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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Honor O'callaghan, by Mary Russell Mitford
+ </title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Honor O'callaghan, by Mary Russell Mitford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Honor O'callaghan
+
+Author: Mary Russell Mitford
+
+Release Date: October 2, 2007 [EBook #22840]
+Last Updated: January 9, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HONOR O'CALLAGHAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ HONOR O'CALLAGHAN.
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Mary Russell Mitford
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Times are altered since Gray spoke of the young Etonians as a set of dirty
+ boys playing at cricket. There are no such things as boys to be met with
+ now, either at Eton or elsewhere; they are all men from ten years old
+ upwards. Dirt also hath vanished bodily, to be replaced by finery. An
+ aristocratic spirit, an aristocracy not of rank but of money, possesses
+ the place, and an enlightened young gentleman of my acquaintance, who when
+ somewhere about the ripe age of eleven, conjured his mother "<i>not</i> to
+ come to see him until she had got her new carriage, lest he should be
+ quizzed by the rest of the men," was perhaps no unfair representative of
+ the mass of his schoolfellows. There are of course exceptions to the rule.
+ The sons of the old nobility, too much accustomed to splendour in its
+ grander forms, and too sure of their own station to care about such
+ matters, and the few finer spirits, whose ambition even in boyhood soars
+ to far higher and holier aims, are, generally speaking, alike exempt from
+ these vulgar cravings after petty distinctions. And for the rest of the
+ small people, why "winter and rough weather," and that most excellent
+ schoolmaster, the world, will not fail, sooner or later, to bring them to
+ wiser thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, as according to our homely proverb, "for every gander
+ there's a goose," so there are not wanting in London and its environs
+ "establishments," (the good old name of boarding-school being altogether
+ done away with,) where young ladies are trained up in a love of fashion
+ and finery, and a reverence for the outward symbols of wealth, which
+ cannot fail to render them worthy compeers of the young gentlemen their
+ contemporaries. I have known a little girl, (fit mate for the
+ above-mentioned amateur of new carriages,) who complained that <i>her</i>
+ mamma called upon her, attended only by one footman; and it is certain,
+ that the position of a new-comer in one of these houses of education will
+ not fail to be materially influenced by such considerations as the
+ situation of her father's town residence, or the name of her mother's
+ milliner. At so early a period does the exclusiveness which more or less
+ pervades the whole current of English society make its appearance amongst
+ our female youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in the comparatively rational and old-fashioned seminary in which I
+ was brought up, we were not quite free from these vanities. We too had our
+ high castes and our low castes, and (alas! for her and for ourselves!) we
+ counted among our number one who in her loneliness and desolation might
+ almost be called a Pariah&mdash;or if that be too strong an illustration,
+ who was at least, in more senses than one, the Cinderella of the school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honor O'Callaghan was, as her name imports, an Irish girl. She had been
+ placed under the care of Mrs. Sherwood before she was five years old, her
+ father being designated, in an introductory letter which he brought in his
+ hand, as a barrister from Dublin, of ancient family, of considerable
+ ability, and the very highest honour. The friend, however, who had given
+ him this excellent character, had, unfortunately, died a very short time
+ after poor Honor's arrival; and of Mr. O'Callaghan nothing had ever been
+ heard after the first half-year, when he sent the amount of the bill in a
+ draft, which, when due, proved to be dishonoured. The worst part of this
+ communication, however unsatisfactory in its nature, was, that it was
+ final. All inquiries, whether in Dublin or elsewhere, proved unavailing;
+ Mr. O'Callaghan had disappeared; and our unlucky gouvernante found herself
+ saddled with the board, clothing, and education, the present care, and
+ future destiny, of a little girl, for whom she felt about as much
+ affection as was felt by the overseers of Aberleigh towards their
+ involuntary protege, Jesse Cliffe. Nay, in saying this, I am probably
+ giving our worthy governess credit for somewhat milder feelings upon this
+ subject than she actually entertained; the overseers in question,
+ accustomed to such circumstances, harbouring no stronger sentiment than a
+ cold, passive indifference towards the parish boy, whilst she, good sort
+ of woman as in general she was, did certainly upon this occasion cherish
+ something very like an active aversion to the little intruder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact is, that Mrs. Sherwood, who had been much captivated by Mr.
+ O'Callaghan's showy, off-hand manner, his civilities, and his flatteries,
+ felt, for the first time in her life, that she had been taken in; and
+ being a peculiarly prudent, cautious personage, of the slow, sluggish,
+ stagnant temperament, which those who possess it are apt to account a
+ virtue, and to hold in scorn their more excitable and impressible
+ neighbours, found herself touched in the very point of honour, piqued,
+ aggrieved, mortified; and denouncing the father as the greatest deceiver
+ that ever trod the earth, could not help transferring some part of her
+ hatred to the innocent child. She was really a good sort of woman, as I
+ have said before, and every now and then her conscience twitched her, and
+ she struggled hard to seem kind and to be so: but it would not do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There the feeling was, and the more she struggled against it, the
+ stronger, I verily believe, it became. Trying to conquer a deep-rooted
+ aversion, is something like trampling upon camomile: the harder you tread
+ it down the more it flourishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these evil auspices, the poor little Irish girl grew up amongst us.
+ Not ill-used certainly, for she was fed and taught as we were; and some
+ forty shillings a year more expended upon the trifles, gloves, and shoes,
+ and ribbons, which make the difference between nicety and shabbiness in
+ female dress, would have brought her apparel upon an equality with ours.
