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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78945 ***
+
+ EACH VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY.
+
+
+
+
+ COLLECTION
+
+ OF
+
+ BRITISH AUTHORS
+
+ TAUCHNITZ EDITION.
+
+
+ VOL. 809.
+
+ MAXWELL DREWITT BY F. G. TRAFFORD
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. 1.
+
+
+ LEIPZIG: BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ.
+
+ PARIS: C. REINWALD, 15, RUE DES SAINTS PÈRES.
+
+ _This Collection
+ is published with copyright for Continental circulation, but all
+ purchasers are earnestly requested not to introduce the volumes into
+ England or into any British Colony._
+
+
+
+
+ COLLECTION
+
+ OF
+
+ BRITISH AUTHORS.
+
+ VOL. 809.
+
+
+ MAXWELL DREWITT BY F. G. TRAFFORD.
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+ MAXWELL DREWITT.
+ A NOVEL.
+
+
+ BY
+
+ F. G. TRAFFORD,
+
+ AUTHOR OF “GEORGE GEITH,” ETC.
+
+ _COPYRIGHT EDITION._
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. I.
+
+
+ LEIPZIG
+
+ BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ
+
+ 1866.
+
+ _The Right of Translation is reserved._
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+ OF VOLUME I.
+
+ Page
+ CHAPTER I. Diamond cut Diamond 1
+ — II. Maxwell’s Little Game 14
+ — III. The Master of Kincorth 33
+ — IV. Coming Home 50
+ — V. Peacemaking 62
+ — VI. At the Hustings 76
+ — VII. The Result of the Poll 93
+ — VIII. Not Dead 113
+ — IX. Mrs. Drewitt understands 125
+ — X. Maxwell’s Engagements 142
+ — XI. Warned 158
+ — XII. Son and Heir 172
+ — XIII. Maxwell’s Improvements 187
+ — XIV. Next 203
+ — XV. Man and Beast 218
+ — XVI. Poor Jenny 230
+ — XVII. Master Harold 243
+ — XVIII. A Little Political Economy 260
+ — XIX. Durrow 278
+ — XX. A Little Leap 294
+ — XXI. Help 307
+
+
+
+
+ MAXWELL DREWITT.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ Diamond cut Diamond.
+
+
+“Confoundedly unlucky for you, Max.”
+
+“Truth, though you spoke it, my boy.”
+
+Having uttered which civil reply, Mr. Maxwell Drewitt flung the fag-end
+of a cigar he had been gnawing out of the window, lit another, and
+commenced smoking like a chimney.
+
+I wonder, reader, what opinion you, looking into that little
+sitting-room, would be inclined to form concerning the two men who
+tenanted it—what sort of character you would naturally attribute to
+each—what precise road through life you might think it most probable
+they would respectively follow.
+
+That tall one lolling on the sofa will, if you ask his name, answer,
+“Tim Ryan, at your service;” whilst the younger man, supposing you put
+the same question to him, would first inquire, “What the deuce business
+it was of yours?” and finally give in to the fact, that people did call
+him Maxwell Drewitt, nephew to Archibald Drewitt, Esquire, of Kincorth,
+near Duranmore, Connemara, Galway, Ireland.
+
+It is the story of Maxwell Drewitt’s life which I am about to try to
+tell, and I must ask you before we go further, to look attentively at
+him, and at the man whom for lack of a better word must be called his
+friend.
+
+There they sit in the sunlight, in the parlour of Mr. Ryan’s house,
+which is a long, low, two-storey, whitewashed cottage, standing a little
+back from the highroad leading to Duranmore. There they are for you to
+study at your leisure. Ryan fair; Drewitt dark; the former grey-eyed,
+reddish haired, wide-mouthed, and eight-and-twenty; the latter nearly
+six years younger, slightly made, and rather under than over the middle
+height, with dark eyes, dark complexion, and regular features.
+
+Nothing very remarkable, you think, about either of them in face, dress,
+circumstances, or expression.
+
+Perhaps you may judge that Ryan is inclined to mirth, whilst Drewitt
+affects gravity; that Max has more brains than Tim, and Tim a better
+temper than Max; but still, notwithstanding Ryan turns his eyes at times
+in a way which is not pleasant, and although when Drewitt speaks he has
+a peculiar and most ungraceful knack of not moving his lips like other
+people, you see nothing evil in either face.
+
+Look again, look steadily, and be sure. Nothing evil? No, decidedly not;
+and this time you are certain of the accuracy of your observation.
+
+All of which only proves that, spite of Lavater, faces are oftentimes
+great lies. They are the paper-money of society, for which, on demand,
+there frequently proves to be no gold in the human coffer.
+
+Maxwell Drewitt’s face, at any rate, was a lie, for it told no
+unpleasant tales about his character. There was nothing disagreeable in
+its expression; there was no shadow of evil in his eyes, and yet the
+person that knew him best perhaps on earth—his uncle—once declared, “the
+man who trusted Maxwell Drewitt twice was a fool.”
+
+He had been that fool, so it is fair to suppose him a competent judge in
+the matter.
+
+Wherever Maxwell Drewitt had been born; under whatsoever circumstances
+he had been brought up; had he been the son of a bishop, or the heir of
+a duke, there can be no reasonable doubt but that he would have turned
+out just as bad a man, though, perhaps, a man differently bad.
+
+With Timothy Ryan the case was different. It seemed as though Nature had
+hardly been able to decide what to make of him; that she had hesitated
+between an honest man and a rogue; and that while she remained
+irresolute, training and nurture took the matter into their own hands,
+and did the worst for him they could.
+
+He himself was wont to declare he was as honest as he could afford to
+be; and if such were the case we can only suppose that the smallness of
+his capital restricted his expenditure of probity and fair dealing to
+almost a minimum sum per annum.
+
+There ensued a long pause after the two remarks I have recorded, during
+which the younger man puffed the smoke of his cigar out into the summer
+air, and the elder toyed with the tassels of the window-curtains and
+looked forth upon Duranmore Bay.
+
+“Confoundedly unlucky,” he at length repeated, bringing his eyes back
+from the sea and the mountains, and stretching one long leg across a
+neighbouring chair—“confoundedly unlucky, indeed.”
+
+“You have made that remark three times,” answered Mr. Drewitt, “and I do
+not see that it grows any less true by repetition, for which reason let
+us quit talking about the matter. If I am not at Kincorth I shall be
+elsewhere. We must always be someplace, Tim; on the earth, or in it.
+What’s done is done, and there is no use fretting over it. When one door
+is shut, another is open. The thing that has been predestined from the
+beginning of time must come to pass before the end of it. Are not those
+your sentiments?”
+
+“Yes, but then we never know what has been predestined till it actually
+happens; and this cursed marriage has not come off yet. Though I am a
+firm fatalist, still I never leave anything for fate to do that I can do
+for myself, and should advise you ditto. Can’t you scotch the wheel,
+Max?”
+
+“I? No,” replied the other.
+
+“Nor loosen a screw, nor upset the coach matrimonial, nor—nor do
+anything, my son?”
+
+“Not a thing,” said Mr. Drewitt out of one side of his mouth.
+
+“Could you not go to London and marry her yourself?”
+
+“And saddle myself with a poor wife, and in due time a tribe of hungry
+brats, leaving my worthy uncle at liberty to marry any one else whom he
+might take it into his wise head to fancy. No thank you, Tim, I am
+rather too wide awake for that. Let him bring home his young wife; I
+won’t try to prevent him.”
+
+“They say she is pretty, Max, as well as young,” remarked Mr. Ryan. “She
+will wind him round her finger. There will be some stir at the old place
+when she comes over.”
+
+“Yes, the same stir there always has been,” said Maxwell Drewitt with a
+malicious smile, “a rustling of bills, and clamour of duns, a rumour of
+writs and dread of bailiffs. I wish the lady joy of her bargain. She
+will see hundreds going out, but not a sixpence will she ever be able to
+keep in her purse. She will have to pay the servants’ wages with
+promises, and manage her housekeeping on credit, and turn her silk gowns
+three times. She will be the scapegoat in trouble, the stay at home in
+pleasure. She will have to teach Willy and Katty, and fight it out with
+Sue. She will have no excitement from year’s end to year’s end, for it
+is not likely she can either drink or hunt. Altogether, Mrs. Archibald
+Drewitt of Kincorth will have an agreeable life of it, and if she were
+the devil I pity her.”
+
+At that Ryan looked up. “You pity her?” he repeated slowly and
+doubtingly, for he knew his companion seldom pitied any but those he was
+resolved should ere long require an abundance of the article from some
+one. “You pity her?”
+
+“Yes, faith,” answered the other; “I know what Kincorth has been to us;
+I know what it will be to her. But hang it, Ryan, let us quit talking
+about this new martyr; put a cigar in your mouth and shut up.”
+
+“They say,” continued Mr. Ryan, unheeding his friend’s polite request,
+“that your uncle intends settling Kincorth upon her.”
+
+For a moment Maxwell Drewitt remained silent, while his face changed and
+darkened; then he answered—
+
+“Likely enough. The man’s in love, you know.”
+
+“So he may be,” replied Ryan, “but justice is justice for all that; and
+it is not justice to cut you out of the house and demesne for ever.”
+
+“And a day,” finished the smoker; “but bless your soul, it may just as
+well be decided, now that I am never to be a farthing the better for any
+Drewitt living or dead, except myself. It must have come to this sooner
+or later, and I say it is better sooner, than later.”
+
+“Then how am I to be paid?” inquired the other. At which question Mr.
+Maxwell Drewitt raised his eyebrows and shrugged his shoulders and
+looked full in his friend’s face while he laughed aloud.
+
+“What the devil is amusing you?” asked Ryan angrily.
+
+“So you were waiting to be paid out of Kincorth, were you?” answered Mr.
+Drewitt. “You would have been content to run barefoot till Archibald
+Drewitt dropped off his shoes some fine winter morning following the
+hounds, or slipped his feet out of them after a night’s hard drinking
+preparatory to taking a sound sleep in Eversbeg Abbey. Laugh!—it is
+enough to make a cat laugh to think of such patience.”
+
+“I was not waiting for his death,” retorted Ryan. “I thought he would do
+something for you before long—make some suitable provision for the next
+heir.”
+
+“You chanced to be damnably out in your thought, then,” replied the
+younger man; “that is all the remark I have to offer on the subject.”
+
+“Well, then, how am I to be paid?” repeated Mr. Ryan. “You owe me more
+than I can afford to lose, Max, and——”
+
+“Don’t trouble yourself to make a speech,” interrupted Drewitt, “there
+is no audience; you want to know how you are to be paid. I’ll pay you.
+You perhaps want to know when. Within twelve months. You may further
+desire to know how, but that is my business, not yours. Now let us talk
+about something else.”
+
+“If you have not much gold, you have lots of brass,” remarked the other:
+“you borrow and borrow and borrow, and then say I am not to ask a
+question about repayment.”
+
+“Are you going to dun me, Ryan?”
+
+“I do not want to dun you; I only wish to know how I am to be paid.”
+
+“I have told you I will pay you within twelve months from this present
+hour.”
+
+“But how? How is it possible?”
+
+“Mr. Timothy Ryan,” broke in his friend, “there is only one way in which
+a man without a pound note in his pocket can possibly pay his debts
+honourably—with an ounce of lead. If you would choose that settlement
+between us I can have no possible objection to such an arrangement; but
+if, on the other hand, you prefer taking your principal and interest in
+the coin of the realm you must wait my time, and my time is a year from
+this date.”
+
+“Have your year, then,” said the other, sulkily. “I don’t want to press
+you. I only——”
+
+“That’s right,” answered Mr. Drewitt, as his friend paused. “Now let us
+talk about something else.”
+
+“What else? The election?”
+
+“Thank you. I hear enough about that up at the house. The very name of
+it drives me away. I am sick and tired to death of the whole confounded
+humbug;” and as he concluded, the young man rose from his chair, placed
+a somewhat shabby hat jauntily on his head, and prepared to take his
+departure.
+
+“Stop a minute,” entreated Ryan. “You know the seat is to be contested
+this time, and pretty hotly too. Sache is not going to walk over the
+course as Abbott did. You are old enough to take some decided part on
+your own account. Which party do you side with?”
+
+“Really, I have never thought about the matter; but I will now. Let me
+see—who is my uncle for?”
+
+“Sache, of course.”
+
+“Then I am for Ryan, of course,” returned Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“May we count upon your assistance?” asked Ryan eagerly.
+
+“I do not know,” answered the younger man. “Any good likely to come of
+it?” he inquired, after a moment’s pause.
+
+“What is your figure?” said Ryan. (Among friends, you see, reader, much
+ceremony can be dispensed with.) “What is your figure?”
+
+“That place of Lynch’s has just fallen in—that place near Eversbeg—round
+the headland, I mean—between the abbey and the shore.”
+
+“Oh, that! It is promised to Hunter, a Scotch fellow. He talked about
+building a good house on it.”
+
+“Did he? Well, talk’s cheaper than building, any day. It is a nice farm
+though, and you can just mention to Waller that I like it, and that
+Hunter is a Sacheite. I would take it without a fine, on lease of
+Waller’s life. You might think it over. Good-bye.” And without waiting
+for an answer, Mr. Drewitt strolled leisurely out of the house, and
+wended his way towards home.
+
+“It is my belief,” remarked Mr. Ryan, as he watched his visitor’s
+departure, “it is my belief, Max, that you are the making of as great a
+scoundrel as ever broke bread.”
+
+And considering Mr. Timothy Ryan was a long way from being a honest man
+himself, this remark may be regarded as a solemn truth, for Mr. Maxwell
+Drewitt’s friend was by no means biased in his judgment, either by the
+prejudices of superior virtue or by any contracted ideas as to the
+number of vices requisite to form a scoundrel.
+
+It was simply the confession of faith of a man who stuck at few things,
+concerning the character of a man who stuck at none; and when he had
+given utterance to his opinion in the sentence recorded, Timothy Ryan,
+Esq., solicitor, felt himself wonderfully relieved, and at liberty to
+retire from the window to a table covered with books and papers and
+letters and deeds and leases, where he was soon up to his ears in
+business.
+
+He had not been writing for more than fifteen minutes, however, when
+Maxwell Drewitt re-appeared.
+
+He came lounging into the room with the same immoveable expression on
+his countenance, and the eternal cigar between his lips—for Maxwell
+Drewitt lived smoking; he did nothing without either a pipe or a weed in
+his mouth, and the principal reason perhaps why he liked tobacco was,
+because his uncle detested it.
+
+“I say, Ryan,” began the young man, taking one hand out of his pocket in
+order to knock the ash off his cigar, “I say, Ryan, lend me a pen and
+sheet of paper, will you, for five minutes? I want to send a letter off
+to-day, and it will be too late for post, I find, if I go back to
+Kincorth. There, don’t disturb yourself—that will do.”
+
+And as he concluded, the speaker pulled a chair up to the opposite end
+of the table, dragged the writing materials his friend looked out,
+towards him, and then, after sitting biting his nails for a few seconds,
+shaded the top of the sheet with his hand, dipped his pen in the ink,
+muttered an oath about the latter being so infernally thick, and began.
+
+Busily the quill at the lawyer’s desk went scratching over the foolscap;
+rapidly was line after line completed; hurriedly were erasures made and
+other sentences substituted; but spite of all his hurry, Mr. Ryan
+managed to keep an eye on his visitor, and tried to make out what he was
+writing.
+
+He might as well have spared himself the trouble, for even when Maxwell
+did lift his hand for a moment from the top of the page to the end, that
+he might finish biting his nails down to the quick, Mr. Ryan found it
+impossible to read his friend’s letter upside down.
+
+“Never mind,” he thought, “I shall know all about it one of these days.
+Judging from his face, he means no good to some poor devil.”
+
+Mr. Ryan was right, and if you, dear reader, would like to watch the
+progress of Mr. Maxwell Drewitt’s little game, we can walk round to the
+other end of the table, and read the epistle over his shoulder.
+
+ [PRIVATE.]
+ “Inchnagawn Cottage, near Duranmore,
+ June 11th, 18—.
+
+ “DEAR SIR,—I suppose you have heard ere this that my uncle is going to
+ be married to a young lady named Dyak, a daughter of Colonel Dyak, of
+ London, but conclude that his intention of settling Kincorth upon her
+ will be as new to you as it was until last night to me.
+
+ “I am sure it will seem but natural to you that I should wish to
+ prevent this, as you are aware that by the terms of my grandfather’s
+ will, my father, the elder son, was disinherited, and that my sisters
+ and self were consequently left dependent on the generosity, or
+ justice, of my uncle.
+
+ “You will at once see the effect of such a settlement. It would cut me
+ off for ever from all hope of possessing this portion of my
+ grandfather’s property; as in case of my uncle dying without issue,
+ Kincorth would pass absolutely to Mrs. Drewitt, who would thus be left
+ at liberty to contract a second marriage, and to will the house and
+ demesne to whom she pleased.
+
+ “Further, it would render your chances of repayment almost indefinite,
+ Kincorth being the gem of the property; indeed, the result of the
+ whole arrangement would be to place Kincorth beyond the reach of Mr.
+ Drewitt’s creditors; and though there is no doubt but that he would
+ bitterly repent his imprudence in after years, at the present moment
+ any remonstrance on my part would only tend to produce an estrangement
+ between us.
+
+ “I want nothing except what is fair, and certainly think as the lady
+ has no fortune of her own, that some settlement is desirable. But an
+ equitable settlement is one thing, and making over an entire estate to
+ a stranger, another.
+
+ “However, I now leave the matter entirely in your hands, to act as you
+ think best, _for you are the only person who can interfere with
+ advantage to all parties_, and shall only beg that you will in any
+ case consider this letter as strictly confidential.
+
+ “Trusting your health is re-established,
+
+ “I remain, dear sir,
+ “Yours faithfully,
+ “MAXWELL DREWITT.
+
+ “P.S.—I am at present staying with my friend Mr. Thomas Ryan, and
+ shall feel obliged by your directing me here _under cover_ to him.”
+
+“So you have finished at last, Max?” remarked the attorney, as his
+visitor commenced folding up his letter. “I think the sky must be going
+to fall when you take to the quill. Surely you have not gone and done
+it?”
+
+“Gone and done what?” demanded the younger man, hurriedly.
+
+“Put your foot in your fortune—made a fool of yourself—fallen in love.”
+
+“Fallen in nonsense!” retorted Mr. Drewitt. “No, Tim, I’m not in love
+with anybody, unless it be with myself.”
+
+“Ah! that’s best. You will have no rivals there,” replied the lawyer,
+which remark Maxwell affected not to hear.
+
+“You are not writing love-letters, then?” persisted Mr. Ryan.
+
+“Not I, faith; the sort of love-letters I want to fall in with are money
+letters. Thank God, I am not such a fool as you are, Tim.”
+
+“You are thankful for small mercies,” was the retort, uttered as Mr.
+Drewitt reached the door. “Are you off in a huff? Well, good-bye—but
+stay—when shall I see you again about the election?”
+
+“Damn the election!” replied the young hypocrite. “Do you think I have
+nothing to interest me but drunken voters and lying candidates? I’ll
+come when it suits me; and besides, I have not yet made up my mind
+whether I will be your man or not.”
+
+“You had better, then, lose no time about making it up,” snapped back
+Ryan; “for Sache and his people are in the field already, and we ought
+to be there too.”
+
+“That is your affair,” said Drewitt, as he passed out into the hall.
+“Adieu, my dear fellow, _au revoir!_” And this time he banged the door
+after him and was fairly off.
+
+“Some day,” soliloquized the lawyer, “some day, Maxwell Drewitt, I shall
+pay you out in your own coin. Some day when you stand in no need of me,
+nor I of you, then we shall be equals—then we shall have many an old
+score to settle. Meanwhile——”
+
+He went back to his work, leaving the remainder of the sentence
+unspoken; and as it would be but waste of time for us to follow his
+thoughts, we will step out into the bright sunshine, and track Mr.
+Drewitt’s indolent footsteps home.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ Maxwell’s Little Game.
+
+
+Very leisurely Mr. Maxwell Drewitt lounged along, for it was part of
+that young man’s creed to work rather with his head than with his body.
+In that caldron he was eternally brewing something which turned out food
+for him, and poison for other people.
+
+From childhood he had been plotting and scheming, and by dint of long
+thought and care and study he had finally reached almost the top step of
+the ladder of hypocrisy, and was, as Ryan said, “the making of as great
+a scoundrel as ever lived.”
+
+So he went on his way very slowly, with his hands plunged in his
+pockets. Kicking the small stones ruthlessly before him, he went along
+the road leading to Duranmore, where, having posted his letter, he
+turned aside from the regular thoroughfare and descended to the beach,
+along which there was a path, though a circuitous one, home.
+
+Sometimes he looked over the bay; but more generally he kept his eyes
+riveted on the ground.
+
+Written on the sands he saw the story of his future life traced
+out—riches, prosperity, success; he beheld them all. There were
+obstacles, but he crushed them; impediments, but he removed them; foes,
+but he annihilated them.
+
+“Yes, yes,” he cried at last, halting suddenly, and looking away towards
+the hills that rose to heaven—“Yes, yes, Kincorth, you shall yet be
+mine—you and many a fair property beside; but you in especial, because I
+have sworn that neither man nor devil shall keep you from me. And shall
+a woman? No, before God!”
+
+And the veins came swelling up in his forehead as he stretched out one
+clenched hand towards Kincorth, and registered his oath.
+
+There lay his home—his home where he lived a dependent—which was his,
+only so long as his uncle’s charity chose to give him the shelter of its
+roof.
+
+Look at it, reader, intently as he did, for it was destined to bring
+agony unto many hearts, to curse many lives, to peril some souls.
+
+Kincorth! there was not a lovelier spot in Ireland; and is not that
+almost equivalent to saying there was not a lovelier spot in the wide
+world?
+
+Halfway up a hill stood the house, backed by dark plantations,
+surrounded by woods and long belts of trees, and verdant fields and
+trickling streams. It was built of the blue granite for which Galway is
+noted, and some Drewitt had in other days erected a porch of black
+marble, around the pillars of which wreathed roses and fuchsias and
+myrtles.
+
+There was the flower-garden, with its hedges of sweetbriar and
+evergreens, with its baskets of wickerwork filled with mignonette.
+
+There were rose-trees covered with buds, and little wild Scotch bushes
+that crept close to the ground, and strewed it with a carpet of white
+and yellow leaves. There were perfumed syringas, Italian broom, and
+barberry-trees, and beds of tulips.
+
+There was a fountain in the centre where the supply of water never
+failed, and creepers and passionflowers and honeysuckles grew about the
+inclosure at their own sweet will.
+
+Kincorth had also its glen and waterfall, and at the top of the fall
+there stood a dilapidated summer-house, from which you could see away
+and away over the sea and the land. The trackless ocean and the distant
+mountains, the villages and hamlets below, and the dashing water near at
+hand—all were visible from this place, which was made of fir, and
+ornamented with shells, and shaded with sycamore and chesnut trees.
+
+Then there was the old entrance, built of the same dark stone as the
+house, half covered with wild white roses, whilst the lodge looked
+brilliant in its scarlet deckings of pyracanthus, the blossoms of which
+mixed among the white buds that were straggling about everywhere, and
+trying to effect an entrance even at the latticed windows.
+
+There were holes in the roof and breakages in the wall; but trees shaded
+the one, and wild flowers concealed the other; and Kincorth, with all
+its dilapidations—with its ruined buildings, and trailing brambles, and
+unmown grass, and unpruned trees—looked beautiful in the dancing
+sunshine.
+
+“And it was this place he wanted to settle on her, and secure from me,”
+muttered Maxwell, as he entered the drive, across which the branches of
+the dark trees met and formed a sort of cathedral roof; and again he
+paused, and with arms folded across his chest, with his lips tightly
+pressed together, and his dark brows bent down looked up at the house
+once more.
+
+Look at him now, reader. Would you like to be an obstacle in his path?
+Would you care to be a thing in his way? Cannot you see he would stamp
+you into the earth as he stamps his heel into the gravel? Would it not
+be an awful thing to have to plead to that man for mercy?—to hear him
+answer you with that mocking devil in his eyes, out of those thin,
+relentless lips?
+
+He is young now: what will he be when he is old? He is just starting on
+life’s journey: what will he be when the road has been traversed—when
+the world has hardened him—when experience has matured him? If you come
+on to the end, you shall see what he is like when the raven hair is
+gray, and the keen eyes dulled, and the devil within satisfied—you shall
+see. Meantime he stands with the evening sunbeams making their way
+through the trees and falling aslant on his figure, and lighting up the
+green and beautiful sward and the plotting, scheming, wary man whose
+heart was full of bitterness, whose soul was full of hate.
+
+Kincorth should have been his! If primogeniture were worth anything—if
+being the eldest son of the eldest son entitled a man to name and land
+and houses—Maxwell Drewitt ought to have been master of Kincorth, and
+Archibald should have been eking out existence somewhere else as best he
+could.
+
+What had George Drewitt done that his father should cut him off? In the
+natural course George Drewitt would have succeeded Nicholas Drewitt,
+Maxwell’s grandfather, save for one deadly sin which he committed. He
+married a nobody, and a Roman Catholic; and though he tried to keep his
+indiscretion a secret, it came finally to his father’s ears, who cut him
+off with a shilling on the spot.
+
+“I would as soon you had married the devil, sir!” thundered the old man;
+and before very long poor Nicholas Drewitt found he might almost as soon
+have mated with that objectionable personage as with his wife, who,
+fortunately perhaps for all parties, died in giving birth to her fourth
+child, leaving George Drewitt at liberty to marry again if he pleased.
+
+But George Drewitt did not please; he lived to get his shilling
+certainly, and to see his brother Archibald owner of Kincorth; he lived
+to move himself and his children back as guests to the old place which
+he had expected to possess; and then he quietly slipped out of this
+world, leaving Maxwell and his sisters to be provided for by their
+uncle, a man full of good intentions, who offered to see to them as if
+they were his own boys and girls.
+
+“I promise you, George, so long as I have sixpence they shall share it.
+I swear it, and you may die happy,” he said to the dying man; who,
+whether he died happy or not, accepted the promise and departed, leaving
+Archibald Drewitt to perform his good intentions if he could.
+
+It is something more than probable that the owner of Kincorth fulfilled
+his promise strictly to the letter, though his own embarrassments and
+wretched mismanagement made it impossible for him to carry out the
+scheme he had proposed to himself in the spirit.
+
+“I will put aside a certain amount,” he determined, “and devote it to
+Maxwell’s education and to portioning his sisters.” A good resolution,
+and perhaps only fair, but one which Mr. Drewitt found he could never
+carry into practice.
+
+He would have done just the same by his own children; he would have
+planned all manner of good things for their benefit, and then he would
+have let them grow up as he let his nephews and nieces grow
+up—uneducated, untrained, unprovided for.
+
+The curse of the Drewitts, improvidence, was on him, and the consequence
+was that, though Maxwell Drewitt and his sisters had food and shelter
+out of their grandfather’s property, they had little more.
+
+Maxwell was not sent to college nor the girls to school. Ready money was
+one of those things which Mr. Drewitt only knew by name; of himself he
+had no acquaintance with it. That George Drewitt’s family did not grow
+up idiots was attributable rather to their own natural cleverness than
+to any advantages of society or education provided for them by their
+uncle. Kincorth was swamped with debt. Every blade of grass, every ear
+of corn, was due to some one ere ever it lifted its head above ground;
+the description given to Ryan by Maxwell of the state of things at his
+uncle’s was not exaggerated in the slightest, and while duns and
+bailiffs besieged the old home of the Drewitts, Maxwell looked on, and
+gnashed his teeth, and thought how, if _he_ had the management, Kincorth
+should soon be clear of debt and the Drewitts rear their heads in the
+county once again.
+
+From his mother he had inherited a clear clever head—a head calculated
+to look closely and warily after the interests of No. 1. His hospitality
+would not have carried him away; his generosity would never have made
+him a poorer man; and it was natural perhaps for such a temper to be
+irritated with the senseless prodigality of his uncle’s _ménage_, and to
+feel more angry at what Mr. Drewitt had left undone than grateful for
+that which he had performed.
+
+Above all, Maxwell Drewitt had been brought up a martyr; since boyhood
+he had thought his uncle a usurper, himself the lawful heir. With that
+love for the first-born which is so distinguishing a feature of the
+Irish, his nurse had always regarded him as “wronged,” and had taught
+him to believe himself so. We read in a very ancient book that when
+Jacob put his hand on the head of Ephraim, Joseph was displeased, and
+just so the mass of the poorer population, much as they liked Archibald
+Drewitt, still considered that the boy had been hardly done by, and that
+he was the rightful owner of all the broad acres that went sloping to
+the sea.
+
+With this idea Maxwell grew up: he had been done out of the estate by
+his grandfather; he was being kept out of it by his uncle, but the day
+must come when the property would revert to him. He was the heir.
+Kincorth must eventually return to the only son of the eldest son—and
+then—
+
+Then all at once came the news that Mr. Drewitt was about to marry.
+
+“And if he marry,” thought Maxwell Drewitt, as he lay awake and tossed
+about from side to side of his bed; “and if he marry—and if he have
+sons—where am I?”
+
+That was the question Archibald Drewitt ought to have considered when he
+adopted the children, but which he had never thought about, first or
+last.
+
+“What was to become of them?” girls who could never earn enough to buy
+shoes to their feet? A young man who could ride across country—bring
+down his bird—dance all night—walk all day—but who knew nothing likely
+to put a guinea in his pocket—what was to become of him?—“What was to
+become of them?”
+
+I echo the question which Maxwell Drewitt put to himself as he lay
+thinking out all manner of disagreeable and evil thoughts in the
+darkness.
+
+All the stories he had read and scoffed at of self-made men came into
+his head. “Why should not a gentleman’s son do well too? Why should not
+a Drewitt and an Irishman make money if he could? What the devil could
+there be in those English people that made them seem able to turn the
+very dirt under their feet to gold? Could _he_ do nothing? Was there no
+El Dorado to which he might turn his steps? If he had Kincorth, could he
+not make money out of it? And if he tried the same scheme with any other
+place, might he not do well with that?”
+
+And Maxwell Drewitt sprang out of bed as he thought of this, and looked
+down over the trees, away and away towards Duranmore, which lay by the
+sea-shore, looking dark and disconsolate in the first dawn of morning.
+
+He looked beyond Duranmore—at something he saw in his mind’s eye, but
+which certainly his outward vision could not have presented to him. “I
+will have that,” he said, and he went back to bed again and fell asleep
+as calmly and peacefully as a child.
+
+From that night the young man formed his plans. Ready money he, like his
+uncle, had none, and like his uncle also he was considerably in debt. He
+had no property save some forty acres of freehold land that came to him
+through his maternal grandfather, and which, having been let during his
+minority to a farmer, were now available if Maxwell chose to give him
+the usual notice. The land, however, was poor and unproductive, and
+though there was a house on the ground, it had been left to go to rack
+and ruin for so long a time that it was almost uninhabitable.
+
+So far the future was unpromising enough. Poor and involved, with no
+profession, with no cash in hand, with no property save a neglected
+piece of barren land, value certainly not exceeding 25_l._ a-year—how
+could the man push his way to fortune?
+
+It was not a cheerful prospect for any one, but still Maxwell Drewitt
+looked out over it bravely, and hour by hour, and day by day, perfected
+his schemes.
+
+He would be idle no longer—he would work, he would be a rich man, when
+Archibald Drewitt was a beggar. Kincorth should NOT pass away from him.
+His uncle should yet be glad to give over the whole place and receive an
+allowance from his nephew. It would take him, say ten years to compass
+this end, and then he would paper and paint Kincorth from garret to
+cellar; he would give every old servant notice; he would keep the
+gardens and grounds in such order that Kincorth should be the talk of
+all the county; and when he had got his own again he would marry—he
+would marry birth, money, and rank, and take his leisure under the
+shadow of his vine and his fig-tree.
+
+In the middle of this day-dream came Ryan’s announcement of his uncle’s
+intention to settle Kincorth upon his wife; and it was the thought of
+the possibility of such a settlement being effected that made Maxwell
+Drewitt stand still as he entered the drive, and look eagerly, longingly
+over Kincorth.
+
+There came a day when he looked over it with different eyes, when the
+netted sunbeams fell aslant on the figure of a bowed and broken man;
+when, satiated with possession and wearied of all he had struggled and
+sinned to obtain, Maxwell Drewitt walked feebly under the shadow of
+those self-same trees, thinking not of this world, wherein he had laid
+house to house and acre to acre, but with a terrible dread, with a
+horrible affright, of that other, to which the treasures of earth may
+not be carried.
+
+But on the summer evening of which I am speaking youth was present and
+age afar off. He was strong, he knew neither ache nor pain, life was all
+before him, it was the spring of his year, the time of budding promise,
+of fearless hope. He had no dread of anything save of Kincorth being
+placed beyond his reach, and he had but little fear of that, for when he
+finished his reverie, and walked on towards the house, he muttered—
+
+“I think I have scotched that wheel. Old Turner has too tight a hold
+over my good uncle to let that cock fight. I would give five pounds to
+see the old fellow’s face when he reads my letter.” And Maxwell Drewitt
+laughed aloud as he pictured to himself the Quaker’s consternation on
+receipt of his communication.
+
+Had Samuel Turner been anything except a “friend” he would have relieved
+his mind by swearing; as it was he merely said “infamous,” and went
+straight off to his solicitor.
+
+After a consultation with that gentleman, who comforted him exceedingly,
+he sent back the following reply to his young correspondent:—
+
+ “Ashton-under-Lyne, June —, 18—.
+
+ “FRIEND MAXWELL,
+
+ “Thee hast done quite right, and acted (an unusual thing for youths of
+ thine age and country) with sound sense and good feeling. Be satisfied
+ I shall do the best I can for thee and thy sisters. I grieve that thy
+ uncle, a sensible man, should think at his time of life of marrying a
+ young wife, and she a fashionable woman from London.
+
+ “Thy sincere friend,
+ “SAMUEL TURNER.
+
+ “If thee should turn thy attention at any time to business, I would
+ try to advance thy views if in my power.”
+
+Which letter, coming to Mr. Ryan amongst a number of others, was opened
+by him in mistake, and read right through by intention. He read it once,
+he read it twice, and then laying it down, he said to himself, “So this
+is your dodge, Maxwell Drewitt, is it?—this is the first step.” And when
+Maxwell himself appeared he handed him the epistle, adding, “You are a
+deal cleverer than I thought you. You will—”
+
+“What the devil, sir, do you mean by opening my letters?” burst forth
+his visitor, the blood rushing up warm and red even through his dark
+complexion. “I tell you what it is, Ryan,” he went on, “for many a less
+thing than this a fellow has had a bullet in his skull.”
+
+“Hold your tongue, my son, and don’t talk like a fool,” interrupted Mr.
+Ryan. “How the deuce am I to know a letter is not for me till I have
+read it? On my honour I was half way through the thing before it
+occurred to me there was any blunder.”
+
+“I don’t believe you,” said Drewitt.
+
+“For less than that many a man has been sent into kingdom-come at twelve
+paces,” retorted Ryan; “but there is one blessed comfort in the affair,
+which is, I don’t care whether you believe me or not. There now, boy,
+sit down, and don’t make such a confounded row about the matter. Honour
+among thieves, you know; and I am not going to turn informer.”
+
+“You are an unprincipled scoundrel,” Maxwell persisted, “to open another
+person’s letter.”
+
+“Oh, for Heaven’s sake! drop the saint,” exclaimed his friend. “Maxwell
+Drewitt talking about principle, and Satan reproving sin, always seem to
+me to sail together in the same boat. I tell you I did NOT open the
+letter of malice afore-thought. Now I have made all the apology I intend
+to make, and if you do not like to take it you may leave it.”
+
+“When a letter comes to you under cover, you cannot open it by
+accident.”
+
+“Hang the lad!” exclaimed Ryan, pettishly, “the thing did not come under
+cover at all. There is the whole cursed concern.” And he flung letter
+and envelope to their rightful owner, who, turning up the latter, read:
+
+ “MAXWELL DREWITT,
+ “Care of T. Ryan,
+ “Inchnagawn Cottage,
+ “near Duranmore, Galway, Ireland.
+
+“What an idiot the old fellow must be. I told him as—”
+
+“I know all you said as well as if I had seen your letter,” interrupted
+Ryan. “Besides, what does it matter about my knowing you wrote to
+Turner? Whenever I heard Mrs. Drewitt’s jointure was cut down, I should
+have been sure you had put your foot in it somehow. Indeed, Max Drewitt,
+you are a very promising young man, and your uncle has every right to be
+proud of you.”
+
+“He is proud of nothing just at present, I fancy,” answered the other,
+recovering his temper at this neatly-turned compliment, and flinging
+himself into a chair as he spoke. “I left him wishing all Quakers and
+lawyers in the hottest of hot quarters. We send for our letters, you
+know, and so get them earlier than you do; and you may depend the
+opening of the bag made an uncommon fuss at Kincorth this morning.”
+
+“Let the cat out?” suggested Mr. Ryan.
+
+“No, faith. If it had I might have walked. As it was I had nothing but
+black looks and short answers. Turner has lost no time about the affair
+though, has he?”
+
+“Trust a Quaker for that,” said Mr. Ryan.
+
+“It seems to me,” remarked Mr. Drewitt, “that a dislike to losing money
+is common to both churchmen and Quakers; but really you should see my
+uncle, he is worth travelling from here to Kincorth to get a sight of.”
+
+“What will he do now?” inquired his companion.
+
+“How should I know? write, I suppose, to his father-in-law elect, and
+tell him unforeseen circumstances, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera, prevent
+his fulfilling his liberal intentions; or he may try to raise money to
+pay off Turner. He could scarcely do it in the time though,” added
+Maxwell, reflectively.
+
+“Scarcely,” acquiesced Ryan. “But now, I say, Max, tell me why is this
+woman marrying your uncle? You declare she is young, pretty,
+well-born—she can therefore scarcely be in her last wonder yet. What is
+the attraction?”
+
+“Kincorth,” sneered his visitor, pulling his chair up to the table as he
+spoke, with a violence which spilt the contents of the lawyer’s tea-cup
+over his hand.
+
+“You don’t think she loves him, then?” persisted the other, as he wiped
+the tea off his sleeve and wristband.
+
+“Why, what on earth should she love him for?” asked Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“I cannot tell—perhaps because he is frank, handsome, generous, amiable.
+Although he is nearly twenty years older than you, Master Maxwell
+Drewitt, I know if I were a woman, which thank heaven I am not, I should
+fall in love with him sooner than with you.”
+
+“You cannot tell what you might do if you were a woman,” answered the
+youth, thus plainly complimented; “but in this case what I tell you is
+true. The Colonel, her father, is poor as a church-mouse; he has this
+daughter single, and no sons; his income dies with him. It follows,
+therefore, that the girls must either marry or starve, and there is
+Kincorth for the one who is left. A pretty little catch it sounds.
+Fifteen thousand a year, with no encumbrance that she knows of, is worth
+looking pretty and pleasant for, eh, Ryan?”
+
+“In theory,” replied Ryan, “but not in fact. If they are playing such a
+game it is a pity they should lose it; my creed is that whatever people
+marry for, whether for love or money, or position or birth, they should
+get it; and they have mistaken the cards over in England if they are
+reckoning on Kincorth as a trump. Suppose, however, Max, that you are
+wrong, and that this Miss Dyak is marrying your uncle not for love of
+Kincorth, but for love of himself.”
+
+“Love of folly!” was the civil answer. “Why, man, you are turning
+spooney all at once.”
+
+“No I am not,” said Ryan. “Mr. Drewitt is still very handsome; he is a
+thoroughbred Irish gentleman, just the sort to take a girl’s fancy.
+Everywhere but at Kincorth he is as lively and talkative as a boy. I do
+not see why she should not love him; and if she do, God help her!”
+
+“And wherefore?” demanded his visitor, who was employing himself in
+cramming hot buttered toast down his throat—“and wherefore?”
+
+“Because love is too valuable and scarce a commodity to be wasted,”
+answered the lawyer, oracularly; “and further, if Miss Dyak be a woman
+who can love, she will probably feel inclined to do her duty, and if she
+do her duty, why God help her again, I say.”
+
+“You mean with Sue?” This was interrogative.
+
+“I mean with everything: all is wrong at Kincorth—master, nephew,
+nieces, servants, labourers, tenants, everything!”
+
+“I’d soon make all right if I had the management,” remarked Maxwell.
+
+“Old maids’ children and bachelors’ wives,” sneered Ryan.
+
+“I keep every soul about the place in order when my uncle is away,”
+returned the other, hotly. “I should like to see the man that would
+disobey my orders if I were master. I’d undertake to tame any dog,
+horse, or woman in a week. But what is the matter with you, Ryan, you
+are as white as a sheet?”
+
+Mr. Ryan did not answer: he got up and walked to the window; after
+standing there for a minute he came back and reseated himself at the
+table.
+
+“What ails you?” persisted his companion, “are you not well?”
+
+“No, I am not,” was the reply. “I feel as weak as a cat at times, and if
+I were standing in the biggest room at Kincorth I should seem
+suffocating when the fit takes me. I don’t intend to work at home at all
+for the future, and I wish you would come and see me at the office,
+after Monday next, when you want to see me.”
+
+“Upon my soul, you are civil. I like that,” said his visitor. “Why do
+you want me to call at the office? Why do you not want me to come here?”
+
+“Because I want my house to be my home after this week,” was the reply.
+
+“You are going to be married!” exclaimed Mr. Drewitt. “Saul is among the
+prophets.”
+
+“I wish I were married,” answered the lawyer, “if only for my poor
+little sister’s sake. She is coming back to me now her aunt is dead, and
+I must shift for her as best I can. That is the reason I want you to
+call at the office. Do you understand?”
+
+“You are afraid I might fall in love with her, I suppose,” laughed
+Maxwell.
+
+“No; but I am afraid, nothing being impossible, of her falling in love
+with you, and,” went on Mr. Ryan, speaking rapidly and, I might almost
+add, fiercely, “as you and I know one another so well that we need not
+stand on ceremony, I may say that although I do not pretend to be either
+a very good or a very scrupulous man, I had rather put the child in her
+grave than give her to you.”
+
+“I do not know what may be the fashion in your rank,” said Maxwell
+Drewitt, “but in ours we do not consider it the thing to refuse our
+sisters till they are asked for, and I shall certainly never ask you for
+yours. It is all very well for me to know you, but Miss Bourke is a
+different affair altogether. When I take to running in double harness it
+shall be with something more thoroughbred. Tit for tat is fair play.
+Never look so cross about being hit back, man. Let us get to business. I
+am your man throughout the election—at least I think I am; and if you
+like, whenever my uncle leaves for England, I will go canvassing.”
+
+“How many voters can you insure?” asked Ryan, “because if you can bring
+nobody but yourself, I don’t know that you will be of much use.”
+
+“Bless my heart, how independent we are all of a sudden!” exclaimed
+young Drewitt. “Shall I go and tell Pryor’s committee you think me a
+bird not worth catching? How would it be with Waller’s agency then? What
+have you got to say to that?”
+
+“Simply what I said before—a single voter is not worth the having, even
+though he be a Drewitt. How many can you bring with you?” And the pair
+looked straight into one another’s eyes as Ryan finished.
+
+Two dogs might have looked in the same way before flying, with hungry
+teeth, each at the throat of his fellow, but the two men drew off. If
+Drewitt had not changed his tone there would have been a quarrel, but
+the young man spied danger, and answered quietly enough—
+
+“That depends on the cash. I can bribe where you could not. I can get
+refractory fellows out of the way. I can do lots of things if you make
+it worth my while. In short, I will do anything you please, on two
+conditions.”
+
+“There was only one the other day,” remarked the lawyer.
+
+“There are two now, though,” was the reply. “First, the farm, which I
+suppose we may call settled; next, I must second Pryor.”
+
+“Why——”
+
+“I have a crow to pluck with Sache, and I can then have it out with
+him,” answered Mr. Drewitt. “Even you have no idea how much I can help
+you if I choose. Pitted against me, my uncle has no chance. He is an
+intruder—a man who has no earthly right to be at Kincorth. He has
+brought me up as his heir until now, and now he takes a young wife to
+himself, so as to cut me out for ever. On principle I am opposing him.
+Contrary to my own interests I am leaving the old ship of the Drewitts.
+If he would only turn me out of the house it would be the best thing
+possible for the Liberal party. Would not it be capital for us? Heavens!
+what fools people are, and what humbug they will swallow!”
+
+Having concluded which complimentary speech relative to the
+understandings of his fellows, the young man stuffed his hand into his
+coat pocket, and produced thence a book, which Ryan seized eagerly.
+
+“There are their voters,” remarked his friend, “and a precious job I had
+to get it. There you have them all—dead, doubtful, and certain. Now how
+many of our own dead can we personate, and how many of their doubtfuls
+can we get?”
+
+“That depends greatly on you; but are we not losing time most
+needlessly? Sache and Munks and Marsden and Tooley and your uncle have
+been hard at work for days past, and here are we, with all the landed
+interests against us, doing nothing—literally nothing.”
+
+“True; but when once I do start I won’t let the grass grow under my
+feet. There has been many an election at Duranmore, but this will cap
+everything. I hear my uncle is going to bring the new mistress of
+Kincorth home right away, and there are to be election balls and dinners
+and Heaven knows what besides, up at the old place. I should have
+thought the excitement of marrying ought to have been enough for him,
+without any extra fuss; but Archibald Drewitt is like no other human
+being on earth.”
+
+“There is not a man in the county much better liked at any rate,”
+remarked Mr. Ryan, drily. “I wish we had him on our side.”
+
+“Stuff!” exclaimed Maxwell; “can’t you take the book and let us get to
+business?”
+
+“It is impossible to refuse a request urged with such politeness,”
+answered the lawyer, moving over to his writing-table, indistinctly
+catching, as he did so, Maxwell Drewitt’s comment, which was, “Damn your
+politeness.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ The Master of Kincorth.
+
+
+Archibald Drewitt, Esq., of Kincorth, was born a mistake. He said so
+himself, and therefore there can be no discourtesy in my repeating the
+observation. Whether different circumstances and a different training
+might have rectified nature’s error, it is hard to say. Circumstances
+and training did nothing for him, and accordingly a mistake he remained
+to the end of the chapter.
+
+“Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel;” that was the pleasant
+programme sketched out for him. “Unstable as water, he did not excel,”
+and he made everybody who had the misfortune to be connected with him,
+miserable in consequence.
+
+“Unstable as water!” Good heavens! how could a man, not, to be a bad
+man, have more said in his dispraise!
+
+Unstable as water, his purposes flowed backwards and forwards
+perpetually. With youth, health, ample means, fair talents, he started
+at six-and-twenty with as fair prospects of happiness as need to be
+possessed by any man. Life was before him,—life with its objects, its
+pleasures, its duties; but the duties he never fulfilled, the pleasures
+he never tasted, the objects he never attained. At twenty-seven
+existence seemed a vast conception; at forty-one it was an unfinished,
+unsatisfactory, miserable failure.
+
+God deliver us, friends, from such a result! God grant that, when the
+noon of our life comes, it may find some work finished, some duty
+discharged, so that as the sorrowful sunset draws near—as the darkening
+twilight and the darker night approach, we may be able to look back on
+the bright mid-day hours without tears of anguish, without the bitterest
+thought humanity knows, of having lost time, which, even with all
+eternity before us, we may never retrieve—never—for ever!
+
+Unstable as water, the force with which the current of his feelings
+hurried him along to an object one moment, was only equalled by the
+violence of the flood by which he was distracted from it the next.
+
+Over the sea of life he floated—a boat without a rudder, a mariner
+without a star—tossed hither and thither by every wave of passion, by
+every caprice and impulse. Almost continually he kept within sight of
+the promised land of peace and comfort and content; but never once, ah!
+never, did he manage to touch its shores.
+
+Always planning, never executing. Always commencing, never completing.
+Always borrowing, never repaying. Always thinking, never acting. Always
+proposing, never performing, he spent the whole of his boyhood, manhood,
+and age in sending down lost opportunities and good intentions to that
+place which is paved with the one and roofed with the other.
+
+It was not, I need scarcely add, that he meant to break his word or
+intended to disappoint any living being; it was merely that his theory
+proved better than his practice, that purposing and promising to do
+everything he finished, like many another, by doing nothing.
