary gave him a look of quick meaning:

"Were you able to find anything for the breakfast?" said she, and then
she was astonished.

"I was indeed," he replied, and he handed her the bulky newspaper
package.

She used that occasion to whisper to him:

"Well?"

"That's all right," said he, nodding at the bundle, but really in answer
to her query.

She opened the parcel.

There were slices of bacon in it and slices of beef; there were ten
sausages in it and the biggest half of a loaf--these, with a small flat
bottle full of rum and two pairs of stockings, made up the parcel.

"Put the sausages in a pan," said Patsy, "and share them round and we'll
eat them."

Mary did put them on the pan, and when they were cooked she shared them
round, and they were fairly eaten.

After breakfast the pipes were lit, but they rose almost immediately to
continue the journey.

"This evening," said Finaun, "we will be saying good-bye."

"Aye," said Mac Cann, "I'm sorry you're going, for we had a good time
together."

The ass took his instructions, and they went down the road. Their places
were now as they had always been--Finaun and Eileen Ni Cooley and Mary
Mac Cann went with the ass, and there was no lack of conversation in
that assembly, for sometimes they talked to one another and sometimes
they talked to the ass, but the donkey listened no matter who was being
talked to, and not a person objected to him.

Patsy and Caeltia marched sturdily at the tailboard, and they were close
in talk.

Behind them Art was ranging aimlessly, and lilting snatches of song. He
did not know the entire of any song but he knew verses of many, and he
was able to relate the tunes of these so harmoniously, with such gradual
slipping of theme into theme, that twenty minutes of his varied lilting
could appear like one consecutive piece of music.

"That lad has a great ear," said Patsy. "He could make his fortune at
the music."

"He is a musician," Caeltia replied. "That is his business when we are
in our own place, and, as you can see, it is his pleasure also."

Patsy was in high spirits. Now that he had successfully undone that
which he had done a real weight had lifted from him. But the thing was
still so near that he could not get easily from it. His head was full of
the adventures of the last few days, and although he could not speak of
them he could touch them, sound them, lift the lid of his mystery and
snap it to again, chuckling meanwhile to himself that those who were
concerned did not know what he was talking about, and yet he was talking
to himself, or to one cognisant, in hardy, adequate symbol. A puerile
game for a person whose youth had been left behind for twenty years, but
one which is often played nevertheless and by the most solemn minds.

It was with an impish carelessness that he addressed Caeltia:

"It won't be long before we are there," said he.

"That is so," was the reply.

"You'll be feeling fine, I'm thinking, when you get your own clothes on
again."

"I have not missed them very much."

"I hope your wings and your grand gear will be all right."

"Why should you doubt it?" returned the seraph.

"What," said Patsy, "if they were robbed on you! You'd be rightly in the
cart, mister, if that happened."

Caeltia puffed quietly at his pipe.

"They were robbed," said he.

"Eh!" cried Mac Cann sharply.

The seraph turned to him, his eyes brimming with laughter.

"Aye, indeed," said he.

Mac Cann was silent for a few seconds, but he did not dare to be silent
any longer.

"You're full of fun," said he sourly. "What are you talking about at
all?"

"Finaun and I knew all about it," said Caeltia, "and we were wondering
what would be done by the person."

"What did he do?" said Patsy angrily.

Caeltia returned the pipe to his mouth.

"He put them back," said he.

"Only for that," he continued, "we might have had to recover them
ourselves."

"Would you have been able to get them back?" said Mac Cann humbly.

"We would have got them back; there is nothing in the world could stand
against us two; there is nothing in the world could stand against one of
us."

Patsy jerked a thumb to where Art was lilting the open bars of "The Wind
that shakes the Barley":

"Wouldn't the boy help?" said he. "How old is the lad?"

"I don't know," smiled Caeltia. "He remembers more than one Day of a
Great Breath, but he has no power for he has never had being, and so did
not win to knowledge; he could give help, for he is very strong."

"Could you have licked Cuchulain that day?" said Patsy timidly.

"I am older than he," replied Caeltia, "that is to say I am wiser than
he."