+ Ill-used she was not: to be sure, teachers, and masters seemed to consider
+ it a duty to reprimand her for such faults as would have passed unnoticed
+ in another; and if there were any noise amongst us, she, by far the
+ quietest and most silent person in the house, was, as a matter of course,
+ accused of making it. Still she was not what would be commonly called
+ ill-treated; although her young heart was withered and blighted, and her
+ spirit crushed and broken by the chilling indifference, or the harsh
+ unkindness which surrounded her on every side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing, indeed, could come in stronger contrast than the position of the
+ young Irish girl, and that of her English companions. A stranger, almost a
+ foreigner amongst us, with no home but that great school-room; no
+ comforts, no in-dulgences, no knick-knacks, no money, nothing but the
+ sheer, bare, naked necessaries of a schoolgirl's life; no dear family to
+ think of and to go to; no fond father to come to see her; no brothers and
+ sisters; no kindred; no friends. It was a loneliness, a desolation, which,
+ especially at breaking-up times, when all her schoolfellows went joyfully
+ away each to her happy home, and she was left the solitary and neglected
+ inhabitant of the deserted mansion, must have pressed upon her very heart
+ The heaviest tasks of the half year must have been pleasure and enjoyment
+ compared with the dreariness of those lonesome holidays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet she was almost as lonely when we were all assembled. Childhood is,
+ for the most part, generous and sympathising; and there were many amongst
+ us who, interested by her deserted situation, would have been happy to
+ have been her friends. But Honor was one of those flowers which will only
+ open in the bright sunshine. Never did marigold under a cloudy sky shut up
+ her heart more closely than Honor O'Callaghan. In a word, Honor had really
+ one of the many faults ascribed to her by Mrs. Sherwood, and her teachers
+ and masters&mdash;that fault so natural and so pardonable in adversity&mdash;she
+ was proud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ National and family pride blended with the personal feeling. Young as she
+ was when she left Ireland, she had caught from the old nurse who had had
+ the care of her infancy, rude legends of the ancient greatness of her
+ country, and of the regal grandeur of the O'Connors, her maternal
+ ancestors; and over such dim traces of Cathleen's legends as floated in
+ her memory, fragments wild, shadowy, and indistinct, as the recollections
+ of a dream, did the poor Irish girl love to brood. Visions of long-past
+ splendour possessed her wholly, and the half-unconscious reveries in which
+ she had the habit of indulging, gave a tinge of romance and enthusiasm to
+ her character, as peculiar as her story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything connected with her country had for her an indescribable charm.
+ It was wonderful how, with the apparently scanty means of acquiring
+ knowledge which the common school histories afforded, together with here
+ and there a stray book borrowed for her by her young companions from their
+ home libraries, and questions answered from the same source, she had
+ contrived to collect her abundant and accurate information, as to its
+ early annals and present position. Her antiquarian lore was perhaps a
+ little tinged, as such antiquarianism is apt to be, by the colouring of a
+ warm imagination; but still it was a remarkable exemplification of the
+ power of an ardent mind to ascertain and combine facts upon a favourite
+ subject under apparently insuperable difficulties. Unless in pursuing her
+ historical inquiries, she did not often speak upon the subject. Her
+ enthusiasm was too deep and too concentrated for words. But she was Irish
+ to the heart's core, and had even retained, one can hardly tell how, the
+ slight accent which in a sweet-toned female voice is so pretty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her appearance, also, there were many of the characteristics of
+ her countrywomen. The roundness of form and clearness of complexion, the
+ result of good nurture and pure blood which are often found in those who
+ have been nursed in an Irish cabin, the abundant wavy hair and the
+ deep-set grey eye. The face, in spite of some irregularity of feature,
+ would have been pretty, decidedly pretty, if the owner had been happy; but
+ the expression was too abstracted, too thoughtful, too melancholy for
+ childhood or even for youth. She was like a rose shut up in a room, whose
+ pale blossoms have hardly felt the touch of the glorious sunshine or the
+ blessed air. A daisy of the field, a common, simple, cheerful looking
+ daisy, would be pleasanter to gaze upon than the blighted queen of
+ flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her figure was, however, decidedly beautiful. Not merely tall, but pliant,
+ elastic, and graceful in no ordinary degree. She was not generally
+ remarkable for accomplishment. How could she, in the total absence of the
+ most powerful, as well as the most amiable motives to exertion? She had no
+ one to please; no one to watch her progress, to rejoice in her success, to
+ lament her failure. In many branches of education she had not advanced
+ beyond mediocrity, but her dancing was perfection; or rather it would have
+ been so, if to her other graces she had added the charm of gaiety. But
+ that want, as our French dancing-master used to observe, was so universal
+ in this country, that the wonder would have been to see any young lady,
+ whose face in a cotillion (for it was before the days of quadrilles) did
+ not look as if she was following a funeral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such at thirteen I found Honor O'Callaghan, when I, a damsel some three
+ years younger, was first placed at Mrs. Sherwood's; such five years
+ afterwards I left her, when I quitted the school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calling there the following spring, accompanied by my good godfather, we
+ again saw Honor silent and pensive as ever. The old gentleman was much
+ struck with her figure and her melancholy. "Fine girl that!" observed he
+ to me; "looks as if she was in love though," added he, putting his finger
+ to his nose with a knowing nod, as was usual with him upon occasions of
+ that kind. I, for my part, in whom a passion for literature was just
+ beginning to develope itself had a theory of my own upon the subject, and
+ regarded her with unwonted respect in consequence. Her abstraction
+ appeared to me exactly that of an author when contemplating some great
+ work, and I had no doubt but she would turn out a poetess. Both
+ conjectures were characteristic, and both, as it happened, wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon my next visit to London, I found that a great change had happened in
+ Honor's destiny. Her father, whom she had been fond of investing with the
+ dignity of a rebel, but who had, according to Mrs. Sherwood's more
+ reasonable suspicion, been a reckless, extravagant, thoughtless person,
+ whose follies had been visited upon himself and his family, with the evil
+ consequences of crimes, had died in America; and his sister, the
+ richly-jointured widow of a baronet, of old Milesian blood, who during his
+ life had been inexorable to his entreaties to befriend the poor girl, left
+ as it were in pledge at a London boarding-school, had relented upon
+ hearing of his death, had come to England, settled all pecuniary matters
+ to the full satisfaction of the astonished and delighted governess, and
+ finally carried Honor back with her to Dublin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time we lost sight altogether of our old companion. With her
+ schoolfellows she had never formed even the common school intimacies, and
+ to Mrs. Sherwood and her functionaries, she owed no obligation except that
+ of money, which was now discharged. The only debt of gratitude which she
+ had ever acknowledged, was to the old French teacher, who, although she
+ never got nearer the pronunciation or the orthography of her name than
+ Mademoiselle l'Ocalle, had yet, in the overflowing benevolence of her
+ temper, taken such notice of the deserted child, as amidst the general
+ neglect might pass for kindness. But she had returned to France. For no
+ one else did Honor profess the slightest interest. Accordingly, she left
+ the house where she had passed nearly all her life, without expressing any
+ desire to hear again of its inmates, and never wrote a line to any of
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did hear of her, however, occasionally. Rumours reached us, vague and
+ distant, and more conflicting even than distant rumours are wont to be.