+
+Unstable as water, there was not a trait in his character but was
+counteracted by some diametrically opposite peculiarity. He was not
+religious, yet he was superstitious and bigoted. He hated the Roman
+Catholics, yet he was always asking the priest to dinner; he was
+prodigal, but still gave little away; he was impatient, yet bore
+disappointment as calmly as a philosopher; he was popular, yet always at
+feud with some one. He was by turns energetic and indolent, kind and
+harsh, forbearing and provoking. His abstract ideas on the subject of
+obedience were excellent, yet his servants and nieces ran counter to his
+orders before his face. He was a stickler for birth and blood, yet he
+supported with heart and soul Mr. Sache—a parvenu, and blackguard. He
+was honourable, yet he could never pay a debt to the day; his bills had
+always to be lifted by a friend, the interest on his mortgages was
+always falling behind, somebody was for ever suffering through, or being
+embarrassed by him. He loved punctuality, yet he could not keep an
+appointment to the hour. He was never out of hot water, yet he looked as
+well and happy as though care and duns and anxiety were meat and drink
+to him. He never had a settled plan, yet he would not adopt any other
+person’s scheme. He was for ever asking advice and never following it;
+in brief, Maxwell Drewitt described his uncle to a nicety when he said
+that he was “consistent in nothing except his inconsistency.”
+
+But notwithstanding all his faults, Archibald Drewitt was better liked
+than many a better man. He had such frank, gracious manners; he was such
+a thorough gentleman in his ideas, his appearance, his bearing; he had
+such a knack of turning a compliment, of saying pleasant things as if he
+meant them, of implying that the man to whom he was talking at the
+moment was his friend of friends—his friend beyond all other friends,
+that it was impossible to resist him, as impossible to remain cold and
+calculating in his presence, as it is for ice to keep from thawing in
+the sun. Let a creditor be ever so angry, an interview with Mr. Drewitt
+satisfied him. Those who had made vows concerning paper lent their name
+to the owner of Kincorth; even Samuel Turner, an Englishman, a Quaker,
+and a merchant, who, for his sins, had once enjoyed the hospitality of
+the Irish gentleman, did bills for him, and was wont to lie awake whole
+nights wondering how they were to be met, till Mr. Drewitt cut the knot
+of his perplexity by a long and pathetic letter setting forth how that
+he could not take up the bill, stating why he could not do so,
+explaining when he should have money in abundance, and imploring Mr.
+Turner meanwhile to do what was needful under the circumstances. “Please
+renew,” was the burden of Mr. Drewitt’s everlasting song, a burden with
+which many business men are conversant; but very few business men meet
+with such correspondents as fell to the lot of the owner of Kincorth.
+
+If was entirely his own fault getting into debt, but people forgot that
+and pitied him for it.
+
+There never was a man who drew so largely on the sympathies and purses
+of his friends, and yet his cheques never came back dishonoured. Liking
+was not the word to express the feeling Mr. Drewitt inspired in those
+with whom he came in contact. He was loved, he was idolized, and yet he
+left no track of good deeds behind him as he walked through life. Even
+his charity, which consisted in letting every tramp who listed walk into
+the kitchen at Kincorth, and drink a basin of milk, or toss off a glass
+of poteen, before he trudged away with his wallet full of broken
+victuals, was as purposeless and as useless as every other action of his
+life. He helped no man who was helping himself; it was not the
+struggling tradesman, the hard-working labourer who benefited by Mr.
+Drewitt’s careless open-handedness; rather, it was the worthless
+vagabond, the lazy idle beggar, who fattened on the waste and profusion
+of Kincorth.
+
+Open house to all comers: covers for a score if a score liked to drop
+in; great sirloins of beef, fish as fine as ever swam in the sea, wine
+of the best, whisky of the strongest, brandy that had never paid the
+king a halfpenny, claret that was in the same predicament; “cead mille
+failthe!” uttered in a rich soft Irish brogue—this was the order of
+things in the parlour; whilst in the kitchen there was a bit and a sup
+for all who chose to claim hospitality; for hungry dogs and for hungry
+men and women. There was the heat of the piled-up turf fire for the lame
+and halt who stood looking over the half door, muttering, “God save all
+here!” There was the cup of tea for the deaf and dumb, who, by reason of
+their misfortunes, were considered able to read the fortunes of others,
+and who kept all the maids from their work by prophesying in signs and
+gestures the advent of certain husbands, probable journeys, possible
+misfortunes.
+
+If the prayer of the poor avail, Archibald Drewitt should have been a
+happy man; for never a day passed over without “God bless him” being
+repeated thirty or forty times. To be sure, the lips that blessed would
+have cursed even more volubly had help been refused; but the help never
+was refused. It was _but_ a handful of meal, _but_ a plate of broken
+meat, _but_ the bag of potatoes, _but_ the screw of tea, _but_ the
+blessing lightly earned, the curse readily averted; and still Archibald
+Drewitt did not prosper, still the property went like the house, like
+the grounds, like the porter’s lodge, like the entrance—to rack and
+ruin.
+
+“Would you grudge the craturs a bite to keep life in them?” asked one of
+the old servants one day when Maxwell Drewitt had made some remark
+concerning the number of beggars he saw about the place.
+
+“I’d make the rascals work and earn it,” he answered.
+
+“Yer grandfather, God rest his sowl! would niver have made a spache like
+that about poor done men,” she replied. “There was many a one thought he
+had done wrong,—I thrust he is now in glory—in passing by his eldest son
+to lave the place to the masther; but there is one thing sure and
+certain, that it is a blessing for the poor you did not get it, Masther
+Maxwell.”
+
+“The poor had best make the most of their blessing then while it lasts,”
+remarked the young man; “for a man cannot go on feeding a county for
+ever, and my uncle is making ducks and drakes of Kincorth as fast as he
+knows how.”
+
+“Well, Masther Maxwell, it’s not for you to be saying anything about who
+he feeds.”
+
+“Because he has fed me, I suppose; because he has kept me like the
+beggars in poverty and idleness,” remarked Maxwell. “I owe him no thanks
+for that, Nannie, rather the reverse.”
+
+“I always heard that Nicholas Drewitt was a terribly wise old gentleman,
+but I am sure of it now,” answered Nannie.
+
+“Well, do you be a wise old woman,” recommended Mr. Drewitt, junior,
+“and make a purse for yourself and keep it; for I swear to you, Nannie,
+that if ever I am owner of Kincorth I’ll clear it of all the vermin that
+are eating the heart out of the corn now.”
+
+And with this Maxwell Drewitt turned on his heel and walked away,
+thinking, “If ever it do come to me it will be valueless, and I—I would
+have kept it together; I would have made Kincorth something worth
+talking about. Curse him,” said the young man stopping suddenly. “Curse
+him for a fool!”
+
+It was hard. His uncle ought either to have cast him off or provided for
+him suitably. The very beggars had almost as much good of the estate as
+he, and they had no claim on Kincorth as he had—a claim in equity though
+not in law.
+
+Why did the man want to marry now? Had he not been in love fourteen
+years before? and was not one love enough for such a temperament for
+life? Had he not been jilted? Had he not stood with the muzzle of a
+pistol touching his forehead, when his brother found him? and did not
+the pistol miss fire? and had not the pair a fight for the weapon, which
+ended in George Drewitt knocking the owner of Kincorth down and sending
+for a doctor to bleed him till he fainted?
+
+“I wish he would take the same notion again,” thought Maxwell, “and that
+I had the loading. He would not fall in love a third time;” and the
+young man sneered bitterly as he remembered his father’s weakness in
+interfering to save the life that stood between him and Kincorth, as he
+thought of all the oaths Archibald Drewitt had sworn when the fever
+passed away about dividing the estate, about giving his brother a share,
+about all he would do for the children, about how he would never marry,
+never look with love on the face of any woman again, but live single,
+and bring up Maxwell and his sisters as though they were his own son and
+daughters.
+
+If an amiable man does us a wrong we hate him fifty times more than if
+he were as black as Erebus—hate him because the world joins issue with
+us on the question. Had Archibald Drewitt been like Maxwell Drewitt,
+nephew and uncle could have fought the matter out on equal social
+grounds; but as it was society could never be made to believe that
+Archibald Drewitt could be wrong, for which reason Maxwell Drewitt hated
+him.
+
+It was hard. I can imagine no cross harder to bear than that of a man
+like Maxwell Drewitt placed in Maxwell Drewitt’s position.
+
+In England such a position would have been bad enough; in England, where
+any one with courage, and industry, and cleverness, may eventually make
+his way; but in Ireland, in Connemara, in a country where trade is
+looked down upon, where work is ignominy, where there are but two
+classes—the very rich who do nothing, and the very poor who do as little
+as they can help, my reader, think of it!—think of a gentleman beggar—of
+a man who had all the instincts of his class—who looked upon a merchant
+as an inferior being—who had been brought up to no profession—whose
+proud stomach could never have brooked the idea of business—who laughed
+scornfully at Samuel Turner’s well-meant postscript—who would have tried
+to keep up the name and the property and the family dignity,—and who was
+still a pauper.
+
+Think of it. He was hardly done by, and all the more hardly, perhaps,
+because Kincorth belonged to an interloper—to one of those younger sons
+who, since the time of the patriarchs, have been continually putting the
+noses of elder sons out of joint.
+
+Never a Drewitt before had thought of making money; but Maxwell was
+determined to make it now. He was born in advance of his age; the men of
+thirty years ago did not think much of draining, of subsoils, of
+top-dressing, of the rotation of crops, and for that matter indeed to
+look at Connemara now, one would think that the men of the present day
+thought as little of these matters as their predecessors.
+
+Once Maxwell had visited England—once he had seen corn growing, where
+for centuries previously nothing had thriven save rushes and reeds and
+wild fowl. He had asked how the change was effected, how the morass was
+turned into a garden, the wilderness into a fruitful plain; and while
+his host told him he thought of Galway—thought of the rushes and the
+bogs there—thought as only an Irishman can think of his native country,
+and of the best way of bettering his condition.
+
+In England, too, he saw smiling cottages, well-fed men and women,
+children with clothes on their back and shoes to their feet. Again he
+asked for information, and again he was told that these men, who were
+better clad than the best tenants who reluctantly came to Kincorth in
+May and November, were not landholders, only labourers.
+
+“That is it,” thought Maxwell Drewitt, then only a lad; “the small farms
+are the curse of Ireland. Our tenants ought to be our labourers—that is
+it.”
+
+And he went back, Irish like, making fun of the English for having a
+good dinner, and yet scorning his countrymen for being contented with
+potatoes and salt. It is the Irishman of thirty years ago and more I am
+talking about, remember. It is not to be supposed the Irishman of 1865
+bears more than the faintest family resemblance to him.
+
+At any rate, the individual whose story I am telling detested the
+English as English, and yet was willing to learn a lesson out of their
+book of prosperity. He liked the flesh-pots, but he hated the country.
+He loved the wealth, but he could not stand the accent. He could have
+horsewhipped the first Irish peasant he saw shrinking out of the way of
+his galloping horse, and yet he thought the English too independent.
+
+“Look at England,” he would say in Ireland, and yet in his heart, while
+he was in England, he loved Irish ways and Irish manners best.
+
+He thought of those great English farmers riding their thoroughbreds,
+sending their daughters to boarding-schools, walking to church beside
+their wives, who were dressed in silks and merinos, and then he looked
+into Irish hovels, where the owner of the soil—owner so far as paying
+his rent can make a man so—never knew what it was to eat an egg laid by
+his own hens, to taste butter made from his own cows’ milk, year after
+year.
+
+“It is all wrong,” concluded Maxwell Drewitt; “these men ought to be
+labourers: they ought to be eating fat bacon and drinking strong ale
+like the English. How _do_ the English make money as if it was to be
+picked up by the road side? Give Galway to them and in twenty years they
+would be advertising villa sites—villa sites”—and the young man looked
+away towards the mountains and smiled to think how soon the Cockneys
+could spoil Connemara.
+
+“But they would live like fighting cocks out of it—they would,” finished
+Maxwell Drewitt; “and it is a burning shame and a crying disgrace that
+the Irish cannot do the same.”
+
+“We do very well as we are, Max,” said his uncle, when he propounded
+these heretical doctrines to him. “Let well alone. The Almighty never
+intended us to be like England or he would not have given us such an
+iron-bound coast. The country is different and the people are different
+and our ways are different. If you put shoes and stockings on the
+children they would limp along the roads. If you washed their faces and
+sent them to school they would cry their eyes out. If you put Davy Blake
+into an English farmhouse and told his wife she must keep it clean, they
+would be wretched. Each nation goes through the centuries its own way,
+as each man travels to heaven by a different road. Many a person has
+tried to mend us, and many a person has come to grief. Stick to your
+horse across country, Maxwell, and leave the rights and wrongs of
+Ireland to those whose business it is to study them.”
+
+Admirable advice doubtless, and kindly meant; but then the giver was a
+man whose way had been made for him, and the receiver had to try and
+make his own way as best he could. And gold mines were not common in
+that part of the country. Money was not lying under foot as it was
+reported to be in London; where, however, Colonel Dyak had not improved
+his opportunities any more than Mr. Archibald Drewitt had improved his,
+in Connemara.
+
+No two men ever travelled to the dogs at so equal a pace as the
+Englishman about town and the Irish country gentleman. They went by
+different roads, but their destination was the same: and yet each looked
+up to the other, and while Dyak thought Drewitt was rolling in wealth,
+Drewitt considered Dyak an individual without a care.
+
+They had met after a fashion common enough in Galway. Colonel Dyak went
+there to fish, and Mr. Drewitt coming across him one day, on the shores
+of one of the innumerable lakes, asked him to dinner.
+
+And Colonel Dyak accepted the invitation, and ate Mr. Drewitt’s mutton
+and drank his claret, and rode his horses every day for six weeks; at
+the end of which time he insisted on carrying his host back to London
+with him.
+
+Nothing loth, Mr. Drewitt went over twice, and the second time he
+returned to Kincorth it was as an engaged man; who by way of bettering
+his prospects had asked a young and portionless woman to cast in her lot
+with his.
+
+There was one kind of wife who might have saved both him and Kincorth. A
+wife with a clear head and a strong will, able to carry things with a
+high hand—clever and active and determined and economical withal, would
+have queened it at the old place and kept the mortgaged acres together;
+but, as a matter of course, Miss Dyak was gentle and loving and
+trusting—a woman perfectly incompetent to fight out any battle—a woman
+with a sweet placid face—with calm, thoughtful eyes—with smooth, glossy
+hair—with a soft, white, satiny skin—with a low voice—with timid,
+caressing manners—with no head to plan; but with a heart to be broken.
+
+It is hard for me to write about her—hard for me to go on from this
+point and tell of the storms and rain that fell upon that drooping
+head—of the trials and crosses that bowed that poor heart before she lay
+down to sleep the only really peaceful slumber our poor humanity knows.
+
+She was not the wife for Mr. Drewitt, and Mr. Drewitt was not the
+husband for her; but notwithstanding that, they chose to take one
+another for better or for worse.
+
+There was no better to the matter, however—it was all worse; it was like
+everything Archibald Drewitt did or proposed to do—a mistake.
+
+Colonel Dyak was charmed with the match, and delighted with his
+son-in-law elect. He had enjoyed himself greatly at Kincorth. He knew
+Mr. Drewitt’s horses were capital. He had landed salmon twelve pounds
+weight. The lakes in Galway were alive with fish: the mountains were
+covered with game.
+
+“A fine country, I believe,” remarked one of his club acquaintance to
+him. “Magnificent scenery, they tell me—monstrous properties—capable of
+being improved to any extent.”
+
+Whereupon Colonel Dyak broke ground.
+
+“A fine country! Why, sir, there is not an Englishman breathing knows
+what a country it is; there is not a Londoner would believe in such
+scenery being within five hundred miles of him unless he saw it.
+Mountains! I couldn’t tell you how high they are. Lakes! God only knows
+how many hundred lakes I saw in one day. Harbours! why the coast is a
+succession of front doors facing America. Rivers! if you turned the
+Thames the other way, and made it run from Yorkshire south, it would not
+be half so fine as the Shannon. Fuel! you can’t imagine what a
+magnificent fire turf makes. Land! there are thousands upon thousands of
+acres that have never been turned up by a plough. Labour! eightpence to
+tenpence a day in the summer, sixpence to eightpence in the winter.
+Society! I never was among a more jovial set of people in my life. Ay,
+that is a country! with building materials lying by the wayside, with
+granite roads, with marble quarries, silver mines, rock and mountain and
+lake and sea. You must come to Galway with me sometime and judge for
+yourself.”
+
+“I should like to go greatly,” was the reply. “I am curious to know why
+such a country should not prosper.” And the little Londoner took snuff,
+and then adjusted his double eye-glasses, thinking doubtless that he
+could solve the problem, which is about as dark as the Sphinx, in a
+scamper through Ireland.
+
+That is one of the beauties of Ireland, I may here remark. Everybody
+imagines, when he begins the pleasing study of her manifold sorrows, of
+her excessive poverty, that he has got hold of the right end of the
+stick at last; that he has hit on the word with which in some remote age
+the puzzle was locked so carefully that no one has ever been able to
+open it since; and led on by this delusion, he proceeds triumphantly
+only to discover that the riddle seems to have no solution, that all
+arguments about the sister island work in a circle, and return to the
+same point in the end.
+
+Colonel Dyak, however, was a man who did not trouble himself with
+questions of this kind. He took things as he found them: if they were
+well, he was pleased; if they were ill, he trusted they would right
+themselves in time; and if they did not right themselves, it still was
+no business of his; and he felt something more than satisfied with the
+match his daughter proposed to herself, although her intended husband’s
+property was situated in Ireland; in a country the nonprosperity whereof
+puzzled the wise head of his club acquaintance.
+
+Good fishing, good shooting, good hunting could not, however, quite
+reconcile Mrs. Dyak to the idea of Agnes throwing herself away upon a
+commoner, and that commoner a man unable to make satisfactory marriage
+settlements upon her.
+
+“If she _must_ marry,” remarked the eldest daughter, who, on the
+strength of having secured a baronet, took upon herself airs in the
+family cabinet—“if she _must_ marry a baronet, why did she not make sure
+that he was a rich one?”
+
+“But your papa says, my love,” put in Mrs. Dyak, mildly, “that Mr.
+Drewitt’s income is fifteen thousand a year.”
+
+“More likely fifteen hundred,” answered Lady Ebbutt.
+
+“And he settles an estate of I think it is two thousand acres on Agnes,”
+went on Mrs. Dyak, not heeding her daughter’s remark.
+
+“Depend upon it the estate is a mountain, mamma,” said the baronet’s
+wife.
+
+“Well, Bertha, whether it is a mountain or not we cannot help ourselves
+in the matter now. Agnes and her papa have set their minds on the match;
+and indeed, my dear, I may tell you in confidence, that as we could not
+have afforded another season in town, it is a great blessing Aggy has
+made a choice. For we must go abroad, and what chance would there be of
+her marrying abroad, tell me that?”
+
+But Lady Ebbutt declined to gratify her mother’s desire: she only
+observed that she thought it would be better for her parents to reside
+in Ireland rather than on the Continent.
+
+“Papa would like it of all things,” she finished.
+
+“I should not,” answered Mrs. Dyak, and the conversation dropped.
+
+Thus the marriage was finally agreed to by all the parties interested.
+As a matter of course Mrs. Dyak protested against it, and maintained for
+some time sufficient coolness of demeanour to impress Mr. Drewitt with a
+due sense of the honour Miss Dyak had conferred upon him by accepting
+his hand, and the very moderate settlement that accompanied it; but in
+the end Mrs. Dyak gracefully gave way; and in a very fashionable church,
+and attended by a little crowd of bridesmaids, Archibald Drewitt and
+Agnes Dyak were made man and wife.
+
+It was a very gay wedding. There were plenty of grand people in the
+church: there was no lack of fashionable guests at the breakfast.
+
+Everything was in the best style. It was Colonel Dyak’s last shot, and
+he did not spare the powder. Any one might have thought his yearly
+income something enormous. Even Mr. Drewitt wondered how it happened
+that behind such a marriage feast there should be no marriage
+settlement, little dreaming that if there had been, Miss Dyak would
+never have been permitted to marry a man who lived in Ireland, who had
+no house in London, or even in Dublin, who never resided abroad for any
+part of the year, and whose estates were embarrassed to such an extent
+that only two or three people had other than the faintest idea which
+part of his property belonged to him and which to his mortgagees.
+
+It was a nice fate, truly, that Agnes Dyak was robed that morning, all
+in pure white, to go out to meet.
+
+“Who shall say that human sacrifices have ceased to be offered in
+Britain?” whispered one cynical bachelor to his neighbour, when the pair
+joined hands and took one another till death should part them. “Who
+shall say there are no victims slain on the horns of the altar now?” And
+the speaker laughed, and his friend laughed, and the friend said the
+idea was “devilish good,” and the speaker thought in his heart that he
+had put it rather neatly, while both forgot how true many words spoken
+in jest may be; and neither imagined that when Agnes Drewitt walked down
+the long aisle a wife, she was walking on, at the same time, to endure
+her martyrdom.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ Coming Home.
+
+
+When a man goes a-wooing, he does not, as a rule, turn the worst side of
+his affairs out for the inspection of his ladye love and his ladye
+love’s family. Rather on the contrary: he is apt to throw a little
+_couleur de rose_ over his prospects, and to insist that all whom the
+matter may concern shall view the landscape through that medium, instead
+of by any truer light.
+
+This had been Mr. Drewitt’s policy, at all events. He had kept his
+advantages in the foreground—his drawbacks well in the rear. He intended
+to reform Kincorth, so what use could there be in talking about its
+previous state of wretched mismanagement? He was quite determined to
+make a radical change with regard to Maxwell and his sisters; so why,
+when the Drewitts’ soiled linen was all going straight off to the
+laundress, should he trouble himself to wash it in London, in the sight
+of the enemy?
+
+“Only let me get this election business over,” thought Mr. Drewitt, “and
+I will send the two younger girls to school, and try if I cannot buy or
+beg Maxwell a commission. Susan is my greatest difficulty. I wish to
+heaven somebody would marry her. I might manage a small portion.”
+
+Alas! and alas! for the good intentions unfulfilled, for the faithful
+promises broken, for the debt of gratitude that had now become
+burdensome, for the trust he had broken, for the noble plans he had
+never carried out.
+
+Is there nothing pitiful to you, my reader, in the picture of this
+middle-aged man, whose work remained for ever undone, who had planned in
+youth to reap such abundant harvests, but who stood now, in the very
+prime and summer of his age, with the spring crops still unsown, with
+the fields of his life bare and barren, with the broad lands of
+opportunity still untilled, with his Lord’s talents still
+unemployed—still bringing in no interest against the day when his
+accounts would be required of him?
+
+If we miss the seed time, what shall we even think of casting into the
+ground when our neighbours’ wheat is ripening? Even such poor intentions
+as Mr. Drewitt now muttered to himself, in lieu of those great honest
+designs that he had once promised to work out for the benefit of his
+brother’s children. Half his wealth, all his influence, all his care,
+had come to a vague commission for Maxwell, a possible school for
+Wilhelmina and Kathleen, and an uncertain fortune for the _bête noir_ of
+the establishment, Susan Drewitt.
+
+It was all wrong together—the time had not been redeemed, the seed had
+not been sown, the talent had not been put out at usury—it was all
+wrong; and so Archibald Drewitt found when the harvest time arrived, and
+there was no grain for the gathering.
+
+But in those bright sunshiny days, when he brought home his bride, the
+summer sun was gladdening the earth, the autumn was afar off; and cursed
+with that peculiar temperament which always believes that “the future is
+the time to mend,” Archibald Drewitt made himself happy in the present,
+and still permitted his wife to view her future prospects through the
+medium of that stained glass to which I have already referred.
+
+She knew, of course, that Maxwell and his sisters resided at Kincorth;
+and if there was anything unpleasant to hear about them she would become
+acquainted with it soon enough, seeing that she was travelling home as
+fast as a very indifferent pair of post horses could take her.
+
+Maxwell had been right. London is a long distance from Galway now, and
+in the days of which I am writing it was further still.
+
+It had cost Mr. Drewitt some ready money to get to London at all, and
+although he was the bridegroom, it had cost him more to get married.
+Elsewhere the fact has been stated that coin of the realm and Mr.
+Drewitt were comparative strangers—adding all of which together, the
+result arrived at is that a bridal tour was beyond his means, that he
+could only do what he did do, viz., bring home his wife with as little
+delay as possible.
+
+We read that when Elijah the Tishbite fled from the wrath of Jezebel he
+journeyed into the wilderness, and travelled thence forty days and forty
+nights, till he came to that cave in Horeb where his wanderings ended.
+
+In the wilderness, on the mountain, the queen’s anger was impotent to
+hurt him—towards those fastnesses, the hand of that “cursed woman” was
+stretched out in vain.
+
+When, in the after-time, Agnes Drewitt heard the story of the prophet
+recited, she always fancied that from all the haunts of men, from all
+the towns and cities in which Baal was worshipped, Elijah must have fled
+to a country like Connemara, where, beside lonely lakes, the plover
+whistles and the bittern cries, where desolation reigns supreme, where
+there is a solitude which may be heard, a silence which has a voice.
+
+Under the shadow of those never-ending mountains they travelled on;
+beside those interminable lakes the road wound in and about. Away to the
+left were hills without end; to the right the blue conical mountains
+reared their heads towards heaven. In the valley—which has no end, but
+runs between chains of mountain, the commencement of which lies so far
+behind that one forgets when a view of any extent of level land was last
+obtained—in the valley, I say, the very genius of desolation appeared to
+Mrs. Drewitt to have taken up his abode.
+
+Here were no smiling fields, no neat farmhouses, no cows luxuriating in
+pleasant pastures, no gentlemen’s seats, no hedges, no gardens, no
+homesteads. Mile after mile stretched away the valley; no turn in the
+road brought with it a change of scene; and often, as the road turned,
+far as the valley extended, nothing met the eye save lonely lakes and
+swiftly-flowing streams, thousands of acres of bog land, thousands more
+of moor, where a few sheep and a few ponies grazed at will among the
+blocks of granite and the huge boulders, that, becoming detached from
+the mountain side, had fallen through the centuries, and still lay where
+they had fallen.
+
+Lakes where water-lilies float, where the tall reeds grow
+sparingly—lakes, the shores of which are bog and moorland—lakes that for
+number are well-nigh countless, that are desolate, and solitary beyond
+all power of description; rivers that wind not between wooded banks, or
+in deep beds of their own digging, but that crawl on in the summer over
+stone and granite, and that in winter spread wide as they like over
+moorland and bog, carrying with them detached fragments of rock, which
+seem in the arms of the mighty flood to be borne lightly as feathers,
+away and away! A country without wood, without a house; a country where
+it seemed out of place, out of keeping, to meet a living being. This was
+what Agnes Drewitt saw as the post-horses laboured up the hills, or were
+lashed into a weary canter down them; this was the strange land which
+she was entering as a pilgrim and a stranger, wherein she was going to
+try to make her home.
+
+It is all very well to travel through these Irish Highlands. The kingdom
+of Connemara is a grand kingdom, and the guide-books do not exaggerate
+when they call its scenery solemn and sublime; but it is one thing to
+visit a country and another to reside in it. The young Englishwoman
+looked out with dread and dismay on those over-shadowing mountains, on
+those endless lakes that looked stern and desolate even with the
+summer’s sun shining down upon them.
+
+The wilderness Elijah fled through could not have been more lonely than
+Connemara; the cave at the mouth whereof he stood while the strong wind
+passed by, and the earthquake shook the hills, and the fire flashed
+before him, might have been in just such a mountain as any of those that
+frowned upon her.
+
+Ahab’s wrath was powerless to touch the prophet there; the king’s writ,
+she had heard, was not worth a halfpenny in the land through which she
+was travelling; and Mrs. Drewitt was just thinking of this saying, and
+wondering what such a savage country would be like when winter’s frosts
+covered the ground, when winter’s rains and snows swelled the
+torrents,—when suddenly, the road taking a sharp curve, the view
+changed—the bogs and the lakes and the mountains were left behind, and
+the sea burst upon her view.
+
+How shall words ever give even the faintest idea of the exquisite beauty
+and peace of that summer’s evening scene? How can pen and ink ever tell
+how green looked the grassy knolls that lay down by the shore; how fair
+were the islands in Duranmore Bay; how soft, and rich, and mellow the
+golden light that lay on wood and water, that steeped the trees and fell
+in great patches on the hill sides? With what a glad sound of welcome
+the “sweet chimes of the waves” sung their low song in the stranger’s
+ear! “From Newfoundland and from Labrador,” as has been happily said,
+they had come “to mingle their voice in harmony,” on that sea-beat
+shore; and Agnes Drewitt fancied she knew what they were telling her,
+and listened to their melody with an answering music swelling in her
+breast.
+
+It was like heaven bursting upon her view; it was like light after
+darkness; it was like liberty after slavery; it was like everything her
+fancy had painted—her heart desired; it was beautiful—it was perfect;
+and Agnes Drewitt, young, impressionable, imaginative, basked in the
+loveliness and the sunshine, and was happy.
+
+On one of the roads through Connemara there is a stone bearing the
+singular statement that from there it is twenty-one miles to Hell.
+
+Where the Hell referred to may be—whether in this world or the next—I am
+unable to tell; but I am sure had Mrs. Drewitt been intrusted with the
+preparation of a table of distances she would have called Duranmore
+heaven, and given it as the ultimate destination of all tourists in
+Galway.
+
+That sweet bay! those soft green hills! those grand headlands! seemed
+beautiful—thrice beautiful, after the bleak desolation, the utter
+loneliness of the wilderness through which she had passed; and she
+leaned forward in the carriage and strained her eyes over the landscape,
+while she said—
+
+“How exquisite! How perfect!”
+
+“That is Kincorth,” said Mr. Drewitt, pointing to the northern side of
+the bay. “That is Kincorth,” and he sighed as he spoke.
+
+From sea, from hill, from wood, from mountain Agnes Drewitt withdrew her
+eager gaze, to turn towards her husband and inquire the meaning of that
+sigh. She was a clinging creature, reader, a woman who could not bear
+the sight of unhappiness, the sound of woe; she was a loving woman, who
+could not endure that her husband should have a care or a sorrow hidden
+from her.
+
+Why did he sigh? Was he tired? Was he ill? Was he unhappy? And the
+little hand stole out to clasp his, and the sweet eyes turned towards
+him full of a ready sympathy.
+
+“Unhappy!” he answered, carried away by one of those impulses he was as
+impotent as a child to control. “Unhappy! I have never been happy
+before. I never knew the meaning of the word till I saw you. I never
+felt peace, perfect peace till I sat thus, with your hand clasped in
+mine. If I sighed it was because I felt at last happy and contented—as
+one takes a long, deep breath, when sitting down, after a weary journey,
+to rest. Do you understand me, darling? Life has been that journey, and
+you are the rest to me.”
+
+She did not understand him then, though she comprehended his meaning
+perfectly afterwards. She did not know that instead of bringing her home
+to comfort and bless her, he was bringing her home to comfort and bless
+him.
+
+A slight, fragile thing she was, yet strong enough for this poor, weak,
+unstable creature to lean against and feel secure. From that day forth
+she was to be the crutch and he the cripple; she the rock and he the
+billow; she the nest and he the bird. Maxwell Drewitt had sketched the
+outline of her future life to perfection; but he had not been equally
+accurate in calling her choice mercenary, her marriage an interested
+one.
+
+She had elected to cast her lot with Archibald Drewitt because she loved
+him; and loving him, she would have gone through fire and water for his
+sake.
+
+It is strange that such men are able to secure such wives; but it is not
+more strange than that the most unselfish of men draw so often viragos
+out of the matrimonial lottery.
+
+We hear a great deal about the balance of power; is this the balance
+(matrimonially) of good and evil?
+
+After his little lament about having found life’s paths rough and
+dreary, Mr. Drewitt became both talkative and cheerful, and discoursed
+concerning the improvements he purposed effecting, concerning the
+alterations he intended making.
+
+“Next year,” he said, “I will rebuild the porter’s lodge; and you shall
+draw me a pretty design for one.”
+
+In her heart Agnes thought that a new lodge ought to be erected at once;
+but she had sense enough not to say so, and merely remarked that the
+creepers and climbers which covered the damp walls and the broken roof
+were extremely picturesque.
+
+Irish picturesqueness, however, could not make up to this stranger from
+a wealthier land for the absence of all comfort, for the ruined walls,
+for the unmown grass, for the unrolled gravel, for the unswept walks.
+
+The place, as Maxwell Drewitt in his pride thought he could keep it,
+would have suited Mrs. Drewitt a vast deal better than Kincorth, as it
+was.
+
+Within the gates, under the arching trees, the old feeling of loneliness
+and desolation came upon her once more, and she shivered she scarcely
+knew why; and Mr. Drewitt wrapped her shawl more closely round her,
+while he whispered tenderly—
+
+“Welcome home, my darling; welcome home.”
+
+They were on the very threshold of home now; but no one came forth to
+greet her. The hall door stood wide, but no servant was there—no
+relation, no living thing to meet the woman who, with that lonely
+feeling growing stronger every moment, walked into the house which she
+never left for any other habitation until she passed from under its
+roof-tree in middle age, with children beside her, with youth behind
+her, wearing widow’s weeds for the husband of her choice, old before her
+time, with wrinkles across her forehead, with silver threads sprinkled
+through her rich dark hair.
+
+When I come to tell you of how she left Kincorth, I would ask you to
+remember how she entered it—how she stood in the hall while the driver
+brought in the luggage and her husband fee’d him handsomely with almost
+the last money in his purse, how she followed Mr. Drewitt as he flung
+open the door of room after room to find each in succession empty, how
+she sat down finally in a little breakfast parlour and watched her
+husband first pull the bell till he broke it, and then go to the
+kitchens personally, to summon assistance.
+
+In the distance she heard him rating and raging and cursing and swearing
+as she had never heard any one rate and rage and curse and swear before;
+and then the tempest lulled as suddenly as it had arisen, and Mr.
+Drewitt returned, followed by Nannie, who, curtseying reverentially to
+her new mistress, at once broke the ice with,
+
+“It’s welcome home ye are, ma’am, and shure an’ we did not expec’ ye for
+a couple of hours yit, Mr. Maxwell said—”
+
+“Show your mistress her room, Nannie,” interrupted Mr. Drewitt, “and
+I’ll see to the trunks being taken up. And Agnes, my darling,” he
+murmured, while Nannie, who was “up to the manœuvres of new-married
+folks,” discreetly left the room, “if the house seems cold to you just
+at first, don’t be vexed; they did not mean it, they did not know.”
+
+She lifted her sweet face to his, but she did not raise her eyes, for
+they were full of tears, and she did not want him to see that they were
+so. It was all mightily unlike the coming home she had so foolishly
+pictured to herself. No friendly hands stretched out towards her! no
+warm Irish words of welcome! But she would not let that discourage her:
+she would be brave, she would be strong, and do her duty.
+
+She made this vow to herself with her husband’s kiss warm on her lips.
+And she was strong, she did do her duty, and she had her reward.
+
+“An’ shure, ma’am, an’ it’s myself is heartily glad to see a mistress
+comin’ home till the ould place,” remarked Nannie, as she assisted Mrs.
+Drewitt to change her dress and unpack her boxes, and put some portion
+of their contents in order. “The lonely dissolate place this has been,
+the Lord knows, wantin’ a lady to keep things straight and genteel. An’
+ye have come all the way from London, I hear; and it’s a terrible big
+place, they tells me. I hope ye won’t be feelin’ lonesome here, ma’am;
+for though it is a fine country—God bless it!—ye’ll know it strange and
+solitary like at first.”
+
+At that Agnes Drewitt gave way, and she stooped her head for a minute
+while her tears fell fast as rain. Then she recovered herself and said—
+
+“It is strange and solitary; you are right. You have put what I was
+feeling into words for me; but it is a fine country, and I will love it
+for my husband’s sake, and I will love its people too, if they will let
+me.”
+
+“They would be mighty queer people if they did not love ye back, my
+lady,” answered Nannie, in all sincerity; “so don’t fret, ma’am, but
+just give them the pleasant word and the bright smile and they’ll come
+to like you so well they’ll forget you’re not Irish.”
+
+Having administered which piece of comfort Nannie proceeded with her
+folding and straightening, and Mrs. Drewitt bathed the traces of tears
+from her cheeks preparatory to returning to the room where she had left
+her husband.
+
+Mr. Drewitt was not there, however, when she descended; but she met in
+his stead a young man who, with his hat on his head, and his hands
+buried deep in his pockets, was whistling to himself that loveliest of
+all the Irish airs—Cushla ma cree.
+
+At sight of Mrs. Drewitt he pulled his hands out of his pockets, took
+his hat off his head, and introduced himself to her as Maxwell Drewitt.
+“And these are my sisters,” he added, as three girls came trooping into
+the room.
+
+“And consequently my nieces,” finished Mrs. Drewitt, kissing them all
+round; an attention the young ladies seemed to regard as altogether
+superfluous and ill-timed.
+
+“Does she know who we are really?” thought Maxwell Drewitt, as he saw
+Mrs. Drewitt’s glance resting first on his sisters’ shabby dresses, and
+then reverting to her own rich attire. “Does she know I ought to be
+master here—that I am the eldest son of the eldest son? or can she fancy
+we are pauper dependents on the bounty of her husband? I will take care
+she does not long remain in a state of blissful ignorance about that
+matter.”
+
+And he did take care; before three days he had found opportunity to tell
+her the whole story; before three days he had opened the skeleton-closet
+at Kincorth, and anatomized its contents for her benefit.
+
+“It is very hard for them, and it is very hard for me,” argued poor Mrs.
+Drewitt; “but I will try to do my duty by them—and by everybody about
+the place. I will—I will—I will.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ Peacemaking.
+
+
+Doing one’s duty (a charming phrase in the abstract, doubtless) is
+usually much less agreeable in practice than in theory, seeing that it
+generally involves annoying oneself, and displeasing other people.
+
+No credit attaches to it, because after all we have only done what we
+ought to have done; duty goes to bed weary and rises early; duty darns
+stockings and turns its dresses; duty does needlework, and pricks its
+fingers in the process; duty tends the sick and humours the fretful;
+duty gives to the poor, and goes about clad in the garments of humility;
+and for many and many a long day—perhaps until, there being no more
+duties to be performed in this world, it betakes itself to the next—duty
+has the felicity of receiving all the kicks of which society is so
+liberal, while halfpence and silver and gold are showered upon those who
+do not go in for duty at all, but simply for pleasure.
+
+There is nothing so hard to discharge, satisfactorily, as our duty;
+there is nothing for which we get so little thanks. It is like work
+looked down upon as a vulgar virtue: and yet when the small sums that go
+to make up life’s great account come to be cast out, duty and work may
+be found to have borne good interest; though the one has oftentimes
+seemed to our eyes but as the toil of the ant, and the other but useless
+labour, but misspent energy.
+
+Shall we say for all this, however, that the weakest among us is right
+to drift with the stream—to make no effort to stem its torrent? Would it
+have been better for Mrs. Drewitt to have never attempted to mend the
+ways of that wretched Irish household?
+
+She never achieved a great deal, but she did something. After all it is
+not given to many women to accomplish much, and she tried her best; and,
+as I have said before, in the long run she had her reward.
+
+During the first few weeks of her residence at Kincorth the
+establishment was in a state of anarchy, for was not the election coming
+on, and did not an election always upset everything?
+
+Gentlemen from Dublin—gentlemen from England—gentlemen from the remotest
+parts of the country came to Kincorth the moment Mr. Drewitt’s return
+was announced, and took up their quarters there.
+
+It was breakfast all the morning—it was luncheon all the day—it was
+dinner all the night—it was noise and confusion and excitement from one
+sunrise to another.
+
+Canvassing was about the last work Mrs. Drewitt was fitted for, but out
+canvassing she had to go, with the Honourable Mrs. Munks and the
+Countess of Popingham.
+
+There was not a description of bribery she did not see practised.
+
+“I am hungry,” Lady Popingham would say, with her arch Irish face
+lighted up by a very intelligible smile; and she would go into a baker’s
+shop in Duranmore and ask for a bun.
+
+“You’re for Pryor?” she would remark—her mouth full of new bread, and
+her small fingers fiddling with half her purchase—“You’re for Pryor.”
+
+“Well, I am not quite determined, my lady. They were in here the other
+day, and were bidding uncommon high; but your ladyship understands that
+I never did sell my vote, and I never will.”
+
+“That is honest and independent, is it not, Mrs. Drewitt?” observed the
+Countess. “I suppose you will not consider it bribery though to ask you
+to a ball, Mr. Rorke? There is to be one over at Kincorth to-morrow
+night, and Mrs. Drewitt will be very glad to see you there.”
+
+And with that Lady Popingham left her unfinished bun on the counter, and
+the baker said he would come and bring “the wife.”
+
+“And we may count on you, Mr. Rorke,” remarked the Countess, from the
+doorstep; “you would rather give your vote to us than sell it to Mr.
+Pryor.” At which observation the man laughed and the lady laughed, and
+the bread was swept into the till, and the Conservatives could count one
+more on their side.
+
+It is not in flesh and blood to be near a contested election and not to
+become interested in it; and before long Mrs. Drewitt found herself
+doing what she could to secure voters and to please their wives. She
+danced with the men—she danced with that identical baker—and had for her
+_vis-à-vis_ Lady Marsden and a Duranmore butcher. She invited a hundred
+frieze-coated men into the drawing-room and sang for them till she was
+hoarse. She ordered some thousands of yards of blue ribbon, and paid for
+it herself; and she and Lady Popingham and Mrs. Munks made it up into
+rosettes for future use.
+
+Mrs. Drewitt had expected her nieces to assist her in the work; but
+Susan, for self and fellows, flatly declined to do anything of the kind.
+
+“If we wear anything we shall wear red,” she said. “Our brother is for
+Mr. Pryor; and we are for Mr. Pryor too.”
+
+At this Mrs. Drewitt drew back astounded.
+
+“Do you mean,” she said, “that Maxwell and Mr. Drewitt are on different
+sides?”
+
+“Our mother was a Roman Catholic,” explained Miss Drewitt; “and it is
+only right that Maxwell should remember that, and vote accordingly.”
+
+“If it were not for landlord terrorism,” put in Wilhelmina—she was
+usually called Willy—“no one who was not for the Catholics would ever be
+returned in Ireland.”
+
+“The very servants about the house are all for Pryor,” added Susan,
+“only they would be discharged if they were to say so.”
+
+“And Maxwell was telling us that if you had been wise you would not have
+taken so active a part in the canvassing, because it will set the poor
+people against you,” capped Wilhelmina.
+
+“But I only did it to please your uncle, and he is liked by every one.”
+
+“Perhaps so,” answered Miss Drewitt, with a sneer; “but at any rate _he_
+is not English.”
+
+“And that makes a difference, you think?”
+
+“That makes all the difference, I know.”
+
+And Miss Susan Drewitt drew up her tall figure and looked down upon her
+aunt, who was at least half a head shorter, as she made this pleasant
+remark.
+
+“It’s just beyond me, childer,” said Nannie to them one day, “till
+understand what delight ye can find in making that craythur’s life a
+burden till her; she has not a bit the same look in her face she had
+when she came here first.”
+
+“She had no business to come here at all,” answered Miss Drewitt.
+“Ireland for the Irish, as Maxwell says: we want no strangers here.”
+
+“But shure and it’s most of all because she is a stranger that ye ought
+to be good till her, so that she might not always be fretting for the
+country and the friends she has left behind her. Why can’t ye make it
+up, young ladies, and live agreeable? See, now, how Miss Kathleen has
+taken to her.”
+
+“You are an old hypocrite, Nannie,” returned Miss Drewitt. “You and Miss
+Kathleen both like Mrs. Drewitt for the sake of what she gives you.”
+
+“Now may I niver, Miss Susan! may I niver die in my bed if the
+mistress—God grant her a long life!—ever give me more than ‘Thank ye,
+Nannie,’ or ‘If ye plaze.’ Miss Kathleen has I know got many a thing
+from her; but I mind hearing you, Miss Susan, tell your aunt, when she
+wanted you to get that illigant blue silk let down and wear it yourself,
+that your brother would not allow you to wear any person’s cast-off
+gowns, ye did; and ye knew she had never had that same silk on her back;
+and she went away to her own room and cried so pitiful! I’d have gone in
+and told her never to heed what you said, for that nobody did, only I
+was afraid she might be angry.”
+
+“Well, I tell you what, Nannie,” said Willy, at this juncture; “if you
+get her to give me that new riding-habit she brought over with her, I’ll
+be friends, for I am rather sick of war.”
+
+“If you take it you are quits with me,” remarked her sister.
+
+“There is no chance of your giving me a riding-habit, Sue,” retorted the
+other, “and I do want one so badly; Loo Munks is so proud of hers from
+Dublin, and it is nothing like such a beauty as Mrs. Drewitt’s. Ask her,
+Nannie, like a good old soul, which you’re not, and see if she will give
+it to me.”
+
+“Give it to you! she would cut the hair off her head and give it away if
+she thought it could pleasure you; but I won’t ask, faith I won’t, for
+she has only the one, and it’s meself hopes to see her riding with the
+masther over to Tully Kill whenever the hunting begins again.”
+
+“Then I will ask her,” said Wilhelmina; and she was rushing into the
+drawing-room to prefer her request, when the sound of angry voices and
+loud speaking frightened her back.
+
+It was Mr. Drewitt and Maxwell having it out concerning the
+election—concerning Maxwell’s canvass of Colonel Vervensoe’s tenantry.
+
+“He was over here himself this morning,” said Mr. Drewitt
+
+“It was not likely he would come over as anybody else,” remarked
+Maxwell.
+
+“Don’t mock me, sir,” shouted out the owner of Kincorth. “Keep your
+insolence for other people, for d—n me if I’ll stand it. And I won’t
+stand your interference, either, You shall not tamper with our voters.
+Vote for Pryor yourself if you like, and be hanged to you; but don’t try
+to get up a party against me, I advise you.”
+
+“I was not aware you were going to stand,” observed Maxwell, coolly.
+
+“You know I am for Sache, at any rate,” retorted Mr. Drewitt, “and you
+know you turned round to Pryor without ever telling me your intention,
+without ever saying a word to put me on my guard. And now listen to
+this: Colonel Vervensoe swears that if ever he finds you about his house
+again, he will horsewhip you; and he is a man to keep his promise.”
+
+“He had better not try to horsewhip me,” said Maxwell, slowly, “not if
+he values his life; for so sure as he attempts it, I’ll break every bone
+in his body.”
+
+“He is a stronger man than you.”
+
+“Is he?”
+
+“And he declares he will not have his tenantry tampered with, or endure
+any man dangling after his wife.”
+
+“He must speak to Lady Emmeline about that. If she likes me to canvass
+with her, I shall certainly do it, and I shall do my best to get Geoffry
+Pryor returned, if the devil himself tried to stop me.”
+
+“You shall not.”
+
+“I shall;” and Maxwell turned to leave the room, but Mr. Drewitt
+prevented him.
+
+“Look here, Maxwell,” he said, “it is time you and I came to an
+understanding.”
+
+“Oh! Archibald,” implored Mrs. Drewitt, “do not say any more while you
+are angry—do not speak while you are irritated. If Maxwell thinks Mr.
+Pryor ought to get in, why should he not canvass for him? I am certain
+you are wrong in this matter, love; I am, indeed.”
+
+“You know nothing about it, Agnes; you are talking on subjects you do
+not understand,” said her husband; while Maxwell, with a grave bow,
+thanked her for her interference, but remarked he and his uncle had
+argued out many a point before, and settled many a dispute, without the
+help of a third party.
+
+Which speech was intended to cut two ways—to make Mr. Drewitt more angry
+than he was, and to send Mrs. Drewitt out of the room.
+
+It did neither. Mrs. Drewitt would not go, because she felt her presence
+was some restraint upon both, and Mr. Drewitt calmed down in a moment,
+and said, “I see what you are driving at, Maxwell, but you may as well
+save yourself the trouble, for I will not turn you out of the house.”
+
+“There are more ways of killing a dog than hanging him,” answered
+Maxwell, “and it is possible to make a place so confoundedly
+uncomfortable for a man that he may leave it of his own accord. We need
+not quarrel any more, sir,” he went on, his face hardening and setting
+as he spoke, “for I shall leave Kincorth without being shown to the
+door.”
+
+“You shall not leave Kincorth,” said Mr. Drewitt, forgetting his anger
+in the rush of memories that came swelling up in his heart. “Vote for
+whom you like, I’ll say nothing more to you about it. I may have been
+wrong. Don’t go away like this. You shall not go, Maxwell;” and as he
+spoke, he laid a detaining hand on his nephew’s arm.
+
+Maxwell shook it off scornfully.
+
+“It is not in the power of any man to make another stay in hell,” he
+answered; “and for many a long day Kincorth has been like hell to me.
+You have my father’s property, but you shan’t have my father’s son as
+well;” and with that Maxwell walked past his uncle, and out of the
+apartment.