"But he was up there with yourself and could learn the tricks."

"There is no secrecy in this world or in the others, and there are no
tricks: there is Knowledge, but no person can learn more than his head
is ready to welcome. That is why robbery is infantile and of no
importance."

"It fills the stomach," replied Patsy cunningly.

"The stomach has to be filled," said Caeltia. "Its filling is a
necessity superior to any proprietarial right or disciplinary ethic, and
its problem is difficult only for children; it is filled by the air and
the wind, the rain and the clay, and the tiny lives that move in the
clay. There is but one property worth stealing; it is never missed by
its owners, although every person who has that property offers it to all
men from his gentle hands."

"You're trying to talk like Finaun," said Patsy gloomily.

They walked then in silence for ten minutes. Every vestige of impishness
had fled from Mac Cann; he was a miserable man; his vanity was hurt and
he was frightened, and this extraordinary combination of moods plunged
him to a depression so profound that he could not climb therefrom
without assistance.

Said Caeltia to him after a little:

"There is a thing I would like to see done, my friend."

Mac Cann's reply came sagging as he hauled his limp ideas from those
pits.

"What's that, your honour?"

"I would like to see the money thrown into this ditch as we go by."

Patsy's depression vanished as at the glare of a torch and the trumpet
of danger. He nosed the air and sniffed like a horse.

"Begor!" said he. "You're full of----. There's no sense in that," said
he sharply.

"That is what I would like to see, but everybody must act exactly as
they are able to act."

"I tell you there isn't any sense in it; give me a reasonable thing to
do in the name of God and I'll do it."

"That is the only thing I want done."

"What's the use of making a fool of me?"

"Am I demanding anything?"

When they had walked a few paces:

"What is it, after all!" said Patsy proudly.

He thrust his hands into his pockets and exhibited them full of gold and
silver.

"Just a pitch of my hand and it's gone!" said he.

"That is all," said Caeltia. "It's easily done."

"So it is," growled Patsy, and he swung his arm.

But he dropped the hand again.

"Wait a minute," and he called Eileen Ni Cooley to his side.

"Walk with ourselves, Eileen, and don't be a stranger. There's something
I want to show you."

He opened his hand before her and it was flooding and flashing in gold.

She stared with the awe of one who looks on miracles.

"There's a great deal of money there," she gasped.

"There's fifteen golden pounds and some shillings in it," said Patsy,
"and here's all I care for them."

He flung his hand then and sped the money at the full force of his
shoulder.

"That's all I care for the stuff," said he, and he gripped her arm to
prevent her bounding to its recovery.

"Come on, woman dear, and leave the ha'pence alone."

Said Caeltia:

"There is something I must throw away also, for I am getting too fond of
it."

"What's that?" said Mac Cann curiously.

"It's this pipe," the seraph replied, and he balanced it by the
mouthpiece.

"Don't throw away the good pipe," cried Eileen Ni Cooley. "Am I walking
beside a pair of wild men this day?"

Patsy interrupted also.

"Hold on for a minute. Give me the pipe and you can take this one." He
took Caeltia's silver-mounted briar and he passed to the seraph his own
blackened clay.

"You can throw that one away," said he, and he popped Caeltia's pipe
into his own mouth.

"It will do that way," said Caeltia sadly.

He held the pipe by the stem, and with a sharp movement snapped it in
halves; the head fell to the ground and a small tight wad of burning
tobacco jumped from it at the shock.

"There it is," said Caeltia.

He jerked the piece of broken stem from his hand, and after sighing
deeply they marched on.

Eileen Ni Cooley was angry.

"Padraig," said she, "what made you throw all the golden money away, and
the silver money?"

Patsy regarded her with the calm eye of a king.

"Stick your arm through mine, Eileen," said he, "and let us be
comfortable as we go along, for the pair of us haven't had a talk for a
long time, and Caeltia here wants to talk to you as well as me."

"That is so," said Caeltia.

Eileen did put her arm in his, and as they stepped briskly forward she
stared at him with eyes that were round with admiration and
astonishment.

"Aren't you the queer man, Padraig!" said she.