+ She was distinguished at the vice-regal court, a beauty and a wit; she was
+ married to a nobleman of the highest rank; she was a nun of the order of
+ Mercy; she was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as years glided on, as the old school passed into other hands, and the
+ band of youthful companions became more and more dispersed, one of the
+ latter opinions began to gain ground among us, when two or three chanced
+ to meet, and to talk of old schoolfellows. If she had been alive and in
+ the great world, surely some of us should have heard of her. Her having
+ been a Catholic, rendered her taking the veil not improbable; and to a
+ person of her enthusiastic temper, the duties of the sisters of Mercy
+ would have peculiar charms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As one of that most useful and most benevolent order, or as actually dead,
+ we were therefore content to consider her, until, in the lapse of years
+ and the changes of destiny, we had ceased to think of her at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second of this present month of May was a busy and a noisy day in my
+ garden. All the world knows what a spring this has been. The famous black
+ spring commemorated by Gilbert White can hardly have been more thoroughly
+ ungenial, more fatal to man or beast, to leaf and flower, than this most
+ miserable season, this winter of long days, when the sun shines as if in
+ mockery, giving little more heat than his cold sister the moon, and the
+ bitter north-east produces at one and the same moment the incongruous
+ annoyances of biting cold and suffocating dust. Never was such a season.
+ The swallows, nightingales, and cuckoos were a fortnight after their usual
+ time. I wonder what they thought of it, pretty creatures, and how they
+ made up their minds to come at all!&mdash;and the sloe blossom, the black
+ thorn winter as the common people call it, which generally makes its
+ appearance early in March along with the first violets, did not whiten the
+ hedges this year until full two months later,* In short, everybody knows
+ that this has been a most villanous season, and deserves all the ill that
+ can possibly be said of it. But the second of May held forth a promise
+ which, according to a very usual trick of English weather, it has not
+ kept; and was so mild and smiling and gracious, that, without being quite
+ so foolish as to indulge in any romantic and visionary expectation of ever
+ seeing summer again, we were yet silly enough to be cheered by the thought
+ that spring was coming at last in good earnest.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is extraordinary how some flowers seem to obey the
+ season, whilst others are influenced by the weather. The
+ hawthorn, certainly nearly akin to the sloe blossom, is this
+ year rather forwarder, if anything, than in common years;
+ and the fritillary, always a May flower, is painting the
+ water meadows at this moment in company with "the
+ blackthorn winter;" or rather is nearly over, whilst its
+ cousin german, the tulip, is scarcely showing for bloom in
+ the warmest exposures and most sheltered borders of the
+ garden.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In a word, it was that pleasant rarity a fine day; and it was also a day
+ of considerable stir, as I shall attempt to describe hereafter, in my
+ small territories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the street too, and in the house, there was as much noise and bustle as
+ one would well desire to hear in our village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first of May is Belford Great Fair, where horses and cows are sold,
+ and men meet gravely to transact grave business; and the second of May is
+ Belford Little Fair, where boys and girls of all ages, women and children
+ of all ranks, flock into the town, to buy ribbons and dolls and balls and
+ gingerbread, to eat cakes and suck oranges, to stare at the shows, and
+ gaze at the wild beasts, and to follow merrily the merry business called
+ pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carts and carriages, horse-people and foot-people, were flocking to the
+ fair; unsold cows and horses, with their weary drivers, and labouring men
+ who, having made a night as well as a day of it, began to think it time to
+ find their way home, were coming from it; Punch was being exhibited at one
+ end of the street, a barrel-organ, surmounted by a most accomplished
+ monkey, was playing at the other; a half tipsy horse-dealer was galloping
+ up and down the road, showing off an unbroken forest pony, who threatened
+ every moment to throw him and break his neck; a hawker was walking up the
+ street crying Greenacre's last dying speech, who was hanged that morning
+ at Newgate, and as all the world knows, made none; and the highway in
+ front of our house was well nigh blocked up by three or four carriages
+ waiting for different sets of visiters, and by a gang of gipsies who stood
+ clustered round the gate, waiting with great anxiety the issue of an
+ investigation going on in the hall, where one of their gang was under
+ examination upon a question of stealing a goose. Witnesses, constables,
+ and other officials were loitering in the court, and dogs were barking,
+ women chattering, boys blowing horns, and babies squalling through all. It
+ was as pretty a scene of crowd and din and bustle as one shall see in a
+ summer's day. The fair itself was calm and quiet in comparison; the
+ complication of discordant sounds in Hogarth's Enraged Musician was
+ nothing to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within my garden the genius of noise was equally triumphant. An ingenious
+ device, contrived and executed by a most kind and ingenious friend, for
+ the purpose of sheltering the pyramid of geraniums in front of my
+ greenhouse,&mdash;consisting of a wooden roof, drawn by pullies up and
+ down a high, strong post, something like the mast of a ship,* had given
+ way; and another most kind friend had arrived with the requisite
+ machinery, blocks and ropes, and tackle of all sorts, to replace it upon
+ an improved construction. With him came a tall blacksmith, a short
+ carpenter, and a stout collar-maker, with hammers, nails, chisels, and
+ tools of all sorts, enough to build a house; ladders of all heights and
+ sizes, two or three gaping apprentices, who stood about in the way, John
+ willing to lend his aid in behalf of his flowers, and master Dick with his
+ hands in his pockets looking on. The short carpenter perched himself upon
+ one ladder, the tall blacksmith on another; my good friend, Mr. Lawson,
+ mounted to the mast head; and such a clatter ensued of hammers and voices&mdash;(for