+
+“Agnes, stop him, talk to him, don’t let him go,” said Mr. Drewitt; and
+only too glad of the order, his wife ran up to her nephew’s room, at the
+door of which she knocked gently.
+
+“Who is there?” asked Maxwell.
+
+“It is I,” she answered; “let me in, Maxwell—let me speak to you. I have
+something particular to say; I have, indeed.”
+
+“Is my uncle with you?” he inquired.
+
+“No, I am here alone; there is no one with me; let me in, Maxwell, do——”
+
+He unlocked the door, and held it open for her to pass in; then he
+bolted and locked it, putting the key in his pocket; after which he
+placed the only chair the apartment boasted for her to sit on, and
+shutting a box he had just commenced packing, he sat down himself, and
+waited patiently for her to commence.
+
+All round the room Mrs. Drewitt’s glance wandered. She had often been in
+it before, and done her best to make it more comfortable for its
+occupant; but now it seemed to her to look more bare and wretched than
+ever, and she wondered whether she had done right in letting Maxwell
+keep his den, instead of insisting on his occupying some of the spare
+chambers on the first floor.
+
+Those spare chambers had been full of guests almost ever since her own
+arrival, so that she need scarcely have blamed herself in the matter;
+but Mrs. Drewitt was one of those women who always magnify their own
+shortcomings, and she could have burst out crying to think Maxwell was
+going, and she should never have a chance of doing better for him than
+that.
+
+He half guessed what she was thinking about, and said:
+
+“You have done as much for it as could be done, but it is not a very
+first-rate bedchamber. In the winter time the rain comes in there, and
+there, and there, and the wind blows the candle out, and it is damp, and
+cold, and wretched. Till you came—well, you know what it was when you
+came, and I see what it is now. Don’t think I blame my uncle for things
+like this, though,” he added hastily, “or that I am so effeminate as to
+care for them. I only regret the years I have wasted here. I only
+reproach my uncle for having let me live here in idleness when he knew
+the day must come that I would have to turn out from even this shelter
+and earn my living as I could.”
+
+“But you will not go,” she pleaded; “your uncle told me to ask you to
+stay. We will do what we can for you, only remain—only—only—remain.”
+
+And she stretched out her hands imploringly towards Maxwell, who sat
+with his hands clasped tightly together and his head bent down, for a
+moment silent after she had ceased speaking. Then he answered:
+
+“Because you ask me, I would remain if I could; but I cannot. Mr.
+Drewitt thinks that he and I might make up this quarrel; and so,
+perhaps, we might. But if we healed this sore, it would only break out
+in a fresh place to-morrow. I am too old now for there to be peace
+between us,” he went on fiercely. “He ought either never to have
+undertaken to do anything for us, or he ought to have done it. If he had
+given me even a chance of earning my living, I would have worked and
+slaved to make myself and my sisters independent. It could not have been
+a great expense had he put me through college; but he never could afford
+to send me to Trinity—could not afford with Kincorth, and Analore, and
+twenty other nice little properties beside! When he came into this
+estate he had, if you believe me, Mrs. Drewitt, eight thousand a year
+clear—I think there was a mortgage on the place, which brought the
+rent-roll down to eight thousand—but a man may live on eight thousand a
+year,” finished Maxwell Drewitt, bitterly. “It is a long way off
+starvation that.”
+
+“If he has been imprudent,” remarked Mrs. Drewitt, “he is sorry for that
+imprudence; if he has never done anything for you, it is not too late
+for him to mend his error now. I am not saying, Maxwell, remember, that
+he has acted rightly—indeed, I am afraid he has been very wrong; but he
+has done wrong without intending it, and if you stay, he can try to make
+reparation.”
+
+“He has not the means now,” answered Maxwell; “if he had the will he has
+not the power. He is mortgaged up to his ears. There is nothing free,
+excepting Kincorth, and Kincorth will have to be pawned to provide funds
+to pay for the expenses of this election and a few other extravagances
+in which he has lately been indulging. I have waited long enough—I have
+waited and I have hesitated; but now I will take my pack on my back and
+go to seek my fortune.”
+
+“But you will not go at once,” she said. “You will stay and see—you will
+not part in anger when you do leave. Your uncle is dreadfully grieved,
+and, Maxwell, you were insolent! You ought not to have tried his
+patience as you did.”
+
+“A beggar has only one weapon, and it is hard if he may not use that,”
+replied the young man. “No,” he continued, “I must either go now or
+never—”
+
+“Let it be never, then,” she interrupted; but Maxwell shook his head.
+
+“Mrs. Drewitt,” he said, “I put it to your own sense. Can I stay here?
+Would it be well for me to do so? Would it be wise—would it be manly?
+Would you like to see any one you cared for, occupying the dependent
+position I fill? Would you not bid him rather go out and work—earn his
+bread, rather than have it given to him?”
+
+“Perhaps so,” she assented; “but I would have no one go in anger. Your
+uncle was saying something about thinking you might like a commission,
+Maxwell. Should you like it? My father might be able to get you one; or
+if not, I am positive my brother-in-law could obtain some government
+appointment for you, in England or the colonies. Should you care for
+that?”
+
+“No, thank you, Mrs. Drewitt,” answered Maxwell; “an officer without
+private means is only a pauper in uniform; and besides, to be frank,” he
+went on, “I would rather take no favour from your family.”
+
+“You dislike me so much, I suppose,” she said, a little flush coming up
+into her face. She had never been disliked before, and it hurt her to
+think she could only make enemies, let her try her best to gain friends.
+“You dislike me so much.”
+
+“Not personally,” he replied. “I only dislike you as being Mr. Drewitt’s
+wife.”
+
+“But what difference can being his wife make?” she asked.
+
+“I cannot tell you that now,” he said, “but perhaps I may some day. What
+I can tell you at this moment,” he proceeded, suddenly returning to the
+question at issue, “is, that I wish to leave Kincorth at once, on
+account of the election. My uncle wants me to stop for a similar reason.
+He thinks it will damage his canvassing if—”
+
+“If people imagine you and he have quarrelled,” finished Mrs. Drewitt,
+as he paused and hesitated. “Then, Maxwell, was he right? Were you
+trying to provoke him to tell you to leave the house?”
+
+There was a moment’s hesitation, but then Maxwell Drewitt said boldly—
+
+“You may as well know me for what I am at once. I was wanting him to
+turn me out. As he is too wise to do that, I am going to turn myself
+out. You look shocked. You begin to see that there may be things in
+heaven and earth undreamed of in your hitherto very limited philosophy;
+but in the future, when you are thinking what a sinner I am, remember
+that I have had no opportunity of becoming a saint. Life has not been a
+bed of roses to me. The teachings I have listened to have not always
+been such as the regenerate hear in church. As time goes by you will
+come to understand what kind of a home Kincorth has been to us, and then
+judge us if you like. You will do what you can for the girls, I know,
+till I am able to take them from you.”
+
+“Don’t go, Maxwell,” entreated Mrs. Drewitt, and there was a sick, dead
+feeling about her heart as she spoke. “Don’t go; let us try all together
+to make a better use of your life; let us live in peace and unity, as
+such near relations should.”
+
+“Did Esau live at peace with Jacob?” asked Maxwell, who was weary of the
+discussion. “Was Ishmael suffered to remain after the new heir was born?
+Do you suppose Lazarus, living on the crumbs that fell from Dives’
+table, had a friendly feeling towards the men who fared sumptuously
+every day? If Solomon had not slain Adonijah, would Adonijah ever have
+ceased troubling his brother? Can you remember an instance where the
+disinherited loved the man who inherited? Is it not better for us to
+live apart in peace, than under the same roof at war?”
+
+“I wish I were a better peacemaker,” she said.
+
+“If an angel came down from heaven, unless indeed he were the angel of
+death,” said Maxwell, with an emphasis on the latter part of his
+sentence which was not quite intelligible to his auditor, “he could not
+keep me in Kincorth now. It will not take me long to pack my clothes, I
+have not so many of them, and then I mean to go. Tell my uncle I thank
+him for wanting me to stay all the same, but I would rather travel my
+own road, and that leads me out of Kincorth.”
+
+Having finished which explicit speech, Mr. Maxwell Drewitt unlocked the
+door, and held it open for his aunt to pass out, as he had held it open
+for her to pass in.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ At the Hustings.
+
+
+Mr. Drewitt and his nephew did not part quite as friends, and yet to the
+eye of the world they did not part as enemies. Finding his wife’s
+intervention useless, the owner of Kincorth, though grievously wounded
+and worsted, let matters take their course. Had the quarrel originated
+in anything else than the election, Mr. Drewitt would have felt its
+consequences more bitterly than was the case. He could not have let his
+dead brother’s only son leave Kincorth in such a fashion had a question
+of politics not been raised between them; but as it was so it was.
+Maxwell had done what his father would not have done—helped a man’s wife
+to tamper with his tenantry; and if he liked to go, and if nothing could
+hinder his going, why, he must do so, and take the consequences.
+
+“He will be glad enough to come back when the election is over,” thought
+Mr. Drewitt; but in this idea he was wrong. Maxwell had made up his mind
+by very slow degrees to moving; but once made up it would have been
+impossible to induce him to return.
+
+He and his uncle had often had quarrels before, and Maxwell had
+frequently hinted that if pushed too far he might leave Kincorth
+altogether.
+
+On one of these occasions Mr. Drewitt had told him he might go to the
+devil if he chose, and Maxwell had retorted that his uncle had taken
+precious good care he should not travel post at any rate.
+
+Between such near relations little amenities of this kind meant nothing,
+or next to nothing; but now the case was different. With no great
+provocation, the young man had elected to leave Kincorth, and could not
+be persuaded to remain in it.
+
+If he repented of his choice at any future period, Kincorth was free to
+him still. Meantime, as he sowed he must reap, and Kincorth could do
+without him.
+
+Supposing Archibald Drewitt ever reasoned out the question, it is very
+likely he did it in somewhat the preceding fashion; but truth was, he
+had little time for thinking. He was so taken up with the election—he
+had such hosts of people to see—he was so eternally occupied, that he
+had no leisure to observe things which did not, however, escape his
+wife’s observation.
+
+She saw her husband was not quite so popular as formerly. She perceived
+that the lower orders were looking coldly on her; she heard indirectly
+that the Liberals were making way; she understood that Maxwell’s
+departure was being made a party question; she learnt that many laid the
+blame of the fracas on her; when she passed through the tents that were
+erected on the lawn, where the populace got drunk _au discrétion_ at her
+husband’s expense, she heard muttered remarks on the subject of English
+pride, and outlandish airs, and “interlopers.”
+
+The election had seemed good fun at first; if it had done nothing else,
+it had served to divert her attention from household grievances, from
+domestic shortcomings; but now, when she laid her aching head on her
+pillow, she sighed for the peace and the happiness of her father’s
+house, and prayed for the contest to be well over.
+
+Then, as in the future, Mrs. Drewitt had to fight out her fight alone.
+From the first hour in which she set foot in her husband’s house she
+kept her trials to herself; she made up her mind not to worry him about
+trifles, and before long she came to the conclusion it would be quite as
+well not to worry him about great things either.
+
+Unstable as water! Who would entrust a pearl of great price to the
+mercies of the stream, to the keeping of a river?—and yet this was
+precisely what this poor soul had done all unwittingly. Her love was her
+pearl; her happiness was her sole treasure; and she had cast both at the
+feet of a man who, never having done well for himself, was never likely
+to do well for her.
+
+Unstable as water! the streamlet ran by; unstable as water! the waves
+came and went, and ebbed and flowed, and she keeping up a brave face
+through the day, cried herself to sleep at night.
+
+She never saw her husband except in the middle of a crowd of voters or
+else at the end of a long dinner-table. The house was crammed with
+visitors. Sorely against her will she had even to move Kathleen to
+Maxwell’s old room, and give the girl’s bedchamber to a bachelor guest.
+
+“It is always like this in the hunting season, aunty; don’t mind about
+me,” said Kathleen. “I have had to sleep many and many a night on the
+floor, because they sat up so late it was no use trying to get a sofa;
+on the floor with nothing but a blanket under me, and hard work to get
+that. Maxwell did not like being turned out constantly, so he came up
+here at last. When will he be back, aunty darling?”
+
+“After the election, I hope, Kathie,” answered Mrs. Drewitt, as she
+kissed the girl and bade her good-night. “After the election.”
+
+“I wish it was over,” sighed Kathleen.
+
+She did not wish it over more than her aunt, who firmly believed that
+the contest never would have an end, for the minutes seemed to be like
+days, and the days like years.
+
+But at last the nomination day came round, and both parties girt up
+their loins and prepared for war.
+
+It was a fine morning, “God bliss it,” as the country people remarked
+one to another: no better weather could have been desired for the
+nomination of candidates. That was going to be a great day for
+Connemara, at least for that portion of it in which we are at present
+more particularly interested. The right of the Earl of Popingham to
+return his nominee was going to be fiercely disputed; there was going to
+be, at last, a thoroughly well-contested election. Hurrah! hurrah!
+hurrah! and caps and hats went flying up in the air, and “Three cheers
+for Sache,” and “None o’ that, but three times three with a will, boys,
+for Pryor,” re-echoed through the usually quiet streets of Duranmore.
+
+Hurrah! and huzza! and hooroo! Who would not yell and cheer and shout
+till he was black in the face?—for had every public-house not been open
+to the populace for weeks past? and was not every “free and independent”
+drunk? and had not each man amongst them who was wavering in the least
+pocketed his five, or ten, or twenty pounds? and was not Irish
+enthusiasm and Irish excitement worked up by whiskey and party feeling
+to fever-point on that glorious August morning when Geoffry Pryor was to
+be seconded by Maxwell Drewitt?
+
+The town was fuller than a fair; the electors were drunker than
+fiddlers; the canvassers were busier than ever; the candidates were in
+an agony of suspense; the windows opposite the hustings were crowded
+with ladies; the inn-yards were a sight to behold, crammed full of
+carriages. There were opposition bands playing, and flags waving, and
+ribbons fluttering, and people jostling, and boys shouting, and women
+screaming, and children being crushed to pieces, and police plunging
+through the crowd. Two companies of horse occupied one side of the
+market-place, ready to charge the populace at a moment’s notice; and,
+altogether, Duranmore was a great and cheering sight, for in the days of
+which I am now writing elections were no child’s play. Lives were lost,
+men trampled under foot, ridden down by the soldiers, kicked, stoned,
+cudgelled. Heads were cracked, limbs broken. Donnybrook, at its worst,
+was a peaceable sort of scene in comparison to an Irish election at its
+best, where men of station and of standing sacrificed fortune,
+character, position, truth, honour, honesty, their fellow-creatures’
+happiness, and, in many cases, their fellow-creatures’ lives, to return
+for their representative in Parliament perhaps as great a vagabond as
+ever cheated the sheriff.
+
+Duranmore and West Connemara was, for various reasons, considered by the
+landlord interest in that part of Ireland a stronghold of considerable
+importance; and the interest of the approaching contest consisted in the
+fact that it was to be a kind of fight for independence. Was the seat
+virtually to belong to the Earl of Popingham, or not? Were the Roman
+Catholics going to let the sworn enemy of their church return his
+nominee again?
+
+The priests had been busy; the priests had their crow to pluck with the
+Earl, and were going to make the election expensive to him at any rate.
+Whilst the landlords threatened ejection from their holdings, the
+priests threatened exclusion from heaven. While the Earl of Popingham
+said, “Vote for Sache—or notice at November,” the proprietors of snug
+little locations in the next world whispered, “Vote for Pryor—or
+everlasting damnation.”
+
+It was a nice fix for men to be placed in. Starvation in this world, or
+hell fire in the next—a lively prospect either way; so cheerful that we
+can scarcely wonder that in many cases the tenants preferred facing the
+danger which was furthest off, and chose rather to fall into the hands
+of the devil than into those of their landlord.
+
+It is of many and many a year ago I am talking, I pray you bear in mind.
+If the landed proprietors of those days were not unexceptionable, their
+successors have doubtless made all up to the generation of tenants that
+pay rents now; and as it is not very graceful to cut down into old
+sores, I will only add, there was not a place in the United Kingdom
+where party feeling ran so high, where bribes were so heavy, where such
+an amount of virulence and animosity was displayed, as it was in that
+out-of-the-way corner of the earth where two fit and proper candidates
+were about to contest the honour of representing the people in
+Parliament.
+
+As a matter of course, there had always hitherto been some fight made,
+and equally perhaps of course the nominee had always heretofore won; but
+on this occasion the claims seemed more nearly equal than had ever been
+the case before, for it was well known that young Mr. Waller of Eversbeg
+had deserted his late father’s principles and gone over to the enemy;
+and it was reported that—instigated thereto and encouraged therein by
+Lady Emmeline Vervensoe and Mr. Maxwell Drewitt—the Vervensoe tenantry
+had turned restive on a papistical question, and were intending to vote
+according to the dictates of their unenlightened consciences for once.
+
+Altogether, Duranmore was a great and glorious sight.
+
+It was enough to make any one madly in love with our representative
+system, and with the way seats in Parliament are secured, to see the
+spectacle the town presented.
+
+For a month the place had been drunk—not figuratively, but literally—for
+weeks men had not been men, but rather casks full of spirits: they drank
+till they were blind, and then slept till they could see. The whole town
+and all the inhabitants thereof smelt of whiskey; every free and
+independent was in a state of greater or lesser incapability; every
+barmaid was frightfully active; every servant went about like a walking
+ribbon-shop; every wife was on the look-out for money: if the husbands
+were drunk, that was no reason why business should be neglected.
+
+They would see to the votes when the time came; meanwhile they would
+take care of the notes.
+
+Towards the last there was no attempt to do the thing under the rose;
+gentlemen and ladies went about buying votes—not begging them—not even
+going through the ceremony of appearing to believe open bribery could
+be, as the Countess of Popingham said, “hurtful to their sensitive
+feelings.”
+
+Rents were forgiven; fines remitted; leases promised; farms let on
+advantageous terms; money was cheerfully paid for getting voters out of
+the way; personation fees ran high—in short, neither side left a stone
+unturned, or a trick untried, likely to prove beneficial to what they
+were severally pleased to call the “good cause.”
+
+To be strictly impartial, there was not a toss up between them.
+
+“If you had shaken the Tories and Whigs up in a bag together,” remarked
+Ryan afterwards, “I do not know which would have come out first.”
+
+There were no clean hands among either party; no man was so free of
+blame that he could have thrown stones at his opponent. The game had
+been a tremendously expensive one; and “whoever wins, the people get the
+stakes,” said Mr. Timothy Ryan regretfully.
+
+What a gay sight the town presented! The windows of every house
+commanding a view of the hustings were full of women—young, well-born,
+beautiful—who exhibited red or blue ribbons, according to the side they
+affected.
+
+The fair Sacheites, headed by the Countess of Popingham, Mrs. Munks,
+Lady Marsden, Mrs. Hickman, Mrs. Drewitt, and a bevy of other county
+notables took possession of the assembly room, which chanced to be Lord
+Marsden’s property; whilst conspicuous among the ladies in the Liberal
+interest, who occupied the Court-house, appeared in white dress and red
+ribbons the still beautiful though somewhat _passée_ Lady Emmeline
+Vervensoe, who having openly deserted her husband’s colours, had gone
+about canvassing, in company with Mr. Waller and Maxwell Drewitt, to the
+intense mortification of her husband and the extreme scandal and disgust
+of the Popingham faction.
+
+Lady Emmeline had come of great people; she was an heiress in her own
+right, she had condescended to marry a commoner; further, she was a
+poetess and had written some very charming lines to the cuckoo, and a
+few verses of a highly laudatory character concerning Duranmore Bay—for
+all these reasons Lady Emmeline did as she pleased, and suffering no one
+to say her nay, sat on the opposition benches, smiling in conscious
+loveliness, the observed of all observers.
+
+The town was like a garden; every flower-bed for miles round having been
+rifled of its treasures to deck the houses, horses, and hustings.
+
+Triumphal arches of red and white dahlias, long festoons of evergreens
+relieved by flowers formed of blue calico and tied with floating
+ribbons, branches of oak, sycamore, and elm, yards of ivy, hearts,
+stars, mottoes formed of every imaginable flower hung fading in the sun.
+
+Blue flags and red flags danced in the light breeze; the opposition
+bands played at one and the same time Garry Owen and God save the King;
+full-length caricatures of Sache and Pryor were exhibited on every
+available yard of wall; election ballads were chanted at the extremest
+pitch of the human voice; there were drums, there were horns, there were
+Jew’s harps, there were penny whistles, there was every imaginable
+instrument, there was every imaginable noise.
+
+Sache’s supporters drove into town, their servants dressed in blue and
+silver liveries, and their carriages decorated with blue hammer-cloths,
+edged with silver lace. Pryor’s friends—for the most part young
+bachelors who affected different opinions from those their fathers had
+held—came galloping into the market square with their saddles and
+bridles ornamented in red and gold.
+
+Such splendour! such misery! such evidences of wealth! such signs of
+poverty! such sleek, well-groomed, gaily-caparisoned horses! such
+under-fed, dirty, half-clothed men and women!
+
+Ah! reader, how can I ever hope to show you the violent contrasts that
+were presented to view within so small a space—contrasts that would have
+been shocking, had they not been ludicrous also?
+
+The candidates were so spruce, the constituents were so shabby; the hats
+of the first were faultless, the head-gear of the latter wretched: the
+blue or red colours of the gentry showed to advantage over glossy
+broadcloth, over snowy waistcoats; the rosettes of the electors were
+pinned on tattered garments, that had been patched and patched till they
+were like unto the coat of many colours that brought Joseph so much
+ill-will.
+
+But though poor, they were merry; they were, as the Earl of Popingham
+said, perpetrating an execrable pun, “full of spirits;” and fuller of
+whiskey than they had ever been of food, laughing, jeering, jesting,
+yelling, shouting, they shoved and pushed and fought their way up
+towards the hustings.
+
+Mr. Sache was not popular among the lower orders, and he knew it. He was
+no hero—morally and physically he was a coward; and though he had drunk
+brandy enough to have, as Lord Marsden contemptuously told him, brought
+colour into the cheeks of a corpse, yet when he appeared on the hustings
+he looked the very embodiment of terror and despair.
+
+Gazing down upon the sea of upturned faces, listening to the jeers and
+menaces of the crowd, in mortal dread of dead cats, rotten cabbages, and
+still more rotten eggs, he thought a seat in Parliament hardly worth
+passing through such an ordeal to gain.
+
+“What the deuce brought me here?” he said to Mr. Munks, and his lips
+were white and his body all of a tremble while he spoke.
+
+“What the deuce brought you here, is it?” asked Mr. Munks; “why, we did,
+and damned idiots we have been, I consider, for our pains. But now you
+are here, there is no help for the matter; and if you show the white
+feather, by —— I’ll shoot you dead!”
+
+And then Mr. Munks faced round on young Waller of Eversbeg, who was
+mocking Mr. Sache, and laughing at the creditable figure cut by the
+Conservative candidate; turned round, and asked him how _he_ would like
+to have his account settled, “in cold steel or hot lead?”
+
+Whereupon Mr. Waller demanded if Mr. Munks wanted to make his will.
+“Because,” he went on, “Ryan can draw you out a draft, and Mr. Pryor
+would give an opinion on it, and I dare say make no charge under the
+circumstances.”
+
+“Get to business—get to business, Munks,” whispered Mr. Drewitt,
+impatiently, “for heaven’s sake let us have it over;” and thus exhorted,
+Mr. Munks, whenever the cheering and groaning consequent upon the
+appearance of the candidates had in some measure subsided, commenced,
+“Gentlemen——”
+
+“Three groans, my boys, and don’t listen to him. Hiss——” and there came
+a storm of yells and hisses and execrations, accompanied by a smart
+shower of missiles, most of which fortunately fell short of the target.
+
+“Gentlemen,” again essayed Mr. Munks, who, whatever other virtues he
+lacked, certainly was game to the backbone. “Gentlemen——”
+
+“Who raised the rints last half——?”
+
+“Who broke the leases?”
+
+“Who put Dick Benton to the dure?”
+
+“Who took the roof off the Widdy Martin, and her down in the favar?”
+
+“Och! ye murthering villain.”
+
+“Och! ye blackguard thafe.”
+
+“Put a praty in yer ugly mouth; here’s one for ye.”
+
+“Gentlemen——”
+
+“Hould yer tongue.”
+
+“He couldn’t do it. He’d slobber his chin.”
+
+“Gentlemen, I beg to——”
+
+“Beg of somebody, then, that doesn’t know ye.”
+
+“Och, can’t ye let the man spake? Shure his wife never lets him have the
+chance at home.”
+
+“Go away and send up Betty!”
+
+“In her ridin’-habit!”
+
+“That she is goin’ to be buried in!”
+
+“Come, come, my lads, this won’t do!” yelled out Ryan, in a stentorian
+voice, which was distinctly audible even above the din. “Fair play is a
+jewel. Never refuse to listen to anybody. Hear Mr. Munks—you don’t know
+what he may be going to promise you.”
+
+“Talk’s chape!” shouted out a refractory voter. “Fine words butther no
+parsnips!”
+
+“Ye can’t boult the dure wid a boiled carrot!”
+
+“Be quiet, will you!” vociferated Ryan, “and attend to the gentleman’s
+speech;” and thus exhorted the crowd permitted Mr. Munks to commence.
+
+He said he hoped they would return Mr. Sache, that he was no stranger,
+but a resident in the neighbourhood, and known to every one of them.
+
+“A d——d sight too well!” hiccupped a tipsy tailor; at which remark the
+hubbub began again with twenty times greater vigour than ever.
+
+Hissing, yelling, hooting, cheering, cries of “Go on, Munks!” “Go in and
+win!” “Speak up, man!” “Make haste or you’ll be late!” “Are you afraid
+of Betty? Lord, man, we won’t let her touch you here!” with peals of
+laughter and volleys of oaths, compelled Mr. Munks finally to give up in
+despair.
+
+“It is of no use,” he exclaimed; “they won’t listen to us; there is a
+conspiracy; the crowd is packed.”
+
+On this Maxwell Drewitt came hurriedly forward. “If you won’t hear Mr.
+Munks,” he cried, “hear my uncle. We are on opposite sides, but I am
+sure he will tell you a great deal you would not willingly miss. Now
+three cheers for Archibald Drewitt, who never defrauded the poor man
+yet! Cheer like Irishmen, and not like a set of over-fed, beer-drinking
+Saxons. Cheer, you rascals, cheer!”
+
+Thus exhorted, the rascals did cheer, till they were hoarse, for
+Archibald Drewitt, for Maxwell Drewitt for Waller and for Pryor; but
+somehow Mr. Sache’s seconder did not seem much elated by the applause.
+Pushing his nephew aside, he said, the moment a lull in the tempest
+permitted his words to be heard——
+
+“I need no one to claim a hearing from me. I am not afraid of your
+refusing any request of mine. You will give a patient hearing to your
+old friend Archibald Drewitt—(tremendous cheering and cries of ‘That we
+will!’) We are old acquaintances, and do not need to be introduced to
+one another by anybody. We have not always agreed about politics, it is
+true, but we have agreed to disagree. Some amongst you go with me, and
+others do not; but to one and all my advice is—Return Mr. Sache! [Uproar
+and yells of ‘No, we won’t!’] Yes, gentlemen, you will. He is as honest
+a man as you’ll find. [Interruption, and a remark that ‘Honest men must
+be scarce!’] Yes, my friends, I admit that they are scarce, and for that
+very reason you ought not to let Mr. Sache slip through your fingers. He
+will do you justice in Parliament! [Great confusion.] He knows your
+wants, and you know his principles. [‘To be very bad!’] He is a
+gentleman who will never deceive you.” [‘No, faith, we know him too well
+to let him do that. He was cut out for a gentleman, but the devil ran
+away with the patthern!’] And then came another burst of yelling,
+hissing, and fighting.
+
+“Now, now, my friends,” said Mr. Drewitt, “I asked you for a peaceable
+hearing, and I thought you would have done that much for me. It is not
+so often I make a speech that you should interrupt me when I do. Just
+give me five minutes to tell you why you should return Mr. Sache, and I
+will promise not to detain you longer. [A prolonged howl, and cries of
+‘We want to hear nothing about him.’] Very likely; but I want to tell
+you something about him. His political views are sound; if you do not
+approve of them, it is not because they are bad, but because you cannot
+see what is good for you. He is an Irishman, has an interest in the
+soil, loves the country of his birth, will speak up for your rights——”
+
+“Arrah! hear that. The man can’t say boo to a goose. Him spake up!” And
+ironical cheers and perfect shrieks of laughter drowned the remainder of
+Mr. Drewitt’s sentence.
+
+“Well, gentlemen,” he resumed, when a partial lull enabled his words to
+be heard, “I suppose if I appeared before you a candidate for the honour
+of representing you in Parliament, instead of trying to second Mr.
+Munks’s statement, that Mr. Sache is a fit and proper person to fill
+that office—in that case also, I suppose, you would refuse to hear a
+syllable I had to say?”
+
+“No, we would not; we’d return you and send you up to London flying.
+Propose yourself, Archibald Drewitt, and we’ll second you. Hurrah!”
+
+He had them on the hip now, and pushed his advantage.
+
+“Then it is to Mr. Sache himself and not to his political principles you
+object. They cannot but be to your liking, because you say you would
+have me for your member, and my views are identical with his. My
+friends, you are acting at this minute much like children who strike a
+hard table when they have knocked themselves. You think you will hurt us
+by returning Mr. Pryor, and in reality you will only hurt yourselves.
+Mr. Sache wishes to serve you; but as you do not happen to like him, you
+cheer and shout for a man who will not serve you at all. Mr. Pryor, a
+very estimable young gentleman no doubt, is not fitted to be your
+representative. What interest has he in the country? Though an Irishman,
+I believe, by descent, he is yet English by birth, education, and
+residence. He is a stranger, a lawyer, a mere boy.”
+
+“Fifty times betther man than Sache, the dirty spalpeen! We won’t hear a
+word against Pryor. We’ll gag the first that cheers for the hardhearted
+landlord.” Which speech being accepted as a challenge, gave rise to a
+regular shindy, that diversified and enlivened the proceedings. Heads
+were cracked, shillelaghs waved, lips cut, an arm or two broken: the
+police had finally to interfere to restore order, and then Mr. Waller
+came to the front, and was greeted with tumultuous acclamations from the
+one side and by hisses, groans, cabbagestalks, bad eggs, and rotten
+fruit from the Sacheites.
+
+“Gentlemen.”
+
+“Three cheers for Lady Emmeline! Three times three!”
+
+And Lady Vervensoe, who had drawn public attention to herself by waving
+a crimson scarf out of the window, now rose and bowed right and left to
+the crowd in acknowledgment of their compliment.
+
+With her white dress and red ribbons, with her chip hat and plume of red
+feathers, her grace and beauty, she created quite a furore; and during
+the excitement attendant on this demonstration Mr. Waller managed to
+move the election of his cousin, Mr. Pryor, as a fit and proper person
+to represent Duranmore and West Connemara in Parliament.
+
+“It is my turn now,” whispered Maxwell Drewitt to Ryan. And he came
+forward, and leaning over the rails, and jauntily holding in his left
+hand a brand new hat, began—
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ The Result of the Poll.
+
+
+“Electors of Duranmore and West Connemara—for I am not going to call
+you, for a purpose, gentlemen, which you are not, nor friends, because I
+see a good many faces below there which belong to my enemies—but
+Electors of Duranmore and West Connemara. I want you to listen to what I
+have got to tell you about the way elections have been previously
+managed in this part of the country, and of how we intend that they
+shall be managed in future——”
+
+Cheers from the Reds, hisses from the Blues.
+
+“For shame, Maxwell Drewitt!” cried one.
+
+“Siding against your uncle.”
+
+“Is it to the likes of you we’re going to listen, do you think?”
+
+“Go home, boy! out o’ that”
+
+“Home is it?” shouted another; “has he not been turned out of the only
+one he ever knew?” And at the words Archibald Drewitt turned sick.
+
+“Isn’t it himself ought to be at the ould place now instead of them that
+owns it?”
+
+“No, it is not,” answered Maxwell Drewitt, whose face was scarlet, but
+not with pain. “It is not; Archibald Drewitt came into Kincorth fairly.
+Long may he keep it!”
+
+“Ye wish it, don’t ye Max?” cried some one among the crowd. And then
+there came shrieks of laughter and cheers and hisses.
+
+“Make it up with him, man; it’s not too late yet.”
+
+“Why didn’t ye quarrel till he married?”
+
+“Why could ye not have let somebody else put in the spake for Pryor?”
+
+“Because I wanted to tell you what nobody else will tell you: because my
+family affairs have nothing to do with anybody in Duranmore: because I
+see no reason why I should wear my uncle’s political opinions, if they
+do not chance to fit me, any more than his clothes. Conservatism is
+stationary. Liberalism is progressive. Toryism may suit those who have
+had their way made for them, but those who have to make their way for
+themselves see that the Whigs have the best of the argument.
+
+“I am now in the same boat with the poorest man amongst you. He wants to
+rise, so do I; he wants to make money, so do I; he does not want to be
+ground under the carriage wheels of the upper ten thousand, neither do
+I. We are all of one mind in this matter; we want butter to our bread,
+and ham and eggs to our breakfast, and clothes to our backs, and good
+roofs over our heads, and something to lay by against old age. Here is a
+man to get what we desire for us. Three cheers for Geoffry Pryor.”
+
+And the people cheered, and the people shouted, while Maxwell Drewitt
+took breath; and some cried out that it was all true, and others told
+him to go home—that he was a humbug, and that they would have nothing to
+do with him.
+
+“Am I a humbug?” he yelled, almost cracking his voice in his efforts to
+make himself heard. “Am I a humbug? If I am, then humbugging must be a
+devilishly unprofitable trade. And as long as you have chosen to
+introduce this subject, I may say that I have given you as good proofs
+as any man can, that, let my principles seem bad or the reverse in your
+eyes, I at least have adopted them in sincerity of heart—with integrity
+of purpose. All of you know that I had not much to give up, but still I
+have given up the little I had, and stand before you a man who, having
+relinquished everything for what he conscientiously believes to be the
+good of his country, has a right to claim from you, at any rate, a calm
+and impartial hearing.”
+
+“Go on, Max; we’re listening.”
+
+“We’re as quiet as mice in a meal bag.”
+
+“Go on, man. Go on, go on, go on.”
+
+“I know I am not so popular as my uncle,” began Maxwell.
+
+Cries of “Yes, yes, you are.” “No you are not.” “Finish your speech, the
+schoolmaster could not have laid it off better. Who wrote it for ye,
+Max?” “Go on, and don’t keep us here all day. Go on, go on.” And the
+crowd shouted and yelled and laughed, and Maxwell cursed the crowd in
+his heart while he proceeded.
+
+“I am going on, if you will let me. I was saying that I know I am not so
+popular as my uncle.”
+
+“We mind that. Ye said it afore.”
+
+“He is a man who deserves all the love and respect you can give him, and
+I am sorry we should stand this day on opposite sides.”
+
+“Why don’t ye go over till him then? He’s near enough to ye.”
+
+“Why don’t I go over to him? That brings me to the point I was wanting
+to reach. Let me ask you a few questions, and give you honest answers to
+them, and then you will see if you can still blame me for deserting the
+‘Dirty Blues.’
+
+“Do you want to have a man of family representing you in Parliament?
+Yes. Then surely Mr. Sache cannot be your member!
+
+“Do you want a gentleman? Mr. Sache can lay no claim to such a
+distinction!
+
+“Do you want a person clever and fluent, able to lay your grievances
+before Parliament, and insist on their being redressed? Alas! my
+fellow-electors, Mr. Sache is no orator!
+
+“Do you want a man of mind, capable of grasping facts, of comprehending
+the necessities and wishes of his fellows? Mr. Sache is not possessed of
+a second idea; his only one, and that a very small one indeed, being
+himself!
+
+“Do you desire to do credit to yourselves by sending a good man, an
+independent man, a man of talent and character, into the British Senate?
+If you do, you must never return Mr. Sache!
+
+“Do you want a man—handsome, energetic, fearless? Look at your would-be
+member, voters of Duranmore—electors of West Connemara—look at your
+landlords’ nominee! Look at the poor, frightened, incapable creature
+your tyrants want to compel you to select, and say if I, Maxwell
+Drewitt, were not right to choose a more energetic leader—one able and
+willing to battle out your cause against the United Kingdom, and to
+state your grievances to the world. Look at him, I say, and cheer that
+poltroon if you dare!”
+
+It was probably the very audacity of this address which had kept his
+audience silent, for whenever Maxwell Drewitt, with hand stretched out
+towards Mr. Sache, with finger pointed at him, paused for a moment in
+his speech, there burst out upon the air such a tumult of laughing,
+cursing, joking, yelling, cheering, hissing, shouting, that the
+unfortunate object of the younger Drewitt’s tirade looked wholly
+stupefied and bewildered.
+
+Lady Emmeline was so delighted that she clapped her little hands
+together with might and main; she waved her eternal scarf over the heads
+of the multitude, and flung a bouquet towards Maxwell, which, falling
+short of the hustings, was caught by a man, who took off his battered
+and brimless hat, and said, “Thank ye kindly, my lady.”
+
+If anything had been wanting to make Colonel Vervensoe boil over, this
+would have settled the matter. Absolutely quivering with rage, he shook
+his fist in young Drewitt’s face, and threatened him with condign
+punishment on the spot.
+
+“Only lay a finger on me,” said Maxwell, “and I pitch you head foremost
+into the crowd, who will soon make mincemeat of you. Stand back, sir,
+stand back!”
+
+“If you say another word, Maxwell, you shall never darken my doors
+again,” foamed Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“Time enough for you to shut your doors when I show my face at them,”
+retorted Maxwell. “Be quiet,” he shouted, addressing the electors, “for
+I have still to tell you how your members have been returned hitherto.
+By bribery and corruption—by threats and intimidation—by turning the
+screw on poor men, who had, for the sake of their families, to put pride
+and self-respect and independence, ay, and common honesty in their
+pockets. You have been treated like slaves instead of like Irishmen. Why
+was O’Shane not successful? Because honest men were put out of the way,
+while rogues voted in their names; because refractory electors were
+kidnapped and carried off to Arran and Achill, and in one or two cases
+even to America; because men were made drunk and stripped naked, and
+left without a stitch to their backs, till the polling was over; because
+dead men were brought to life again; because tenants were threatened
+with expulsion; because Government posts were promised to the sons of
+the shopkeepers and small gentry; because the landlords formed a league
+against the men who enable them to live; because there was not an atom
+of honour or honesty amongst the friends and supporters of your
+taskmasters’ nominee.”
+
+“Maxwell, I command you to be silent!” exclaimed Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“My uncle commands me to be silent,” persisted the young man, “but my
+conscience commands me to speak. As a boy I saw these things done, and
+held my peace; as a man I remember what I saw, and choose my side
+accordingly.
+
+“How does the Earl of Popingham expect to win this election? By
+intimidation, by dead cats, such as this” (and he dexterously caught one
+by the tail, and pitched it back in the face of the man who had thrown
+it at him), “by the strong arm, by the might of rank, and power of
+money, and the majesty and omnipotence of landlordism. The things which
+have been done by the Conservatives are almost past my telling.
+Popingham’s pets are among you now with orders to keep the reds back
+from the polling booths; they are wearing red rosettes; but you will be
+able to pick them out for all that when the time comes. As I rode into
+town this morning a lad told me Marsden had offered him half-a-crown to
+pelt the reds, but that he was willing to pelt Marsden himself for
+eighteenpence. Will you have this, fellow-countrymen? It only requires a
+vigorous effort on your part to free yourselves from the yoke. A long
+pull, and a strong pull, and a pull altogether, and we will stand a
+respectable and independent body of electors, with a better man than any
+lordling’s nominee representing us in Parliament.” And amidst a Babel of
+cheering, groaning, clapping, and hissing, Maxwell concluded his speech.
+
+“Now, Sache,” whispered Lord Marsden.
+
+“I have not a word to say. I—I couldn’t do it.”
+
+“But you shall do it,” said Mr. Munks. And he and Mr. Drewitt shoved him
+up to the front of the hustings.
+
+What he said, however, or whether he ever said anything, nobody had the
+slightest idea. His speech appeared in the county paper, but it was
+generally supposed that the reporter wrote it himself.
+
+He had the worst of the day’s storm. Imprecations were shouted out
+against him. He was pelted, insulted, reviled. “How much does the Earl
+give you?” asked one wag.
+
+“Doesn’t the divil take care of his own, Sache?”
+
+“Why don’t you speak up like a man?”
+
+“Couldn’t they have got anybody betther than you?”
+
+“Abbott wouldn’t do their dirty work any longer.”
+
+“And it’s betther to sup with a cutty than want a spoon.”
+
+“Spake up, man, spake up.”
+
+“They’ll niver pay ye for the job if ye don’t work for yer money.”
+
+“Go out o’ that.”
+
+“Betther be a coward than a corp, Sache.”
+
+“Ye dirty blackguard.”
+
+“Who ate up Dan Joyce’s crock o’ butther?”
+
+“Who counts the very chickens as they’re chipping the shell?”
+
+“Let him alone, can’t ye? What’s the use of pouring water on a drownded
+rat?”
+
+“Don’t look so scared, Sache; niver howl till ye’re hurt.”
+
+“We won’t hear ye; we’ll bate ye black and blue. Go out o’ that or there
+won’t be an egg left in Duranmore.”
+
+“How do ye like it?”
+
+“Do like the women: say no and take it” And at every sentence there
+arose a howl, and then came a shower of dirt and filth of all
+description.
+
+“I never heard anything to equal this,” said Mr. Pryor to his cousin.
+
+“You’ll have to run the gauntlet in a minute or two,” answered Mr.
+Waller.
+
+“It’s good for the tailors, that’s one comfort,” observed Maxwell
+Drewitt.
+
+“We want Pryor: go back and send out Pryor. Take him away, Munks, he’s
+no credit till ye. I wondher ye’d be seen out with him. We’re run short
+o’ eggs, and we’ll have to fall to the pavin’ stones next. Take him out
+o’ that. Pryor, Pryor; three cheers for Pryor, and three more for
+Butler, and a good one for Waller, and keep your best and longest for
+Lady Emmeline.”
+
+“Are you going to give me a hearing, my friends?” asked Geoffry Pryor,
+coming forward as Mr. Sache, who by this time presented a pitiable
+spectacle, drew back.
+
+“No we’re not. Yes we are. Ye’ll be served worse than he was. Why did ye
+put on your best coat? ye might as well take it off and give it to me.
+It ’ud look mighty purty turned up wid yellow. See that now!”
+
+“An there’s a flower for your buttonhole.”
+
+“Have ye nearly done?” he demanded.
+
+“No, we havn’t begun. Why don’t ye go on? Ye’re as bad as Sache.”
+
+“Had you not better hear me first, and then speak yourselves
+afterwards?”
+
+“No, we hadn’t.”
+
+“Shall I not speak at all?”
+
+“If it’s any pleasure till ye, ye may.” And then the people laughed and
+cheered and shouted, and Geoffry Pryor went on to tell them how they
+were an oppressed and injured race; how justice had never been done to
+them; how the English knew nothing of the way in which the Irish lived;
+how everything was wrong in the management of the country; how he
+pledged himself to advocate the poor man’s right; how he would miss no
+opportunity of letting the English know of their manifold grievances.
+
+“Every labourer is worthy of his hire,” proceeded Mr. Pryor, “and the
+man who tills the ground should eat of its produce: you ought to have
+your land at such a rent that you can live off it, and not starve on it.
+Politically I am a thorough reformer; in religion I am for letting every
+man go to heaven his own road; and, in conclusion, I can only say, if
+you return me I shall try to serve you faithfully; if you do not return
+me I shall try to be content. I would entreat each man among you to vote
+according to his conscience: not for Sache or Pryor, not for red or
+blue, but for the right and the principle that is in him. And whatever
+the result of the contest may be, Mr. Sache,” he added, turning towards
+his opponent, “I hope we shall be enemies only in public, never in
+private life; and I should like, though I suppose such a proceeding is
+not usual on the hustings, to shake hands with you in token that ours is
+an amiable warfare.”
+
+And Mr. Pryor stretched out his hand to Mr. Sache, who had been, he
+felt, roughly dealt with. Perfectly stupified, however, with brandy and
+terror; bespattered from head to foot, with his cheek cut, and one eye
+closed up, Lord Popingham’s nominee made no movement to take his
+opponent’s offered hand till he was pushed forward by Mr. Drewitt, who,
+having lost patience with everybody, was in no very gentle or forbearing
+mood.
+
+“The show of hands is in favour of the Reds,” he said to Mr. Munks. “We
+must demand a poll.”
+
+And a poll was demanded accordingly; but the result was the same as the
+sheriff had declared the show of hands to be, viz., in favour of Geoffry
+Pryor.
+
+In the days of which I am writing there was no earthly reason why an
+election should not have lasted for ever. Government had not then put
+any limit to the period over which the innocent amusement of breaking
+heads should extend. On the contrary: as there was but one town in each
+county or portion of a county returning a separate member where votes
+could be legally polled, government seemed rather to have erred on the
+side of humouring the popular taste a little too far, than of
+considering it too little. Those were the palmy days of electioneering;
+those were the days of delightful uncertainty—of charming fluctuation.
+You were getting on to-day—you were far behind to-morrow; from hand to
+hand the political ball went tossing; now the Tories had it—now the
+Whigs. Now it was all up with the Reds—now the Blues had not a chance.
+As for trade! nobody even tried to transact any business while the
+election lasted, unless, indeed, the owners of public-houses and the
+landlords of hotels.
+
+They took the business of the town and did it. If you had not a pair of
+shoes in the world, do you think any cobbler in the parish had leisure
+to attend to your wants? Was the rain pouring in through your roof, or
+your house falling down; were the spokes in the wheels of your gig
+rattling like castanets, or every pane of glass in your windows smashed?
+If you were not a glazier, wheelwright, bricklayer, or slater yourself,
+why, windows, and wheels, and houses, and roofs must remain as they were
+till the members were returned—till the free and independent were sober
+and hungry once again.
+
+It was carnival time—a time not of sweetmeats and bouquets, but of
+whiskey and fighting, of rotten eggs and blackthorn shillelaghs; a time
+when family feuds were established that would last rival houses for
+life, and be handed down as heirlooms to their posterity; when even
+sober men—sober and discreet—lost their heads and got drunk with
+political excitement; when wrongs were done that never could be righted
+subsequently; when words were spoken that never could be forgotten; when
+insults were uttered that could never be forgiven.
+
+If the elections of those days were relics of the “good old times,” we
+may fervently thank our stars that such times have passed away for ever.
+
+Canvassing had seemed to Mrs. Drewitt a sufficiently weary season; but
+what was canvassing to making sure of the promised votes, to keeping the
+electors up to the mark?
+
+Mr. Drewitt worked himself into a state of frenzy, and he and Colonel
+Vervensoe and Mr. Munks and Lord Marsden and the Earl of Popingham, and
+a host of other influential Blues, went about the country like so many
+madmen, hunting up voters and bringing them to the polling-booth _nolens
+volens_.
+
+If anything had been wanting to egg the Blues on to greater exertions,
+Maxwell Drewitt’s speech would have proved a whip powerful enough to
+lash them to fury.
+
+If Mr. Sache were not returned, every tenant should be ejected—every man
+who had a vote sent adrift; the cottages should be unroofed; the land
+might remain untilled; children might starve; women might die! From time
+immemorial have not the innocent suffered with the guilty? has not the
+house of Ahab always suffered for the sin of Ahab, from the time of
+Elijah until now.
+
+Most of the landlords were kindly men—not proud, not uncourteous, not
+unfeeling; but they were like the rest of us, weak on one point, and
+that point was politics. There is a savage in most which only requires
+waking to be dangerous. Spite of all our civilization we are forced at
+times to admit we must have come originally of a rude stock, that we are
+closer to Jael, that we are nearer to Jehu than we would willingly
+confess.
+
+The most delicate taste cannot distinguish between port and sherry in
+the dark; and in the same manner there is a mental darkness in which the
+tenderest conscience fails to discern the difference between right and
+wrong.
+
+That was the state to which politics reduced men in the days of which I
+am writing; that is the state to which politics would reduce men now but
+for the extra vigilance of civilization, but for the coolness and
+calmness of the fourth estate, which will have none of it, which insists
+on pouring light in on darkness, of calling a spade a spade, let the
+implement so named be used by peer or peasant.
+
+With the landlords I have mentioned the case was different—the savage
+was roused in them: blinded by passion, they stood, with the noon-day
+sun shining on them, in darkness.