"I suppose," said Patsy, "that you'll be slipping away from us some time
to-night?"

"Not if you want me to stay, Padraig."

They opened a new conversation on that.




                              CHAPTER XXXV


That day they did not stay their travel, even to eat.

Finaun was urgent, and they ate from their hands as they marched. The
ass moved his slender legs briskly, the cart rumbled, and the metals in
it clashed and thumped as the wheels jolted on the rutty path.

They met no person as they went.

From the fields near by came the fresh odour of wild grass that
out-breathed again to the sun his living breath; and the sun shone, not
fiercely, but kindly, tempering down the oblique ways his potent fire;
above their heads and slanting away on wide wings the birds were
sailing, calling a note as they went and calling again; here were trees
once more; their grave shadows slept on the road, stamping the golden
light with a die of ebony, and their grave voices whispered busily,
quietly, like the voices of many mothers who fold against fruitful
breasts the little children; so they crooned and sang rocking their
ample greenery on the air.

In the afternoon they reached the hill, close to the top of which the
angels' finery was buried.

When they had ascended this hill for nearly an hour the donkey struck
work.

He stood, and nothing would induce him to move further in that
direction. Indeed, he slewed the cart completely round, and pointed his
nose and his shafts in the direction which he considered reasonable.

They halted.

"He'll not go up there," said Mary, and she pulled the long nose to her
bosom.

"He will not," said her father. "Will you leave that ass alone, Mary.
Give him back his snout and behave yourself like a Christian girl."

"You leave me alone," said Mary, "what harm am I doing to yourself?"

"It's that I don't like to see a woman kissing an ass."

"Well, if you don't look at me you won't see anything."

"You're full of fun," said her father sternly.

He shrugged his shoulders and turned to Finaun:

"He did this once before on us and we going up a tall hill in Connaught,
and although I hammered the skin off his back he wouldn't move a step;
he's a great ass, mind you, mister, and maybe we ought to have looked
for a gentler way up this hill."

Finaun was feeding tufts of grass to the donkey, and the donkey was
eating these with appetite.

"There is no need to come further," said Finaun. "We are almost in sight
of the place and can make our adieus here."

"Oh! we'll leave the beast," cried Mac Cann, "and we'll all go up to see
the last of you."

"It is better that we should part here," said Finaun gently. "We do not
wish to be seen at the last."

"You can have it your own way," said Patsy sulkily.

Finaun stood towering over Mac Cann; he placed his hands on Patsy's
shoulders and solemnly blessed him in round language, then he kissed him
tenderly on either cheek.

"Begor!" said Patsy.

And Finaun did the same for Eileen Ni Cooley and for Mary, and he kissed
the two of them on their cheeks, then he laid his palm on the donkey's
muzzle and blessed that beast, and he strode mightily up the hill.

Caeltia advanced to Patsy, but Mac Cann was embarrassed. He had been
kissed by a man, so he lit his pipe in self-defence and kept it in his
mouth.

"You're going off?" said he to Caeltia, and he puffed like a chimney.

"I'm going off," replied Caeltia in a low voice.

Patsy took the pipe from his mouth and put it into the seraph's hand.

"Here," said he, "take a last pull at that and ease your heart."

Caeltia did take it, and he smoked it, and it did ease his heart.

"I'll give you the spade out of the cart," continued Patsy, "for you'll
have to dig the things up. There it is, and it doesn't matter whether
it's lost or not."

"It is good-bye now," said Caeltia, shouldering the spade, and he
returned the pipe to Patsy, who put it instantly in his mouth.

Caeltia held out his hand and Mac Cann put his own into it.

While their hands were together Patsy was seized with compunction--he
drew the seraph aside a few paces:

"Listen!" said he. "I played a trick on you the time I was taking the
money out of my pocket to throw it away."

"Yes?" said Caeltia.

"I let one of the gold pieces slip through my fingers, and it's lying at
the bottom of my pocket at this minute, but I'll throw it away, mister
honey, if you say so."

Caeltia looked at him, and a smile of great contentment crept over his
lips.