+ it was exactly one of those fancy jobs where every one feels privileged to
+ advise and find fault)&mdash;such clashing of opinions and conceptions and
+ suggestions as would go to the building a county town.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This description does not sound prettily, but the real
+ effect is exceedingly graceful: the appearance of the dark
+ canopy suspended over the pile of bright flowers, at a
+ considerable height, has something about it not merely
+ picturesque but oriental; and that a gentleman's contrivance
+ should succeed at all points, as if he had been a real
+ carpenter, instead of an earl's son and a captain in the
+ navy, is a fact quite unparalleled in the annals of
+ inventions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whilst this was going forward in middle air, I and my company were doing
+ our best to furnish forth the chorus below. It so happened that two sets
+ of my visiters were scientific botanists, the one party holding the
+ Linnoean system, the others disciples of Jussieu; and the garden being a
+ most natural place for such a discussion, a war of hard words ensued,
+ which would have done honour to the Tower of Babel. "Tetradynamia,"
+ exclaimed one set; "Monocotyledones," thundered the other; whilst a third
+ friend, a skilful florist, but no botanist, unconsciously out-long-worded
+ both of them, by telling me that the name of a new annual was "Leptosiphon
+ androsaceus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never was such a confusion of noises! The house door opened, and my
+ father's strong clear voice was heard in tones of warning. "Woman, how can
+ you swear to this goose?" Whilst the respondent squeaked out in something
+ between a scream and a cry, "Please your worship, the poor bird having
+ a-laid all his eggs, we had marked un, and so&mdash;" What farther she
+ would have said being drowned in a prodigious clatter occasioned by the
+ downfal of the ladder that supported the tall blacksmith, which, striking
+ against that whereon was placed the short carpenter, overset that climbing
+ machine also, and the clamor incident to such a calamity overpowered all
+ minor noises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile I became aware that a fourth party of visiters had
+ entered the garden, my excellent neighbour, Miss Mortimer, and three other
+ ladies, whom she introduced as Mrs. and the Misses Dobbs; and the
+ botanists and florists having departed, and the disaster at the mast being
+ repaired, quiet was so far restored, that I ushered my guests into the
+ greenhouse, with something like a hope that we should be able to hear each
+ other speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dobbs was about the largest woman I had ever seen in my life, fat,
+ fair, and <i>fifty</i> with a broad rosy countenance, beaming with
+ good-humour and contentment, and with a general look of affluence over her
+ whole comfortable person. She spoke in a loud voice which made itself
+ heard over the remaining din in the garden and out, and with a patois
+ between Scotch and Irish, which puzzled me, until I found from her
+ discourse that she was the widow of a linen manufacturer, in the
+ neighbourhood of Belfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," quoth she, with the most open-hearted familiarity, "times are
+ changed for the better with me since you and I parted in Cadogan Place.
+ Poor Mr. Dobbs left me and those two girls a fortune of&mdash;&mdash; Why,
+ I verily believe," continued she, interrupting herself, "that you don't
+ know me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honor!" said one of the young ladies to the other, "only look at this
+ butterfly!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honor! Was it, could it be Honor O'Callaghan, the slight, pale, romantic
+ visionary, so proud, so reserved, so abstracted, so elegant, and so
+ melancholy? Had thirty years of the coarse realities of life transformed
+ that pensive and delicate damsel into the comely, hearty, and to say the
+ truth, somewhat vulgar dame whom I saw before me? Was such a change
+ possible?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Married a nobleman!" exclaimed she when I told her the reports respecting
+ herself. "Taken the veil! No, indeed! I have been a far humbler and
+ happier woman. It is very strange, though, that during my Cinderella-like
+ life at school, I used always in my day-dreams to make my story end like
+ that of the heroine of the fairy tale; and it is still stranger, that both
+ rumours were within a very little of coming true,&mdash;for when I got to
+ Ireland, which, so far as I was concerned, turned out a very different
+ place from what I expected, I found myself shut up in an old castle, fifty
+ times more dreary and melancholy than ever was our great school-room in
+ the holidays, with my aunt setting her heart upon marrying me to an old
+ lord, who might, for age and infirmities, have passed for my great
+ grandfather; and I really, in my perplexity, had serious thoughts of
+ turning nun to get rid of my suitor; but then I was allowed to go into the
+ north upon a visit, and fell in with my late excellent husband, who
+ obtained Lady O'Hara's consent to the match by the offer of taking me
+ without a portion; and ever since," continued she, "I have been a very
+ common-place and a very happy woman. Mr. Dobbs was a man who had made his
+ own fortune, and all he asked of me was, to lay aside my airs and graces,
+ and live with him in his own homely, old-fashioned way amongst his own old
+ people, (kind people they were!) his looms, and his bleaching-grounds; so
+ that my heart was opened, and I grew fat and comfortable, and merry and
+ hearty, as different from the foolish, romantic girl whom you remember, as
+ plain honest prose is from the silly thing called poetry. I don't believe
+ that I have ever once thought of my old castles in the air for these
+ five-and-twenty years. It is very odd, though," added she, with a
+ frankness which was really like thinking aloud, "that I always did
+ contrive in my visions that my history should conclude like that of
+ Cinderella. To be sure, things are much better as they are, but it is an
+ odd thing, nevertheless. Well! perhaps my daughters...!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as they are rich and pretty, and good-natured, although much more in
+ the style of the present Honor than the past, it is by no means improbable
+ that the vision which was evidently glittering before the fond mother's
+ eyes, may be realised. At all events, my old friend is, as she says
+ herself a happy woman&mdash;in all probability, happier than if the
+ Cinderella day-dream had actually come to pass in her own comely person.