+
+It had become a question of might _versus_ right—of lord against serf—of
+Protestant against Catholic—of “You shall” against “I shall not;” and
+such a question can never be solved except by the result of the battle
+of man against man.
+
+I am not advocating one side or another. God knows,—God who knows all
+things—that though the profession of each was different, there was not,
+long ago, a turn of the scale in favour of either Whig or Tory. Drewitt
+of Kincorth would have served his own father with notice to quit had his
+father voted against Sache. Waller of Eversbeg would have ejected every
+man on his estate had every man not chanced to want to return Pryor.
+There was no choice between them. It was war to the knife on both sides:
+and when war of any kind is being waged, men are not apt to be too
+particular.
+
+Day by day the fight got fiercer, the combatants angrier. In the race
+each side strained every nerve for victory: all stratagems were
+allowed—all tricks were resorted to. It was a Derby where every man was
+trying to bribe his neighbour’s jockey; where he was slyly trying to
+loosen his girths, to unbuckle his bridle, to lame the favourite. It was
+a boat-race where people strove not only to row their best, but
+endeavoured to prevent others rowing at all. If you can fancy a
+three-mile heat, with the riders standing in their stirrups and lashing
+one another back; if you can imagine a rowing-match where, when hard
+run, the crew rose up and battered their opponents with their oars; if
+you can picture a battle without any order or regularity; if you can
+crowd into your mental canvas everything hopelessly unfair, dishonest,
+brutal, mean, you may perhaps form some idea of Duranmore during the
+time which elapsed between the nomination and the return.
+
+There was many a purse filled—there was many a spirit broken. Many a man
+thought of the children at home, and the tract of wretched land that he
+had done his miserable best to till; thought of how the children would
+cry for want of their potatoes; thought of the empty pot, of the lonely
+hill side, of the deserted cabin; and voted against his conscience. His
+opinions might not be right—more than probable they were all wrong—but
+they were not more wrong than those held by many of his betters; and his
+betters were able to vote as they liked, while he had to vote for the
+man he detested.
+
+“If the masther ’ud just let me be, ma’am,” said one poor fellow to Mrs.
+Drewitt, “it’s meself ’ud niver go to the poll at all at all. I’d vote
+for Mr. Pryor if I could; but as it’s not plazing to Mr. Drewitt, I’d
+rayther not vote for aither.”
+
+He had been artful, this uneducated Irishman: he had thought to get at
+the soft side of Mr. Drewitt through his wife; and Mrs. Drewitt herself
+imagined that so reasonable a request might be granted.
+
+“He will never force Byrne to vote against his conscience,” argued Mrs.
+Drewitt.
+
+Wouldn’t he though? Mr. Drewitt soon showed his wife the reverse of the
+picture; and the reverse was not pretty.
+
+Byrne should vote or give up his lot.
+
+“Then,” said Byrne, “I will give up my lot; but if I do I’ll vote for
+Pryor.”
+
+And he did.
+
+After that Mr. Drewitt desired his wife not to allow any of his tenants
+to speak to her on the subject of the election. He knew she did not go
+with him in his ideas; that in fact she was getting perfectly bewildered
+with the strife of contending opinions; for which reasons he bade her
+send all reluctant voters to him.
+
+“I understand them, and you do not,” he said. “I know how to manage
+them; and they think they can manage you.” And thus, happily for
+herself, Mrs. Drewitt was withdrawn from the political arena, and only
+permitted to look on at the fray.
+
+What a fray it was!
+
+“I have not been in bed for a week,” said Maxwell Drewitt to Mr. Waller,
+on the morning which was to decide the result.
+
+“Nor have I,” answered the owner of Eversbeg; “but to-day will, I hope,
+repay us for all.”
+
+That was what the Blues were saying as well. They were sanguine of
+success also; so sanguine, that Mrs. Munks, and Lady Marsden, and a
+number of other ladies—Mrs. Drewitt amongst them, by her husband’s
+special desire—took possession of the Assembly Room, to hear the
+earliest tidings concerning the winner.
+
+Not to be behind on such an occasion, Lady Emmeline and her staff
+occupied the opposition benches. She and Colonel Vervensoe had not
+spoken to one another for a month previously, and it was currently
+reported that if Mr. Pryor got in he would never speak to her again. If,
+on the other hand, Mr. Sache were returned, people believed that she
+would never speak to her husband.
+
+There can be no doubt that the attitude assumed by this lady added
+greatly to the excitement of the election. In the Hickman family brother
+was against brother; among the Drewitts uncle and nephew were bitter
+opponents; but all this was nothing to husband and wife openly
+supporting different sides.
+
+It was the flavouring to the soup; the sauce to the fish; the lemon to
+the punch. Without that element the election would have been, to a great
+extent, like other elections: as it was, in the memory of the oldest
+inhabitant there had never been such fun in Duranmore.
+
+On the last day of the poll the town presented a perfectly indescribable
+scene of riot, misery, and contention.
+
+Everything which had made the nomination rather a grand affair, tended
+to make the final combat wretched and squalid.
+
+The wreaths were faded, the evergreens had turned brown, the arches were
+partly broken down, the flowers were dead, the banners were torn, the
+rosettes were crumpled and soiled, the instruments of the respective
+bands having been used as weapons of offence and defence had come to
+grief, the leading men on both sides looked worn-out and jaded, the
+voters had hardly a whole coat among them; they were tired of fighting,
+they were weary of being dragged hither and thither, they had passed
+through every known stage of drunkenness, and many of them were by this
+time in a state of sickly sobriety.
+
+Altogether the ball had lasted too long: the soldiers, the police, the
+musicians, the voters, the candidates—all were alike exhausted. No one
+seemed so bright as on the first day, excepting the ladies; and even
+some of them looked a little drooping.
+
+Not so Lady Emmeline, however: whether she slept well or rouged well it
+is not for me to say, but the colour in her face was brilliant as the
+dye of her scarf.
+
+“If we do not win I shall die,” were her parting words to Maxwell
+Drewitt.
+
+“We shall win,” was his last answer. Every half-hour he despatched a
+messenger to tell her the state of the poll: every half-hour Geoffry
+Pryor’s chances seemed to brighten, while the anxiety of the Sacheites
+increased.
+
+As the day wore on and the excitement became more intense, rioting
+began, and the fighting and pushing which had hitherto been confined to
+the neighbourhood of the polling-booth, spread through the crowd, till
+the row became general.
+
+There could be no mistake about the matter now. The affair was growing
+serious, the people were getting earnest and dangerous. The Reds were
+cudgelling the Blues, and the Blues were paying back the Reds with
+interest. The authorities were beginning to be alarmed. There was a yell
+for the military, and every soldier settled himself more firmly in his
+saddle, and gathered up his reins, while he waited for the order to
+charge. Every spectator was holding his or her breath, waiting for “what
+next?” when suddenly a piercing scream rang out over the heads of the
+crowd, and a cry of “Save him!” issued from the windows of the Assembly
+Room.
+
+For a moment the play of shillelaghs ceased in the centre of the
+market-place square, and Geoffry Pryor, in the very heart of that
+surging, seething mass of human beings, could just distinguish two men
+struggling over a voter.
+
+The fellow’s coat was torn off his back, and Maxwell Drewitt, with his
+head bare, with clenched teeth, and with his face flushed and furious,
+was dragging him by one arm, while Mr. Drewitt was tugging him away by
+the other. The elder and more powerful man seemed to be getting the best
+of it, when, quick as thought, a stick whizzed through the air and came
+down on Mr. Drewitt’s skull. He dropped on the instant, and as he
+dropped there was a rush of the rabble to one side, and right over his
+body rode a company of hussars.
+
+Then the light left Geoffry Pryor’s eyes; a deathlike sickness came over
+him, and he fainted away.
+
+The whole scene, which it has taken me so long to describe, was acted
+out almost in a second; and next moment eager hands were raising the
+owner of Kincorth from the ground.
+
+“My God, he’s dead!”
+
+“Och, docther, dear, say that the life’s not out of him!”
+
+“Bleed him, docther darlint.”
+
+“For the sake of the blessed Vargin, lift him aisy.”
+
+“Oh, swate father! what is this at all at all?”
+
+“Keep the craythur back. Shure it’s the young wife he married only the
+other day.”
+
+But Agnes Drewitt would not be kept back. Unmindful of the crowd,
+heedless of danger or difficulty, she made her way towards the knot
+collected round her husband.
+
+“Doctor,” she said, “you must bring him back to me. He is not dead: tell
+me he is not dead.”
+
+“Carry him to my house. I can do nothing here,” was all the answer he
+made; but he pulled Mrs. Drewitt forcibly from her husband’s side, and
+keeping her hand in his, followed close behind.
+
+The doctor’s house was not fifty yards distant, but to Agnes Drewitt it
+seemed fifty miles.
+
+The mob closed up again as they passed through, and, as in some terrible
+dream, she heard loud shouts and continuous yells and oaths and threats
+and curses.
+
+Very vaguely it seemed to her as though she had crossed into a frightful
+eternity in which the tumult of earth was still distinctly audible.
+
+Behind her lay the great battle-field of the contested election, where
+her husband had fought for what he thought the right so gallantly and so
+long. To her it was all gone and past: gone with its excitement, its
+sorrow, its shock, its trouble.
+
+She felt stupified, she felt stunned. As she crossed the threshold of
+the doctor’s house, she scarcely heard a prolonged howl of anger and
+disappointment that rent the summer air.
+
+“What’s that?” cried Lady Emmeline, starting up; but next moment she sat
+back in her seat, clenching her hands together and beating her little
+foot in impotent rage against the floor.
+
+“It’s lost! it’s all over!” she shrieked out. And she was right. At the
+eleventh hour every one of the tenants she had promised Mr. Pryor were
+marched up to the polling-booth by her husband, where they recorded
+their votes for Mr. Sache.
+
+They turned the fate of the day.
+
+“That settles it!” muttered Ryan, with a fearful oath; and he was right,
+for Geoffry Pryor was beaten, and the Earl of Popingham’s nominee had
+won!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ Not Dead.
+
+
+If there be one thing under heaven for which more than another the lower
+order of Irish have a passion, it is for offering medical advice; and
+accordingly, whenever the eager crowd who had hustled and shoved their
+way after the “body,” as they called Mr. Drewitt, beheld him safely
+deposited on Doctor Sheen’s bed, they opened fire on that gentleman in a
+style which set at defiance the knowledge of Apothecaries’ Hall, and
+might have made the whole College of Surgeons stand aghast.
+
+“Lay him down there,” growled the doctor. “Gently, gently—do you
+hear?—and not as if he was a sack of potatoes: and now be off, everyone
+of you; I don’t want you here.”
+
+“But, Doctor dear——”
+
+“Open an artery. Och! see if the blood’ll come. Sweet father, what’ll we
+do at all—at all? Musha—oh! Wirrastrue.”
+
+“Jist touch him in the arm”—improved another—“a bit above the
+elbow—where Sergen Brabsen—long life till him—put the lance in me and
+brought me back after I died of the squinazy.”
+
+“Could ye not put a dhrop o’ spirit down his throat, Docthor darlint?”
+suggested a fourth; “it might lift his heart again.”
+
+“Do, an’ may the heavens be yer bed: we’ll dhrink ye’re health night and
+day, an’——”
+
+“Come, be off!” interrupted Doctor Sheen. “I can’t do with you crowding
+about me, yelling enough to pull the house down.”
+
+“If ye’d put a feather till his nose,” broke forth the first speaker
+with greater vehemence than ever, “I can catch one of the hens in a
+minit, or let me hould a bit av a lookin’ glass afore his mouth.”
+
+“An’ fit his arm straight in place: see how it hings.”
+
+“An’ look if the skull’s knocked in entirely, an’ pick out the broken
+bits afore they get down intil his brains.”
+
+“Pick them up with the pincers, and then join them cleverly.”
+
+“An’ sen’ for ould Peggy Magore; shure she has dhrinks made out o’ herbs
+that would entice a corpse to speak, if it could only be made to swally
+them.”
+
+“An’ docthor, wouldn’t ye let his head down a bit?”
+
+“An’ lift his feet on a pillow?”
+
+“And feel if there’s a ticking in either of his heels?”
+
+Which last speech bearing, as it did, on the idea that before death a
+pulse may be felt in the heel, produced such a wailing and mourning—such
+laments over the man who had been taken from them—such tributes to his
+virtues—such regrets for his untimely end—that at length Doctor Sheen
+fairly lost his patience, and shoving the loudest of the talkers out of
+the room, and ordering the rest to follow, he locked and double-locked
+the door, and found himself alone with his patient, Mrs. Drewitt, and
+his assistant.
+
+Without, there was noise and riot and shouting and fighting: within,
+there was silence like the grave: without was life; within, the shadow
+of the angel of death.
+
+No one in the room spoke a word while Doctor Sheen felt Mr. Drewitt’s
+pulse, opened his coat, waistcoat, and shirt, and placed his hand on his
+heart; but when at last he looked up doubtfully, Mrs. Drewitt said—
+
+“Doctor, he shall not die?”
+
+“Very well, ma’am,” answered the doctor, and pressed his fingers on Mr.
+Drewitt’s wrist once more.
+
+Then Doctor Sheen whispered something in the assistant’s ear, to which
+the assistant replied:
+
+“No, only stunned.”
+
+“Do you think so?”
+
+“I am sure of it,” answered the other; “haven’t I had dozens of them
+here just as bad?”
+
+“But not with that,” said Doctor Sheen, still speaking in so low a tone
+that his words could not reach Mrs. Drewitt, and pointing as he spoke to
+Mr. Drewitt’s head, “but not with that.”
+
+“And what’s that?” inquired the assistant contemptuously; “he’ll be all
+right again in a week;” and he took the injured arm, and began
+manipulating it, as though he were playing a tune on a piano.
+
+“There you are,” he said. “Harder, sir, harder; his pulse is not in his
+skin; give him time, there’s no hurry; he’s coming as fast as he can.
+Now I’d give five shillings,” added the young man, stepping back and
+surveying Mr. Drewitt, “I’d give five shillings to know where he has
+been.”
+
+“Where who has been?” asked Mrs. Drewitt, turning her face, which was
+wet with tears, towards the speaker.
+
+“Where your husband has been, ma’am; all our anatomy won’t teach us
+that; it’s a good quarter of an hour since he went away, and he is only
+coming back again now—here he is,”—and as he said the word Mr. Drewitt
+opened his eyes.
+
+With a little cry of thanksgiving his wife fell on her knees beside him.
+She had been afraid to say she feared before; but now the very excess of
+her joy proved how great had been her previous dread.
+
+“I will be quiet,” she said, as Doctor Sheen tried to draw her from the
+room; “I will be quiet—you need not be afraid of me again—I won’t say a
+word you may trust me, indeed—indeed you may.”
+
+“I am going to set his arm,” persisted Doctor Sheen, “and see to this
+cut in his head, and——”
+
+“And there is no one so fit to stay here as I am,” she interposed
+eagerly: “you would wish me to remain, you would like me to be near
+you—would not you, Archy?”—and she looked into the scarcely conscious
+eyes half hidden by a weight of heavy eyelid while she waited for an
+answer.
+
+Archibald Drewitt could not answer her; she had not been accustomed to
+illness, poor soul, or she might have known better than to expect it;
+but he made a vain effort to turn towards her—a faint attempt to move
+his uninjured arm and clasp her hand in his.
+
+It was too much; a more ghastly pallor came over his face, the eyelids
+closed again, and——
+
+“He’s dead! he’s dead!” exclaimed his wife, starting up and endeavouring
+to throw herself on the body, but Mr. Murphy prevented this.
+
+“Dead, ma’am!” he said, still keeping a firm hand on her shoulder:
+“dead, ma’am! he’s worth a dozen dead ones yet. Now—now”—and Mr. Murphy
+patted her back, apparently under the delusion that she was a baby
+choking—“do be reasonable and just leave him to us. He’s not dead, and
+isn’t going to die. So far as this goes, he may live to bury you;” and
+without any more ceremony the young man walked Mrs. Drewitt out of the
+room, and sat her down in the surgery, where he left her alone, after
+having procured for her a well-thumbed copy of “Clarissa Harlowe,” which
+would, he said, “serve to divert her mind.”
+
+“And keep yourself easy, ma’am,” he finished, “for Mr. Drewitt will be
+about again, in no time.”
+
+“You should be more careful, Murphy,” remarked Doctor Sheen that same
+night, when he and his assistant were seated together over their
+respective tumblers of punch. “I did not exactly like your saying to
+Mrs. Drewitt that her husband might bury her. Some of the English don’t
+take those kind of things.”
+
+“Well, wasn’t I right?” demanded the other; “mayn’t he bury her? isn’t
+he going on as well as a man could go on? and won’t he live to have sons
+of his own, please God, and keep Maxwell out of the estate?”
+
+“He has been here three times this evening to ask after him,” said
+Doctor Sheen, reflectively.
+
+“And did he seem sorry when he heard it was for Kincorth, and not for
+the Abbey, his uncle was bound?”
+
+“No, he seemed glad.”
+
+“Did he now?”
+
+“And he says he did not strike the blow.”
+
+“Who ever thought he did? He had not a stick in his hand at all.”
+
+“His aunt did not know that, for she went on at him, and he could not
+edge in a word till she was tired; but then he began, and told her this,
+that, and the other, till he got round her completely: she’s as soft as
+salve, and she begged his pardon, and they are now as thick as thieves.
+Oh! faith,” added the Doctor, “and it’s Master Maxwell Drewitt that can
+wile the bird off a bush when he likes. It’s a wonderful tongue he has:
+to hear him sometimes, you would think butter could not melt in his
+mouth.”
+
+“And to hear him at others you would know cheese would not choke him,”
+said Mr. Murphy, who had his own reasons for disliking Maxwell.
+
+“Still it’s a great pity of the young fellow,” said Doctor Sheen, mixing
+himself another tumbler of punch, “for he ought to have had Kincorth.”
+
+“It would have been a greater pity of other people if he had had it,”
+remarked Mr. Murphy; in which opinion, however, he chanced to be wrong.
+
+No man could have done worse for other people than Archibald Drewitt,
+who, spite of Mr. Murphy’s hopeful predictions, lay between life and
+death for more than a month at Doctor Sheen’s, during which time the
+house was besieged with visitors and inquiries.
+
+“You must pull him through, Sheen,” said the Earl of Popingham. “We
+cannot afford to lose Mr. Drewitt.”
+
+“You need never show your face at the Hall again if he is not able to
+ride to the first meet this season,” chimed in Colonel Vervensoe, while
+Mr. Pryor, Mr. Waller, and all the Reds were, if possible, more eager in
+their anxiety, more impatient for good tidings, than the Blues.
+
+“But he will get through it, won’t he, Murphy?” asked Mr. Waller one day
+when he had met Doctor Sheen’s assistant on the road near Eversbeg, and
+insisted on taking him up to the house for lunch. “There is no fear now,
+is there?”
+
+“No; he is out of danger; that is, he is out of danger now, so far as we
+know. He will do, if he takes care of himself. His arm is the worst; we
+can’t make a good job of that at all. It was a beautiful case, and a
+splendid fracture; but it will never be a good arm again.”
+
+“Will it hinder his hunting?” asked young Waller, who thought anything
+that stopped a man’s course across country the most grievous misfortune
+possible.
+
+“Hinder his hunting? Is it the like of that would keep Mr. Drewitt back,
+do you think? If that was all, couldn’t he ride with the bridle in his
+teeth, like a gentleman I knew down in Tipperary? You may believe me or
+not, Mr. Waller, just as you like,” proceeded Mr. Murphy; “but he had
+neither arms nor legs, and yet he hunted as regularly as you do.”
+
+“I’d go from here to there to see him,” was Mr. Waller’s only reply.
+
+“And, indeed, it’s himself would make you welcome,” answered Mr. Murphy;
+“that is, if he’s alive; there was not a funnier fellow nor a harder
+drinker in the county.”
+
+“My cousin was round seeing Mr. Drewitt the other day,” remarked Mr.
+Waller.
+
+“Yes, but he did not see him,” said the assistant. “He had a long talk
+with Mrs. Drewitt. We’re glad of anybody that will keep her out of the
+sick room; and Mr. Pryor wanted to get speech with some of them.”
+
+“Yes,” said the other, “he was going back to London, and wished to
+express his regret and all the rest of it. Upon my conscience, I never
+was so frightened in my life. He went down—Pryor, I mean—as if he had
+been shot. Fainted dead away.”
+
+“He ought to take three tumblers of punch every night going to bed,”
+observed Mr. Murphy; “it would strengthen his nervous system.”
+
+“He was delighted with Mrs. Drewitt—came home here in perfect raptures
+about her. She did not strike me as being anything remarkable.”
+
+“Miss Susan Drewitt is a handsome woman,” answered Mr. Murphy; “but Mrs.
+Drewitt is more of a woman—do you understand me, sir? She has not much
+spirit, but she has a sweet temper. She is pretty, to my taste; and for
+a woman, I consider her uncommonly sensible—uncommonly,” and Mr. Murphy
+drained a bumper to her health, after which he suddenly recollected that
+Dr. Sheen would be expecting him, and rose to take his departure.
+
+“When do you think of moving him?” asked Mr. Waller.
+
+“In about a week’s time, if he goes on well,” said Mr. Murphy. “We are
+to have down a mighty easy carriage from Lord Marsden’s, and I think it
+won’t hurt him. It must be uncomfortable for Mrs. Drewitt staying at Dr.
+Sheen’s, though we do our best; and this much I’ll say for her,” added
+Mr. Murphy, “that an easier-pleased or an easier-served lady I would
+never wish to see. She makes no fuss and she gives no trouble, and, for
+my own part, I wish she was to live in the house for ever.”
+
+As for Mrs. Drewitt herself, she was Mr. Murphy’s friend for life. What
+she would have done without him during that illness she never knew. He
+did not seem to know the meaning of the word despondency.
+
+“It was a doctor’s business to cure, to be sure it was. When a doctor
+could not cure, send for the nurse, and a coffin, and a lawyer to make
+the will; but till Mrs. Drewitt saw the lawyer, at any rate, she ought
+not to give way.”
+
+He went up to Kincorth for her. He did her errands; he posted her
+letters; he kept watch while she slept; he told her stories; he listened
+to her while she talked about England.
+
+“That’s the place I’d like to go to,” he said. “What chance has a man in
+a place like this? a man that is a man, I mean, and has any push in him.
+What do you see in a place like this, but broken heads and fever, and
+children being born, and old men and women dying? Except, may be, an odd
+case of cancer, middle-aged people never die of any out-of-the-way
+disease. A child could prescribe for them. And as for work, ma’am,
+nobody in London would credit it! Doctor Sheen is the dispensary doctor,
+you know. Well, if we were earning ten thousand a year each out of it,
+there could not be more expected from us. They come in the middle of the
+night here, and ring—ring—ring, just as if one ought to be standing
+behind the door waiting to answer it, and then, ‘It’s the misthress is
+taken ill, and ye’re to come at wanst,’ and then we’ve to go through the
+rain and the snow and the wind to find the woman. ‘Sorry to have given
+us the thrubble, but when she sint she was very bad, entirely.’ I’d like
+well to go to London, I would. Perhaps I might be there before I’d die.”
+
+“But you must remember, Mr. Murphy,” Mrs. Drewitt was wont to say, “that
+the streets are not paved with gold there, though I know many country
+people imagine they are.”
+
+“True, ma’am; but they must be full of patients. I have always fancied
+that there must be some place on the face of God’s earth where, if men
+are willing to work hard, they may gather abundantly; but let that place
+be where it will, it is not Duranmore.”
+
+All of which set Mrs. Drewitt thinking, and wondering more and more what
+Maxwell was to do. Would he come back to Kincorth, she marvelled? Would
+her entreaties avail now? After what had happened, would he listen to
+her? Give her the opportunity and she would try. And Maxwell gave her
+the opportunity by asking if he could assist her in any way when she was
+removing his uncle to Kincorth.
+
+“Can I help—may I help?” he said eagerly; but Mrs. Drewitt answered—
+
+“I am afraid to let him see you for the present. I do not wish to speak
+to him about you; about the election, I mean, for a little while. But I
+should like you to return to Kincorth. I know he will be glad, when he
+is better, to hear you are under the same roof with him. I can take so
+much on my own responsibility, Maxwell; and I do take it, and ask you
+most earnestly to come back to us once more.”
+
+“I have started on my road,” he said, “and I may not retrace my steps;
+but I thank you all the same. Whenever he is strong enough to see me,
+tell me to come, and I will come to Kincorth, though not to stay there.”
+
+“I wish there was not any Kincorth standing between us,” answered Mrs.
+Drewitt, very truthfully, “and that we could all live at peace
+together.”
+
+“Perhaps we may, some day,” was Maxwell’s reply. He was thinking of the
+vow he had made to himself, of the time when he was to be rich and his
+uncle poor.
+
+Would there be peace then? When the tables were turned—when he was the
+benefactor, could he afford to let bygones be bygones; could he then be
+generous enough to say, let there be peace between us at last?
+
+That was what he was wondering while Mrs. Drewitt stood silent and
+looked in his face, and marvelled what made its expression change so
+swiftly and vary so often.
+
+There came a day when she knew all, when she hated Maxwell more than he
+had ever hated his uncle; when she spurned his proffered kindnesses,
+when there was war waged between them, war to the death, which ended but
+with life.
+
+Had anyone told Mrs. Drewitt then that she could ever learn to prefer
+strife to peace, she would have declared it was impossible; and yet as
+time went by the impossible grew possible, and the possible came to
+pass.
+
+But at that early stage of her married life Mrs. Drewitt had no strong
+interests blinding her, no feeling in favour of this person or against
+that, warping her judgment and leading her astray.
+
+She loved her husband, who owned Kincorth; she was sorry for Maxwell,
+who did not own it; but at the same time Mr. Drewitt, whom she loved,
+was master for life, while his nephew had not a penny.
+
+Reverse the cases, and how would Mrs. Drewitt have felt? That, my
+reader, is what we shall find out when the tale of the years is
+completed—when the story of the years is told.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ Mrs. Drewitt understands.
+
+
+It was winter—winter on the grand sea-coast—winter among those
+everlasting hills; and Agnes Drewitt came to understand how the season
+might be more endurable in the country than in London; came to see how
+the breakers dashing on the rocks—how the waves rolling up on the
+shore—how the mountains covered with snow—how the swelling streams, and
+the roaring torrents might be less monotonous and depressing than the
+fine perspective of a London street, or the exhilarating spectacle of a
+yellow fog.
+
+She was beginning to like Kincorth. Home—be it ever so homely, ever so
+lonely, ever so uncomfortable—has a great charm for a woman like Mrs.
+Drewitt; and though her lot was in many respects not an enviable one,
+still she was becoming reconciled to it. She was growing to know the
+people and to like them; she was contriving how to get her household
+into more orderly ways. She had talked with her husband, and got him to
+consent to see Maxwell. Altogether, on the particular afternoon of which
+I am speaking, Mrs. Drewitt did not feel unhappy.
+
+She was going out for a walk, a long walk, all by herself; and after
+long confinement to the house, after constant attendance on an invalid,
+the idea of fresh air, of a little pilgrimage beside Duranmore Bay, all
+round Eversbeg Head, and so on nearly to Eversbeg Abbey, did not prove
+unpleasant.
+
+She had been rather a prisoner since her arrival in Ireland, and freedom
+seemed sweet. She had never been round Eversbeg Head, which she could
+see so plainly from her bedroom windows. She had never been very near
+the Atlantic, for she did not call Duranmore Bay the Atlantic; and she
+wanted to dip her hand in it for once, and write to her sister, “I have
+touched the great ocean.” She longed to stand on some point of land
+whence she could see thousands and thousands of miles away. She had some
+vague notion, I fancy, of getting a glimpse of America; but be this as
+it may, she intensely enjoyed the idea of the walk, and meant to make
+the most of it.
+
+“There is a much nearer way you know, Auntie,” said Kathleen, “thrau the
+road by Eversbeg Head; but if you wish to get a good view of the
+Atlantic, you must go by the coast. It is not a nice clear day, though.
+You ought to have seen it in fine weather.”
+
+“Oh! I think it a lovely day,” answered Mrs. Drewitt, and as she walked
+along, while the wind drove the clouds before her, she repeated to
+herself that it was lovely—that she had never enjoyed anything so much
+in all her life before.
+
+The election had long been over. Mr. Sache and his family were in
+Dublin, and the “Castle,” as he somewhat pompously called his house—a
+building all wings and turrets and loopholes and weathercocks—was left
+in charge of servants.
+
+Duranmore had subsided into its state of normal dullness. Fishermen
+mended their nets, labourers went about their accustomed work, the
+shopkeepers did their usual small amount of business. There was no more
+fighting in the streets, the public-houses were emptied of the crowds of
+drunken men that had once filled them full to overflowing. The Earl and
+Countess of Popingham were in France, Lord Marsden in Rome, Mr. and Mrs.
+Munks in London, and thus Mrs. Drewitt had, after a fashion, the country
+to herself, to enjoy thoroughly and completely, if she liked.
+
+And she did like. She loved to look at the mountains with the clouds
+flying fast over them as though hurrying, hurrying away. She loved the
+wild hills, the distant ravines, the rivers that came bounding down from
+the far-off heights and went rushing to the sea. She loved the bay when
+the waters were dark like the sky, when the waves came up towards
+Duranmore, that was now so quiet and orderly. She loved to pause and
+look at the whitewashed cottages, at the pretty, picturesque children,
+who hung their curly heads abashed as the lady passed by. She loved the
+salutation of the country people, some of whom “made bould to ask her
+how the masther was.” She was not a stranger among strangers now. She
+was taking root in the soil, and learning to love the very shamrocks in
+the grass.
+
+She left Duranmore behind her, and still went on. Spite of recent rains
+the granite road was hard and dry beneath her feet. Above her head the
+high wind drove the clouds before it. “You are going to England,” she
+thought, “but I do not wish to be travelling there with you now.” The
+western breeze blew a colour into her cheeks, and disarranged her hair,
+and lifted her veil, and kissed her sweet face caressingly.
+
+“I love the wind,” she thought; “it is fresh and pure, and it comes from
+travelling over the great sea, instead of bringing the taint of large
+cities on its breath;” and she turned, even while she was thinking this,
+round Eversbeg Head, and the wide Atlantic and the full force of the
+western breeze burst upon her at once.
+
+Thousands of miles! Millions upon millions of tossing billows! Oh! thou
+great God Almighty! who can look across the restless ocean and not think
+of Thee! Who can forget, while standing by the sea and watching the
+great waters come thundering upon the shore, that Thou hast set bounds
+to the waters and said, “Here shall thy proud waves be stayed”—who,
+looking over the trackless expanse of ocean, but must feel that all
+unseen the feet of the Most High have traversed it?
+
+When we see this work of the Lord, His wonders in the deep; when we
+perceive how at His command the floods arise, and how at His word the
+storm ceases; when we remember that though the waves of the sea are
+mighty and rage horribly, still that the Lord God who dwelleth on high
+is mightier; when we think that he holds the waters in the hollow of his
+hand, do we not seem for a moment, amid raging tempests and foaming
+billows, to catch a glimpse of the Infinite? Looking over the waste of
+waters, does not our weak mortality appear able to grasp for an instant
+the idea of immortality? Can we not imagine that no material horizon
+bounds our view—that we are gazing away and away across the ocean into
+eternity?
+
+Thousands of miles, friends! Which of us has not at one time or other
+let his heart go free over the waters? Who has not stood by the shore
+silent, while his inner self—his self that never talks save to his God
+and his own soul—has gone out from his body and tossed with the billows,
+and answered the sullen roar of the waters, and risen and sunk with the
+waters as they rose and fell, rose and fell, and felt the breaking of
+the foam, the sobbing plash of the great ocean, as it rolls up on the
+sands and over the rocks and stones and shells of earth, while depth
+calleth unto depth and the giant floods clap their hands together?
+
+And oh! with what a terrible sadness does that second self come back to
+us! It has been out listening to strange voices, hearing strange sounds,
+learning solemn truths. It has been out on the billows, on the foam,
+among the spray and the clouds and the tempest—out and away to the very
+confines of the invisible world. It has been restless like the ocean,
+and it comes back to be set within the bounds of flesh; it has been
+free, and behold it must return to chains and fetters; it has been
+telling of its troubles to the ocean, and the ocean has lifted up its
+mighty arms and mourned out its sorrowful reply.
+
+Mourning—mourning—never silent, never still—now lashing itself up into
+fury—now tossing hither and thither as it seems to us without plan or
+purpose; now wave following after wave, as man follows after man in the
+ranks of a vast army; now flinging its waters on the shore—now striving
+to climb the steep sides of some rugged rock; fretting itself as we fret
+ourselves—moaning as we moan—toiling as we toil—restless as we are; now
+receding—now advancing—but never at peace; in its strong moods wild and
+tumultuous—in its calmest moments stirred by the ground swell, ruffled
+by the lightest breeze!
+
+Well may man love this deep, inexplicable, unfathomable ocean, for as it
+through the ages has gone on sobbing and mourning and struggling, so man
+through the years of his life goes mourning and struggling too.
+
+Some thoughts like these passed through Mrs. Drewitt’s mind as she stood
+at the base of Eversbeg Head, and looked out over the Atlantic. She had
+never seen anything like it before; the ocean had never filled her heart
+and saddened it till now.
+
+Though not much of a traveller, she had, like most people, known the sea
+in its quieter aspect. She had visited Brighton; she had been to
+Hastings; she had seen the flat Norfolk coast, and beheld the mud banks
+in the Essex Hundreds; but the sea in any of the places I have mentioned
+was not like the sea that broke over the rocky headlands of the wild
+West; neither was the desolate shore she stood on like unto the
+civilized shores she was once familiar with, where bathing boxes were
+drawn up on the shingle, and men and women walked upon the parade, and
+the bare windows of lodgings to let looked out above the calm blue
+waters.
+
+An unromantic lady—middle-aged, shall we say—and with no particular
+beauty of face or figure, who pursues the even tenour of her unexciting
+life, is of the same genus, doubtless, as Lady Macbeth, Joan of Arc, or
+Mary Queen of Scots. Naturalists would declare them to be all women
+together; but then they were different women, and not much alike, we may
+suppose, in personal appearance.
+
+It is thus with the sea: we have now the respectable matron, and anon
+the queen of tragedy; we have the smooth face, the well-established
+conventionalities; the world’s customs in one place, in another we have
+anger and passion, and wild beauty and rugged grandeur; and, above all,
+thousands of miles of ocean, millions of tossing billows.
+
+She had never seen anything like it—never seen such a sea under such a
+sky before; never seen a vessel out before in rough weather; never
+thought to look upon such an expanse of angry waters as now met her
+view.
+
+She turned and looked towards Kincorth. There, secure on the hill-side,
+it stood in its tranquil beauty; she looked further north still, towards
+Duranmore Point, and saw it gloomy and impassable, stretching out into
+the sea. Far and far out she could tell where the sunken rocks lay—she
+knew by the sheets of white, foam that broke upon them; to her left, on
+the other side of Eversbeg Bay, she saw a low green hill—green even
+under that wintry sky, which looked calm and tranquil, though the wild
+waves were dashing round and about it. Up the bays the water rolled dark
+and sullen, but still calm by comparison with what they looked out to
+seaward.
+
+Among the billows a ship was labouring and striving, and when Mrs.
+Drewitt reluctantly pursued her onward way, she left it making with
+caution for Duranmore Bay, putting in there out of the way of the coming
+storm.
+
+“‘And so He bringeth them into the haven where they would be,’” murmured
+Mrs. Drewitt, as she neared her own destination.
+
+Did she ever forget her first view of the great Atlantic, do you
+imagine, my reader? Did the stormy ocean, those foaming billows, those
+restless waves ever fade out of her memory as the years went by?
+
+When she passed, in a far different place, to the haven which God had
+appointed for her, was not the roar of those mighty waters still in her
+ears? did she not feel like that reeling vessel, weary of the struggle
+with the winds and the waves? and was she not glad to turn into any
+harbour where she might be at rest?
+
+Thinking of the boundless Atlantic, she continued on her way, till she
+came to a tract of poor, barren land, on the very edge of Eversbeg Bay,
+which tract of land was Maxwell Drewitt’s sole inheritance.
+
+A child whom she met on the way gladly turned back and showed Mrs.
+Drewitt which was Headlands Cottage.
+
+Headlands Cottage! Headlands Hovel would have been nearer the mark, she
+thought, as she knocked with her knuckles at the door, which, for a
+wonder in that description of house, was shut.
+
+Maxwell Drewitt answered her summons in person, and requested her to
+enter his poor habitation with all the courtesy of a grand seigneur.
+
+The cabin—for it was nothing better than a cabin—contained but two
+rooms, in one of which Maxwell slept, whilst he lived, read, ate, wrote,
+and planned in the other.
+
+He had an old woman who came in and “did for him,” so he explained to
+his aunt, and who, being at that present moment in a kitchen which he
+had extemporized out of a cow-shed, would be happy to make Mrs. Drewitt
+a cup of tea if she wished for it.
+
+“But in any case,” finished Maxwell, “I will tell her to bring it in;”
+and he left the room to do so, while Mrs. Drewitt looked round at her
+leisure.
+
+There was a blazing turf fire on the hearth, and near the fire stood a
+common deal table covered with books, papers, and plans. The apartment
+boasted two chairs, and Mrs. Drewitt occupied one of them.
+
+The floor was of earth, swept clean; the walls were whitewashed; the
+roof was unceiled, and between the blackened rafters she could see the
+thatch. Besides the table and chairs, the room boasted no other
+furniture of any kind, sort, or description, except a writing-desk and a
+hair trunk. The walls were decorated with pistols, guns, riding-whips,
+and fishing-rods. It was in a place like this Maxwell Drewitt had
+elected to make his first start in life, and Mrs. Drewitt could not help
+admiring him for it.
+
+I wish I were able to sketch that room for you. I should like to show
+how the firelight fell on Maxwell’s dark face; how the shadows lay on
+the floor while the gloom of the winter evening gathered, deepened and
+deepened, out of doors.
+
+There was no false pride about Maxwell Drewitt. He had that virtue, at
+any rate. If the king had called, in passing, the young man would have
+felt no shame about receiving royalty in the only house he owned; and
+for this reason Mrs. Drewitt found that it was impossible for her to
+speak about the place in which she found him. She could as soon have
+remonstrated with an Indian on the inconvenience of living in a wigwam
+as she could have talked to her nephew concerning his abode.
+
+It was his, and he was a gentleman, and he had chosen it for himself.
+She had no more right to come there and pity him for his earthen floor
+and his scant furniture than royalty would have to find fault with the
+dinner-service at Kincorth.
+
+Headlands Cottage was Maxwell Drewitt’s castle, and being his castle,
+Mrs. Drewitt respected it.
+
+“She had come to speak to him about many things,” she said. “First of
+all, your uncle is much better—almost well again, thank God, and he is
+able and wishful to see you. I thought, perhaps, you would come back
+with me this evening,” she hesitated; “but in case you were unable to do
+so, I told one of the men to walk a little way on this side Duranmore to
+meet me.”
+
+“I have an appointment for this evening,” answered Maxwell, “but I will
+walk back with you as far as the lodge gates.”
+
+“And when will you come to Kincorth?” she asked.
+
+“To-morrow, if it be convenient to you,” he said.
+
+“As if any time were inconvenient!” she exclaimed; “as if I should not
+be only too glad to see you back there, for good and all, I mean.”
+
+“I have got so far on my road,” he replied, “I am not likely to try
+another now.”
+
+“But, Maxwell,” she inquired, “what are you going to do? Forgive me if I
+seem impertinent; but how are you going to live? Do you mean to stay
+here? What do you purpose doing for money?”
+
+“I purpose to work for it,” he answered, “and I mean to obtain it. I
+know you only ask what my plans are, out of kindness, and I, therefore,
+cannot consider any question impertinent. You must not, however, think
+me rude if I reply that men are not like women; they do not act from
+impulse; they do not commence to build without counting the cost; they
+do not start on a journey without knowing something of the land towards
+which they are travelling. To speak more plainly still, I did not leave
+Kincorth without sketching out a plan for my own future, and I mean to
+perfect that plan if I can. When I have perfected it, you shall see the
+result. Meantime, be satisfied,” he added, with a smile. “I have food, I
+have raiment. I have a roof to cover me, and I have a fire at which to
+warm myself withal. More than this,” he went on, “it is all mine own;
+that is, mine, so long as I pay my rent punctually. If you came round
+Eversbeg you must have passed some land which is mine without paying
+rent at all, and in another year I mean to have it in my own hands. This
+farm joins my land, so I have my territories close together, and there
+is a small house on my freehold which, when once Blake gives up
+possession, I mean to have put into thorough repair, and where I hope
+you will come and see my improvements.”
+
+“Then you never mean to return to Kincorth?” she said. “Never?”
+
+He looked at her, and then he looked into the fire, and then he flung on
+a few more peats before he answered—
+
+“I may, perhaps, but you ought not to wish me to do so.”
+
+“Why?” she asked; and as he only laughed in reply, she went on. “You
+always speak in riddles, Maxwell. What do you mean?”
+
+“You really wish to know?”
+
+“I do; of course I do.”
+
+“Then I will tell you before you go. Now, what else did you want to
+speak to me about?”
+
+“About your sisters—about twenty things. First about your sisters. They
+are a great care to me, Maxwell. I do not know what I ought to do. I do
+not know if I can do anything.”
+
+“What is the particular emergency?” inquired Maxwell.
+
+“Their position is not what it ought to be,” she explained, “and I
+cannot make it different. If Susan and Wilhelmina would do their parts,”
+she continued, “things might be better; but they seem to take a delight
+in thwarting all my plans. Wilhelmina rides from morning till night. She
+visits with people your uncle does not seem to know and that I have
+never seen. She will not read or practice, or improve herself in any
+way: and as for Susan—” but here Mrs. Drewitt paused.
+
+“Well, what about Susan?” he asked.
+
+“There is a Captain Ellenham who is always about the house,” said his
+aunt; “always with Susan,” and she stopped again.
+
+“He is possibly in love with her,” remarked Maxwell, with a smile,
+“though it does not say much for his taste.”
+
+“But if he were in love with her,” argued Mrs. Drewitt, “should he not
+want to see her uncle, to see me, to ascertain how her family were
+likely to receive him? There is a secrecy about it which puzzles me. I
+do not wish to speak to your uncle, but I thought that you—”
+
+“I do not wish to have anything to do with Susan’s affairs,” answered
+Maxwell, shortly; “I think my uncle is the proper person to interfere.”
+
+“And Wilhelmina?”
+
+“Wilhelmina will not hurt, unless she gets her neck broken some of these
+days.”
+
+“And Kathleen?”
+
+“What about Kathleen?” asked Maxwell, raising his head and looking at
+Mrs. Drewitt.
+
+“Nothing, only your uncle wants her to be sent to school: now, Maxwell,
+ought I to let her go? I can teach her all she needs to learn; I can see
+to her when she is ill; and she is such a comfort to me, I am so fond of
+her—so fond!”
+
+“But still, would it not be better for her to go to school?” asked
+Maxwell. “Would the companionship of girls of her own age not be
+desirable? would the early hours, the regularity, the whole discipline
+of a school not be good for her? If Susan and Willy had been sent away
+they might have been different to what they are. You will never have
+time to attend to Kathie. Altogether, if my uncle be willing to pay for
+her, it is best she should go.”
+
+“You think so?”
+
+“I do.”
+
+“But she is so delicate.”
+
+“She will be stronger out of Galway.”
+
+“And we are so fond of each other.”
+
+“That is quite another matter,” said Maxwell, and then, to his
+amazement, Mrs. Drewitt began to cry.
+
+His decision was different to what she had expected it would be, and she
+and Kathleen had agreed to abide by that decision.
+
+“I feel certain,” he said, “that you would rather do what is best for
+Kathleen’s future than what you and she would like in the present. I
+think it is a good thing for her to go to school, but of course that is
+a matter for you and my uncle to settle.”
+
+“It is for you to settle,” answered Mrs. Drewitt, “and she shall go to
+school. Now, about another thing, Maxwell. What kind of a woman is Lady
+Emmeline Vervensoe?”
+
+“You know almost as much of her as I do,” was his reply; “you saw her at
+the election. You may judge from that very much what she is.”
+
+“She has been often over to Kincorth lately,” said his aunt, “she seems
+to wish to be very intimate with me; she is very kind and very
+attentive, but your uncle does not like her much, and—”
+
+“It is not to be expected he would like her after the part she took
+against Mr. Sache,” laughed Maxwell. “So far as I know, Lady Emmeline
+has not any harm about her; she is much wiser, in my opinion, than Mrs.
+Munks, and she is a great deal prettier. I think you would get on very
+well together, and that you might find her a pleasant acquaintance. Does
+my uncle not wish you to visit her?”
+
+“He is very great friends with Colonel Vervensoe, you know,” answered
+Mrs. Drewitt; “but we cannot have him, at least I do not like having
+him, without his wife, and I thought I would ask you about Lady
+Emmeline.”
+
+“There is nothing against her, if that is what you mean,” Maxwell
+replied: “she is perfectly and unexceptionably proper, although she did
+wear a red scarf at the election and canvass her husband’s tenantry. But
+then, really they are as much her tenants as his. She has more money
+than he, and gives it to him freely enough, I believe. I have not seen
+her these two months.”
+
+“So she told me,” remarked Mrs. Drewitt; “she was asking me where you
+were and what you were doing.”
+
+“How very kind!” laughed Maxwell. “I should have thought so
+insignificant a person far beneath her ladyship’s notice,” and Maxwell
+laughed again.
+
+“I must go now,” said Mrs. Drewitt, rising to depart; “it is getting
+dusk, and Kathie will be uneasy. Now do not think of coming with me,
+Patrick is certain to be somewhere on the road; I left a message for
+him.”
+
+“You must not deny me the pleasure of being your escort for all that,”
+answered Maxwell, and the two left the heat of the blazing turf-fire and
+walked back together by the nearer road to Kincorth. As they walked they
+talked—about Ireland, about her scenery, about her people, about her
+wrongs, about her want of prosperity. Then Mrs. Drewitt told her nephew
+how fond she was getting of the country, and spoke enthusiastically of
+the view from Eversbeg Head; and pleased, almost in spite of himself, by
+her admiration for his native land, Maxwell began to wish they could be
+good friends—that no Kincorth stood between them.
+
+“Tell me,” she said, as they parted, “why you think I ought not to wish
+you back at Kincorth. I can imagine that you might be a great comfort to
+me and a great help to your uncle.”
+
+“If I tell you, I am afraid you will be angry,” he answered.
+
+“Angry! you are jesting. What is the reason?”
+
+For a moment Maxwell hesitated, then he said—
+
+“Do you remember my saying once that I did not dislike you for yourself,
+but only for being my uncle’s wife?”
+
+“Perfectly; but I hope you do not dislike me now for that.”
+
+“No, not for that,” was the slow reply; “not for that, exactly, but it
+is not in flesh and blood—at least it is not in my flesh and blood—to
+feel any great amount of attachment for a woman whose children will keep
+me out of Kincorth for ever.”
+
+She never answered him by a word. In the twilight he could see her turn
+first red and then white: he could see enough in her face to assure him
+his guess had been correct, and that there was an heir coming to inherit
+Kincorth, its woods, its lawns, its streamlets.
+
+Never hence by the strength of his own right hand, by the power of his
+own work, by the force of his own industry, might the lands of his
+ancestors return to him. The son of a younger son would possess
+Kincorth; while he, the son of the eldest son, was earning his bread in
+his barren farm by the desolate sea-shore.
+
+As for Mrs. Drewitt, she re-entered Kincorth a different woman to that
+she had left its gates. She understood her position now. She knew at
+last why Maxwell and his two elder sisters detested her.
+
+“Not for myself, but because of the sons I may have,” she thought; and
+it seemed to her that everything which was strong and evil in her weak
+and tender nature sprung to life and prompted her to do battle for the
+sake of her still unborn child.
+
+Had he measured her character accurately, would Maxwell have spoken to
+her as he did? I doubt it—doubt whether willingly he would have turned
+her friendship into enmity, and taught her to guard the inheritance of
+her children with a jealous watchfulness.
+
+It was not for herself—it was for no benefit she ever expected to have
+out of the property that Mrs. Drewitt vowed Maxwell Drewitt should never
+own Kincorth—never if she had a living son.
+
+Who can sow good grain as fast as the Evil One can plant tares? who can
+learn to cleave to the right, even in twenty times the space which it
+takes him to adopt the wrong? In the garden of Eden the serpent speedily
+beguiled Eve into eating of the tree; but through all the centuries that
+have passed, with their sorrow, away since then, the Maker of the
+universe has never been able to induce his children to cast that evil
+and cursed fruit from them.