"If I were you," said he, "I'd keep it."

Mac Cann nodded at him very solemnly:

"I'll keep it," said he earnestly, "and I'll spend it."

Caeltia then said his adieus to the others, and he tramped up the hill
with the spade balanced in his hand.

The piece of gold was burning in Patsy's pocket. He turned to Art:

"Well, young boy! there's my hand and good luck be with you; give up
racing about and climbing trees and you'll be all right; you've the
makings of a good hand on you, and that's a great thing, and you've got
the music."

"Good-bye," said Art, and they shook hands.

Eileen Ni Cooley took his hand also, then she and Patsy strode to the
cart, and with the donkey they moved down the hill.

Mary stood in front of Art, and she did not look at him; she turned her
grave face away, and stared sidewards where the late sunshine drowsed in
gold on the rough slopes. She put her hand out to him.

He took her hand and held it between his own; he raised it to his lips
and he held it there pressing against his mouth.

He dropped it, and stood back a pace staring at her; he struck his hands
together in a wild movement; he turned and ran swiftly after his
companions.

These two had never spoken to each other.

Near the top of the hill he came on Finaun and Caeltia, and the three
went together.

In a little they reached the point in the road where they had slept
during their first night on earth, and where they had eaten their first
meal on a sunny morning. Distant a few paces they saw the tree.

Caeltia dug there until he uncovered the sacks. He pulled these from the
clay and opened them, and each of the angels retrieved his own
belongings from the medley.

Finaun was urgent and thoughtful. He apparelled himself hastily, while,
with less speed, Caeltia also achieved his change. But Art sat on the
ground fingering his raiment, and seemed to be lost in a contemplation
of the grass beside him.

Finaun was ready. He stood upright, a kingly figure, shimmering in
purple folds. On his head a great crown, closed at the top; across his
shoulder a chain of heavy gold, and depending on his breast a broad
plaque of gold that blazed.

He looked at the others and nodded, then he leaped, and at a hundred
feet the sun flashed from his wings, and he looked like a part of the
rainbow.

Now Caeltia was ready, standing in cloth of gold and lovely ornaments of
hammered silver. He scanned once more the drowsing landscape; he smiled
on Art; he sprang aloft and abroad and sped upwards in a blinding gleam.

Art raised himself.

He lifted the crimson robe that was dashed with gold, the crimson
buskins feathered at the heel, the wide crown of short points. He placed
these on the ground and stood for a time looking down the road, while
the many-coloured pinions streamed lengthily from his hand.

Suddenly he frowned, and, with the wings still dragging, he ran down the
path.

In five minutes he came to the place where they had left the ass, but it
was no longer there. Far below on the curving ways he saw the donkey
moving quietly. Mac Cann and Eileen Ni Cooley were going by each other's
side, and Patsy's arm was about the woman.

He looked around, and at a little distance saw the girl beside a bush.
She was lying on her breast, her face was hidden into the ground, and
she was motionless.

He walked to her.

"Mary," said he, "I have come to say farewell."

She moved as at a shock. She rose to her feet, and she did not look at
him, and this was the first time that these two had talked together.

He bent to her beseechingly:

"I have come to say farewell," said he.

Again she put her hand into his:

"Say your say," quoth she, "and go your road," and with that she did
look at him, sternly.

He loosed her hand; his eyes flamed; he stamped the road; he swung his
arms aloft gripping the wings, and, with a fierce movement, he ripped
them in twain; he put the halves together and tore again, then, with a
sweep of his hands, fluttered the shining plumes away and on the wind.

"Now!" quoth he, with a laugh.

"Oh!" she stammered, staring, terrified, incredulous.

"Let you and I go down after the people," he said.

But Mary was weeping, and as they paced down the narrow track he laid a
great arm about her shoulder.


Printed in the United States of America.




                           Transcriber Notes:

Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.

Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.

Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of the
speakers. Those words were retained as-is.

Throughout the document was creative spelling

Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
unless otherwise noted.

On page 202, the quotation marks were corrected around "Bring him here,".

On page 203, a quotation mark was added before "Down went the seraph Cuchulain".





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