+ But the transition! After all, there are real transformations in this
+ every-day world, which beat the doings of fairy land all to nothing; and
+ the change of the pumpkin into a chariot, and the mice into horses, was
+ not to be compared for a moment with the transmogrification of Honor
+ O'Callaghan into Mrs. Dobbs.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Honor O'callaghan, by Mary Russell Mitford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Honor O'callaghan
+
+Author: Mary Russell Mitford
+
+Release Date: October 2, 2007 [EBook #22840]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HONOR O'CALLAGHAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+HONOR O'CALLAGHAN
+
+By Mary Russell Mitford
+
+
+Times are altered since Gray spoke of the young Etonians as a set of
+dirty boys playing at cricket. There are no such things as boys to be
+met with now, either at Eton or elsewhere; they are all men from ten
+years old upwards. Dirt also hath vanished bodily, to be replaced by
+finery. An aristocratic spirit, an aristocracy not of rank but of
+money, possesses the place, and an enlightened young gentleman of my
+acquaintance, who when somewhere about the ripe age of eleven, conjured
+his mother "_not_ to come to see him until she had got her new carriage,
+lest he should be quizzed by the rest of the men," was perhaps no unfair
+representative of the mass of his schoolfellows. There are of course
+exceptions to the rule. The sons of the old nobility, too much
+accustomed to splendour in its grander forms, and too sure of their own
+station to care about such matters, and the few finer spirits, whose
+ambition even in boyhood soars to far higher and holier aims, are,
+generally speaking, alike exempt from these vulgar cravings after petty
+distinctions. And for the rest of the small people, why "winter and
+rough weather," and that most excellent schoolmaster, the world, will
+not fail, sooner or later, to bring them to wiser thoughts.
+
+In the meanwhile, as according to our homely proverb, "for every gander
+there's a goose," so there are not wanting in London and its environs
+"establishments," (the good old name of boarding-school being altogether
+done away with,) where young ladies are trained up in a love of fashion
+and finery, and a reverence for the outward symbols of wealth, which
+cannot fail to render them worthy compeers of the young gentlemen
+their contemporaries. I have known a little girl, (fit mate for the
+above-mentioned amateur of new carriages,) who complained that _her_
+mamma called upon her, attended only by one footman; and it is certain,
+that the position of a new-comer in one of these houses of education
+will not fail to be materially influenced by such considerations as the
+situation of her father's town residence, or the name of her mother's
+milliner. At so early a period does the exclusiveness which more or
+less pervades the whole current of English society make its appearance
+amongst our female youth.
+
+Even in the comparatively rational and old-fashioned seminary in which
+I was brought up, we were not quite free from these vanities. We too
+had our high castes and our low castes, and (alas! for her and for
+ourselves!) we counted among our number one who in her loneliness and
+desolation might almost be called a Pariah--or if that be too strong an
+illustration, who was at least, in more senses than one, the Cinderella
+of the school.
+
+Honor O'Callaghan was, as her name imports, an Irish girl. She had been
+placed under the care of Mrs. Sherwood before she was five years old,
+her father being designated, in an introductory letter which he
+brought in his hand, as a barrister from Dublin, of ancient family, of
+considerable ability, and the very highest honour. The friend, however,
+who had given him this excellent character, had, unfortunately, died
+a very short time after poor Honor's arrival; and of Mr. O'Callaghan
+nothing had ever been heard after the first half-year, when he sent
+the amount of the bill in a draft, which, when due, proved to
+be dishonoured. The worst part of this communication, however
+unsatisfactory in its nature, was, that it was final. All inquiries,
+whether in Dublin or elsewhere, proved unavailing; Mr. O'Callaghan had
+disappeared; and our unlucky gouvernante found herself saddled with the
+board, clothing, and education, the present care, and future destiny, of
+a little girl, for whom she felt about as much affection as was felt
+by the overseers of Aberleigh towards their involuntary protege, Jesse
+Cliffe. Nay, in saying this, I am probably giving our worthy governess
+credit for somewhat milder feelings upon this subject than she
+actually entertained; the overseers in question, accustomed to such
+circumstances, harbouring no stronger sentiment than a cold, passive
+indifference towards the parish boy, whilst she, good sort of woman as
+in general she was, did certainly upon this occasion cherish something
+very like an active aversion to the little intruder.
+
+The fact is, that Mrs. Sherwood, who had been much captivated by
+Mr. O'Callaghan's showy, off-hand manner, his civilities, and his
+flatteries, felt, for the first time in her life, that she had been
+taken in; and being a peculiarly prudent, cautious personage, of the
+slow, sluggish, stagnant temperament, which those who possess it are
+apt to account a virtue, and to hold in scorn their more excitable
+and impressible neighbours, found herself touched in the very point of
+honour, piqued, aggrieved, mortified; and denouncing the father as the
+greatest deceiver that ever trod the earth, could not help transferring
+some part of her hatred to the innocent child. She was really a good
+sort of woman, as I have said before, and every now and then her
+conscience twitched her, and she struggled hard to seem kind and to be
+so: but it would not do.
+
+There the feeling was, and the more she struggled against it, the
+stronger, I verily believe, it became. Trying to conquer a deep-rooted
+aversion, is something like trampling upon camomile: the harder you
+tread it down the more it flourishes.
+
+Under these evil auspices, the poor little Irish girl grew up amongst
+us. Not ill-used certainly, for she was fed and taught as we were; and
+some forty shillings a year more expended upon the trifles, gloves,
+and shoes, and ribbons, which make the difference between nicety and
+shabbiness in female dress, would have brought her apparel upon an
+equality with ours. Ill-used she was not: to be sure, teachers, and
+masters seemed to consider it a duty to reprimand her for such faults
+as would have passed unnoticed in another; and if there were any noise
+amongst us, she, by far the quietest and most silent person in the
+house, was, as a matter of course, accused of making it. Still she was
+not what would be commonly called ill-treated; although her young heart
+was withered and blighted, and her spirit crushed and broken by the
+chilling indifference, or the harsh unkindness which surrounded her on
+every side.