+
+A moment for the one—thousands of years for the other. An instant sows
+the seed—the labour of a lifetime will not eradicate the noxious plant
+the seed produces. We are strong for evil; we are weak for good. We are
+frail; we are erring. God have mercy upon us! for even the best man and
+the best woman proves, when put to the test, to be but a miserable
+sinner.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ Maxwell’s Engagements.
+
+
+After leaving Mrs. Drewitt at the entrance to Kincorth, Maxwell slowly
+retraced his steps to Duranmore, thinking, thinking as he walked. He had
+never done thinking about his plans, his projects, his schemes, his
+hopes.
+
+As a man strives to perfect an invention, as he meets every mechanical
+difficulty, as he seeks to understand what natural law is standing in
+the way of his success—so Maxwell Drewitt worked out the design of his
+own future painfully and laboriously.
+
+It is one thing to sketch out a picture, and another to fill it in; one
+thing to draw a house, and another to build it; one thing to say I will
+do this or that, and quite another to accomplish the project.
+
+It is easy to plan; it is hard to finish. We can dream dreams, sitting
+in the firelight or lying on the green hill’s side, but if we would make
+those dreams realities, we must work hard and think hard; we must think
+till our brains are weary, we must work through the years for success.
+
+The lives of all famous men repeat the same story, but the hearts of
+most young people reject it with impatient scorn.
+
+They want the harvest and the seed-time to come together. It seems to
+them awful not to be able to gather till the autumn, to have to toil
+before they eat. Seeing the height to which others have climbed, they
+refuse to believe that the ascent can be so difficult. The successes
+which genius and labour have found it the most difficult to compass look
+to the eyes of inexperience easy and commonplace.
+
+Can anything go more smoothly along the lines than engine and tender and
+carriages and trucks? Can anything be simpler, more natural, more
+prosaic than a railway train? and yet, oh! friends, how many a man’s
+thoughts are concentrated there! how many a man’s work has combined
+together to make up the sum total which you see!
+
+It is thus with everything in life, be it small or be it great—the
+result seems to bear no proportion to the labour expended to produce it.
+
+Time, thought, industry—we must give all these before, weary and worn,
+we can hope to reach the goal of such success as our souls desire. We
+must do what Maxwell Drewitt did—spare no pains, repine at no hardships,
+grumble at no obstacles on the road.
+
+And yet there was one thing he lacked if he desired to compass such
+success as might not only give him competence and station, but happiness
+and content.
+
+He was labouring for riches and position, but he forgot that, even in
+this world, riches and position, though much, are not everything. What
+are the daintiest viands, the choicest wines, to the man who can bring
+no appetite to table? What are lands and houses, what are fields and
+trees, if the eyes that look over them are dim with weeping, heavy with
+care?
+
+“Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it.
+Except the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but in vain.
+
+“It is vain for you to rise up early, to sit up late, to eat the bread
+of carefulness.”
+
+I wonder how many young men believe these words to be true? I wonder how
+many, walking in the dim light through which all, rich or poor, must one
+day pass, would be able to say it was false?
+
+The words which we listen to with careless ears at one time of our
+lives, thinking they were addressed solely to men who spent their
+strength for nought and disquieted themselves in vain thousands of years
+since, we come finally to understand hold a meaning within them which is
+and will be eternally true this year and next, and through all the years
+that are to come—true for the man who is toiling for fame, for the
+merchant who is heaping up wealth, for the woman who is labouring to
+secure a good position, as it was for Maxwell Drewitt walking though the
+gathering darkness by the shore of Duranmore Bay.
+
+He was planning, plotting, scheming. He had youth, strength, hope,
+resolution. There was no reason why he should not have made a good thing
+of life, a good thing for himself and for others, save this—that in the
+city of his heart he would not suffer that sentinel of the
+Lord—conscience—to keep watch; that he was selfish, unprincipled,
+unfeeling; that he did not care whether the car of his progress crushed
+men and women under his wheels; that he was overconfident in himself;
+that he believed, if we exhaust the matter completely, man to be
+stronger than his Maker—the creature, than the Creator.
+
+I am not attempting to write a religious novel, I am not trying to
+interleave my book with sermons, but there is no author who can tell the
+story of a man’s life truly, and not speak of the mistakes he made, of
+the errors he committed.
+
+If it be but an extract out of the volume of existence that we profess
+to give—but the account of this one’s love-making, of the disappointment
+of his friend—if we stop short when we find the record becoming
+troublesome to ourselves, or likely to prove displeasing to our readers,
+we may dispense with much minutiæ which is indispensable when we are
+tracing a human being’s footsteps from the cradle to the grave.
+
+When we take a man’s life, and write his biography, indifferently it may
+be, but still as well as we are able, we must tell where he went wrong,
+and how that wrong brought forth bitter fruit in the future. We must
+tell not only of the crimes of which the law of the land takes
+cognizance, but also of those other transgressions which are not
+punished with fine or imprisonment, but by the heavy hand of the Lord
+God himself. It is useless to try to tell a story and be bound to steer
+clear of this matter of eternal truth, of eternal justice. I might as
+well lay down my pen at once were the subject beyond a novelist’s
+province; for the sum total of Maxwell Drewitt’s mistake in life was,
+that he thought the will of man paramount—that—as many a reader will
+scoff over the few last pages—he scoffed at the idea of retribution, of
+repentance.
+
+He built his house, but the Lord had no hand in it; he made his fortune,
+but the blessing of God was not upon it; he became a prosperous man, but
+the day came when he acknowledged with bitterness that prosperity is not
+always happiness.
+
+In the spring-time of youth he reared his life’s edifice on the sands;
+when the winter came—the winter with its storms, its rain, its snows,
+its frosts—he saw the work of years scattered to the four winds of
+heaven.
+
+It was just; but it was terrible. To me there is something too mournful
+for words to utter in the idea of that man walking on through the
+darkness—planning, plotting, scheming—for the end that I shall yet have
+to tell. Strong to work, willing to labour, independent enough to
+achieve, he had yet the seeds of ultimate failure in him—he was walking
+on blindly to meet his doom.
+
+As he walked along, with the wind raising the hair from his forehead, he
+was thinking—how Kincorth should yet be his—how the day would come when
+his homeward steps would lead him thither, and not away from its gates;
+and he was thinking of something else, too—of something he was going to
+meet that very night—of a girl he had tried to make love him, and not
+without success.
+
+He passed Ryan’s cottage slowly, passed it and stopped to listen; then
+he leaped over the ditch that divided the lawyer’s little meadow from
+the road, and made his way round to the place where his friend’s hay was
+stacked. A stream went brawling by to the sea, and beside the stream
+Jenny Bourke was waiting for him—poor little girl! poor foolish child!
+
+From the hour Ryan warned Maxwell Drewitt off this ground, Maxwell vowed
+to win her heart. He did not know then whether she were pretty or ugly,
+sweet or sour, able to take care of herself or guileless as an infant;
+but it was all one to Maxwell. He would pay Ryan out, let his sister be
+what she pleased. He knew he was handsome; he knew he was a favourite
+with women; he knew he could soon make the girl fond of him. When he saw
+her he discovered something more—that the girl made him care for her. He
+had not quite contemplated this possibility, and it complicated matters
+a little; but the fact was so, nevertheless.
+
+The only woman Maxwell Drewitt ever loved was Jenny Bourke; and the
+reason that he loved her was probably because she was so diametrically
+opposite to himself.
+
+When he lay a-dying he thought of her; and thought then, what I believe
+to be true, that a prettier creature than Jenny Bourke never walked on
+the face of God’s earth—pretty and soft and gentle; and faithful to him,
+at any rate. Oh! sweet Jenny Bourke! why did you ever go out to meet
+such a man? why did you disobey your brother’s commands? why did you lay
+your lovely face on his breast, and say that it was long since you had
+seen him—long that he had kept away?
+
+Fair, sweet Jenny! there was never a rose in the kingdom lovelier, never
+a lily purer, when Maxwell Drewitt first cast his dark eyes upon you.
+Let me try to sketch the face he saw—the saucy piquante face that, in
+the time of his tribulation, in the time of his wealth, in the hour of
+death, was still framed in his memory.
+
+Would she appear before him in the day of judgment, I wonder? Maxwell
+Drewitt said not. He said, as solemnly as he said he believed he was
+dying, that Jenny Bourke would be true to him in the next world as she
+had been in this, and that she would never turn informer.
+
+Dark-brown hair; clear white and red complexion; large eyes, that now
+seemed brown, now grey, now black—eyes that varied with the light, with
+her thoughts, with her feelings, with her words; lips that were as red
+as cherries; teeth white and even, but not too small; a somewhat short
+nose;—these were the features; but then it was not her features, it was
+the expression of her face; so joyous, so innocent, so pure!
+
+I do not know how a man could ever make such a woman cry and forget
+seeing her tears. I cannot imagine how Maxwell Drewitt, fair and false,
+and hypocritical and remorseless though he was, could ever take such a
+girl to his heart and teach her to nestle there, knowing all the time he
+never intended to marry her; that the hour must come when he would have
+to cast her out from her abiding-place.
+
+“I thought you never were coming,” she said, with her sweet Irish voice,
+soft and low and plaintive as music over the waters—as the low wind
+sighing among the trees. “I thought you had forgotten me—that I never
+was to see you again—that—”
+
+He stopped her words with kisses; but she laughingly released herself,
+and went on.
+
+“That you were caring more for the grand ladies you are so intimate with
+than for me.”
+
+“As if any one of them could compare with you,” he answered; “as if
+there were any creature on earth equal to you. How many hundred times am
+I to tell you that I love you, and you only; that you are dearer to me
+than life or station or anything else in the world? But you say these
+things to try my temper,” he added; “you say them to make me contradict
+you—to make me punish you,” and he kissed brow and cheeks and lips till
+Jenny’s face was as red as a rose; till she was glad that the darkness
+hid her blushes from his admiring gaze.
+
+“I cannot come out to meet you again,” she said at length, timidly and
+hesitatingly.
+
+“Nonsense, Jenny; there is no such word as cannot in the whole of love’s
+dictionary.”
+
+“Well, will not then, if you like that better,” she answered, more
+firmly. “Indeed, indeed,” went on the girl, “I cannot deceive Timothy
+any longer; I am getting that I am afraid to look him straight in the
+face; that I dread every sentence he speaks; that I am frightened of
+every question he puts. Let us part,” and as she made this terrible
+suggestion Jenny began to sob. “Let us part if you cannot have me tell
+Timothy; if you will not speak to him yourself.”
+
+“The first day I ever saw you, Jenny, what did your brother say to you
+after I left the house?” But Jenny remained mute.
+
+“Did he not tell you, to keep out of my way; to give me no
+encouragement; to show me no favour? Did not he tell you that, although
+I might be a fit acquaintance for him, I was none for you? that I was a
+bad man; a bad nephew; a bad brother; a bad friend? Did he not give me
+the worst character you ever heard given to an unfortunate fellow out of
+favour with fortune? Did not he do all this? I know he did, Jenny; I
+know it as well as if I had been sitting in the parlour listening to
+him.”
+
+“Maybe you were near it,” suggested Jenny.
+
+“No, I was not; but he spoke those words, or something very like those
+words, to me before you ever came to Duranmore. He said, ‘I had rather
+put the child in her grave than give her to you.’ That was his summing
+up. I hear it tingling in my ears yet.”
+
+“I wonder you ever looked near me after that!” remarked Jenny.
+
+“Ah, Jenny!” said Maxwell Drewitt, “who could ever see you and not look
+after you?” and the young man stole his arm round her waist, and drew
+her nearer to him—nearer still.
+
+“But if he knew the way things were now, don’t you think he might change
+his mind?” she coaxed. “If he thought that you—that I—”
+
+“If he thought you loved me, is that it, Jenny?” he finished. “No, that
+would make no difference; it would only make him bitterer. I am a poor
+man you see, dear; and a poor man is always a bad man: you must take
+patience and wait a while. When I am able to drive here in my carriage
+and ask him to give me his sister, he will then perhaps beg me to step
+inside; but till then I must see you as I have seen you, on the quiet.”
+
+“I cannot go on with it,” she said. “It is not right; and I have heard
+that good can never come out of evil.”
+
+“If it be wrong,” he answered, “let the punishment fall on me.”
+
+“But oh!” said the girl, “we must each bear the burden of our own
+faults.”
+
+“When we come to faults, it will be time enough to discuss that
+question,” he impatiently retorted.
+
+“It is wrong, though,” she persisted.
+
+“If you think it wrong then you do not love me,” he said. “You are not
+willing to suffer anything for my sake; you are ready to desert me
+because I am poor and in difficulties. Had I been still at Kincorth I
+should not have been forced to beg so hard for so small a favour; but
+let us part, Miss Bourke, as you wish all to be at an end between us. I
+cannot force you against your will. Give me one kiss, Jenny, and bid me
+good-bye. I am used to being scurvily treated. I will go back to my
+wretched home, and forswear love for ever. One more—forgive me, it is
+the last time. Now, good-bye. Let me go.”
+
+But Jenny would not let him go; she hung about him, she sobbed, she
+asked forgiveness, she told him how she should die if he left her in
+anger, left her in grief.
+
+He knew her every mood, her every thought almost, and he could manage
+her as easily as he might a child. She had her little qualms of
+conscience every now and then about her brother; she had her little fits
+of strength when she made all kinds of resolutions and declared her
+intention of keeping to them; she had her instincts too, which perhaps
+warned her that in concealment there is mostly danger—that though stolen
+waters may be sweet they are generally unwholesome; she had her hours of
+sadness, her times of bitter self-reproach;—but Maxwell had long known
+how to deal with her in every mood: he was her master and she his slave;
+and the end of all such conversations invariably was that Jenny promised
+to be guided by her lover’s advice; to do what he told her; to meet him
+when he asked her; to keep the fact of their engagement secret.
+
+He called it an engagement, but whether he wilfully deceived her or
+resolutely blinded himself it would be hard to say: Jenny Bourke
+implicitly believed that he would marry her whenever he had enough money
+to do so, and her only trouble was lest her brother should withhold his
+consent.
+
+As for Maxwell’s intentions! He was very fond of Jenny, and that is all
+he ever told even to himself.
+
+He was very fond of the girl: all the worse for her. That love was the
+whole of her life: it was then but a part, a small part, of his. He had
+other aims, other objects, other wishes. He had plans into which she
+never entered, projects of which she formed no part: there were whole
+days when he never thought of her, or at least never thought save
+casually. There was not an hour, there was not a minute, when Jenny did
+not think of him.
+
+When they parted after a few such stolen minutes as those I have spoken
+of, he could put her out of his memory, he could thrust her out of his
+head, he could forget the sweet face, the pleading voice, the twining
+arms, the clinging manner, and turn him to his plots and his schemes
+again; nay, he could do more—he could part with the sister and go to
+meet the brother; he could make an appointment with Ryan likely to keep
+him out of the way while he talked to Jenny, and then he would tell some
+lie to account for being late, and be as mild and gentle as a south wind
+during their interview.
+
+There are not many men in the world, more particularly not many of
+Maxwell’s age, with consciences so elastic as to permit such stretches
+as these. It is not usual even for Christians to seethe the kid in its
+mother’s milk, and I fancy there are few who would like to think that
+they had offered a man hospitality to the end that they might
+clandestinely make love to his sister. Human nature, though not at all
+times over-nice or over-particular, will turn squeamish occasionally
+about trifles; and if Maxwell Drewitt had been at all like other people
+it must have cut him a little to think, after he left Jenny, that her
+brother was waiting for him at Headlands Cottage, wondering where the
+deuce Maxwell could have got to.
+
+“Had to see madam home,” was that young gentleman’s explanation. “I
+think I must be a devilishly nice sort of fellow when ladies take to
+visiting me in an elegant mansion like this,” and Maxwell threw himself
+into one of the two chairs his ménage boasted, and after expressing a
+hope that Ryan had seen to the kettle, began to rattle on about Mrs.
+Drewitt’s visit, about her pressing invitation to Kincorth.
+
+“I suppose you will soon go back to the old place now, then,” suggested
+Mr. Timothy Ryan; “you must be pretty well tired of this,” and the
+lawyer glanced contemptuously round the cabin.
+
+“I would thank you not to sneer at my house,” answered Maxwell; “I hope
+to have a better some day, but it is the best I have at present.”
+
+“Just so,” argued Ryan; “and as I was saying, you must be pretty well
+tired of it.”
+
+“You should think! well, you are not me, that is the whole thing.”
+
+“But are you not tired?” asked Ryan.
+
+“No; I have not even thought of being tired yet. Time enough for that
+when I see a better place to go to; time enough for that when I have
+made my fortune!”
+
+“And how the devil,” asked Mr. Timothy Ryan, “do you propose making your
+fortune here?”
+
+“I mean to set up a private still,” answered Maxwell; “I mean to turn
+alchemist; I intend to discover the philosopher’s stone.”
+
+“You have your work cut out then,” was the reply.
+
+“I mean to make the howling wilderness a smiling plain,” went on
+Maxwell, unheeding the interruption; “I mean to see corn growing where
+corn has never grown before; I mean to live in advance of my age and to
+make money in Connemara.”
+
+“You won’t make much,” said Ryan, by way of encouragement.
+
+“That depends,” answered Maxwell: “meanwhile, the certainty before us is
+punch. Let us drink that and be happy,” and he pushed the whiskey-bottle
+over to Ryan, with the remark that the contents had never paid the King
+a halfpenny.
+
+“It is all the better for that,” remarked Ryan; “but, not to seem
+personal, here’s ‘Long life to him.’”
+
+“Amen,” said Maxwell Drewitt, and the two men took a pull at the punch
+together.
+
+“And here’s to ‘Ireland: long life to her,’” observed the lawyer.
+
+“Amen,” repeated Maxwell, and the pair emptied their glasses.
+
+“Don’t spare the potheen,” urged Maxwell; “don’t make the creature so
+weak that it won’t be able to get into your mouth. Remember the good old
+Irish receipt for making punch: first the sugar, then the whiskey, and
+then every drop of water after that spoils it.”
+
+“So it may, but I have to get home to-night,” remarked Ryan.
+
+“The more reason you should recruit your strength for the walk,”
+observed Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“So you won’t go back to Kincorth,” said Ryan, after a pause devoted to
+whiskey and water.
+
+“No; I am better off here. I have food and shelter in this cabin—as I
+suppose you would call it. At Kincorth, excepting a horse, I had nothing
+but the run of my teeth. I had no chance of making money; I had no
+feeling of independence. In Headlands Cottage, on the contrary, ‘I am
+monarch of all I survey, and my right there is none to dispute.’ I have
+land; I have a house; I have bog beyond Eversbeg, I have sea-wreck on
+the shore. I have a future; I have hope; I see my way. I mean yet to be
+a rich man. When you, Mr. Timothy Ryan, my worthy creditor, are blacking
+your fingers over deeds of settlement and iniquitous wills, I, at
+present your humble debtor, will be a great man; able to make your heart
+glad by appointing you agent to my estates. Mix again, man. We shall
+have many a talk in years to come about this old cottage, about these
+winter nights.”
+
+And Maxwell laughed, and the turf-fire—the bright upheaped turf-fire
+shone on his dark face; and Mr. Ryan, looking around the room, wondered
+what made the young man so merry; what he could see in his prospects or
+his surroundings to inspire him with such hopes.
+
+“I confess,” he said, at length, “that I do not see how you are to do
+it.”
+
+“My friend,” answered Mr. Maxwell Drewitt, “do you know anything of the
+science of agriculture?”
+
+“No further than that it reluctantly pays rent,” was the reply.
+
+“Do you know anything of the rotation of crops?”
+
+“I have not the faintest idea what you are talking about,” answered the
+lawyer.
+
+“Do you know anything of the nature of soils?” persisted his host.
+
+“No more than I know of Arabic,” was the reply.
+
+“Have you ever thought much about manures?”
+
+“Damn it, I am not a farmer.”
+
+“Well, I am; and I have thought about manures; I have studied the nature
+of soils; I can tell you all about the rotation of crops; and I mean to
+make money. I mean to turn up these grass lands, that grow nothing but
+moss and rushes. I mean to manure them; I mean to crop them. Harder than
+ever you read to be a lawyer, I have been reading to be a farmer. Pryor
+has been very good; he has sent me over books about soils. Turner is a
+trump; he has introduced me to an eminent English agriculturist with
+whom I correspond. I have ploughed and sowed half my farm already; I
+shall get the remainder ploughed, so that the frost, if any frost come,
+may eat into the ground. I have collected sea-weed. I intend to keep
+stock after this year. The great mistake in Ireland is the neglect of
+stall-feeding. I mean to try it. If you exhaust the secret of England’s
+prosperity, it is beer, beef, and manure; and I think I ought, as a
+simple matter of justice, to have put manure first. Let us see what
+sea-weed and stall-feeding will do in Connemara—what perseverance and
+resolution can effect anywhere.”
+
+“I hope I shall not see you ruined,” was the reply.
+
+“A beggar cannot be ruined,” said Maxwell, calmly; and the conversation
+reverted to general subjects, till Mr. Ryan rose to take his leave, when
+Maxwell lighted him to the door and out into the night with a dip
+candle.
+
+“Wishing it was wax for your sake,” he said, with a laugh; and then he
+went back to his sitting-room, and remained there reading and writing
+and thinking for a couple of hours.
+
+Next day he paid his promised visit to Kincorth.
+
+“You will stay for dinner?” said Mrs. Drewitt, whose manner was, as
+Maxwell noticed, colder than usual.
+
+“Do, Maxwell,” urged Kathleen.
+
+“Of course he will,” chimed in Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“Thank you,” said Maxwell, “but I am engaged—that is, I have an
+engagement.”
+
+“You have always engagements now,” pouted his sister.
+
+“Shows what a great man I am,” answered her brother, as he left to keep
+another appointment with Jenny Bourke—pretty, trustful, foolish Jenny!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ Warned.
+
+
+In the days of which I am writing there were two kinds of lawyer extant
+in Ireland—the wholly disreputable and the eminently respectable.
+
+Among the disreputable every kind and description of man might be found,
+providing he was decidedly clever and not over-scrupulous; the
+respectable, on the contrary, were mostly of one pattern, men of
+standing, having characters to lose, who were socially quite on an
+equality with their clients, and who were as far above the stock
+attorney of Irish novelists as an honest merchant is above a swindling
+adventurer.
+
+The worst of the respectable lawyers was that they were a little slow;
+the best of the disreputable lot was that they were decidedly sharp and
+shrewd.
+
+Drawn as a rule from the lower middle class, the latter had all the
+quickness of the lower orders of Irish society, all their acuteness of
+perception, all their rapidity of jumping to conclusions. In guerilla
+warfare the regular army had no chance with them; they were down on a
+point of law like a terrier on a rat; they had every Act of Parliament
+at their fingers’ ends; they were perfect scourges in court; they were
+the terror of witnesses, the detestation of magistrates. If there were a
+flaw in your title, woe betide you if one of them got scent of it. They
+were clever, well up in law, impertinent, impudent, vulgar; they were
+always talking about the people’s rights; always for the man who had
+shot his landlord or his landlord’s bailiff from behind a hedge; always
+against the Crown; always in favour of the Roman Catholics and against
+the Protestants.
+
+Unless a landlord had very dirty work indeed on hand he seldom left his
+family solicitor to seek advice from one of these gentlemen; and it was
+rarely indeed that any of them so far deserted his original flag as to
+serve under the enemy. In politics they were Liberals; in religion much
+the same. As a rule, they had been articled without the regular fee, and
+came into the profession by the back stairs. They were the hope of the
+vagabond population; they were the deliverers of many a man from the
+grievous terrors of the law; they fought so long as there was a rag of a
+chance left to them. If ever they got very rich they settled into men
+who upheld the constitution and the government; but so long as they
+remained poor—and that was generally for ever, because they spent as
+recklessly as they earned easily—they were for the people: for the women
+who went about barefooted; for the men who lounged through life with
+their coat-tails trailing the ground, with their battered hats worn on
+one side, with their hands in their pockets, and short pipes in their
+mouths.
+
+Of this class Timothy Ryan was a favourable specimen. He might not have
+much principle, but he had a heart. He was known to forgive men their
+costs, though he was also known to have done many a thing which his best
+friends could scarcely consider honest. He was not a hard agent, though
+he was certainly not an honest man. His conscience had never stood in
+his way, but his feelings had. He was immensely popular with the lower
+orders, but he had not the entrée into any of the gentlemen’s houses in
+the neighbourhood, except into that of Waller of Eversbeg, whose agent
+he was, and to whose table he was often invited.
+
+For the rest, he had little society save Mr. Murphy, Dr. Sheen’s
+assistant; the parish priest, and a retired sea captain who lived on the
+Duranmore side of Eversbeg Head. With Maxwell Drewitt, whom he had known
+for years, his intimacy was entirely of a business character, and yet
+Ryan was proud of the acquaintanceship, such as it was. He felt it gave
+him a certain standing knowing a Drewitt of Kincorth, even although that
+Drewitt had not the remotest chance of ever owning Kincorth. He knew he
+owed Waller’s agency—a tremendous lift for him—to Maxwell having brought
+the owner of Eversbeg into Inchnagawn Cottage to shelter during a storm;
+he was well aware young Drewitt could benefit him still more if he
+chose; for all of which reasons, Ryan cultivated Maxwell; whilst, for
+various sufficient reasons of his own, Maxwell cultivated Ryan.
+
+Jenny Bourke was Ryan’s half-sister. They were children of the same
+mother; Mrs. Ryan having changed her name for that of Bourke within two
+years of her first husband’s death.
+
+Of the Ryans’ union there had been many sons: one, Timothy, the eldest,
+settled at Duranmore as a lawyer; another ran away to sea; a third
+enlisted; a fourth emigrated; and so at last poor Mrs. Bourke departed
+this life in despair of ever seeing them reunited, and left her only
+daughter to the care of her sister and to the guardianship of Timothy.
+
+As for Mr. Bourke, he had long before deserted his wife and married a
+younger and more attractive-looking woman in England; indeed, rumour
+said that Mrs. Ryan was by no means his first essay in matrimony. He had
+a way of winning widows and securing their little fortunes, and then
+disappearing like a flash of lightning.
+
+Some people declared Bourke was not his name at all; but be this as it
+may, Jenny had never been called by any other, and she never hoped to be
+called by any other, unless indeed it might some day happen that Maxwell
+were able to make her his wife.
+
+Mr. Murphy had something more than a liking for the girl, but Jenny
+turned her coldest shoulder on the assistant when he called.
+
+“It’s that blackguard Maxwell at his tricks again,” thought Mr. Murphy;
+“I am sure he sees her somehow:” but Mr. Murphy was a wise man and kept
+his own counsel. He did not frighten Jenny by spreading a net in her
+sight, but he drew back and watched who threw the crumbs, he felt
+confident, the girl came down to pick up.
+
+“I’ve my eye on you, my boy,” he would remark to himself when he met
+young Mr. Drewitt and exchanged bows with him; “I have my eye on you.
+Give you rope enough and you will run it into a noose for yourself, or I
+am greatly mistaken. Good-morning, sir; fine weather this for the
+country.” And he would ride off on his rough pony, while Maxwell trudged
+over the Connemara roads on foot.
+
+His uncle had offered him leave to take a couple of horses out of the
+stable at Kincorth, but Maxwell declined the gift.
+
+“Not one of them shall give me a lift up,” he said to Ryan, and Ryan
+applauded his spirit even while he wondered at it.
+
+“Where the deuce does he get the money from?” considered the lawyer:
+“where can he get it? for a man is not able to live for nothing, even in
+a cabin; and he pays wages, and buys implements, and hires horses, and
+draws sea-weed. I should like to know who is backing him. Can it be
+Turner? It is not impossible.”
+
+And Maxwell took every pains to foster this idea, and to make Mr. Ryan
+think not only that Turner was backing him, but also that Mr. Waller and
+Mr. Pryor were willing to help him in his endeavours.
+
+In reality, however, he did not for many a long day receive the
+slightest assistance from any of his male acquaintances, whether Irish
+or English.
+
+It was Lady Emmeline Vervensoe who helped him into the saddle; it was
+Lady Emmeline who, when she heard he had left Kincorth with the
+intention of trying to push his way on in the world, gave him a
+considerable sum of money, saying significantly as she pressed it into
+his hand: “Secret service money for the election; you need not give me
+any account of it, Mr. Drewitt.” And Mr. Drewitt did not give her any
+account, and when he found that his farming operations required more
+capital he asked her ladyship to make him a further advance.
+
+He and Colonel Vervensoe had never healed up their old wound. So they
+passed each other when they met without speaking, and Maxwell was never
+by any chance now asked up to Cragantlet, even in the hunting season.
+
+But yet the servants at Cragantlet knew that Mr. Drewitt of “The
+Headlands,” as he was beginning to call his new property, occasionally
+rode up to the house when Colonel Vervensoe was from home; and a man who
+was in the habit of attending Lady Emmeline when she drove in her
+phaeton, or rode out on horse-back, could have told tales of many a
+meeting, not accidental, between the pair.
+
+There was nothing wrong in the affair; there was no breaking of the
+seventh commandment, nor idea of breaking it; but still Lady Emmeline
+liked Maxwell so much, and Maxwell found her ladyship so extremely
+useful, that neither thought of discontinuing the acquaintance
+altogether.
+
+To be strictly truthful, however, the young man had thought at one time
+of persuading her ladyship to go off with him—not because being his
+neighbour’s wife made her seem any nicer in his eyes, but simply because
+her husband had insulted him, and she had a large fortune.
+
+I am afraid, seeing Lady Emmeline was not over-prudent, had Maxwell been
+sure the game was worth the candle, that he would not have proved
+over-scrupulous in the matter; but as it was, Maxwell had a long head,
+and a clear head, and he reflected that, if he ran away with Colonel
+Vervensoe’s wife, that gallant officer would either shoot him or ruin
+him.
+
+Her ladyship, at a certain price, might not be dear; but her ladyship,
+with a bullet in some part of his body, or with heavy damages from the
+Ecclesiastical Courts, was quite another matter.
+
+Mr. Maxwell Drewitt thought that game not worth the candle, and so
+abandoned it, and accordingly Lady Emmeline Vervensoe’s character was as
+safe in his keeping as though she had been as ugly as one of the witches
+in Macbeth or as repulsive as Sycorax.
+
+Nevertheless, it was her money that ploughed his fields, paid his
+labourers, bought his seed; and, to do Maxwell Drewitt justice, no money
+was ever more judiciously laid out.
+
+He was prudent, he was economical, he did not encroach on her kindness;
+he knew when to hold back his hand and say “enough.”
+
+He required money and she lent it to him—gave it to him, she said but
+Maxwell preferred the other way of putting it. Once he had got the
+start, however, he worked manfully to keep it: he wanted to show Lady
+Emmeline, and to convince himself, out of what small beginnings even an
+Irishman may make a fortune; and so he laboured on, bringing first one
+piece of land and then another under cultivation, till people finally
+began to talk of Maxwell Drewitt as a wonder, and to marvel how he did
+it; while pretty Jenny Bourke thought within herself, “He will soon be
+rich enough to ask Timothy for me now;” but she never ventured to say
+this to him again, although she still stole out to meet him, either by
+the stream, or on the shore, or up in the mountain gorge that lay at the
+back of Inchnagawn Cottage.
+
+“That is a mighty nice walk on a summer’s evening,” remarked Mr. Murphy,
+pointing up this gorge, as he and Mr. Ryan stood looking inland one fine
+morning in June.
+
+“Is it?” said the attorney, carelessly.
+
+“I like to listen to your innocent talk,” replied Mr. Murphy. “‘Is it?’
+he says, just as simple as a lamb.”
+
+“Well, is it?” repeated Mr. Ryan. “How should I know anything about the
+place; I never was up the stream in my life!”
+
+“Never were out with any young woman either, I suppose?”
+
+“I have not been this many a year, at any rate,” returned the other.
+“The only girl I ever was to say sweet on was not sweet on me; and
+somehow I never fancied another since.”
+
+“Well, it is mighty queer,” remarked Mr. Murphy.
+
+“What is queer?” asked his friend.
+
+“Why, the lies men will tell when women and money are concerned. It was
+no later ago than last night that I followed a pair of lovers from the
+top of the gorge down to that big rock; you see it there, don’t you?”
+
+“Yes. You followed them; what then?”
+
+“Why then, Mr. Timothy Ryan, as I did not want to be seen, I stopped
+behind that lump of granite and watched; and I saw them in the darkness
+come down, down, down. The young woman wore a light dress; and I am
+positive that dress, at any rate, went round your haystacks and in by
+the back gate.”
+
+“You did not think it was me, Murphy?” said Ryan; but his voice sounded
+hoarse as he asked the question.
+
+“You in the light dress? in course not; but if the man wasn’t you, who
+was he?”
+
+“You are sure you had not been drinking?”
+
+“I’ll swear it for you, if you like.”
+
+“And you are certain you were not mistaken?”
+
+“Sure and certain.”
+
+“The man was not as tall as I am?”
+
+“He might not have been.”
+
+“Was he anything like Maxwell Drewitt?” inquired Ryan.
+
+“They could have passed for twins,” replied Mr. Murphy.
+
+“That’s enough, Murphy, thank you,” said Ryan, and he drew a long, deep
+breath. “It’s warm to-day,” he observed, lifting his hat off his head,
+and letting the light wind fan his temples. “I must be getting towards
+Duranmore now,” he added abruptly; “are you going to walk that way?”
+
+“I can walk any way,” was the reply. “Trade is mighty dull just now.
+There has not been a child born this week, I think; and only one
+accident, and he was carried home dead as a doornail. It’s a cursed
+place at the best of times,” proceeded Mr. Murphy; “but the like of it
+this June nobody would credit. I have made up all our calomel into pills
+and powders, just for want of something to do; and I have been trying
+how much nux vomica I could take without bringing on tetanus, for the
+sake of whiling away the time. I don’t think there is another such hole
+in the entire of Great Britain or Ireland. Whenever my mother dies, and
+she can’t last long, poor old girl, I shall cut Ireland altogether, and
+make for London. That’s the place, my boy—that’s the chance for men like
+me.”
+
+And Mr. Murphy rattled on after this fashion all the way to Duranmore,
+leaving it quite optional with his companion whether he answered him or
+not.
+
+Ryan elected not to answer him, and not to speak till they were shaking
+hands at the door of his office in the High Street; then he said—
+
+“They did not see you, did they?”
+
+“Does a corpse see the sexton when he is shovelling the mould in on the
+top of him, do you think?” asked Mr. Murphy.
+
+And with that they parted.
+
+For many a night afterwards Mr. Ryan kept watch; many a time he
+pretended to go away from home, and kept guard in the gorge, in the
+twilight, in the starlight, in the moonlight—all in vain.
+
+He would not speak to his sister nor to Maxwell. He bided his time, and
+he waited without result until one evening when he was returning, a day
+sooner than he had expected to be back, from an outlying portion of Mr.
+Waller’s property, among the wildest part of the Joyce country.
+
+There he had bought a new horse, a young, handsome creature, bay with
+black legs, leaving in exchange his old white mare and a not
+unreasonable number of pound-notes.
+
+He was proud of his new purchase: it had a long easy trot, and had
+brought him by bridlepaths up hilly roads, through lonely valleys,
+thirty Irish miles without turning a hair; and he was so careful of this
+good steed that he stopped at the top of the hill above Eversbeg in
+order to lead him down the steep descent.
+
+With his arm passed through the bridle and his hand on the horse’s
+glossy neck, Mr. Ryan paused at a turn of the road, and looked at the
+view spread out before him.
+
+Nestling at the foot of the hill, huddled up among its woods, stood
+Eversbeg, and nearer to him still were the ruins of Eversbeg Abbey. He
+could see the pointed windows half concealed by ivy; he could see the
+grave-stones and the crosses and the monuments; he could see away over
+Eversbeg Bay, out to the great Atlantic; and he could discern, like a
+speck in the distance, Maxwell Drewitt’s cottage lying away near
+Eversbeg Head.
+
+There was a great hush and calm over everything—over the sea and the
+land, the mountains and the valleys—and Ryan could not help feeling
+subdued by that virtue of stillness, by that calm which seems oftentimes
+to follow the sun’s setting, as though nature were lying quiet ere
+falling to sleep for the night.
+
+After this pause he went on, descending the hill by a winding road,
+which soon shut out from his view Eversbeg and the Abbey and the
+Atlantic, but brought him at a sharp turn within sight of Kincorth and
+Duranmore and Duranmore Bay, which was more like a lake than like an arm
+of the sea, and his own white cottage close to the shore, where Jenny
+would not be expecting his return.
+
+As he thought of this, Ryan pulled up short. He had twisted his hand in
+his horse’s mane, he had lifted his left foot half way up to the
+stirrup, but on the instant he unwound his fingers from among the coarse
+black hair, and stood beside his steed, while the animal lifted up its
+head and looked out over the bay, too, as though he had been a
+Christian.
+
+While he stood irresolute, Ryan saw a man leave the shore road, and,
+after looking round, follow the course of the stream I have spoken of as
+flowing at the back of Inchnagawn Cottage.
+
+It was Maxwell Drewitt. Though it was getting dusk, though there was a
+considerable distance between them, still Mr. Ryan recognized the man he
+had been waiting for.
+
+When there are not a dozen gentlemen within a circuit of twenty miles it
+is not easy to mistake the identity of any of them, and Ryan felt that
+he was not deceived—Maxwell Drewitt was going up the stream to meet
+Jenny, and he might catch them yet; and he would catch them, “he would,
+by——.”
+
+He flung the reins to a lad who stood at a cabin-door by the wayside,
+and bidding him take care of the horse, Ryan left the main road and
+dashed down what remained of the hill, across bog and river, among
+brambles and heather, home. He had his riding-whip in his hand, and
+involuntarily he shortened his hold of it as he drew nearer—nearer
+still.
+
+Every now and then he stopped, for there was a noise in his ears like
+the raging of distant waters. It was his passion—it was the tumult in
+his breast which sounded to him as the roar of the sea.
+
+He came on—on; he gained the high road; he stole round by the back of
+his own house; and there, by the stream, were the pair still talking.
+
+“Timothy!” shrieked Jenny—and she had reason: in a moment he held
+Maxwell by the collar, and showered down blows upon him.
+
+“Villain! scoundrel! coward!” he said, and he literally ground his teeth
+with rage.
+
+“Hands off, fool!” shouted Maxwell, and he clasped his own round Ryan’s
+throat.
+
+There was an awful struggle for a moment, but then Maxwell tripped his
+opponent up, and putting his knee on his chest, tore the whip out of his
+grasp, and sent it flying among the weeds and rashes that grew on the
+other side the stream.
+
+“Who is villain, scoundrel, coward now?” he asked, with a sneer; with
+his face black with rage, with the veins in his forehead swelled, with
+the devil that was in him looking out of his eyes. “Who is a spy and a
+listener? I won’t thrash you, because you are her brother; I won’t shoot
+you, because you are not worth the trouble; but I’ll leave you to think
+what you have made by this move;” and Maxwell released his adversary,
+picked up his hat, which had fallen to the ground, and saying to Miss
+Bourke, “I will see you another time, Jenny,” was about to walk off,
+when Ryan called out, “Stop!”
+
+“You shall never see her to speak to again. Only let me catch you near
+the house—only let me hear of Jenny ever looking to the side of the
+street where you walk, and I will shoot you like a dog.”
+
+“Have you finished?” asked Maxwell; “because in that case I may wish you
+good-morning.” And he lifted his hat to Jenny, whose face was as white
+as the cottage walls, and was gone.
+
+Within a week Ryan took a house in Duranmore next door to his office,
+and moved his furniture and himself and his sister away from the pretty
+cottage by the shore.
+
+But the waves came rolling up the bay for all that: though there was no
+human ear to listen to their music, they still rippled over the stones
+and sand—the shutters of the cottage-windows were closed and fastened,
+but the fuchsias bloomed the same as ever—no Jenny now stood by the
+stream, singing her love songs, dreaming her love fantasies, but the
+stream went dancing over the stones to the sea none the less
+joyously—there were none to look up at the everlasting hills, but the
+summer’s sun shone on them, and the winter’s snows lay on them, as the
+sun had shone and the snow had lain since the beginning of time.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ Son and Heir.
+
+
+Meanwhile there had been changes at Kincorth, such changes as the birth
+of a son and the management of a careful and educated woman were likely
+to produce; but the greatest change of all had perhaps been that wrought
+in Mrs. Drewitt herself, who, looking back twelve months, could not help
+marvelling if the Agnes Drewitt who sat nursing her child in her bedroom
+at Kincorth were the same with the new-made wife who had wept bitter
+tears in that self-same chamber, who had grieved over Maxwell, who had
+wanted to keep him in the house at any sacrifice, at any cost.
+
+Since those early days, Mrs. Drewitt had grown very jealous for her
+son’s inheritance, very watchful over the interests of her baby. Maxwell
+had opened her eyes and taught her to discern between good and evil; and
+with all a woman’s quickness of perception she had seen that there would
+be war between her children and the children of the elder brother; that
+Maxwell wanted the estate, and was resolved some day to have it.
+
+“But he shan’t, darling, shall he?” and Mrs. Drewitt kissed every one of
+her son’s toes in succession as though he had been a pope.
+
+There is no accounting for tastes, or otherwise one might wonder at the
+fancy mothers have for this form of refreshment. Pink and plump and
+pretty the creature’s toes looked peeping from under the long white
+robe, but there was no earthly reason why she should have kissed them
+for all that.
+
+She did perform the ceremony, nevertheless, rapturously, and then she
+lifted her eyes and looked out over the waving woods and the sunny
+fields that went sloping towards the sea.
+
+It was a fair property. I have said what Maxwell thought of it as he
+stood gazing up at Kincorth on the summer’s afternoon when you, dear
+reader, were introduced to him, and it was perhaps natural that Mrs.
+Drewitt longed a little greedily to secure it for her boy.
+
+Women nursing babies are all alike. They think nothing good enough for
+the new king, and they expect every created being to fall down and adore
+the autocrat as they do.
+
+Women whose children are growing up get, as a rule, more sensible and
+fairer dealing year by year. They see their white crows throwing out
+black feathers, they begin to understand that other people have children
+too, and that the meadow-lands of existence cannot be kept clear so that
+their young lambs may browse over them undisturbed.
+
+But a baby!—there is so much left to the imagination about a baby. It
+may grow up to be as handsome as Apollo, as wise as Solomon, as eloquent
+as Demosthenes, as just as Aristides, as holy as George Herbert.
+
+It is so delightful to be able to sit in the sunlight, as Mrs. Drewitt
+was doing, nursing a two months’ old monarch, and picture for him a
+reign long, glorious, and triumphant. If mothers did not mercifully
+forget these dreams, how could they ever live and face the downfall of
+all these airy castles? How could they bear to see their sons and
+daughters grow up, not as the polished corners of the temple, but
+sometimes no better than other folks’ sons and daughters—oftentimes much
+worse?
+
+A baby!—a monarch, a pope, a little god, a lord mayor for a year and a
+day, and then another lord mayor rides in gilded coach to fortune, and
+inhabits his brother’s grand chateaux en Espagne.
+
+The king is dead, long live the king! and autocrat No. 2, No. 3, No. 4,
+as the case may be, appears on the daïs for the household generally to
+bow down before and worship.
+
+A baby!—well, well, Maxwell Drewitt had been a baby once, and perhaps
+his mother dreamed such dreams for him as Mrs. Drewitt of Kincorth was
+doing for her baby now.
+
+There are some things in nature which we shall never understand on this
+side eternity, and one of them, I think, is, why having a child born to
+her should make a woman unjust for the time being.
+
+I know there will be an outcry of indignation at this assertion; but it
+is true for all that. Beyond her baby, a woman has at first no sympathy.
+Nay, I go further, and say she has no liking save for those who serve,
+honour, and obey her Moloch.
+
+There are men who are worse than women in this matter, but not many,
+thank God! If there were, the shop of the world might be shut up, and
+human nature would have to retire from business altogether.
+
+Her baby!—there came a day when Mrs. Drewitt turned from her first
+allegiance and worshipped another baby. All her life long she was
+somewhat of an idolater, and her gods did nothing for her, as is the way
+with the gods we rear for ourselves—only brought trouble and sorrow to
+that gentle breast.
+
+But sitting in the sunshine, kissing the fat toes of her first-born,
+Mrs. Drewitt was happy, and she was all the happier perhaps because she
+felt no sorrow for the man whom the birth of her son cut out from
+Kincorth for ever.
+
+If we exhaust the matter, the young mother thought in her heart it ought
+to be a pleasure for Maxwell to stand out of the way of the new king’s
+progress; and as she felt sure it was no pleasure to him to do anything
+of the kind, she began to entertain a very sincere dislike for her
+husband’s nephew.
+
+Holding her baby from her at arms’ length—laughing when it laughed,
+clasping it to her heart, touching its little fingers, its little hands,
+its meaningless face, with a delight ever strange and ever new—something
+even in that happy moment came over Mrs. Drewitt that made the tears
+start into her eyes, and caused her face to change and sadden under the
+sunlight.
+
+She was sorry that she did not feel sorry for Maxwell, that she did not
+like him, that she was not so glad to see him as formerly, that she
+could not care for Susan and Wilhelmina. She had resolved to do her
+duty, and this was the end of it. Human nature is stronger than duty,
+and it was impossible for Mrs. Drewitt to help her feelings. The child
+she had brought into this world was nearer to her than any other
+person’s children could be.
+
+It was natural she should long to secure Kincorth for the baby—that she
+should dislike any one who seemed to stand in antagonism to her son.
+
+The child had changed her, and it was the consciousness of this change
+having taken place that made Mrs. Drewitt’s eyes fill full of tears.
+
+As for Mr. Drewitt, he had received the new arrival just as such a man
+usually does receive such donations—ecstatically!
+
+To have heard him talk, any stranger might have thought that Mr. Drewitt
+only held the property in trust until his son should come of age. If his
+bailiff spoke to him about cutting down a tree, he hesitated. He would
+grant no lease for more than seven years.
+
+The expenses must be curtailed, the household expenditure retrenched.
+His agent must see that the rents were paid more punctually. When Brian
+came of age it would not do for him to find the tenants all in arrear.
+He trusted those girls would marry, or that if they did not, Maxwell
+would have them to live with him. “I must try to make him an allowance
+for their maintenance till they all come of age, when I can perhaps
+manage to settle a certain sum on each,” said Mr. Drewitt to his wife.
+“I should not like Brian to marry one of them, and if they grow up
+together who knows what might happen?”
+
+Who indeed? but meantime the state of mind in which Mr. Drewitt went
+about the house, and walked round the shrubberies, and exchanged
+greetings with his friends, and answered the congratulations of his
+acquaintances, was involved and ridiculous beyond description.
+
+“It is a far cry to Loch Awe,” Maxwell observed drily, when Wilhelmina
+told him, with shrieks of laughter, how her uncle was doing everything
+with an eye to the pleasure and advancement of the young heir. “What
+kind of a creature is it?”
+
+“What kind of creatures are all babies?” inquired Miss Susan Drewitt,
+scornfully. “Though to be sure, to hear the way they go on about it,
+anybody might imagine it was not a baby at all, but an angel. Nannie
+says it is like its papa, and the doctor says it is like its mamma; but
+for my part, I think it is a cross between a star-fish and a lobster.”
+
+“You really ought to be in the house with uncle,” remarked Wilhelmina.
+“He won’t let a window be open for fear of the brat catching cold. He
+won’t let any stranger touch it for fear the said stranger should have
+any dreadful and communicable disease. He was going to put Mr. Murphy
+out of the hall-door, the other day, because the poor man said, after
+uncle had quite worn him out, ‘Tut, tut, tut, Mr. Drewitt, the egg is
+all very well, but it is not worth the cackling you make over it.’ I
+really thought I would have died, Maxwell. I had to put the whole of my
+pocket-handkerchief into my mouth, or I should have laughed outright.
+
+“‘Sir!’ says my uncle, and he drew himself up like a grenadier.
+
+“‘You need not be offended, Mr. Drewitt,’ says Murphy. I do love that
+man, it is so hard to put him out of countenance. ‘A hen with only one
+chicken always makes ten times the fuss she would if she had a good
+clutch to go about with; and by the time you have a dozen, I’m thinking
+you won’t be caring so much whether a few of them should catch some
+infection or not. Excuse a jest, sir, it is only my way. The baby is a
+fine baby. I don’t know that ever I saw a handsomer.’
+
+“And as he said that he looked over at me, and you know, Maxwell, what
+his looks are.”
+
+“He is an impudent scoundrel,” remarked her brother. “If I hear of him
+looking at you at all, I will wring his neck for him—and glad of the
+excuse too,” added Maxwell, _sotto voce_.
+
+“You never saw a man make such an idiot of himself in your life,” said
+Susan, laying a true Hibernian emphasis on the last word in her
+sentence. “He ought to build a little chapel and have a shrine made, and
+let people only look at the brat from a distance. And that reminds me,
+Maxwell—do you know Kathie has never gone back to school yet? She is not
+well enough to go, Sheen says, and my uncle wanted her to keep away from
+the heir, seeming to think it might be something of consumption, and
+that the young gentleman would take it from her.”
+
+“And Kathie cried, till I told her she was a greater idiot than uncle
+and a bigger baby than the heir,” put in Wilhelmina. “Mrs. Drewitt would
+not listen to such nonsense, though; she said Kathie should be with her
+and Brian if she liked. That is one thing I will say for Mrs.
+Drewitt—that she is good to Kathie. Give the devil his due, her own
+mother could not be better to her.”
+
+“But do you think Kathie ill, seriously ill, I mean?” asked Maxwell: if
+the young man had ever loved any of his own flesh and blood, it was
+Kathie, and he put the question anxiously.
+
+“Well, you know she never was strong—she was always, as Nannie says, the
+‘crowl’ among us,” answered Wilhelmina, who looked both strong and
+handsome, and had a rich colour in her cheeks with walking to Headlands
+Cottage; “she ought not to have gone to school, and it was not with Mrs.
+Drewitt’s good will she went, but you and uncle would have it. You know
+it was your doing, Maxwell, and she got a cold, and the cold got worse,
+and you should see for yourself how she looks.”
+
+“What are they doing for her?” he inquired.
+
+“Dr. Sheen has sent her some medicine, and Mrs. Drewitt tries to coax
+her to eat,” Wilhelmina replied; while Susan added—
+
+“I think they have an idea of sending her abroad. I am sure I heard some
+one talk of letting her spend the winter with the Dyaks, if money for
+her travelling expenses could be raised.”
+
+Then Maxwell Drewitt rose up, walked across the room, took a cigar out
+of a paper lying on the table, lit it, and began to smoke. When he had
+puffed away for a little time he said—
+
+“Kathie shall not go to the Dyaks. I won’t have my sister eating the
+bread of a dependent in the house of any of Mr. Drewitt’s relations. If
+she needs a milder climate I will find somebody to take charge of her,
+and I will find the money too, which the great people up at Kincorth
+seem to think a thing so devilishly hard to raise.”
+
+“That’s right, Maxwell. Go it,” exclaimed Wilhelmina, clapping her
+hands. “Send us all abroad, and come yourself—we’d make our fortunes at
+_rouge-et-noir_. Wouldn’t it be capital sport?”
+
+“You seem to think so, at any rate,” remarked Susan, shortly.
+
+“And you—ten thousand pardons. I forgot. You would not like to leave——”
+
+“Whom?” asked Maxwell, as his sister stopped abruptly.
+
+“The baby, I suppose,” laughed Wilhelmina; whereupon Maxwell made some
+remark about the baby which did not sound like a blessing.
+
+“What the deuce is their fancy for calling the young beggar Brian?” he
+inquired. “Is it Brian Boroïhme they have gone back to, or is it some of
+her people, or what?”
+
+“There was a good Drewitt once,” answered Wilhelmina; “at least, so
+tradition says, though I believe there is not a syllable of truth in the
+story. There was a good Drewitt once—good and wise, and his name was
+Brian. There is a long rigmarole about him on some old stone in the
+abbey, and Nannie told Mrs. Drewitt a great history about what grand
+people the Drewitts were in his day, and about what a pious man he was,
+and how he repaired the abbey, and how he planted that huge yew-tree in
+the churchyard, and that hollow ash, and that rotten beech on the lawn
+at Kincorth. And Nannie told her, too, how a child always strains after
+the person it is called after, and how luck follows names, and worked
+her up to such a pitch finally, that nothing would do her but the young
+gentleman must be called Brian—and accordingly Brian he is—Brian
+Archibald. It is not an easy name to make fun out of; so all I can do is
+to call him Brin Baldy. It’s a pretty conceit, is not it? as Lady
+Emmeline would say, and it has the great advantage of being
+unintelligible. I have ventured to talk about Brin Baldy to Susan before
+uncle, and he had not the remotest idea of whom I was talking.”
+
+“I shall come up to see Kathie,” said Maxwell, when his sister stopped—a
+little irrelevantly it is true, but still in consequence of some train
+of thought he had been pursuing during her sentence.
+
+“I am sure _we_ ought to be grateful,” remarked Susan. “Get up and make
+a courtesy, Willy.”
+
+Which Willy accordingly did, observing, at the same time, she thought
+somebody ought to come and see Kathie, and rouse her up.
+
+“Talk about peaches! You should have seen the peaches the Countess gave
+me the other day to take home to Kathie,” she went on; “they were as
+big—oh! as big as Susan’s head—four times as big as any I ever saw grow
+at Kincorth, and do you think she would touch them?—not a bit of it.
+
+“‘You little ungrateful wretch!’ I said, ‘and I have brought them all
+the way from Laddenwell home for you, and it was as much as I could do
+to keep from eating them on the road. You _shall_ take them!’
+
+“So she took one, and tried to swallow it, but she did not like peaches,
+she told me.
+
+“‘Will you have grapes, then?’ I asked her, but she would not have
+grapes. At last I worried out of her what she could eat, and what do you
+think it was, Maxwell? I will give you six guesses.”
+
+“Don’t be childish, Willy; go on.”
+
+“Crabs!” exclaimed that young lady. “Now you know crabs are things uncle
+can’t bear the sight of, and that he thinks nobody else ought to be able
+to bear the sight of either; so I had to get one smuggled up for her.
+But when it came, would she touch it? I don’t know what to do with
+Kathie,” finished Wilhelmina, in despair.
+
+“She ought to take a good canter every day of her life,” said Susan,
+“and keep out of the nursery. There is nothing the matter with Kathie
+except the mopes.”
+
+“Do you know what your mother died of, Susan?” asked Maxwell, a little
+sternly.
+
+“She died when Kathie was born. I suppose it was of that,” answered Miss
+Drewitt.
+
+“She would not have died of that if she had not been in a decline
+beforehand,” said Maxwell; “and from what you say, I’m afraid it is
+consumption Kathie has got. I will come up and see her,” he repeated. “I
+will walk back with you.”
+
+When Maxwell passed through Duranmore, on his way from Kincorth to
+Eversbeg, he stopped at Dr. Sheen’s, and not finding that gentleman at
+home, spoke to Mr. Murphy about his sister’s health.
+
+“Had not you better step round when the doctor is within?” asked the
+assistant.
+
+“I have got something else to do than dance up and down from Eversbeg
+here, after him or anybody else,” answered Maxwell, with that
+graciousness of manner which distinguished his treatment of any one he
+considered beneath him in station.
+
+“It is not my place to talk about Doctor Sheen’s patients,” persisted
+Mr. Murphy.
+
+“What the devil is the use of your getting on in this way to me? She is
+my sister, and I must know, and I will know, what is the matter with
+her.”
+
+“And how should I know what is the matter with her?” demanded the other.
+“Sure we never know for certain what is wrong with man, woman, or child,
+unless we open them, and I suppose you don’t want me to do that?”
+
+“Will you tell me, as far as you do know, what ails my sister, or not?
+If you do not choose to do so, I must take her to somebody who will.”
+
+“I would rather you would ask Dr. Sheen. I am only his assistant, and I
+have not had his experience; and to be plain, the doctor and I don’t
+agree about the case. Ask him; or if you like, I will tell him to write
+to you.”
+
+“I want your opinion,” persisted Maxwell. “All you say I shall consider
+as spoken to me confidentially, if you wish, only tell me exactly what
+you think is wrong with Kathleen.”
+
+“I do believe you are fond of her,” said Mr. Murphy, with a vague wonder
+in his voice.
+
+“What the deuce is it to you whether I am or not? Tell me your opinion,
+without beating about the bush any longer.”
+
+“Do you want me to tell you the truth or a lie?”
+
+“I want the truth, whatever the truth may be,” was the answer.
+
+“Because,” went on Mr. Murphy, “there’s many a one says he wants to hear
+the truth, and then is angry at the man who tells it to him.”
+
+“Whatever you think, out with it,” exclaimed Maxwell, impatiently.
+
+“Your sister is very far from strong.”
+
+“I can see that without the help of any doctor’s eyes,” answered the
+young man; “but is she likely to get worse? Will the medicine she is
+taking cure her?”
+
+“Doctor Sheen thinks it will,” was the reply.
+
+“But what do you think, Mr. Murphy?”
+
+“I consider Miss Kathie to be in a very bad way,” said the assistant.
+
+“Will it be life or death?” asked Maxwell.
+
+“Don’t ask me. What is the use of it? Sure you know yourself.”
+
+For a minute there was silence—for a minute the thought of the only
+enemy that in youth a man like Maxwell Drewitt is afraid to face cowed
+him. Then he said:
+
+“Would a warmer climate, Mr. Murphy——”
+
+“Save her, I suppose you mean. You can try it.”
+
+Slowly and reluctantly, Maxwell turned to go.
+
+“One thing more, Mr. Murphy,” he said. “Was the cold she caught at
+school the cause of this?”
+
+“If she had not caught a cold there she would have caught it some place
+else,” was the answer. “You can’t keep a person shut up in a band-box
+for ever; and the fire was always ready laid in her, to be kindled some
+chilly winter’s morning. But people invariably like to attribute disease
+to accident: they think if they could guard themselves against that they
+would be immortal,” added Mr. Murphy.
+
+Maxwell went out into the air. He walked home round by Eversbeg Head,
+from whence he had a view over the wide Atlantic, looking under the
+summer’s sky like a glassy lake. He saw the ships going past with their
+white sails shining and glistening in the sun; he beheld the ocean at
+peace with man—the land kissed softly and gently by the waves; he saw
+his own fields looking rich and cultivated, in the warm glow of the
+afternoon light;—but there was a sorrow in his heart, the memory of
+which the peaceful scene could not chase away.
+
+Many a feeling which passes through our breasts to-day we forget
+to-morrow; we fear, and with a new sunrise the dread is gone. We settle
+down to think: something comes to prevent our doing so, and the
+impression made, fades away and is forgotten.
+
+Could Maxwell Drewitt have stereotyped in his memory all the feelings
+which saddened him when he stood, that day, looking out over the great
+Atlantic, I think—I believe—he would have gone through the rest of his
+life a better man.
+
+But as it was, they were merely as words spoken to the air—as letters
+traced on the sand.
+
+The next wind of passion bore them far beyond his reach and his
+recollection; the next wave of life, rushing up on the shore of his
+existence, obliterated their meaning.
+
+Life and death, friends—life and death!—are these two not ever walking
+through this world hand in hand together?
+
+The tide that brings a fresh soul into existence on its flow, bears a
+pale corpse out to the great sea as it ebbs.
+
+There was a child born—there was a girl dying: there was a son and heir,
+over whose birth exulting parents rejoiced—there was an orphan waiting
+to rejoin her father and mother also.
+
+There was life in the boy, who crowed and shrieked in the nursery: there
+was death in Kathleen, who walked about the grounds and through the
+rooms at Kincorth—who had learned her last lessons, who was never to go
+back to school any more—who was never to have lovers, never to be
+married—never to be anything except a slight, dark-eyed, loveable,
+delicate girl—who cooed and fondled the baby as long as she had strength
+to do it, and who delighted in the newcomer, even although he did cut
+Maxwell out from the property.
+
+“And Maxwell was always kinder to me than he was to anybody,” sighed
+Kathie to Mrs. Drewitt; “I wish he was out of that cottage—I wish he was
+back at Kincorth!”
+
+But when her wish was fulfilled, when Maxwell did return to Kincorth, I
+think it was best for Kathleen that she could not see him there—that she
+had then been sleeping for twenty years in Eversbeg Abbey, away from all
+the sinful jealousies and wicked passions which make the world so often
+seem only like a battle-field, where man stands up to war against man.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ Maxwell’s Improvements.
+
+
+Three years passed away—slowly enough, for in a place like Duranmore
+time’s flight is never very rapid; and during the course of those three
+years the novelty of having a son had worn off, and Mr. Drewitt cut down
+trees, and renewed leases, and took fines, and raised money without the
+slightest reference to his heir’s interests. In the house matters were
+better managed; out-of-doors, worse. Every day the property was going
+more surely to the dogs; every day money seemed more difficult to be
+had, more impossible to be kept.
+
+When Brian lay in his cradle, Mr. Drewitt proposed building a house on
+the farm he had settled on his wife before her marriage. “It will
+increase the value of the place,” he said; “and if I live till Brian
+grow up and marry, he can reside there and be independent of us
+altogether; while, on the other hand, should you, dearest, ever have to
+leave Kincorth, it would be a home for you.”
+
+All in vain Mrs. Drewitt remonstrated. All in vain she entreated him to
+wait, observing that it would surely be time enough to build a house for
+Brian’s wife when Brian was put into jacket and trousers. She pointed
+out that money was not very plentiful; that workmen would have to be
+paid; that somebody must live in the house if it were finished; and that
+it would be a continual expense and worry.
+
+Mr. Drewitt overbore all her objections. He insisted that the thing,
+being proper to be done, should be done at once; that a dower-house
+ought immediately to be erected; that the expense would be nothing, the
+advantages incalculable; and straightway he had granite quarried and
+drawn to the farm, chose a site, set labourers to dig at the
+foundations, and neglected every other concern of his life in order to
+ride over each day and see how the work progressed.
+
+“Where are you drawing those stones to?” Maxwell asked one of his
+uncle’s men who was driving a cart and horse across the hills.
+
+“To Analore, yer honour,” was the answer.
+
+“What for?” pursued the young man.
+
+“To build a house for Masther Brian. The masther is greatly taken on
+with the notion entirely.”
+
+“Fools build houses,” thought Maxwell, “and, my God, what a fool he is!”
+
+Twelve months afterwards Maxwell rode over to Analore, and tying his
+horse to a gate walked leisurely up the hill to see how Brian’s castle
+was getting on. Analore lay inland; it was, as Lady Ebbutt had said, a
+mountain: the farm was nothing more than a sheep-run. Nature had not
+made it a garden, and Art had left Nature’s handiwork alone. Over the
+short grass Maxwell picked his way: there were boulders, there were
+brambles, there was bog, there was morass—Maxwell rounded them all,
+still keeping up the hill to the site Mr. Drewitt had chosen.
+
+It was a winter’s morning, bright, clear, and bracing; but there was
+nothing of elasticity in Maxwell’s step—nothing youthful about his
+movements.
+
+Every now and then he stopped and looked about him; not that the place
+was unfamiliar, for the young man knew every rood of his uncle’s
+property much better than his uncle did himself. He was scrutinising the
+land professionally; he surveyed it as a jockey might a horse. He was
+contrasting it with Headlands, and thinking he had made a mistake in
+choosing a farm by the sea. He dug up the turf with the heel of his
+shoe, and taking a piece of the earth in his hand examined it minutely.
+
+“Curse him!” said Mr. Maxwell Drewitt as he threw the mould away, “this
+soil is better than mine,” and he pursued his walk up the hill, thinking
+while he walked, till he reached the place where Mr. Drewitt had thought
+to build his house.
+
+It was a lovely site. “A property in such a situation, within twenty
+miles of London, would be worth a king’s ransom; the view alone would be
+a fortune,” thought Maxwell, while he looked over lake and valley, over
+gorge and mountain, and then he laughed, to see nothing but the
+foundations built up, no sign of bricklayer or labourer at hand. There
+were cartloads of granite on the ground; there were heaps of sand and
+marks of where mortar had been mixed; there was the earth that they dug
+out of the foundations wheeled away on one side, and in this state the
+edifice was left.
+
+“If he had given this to me instead of settling it on her; if he had
+said, ‘Maxwell, you have been hardly done by, and it is not much I can
+give you, but there is Analore, take it, for you and your heirs for
+ever;’ if he had made it over by any binding legal document and helped
+me to raise a thousand pounds upon it, or lent me a thousand himself, as
+he might readily have done, I should not have cared to call the king my
+cousin,” were the thoughts that chased one another through Maxwell
+Drewitt’s mind. “I could have built a house of those boulders; I could
+have drained this land; I could have grown potatoes here till the ground
+was fit for oats; I could have made a fortune out of the place, and so
+might he, if he were not what he is—a purposeless idiot, a thickheaded
+ass.”
+
+All the world over, the man who has got hold of a new idea abuses the
+man who sticks to the old: in Ireland, as in England, the man of
+business hates the man of pleasure; the worker detests the idler.
+
+Mr. Drewitt might be a fool, an ass, an idiot; in some things, indeed, I
+am afraid he was all three; but had Maxwell been born to a great estate,
+he would scarcely have seen his uncle’s shortcomings so clearly; he
+would not have looked so closely after soils himself.
+
+Give a property to a man whose eyes have once been opened and he can see
+clearly enough how to improve it; but till necessity has sharpened their
+inventions, I think few people notice everything which is lying within
+their ken. It was his uncle’s marriage that sharpened Maxwell Drewitt,
+that enabled him to see exactly to what extent the rent-roll of Kincorth
+might be increased.
+
+“If it were clear to-morrow it would be worth fifteen thousand a year;
+increase those mortgages, and I could make it worth forty thousand a
+year.” This was Maxwell’s calculation as he sat on a great stone,
+looking over the lake, and the valley, and the distant mountains. “I
+must try to get some land in this neighbourhood, and so make the most of
+my rights of sea-weed,” was the practical conclusion he arrived at ere
+he left Analore.
+
+“A man like this deserved to succeed,” I hear some say at this juncture;
+and my answer is, “He did succeed—he did lay house to house and acre to
+acre.” He gained all that he set out determined to achieve, and if he
+did not secure the great prize, towards which all human efforts
+aim—happiness—it was only because, thinking he should find it in wealth
+and position, in lands, in smiling fields, in verdant pastures, he
+strove to become the owner of these good things, and of these only.
+
+Knowing what need Ireland has of such men, fresh from the sight of her
+wretched poverty, her miserable management, her forlorn condition, I
+could almost wish I had chosen a different hero, and taken a better man
+to show what energy and perseverance may do for an individual as well as
+for a people.
+
+There are such in Connemara; there are little oases, formed by their
+industry and talent, in the wilderness; there are gardens in the desert;
+there are resting-places where the tired mind and the weary heart may
+sit down and take refreshment, seeing what even one man has been able to
+effect. Kincorth is one of these; but the mind that saw what Kincorth
+might be made has long ceased to fret itself with schemes, to vex itself
+over disappointment; while the man who owns Kincorth now is grave beyond
+all mortal comprehension.
+
+Let me go on with my story, friends, for I must not write of the end
+yet.
+
+All the plans of Mr. Drewitt’s life came to nothing, like the
+dower-house at Analore. All the good he purposed died in the birth, all
+the reforms he intended were never carried out.
+
+The road to ruin was the one he voluntarily chose in youth, and he
+always lacked strength of mind enough to turn back at any stage of his
+journey and try to make for fortune.
+
+For a time Mrs. Drewitt endeavoured to mend matters, urging him to look
+his affairs boldly in the face, and not to allow them to get more and
+more involved; but before she had been married two years she, too,
+learned that speaking was useless, and contented herself with entreating
+that he would not mortgage the house and demesne of Kincorth; that he
+would endure any inconvenience, practise any economy, rather than
+jeopardize _the_ inheritance of their son.
+
+Mr. Drewitt promised, and then broke his promise, comforting himself
+exceedingly the while by thinking that his wife need never know he had
+done so.
+
+Mortgaging in one class is very like pawning in another. Money is
+wanted, and a few thousands can easily enough be raised. Money is
+needed, and it is only a step to the three balls.
+
+But in either case it is the repayment that proves difficult, and with
+Mr. Drewitt repayment was simply impossible. Still on—on—along the road
+to ruin he pursued his way, riding his hacks, keeping his hunters,
+making guests welcome, running into debt recklessly as he travelled.
+
+There was plenty of good company taking the same journey with the owner
+of Kincorth.
+
+His was no isolated case—no exception to a general rule—only perhaps
+there were few who, while beggaring themselves, made so little show of
+wealth as he—few who seemed to do so small an amount of good, either to
+their families or to their friends, as this weak, amiable, purposeless,
+loveable Archibald Drewitt, who put down his misfortunes to every cause
+save the real one, who shifted the blame to any man’s shoulders rather
+than carry it himself.
+
+Much as she loved her husband, Mrs. Drewitt could not be blind to his
+shortcomings; she could not avoid seeing that different management might
+have produced different results.
+
+She heard how well Maxwell was doing, and asked his uncle whether he
+could not reclaim some portion of his own land likewise.
+
+“If I had started unencumbered as he has done,” replied Mr. Drewitt,
+with a sigh, “things might have been very different; but I have been in
+debt from the first. I had a heavy establishment to keep up. I had those
+children to maintain.”
+
+And the owner of Kincorth spoke in a tone of such sincere self-pity that
+Mrs. Drewitt had no courage left to remind him of the fact of his having
+started with eight thousand a-year clear, spite of the mortgages. She
+held her peace, and Mr. Drewitt still continued traversing the road that
+for him could have but one end.
+
+Three years passed away. Kathie was dead, Susan had eloped, Wilhelmina
+rode as fast, as far, and as fearlessly as ever. There was another child
+at Kincorth—a daughter named after its paternal grandmother, Geraldine.
+There was a third infant coming, and Mrs. Drewitt’s face was beginning
+already to tell tales of sorrow and anxiety. Poor lady! four years of
+married life, of an irregular household, of a dissatisfied family, of
+regret, of sickness, of struggle, had rubbed some of the beauty of youth
+off her countenance, had altered and saddened her expression.
+
+She had mourned for Kathleen, she had wept over the girl in the watches
+of the night; she had kept her with her so long as human love and human
+care could avail; and when at length Kathleen floated out from the river
+to the sea, Mrs. Drewitt watched her as she drifted towards the great
+ocean with eyes dimmed by crying, with a heart bowed down by grief.
+
+Though she had her baby, though she did now own that great and powerful
+king, still she missed the friendship and the companionship of the girl
+who had taken to her so kindly.
+
+She had never feared to talk to Kathie about her perplexities, her
+difficulties, and now she knew that through the years to come she must
+live entirely without sympathy, and without assistance.
+
+If anything had been wanting to fill her cup of sorrow at that time, a
+remark of Maxwell’s, which through the officiousness of an acquaintance
+came to her ears, would have caused it to overflow.
+
+He said what he knew to be false, that if Kathie had been properly
+attended to when she first returned from school, she need not then be
+lying in Eversbeg Abbey.
+
+It was not true; and Mrs. Drewitt herself chanced to be aware that no
+care or attention could have saved Kathie at any stage of her disease;
+but the blow went home for all that.
+
+She reproached herself; she thought she had not noticed Kathie’s malady
+so soon as she might; she remembered that she had mistaken the flush on
+her cheeks for strength—the brightness of her eyes for health.
+
+She knew she had been taken up with herself and the baby; for a time she
+remembered she felt so ill that exertion of any kind was a trouble; and
+then she was so happy about the birth of her son, that she did not pay
+much attention to any one save the young autocrat.
+
+She had put the boy first (this was what she thought), and, being her
+own, she ought to have seen to poor motherless Kathie, even before
+thinking of her child. Heaven help her!—many a time that winter the baby
+went a little to the wall, while the sick girl was nursed and tended.
+
+If Maxwell had exhausted all his ingenuity in trying to make her
+wretched, he could not have succeeded better.
+
+She had been selfish, she had been absorbed, and it was wrong for her to
+be either, though nothing could have saved Kathie, though no help of man
+could have averted the decree of death.
+
+She and Mr. Drewitt had both been foolish. She, gentle soul, could see
+it all clearly enough when the idol had been taken down from its
+pedestal, when its father ceased to consider its future prospects every
+moment in the day, when she found life had its duties, though she was a
+mother—when she discovered that even a baby may usurp too much
+attention, and lead with its fat toes, with its plump legs, with its
+soft, yielding body, with its clenched fists, with its meaningless face,
+its unseasonable grief, and its maniacal merriment, the wisest parent
+into temptation every day.
+
+Poor Kathie! Mrs. Drewitt mourned for her as no one of her own flesh and
+blood sorrowed.
+
+Maxwell was busy with his schemes; Susan was full of her lover; Willy
+thought the house dull, and lived as much out of it as possible; Mr.
+Drewitt had his own anxieties and troubles, and besides, he said “he
+always expected Kathie to follow her mother.”
+
+Mrs. Drewitt alone, did not forget the girl, but thought of her when the
+winter snows were on the ground, when the February rains deluged the
+earth, when the spring flowers were blooming and the summer splendour
+glorifying the hills. Nothing could be quieter than Eversbeg Abbey,
+nothing more beautiful, more peaceful, and Kathie always longed for
+peace and quietness.
+
+It was best so—it was best.
+
+The birds built their nests in the ivy that grew over the window beneath
+which the vault of the Drewitts lay. They went twittering in and out,
+chirping and singing all the day, from early morning till late at night.
+The sheep came in over the broken wall, and browsed at will among the
+graves, undisturbed by resident or stranger. The ferns grew among the
+old walls, and the grass was long and rank in the hollows between the
+tombs. Nettles tall and luxuriant flourished where the priest had once
+performed mass, where the worshippers had once knelt before the altar.
+
+There was no roof to the Abbey, save the sky. The once perfect arches of
+doors and windows were falling to decay. The evening wind lightly
+stirred the leaves of the ivy. In the stillness the ripple of the waves
+upon the shore could be distinctly heard, and it was in this quiet
+nook—quiet and neglected, desolate and beautiful—that Kathie, with her
+hands folded on her breast, slept among her kindred, far beyond the
+reach of sorrow or regret.
+
+One trouble drives away the memory of another, and Susan’s elopement
+proved even a greater trial to Mrs. Drewitt then Kathie’s death. She
+knew where the one was, but did not know what had become of the other.
+She only felt that the evil she was unable to avert had come at last.
+She had spoken to Susan, to Maxwell, to Mr. Drewitt, and behold the end
+was an empty room one morning, and a note from Miss Drewitt, stating
+that as anything seemed preferable to remaining at Kincorth, she had
+determined to cast her lot with the only man who loved her.
+
+“What lot has she chosen, Maxwell, what lot?” asked poor Mrs. Drewitt,
+as with blanched face she showed this note to her nephew, and entreated
+him to trace his sister and bring her back.
+
+“Would she stay, do you think?” asked Maxwell. “Could you or I, or
+anybody living, keep Susan here if she made up her mind to go away? But
+I will follow them to Dublin. I will see whether they are married, and
+if not, he shall marry her.”
+
+But the fugitives were gone to England, and at Liverpool Maxwell lost
+all traces of them. He could not devote his life to running after his
+sister. He had not the time, he had not the money, he had not the
+inclination.
+
+“As Susan had sown she must reap,” he remarked to Mrs. Drewitt, and he
+went back to his farm by the shore.
+
+What more could be done for Susan was done by Mrs. Drewitt, who wrote to
+her brother-in-law, Sir Everard Ebbutt, begging him to ascertain Captain
+Ellenham’s antecedents, and to give her tidings of her niece, if
+possible. Further, she asked him not to mention the matter to his wife.
+
+Sir Everard lost no time in replying to this letter. To begin with, he
+stated that Captain Ellenham could not have married Miss Drewitt,
+because he had at that moment a wife and three children living in
+London. Further, Captain Ellenham’s regiment having been ordered abroad,
+it was more than probable Susan had gone abroad with him. Should he
+obtain any further information he would let her know.
+
+“It is a blessing she has gone abroad. I hope she will die there!” was
+Maxwell’s only remark when Mrs. Drewitt communicated these particulars
+to him. “And if ever I come across that fellow, I will shoot him.
+Meantime it will be as well to say to every one that they are married.”
+Having summed up the duty of the family in which explicit sentence,
+Maxwell dropped the subject, and never, of his own free will, mentioned
+his sister afterwards.
+
+He was building a house at the time on the piece of barren land that had
+come to him from his grandfather, and he paid particular attention to
+the masons during the whole of the summer following Kathie’s death.
+
+“A bare staring place,” Mr. Drewitt told his wife, “that it made him
+feel cold even to look at. What a pity for him not to have chosen a
+better site! It is a good house too;” and then he asked Maxwell why he
+had not selected some finer position, somewhere on the side of a hill,
+and where there was more of a view.
+
+“Beggars cannot afford to be choosers,” answered the younger man;
+“besides, wait a while, sir, and you will not call my choice so bad a
+one. Further, remember the land I am laying money out on now is _my
+own_, and that I am not in a position to both build and buy.”
+
+“But money can always be raised, you know,” suggested Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“Can it?” was the reply. “That is not my opinion, and I hope you will
+never find reason to alter yours.”
+
+This little rap ended the conversation. It is not easy to talk with a
+man who has always the last word and the best word; and besides, it
+suddenly occurred to Mr. Drewitt that the house at Analore was not two
+feet above the ground, and that perhaps Maxwell might inquire why he did
+not raise money to finish it.
+
+“He must be excessively clever, I think,” sighed Mrs. Drewitt, when she
+heard in the following spring how Maxwell was buying young trees from
+Waller of Eversbeg, and planting them round his new abode.
+
+“They won’t live—they can’t live; it is impossible,” said Mr. Drewitt,
+who, although he did not exactly grudge Maxwell his success, still
+thought that such innovations ought not to be encouraged by Providence.
+“They cannot live; consider the sea-breeze—the exposed situation.”
+
+And Mrs. Drewitt, of course, was of her husband’s opinion. Maxwell had
+made a mistake at last; the trees could do no good. But the trees throve
+for all that. Maxwell had considered the matter before ever Mr. Drewitt
+thought of it. He had a south aspect; he was well sheltered from the
+north and east; he knew that the woods surrounding Eversbeg must have
+been planted by some one, and he thought he would risk something at any
+rate, and make the experiment.
+
+There is many a lovely place across the water, many a sweet nook in the
+Green Isle, but I doubt whether in its way—which, of course, is not a
+grand way, but only very quiet and enchanting—the tourist could chance
+to see a prettier spot than “Headlands” at this day.
+
+If you row across the bay from the little fishing village of Eversbeg,
+you see the house built of granite lying among the trees. The lawn
+slopes quite down to the edge of the shore, while the woods, spreading
+out like a semicircle, enclose this piece of green, which is soft as
+velvet. Down almost to high-water mark the plantations extend, and when
+the tide is in the willow, and the birch, and the spruce-fir droop their
+branches over the tide. See it on a fine day, when the bay resembles an
+opal; when the new-mown grass appears in the distance to be an emerald
+set in a darker band of green; when the rugged headland shows dark and
+steep against the calm unruffled ocean; when there is hardly a ripple on
+the sea, when there is scarcely the lightest breeze stirring among the
+treetops; when the little fishing village nestling on the side of
+Eversbeg Point looks white and picturesque in the bright sunlight; when
+the mountains look higher and nearer than usual, and rear their great
+heads towards the sky; when the ruins of Eversbeg Abbey appear close at
+hand; when the fresh-shorn sheep are climbing the hill-sides; when no
+sound breaks the stillness save the plash of the oars as the rowers pull
+across the bay, and the drip drip of the water from the blades, as they
+hold them above the sea and float gently towards the shore;—see it thus,
+I say, and you can well fancy you have beheld fairyland. It is a place
+you cannot bear to leave—that you turn back and look at with an
+indescribable emotion—that you wave your adieu to with the tears filling
+your eyes, though you could not give a reason why or wherefore.
+
+Maxwell Drewitt found it a wilderness—this is the paradise he left it.
+Think of that as you lean over the stern, and the rowers bear you away
+from the garden of Eden, and think, also, if you had such a nest on
+earth you might find it hard to leave the world, and that, perhaps, it
+is best for you to own nothing so perfect, so exquisite of its kind.
+
+Headlands is too beautiful—that is all any person can say. It seems too
+charming to be real; and when you have left Eversbeg behind you, and are
+travelling away towards Oughterard through the valley of desolation,
+through the land of a thousand Dead Sea lakes, you come gradually to
+believe that “Headlands” was a dream—that such a place never
+existed—that the lawn does not slope down to the glassy sea—that the
+trees do not overhang the water—that Maxwell Drewitt never planted the
+ground at all, but that it remains barren and sterile to this very day.
+
+Nevertheless that modern garden of Eden lies in Connemara, on the shores
+of the wide Atlantic; within sight of its tremendous billows, of its
+restless waves. Eversbeg Bay is much more open than Duranmore, which
+almost resembles a lake. On the north side of Duranmore stands Kincorth,
+well sheltered from all breezes save the south, high up on the hill, the
+house conspicuous for miles; on the north side of Eversbeg, lying low by
+the shore, is the modest mansion Maxwell reared for himself in the days
+when he was a poor and a struggling man.
+
+The trees grew and spread out their branches, the land improved and
+began to pay him well.
+
+While difficulties increased at Kincorth, everything grew smoother and
+easier at Headlands; and yet one difficulty had arisen in Maxwell
+Drewitt’s path.
+
+Colonel Vervensoe was dead; and Lady Emmeline, by consequence, was left
+a widow.
+
+It took Maxwell a few days to realize the difference that this fact
+might make in his position; and then he drew back his breath and paused,
+asking himself, “What next?”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ Next.
+
+
+If the fact of Lady Emmeline being Colonel Vervensoe’s wife, and
+unattainable, had not enhanced her charms in Maxwell Drewitt’s eyes, the
+fact of her being Colonel Vervensoe’s widow, and available, rendered her
+less desirable still.
+
+There had been a time, indeed, as previously mentioned, when the young
+man hesitated about running away with her, and settled not to do so; but
+then his future looked dark in the extreme—now it was bright and
+hopeful.
+
+If only Colonel Vervensoe had remained at Cragantlet, as any other
+Christian would, instead of dying at such an unlucky crisis!
+
+“It seems as if he had almost done it to spite me,” muttered Maxwell;
+and the young man cursed his neighbour for having departed this life at
+all.
+
+In former days Lady Emmeline’s loan to Maxwell had smoothed matters for
+him; but four years after that loan complicated his difficulties, and
+made him walk round and round Eversbeg Head, and round Eversbeg Bay,
+asking himself as he kicked the stones before him, What next—what next?
+
+The financial crisis which troubled Maxwell was this:—
+
+Suppose he did not marry Lady Emmeline—her ladyship would be certain to
+ask for repayment. He could not mortgage to repay, because his land was
+mortgaged to its full value already. Suppose he offered to marry her,
+and that they kept the engagement secret, and that he never fulfilled
+his promise?
+
+Before he was well out of his difficulties, somebody else would marry
+Lady Emmeline—she was sure to leave Connemara, because the next heir
+would require possession of Cragantlet; and if she went to Dublin or
+London, how long was it probable she would remain a widow? Suppose he
+did marry her—he would get fortune and position, but then he would also
+get a wife.
+
+“That is the devil of it!” said Maxwell Drewitt, with that charming
+frankness which characterized all his mental conversations. “That is the
+devil of it!” and he hesitated and waited on, while Lady Emmeline grew
+kinder and kinder; and, free at last to follow the bent of her
+inclination, absolutely forced money on the man who could have sworn at
+her for ever having lent him any.
+
+He had his own ideal of a wife, and Lady Emmeline did not come up to it.
+He had an ideal the reality of which was not unlike Jenny Bourke, if
+Jenny Bourke had been rich, and well-born, and accomplished.
+
+It is not fair to contrast twenty and forty-four—the bloom of youth and
+the bloom of rouge—the charms of purity and innocence and the graces of
+fashion and affectation; but, on the other hand, poverty can bear no
+comparison with wealth, low birth with long pedigree.
+
+He could not marry Jenny. Were he as rich as Crœsus, as great a man as
+the Duke of Leinster, Maxwell felt it would be impossible for him to
+marry Ryan’s sister and remain in Connemara.
+
+There are some things which to some men are impossible, and a low match
+was one of these to Maxwell Drewitt. No love, no beauty, no truth, no
+devotion could reconcile him to that.
+
+Though he had lived in a cabin, though he would not have minded working
+like a common labourer to achieve an object, still Maxwell Drewitt was
+as proud as Lucifer; and for the blood of his wife, of the mother of his
+children, not to be of the regulation colour and quality, was a thing
+terrible to contemplate.
+
+He could not marry Jenny Bourke—poor Jenny! And Maxwell Drewitt’s dark
+eyes grew darker as he thought of the girl who loved him, who was
+staying single for his sake, who managed, spite of all her brother’s
+precautions, sometimes to see him; who had got pale, poor child! pale
+and thin, because of that hope deferred which maketh the heart sick.
+
+He could not marry Jenny, but he could marry Lady Emmeline; and he could
+have her Connemara property, which lay among the mountains beyond
+Cragantlet, and her money to improve his own properties.
+
+He could buy, he could drain, he could till; in imagination he saw corn
+waving where the sheep now browsed. He could be wealthy and independent;
+he could soon be almost as great a man as the Earl of Popingham. He
+could pay out everybody who had ever been insolent to him. He could take
+up the mortgages on his uncle’s estates; he could make Headlands the
+wonder of Galway, the admiration of strangers, a place to be proud of
+himself. He could do all this if he married Lady Emmeline; but then,
+when he had done all, he should not be able to get rid of her: that was
+the devil of it, that was where the shoe pinched.
+
+“But then,” reflected Maxwell, “hang it! a man cannot have everything in
+life; and if he gets the best thing he must be content. Isn’t it better
+to satisfy one’s ambition than one’s love? If we fulfil our ambition,
+the gratification remains; if we gratify our love, the pleasure is
+transient. Anyhow, I am not called upon to make a choice, because,
+though I do love Jenny, I still cannot marry her—could not if there were
+no Lady Emmeline in existence. Hang marriage! it is like going through
+life with a halter round one’s neck. It is the most terrible ‘must’ in
+existence, because we seem to have some choice in it, and have, as a
+rule, nobody but ourselves to blame if it turn out ill. All experience
+is against it—all proverbs are against it. ‘Next after single a good
+wife’s best;’ but the single is better than the good wife. ‘Better marry
+late or never.’ I don’t think that is true. I fancy it must be better to
+marry young or never. I wish I had not to decide; and yet, after all,
+many a man would consider himself a deuced lucky fellow to be standing
+in my shoes. Success has spoiled me. I would have married her four years
+ago and welcome. Oh! Jenny, I wish I had never seen you.” And Maxwell
+Drewitt crossed his arms on the table, and leaning his head on them,
+thought this problem out—this wonderful problem of not loving a woman
+well enough to marry her, and yet of loving her so much that it made the
+idea of marrying another hateful to him.
+
+He could not make up his mind; he grew restless, he became soured; he
+would ride halfway to Cragantlet, and then turn back again. He was so
+young to sell himself for money; but yet such a chance might never come
+in his way again. Lady Emmeline had been thought a catch for Colonel
+Vervensoe. What would she be therefore for Maxwell Drewitt? It was
+folly, it was nonsense, it was midsummer madness; and the young man
+began to visit regularly at Cragantlet, which the courtesy of the next
+heir had left at Lady Emmeline’s disposal for twelve months till she
+should form her future plans. Mr. Maxwell Drewitt had his own opinion
+about this next heir—a distant relative of the late proprietor—which was
+not favourable. He thought he wanted to marry Lady Emmeline himself, and
+perhaps so did the widow, for after a time she began playing off Dolf
+Vervensoe against Max Drewitt. Dolf often came down to see to the
+management of the estates, and people soon commenced talking (they talk
+and chatter in Connemara the same as in any country village), and saying
+that Lady Emmeline would not have to leave Cragantlet at all except to
+be married.
+
+“She can go to Dublin and buy her trousseau, and get it all over there,”
+laughed Mrs. Munks, a little bitterly, for Cragantlet was a fine
+property, and the Honourable Mrs. Munks had daughters.
+
+“But surely,” suggested Mrs. Drewitt, “she would not marry so soon after
+her husband’s death?”
+
+“He has been dead a year nearly,” was the reply, “and I dare say Mr.
+Vervensoe would let her keep Cragantlet another for the sake of her
+fortune; besides, is there any person on earth who could say for certain
+what Lady Emmeline would or would not do? Louisa, my dear,” went on Mrs.
+Munks, turning to her second daughter, “do you remember that funny
+Scotch song Miss Macpherson so amused us with the other evening? Talking
+of Lady Emmeline puts me in mind of it. Something about a widow; don’t
+you recollect?”
+
+“Oh, I know,” exclaimed Miss Munks, holding up her riding-habit while
+she walked across the room, for as usual the mother and daughter had
+galloped over to Kincorth; “at least, I know the song you mean. I think
+I can repeat the last two verses, though of course it would be
+impossible for me to say the words anything like Miss Macpherson.”
+
+“Good gracious! Miss Macpherson! You should hear her talk, Mrs.
+Drewitt,” exclaimed Mrs. Munks, who spoke with a fine brogue fresh as
+the day it was imported from the county of Cork.
+
+Mrs. Drewitt vaguely wondered whether Miss Macpherson’s Scotch accent
+_could_ be any worse than Mrs. Munks’ Irish, while Miss Louisa began:
+
+ “‘Tam withered like a sickly flower that frae its stalk does fa’,
+ And in a twelvemonth after that puir Pate was ta’en awa’;
+ And as I laid him in his kist and closed his glazèd e’e,
+ I wonder’t if the yirth contained a lanelier thing than me.
+
+ “‘Noo I’m a waefu’ widow left, a’ nicht I sich and grane,
+ And aften in my musin’ moods when sitting here my lane,
+ There’s ae thing I’ll confess to you, ‘bout whilk I’m sair perplext,
+ I aften wonder, Janet, noo, whose lassie I’ll be next.’”
+
+“For my part,” concluded Miss Louisa, “I wonder that while there are
+more women than men in the world, widows are allowed to marry at all—I
+do indeed.”
+
+“There was a time when I thought if Colonel Vervensoe died, another
+person would try for Lady Emmeline, and try successfully; but it appears
+I was mistaken,” said Mrs. Munks.
+
+“Who was that other person?” asked Mrs. Drewitt, being naturally curious
+on the subject, for where there are few neighbours, even the quietest
+woman cannot help being interested in their affairs.
+
+“My dear, you are far too sly,” answered Mrs. Munks. “You know as well
+as I do;” and when Mrs. Drewitt declared and protested that she did not
+know, that she had not the faintest idea of whom her visitor was
+speaking, Mrs. Munks only laughed the more, and declared it would be
+better for her not to enlighten such pristine innocence.
+
+“Lady Emmeline never did flirt with any one you remember, and
+consequently there can be no person whom her marrying Mr. Adolphus
+Vervensoe will disappoint,” went on Lady Emmeline’s friend. “Colonel
+Vervensoe never did forbid any gentleman the house—never cut any
+acquaintance of yours when he met him.”
+
+“You surely do not mean Maxwell!” exclaimed Mrs. Drewitt. “Why he is
+young enough to be her son.”
+
+“Exactly so; and he is not rich either; while Mr. Vervensoe—is forty,
+though he has Cragantlet. Still I fancy your nephew will be
+disappointed. We have met him often of late riding in that direction.
+Have not we, Louisa?”
+
+“Yes, mamma,” answered Louisa, who would have said “yes,” even if her
+mamma had stated a falsehood. “But if you remember he told us he was
+looking after some land that was for sale.”
+
+“A man must say something,” remarked Mrs. Munks. “In my opinion, Lady
+Emmeline will do best to marry Mr. Vervensoe.”
+
+“I think so decidedly,” said Mrs. Drewitt, “if she marry at all. But
+from what Lady Emmeline dropped the other day about her future plans I
+should think she meant to remain a widow.”
+
+“Time will show,” was Mrs. Munks’ reply. And time did show, for Maxwell
+Drewitt proposed that very same evening, was accepted by Lady Emmeline,
+and rode home to Headlands an engaged man.
+
+The die was cast; the game played out. He had won a wife: he had made
+his fortune.
+
+In after days it was one of Maxwell Drewitt’s favourite remarks that “a
+man may get anything he wants in life if he be only willing to pay high
+enough for it.”
+
+Was he thinking then of the price he had paid for his wealth, of the
+exchange he had made for position? Who can tell? Who ever knew for
+certain what pleased or troubled Maxwell Drewitt, until that great
+sorrow came which clouded with darkness the evening of his life?
+
+One fact was sure, however, viz., that when the young man finally chose
+to sell himself for money, to follow ambition and eschew love, he flung
+his last chance of making a better thing of existence away for ever. But
+he had set out to conquer fortune, and he gained the day. He had decided
+that such a prize as Lady Emmeline might never cross his path again, and
+he determined to secure it while within his reach. He would continue to
+live at Headlands, and he would beautify and improve his property. He
+would farm Lady Emmeline’s estate, and add acre to acre, and thousand to
+thousand, till, when Kincorth did come to him, as come it should,
+Drewitt would be a name worth talking about.
+
+Better than ever the Martins were known, the Drewitts should be
+remembered. They had not sprung from any trooper of the merciless
+“Protector;” they had not kept their estates by currying favour with any
+king. The English papers should tell how a man—poor, disinherited,
+well-born—worked his way back to fortune, unassisted by his family,
+unhelped by patronage. Tourists would come and wonder to see, in the
+midst of that wild region, smiling fields and waving woods, and neat
+cottages and blooming gardens.
+
+They would go back and speak of what one individual had effected. He
+should have to give evidence on parliamentary committees: when he grew
+very, very rich, perhaps he would go up to Parliament himself. He could
+reclaim mile after mile of barren country. He would drain and cultivate
+the bogs; he would do away with the loose stone walls which divided the
+land when any division was attempted into about half-acre plots; he
+would plant trees up the mountains—there was no reason why trees should
+not grow among those fastnesses that he could understand; he would
+change the aspect of Connemara. Did he think of possessing the whole of
+it? Had he any vision about all Galway one day having but one landlord,
+and that landlord’s name being Drewitt?
+
+He reduced the 1,566,354 acres Galway contains into hundreds, and after
+deducting a certain portion for lake and mountain, calculated how long
+it would take to bring them under cultivation. He thought how useful
+those lakes would be for watering cattle, for purposes of irrigation; he
+ran over the best sites for towns and villages; he saw, in fancy, ships
+putting into each secure harbour; he saw the mines worked, the quarries
+filled with well-paid labourers, the country prosperous, the people
+warmly clad and sufficiently fed. He was doubtful whether Mayo ought not
+to figure in his programme too. As he rode out of Cragantlet gates he
+gave the rein to his imagination, and bid it conjure up before him fame,
+wealth, success. He held the bridle loosely in his hand, letting it lie
+on his horse’s neck, while he reflected on what he had just done, and on
+what fruit that act might bring forth for him.
+
+“Gold begets gold,” they say; that was what Maxwell hoped it might.
+“Money makes money” is oftentimes a great truth. Maxwell trusted it
+would prove a great truth in his case.
+
+The kingdoms of this world and the glory thereof seemed to spread out
+before Maxwell’s mind when he thought of what he had achieved on little,
+when he considered what he might effect with much.
+
+The kingdoms of this world were around him—there was land to be
+cultivated—there were the resources of nature to be developed—there were
+the hidden riches of the country to be brought to light. There was fuel
+to be had for the cutting—fish for the catching—cattle for the
+rearing—corn for the growing—wealth for the hand of industry to gather
+in. There were barren wastes to clothe with verdure—there were hills to
+plant with trees—there was granite to build houses—there was a land to
+be peopled—there was a people to elevate and civilize.
+
+It was all very fine; nay, it was more, it was glorious; and yet, as the
+moon sailed out from behind a bank of watery clouds and shone over the
+country this man was traversing, a feeling of loneliness, of desolation,
+of misery came upon him which he could neither explain nor analyze.
+
+There were the tremendous mountains, there the bare, solitary-looking
+lakes; far as his eye could see across the valley, nothing met his view
+but water, and stone, and bog: there were hills lying dark, and silent,
+and sullen in the distance. Above his head was a cloudy sky, where the
+moon kept wandering in and out like a troubled spirit. Now his way was
+dark, now light: now the moon shone clear on the lake, and the road, and
+the mountains, and then, again, she played fantastic tricks with the
+stunted bushes—with the huge boulders. She would lay a white trap along
+the highway and up the mountain-side, at which Maxwell’s horse would shy
+frightened; she would dance on the ripples of the waters; she would
+thrust her full face out of window, as it seemed, and stare down at the
+earth, and then she would plunge behind the fringed curtains of the
+night, and be invisible for a time again, after which she would come
+shyly forth and gaze upon the man who rode slowly and alone through that
+desolate portion of God’s fair earth.