+
+Nothing, indeed, could come in stronger contrast than the position of
+the young Irish girl, and that of her English companions. A stranger,
+almost a foreigner amongst us, with no home but that great school-room;
+no comforts, no in-dulgences, no knick-knacks, no money, nothing but the
+sheer, bare, naked necessaries of a schoolgirl's life; no dear family
+to think of and to go to; no fond father to come to see her; no brothers
+and sisters; no kindred; no friends. It was a loneliness, a desolation,
+which, especially at breaking-up times, when all her schoolfellows went
+joyfully away each to her happy home, and she was left the solitary and
+neglected inhabitant of the deserted mansion, must have pressed upon her
+very heart The heaviest tasks of the half year must have been pleasure
+and enjoyment compared with the dreariness of those lonesome holidays.
+
+And yet she was almost as lonely when we were all assembled. Childhood
+is, for the most part, generous and sympathising; and there were many
+amongst us who, interested by her deserted situation, would have been
+happy to have been her friends. But Honor was one of those flowers which
+will only open in the bright sunshine. Never did marigold under a cloudy
+sky shut up her heart more closely than Honor O'Callaghan. In a
+word, Honor had really one of the many faults ascribed to her by Mrs.
+Sherwood, and her teachers and masters--that fault so natural and so
+pardonable in adversity--she was proud.
+
+National and family pride blended with the personal feeling. Young as
+she was when she left Ireland, she had caught from the old nurse who had
+had the care of her infancy, rude legends of the ancient greatness of
+her country, and of the regal grandeur of the O'Connors, her maternal
+ancestors; and over such dim traces of Cathleen's legends as floated
+in her memory, fragments wild, shadowy, and indistinct, as the
+recollections of a dream, did the poor Irish girl love to brood. Visions
+of long-past splendour possessed her wholly, and the half-unconscious
+reveries in which she had the habit of indulging, gave a tinge of
+romance and enthusiasm to her character, as peculiar as her story.
+
+Everything connected with her country had for her an indescribable
+charm. It was wonderful how, with the apparently scanty means of
+acquiring knowledge which the common school histories afforded,
+together with here and there a stray book borrowed for her by her young
+companions from their home libraries, and questions answered from the
+same source, she had contrived to collect her abundant and accurate
+information, as to its early annals and present position. Her
+antiquarian lore was perhaps a little tinged, as such antiquarianism is
+apt to be, by the colouring of a warm imagination; but still it was a
+remarkable exemplification of the power of an ardent mind to ascertain
+and combine facts upon a favourite subject under apparently insuperable
+difficulties. Unless in pursuing her historical inquiries, she did
+not often speak upon the subject. Her enthusiasm was too deep and too
+concentrated for words. But she was Irish to the heart's core, and had
+even retained, one can hardly tell how, the slight accent which in a
+sweet-toned female voice is so pretty.
+
+In her appearance, also, there were many of the characteristics of
+her countrywomen. The roundness of form and clearness of complexion, the
+result of good nurture and pure blood which are often found in those
+who have been nursed in an Irish cabin, the abundant wavy hair and the
+deep-set grey eye. The face, in spite of some irregularity of feature,
+would have been pretty, decidedly pretty, if the owner had been happy;
+but the expression was too abstracted, too thoughtful, too melancholy
+for childhood or even for youth. She was like a rose shut up in a room,
+whose pale blossoms have hardly felt the touch of the glorious sunshine
+or the blessed air. A daisy of the field, a common, simple, cheerful
+looking daisy, would be pleasanter to gaze upon than the blighted queen
+of flowers.
+
+Her figure was, however, decidedly beautiful. Not merely tall, but
+pliant, elastic, and graceful in no ordinary degree. She was not
+generally remarkable for accomplishment. How could she, in the total
+absence of the most powerful, as well as the most amiable motives to
+exertion? She had no one to please; no one to watch her progress, to
+rejoice in her success, to lament her failure. In many branches of
+education she had not advanced beyond mediocrity, but her dancing was
+perfection; or rather it would have been so, if to her other graces
+she had added the charm of gaiety. But that want, as our French
+dancing-master used to observe, was so universal in this country,
+that the wonder would have been to see any young lady, whose face in a
+cotillion (for it was before the days of quadrilles) did not look as if
+she was following a funeral.
+
+Such at thirteen I found Honor O'Callaghan, when I, a damsel some three
+years younger, was first placed at Mrs. Sherwood's; such five years
+afterwards I left her, when I quitted the school.
+
+Calling there the following spring, accompanied by my good godfather, we
+again saw Honor silent and pensive as ever. The old gentleman was much
+struck with her figure and her melancholy. "Fine girl that!" observed
+he to me; "looks as if she was in love though," added he, putting
+his finger to his nose with a knowing nod, as was usual with him upon
+occasions of that kind. I, for my part, in whom a passion for literature
+was just beginning to develope itself had a theory of my own upon the
+subject, and regarded her with unwonted respect in consequence. Her
+abstraction appeared to me exactly that of an author when contemplating
+some great work, and I had no doubt but she would turn out a poetess.
+Both conjectures were characteristic, and both, as it happened, wrong.
+
+Upon my next visit to London, I found that a great change had happened
+in Honor's destiny. Her father, whom she had been fond of investing with
+the dignity of a rebel, but who had, according to Mrs. Sherwood's more
+reasonable suspicion, been a reckless, extravagant, thoughtless person,
+whose follies had been visited upon himself and his family, with the
+evil consequences of crimes, had died in America; and his sister, the
+richly-jointured widow of a baronet, of old Milesian blood, who during
+his life had been inexorable to his entreaties to befriend the poor
+girl, left as it were in pledge at a London boarding-school, had
+relented upon hearing of his death, had come to England, settled
+all pecuniary matters to the full satisfaction of the astonished and
+delighted governess, and finally carried Honor back with her to Dublin.