+
+Is it not necessary for a person to be very sensitive or very poetical
+for a scene like this to produce a profound impression upon him. An
+individual who has not an amazingly warm heart can yet feel something
+stir within him when he looks upon a fine picture; and those who have
+lived in the country all their lives are as susceptible to the
+influences of nature’s varying moods as though her every change was
+fresh to their comprehension.
+
+All his life Maxwell Drewitt had loved scenery as he loved his country.
+All his life the sun, and the wind, and the snow, and the frost, and the
+sea, and the mountains had talked to him as they oftentimes fail to
+speak to a better man; and now, as the moon shone with a fitful
+brightness over the landscape, as her cold light fell on the breast of
+the lonely waters, as the clouds rolled up and shrouded the mountains in
+darkness, as the eternal hills returned his eager glance with a hard
+unsympathising gaze, as they looked with stony eyes down upon him as
+they had looked on others who had gone under their shadow sighing or
+singing, laughing or weeping—as he paused and listened to the dash and
+flow of the waters, as he heard the whistle of the plover and the cry of
+the curlew, some voice through the still night spoke as clearly and
+distinctly to Maxwell Drewitt’s soul as the “Preacher,” who tried all
+things, and pronounced them vanity of vanities, tells the same tale to
+us.
+
+Most probably Maxwell Drewitt had never read Ecclesiastes. If he had, he
+would certainly not have recollected any portion of it; and yet it was
+the same story as that told so many thousand years ago by the great king
+of Israel, which the night, and the clouds, and the moonlight, and the
+mountains were whispering prophetically in his ear—
+
+“I made me great works; I builded me houses; I planted me vineyards: I
+gathered me also silver and gold, and whatsoever mine eyes desired I
+kept not from them, I withheld not my heart from any joy.
+
+“Then I looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and _behold
+all was vanity and vexation of spirit, and there was no profit under the
+sun. Yea, I hated all my labour which I had taken under the sun: because
+I should leave it unto the man that shall be after me._”
+
+“It is a desolate place,” thought Maxwell. “It gives a man the blues!”
+and he struck his heel against his horse’s flank, and the animal sprang
+forward along the hard road, and the flints flashed fire as the iron
+hoofs dashed over them. He passed by lonely lakes, round the base of
+steep rocks, over bridges beneath which the mountain streams brawled
+noisily among the stones. He passed by silent cabins, by unroofed
+cottages, by deserted hearthstones gleaming white and bare in the
+moonlight; by a lonely chapel, by a forsaken-looking graveyard, where
+the tombs were covered with moss, where the crosses were black with
+weather, wind, and age.
+
+On, on, he rode, and as he rode he sung, either to encourage his horse
+or to reassure himself, that cheerful ballad which recounts the loves of
+King Connor and the fair Kathleen, and the sad fate of the latter:—
+
+ “‘The castle portal stood grimly wide,
+ None welcomed the king from that weary ride,
+ For dead, in the light of the dawning day,
+ The pale sweet form of the welcomer lay
+ Who had yearned for his voice while dying.’
+
+“While dying!” hummed Maxwell, and the words brought him within sight of
+Eversbeg.
+
+There was the sea, the fair, calm open sea, with the moonlight sleeping
+in it as peacefully as if he had not seen the same light wandering about
+the hills and through the valleys he had just left. There was Eversbeg
+Abbey, where poor Kathie had been lying dead this many a day. There was
+Eversbeg Head, round which Mrs. Drewitt had walked when she came to
+speak to him about Susan and Kathie and Lady Vervensoe.
+
+There was the cabin where he had received her, where they had sat beside
+the turf-fire talking; there were the woods of Kincorth high up on the
+other side of Duranmore Bay, and there close down by the bay was his own
+place, which he meant to convert into the garden of Erin. Was he
+sorrowful when he came in sight of all these things? My reader, no! the
+dark hour had passed away, and Maxwell Drewitt was a man of the world,
+in the world, loving the world once more.
+
+He was glad to have done with uncertainty, to have settled his future
+past recall, to feel no more hesitation, to have laid down a course to
+which he meant to adhere.
+
+He was glad; he had done well: he should do better. It was a good match.
+He knew half the county would say what a capital thing he had done for
+himself. He knew many a man would gnash his teeth with rage when he
+heard of Drewitt having carried off the prize.
+
+Altogether, Mr. Maxwell Drewitt was a contented man; and yet, as he came
+along the road that led down towards the bay, he stopped his horse for a
+moment, and strained his eyes away to a little cottage gleaming white
+and ghostly in the moonlight.
+
+It was a deserted cottage now, and he had made it so. There was no Jenny
+waiting for him by the stream or up the ravine. She had long been living
+with her brother in Duranmore, and many suitors had sought her hand in
+vain.
+
+“She will marry now,” was the idea that passed through Maxwell’s mind;
+and then, with a pang of remorse, he added, “Poor Jenny!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ Man and Beast.
+
+
+There is a great pathos about the life of a common man, about the story
+of any one whose wishes are moderate, whose pleasures are limited, whose
+hopes are small, whose way through existence is along the river instead
+of across the sea, adown the valley rather than over the mountains; and
+for this reason that little deserted cottage close by Duranmore Bay,
+looking white and ghostly in the moonlight, was as pitiful an object as
+Maxwell Drewitt’s eyes could have rested on.
+
+No person knew better how Ryan had loved that cottage; how he had
+delighted in the look out over the bay, in the view up the ravine. He
+had seen him pacing beside the stream and superintending the mowing of
+his little crop of hay. He remembered the various articles of additional
+furniture with which Ryan had adorned the rooms in honour of Jenny’s
+arrival; how he had planted creepers by the porch, and nailed
+trellis-work together for the honeysuckle and the clematis to clamber
+over; how he had laid out his little garden sloping towards the south,
+and filled it with London-pride and lavender, with red daisies and
+hepaticas, with cabbage roses and sweet Williams, with daffodils, and
+pinks, and southernwood, and tulips, and gentianallas, and all the
+common flowers which are so beautiful in their homely simplicity and
+sweetness.
+
+As a man plants and sows and beautifies for his wife that is to be, so
+Ryan, knowing that dream could return no more, that love could never
+come back again with its freshness, planted and sowed and beautified for
+the young sister who was going to make his house a home for him at last.
+
+All this Maxwell Drewitt remembered. He recollected also what a
+different man Ryan seemed after his sister’s return; how much more
+comfortable he appeared to be; how he used to hurry home from Duranmore
+to his little cottage; how busy he was wont to make himself with spade,
+and rake, and hoe.
+
+The simple pleasures of a common life came back to Maxwell’s memory
+separately and singly with the power of a curse. He had driven Ryan away
+from Inchnagawn; it was he who had laid the garden waste; he who had
+broken down the trellis-work and left the cottage desolate.
+
+As regarded the horsewhipping, he and Ryan had long been even; for
+Maxwell had worked on and till he got Waller’s agency withdrawn from
+Ryan and given to a _protégé_ of Mr. Samuel Turner.
+
+He had made no secret of this to the lawyer, for he knew for his
+sister’s sake Mr. Ryan would make no complaint of unfairness to Mr.
+Waller.
+
+“You’ll spy again, Ryan, will you?” he asked.
+
+“Yes, and thrash you again if I catch you meddling with her,” was the
+spirited reply.
+
+At which answer Maxwell laughed.
+
+“I owe you a good turn for your interference, though I have done you a
+bad one for meddling in my affairs. But for you, I really think I should
+have married Miss Bourke.”
+
+“I am greatly obliged for the intended condescension,” said Ryan.
+
+“You would have been more obliged to me for the actual condescension, I
+suppose?” suggested Maxwell.
+
+“I told you once I would rather put Jenny in her coffin than give her to
+you,” answered the other.
+
+“Nonsense,” retorted young Drewitt; “you only said that because you
+thought I never would ask her honourably.”
+
+“Repeat that sentence—I wish you would repeat it,” said Ryan, facing
+round on his tormentor, who, however, declined to oblige him.
+
+“You understood my meaning well enough. I need not go over the ground
+again. You are wrong. There was a time when I loved your sister very
+much; when—when I might have made a lady of her. But you cured me of my
+folly; and I vowed then to be revenged. I am revenged. Let bygones be
+bygones.”
+
+The pair had never ceased to be on speaking terms. Maxwell was too wise
+and Ryan too careful to permit the little world of Duranmore to imagine
+there was any open rupture between them.
+
+They nodded in the street, they shook hands when they met in a room;
+only Ryan did not go to Headlands, and Maxwell never entered Ryan’s
+office in Duranmore. Ryan never ceased keeping a watchful eye on Jenny,
+and Maxwell carried his pebble in his pocket, and turned it every now
+and then, biding his time.
+
+He had sworn to be revenged, and he was revenged. Did that fact comfort
+him now, as he looked down on Inchnagawn, lying white and silent in the
+moonlight?
+
+This man had owned no wide acres, no fine park, no great house. He had
+but a little patch of land, and behold he was cast out of it! He had
+been doing very well, and all at once the ground was cut from below his
+feet. Every man over whom Maxwell had any influence left him and went to
+the opposition lawyer. Poor Ryan’s conduct had not in all cases been
+above fear and above reproach; and Maxwell, having once been his
+confidant, fought and killed him with his own weapons.
+
+He had almost to commence again, and there were times when he thought of
+leaving Duranmore altogether, and seeking his fortune elsewhere.
+
+That was what Maxwell wanted to make him do. He wished to see the back
+of Mr. Timothy Ryan, and of his sister also.
+
+It was the old story of the poor man and his ewe lamb over again. Ryan
+had not much, but what he had Maxwell took from him. Maxwell was gaining
+great possessions; but, like Ahab, he longed for the vineyard of Naboth
+the Jezreelite as well.
+
+Besides, Ryan knew too much of him and of his affairs, and he desired to
+be rid of his former friend. When you have made all the use you can of a
+weapon, it is as well to break it, so that the steel may not prove
+dangerous in other hands. That was what Maxwell wanted to do. He wished
+to get Ryan out of his way, and he had not stood over-nice about
+compassing his end.
+
+Was it pleasant for him to remember these things as he rode slowly
+homeward under the moonlight? Was there nothing pathetic even to him in
+Ryan’s worn face, in Jenny’s pale cheeks?
+
+“If she will marry Connor,” was the conclusion Mr. Maxwell Drewitt
+arrived at that night, “I will try to push him on; but I cannot do
+anything for her brother. He must leave Duranmore.”
+
+And Jenny at that very moment was lying awake in the moonlight,
+thinking, with the tears in her eyes, of him; whilst Ryan was sitting in
+his office, facing his affairs and cogitating concerning ways and means.
+
+Maxwell could have made them both happy, had he chosen; but he elected
+not to make them happy, and fell asleep contented.
+
+There had been many minor changes in Duranmore during the four years I
+have spoken of. There was an opposition doctor in the town, and another
+attorney. A queer old bachelor had taken up his quarters, for a
+permanency apparently, at the “Marsden Arms.” Mr. Murphy was gone to
+London, from which place he sent occasionally notes of rare and
+exquisite cases to Dr. Sheen, who, not having the same enthusiasm for
+his profession, thought that the “good old way” seemed best after all.
+
+“I cannot help fancying,” he wrote back on one occasion to his late
+assistant, “that the operation you mention (laryngotomy) must have been
+excruciatingly painful to the patient.”
+
+“No doubt it was,” replied Mr. Murphy, in dudgeon; “but, good God, sir,
+consider how interesting!”
+
+“That is all very true,” remarked Dr. Sheen to Mr. Murphy’s successor,
+“but I never was fond of diseases out of the common;” which was all the
+more fortunate for Dr. Sheen, as he did not meet with many singular
+cases amongst his patients, and could not have cured them if he had.
+
+The most out-of-the-way ailment he ever had to puzzle over was that of
+an old lady named Connor, who lived with her son in the cottage near
+Eversbeg Head (on the Duranmore side), which, at the time Mrs. Drewitt
+first beheld the Atlantic, was tenanted by a retired sea captain.
+
+Mrs. Connor’s complaint was gastric carcinoma—a disease which was, in
+those days, to the faculty precisely what an unclassified animal or a
+strange fish proves to the naturalist. Mr. Murphy would have been
+enchanted with the case, but not so Doctor Sheen.
+
+To Mrs. Connor herself it seemed as terrible an affliction as could have
+been laid upon her. She found nothing interesting or entertaining in the
+matter. It was dying by inches. It was sinking in the ocean with help
+all around. It was wasting off the face of the earth under the influence
+of a disease more depressing than consumption, and equally hopeless—a
+disease of which science could give no account—for which skill could
+prescribe no remedy.
+
+There were no alternations in this ailment—no days of hope, no times of
+relief. It was like hiring a hearse, and driving by slow stages to the
+grave. It was not life; it was not death; but it was dying, day after
+day, week after week, month after month, with starvation for the end.
+
+Starvation, though she had plenty of nourishment, and was able to eat. A
+disease as strange and inexplicable to the spectator as perplexing to a
+doctor; a disease for which there was no cure but death, no palliation
+but patience; in which there was no stay, no pause—which picked the
+flesh off her bones, and pinched her cheeks, and exhausted her strength,
+and tried her temper—which it was hard to bear alone in that solitary
+cottage by the sea-shore.
+
+Her son could not stay with her all the day. He had to be away from
+early in the morning till six o’clock in the evening, at the marble
+quarries, where he was a kind of overseer, and both mother and son
+consequently felt very grateful when Jenny Bourke took her needlework in
+her hand, and went to pass a few hours at Duranmore Cottage.
+
+She was quiet and sad enough in these days, it is true; but she seemed
+none the less sweet and loveable for that. She would sing her plaintive
+songs, and talk to the old lady about her ailments, and lead her out in
+the sunshine round by Eversbeg Head, or up towards the mountains where
+the marble quarries were; and poor Mrs. Connor took kindly to the girl,
+and prayed her when she was gone to try and love Dennis, and become in
+due time his wife.
+
+But Jenny only shook her head.
+
+It was a few days after Maxwell’s night ride home from Cragantlet that
+Jenny and Mrs. Connor climbed to the top of Eversbeg Head—no great
+ascent after all—and sat them down there.
+
+The summer’s sun was shining over the scene—over the wide Atlantic, over
+Duranmore and Eversbeg Bays, over the old Abbey, and over the Headlands,
+towards which Jenny’s eyes turned longingly.
+
+She had not seen Maxwell for some time, and she loved him. How much?
+More than Dennis Connor loved her; more than Jenny could ever love any
+one again.
+
+The two women sat side by side, each busy with her own thoughts. Mrs.
+Connor was gazing over the fair earth, upon which she should so soon
+have to close her eyes. Jenny was looking at Maxwell’s home and wishing
+she could see him.
+
+Jenny was a good little soul, and she had a kind heart beating in her
+breast; and she was very sorry for Mrs. Connor, and very glad to help
+her to while away the time; but, yet, Jenny was not quite disinterested.
+
+Duranmore Cottage was not a great distance from Headlands, and she could
+sometimes catch a glimpse of Maxwell.
+
+She caught a glimpse of him on the day in question when he came with a
+new horse Lady Emmeline had sent him along the avenue from his house.
+
+The drive was rough and the horse intractable. So Maxwell led him up to
+the main road, accompanied on his way so far by a couple of his men, who
+were curious to see the animal in harness.
+
+The creature had been used to the saddle, and rebelled against the
+indignity of a vehicle. He had been used likewise to jib, but a pair of
+spurs prevented much harm coming of that habit, so long as he had a
+rider on his back. With a conveyance behind him, however, the case was
+different; and the moment Maxwell jumped into his tax-cart and touched
+the animal with his whip the brute began to back.
+
+All this Jenny, from her seat among the grass and the heather, was able
+to see, and she could see also Maxwell shouting and gesticulating,
+although she could not hear what he said.
+
+“Take his head, Lynch, and lead him on a bit,” Mr. Drewitt ordered.
+
+But leading him on proved a matter beyond Lynch’s capability, for which
+reason Maxwell began flogging the creature unmercifully.
+
+A jibbing horse being one of those circumstances which tries a man’s
+temper too much, is, I think, one of those struggles which a woman ought
+never to see; but Jenny, being on the height above the Headlands, could
+not help seeing, and neither could Mrs. Connor, for that matter.
+
+“What a wretch—what a brute!” exclaimed the old lady indignantly.
+
+“If the horse won’t go on, what is he to do?” demanded Jenny, ready to
+do battle for Maxwell, though she could have run down the hill and
+prayed him to cease beating the creature for her sake.
+
+For all the good flogging did, Maxwell might as well have flogged one of
+the granite pillars against which Lady Emmeline’s present had backed the
+tax-cart, and after he had lashed the thong off his whip the young man
+sprang with a curse to the ground, and, taking the reins short in his
+hand, tugged and tore at the horse’s mouth like a madman. And the more
+he tore the bit the higher the brute lifted his head, while he lowered
+his hind quarters and backed as well as he was able.
+
+It was a trial of brute strength now. There was no skill, no
+horsemanship, no science in the matter; it was whose will should be
+fiercest, whose power greatest.
+
+As I have said before, a man is not to be judged by his conduct towards
+a jibbing horse; but yet to the outsider—to the spectator whose temper
+is not tried, whose blood is not up, whose strength is not defied—the
+struggle between an unreasoning animal with a bit in his mouth, with
+harness on his back, with a conveyance behind him, and a man free to go,
+free to think, free to act, always seems cowardly and terrible.
+
+With her breath coming thick and short, Jenny watched the combat. A
+woman cannot bear these kind of struggles, perhaps because she knows
+that in the hands of man she is oftentimes but as a creature having a
+bit in her mouth herself.
+
+Which would win? Maxwell turned his whip in his hand and struck the
+horse with the butt-end again and again, with such force that Jenny
+could hear the blows, and feel each stroke go through her own tender
+heart.
+
+He sent for a heavy cart-whip and showered blows on the animal with
+that. His men took each a wheel and shoved, while he kicked and damned
+and flogged.
+
+“That man is a perfect devil!” said Mrs. Connor, solemnly.
+
+“Let us go, oh, let us go!” cried Jenny, rising; but still fascinated,
+she stood still and watched.
+
+Then she saw that which through all her after life it made her turn sick
+and faint to remember—Maxwell stoop and scoop up a handful of gravel off
+the road.
+
+“Get up,” he said to one of the men, and the man jumped in and took the
+reins.
+
+“Lash him on,” continued Maxwell, and he handed the fellow the whip.
+
+Then Maxwell thrust the gravel up the animal’s nostrils, rubbing the
+small sharp stones into the quivering flesh; and while the creature, mad
+with pain, sprang forward, he leaped to his seat, and taking both reins
+and whip, kept flogging the horse far as Jenny’s eyes could follow him.
+
+“I think, Mrs. Connor, I will go home,” she said, when she had walked in
+silence back to Duranmore Cottage, and helped Mrs. Connor off with her
+shawl and settled her in her chair by the window. “I think that horse
+has made me feel a little ill.”
+
+Mrs. Connor looked into the girl’s face as she said this, and saw there
+what she never told to Dennis, or Jenny, or any human being; only she
+sat for a long time after Jenny left her, crying all alone.
+
+Meanwhile Jenny walked back to Duranmore, heartsick, faint, and weary,
+and when she was near her own door she was met by Mrs. Sheen, the
+doctor’s wife—for among other changes, Dr. Sheen had taken unto himself
+a wife—who said:
+
+“How pale you look, Miss Bourke! What is wrong with you?”
+
+“I have walked too far in the heat, Mrs. Sheen,” answered Jenny. “I sat
+out in the sun with poor Mrs. Connor, and it has made me feel faint.”
+
+“It is no wonder Mr. Connor is fond of you,” replied Mrs. Sheen, with a
+knowing look; “but you must not overdo the thing, my dear. Even for his
+sake you must not.”
+
+“I do not know what you mean at all,” answered Jenny; but she blushed up
+to the roots of her hair, nevertheless.
+
+“I did not mean anything, of course,” explained Mrs. Sheen; “and talking
+of marriages—have you heard the news?”
+
+“News! I did not know there was ever any news in Duranmore,” said Jenny.
+
+“There is news now, at any rate,” was the reply. “Mr. Maxwell Drewitt is
+going to be married to Lady Emmeline Vervensoe.”
+
+The houses danced up and down before Jenny’s eyes, and the street went
+round and round.
+
+“Will you tell me all about it to-morrow?” she asked, while she felt
+blindly about for the wall, and held on by a window-sill. “I feel so
+sick and faint now, Mrs. Sheen.”
+
+“Had not I better bid the Doctor come round and see you?” said the lady;
+but Jenny answered:
+
+“It is only the heat. I shall be well to-morrow.”
+
+Then she walked into the house and ran up the staircase, and locked
+herself into her own room, where she fell on the floor in a dead swoon.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ Poor Jenny.
+
+
+It was on a Monday that Maxwell Drewitt proposed to Lady Emmeline, and
+on the following Friday he was coming along the road leading from
+Eversbeg to Duranmore, when he met a palefaced, large-eyed girl, who
+told him she wanted to speak to him.
+
+“Not now, Jenny,” he said. “I am going up to a party at Kincorth. Wait
+for a day or two.”
+
+“If I wait any longer I shall die,” she answered. “I must speak to you.
+Timothy is away, and I have been watching for you all the afternoon. Let
+me ask you something now, and then go to your party if you like.”
+
+“We cannot stand talking on the road here, Jenny,” he answered, “but I
+tell you what,” he added, seeing the look of despair in her poor tearful
+eyes: “meet me at twelve, in the summer-house at the top of the fall
+(you know the summer-house). I will be there.”
+
+“Upon your honour?” she asked.
+
+“Upon my soul,” he replied, and the pair parted. She walked forward to
+Mrs. Connor’s, and he went on to Kincorth.
+
+It was a quiet party, given in honour of Maxwell’s engagement. The
+Drewitts did not think well of the match, and for that reason they were,
+perhaps, a little over-anxious to be cordial to Lady Emmeline.
+
+It was a good thing for Maxwell, Mr. and Mrs. Drewitt agreed; and yet
+Mrs. Drewitt knew a younger woman would have appeared to her better.
+
+Such a union was likely to give Maxwell all he had lost through his
+father’s unlucky marriage, but still it seemed unnatural to see so young
+a man selling himself for money.
+
+Nevertheless, the Drewitts were bound to be pleased: the head of the
+family was expected to hold out the right hand of fellowship to Lady
+Emmeline, and Mr. and Mrs. Drewitt had accordingly driven over to
+Cragantlet and invited the widow to a very quiet party in honour of the
+event.
+
+On account of Lady Emmeline’s bereavement dancing would have been
+improper, but, looking towards her impending marriage, music was
+permissible.
+
+It was a musical party therefore—that is, dinner and music. Only very
+intimate friends on both sides were invited, such as the Munks and
+Marsdens and Hickmans and Dolf Vervensoe, who began at once to pay
+marked attentions to Laura Munks, which attentions caused the heart of
+her honourable mother to leap for joy.
+
+Miss Macpherson came with the Munks. Mrs. Drewitt had asked her to come,
+greatly on account of her musical attainments, which would, that poor
+lady hoped, cause the evening to go off all the more pleasantly.
+
+Lady Emmeline was in great force: she put on her deepest mourning, and
+flourished her widest hem-stitched pocket-handkerchief. She kissed Mrs.
+Drewitt and Wilhelmina, and Master Brian and Miss Geraldine, and pressed
+Mr. Drewitt’s hand with emotion.
+
+And Mr. Drewitt pressed Lady Emmeline’s, and the pair had a little
+private conversation in the embrasure of one of the drawing-room
+windows; and Mr. Drewitt wept, and Lady Emmeline wept, and the two
+exchanged sentiments of regard and vows of eternal friendship.
+
+To do the poetess justice, she did not care one straw about money. Give
+her Maxwell, and she was indifferent to filthy lucre. Had he owned
+Kincorth fifty times over she could not have been fonder of him. It is
+pitiful to think how far good looks go with women: how much better she
+liked this handsome young fellow than she had ever cared for her
+far-honester husband.
+
+Well-a-day, well-a-day! so the world goes, and so the world will go till
+the Millennium.
+
+Of all the company, Maxwell himself was, I think, the most
+uncomfortable.
+
+A man takes kindly enough to having honours thrust upon him, but he
+feels awkward when a select party is invited to see the process.
+
+Besides, though he loved money he hated marriage; and, above all, was
+there not a poor soft-hearted little girl crying her eyes out for his
+sake?
+
+Poor child! poor Jenny! She was in his memory all that evening. He could
+not see Lady Emmeline for thinking of her when the widow spoke; and as
+for Miss Macpherson, there were some people whom Maxwell always
+detested, and Miss Macpherson was one of them; for this was part of the
+song that terrible Scotchwoman elected to sing with a pathos utterly
+indescribable, while Maxwell Drewitt stood beside his aunt, digging his
+nails into his flesh, and cursing the poet who wrote the words and the
+woman who sung them with all his heart and soul and strength.
+
+Was ever a more mournful song penned, reader, than that from which Miss
+Macpherson selected four sorrowful verses? Four verses, sorrowful and
+beautiful. Here they are:—
+
+ “My head is like to rend, Willie,
+ My heart is like to break;
+ I’m wearin’ aff my feet, Willie,
+ I’m dyin’ for your sake:
+ Oh! lay your cheek to mine, Willie,
+ Your hand upon my head;
+ Oh! say ye’ll think on me, Willie,
+ When I am cold and dead.
+
+ “It’s vain to comfort me, Willie,
+ Sair grief maun hae its will;
+ But let me rest upon your breast,
+ To sab and greet my fill;
+ Let me sit on your knee, Willie,
+ Let me shed by your hair,
+ And look into the face, Willie,
+ I never may see mair.
+
+ “I’m weary o’ this warld, Willie,
+ And sick wi’ all I see;
+ I canna live as I hae lived,
+ Or be as I should be;
+ But fauld into your heart, Willie,
+ The heart that still is thine,
+ And kiss ance mair the white, white cheek
+ Ye said was red lang syne.
+
+ “The lav’rock in the lift, Willie,
+ That lilts far ower our heid,
+ Will sing the morn as merrilie
+ Aboun the clay cauld deid;
+ And this green turf we’re sittin’ on,
+ Wi’ dewdrops shimmerin’ sheen,
+ Will hap the heart that luvit thee
+ As warld has seldom seen.”[A]
+
+Footnote A:
+
+ The whole of this ballad is to be found in a curious collection of
+ Scotch songs entitled “Whistle Binkie.” The book is somewhat rare, and
+ I do not chance to have it by me at the moment; but I believe the
+ verses quoted above were written by Motherwell; and I know that they,
+ as well as the “King’s Ride,” referred to on page 215 (the name of the
+ author of which I am unable to learn), have recently been most
+ charmingly set to music by Miss Elizabeth Philp.
+
+After the manner of all Scotch poems, the original was of great length.
+If Maxwell had heard the whole of it I think he would have sacrificed
+Miss Macpherson in his uncle’s drawing-room.
+
+How long that evening seemed! How unendurable! How intolerable it was to
+listen to the chitter-chatter of a dozen female tongues! How plainly he
+could see the rouge on Lady Emmeline’s cheeks! How he hated the
+affectation of her manners! How sick the little flutter she pretended to
+feel made him! How he wished to heaven he could break Dolf Vervensoe’s
+head for his sly allusions, for his meaning looks!
+
+Miss Macpherson sang, and Mrs. Drewitt sang, and Laura Munks sang, and
+Lady Emmeline was induced to “join in.”
+
+Then they had tea handed round, and the card-tables were brought out,
+and the old stagers played whist, while the young people flirted, and
+Lady Emmeline sat talking demurely to Mr. Drewitt, and Maxwell walked
+from window to window looking forth at the view on which the moon was
+just rising. It must be getting on for twelve he knew by that, and
+thinking of Jenny, he went across to Lady Emmeline, and after leaning
+over the back of her chair and whispering a few compliments in her ear,
+reminded her how late it was getting.
+
+“You will come with me as far as Eversbeg,” she suggested; but Maxwell
+told her he thought of remaining at Kincorth for the night, upon which
+she rose to go.
+
+“Time has passed so pleasantly, Mrs. Drewitt,” said Lady Emmeline, “that
+I had not the least idea of the hour.” And the widow, after a tender
+farewell of the Drewitt family, swept down to her carriage, attended by
+Maxwell and his uncle.
+
+Her departure was the signal for the remainder of the party to disperse;
+and accordingly, with a great clattering of horses’ hoofs, and banging
+to of carriage doors, and putting up of carriage steps, the guests drove
+off, and left Kincorth quiet and lonely in the moonlight.
+
+Then Maxwell bade Mrs. Drewitt good-night, and took his hat, spite of
+Mr. Drewitt’s entreaties for him to stay.
+
+“Thank you, no,” answered Maxwell, “I cannot remain. I told Lady
+Emmeline I thought I should, but I forgot then that a man said he would
+come to me to-morrow morning at seven about some stock, and I should not
+care to have to walk over from here so early as all that comes to.
+Good-night, sir.”
+
+“Good-night, Maxwell, and I wish you every happiness. I think you have
+made a most prudent choice,” finished Mr. Drewitt, wringing his nephew’s
+hand; which piece of commendation elicited the remark, “D—n my choice
+and your thoughts too,” from Maxwell, as he walked down the drive.
+
+When he had got well among the trees he left the gravelled walk, and
+made his way through the plantations to the glen mentioned in an early
+chapter.
+
+Many a time he and Jenny had met in that glen during the last two years,
+for it was a lonely place where strangers were sure never to intrude,
+and where the family rarely penetrated. At the very top of the glen
+stood the ruined summer-house, going fast to wreck and decay. The roof
+let in the wet, the floor was damp and grass-grown, the seats were
+broken and crazy. It was nearly a mile away from the mansion, and as
+solitary and deserted a spot for a meeting of the kind as can well be
+imagined.
+
+As he climbed up the steep path which led to it from the glen, Maxwell,
+looking at the summer-house perched on the very top of the waterfall,
+saw a woman leaning against the rustic pillars that formed the entrance.
+
+“You are late,” she said; “I thought you were not going to come;” and
+she dropped back the shawl she had put over her head, and the white sad
+face was lifted appealingly to his in the moonlight.
+
+“Have I ever disappointed you, Jenny?” he asked, and he kissed her cold
+lips while the girl clung to him in a kind of passionate despair.
+
+“They told me you were going to be married,” she whispered; “it is not
+true? tell me it is not true.”
+
+If there had been any use in telling her a lie he would have done it;
+but he knew it must come to this sooner or later, and so he held his
+peace, and turned aside his head.
+
+“Why don’t you look at me?” she cried; “why don’t you answer?” And then,
+in her extremity, she fell on her knees before him, and prayed him say
+it was false, it was not true.
+
+He lifted her from the ground, and took her in his arms, and held her to
+his heart, and kissed her over and over again; but still he said
+nothing, while she kept moaning out—
+
+“It’s not true! You never could be so fond of me, and marry another
+woman.”
+
+“If I were married to twenty women I could never be so fond of one of
+them as I am of you,” he answered.
+
+“But you are not going to be married? Say it was an untruth they told
+me—say so, for God’s sake!”
+
+“What can it matter, Jenny?” he replied. “I will never love any one as I
+love you. I swear that.”
+
+“But you promised to marry _me_!” Jenny broke out, tearing herself from
+his embrace, and facing him as he stood silent and pale in the
+moonlight. “You swore that to me. You said whenever you had money enough
+you would marry me, and that then, when we were married, Timothy would
+soon come round. You did, you know you did! and if it was a lie, God
+pardon you, Maxwell Drewitt, and God help me!”
+
+She sank to the earth once more, not kneeling this time, but crouching,
+with her hands covering her face, with her head bent forward on her lap,
+crying—crying, oh! so terribly.
+
+And the moonlight lay on tree and ocean and field—on Duranmore down by
+the shore, on the great mountains, and the smaller hills.
+
+“You will marry me, Maxwell?” she sobbed at last, and she seized his
+hands in hers, and covered them with tears and kisses. “You cannot mean
+to desert me after all. You cannot leave me to face the world’s scorn. I
+would do my best to please you. I would never ask to go out with you to
+any place, or to be your equal, or to know your concerns. Only marry me,
+for the love of God!”
+
+“I told you before,” he answered huskily, “that I can never love any
+woman but you; and as long as I love you, what does it matter whether I
+am married or single?”
+
+“Maybe it does not matter to you,” she said; “but to me—to me——”
+
+“You will marry somebody else, Jenny, and look back upon all this as a
+foolish dream—a foolish happy dream.”
+
+“It’s a dream that’s mighty like reality,” she answered. “I wish it was
+a dream!” went on the girl, passionately. “I wish that I could wake now
+and know that all that has passed was only a dream! If I could go back
+to what I was when I first met you, I’d die happy. I wouldn’t care that
+this was my last night on earth.”
+
+“Jenny—Jenny!” he remonstrated.
+
+“I’m thinking that the water down by there looks mighty quiet,” she
+continued, looking with her great sorrowful eyes away to the sea. “If I
+could get anybody to row me out far enough that I’d never come ashore,
+I’d drown myself. Timothy would be sorry, but he would not be half as
+sorry as he will be if I don’t do it.”
+
+Maxwell could not bear this. He made her get up, and drew her back to
+the firmest of the seats, and sat down beside her, and laid the poor
+tired head on his breast and tried to comfort her. There had been a time
+when his lightest caress made Jenny’s heart leap with joy; but nothing
+he could say or do would comfort her now. “Marry me, marry me!” she kept
+crying, and she twined her arms round his neck and told him how their
+sin had found them out; how it was because she knew she could keep their
+secret no longer that she wanted him to save her from shame.
+
+For a minute, Maxwell sat stunned; a sickening remorse came over him.
+Her child!—and she was little more than a child when he first met her.
+Her child!—Maxwell knew now the reason of her pale thin cheeks, of her
+unusual importunity, of her longing look towards the quiet sea.
+
+“Oh! Jenny, Jenny, I wish we had never seen one another,” he cried out
+at last; “I wish I had never looked at your pretty face, my darling!”
+
+“And it’s I that wish I had never seen you!” she answered, “or that I
+had died before this ever came to pass; before I ever was the bad girl I
+have been, and brought trouble and disgrace on the one that knew you
+better than I did. What are you going to do now?” she demanded, with a
+sudden access of indignation. “Are you going to marry me or leave
+me?—going to desert me or shelter me from the storm? You will marry me,
+Maxwell, won’t you? Now that you know all, you will not forsake me?”
+
+And she put her “cheek against his cheek,” and took his hand and held it
+upon her heart, while she begged him to have mercy, while she craved him
+to have pity, in tones that Maxwell Drewitt remembered at his dying
+hour.
+
+But she did not know with whom she had to deal. The very reason she
+assigned would have been powerful enough to prevent Maxwell fulfilling
+his promise. Should the finger of scorn be pointed at him?—should the
+purity of his wife be questioned? He would as soon have thought of
+marrying the vilest of women as of mating with Jenny now. And he had
+brought her to this, with his lying words, with his false tongue, with
+his fair promises! He had found her young and guileless and loving, and
+she was sitting now with the moonlight streaming on her pale face,
+ruined and betrayed. That was a pleasant memory for him when “the door
+of the house came to be shut,” when the noise of the outer world sounded
+no longer in his ears, when there was no future of life stretching out
+before him—but only silence, and sickness, and recollection in the
+darkened chamber, in the lonely room.
+
+“Would he marry her?”
+
+No. But Maxwell was at immense pains to explain why he could not do so:
+how he was very, very poor; how he was only marrying Lady Emmeline for
+her money; how he would always spare enough for Jenny; how, though
+another woman might own his name, no one but Jenny should own his heart.
+He tried to work upon her feelings; he tried to get her to be
+self-sacrificing for the sake of the love she bore him. “You would not
+like to see me struggling for bread all my days?” he finished: “you
+would not like to ruin me and keep me poor till the end of my life?”
+
+“You ought to have thought about that before you ruined me,” she
+answered. “You talk to me as if money could give me back what I have
+lost, when I would cheerfully beg my bread from door to door if only I
+could be what I once was; if I only could!”
+
+“But, Jenny,” he answered, “why should you be ruined at all? There’s a
+man who would marry you to-morrow—Connor. Marry him, and then——”
+
+He stopped in his sentence, for the girl rose up at his words and looked
+him in the face. She unwound his arm from about her, she put his hand
+away from her face, she lifted her head from his shoulder and stood in
+the moonlight staring at the man she loved with an incredulous surprise.
+
+“And it’s that you want me to do?” she said. “And it’s your child you
+would have me pass off on him as his?—and that’s the way you think
+you’ll get rid of me? But you’re mistaken; you’re wrong this time. I’ll
+tell Timothy; I’ll tell Lady Emmeline; I’ll tell your uncle, and I’ll
+see if there isn’t one of them will have me righted. Marry Dennis! Oh!
+Father of Heaven, what is this at all, at all?” and she rushed out of
+the summer-house and down the glen, sobbing as she went.
+
+He picked up her shawl and followed her. It did not take much pleading
+on his part to make her promise that she would not fulfil her
+threat—that she would not go and blazon her wrongs about.
+
+She blazed up into a passion one moment, but was calm the next.
+
+“I will do well for you, Maxwell,” she said, “though you have done ill
+for me. I will keep your secret, if it kill me. I will be faithful to
+you, though you have been false to me. I won’t have any money; but I
+won’t drown myself: I promise you, and I don’t break my word. Let me
+pass you. Don’t kiss me again—don’t; you belong to another woman now,
+and I hope—I do hope she will make you as happy as I would have tried to
+do!”
+
+“I cannot let you go, Jenny,” he said. “I love you, and you only,
+still.” And he kissed her as he never kissed another on earth, with
+passionate tenderness, with a hungry affection, with a despairing
+remorse—kissed her while the tears ran down her white cheeks, and the
+stream trickled at their feet, and the roar of the waterfall sounded in
+their ears, and the trees stirred their branches in the light wind which
+went rustling and murmuring among the trees.
+
+Then he wrapped the shawl which she wore for disguise, like the country
+people, gently about her, and pulled it over her head. And thus they
+parted, so far as meeting and loving and trusting was concerned, for
+ever.
+
+It is not in all cases parting to be separated from those we love by
+absence or death, by distance or the grave.
+
+There are worse partings than those on the deck of the outward-bound
+ship, or by the dying beds of the dear ones we have walked with through
+years—worse partings, between two who may yet hear each other’s voices,
+and touch each other’s hands, and look in each other’s faces, day after
+day.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ Master Harold.
+
+
+There was little change in Connemara—in the general aspect of the
+country I mean—and yet the suns of sixteen summers had risen and set
+upon the mountains since Maxwell Drewitt rode home from Cragantlet under
+the moonlight—since, under the moonlight also, Jenny Bourke accepted the
+sorrow that was inevitable, and went away through the night, crying
+silently.
+
+There were the mountains, grand and stern and rugged as ever; there were
+the desolate lakes, the dreary bogs, the huge boulders, the endless
+bays, the rocky headlands, the grassy promontories washed by the wide
+ocean.
+
+To look at the country, any one might have thought only a new day had
+dawned upon the earth; and it was a new day indeed, but one twenty years
+after that summer afternoon when you, reader, first looked into the
+parlour of Inchnagawn Cottage, and heard Maxwell Drewitt and Timothy
+Ryan talking about the new mistress who was coming home to Kincorth.
+
+What are twenty years, when all is said and done, but as an hour in the
+life of the great hills? Twenty years! Man frets and troubles himself
+through the third portion of almost his longest day, and the hills look
+on silently. Twenty years! Others come and go, are born and die, marry
+and have children, strive and plan, harass themselves, laugh and weep,
+rejoice and mourn, while the hills remain unchanged.
+
+Twenty years! The mountains and the lakes and the ocean were the
+same—but the people! Ah! dear reader, no one but God in Heaven may ever
+know what the Irish suffered between the summer’s day on which this
+story opened and the summer’s day on which I take up my pen once more.
+
+It was a lovely afternoon, towards the latter end of June. There had
+been rain in the early morning, but towards twelve o’clock the clouds
+dispersed, the sun broke out, and now, as the mail-coach, bound to
+arrive at Duranmore at five o’clock, stopped to change horses at
+Calgillan, ten miles distant, the traveller could not have desired a
+more beautiful day for his journey, or a finer country for his eyes to
+wander over. Fine, not with cultivation, but by nature. Grand with
+hills—well-wooded here and there too—with waterfalls dashing down the
+mountain-sides, with rapid rivers pursuing their course onward to the
+sea. The road leading from Calgillan to Duranmore was far the most
+picturesque approach to the little town which could have been selected,
+and it was because of its beauty that two English gentlemen chose it for
+their route.
+
+The younger of these two men had never visited Ireland before; the elder
+had been in Connemara twenty years previously, when he stood for
+Duranmore and lost the day. Henry Pryor was coming back, after all those
+years, to look at a property which was for sale near Duranmore, and if
+he liked, to buy it.
+
+Whilst he remained in Connemara he was going to be the guest of Maxwell
+Drewitt, Esq., of the Headlands; and Maxwell Drewitt, Esq., had kindly
+offered to extend his hospitality to Mr. Francis Gyton, whose father was
+principal in the great firm of Gyton, Lark, Munday, Hatfield and
+Company, Austinfriars, London.
+
+Mr. Gyton, senior, was a millionaire—Mr. Gyton, junior, was rather a
+fast young man, who went down to the City and “looked in” at the office
+as seldom as he could help, whose health required continual absences
+from town, and who, consequently, the moment he heard his uncle intended
+visiting Ireland, offered to accompany him.
+
+Calgillan was not a town, merely a straggling village lying among the
+hills, and Mr. Gyton employed himself during the time that was occupied
+in taking the tired horses out and putting the fresh horses to in making
+depreciating remarks concerning the country and its inhabitants
+generally. He saw nothing picturesque except the short petticoats of the
+women.
+
+“Like ballet girls, by Jove!” finished Mr. Gyton, who pronounced Jove
+Jauve, and surveyed Irish society through an eyeglass.
+
+“You never saw a ballet girl half so pretty,” answered a young lad who
+had travelled with them for the last thirty miles, and who now stood
+with his hands in his pockets leaning against the wall of Joyce’s Hotel.
+
+“And how do you know anything about the matter?” asked Mr. Gyton,
+laughing, for he had been tormenting and chaffing the boy all the way,
+“you never saw a ballet girl in your life.”
+
+“I don’t want to see one,” retorted the other, sulkily; “but I know our
+women are prettier than the English women for all that, and our country
+is finer than England. You have no mountains like those where you came
+from;” and he pointed away towards the “Twelve Pins,” which are the Alps
+of Connemara.
+
+“No; our mountains are twenty times higher,” said Mr. Gyton, laughing
+again.
+
+“I could take you to a place where you might count a hundred lakes below
+you,” went on the boy.
+
+“Mill-ponds,” observed the other.
+
+“And you have no such fish in England as we have at our very doors.”
+
+“Ah! you never tasted whitebait, my boy.”
+
+“We’re ready now, gentlemen, if you please,” said the guard at this
+juncture, and all the passengers clambered up into their seats.
+
+“There’s a team!” Mr. Gyton leaned back from the box to whisper to the
+young Irish lad; “why, there’s not a coachman in England would sit
+behind four such sorry nags.”
+
+“You never saw such a turn-out, at any rate,” answered the boy.
+
+“He’s right, sir,” interposed the driver. “Master Harold’s right. You
+might travel England and Ireland through, and never meet with such a
+turn-out again.”
+
+“The horses are as thin as whipping-posts, and the harness is falling to
+pieces; but I should have thought that no such uncommon sight on this
+side the channel,” replied Mr. Gyton.
+
+“But we know—we know better, don’t we, Master Harold?” chuckled the
+coachman, bringing his whip down cleverly on the off leader’s flank as
+he spoke.
+
+“Yes, Doyle, we know,” answered the boy, and the pair laughed in chorus.
+
+“What is remarkable about the turn-out?” asked Mr. Pryor, who had for
+some time been watching Master Harold with considerable interest.
+
+“There is nothing remarkable; they’re trying to humbug us, that is all,”
+said his nephew.
+
+“Bet you five to one,” retorted the boy, sharply.
+
+“Done. Who is to hold the stakes?”
+
+“He may,” agreed Master Harold, pointing to Mr. Pryor, “and he shall be
+umpire.” And with that the lad pulled out five shillings, and placed
+them in Mr. Pryor’s hand.
+
+Mr. Gyton laughed till he almost fell off the coach, while he laid down
+his stake.
+
+“Now go ahead,” he said; “what is there so remarkable about Pharaoh’s
+lean kine?”
+
+“Why, there are four horses—you see them; and here is Billy Doyle who
+drives them—you see him; and the five have only one eye among them, and
+that is Billy’s. Did you ever see anything like that in England?—did you
+now?”
+
+“Fairly beaten, Frank,” said his uncle.
+
+“Done, by Jupiter!” exclaimed the young man about town. “Here, sir, take
+your money.”
+
+“Give it to Bill—I don’t want it,” said the lad, contemptuously; and he
+folded his hands tightly together, and looked away towards the “Twelve
+Pins” with as lordly an expression as though he owned them and the
+hundred lakes he had spoken of into the bargain.
+
+“But they can’t go,” began Mr. Gyton, who considered Master Harold far
+too good fun to be left in peace. “Poor things! they seem as if they
+hadn’t one leg among them—as if they were lame as well as blind. They
+are tired already. Do you call such animals horses in this part of the
+country?”
+
+“If I was sitting where you are,” retorted the lad, “I would show you
+whether they could go or not.”
+
+“Perhaps you will take the box seat,” suggested Mr. Gyton, with a
+delighted chuckle.
+
+“I will if you’ll let me.”
+
+“Don’t, Frank, do not,” entreated Mr. Pryor. “You are carrying the joke
+too far,” he added, in a lower tone; “you do not understand the Irish.
+Remain where you are.”
+
+But Mr. Gyton would not take his uncle’s advice. They were at the very
+foot of a hill which rose up before them steep and straight like the
+wall of a house. “I mean to walk up here,” he said, “and if you like at
+the top to take my place and the ribbons, you are welcome to both.”
+
+“I did not see you offer to drive,” remarked the boy. “Are you not used
+to it?”
+
+“Not to driving such cattle as the creatures you call horses. A good
+English thoroughbred now, or something of that kind.”
+
+“Oh, indeed!” said Harold, and they walked on in silence.
+
+“Coachman, I say, coachman,” exclaimed Mr. Gyton, when they reached the
+top of the hill, “this young gentleman is going to take my place and the
+reins, and means to break all our necks. Keep your one eye on him.”
+
+“I won’t need, sir. Master Harold is as good a whip as ye’d find betwixt
+this and the Shannon; ay, and faith an’ there’s not a leap a horse could
+take that it’s himself couldn’t go over with him.”
+
+“I’d like to see him on the back of an English hunter,” laughed Mr.
+Gyton.
+
+“And damn me if I would not like to put _you_ on the back of my father’s
+chestnut Madcap; you’d be precious soon off, I’m thinking,” Harold
+turned round to answer.
+
+“Take care, Frank, take care,” urged Mr. Pryor, but his nephew was
+incorrigible.
+
+“Is the chestnut anything like our blind team, which you are driving so
+beautifully?” he asked.
+
+“No, she is not; but our team could go faster than perhaps you would
+like to travel,” retorted the boy.
+
+“Try me,” was the reply.
+
+“Don’t, for Heaven’s sake!” entreated Mr. Pryor; but, before the words
+were well out of his lips, Harold had knotted up the reins, flung them
+on the horses’ necks, and, with an hoorah and a whoop, lashed them
+forward down the hill.
+
+“Now for Hell or Duranmore,” gasped the coachman, while the insides
+screamed, and every outside passenger held on for his life.
+
+“Can Irish horses go now?” hissed out the boy, turning round to his
+tormentor, as the coach went swaying and rocking down the hill.
+
+Every moment the pace increased. Doyle seized the whip, but he could not
+stop Harold shouting and hallooing, and as the horses felt the vehicle
+gaining on them they galloped, blind though they were, faster and faster
+still.
+
+The collars tightened, and the haime chains were strained to their
+utmost, as the creatures drew further away from one another in their
+frantic endeavours to get loose.
+
+From side to side—bumping, tossing, rolling—the coach went flying down
+the incline. If one of the horses had fallen it would have been all over
+with the passengers; but hot iron had never touched the hoofs of those
+four blind steeds, and they were sure-footed as goats.
+
+Down the hill they went; the mountains seemed to be spinning along with
+them. Duranmore and the Bay were now up, now down—now in the depths of
+the earth, now on the top of Eversbeg Head—but at last the level was
+safely reached, and the bays, after galloping along for a while, stopped
+of their own accord.
+
+“It’s not your fault, Master Harold, that there’s one of us left alive.