+
+From this time we lost sight altogether of our old companion. With her
+schoolfellows she had never formed even the common school intimacies,
+and to Mrs. Sherwood and her functionaries, she owed no obligation
+except that of money, which was now discharged. The only debt of
+gratitude which she had ever acknowledged, was to the old French
+teacher, who, although she never got nearer the pronunciation or the
+orthography of her name than Mademoiselle l'Ocalle, had yet, in the
+overflowing benevolence of her temper, taken such notice of the deserted
+child, as amidst the general neglect might pass for kindness. But she
+had returned to France. For no one else did Honor profess the slightest
+interest. Accordingly, she left the house where she had passed nearly all
+her life, without expressing any desire to hear again of its inmates,
+and never wrote a line to any of them.
+
+We did hear of her, however, occasionally. Rumours reached us, vague and
+distant, and more conflicting even than distant rumours are wont to be.
+She was distinguished at the vice-regal court, a beauty and a wit; she
+was married to a nobleman of the highest rank; she was a nun of the
+order of Mercy; she was dead.
+
+And as years glided on, as the old school passed into other hands, and
+the band of youthful companions became more and more dispersed, one of
+the latter opinions began to gain ground among us, when two or three
+chanced to meet, and to talk of old schoolfellows. If she had been alive
+and in the great world, surely some of us should have heard of her. Her
+having been a Catholic, rendered her taking the veil not improbable;
+and to a person of her enthusiastic temper, the duties of the sisters of
+Mercy would have peculiar charms.
+
+As one of that most useful and most benevolent order, or as actually
+dead, we were therefore content to consider her, until, in the lapse of
+years and the changes of destiny, we had ceased to think of her at all.
+
+The second of this present month of May was a busy and a noisy day in
+my garden. All the world knows what a spring this has been. The famous
+black spring commemorated by Gilbert White can hardly have been more
+thoroughly ungenial, more fatal to man or beast, to leaf and flower,
+than this most miserable season, this winter of long days, when the sun
+shines as if in mockery, giving little more heat than his cold sister
+the moon, and the bitter north-east produces at one and the same moment
+the incongruous annoyances of biting cold and suffocating dust. Never was
+such a season. The swallows, nightingales, and cuckoos were a fortnight
+after their usual time. I wonder what they thought of it, pretty
+creatures, and how they made up their minds to come at all!--and the
+sloe blossom, the black thorn winter as the common people call it,
+which generally makes its appearance early in March along with the
+first violets, did not whiten the hedges this year until full two months
+later,* In short, everybody knows that this has been a most villanous
+season, and deserves all the ill that can possibly be said of it. But
+the second of May held forth a promise which, according to a very usual
+trick of English weather, it has not kept; and was so mild and smiling
+and gracious, that, without being quite so foolish as to indulge in any
+romantic and visionary expectation of ever seeing summer again, we were
+yet silly enough to be cheered by the thought that spring was coming at
+last in good earnest.
+
+ * It is extraordinary how some flowers seem to obey the
+ season, whilst others are influenced by the weather. The
+ hawthorn, certainly nearly akin to the sloe blossom, is this
+ year rather forwarder, if anything, than in common years;
+ and the fritillary, always a May flower, is painting the
+ water meadows at this moment in company with "the
+ blackthorn winter;" or rather is nearly over, whilst its
+ cousin german, the tulip, is scarcely showing for bloom in
+ the warmest exposures and most sheltered borders of the
+ garden.
+
+In a word, it was that pleasant rarity a fine day; and it was also a day
+of considerable stir, as I shall attempt to describe hereafter, in my
+small territories.
+
+In the street too, and in the house, there was as much noise and bustle
+as one would well desire to hear in our village.
+
+The first of May is Belford Great Fair, where horses and cows are sold,
+and men meet gravely to transact grave business; and the second of May
+is Belford Little Fair, where boys and girls of all ages, women and
+children of all ranks, flock into the town, to buy ribbons and dolls and
+balls and gingerbread, to eat cakes and suck oranges, to stare at the
+shows, and gaze at the wild beasts, and to follow merrily the merry
+business called pleasure.
+
+Carts and carriages, horse-people and foot-people, were flocking to the
+fair; unsold cows and horses, with their weary drivers, and labouring
+men who, having made a night as well as a day of it, began to think
+it time to find their way home, were coming from it; Punch was being
+exhibited at one end of the street, a barrel-organ, surmounted by a most
+accomplished monkey, was playing at the other; a half tipsy horse-dealer
+was galloping up and down the road, showing off an unbroken forest pony,
+who threatened every moment to throw him and break his neck; a hawker
+was walking up the street crying Greenacre's last dying speech, who was
+hanged that morning at Newgate, and as all the world knows, made none;
+and the highway in front of our house was well nigh blocked up by three
+or four carriages waiting for different sets of visiters, and by a
+gang of gipsies who stood clustered round the gate, waiting with great
+anxiety the issue of an investigation going on in the hall, where one
+of their gang was under examination upon a question of stealing a goose.
+Witnesses, constables, and other officials were loitering in the court,
+and dogs were barking, women chattering, boys blowing horns, and babies
+squalling through all. It was as pretty a scene of crowd and din and
+bustle as one shall see in a summer's day. The fair itself was calm and
+quiet in comparison; the complication of discordant sounds in Hogarth's
+Enraged Musician was nothing to it.
+
+Within my garden the genius of noise was equally triumphant. An
+ingenious device, contrived and executed by a most kind and ingenious
+friend, for the purpose of sheltering the pyramid of geraniums in front
+of my greenhouse,--consisting of a wooden roof, drawn by pullies up and
+down a high, strong post, something like the mast of a ship,* had
+given way; and another most kind friend had arrived with the requisite
+machinery, blocks and ropes, and tackle of all sorts, to replace it
+upon an improved construction. With him came a tall blacksmith, a short
+carpenter, and a stout collar-maker, with hammers, nails, chisels, and
+tools of all sorts, enough to build a house; ladders of all heights and
+sizes, two or three gaping apprentices, who stood about in the way, John
+willing to lend his aid in behalf of his flowers, and master Dick with
+his hands in his pockets looking on. The short carpenter perched himself
+upon one ladder, the tall blacksmith on another; my good friend, Mr.
+Lawson, mounted to the mast head; and such a clatter ensued of hammers
+and voices--(for it was exactly one of those fancy jobs where every one
+feels privileged to advise and find fault)--such clashing of opinions
+and conceptions and suggestions as would go to the building a county
+town.
+
+ * This description does not sound prettily, but the real
+ effect is exceedingly graceful: the appearance of the dark
+ canopy suspended over the pile of bright flowers, at a
+ considerable height, has something about it not merely
+ picturesque but oriental; and that a gentleman's contrivance
+ should succeed at all points, as if he had been a real
+ carpenter, instead of an earl's son and a captain in the
+ navy, is a fact quite unparalleled in the annals of
+ inventions.
+
+Whilst this was going forward in middle air, I and my company were doing
+our best to furnish forth the chorus below. It so happened that two
+sets of my visiters were scientific botanists, the one party holding the
+Linnoean system, the others disciples of Jussieu; and the garden being
+a most natural place for such a discussion, a war of hard words ensued,
+which would have done honour to the Tower of Babel. "Tetradynamia,"
+exclaimed one set; "Monocotyledones," thundered the other; whilst
+a third friend, a skilful florist, but no botanist, unconsciously
+out-long-worded both of them, by telling me that the name of a new
+annual was "Leptosiphon androsaceus."
+
+Never was such a confusion of noises! The house door opened, and my
+father's strong clear voice was heard in tones of warning. "Woman,
+how can you swear to this goose?" Whilst the respondent squeaked out in
+something between a scream and a cry, "Please your worship, the poor
+bird having a-laid all his eggs, we had marked un, and so--" What
+farther she would have said being drowned in a prodigious clatter
+occasioned by the downfal of the ladder that supported the tall
+blacksmith, which, striking against that whereon was placed the short
+carpenter, overset that climbing machine also, and the clamor incident
+to such a calamity overpowered all minor noises.
+
+In the meanwhile I became aware that a fourth party of visiters had
+entered the garden, my excellent neighbour, Miss Mortimer, and three
+other ladies, whom she introduced as Mrs. and the Misses Dobbs; and the
+botanists and florists having departed, and the disaster at the mast
+being repaired, quiet was so far restored, that I ushered my guests into
+the greenhouse, with something like a hope that we should be able to
+hear each other speak.
+
+Mrs. Dobbs was about the largest woman I had ever seen in my life,
+fat, fair, and _fifty_ with a broad rosy countenance, beaming with
+good-humour and contentment, and with a general look of affluence over
+her whole comfortable person. She spoke in a loud voice which made
+itself heard over the remaining din in the garden and out, and with a
+patois between Scotch and Irish, which puzzled me, until I found from
+her discourse that she was the widow of a linen manufacturer, in the
+neighbourhood of Belfast.
+
+"Ay," quoth she, with the most open-hearted familiarity, "times are
+changed for the better with me since you and I parted in Cadogan Place.
+Poor Mr. Dobbs left me and those two girls a fortune of---- Why, I
+verily believe," continued she, interrupting herself, "that you don't
+know me!"
+
+"Honor!" said one of the young ladies to the other, "only look at this
+butterfly!"
+
+Honor! Was it, could it be Honor O'Callaghan, the slight, pale, romantic
+visionary, so proud, so reserved, so abstracted, so elegant, and so
+melancholy? Had thirty years of the coarse realities of life transformed
+that pensive and delicate damsel into the comely, hearty, and to say
+the truth, somewhat vulgar dame whom I saw before me? Was such a change
+possible?
+
+"Married a nobleman!" exclaimed she when I told her the reports
+respecting herself. "Taken the veil! No, indeed! I have been a far
+humbler and happier woman. It is very strange, though, that during my
+Cinderella-like life at school, I used always in my day-dreams to make
+my story end like that of the heroine of the fairy tale; and it is
+still stranger, that both rumours were within a very little of coming
+true,--for when I got to Ireland, which, so far as I was concerned,
+turned out a very different place from what I expected, I found myself
+shut up in an old castle, fifty times more dreary and melancholy than
+ever was our great school-room in the holidays, with my aunt setting
+her heart upon marrying me to an old lord, who might, for age and
+infirmities, have passed for my great grandfather; and I really, in my
+perplexity, had serious thoughts of turning nun to get rid of my suitor;
+but then I was allowed to go into the north upon a visit, and fell in
+with my late excellent husband, who obtained Lady O'Hara's consent to
+the match by the offer of taking me without a portion; and ever since,"
+continued she, "I have been a very common-place and a very happy woman.
+Mr. Dobbs was a man who had made his own fortune, and all he asked of
+me was, to lay aside my airs and graces, and live with him in his own
+homely, old-fashioned way amongst his own old people, (kind people they
+were!) his looms, and his bleaching-grounds; so that my heart was opened,
+and I grew fat and comfortable, and merry and hearty, as different from
+the foolish, romantic girl whom you remember, as plain honest prose is
+from the silly thing called poetry. I don't believe that I have ever
+once thought of my old castles in the air for these five-and-twenty
+years. It is very odd, though," added she, with a frankness which was
+really like thinking aloud, "that I always did contrive in my visions
+that my history should conclude like that of Cinderella. To be
+sure, things are much better as they are, but it is an odd thing,
+nevertheless. Well! perhaps my daughters...!"
+
+And as they are rich and pretty, and good-natured, although much more
+in the style of the present Honor than the past, it is by no means
+improbable that the vision which was evidently glittering before the
+fond mother's eyes, may be realised. At all events, my old friend is, as
+she says herself a happy woman--in all probability, happier than if the
+Cinderella day-dream had actually come to pass in her own comely person.
+But the transition! After all, there are real transformations in this
+every-day world, which beat the doings of fairy land all to nothing; and
+the change of the pumpkin into a chariot, and the mice into horses, was
+not to be compared for a moment with the transmogrification of Honor
+O'Callaghan into Mrs. Dobbs.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Honor O'callaghan, by Mary Russell Mitford
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