+If the craythurs had not been blind it is hard to say when we would have
+pulled up,” remarked Doyle, as he descended from his perch and
+unfastened the reins, and soothed and patted the frightened and panting
+animals, that stood with their nostrils quivering, with their flanks
+white with foam.
+
+“Is it your misfortune, Bill?” asked the lad, swinging himself to the
+ground. “I’ll send for the kit;” and then he looked coolly up to Mr.
+Gyton, and hoped he had enjoyed his drive. “It was not the distance, I
+suppose, so much as the pace?” he suggested, and lifting his cap to the
+two gentlemen, he turned along the road leading towards Kincorth.
+
+“Who is that—that lunatic?” asked Mr. Gyton, when the coachman resumed
+his seat on the box.
+
+“That, sir,” answered the man, whose cheeks and nose were blanched as
+white as though whiskey had never reddened them, “is Masther Harold
+Drewitt; and I am free to say that a bigger divil niver run.”
+
+“Any relation to Mr. Drewitt, of Kincorth?” inquired Mr. Pryor.
+
+“His youngest son,” was the reply; and uncle and nephew exchanged
+glances.
+
+“They sent him to school to quiet him down a bit; but faith I think he’s
+come back worse than he went.”
+
+“Send a goose to Dover, and a goose will come over,” remarked Mr. Gyton.
+
+“A goose!” repeated the coachman. “It’s not much of a goose there is
+about Masther Harold. It’s more of the cloven foot than the web that’s
+inside his boots; an’ it’s a pity, for a kinder-hearted, more spirity,
+freer-spoken young gentleman there’s not in Connemara. But they tell me
+it’s the mother has spoiled him entirely; an’ a nice lady she is, too,
+and homely-like in her ways, for a foreigner.”
+
+“Foreigner!” echoed Mr. Pryor, in surprise.
+
+“Well, English then, like yourself, sir; shure it’s all one. The masther
+married her in London, I think it was—and well spoken of she is by rich
+and poor. Only they do say it’s she spoils Masther Harold: though some
+think he would not have been so wild a divil if he had not been so much
+at the Headlands: that’s his cousin’s place, sir, Mr. Maxwell Drewitt,
+and a clever gintleman he is. He’s made a sight of money, and gives
+plenty of employment.”
+
+“We are going to the Headlands,” remarked Mr. Gyton, demurely.
+
+“See that now!—well, as I was saying, you are going to see a clever
+gintleman. What he has in his head nobody would credit; and as for land,
+I could not tell all he bought up in the Estates Court. All that fine
+farm, that lies down in the hollow after we passed Calgillan, is his;
+and he has a great property, they tell me, beyond Cragantlet; that is
+behind the hill there facing you: and then he has the place that used to
+be Mr. Munks’, on the other side of Laddenwell Lake; and never chick nor
+child to leave all to. Many a time I think about that when I see the
+childer swarming in and out of the cottages of his labourers. They say
+he’d give Cherryfield, the place he bought from Mr. Munks, to have a
+son. It seems queer, sir, the way them things go. I suppose it’s by
+favour, like kisses.”
+
+“It will be a deucedly lucky thing for that boy if he never have any
+children,” observed Mr. Gyton, thoughtfully.
+
+“So Mr. Drewitt thinks, people do say,” answered the driver. “Maybe,
+gentlemen,” he went on after a pause, “ye wouldn’t mind saying nothing
+to Mr. Maxwell about Masther Harold’s tricks. It might get him into
+thrubble. An’ the lad intended no harm; it’s just divilment and
+contrariness.”
+
+“Oh, we will do the young fellow no harm,” said Mr. Gyton, “though, as
+you remarked, it was not his fault that our necks were not broken; and
+if you take my advice you will not trust him with the ribbons again.
+What _are_ you considering, uncle?” he added. “You look as grave as if
+you had been retained for a bad case and got an adverse verdict.”
+
+“I was thinking about that Master Harold,” replied Mr. Pryor, who had
+neither wife nor child himself. “I was thinking about that Master
+Harold. He is the very image of what Maxwell Drewitt was twenty years
+ago, though there is not much resemblance now.”
+
+“They tell me Mr. Maxwell never favoured him, sir,” dissented the
+driver; “that there’s a kindly look in Master Harold’s eyes, and a soft
+winning way with him, that nobody ever remembered in Mr. Maxwell; but I
+ask your pardon, sir, for making so free, and Mr. Maxwell a friend of
+your own too.”
+
+“I have only seen him twice in the last twenty years,” replied Mr.
+Pryor, “but I can remember very well what he was the first day we ever
+met, and that boy is like him. I could not think who he reminded me of
+all the way. Of course,” he added, speaking to his nephew, “Maxwell
+Drewitt was a man when I first saw him, somewhere about my own age at
+that time, and this Harold is but a boy; still, the turn of the head,
+the tone of the voice, the features, and something in the expression,
+are the same. How it carries one back!” he finished, with a sigh; “how
+it carries one back! But here we are at Duranmore, and there is Mr.
+Maxwell Drewitt himself.”
+
+“Welcome once more to Connemara,” said that gentleman, shaking Mr.
+Pryor’s hand as though he wanted to shake it off. “See to the luggage,
+Dickson,” he added, turning to his servant, and then he asked his guests
+which they would choose—to walk or drive.
+
+“Walk, if you please,” answered Mr. Gyton. “I shall be glad to stretch
+my legs after so much coaching.”
+
+“And you?” inquired Maxwell, turning to Mr. Pryor, with a smile at the
+younger man’s lead.
+
+“Should like the walk also,” laughed Mr. Pryor. “Do you remember all the
+walks we had along the bay, twenty years ago?”
+
+“Twenty years this month,” answered Maxwell Drewitt. “They have not been
+long in passing.” And the trio sauntered down the street together, while
+Doyle said to Dickson—
+
+“Whose’s them gentlemen, Barney, do ye know?”
+
+“One of them is some Mr. Pryor,” said Dickson, “that stood for Duranmore
+the time of the great election.”
+
+“You don’t mane that?”
+
+“Do you think I’m a liar then?” asked Dickson, who was of a taciturn
+disposition and easily annoyed.
+
+“I don’t think much of the young chap, but if that’s Mr. Pryor, I wish I
+was dhriving him ivery day, and was getting his blissing in silver too.”
+
+“Ay, faith, I believe ye. That’s the only blissing or crossing aither
+you ever thrubble yerself about.”
+
+Which remark being disagreeably true, caused Mr. Doyle to retire into
+the “Marsden Arms,” where he wet Mr. Pryor’s gift with whiskey
+immediately.
+
+Meanwhile Harold, after parting with his travelling companions,
+proceeded along the road which led round the north side of Duranmore
+Bay, and wended his way towards home—now running, now loitering, now
+pegging stones at the birds in the trees by the wayside, now cutting a
+stick, now decapitating the dandelions and benweeds, which were
+plentiful and in splendid bloom. He was full of life and youth and
+strength and spirit. He did not seem to know what to do with himself for
+very happiness, and so he would jump backwards and forward over the
+ditches and swing himself up to the first branch of a tree, and then
+drop lightly to the ground, in order to let off the superfluous steam.
+
+A fine lad truly—straight and tall and well-made—with black hair, dark
+eyes, white teeth, good features, and a fine open expression of face. He
+was like Maxwell Drewitt, and yet he was unlike. He had Maxwell’s figure
+and Maxwell’s face, but he had not Maxwell’s impassiveness of muscle,
+his command of countenance, his steely self-possession.
+
+A fine lad—one whom his mother idolised and his father adored. No other
+autocrat had come to reign after him; and the love and thought and
+devotion bestowed on Harold as a baby were bestowed on Harold likewise
+when he was a boy.
+
+Brother and sister and servants were all alike—all yielded their wills
+to Harold. It was an understood thing in the household that Master
+Harold could think no wrong, that Master Harold was not to be crossed,
+that whatever Master Harold desired was to be done for him immediately.
+
+Brian had for so long a time given place to Harold that no person
+remembered the time when Brian was anybody. The eldest born was to have
+Kincorth, and the younger was to reign over all hearts in consequence.
+No one ever seemed to think such an arrangement harsh or unjust until
+the boys grew up, but then people began to remark that Mrs. Drewitt’s
+entreaty—
+
+“Do, Brian. Now cannot you let him have it? remember he is the
+youngest,” was heard too often for much good to come of such training.
+
+The best horse in the stable, the best fishing-rod, the best gun, had to
+be relinquished in Harold’s favour without a murmur; and, perhaps, I
+cannot say more in praise of Brian Drewitt than that he never murmured
+at this favouritism; that he accepted his lower seat without a word.
+
+At the gate of Kincorth the brothers ran up against each other.
+
+“I was coming to meet you, Haro,” said Brian, passing his arm through
+his brother’s. “I meant to have been at the cross-roads in good time. Is
+the coach early, or am I late?”
+
+“Both, I should say,” answered Harold. “The coach was early, for I
+drove; and you are late, for some reason best known to yourself.”
+
+“I had to fetch Doctor Sheen to see papa,” was the reply. “He’s often
+ill now. I sometimes think Sheen does not know what is the matter with
+him.”
+
+“Sheen is a fool!” remarked Master Harold. “Why don’t you have old
+Barnes? But doctors are no use, are they now?”
+
+“I don’t know,” sighed Brian; “but I wish somebody would do him some
+good.”
+
+“What ails him?” asked Harold; “is it the same old pain?”
+
+“I believe so,” answered Brian, and the pair walked on a little way in
+silence.
+
+“I tell you what,” at last broke out the younger brother; “if I were
+mamma I’d take him to Dublin; I would not stand Sheen’s duffing about
+any longer. The fellows there could soon find out all about him, and
+he’d be ready for the hunting if they set him up at once.”
+
+“Harold——”
+
+“Yes, Brian.”
+
+“Sometimes I am afraid that nothing will set him up.”
+
+“Do you mean, you think he is going to die?” Harold asked, with a
+gradual crescendo.
+
+“I hope not—but——”
+
+“You are as bad as old Sheen,” retorted Harold. “Die—why should he die?
+he is ten years younger than Sheen himself, and he’s twenty years
+younger than old Mrs. Waller—Waller’s grandmother I mean. Why you might
+as well talk about you or me dying as of him.”
+
+“Don’t say anything to mamma.”
+
+“_I_ would be ashamed to repeat such folly,” answered Harold, with a
+swagger; “but I shall tell her to take him to Dublin, and to have done
+with Sheen.”
+
+“I wish she could. She was wishing herself she had money to pay some
+eminent physician for coming down.”
+
+“Money—there you go again—money! It is all nonsense our being short of
+money. Haven’t we this, and haven’t we that, and haven’t we hundreds and
+thousands and millions of acres beside?” asked Harold.
+
+“What is the use of acres if they are all mortgaged?” demanded Brian.
+“What is the use of land if we can make nothing out of it?”
+
+“I declare, Brian, if you go on like that I will turn straight back to
+school; you are the most confounded old croak I ever heard; and I have
+got such a lark I want to tell you about. I galloped the horses down
+Calgillan Pass, and nearly frightened the wits out of two English
+fellows, who thought Doyle’s team had no blood in them. They shouted for
+me to stop: the younger fellow prayed and cursed alternately: the
+insides were screeching like pigs a-killing. Old Doyle could not get the
+reins, for I had pitched them on the horses’ necks, and I gave it to
+them with the whip as long as he left it with me. Didn’t I, just? and
+didn’t they go? We came down the hill with never a drag on, at the rate
+of about forty miles an hour; and then I hoped they had enjoyed their
+drive. Serve them right!—teach them to abuse Ireland again.”
+
+“You’ll get your neck broken some day to a certainty, Harold,” said
+Brian, gravely.
+
+“Well, it can only be broken once, that is a comfort,” answered Harold.
+
+“And did the harness hold?—did no accident happen?”
+
+“Devil an accident.”
+
+“What did Doyle say?”
+
+“He was frightened to death—thought we were all going to hell, I
+believe—old humbug! He was trembling for his half-crowns I suspect. I
+hope they won’t give him a halfpenny! Shall I tell mamma? Yes, I will,
+for it would put her all of a shake. No, I won’t, because she would send
+word to Doyle never to let me drive again. There she is at the hall-door
+waiting for us;” and both sons started off to reach her.
+
+“Beaten, Brian,” said Harold, disengaging himself from his mother’s
+arms, and wiping her kisses away with his coat-sleeve. He could not bear
+her to kiss him. He did not think it looked manly; he was afraid of
+anybody calling him a “Molly Coddle,” and he considered the correct
+thing would have been for Mrs. Drewitt to shake hands with him and say,
+“How are you, Harold?” instead of “hugging and kissing,” as the young
+gentleman put it.
+
+A natural enough sentiment for his age and disposition; and yet, do not
+be quite so energetic about the matter, Harold. Let the twining arms
+hold you, and the loving kisses remain, for those arms cannot clasp you
+always—those kisses cannot be given twice.
+
+There is no need to be ashamed of a mother’s love, boy; no need to
+wonder if any one be looking at that clinging paroxysm of affection.
+
+Do not turn your eyes from her to see if the servants have beheld your
+meeting; for you will never find another on the wide earth to love you
+like her. No one hereafter will lie awake at nights wondering how it is
+faring with you: no one will ever think of you in the days to come as
+she does now: no one in that vague future stretching away before you
+will ever feel her entire world bound up and centered in you.
+
+Do not thrust her love aside, boy; you will stand in grievous want of it
+yet: do not wipe her kisses off your lips; the day is coming when you
+will lay your head on her breast and pray for another—and another yet.
+
+Her love may be foolish, but it is foolish only because she thinks too
+much of you.
+
+As man is born of woman, so man in his bitterest extremity turns back to
+woman; and ere many years passed over, Harold asked to listen to no
+voice beside his mother’s, to look in no other face save hers, to hold
+no hand except that which had so often caressed him in vain.
+
+He found comfort in the love which was unselfish in its selfishness; he
+sought shelter in a heart he had well-nigh broken; while she, poor soul!
+while she——?
+
+If Mrs. Drewitt loved him too much, she was punished; if she were
+unjust, justice was done; if she sowed the wind, she reaped the
+whirlwind; if she made an idol of him, he showed her his feet of clay;
+if she spoiled him, she repented her of it; if she mourned, the Lord
+God, in his own good time, brought consolation to her!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ A little Political Economy.
+
+
+The breakfast-room at Headlands faced the east, and from the large
+bay-window you could see, over the trees which grew down to the sea,
+Eversbeg Abbey and Eversbeg House, the mountains where the marble was
+quarried, and the Twelve Pins far away in the distance.
+
+“Lovely! exquisite!—perfectly enchanting!” exclaimed Mr. Pryor, looking
+for the twentieth time away from his tea and toast, from his ham and
+eggs, to the view before him. “It is not reality, Mr. Drewitt; we must
+be in fairyland!”
+
+“Never saw anything more charming put on the stage,” capped Mr. Gyton;
+at which remark his host laughed a little scornfully.
+
+“Frank and I do not generally agree in our opinions,” observed Mr.
+Pryor; “but on the present occasion I confess I think he is right. I
+never saw anything more charming on the stage nor in a picture, which is
+about the same thing. On the stage, as in a picture, the best part of a
+scene is given to us, and all the worst is excluded. What we get is
+perfect of its kind, without blemish, without spot; and this scene is
+perfect; we could wish nothing more, we could do with nothing less.”
+
+“An unconscious plagiarism from Moore,” remarked Lady Emmeline from
+behind the tea-urn, with an engaging titter. She had had a pleasant life
+of it during the fifteen years of her second experiment in matrimony;
+but experience had not made her any more sensible.
+
+“Indeed!” said Mr. Pryor; “I was not aware.”
+
+“Of course not—I am sure not,” replied Lady Emmeline, who prided herself
+on the extent of her reading. “So few people know the little poem to
+which I refer, It begins”—and Mr. Drewitt’s wife coughed affectedly and
+tapped with her fingers on the table-cloth, and said, “Oh dear! how does
+it begin? ‘To kneel—’ no; ‘To keep—’ no—how is this?—‘To weep—’”
+
+“To damn,” suggested her husband, and Mr. Gyton grew quite red in the
+face with his efforts to keep from laughing.
+
+“‘To sigh, yet feel no pain,’” said Lady Emmeline, with a swan-like
+movement of her lean neck; “‘to weep, yet scarce know why’—the lines I
+referred to are towards the end—
+
+ “To feel that we adore with such refined excess,
+ That though the heart would burst with more, it could not live with
+ less.
+
+“This is love,” and Lady Emmeline shut her eyes and repeated the
+remainder of the poem to herself.
+
+“Well, it may be,” remarked Mr. Drewitt; “I confess I am no judge; but
+it sounds to me much more like folly. What is your opinion, Mr. Gyton?”
+
+“Mine?” exclaimed that young gentleman. “I know nothing about it. The
+fact is, love is not in my way. Ask my uncle; he’s a shocking flirt.”
+
+“Oh, fie!” said Lady Emmeline, looking immensely pleased for all that.
+“Defend yourself, Mr. Pryor, from such a frightful accusation.”
+
+“Conscious innocence——” murmured Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Needs no advocate,” finished his nephew. “What a compliment to your
+clients!”
+
+“I have come here, Frank, to forget my clients,” answered the other.
+“Let me enjoy my holiday; let me imagine I am in Paradise without a
+serpent near me.”
+
+“If the garden of Eden had been in Ireland,” said Lady Emmeline, “poor
+Eve would never have been beguiled into eating the apple.”
+
+“My experience of Eves would lead me to a different opinion,” remarked
+Mr. Pryor. “I do not think the absence of serpents would have secured
+the safety of the fruit.”
+
+“How terribly ungallant!” observed his hostess.
+
+“How terribly true!” added her husband.
+
+“And besides,” finished Mr. Gyton, “St. Patrick was not born for a few
+years after Eve’s petty larceny.”
+
+“It is a sad thing,” said Mr. Pryor, addressing his host, “that so fine
+a country should not be more prosperous. I cannot understand the reason
+why Ireland is so far behind England at the present day. You have soil,
+climate, labour, fuel, canals, navigable rivers. It is a perfect puzzle
+to me.”
+
+“You are wrong in some of your premises,” answered Maxwell Drewitt; “we
+have not soil, nor climate, nor efficient labour. Of course a soil can
+be made, and bogs can be drained; but these things require capital, and
+Ireland has no capital. If we had your climate and your capital we could
+do anything.”
+
+“But there must be money in Ireland,” Mr. Pryor persisted.
+
+“There is money in the North, I suppose,” answered Maxwell,
+indifferently; “though even there I should say great capitalists are
+almost unknown; and there may be a few pound-notes in Dublin; but, as a
+whole, there is no money in Ireland, for this reason—that all the money
+made in Ireland is spent out of it; that rents are not returned to the
+soil, but squandered in England and on the Continent. We never had many
+resident gentry, and there are fewer resident gentry now than ever.
+Since the famine, this part of the country, at any rate, has been like
+the Deserted Village. People have purchased in the Encumbered Estates
+Court who have never seen their properties, and are never likely to see
+them.”
+
+“Surely, however, the Encumbered Estates Court has done good?”
+
+“I ought to say nothing against it, at any rate,” answered Maxwell, with
+a smile, “for I have bought to great advantage in it.”
+
+“I am sure I thought at one time he was going to buy all Connaught,”
+said Lady Emmeline, languidly.
+
+“Things will be better now, though,” remarked Mr. Pryor, after
+acknowledging Lady Emmeline’s observation.
+
+“Will they? What makes you think so?” asked his host.
+
+“The famine must have taught the Irish not to depend on potatoes,”
+interrupted Mr. Gyton.
+
+“Would a murrain teach the English not to depend on beef and mutton?”
+demanded Mr. Drewitt.
+
+“Certainly not; but beef and mutton are not potatoes, are they?”
+
+“Potatoes were beef and mutton to the Irish,” answered the owner of the
+Headlands.
+
+“And, good heavens! how can you expect a country to prosper whose people
+are satisfied with that cursed root, as Cobbett called the potato?”
+asked Mr. Gyton.
+
+“The people here are not at all averse to butchers’ meat,” Maxwell
+replied, coolly; “only it is sometimes true philosophy to be satisfied
+with what one can get.”
+
+“_Quand on n’a pas_——” began Lady Emmeline, but her husband cut
+ruthlessly across her little observation.
+
+“There is no man living,” he went on, “can tell what the cause of
+Ireland’s misery may be, or where the best remedy for that misery is to
+be found. I thought at one time I had got to the bottom of the matter.
+After twenty years’ consideration I have arrived at the conclusion that
+I know nothing about it. Every fact in the country is contradicted by
+some other fact.”
+
+“But surely the reduction of the superabundant population——” began Mr.
+Pryor.
+
+“My dear sir, as you came through the country, did you see any traces of
+there ever having been a superabundant population in Connemara?” broke
+in Mr. Drewitt. “I hear a great deal of talk about the blessings of the
+potato blight, and the good done by emigration, but I confess I cannot
+trace the blessing or see the good.”
+
+“Potatoes could not, however, be a desirable article to form the sole
+diet of an entire population,” persisted Mr. Pryor.
+
+“They were quite as good as yellow meal,” retorted Maxwell Drewitt, “and
+a precious sight more palatable. I really should like to have some clear
+explanation of the benefits this blight has showered down upon us,” he
+continued; “for, so far as I can see, it has only reduced our population
+a couple of millions and brought Indian corn to our doors. Is yellow
+meal beef and mutton? is yellow meal bread and butter? is Indian-meal
+porridge a richer diet than potatoes and salt?”
+
+“But wages must be higher,” argued Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Possibly they may be a little,” answered the other; “But certainly
+provisions are higher also. Potatoes are dearer, oaten meal is dearer,
+all the necessaries of life to the mass of the population are much
+dearer. It is not the potato blight or emigration that has, in my
+opinion, caused the slight rise in wages, but simply that money is not
+of the same value as formerly. No terrible calamity has fallen on the
+whole of England during the last few centuries, and yet an ox used to be
+sold for fewer shillings than it now fetches in pounds. I repeat what I
+said at first: plague, pestilence, and famine have done Ireland no good.
+What will do Ireland good remains yet to be seen.”
+
+“You have mounted him on his hobby now, Mr. Pryor,” said Lady Emmeline,
+“and if you do not take him out he will not get down to-day;” which hint
+being sufficiently intelligible, Mr. Pryor asked his host to show him
+his improvements, and Mr. Gyton gladly accepted an invitation from Lady
+Emmeline to accompany her over to Kincorth.
+
+Mr. Gyton thought her Ladyship “awful value,” as he told Harold
+confidentially, while he considered her husband confoundedly slow.
+
+“A demmed blue-book,” was Mr. Gyton’s irreverent conclusion; “a perfect
+table of confounded statistics.” And Harold laughed and vowed he would
+tell his cousin what Mr. Gyton said; while Mr. Gyton was inwardly
+thinking he had never seen, in all his life, a prettier girl than
+Geraldine Drewitt.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Pryor and Maxwell Drewitt walked by the shore, conversing
+as they loitered along.
+
+“I should like to understand why this country cannot be made to
+prosper,” repeated Mr. Pryor, pausing at last and looking with
+thoughtful eyes across the bay. “We in England imagined Ireland’s
+difficulties were over; but now, when I come back here, I see no change.
+I see the same dress, the same wretched cabins, the same dunghills, the
+same weeds. Excepting your place, I see no improvement anywhere. Tell me
+what your idea is of the matter? as a thinking man you must have formed
+some opinion on the subject.”
+
+“I have not,” was Maxwell’s reply. “I am as far at sea as ever. If you
+told me that unless I could give a clear account of the cause of
+Ireland’s misery, and suggest some means of bettering her condition, I
+should be hung to-morrow morning—I must either string together a parcel
+of lies, or go to the gallows. I know no more than an infant where the
+evil lies, though I know where it does not lie. Ireland has nothing to
+complain of from England now. The English helped us nobly through the
+famine, though only about a quarter of that help reached the poor. We
+are fairly taxed, fairly governed. The unprosperous man never likes the
+prosperous. If Ireland does not like England, it is only because England
+is the rich lady, and Ireland the poor. Grievances are all rubbish: very
+well on the hustings, perhaps, or in a newspaper leader, but absurd when
+one talks sober, sorrowful earnest. I am sorry to see my country limping
+along, but I cannot see where the shoe pinches for all that.”
+
+“You are satisfied, then, the population was not excessive?”
+
+“It was not excessive for the country, though it probably is still
+excessive for the capital in the country. A dozen servants may not be
+too much for one house; but if there be no money to feed and pay them,
+what then?”
+
+“That is precisely what political economists say!”
+
+“I beg your pardon, political economists say there were too many people
+for the soil. You have only to use your eyes to see that view is
+erroneous, at any rate. The population of London, which is about half
+that of the whole of Ireland, is not too great for London, because you
+can employ your population and pay them. Here we could employ our
+population, but not pay them. Do you see what I mean?”
+
+“Yes, you want capital; but if capital comes to Ireland, you shoot its
+bodily representative.”
+
+“I have not been shot.”
+
+“But you are Irish, and you are popular.”
+
+“No,” said Maxwell Drewitt, slowly. “No, I am not popular, but I have
+been cautious. I loved my life, and I took care of it. I have tried to
+be just. I have made no distinction between Catholic and Protestant. I
+have never evicted a tenant. I have given employment. I have assisted
+the poor. I have fed the starving. And yet,” he added, “I am not
+popular. Explain it how you will.”
+
+Mr. Pryor thought about what the coachman had said, but wisely held his
+peace.
+
+“There is my uncle,” proceeded Maxwell, “who has mortgaged and wasted,
+beggared his tenantry and himself, ruined his tradespeople and
+encouraged pauperism, been a furious bigot and an intolerant Tory. He is
+liked better than I am. People would rather run a mile for a word from
+him than go across the street for a shilling from me. I cannot be blind,
+Mr. Pryor; these are the facts which puzzle me about Ireland—which I
+shall go to my grave and never understand.”
+
+“How is your uncle?” asked Mr. Pryor.
+
+“But middling,” was the reply. “Middling in mind, body, and estate. As
+for the latter, it is going to the dogs. Nothing can save Kincorth. If
+he lives long enough he will have to leave it, and God help the man who
+has it after him.”
+
+“Why?” inquired Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Because an angel from heaven would not give satisfaction there now. If
+you bring a new mistress home to a disorderly household, what is the
+consequence? That the household hates the new mistress who wishes to put
+things to rights a little. For the same reason, Kincorth would hate a
+new master.”
+
+“But tenants are surely not like servants? They stand in a different
+position to their landlord to what a servant does to his master, and a
+good landlord must be felt by them to be a blessing.”
+
+“True—but there you come round the screw in the Irish character: they
+like to be benefited, it is true, but they must be benefited in their
+own way. They love to have their rents remitted, rents lowered; but they
+cannot endure a man who wants them to improve their land and take more
+out of it; who wishes them to help him and themselves at the same time.
+I have made my money, not by my tenants, but by my labourers. There is
+not a man who pays me rent that has bettered himself or me to the value
+of sixpence. If I had to begin again I would not buy an estate that had
+tenants on it; because if you evict them you are likely to get a bullet
+through your head, and if you let them stay it is endless worry and
+trouble. Besides, there is a something very shocking—look at the matter
+how you will—in sending a whole colony adrift. A man used to a farm of
+his own will not become a labourer; and over and above that, the Irish
+attachment for place is strong to a degree inconceivable to an English
+mind. If you took a small house from an Englishman and gave him a better
+he would be contented I suppose?”
+
+“He would be a great idiot if he were not,” answered Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Well, an Irishman would not be contented. Where he is planted he grows:
+he is like a cat; he loves the walls he has been accustomed to. If you
+take the roof off he will still kindle his fire on the old hearthstone,
+and sit there with nothing but the sky above him, cursing the men who
+have, as he calls it, brought him and his ‘to the world.’”
+
+“But what are people to do?”
+
+“Let the tenants stay, as I have done; or, better still, buy the waste
+land and reclaim it. I would turn no man out in this country, because it
+is better for him to live poorly off his own labour rather than live
+poorly by begging. The thing is this—if you turn a man out he will not
+work, and he will neither let you or anybody else till his land;
+therefore the land is useless, and he is a burden. That is the state of
+the country at present; but if capital were introduced into Ireland, if
+our waste ground were ploughed, if our cattle were properly fattened, if
+the people were taught to eat beef and mutton, if they could be made to
+love luxury, if they could be induced to wear shoes and stockings, and
+to live in any house better than a pig-stye—if, in one word, they could
+be civilised, I think in another hundred years things might be better. I
+only think, remember, because Ireland is a hopeless problem to me at
+present. Had I had English tenants to deal with, had I had to work with
+any class of human beings that wanted to rise in the world, I could have
+money in handfuls. I declare to you, Mr. Pryor, I could.”
+
+“As it is you have not done amiss, I think,” said the other.
+
+“I have done nothing to what I might have done,” was the reply;
+“nothing. I might have owned the whole tract of country that lies
+between here and Bennebeola. Land was to be had in this neighbourhood at
+one time almost for the asking; and if I could have got hands to farm
+it, and a market for my produce, I should have been as rich as
+Rothschild. With me it was not the want of capital so much as the want
+of immediate return for capital and the perfect impossibility of
+obtaining labour. Even starvation could not induce men who had owned
+little patches of land to do a fair day’s work for a fair day’s pay.
+They tired of it; tired of having my bailiffs after them, of being
+compelled to turn up the ground in earnest. My ways were contrary to
+their ways, my determination to their prejudices. They could not bear
+improvement: they saw in it just what the North American Indians saw in
+civilisation, the downfall of their dynasty of dirt, laziness, and
+letting things alone.”
+
+“And so you had to give up.”
+
+“So I had to draw in my hand. I had stretched my arm out further almost
+than I could draw it back; and I do not mind telling you that there was
+a time when, what with poor’s rates and beggars, and capital bringing
+back no return, I was almost ruined. Look here, Mr. Pryor,” he added;
+“at that very time I could have found work for every able-bodied man in
+this part of the country. I could not get labourers enough. It was then
+I tried Ireland: then all my old ideas were overset: then I _began_ to
+understand that the English were right about us—‘that the fault was in
+ourselves.’”
+
+“And you think so still?”
+
+“I do. I cannot tell you where the fault lies, or what the fault is, but
+it is in us. I have heard Englishmen talking about friends of
+theirs—capital fellows, honest, clever, and so forth, who yet could not
+get on, and wondering what the reason might be. Well, Ireland is as
+great an enigma; she cannot get on. If her sons and daughters go to
+England or America they can push their way up, but they will not push
+here. We are alike in all ranks. There is my uncle at Kincorth, and
+there is his poorest tenant: they cling together, and love one another,
+because their ways are the same, their ideas are identical. They are
+both thoroughly Irish: they do not see the use of ‘taking so much
+trouble,’ of ‘being so particular.’ What their ancestors did is surely
+good enough for them; and so where the rushes grew a hundred years ago,
+they are growing still: where the dungheap was piled in their
+grandfather’s time, it stands fouling the air to this present day.”
+
+“But you have done so much! I cannot understand _your_ talking in this
+manner.”
+
+“I have done much; but mark you, if I were dead to-morrow, and an Irish
+gentleman took this place, in twelve month’s time the lawn would be
+turned into grazing, and the weeds would be growing beside the drive. I
+go to England and I see velvet lawns, and clean, well-rolled walks. I
+come back here and I pay a visit to any house in the neighbourhood—to
+Lord Marsden’s, or your cousin’s, or any gentleman’s residence—and up to
+their very hall-doors the grass is half-a-foot long, and the gravel cuts
+my boots, and the weeds grow lank and luxuriant. If the gentry kept
+their places in the same order as the English, our labourers would find
+employment about our gardens and pleasure-grounds alone. But we are all
+alike,” finished Maxwell, bitterly; “all—all alike.”
+
+“You are all alike in one thing, at any rate,” answered Mr. Pryor; “in
+your detestation of trade: you do not consider buying and selling cattle
+and farm produce trading; but you hate mills, factories, shopkeepers,
+and merchants.”
+
+“Till they are rich enough,” replied Maxwell; “wherein I think we only
+follow your English lead. You do not recognize traders as equals till
+they are millionaires.”
+
+“Fairly hit,” laughed his guest.
+
+“And as the Irish think more of caste than of comfort, they would
+rather, as a rule, live on a little, and be gentlemen, than earn much,
+and sink in the social scale.”
+
+“But as money goes on depreciating in value; as small incomes, I mean,
+buy less and less each year; as birth becomes of less importance, and
+money, and what money can buy—education—of more, that prejudice will
+vanish.”
+
+“It may—but it will take a long time first,” was the answer.
+
+“To me,” went on Mr. Pryor, “love of pleasure and indifference to
+luxuries seem the curse of the country. To do as little work, to live on
+as little money as possible, appears to be the aim and object of every
+man, woman, and child I meet. It makes it a pleasant country to travel
+in; but I should not care to live in it all the year round.”
+
+“Do you remember,” asked Maxwell, with a cold smile, “how you were going
+to right all Ireland’s wrongs when you stood for Duranmore? Do you
+think, if you had got in, you could have done any good for us?”
+
+“No,” answered Mr. Pryor, “I do not; and I know it was a capital thing
+for me, being beaten. I lost nearly all my money after I got back to
+London; and what I should have done, had I been returned, I really
+cannot imagine. As it was, I turned to my profession with a will; and I
+have made nearly as good a thing of law as you have of farming.”
+
+“For which reason—and because you are too rich, too prosperous, too
+happy—you want to come to Ireland to be shot?”
+
+“I hope not! If I buy Durrow Park, I shall take your advice and not
+evict a solitary tenant. I will regard the parents as so many
+encumbrances, but endeavour to teach the children better ways.”
+
+“You had better not present them with shoes and stockings,” counselled
+Maxwell.
+
+“Why? would that be interfering with the liberty of the subject?” asked
+Mr. Pryor.
+
+“And there is a Holy Well in Durrow Park, to which, whenever there is a
+‘station’ appointed, about ten thousand people will flock: you had best
+not meddle with that.”
+
+“Anything else?” inquired Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Well, yes; there are a number of fishermen living under Durrow Cliff
+who claim the sea-weed as theirs: it would not be wise for you to have
+any dispute with them.”
+
+“What more?”
+
+“There is a right of way across what is called the ten-acre field, and
+the inhabitants of Durrow village take their donkeys through the grounds
+at all hours of the day and night.”
+
+“Any other advantages?”
+
+“Durrow Cliff is full of caves: you must never explore them; and should
+you hear suspicious sounds round the coast in the calmest night, you
+must conclude it is the Atlantic breaking on the rocks. If you are wise,
+you will be kept in brandy free. Many a keg is left outside the
+dining-room window at the Headlands; and as for potheen, I know a place
+up among the hills where some of the natives gather mountain dew in such
+quantities that I could almost set up a public-house with the presents
+that find their way to me. The constabulary officer sometimes says my
+whiskey tastes wonderfully like potheen; but I always assure them it is
+sent to me by a friend in the North.
+
+“‘Bushmills?’ suggests Captain Ford, mixing himself another tumbler.
+
+“‘Somewhere thereabouts,’ I answer; and between us we empty the
+decanter. There is a still on the Durrow property, and if you see any
+smoke rising without apparent reason, you had better attribute it to a
+volcano.”
+
+“Have you exhausted your catalogue of drawbacks?”
+
+“No,” replied Maxwell; “there was a fellow ejected by the late
+proprietor, who has vowed to burn the house down over the head of the
+first man who gets his lot.”
+
+“What do you mean by a lot?” interrupted Mr. Pryor.
+
+“A lot,” answered Maxwell, “is so much land let by the piece instead of
+by the acre; perhaps a tract of waste ground containing one hundred
+acres of morass, rock, granite and brambles, will let for, say five
+pounds a year. Molloy’s case was a hard one, if his story is to be
+believed. Three years running he reared three pigs to pay his rent, and
+three years running his pigs died; only one out of the nine lived to be
+killed, and the price of that one he offered to Mr. Carford, who refused
+to take it.
+
+“‘All or none,’ he said, and Molloy was ejected. Now, if you buy Durrow,
+take my advice and give Molloy back his house. He is living there on the
+hearthstone, like hundreds of others in Ireland. Roof his house for him,
+and give him a potato-garden, and an acre or two of common land for his
+pigs to run over.”
+
+“But would not that look as if I were afraid?”
+
+“If you had turned him out it would; as you did not turn him out, it
+will only make things pleasant for your agent.”
+
+“On the whole, I think I shall not care about buying Durrow. I tell you
+a place I should like, if it were in the market—Kincorth.”
+
+Maxwell’s face changed.
+
+“Kincorth will not be for sale, I fancy,” he remarked.
+
+“I thought you said Mr. Drewitt would have to leave it?”
+
+“So he will; but the mortgagees are likely to take possession.”
+
+“Then he is mortgaged?”
+
+“Mortgaged?” repeated Maxwell. “Swamped would be a better word, Mr.
+Pryor. He has never paid a shilling of interest these four years, and
+there were arrears then.”
+
+“The place could not have been mortgaged for anything like its value,”
+remarked the other.
+
+“I believe it was not, in the first instance,” answered Maxwell; and Mr.
+Pryor looked him straight in the face.
+
+“I suppose I must not guess who will ultimately take possession of
+Kincorth,” said Mr. Pryor, a little significantly.
+
+“You can if you like,” answered Maxwell. “Most probably I shall. I
+bought up the mortgages long ago.
+
+“It is a pity!” exclaimed the other, “for your uncle was a thorough
+gentleman, and his wife a charming creature.”
+
+“Of course, if I am obliged to foreclose, I shall not require them to
+leave Kincorth,” said Maxwell, loftily.
+
+“You will do the same by them as you have done by your other tenants, I
+suppose,” remarked Mr. Pryor.
+
+“If they allow me,” was the reply; and the two walked on for a minute or
+two in silence, while Mr. Pryor thought that perhaps none of the tenants
+had found Mr. Maxwell Drewitt very pleasant to deal with, spite of his
+worldly wisdom.
+
+“You will, I am sure, consider our conversation as confidential,” said
+Maxwell, after a pause.
+
+“Most assuredly. I have no right to speak about your business at all.”
+
+“Not that it matters much,” thought Maxwell, “for the pear is nearly
+ripe.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ Durrow.
+
+
+Mr. Pryor had said he should not care for Durrow Park, but when he rode
+over there, accompanied by Maxwell Drewitt, his nephew, and Mr. Waller,
+he altered his opinion, and thought that, despite its drawbacks, Durrow
+would be a very pleasant residence for a couple of months in the year.
+“Non-resident again,” remarked Maxwell, laughing, while Mr. Gyton
+inquired—
+
+“How the deuce he could expect a man to stay away from London any
+longer?
+
+“More especially in such a hole as this, with only one post a day; with
+no railway-station within fifty miles; with no telegram nearer than
+fifty miles, also; with no books, no newspapers, no society. And a
+bachelor, too,” finished Mr. Gyton.
+
+“That is his own fault, I suppose,” remarked Maxwell Drewitt, “if it be
+a fault; but I should rather call it a virtue.”
+
+“Well said,” cried Mr. Waller, who was terribly under the influence of
+petticoat government at home.
+
+“For my part, I consider a bachelor one of the most enviable beings
+under the sun,” went on Maxwell: “he can go as he likes, come as he
+likes. He is free as air, and yet knows that he can settle down whenever
+he pleases into husbandhood.”
+
+“It is not so easy to settle down—at least, not to find any one to
+settle down with at my age,” answered Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Why, you cannot be more than a year or two my senior; and if I were
+single to-morrow I could have my pick of a dozen—ay, and pretty girls,
+too.”
+
+“I wish you would introduce me to some of them,” remarked Mr. Pryor.
+
+“I am too much your friend,” replied Maxwell; “far be it from me to lead
+you up to the trap and help you to snap the spring on yourself. Wedlock
+is a padlock,” added the owner of the Headlands. “Not that I ought to
+speak against it, for my marriage made me; and my wife never had a will
+of her own, so far as I heard of; but for an independent man to
+marry—for a man like yourself, for instance—it is folly.”
+
+“Drewitt is going to turn preacher, and expound the Gospel according to
+St. Paul,” said Mr. Waller.
+
+“I shall hold you up as an example of a sinner’s end then,” retorted
+Maxwell.
+
+“Hang it, man, you need not be so confoundedly personal!” observed Mr.
+Waller, whose domestic discomforts were too well known for him to
+attempt concealment. “It is not everybody knows how to marry so well, or
+manage a wife so well when he is married, as yourself.”
+
+Maxwell looked away from his companions over the ocean, and a thought
+came across his mind that he had not married so very well after all.
+
+He had given his youth—his liberty—all chances of happy love, for money;
+and now he could not get rid of his wife—could not get rid of that old,
+rouged, affected, ugly woman, who was jealous of every look he cast in
+the direction of those who were younger and prettier than herself; who
+had no homely graces, no fireside virtues; whom he could not even love
+like a mother and value as a friend.
+
+Forty-three and sixty—seventeen years on the wrong side. It was of this
+Maxwell thought while he stood in front of Durrow House, and looked over
+the Atlantic which lay like a lake below.
+
+They were four fine-looking men. Maxwell was much the same in figure as
+when we first saw him, but his face was more set and hardened; the lines
+were deeper, the look in his eyes was darker. He was getting a little
+bald, that is, the once-luxuriant hair was thinner, more especially
+about his temples, and his whiskers were turning grey. He was the
+oldest-looking man of the party, though Mr. Pryor was a year his senior;
+but then Mr. Pryor’s life had not been so hard a one, and his heart was
+younger too.
+
+Mr. Pryor’s face was one that his sister said “it rested her to look
+at,” so calm, so trustworthy, so good. Maxwell Drewitt had lived twice
+as fast as this London barrister, and would be old twice as soon.
+
+Some idea of this kind came into Mr. Waller’s mind, apparently, for he
+said—
+
+“I wish I looked as young as you do, Geoffry. I wish you could give me
+the secret of wearing so well and keeping so handsome:” at which remark
+Maxwell Drewitt turned round and laughed.
+
+“I know what you are laughing at,” went on Mr. Waller; “you are thinking
+that one must be handsome before one can keep handsome. That is the
+worst of being clever, Drewitt; it makes a man so devilishly sharp and
+disagreeable: but, now, do look at Pryor; there was not so much
+difference between us twenty years ago, and yet——”
+
+“There is all the difference now—is that what you would say?” asked
+Maxwell. “If it be, perhaps there has been all the difference in the
+twenty years too; in how the twenty years has been passed. You have
+drunk hard, I have worked hard, while he has been addressing an
+attentive court or lounging in an easy-chair. It is the pace that kills,
+Waller, more than years.”
+
+“As for pace,” muttered Mr. Waller, but a dangerous look in Maxwell’s
+face stopped him.
+
+“We can but live,” said the latter, hastily; “if we grow old soon, we
+have lived much, that is all any one can make of the question; and yet,”
+he went on, “I think it must be a fine thing for a man in middle age to
+find himself free to begin the whole drama of existence over again. Free
+to settle, free to choose, free to reside in a great town; and yet,
+also, free to buy a place like this and keep it for a kind of dessert to
+the dinner of the year. You will buy it?” he added, turning to Mr.
+Pryor. “Can you resist?—can you look upon Durrow and yet flee from such
+temptation?”
+
+“I cannot,” answered Mr. Pryor: “spite of right of way, and private
+stills and smugglers, and evicted tenants, and holy wells, I must have
+Durrow.”
+
+“And we will get a jolly lot of fellows together, and come over and have
+such capital sport,” finished Mr. Gyton, who had kept silence for an
+unusual time.
+
+“Thank you, Frank, you are very kind,” replied his uncle.
+
+“And you might get my mother to matronize halfa-dozen girls; it would be
+such a lark,” went on Mr. Gyton; “dancing and boating, and riding and
+driving.”
+
+“No fear of the rents of Durrow being spent off the soil,” said Mr.
+Pryor, “if Frank’s programme were carried out. I should spend as much in
+a couple of months as Durrow would return in a year.”
+
+“First-rate for Connemara,” answered Maxwell.
+
+“I will write to my mother to-night,” persisted Mr. Gyton, “and give her
+a description of Durrow. It is the very place she would delight in. Let
+me see, how can I describe it? Help my imagination, Mr. Drewitt.”
+
+“Your imagination!” repeated Maxwell; “gracious heaven! there is no
+imagination about the matter; it is all fact, from beginning to end.
+There are the rocks, and the Atlantic, and the islands; and Durrow
+stands, say a hundred feet above the sea, and the ground is level from
+the house to the very edge of the cliff, which goes sheer down to the
+shore. There are no trees to speak of, no shrubs, no fields; it is all
+rock and mountain, and bog and morass. It is a place to make your teeth
+chatter in the winter-time; but in the summer—you see for yourself,
+young gentleman, what it is like now.”
+
+“Cannot you buy the place at once, and let us all spend August here?”
+asked Mr. Gyton, with enthusiasm.
+
+“I am afraid not,” said Mr. Pryor, with a smile; “but I dare say I can
+have it all ready for your mother by the spring.”
+
+“And if you want a good fellow to manage your property and to reside in
+the house while you are away, let me recommend you a deserving man. His
+name is Connor; and he has been overseer at the marble quarries for
+sixteen or seventeen years past.”
+
+“What—Ryan’s brother-in-law!” exclaimed Mr. Waller, with some surprise.
+
+“Even so; do you know anything against Connor?” demanded Maxwell, facing
+sharp round on the last speaker.
+
+“No; only you remember that you thought—that is—that Ryan himself—”
+
+“Ryan himself is not Connor,” interrupted Maxwell; “and Mrs. Connor is a
+very worthy person.”
+
+“And pretty too,” added Mr. Waller “though she is not so young as she
+used to be. By Gad! Geoffry, that was a girl! If she had been more
+thoroughbred she might have married a duke. Faith, I thought she stayed
+single so long waiting for some travelling prince to pick her up and
+carry her off with him. She must have been thirty before she took on
+with Connor; eh Drewitt?”
+
+“I am not the parish clerk, sir,” answered Maxwell, hotly. “I do not
+keep a register of births in my head;” and with this civil speech the
+owner of the Headlands marched off to the edge of the cliff, where he
+flung himself down on the grass, and with one hand supporting his head,
+looked away and away over the sea across which white sails were glancing
+in the sunshine.
+
+“What a damnable temper Drewitt has!” remarked Mr. Waller. “I am sure it
+is just wearing his body out,” and the trio turned into the house and
+walked through the empty rooms, and looked at all possible views, from
+all possible windows, discussing furniture and papers, and carpets and
+window-curtains the while.
+
+After a time Mr. Pryor made his escape, and rejoined his host, and the
+two lay on the grass, near the edge of the cliff, talking about
+Duranmore, and Kincorth and Durrow, and Ireland and England, for nearly
+an hour.
+
+“There is another thing,” said Maxwell, at last; “the last proprietor,
+Mr. Carford, was a Roman Catholic, and almost supported the priest of
+Durrow, besides paying tithes. Will you follow suit? I know that to
+English ears such advice must sound absurd; but, after all, the few
+things I have mentioned will not amount to a hundred a-year, and you
+will have five hundred a-year back in comfort. You cannot civilize a
+country in a day. You must give savages beads, and rum, and
+looking-glasses, if you take their land from them. They cannot
+understand the substance, so you must let them have the sham. I should
+like to come back to life in a hundred years’ time, say about 1950, and
+see Ireland then. Will there be butchers’ shops in a place like
+Duranmore, where the poor people will buy scraps for their Sunday’s
+dinner, as the Londoners do on Saturday night? Will yellow meal be a
+tradition, and the cup of tea an institution? Will the people wash
+themselves, and the women wear their flannel petticoats under their
+dresses instead of round their necks? Will the bare feet be covered?
+Will the children drop off their rags some night, and put on clean
+cotton frocks, like English children, when they get up in the morning?
+Will they comb their hair, and scrub their faces, and eat with a knife
+and fork? Will the men who drive the sheep into Ballinasloe fair ever
+know by experience what number of joints there are in one? Will they
+ever have wooden floors? and if they have, will they keep them clean? I
+wonder, Mr. Pryor, I wonder! And yet,” added Maxwell, “if that day ever
+do come, Ireland will he Ireland no longer, but only a more picturesque
+England—a Cumberland, in fact, across the channel.”
+
+“On the whole, perhaps, you would not care to come back after the
+hundred years,” suggested Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Yes, I should. I should like to have my land then, and to be able to
+sell it at the 1950 market price. A hundred years!—where shall we be
+then? where shall we be?”
+
+“Certainly not on the top of Durrow Cliff, talking about Ireland,”
+answered Mr. Pryor, gravely. There was something about the fierce tone
+of Maxwell’s question which quivered through every nerve in his body.
+
+“Is he afraid of death?” marvelled the barrister, and even while he was
+marvelling, Maxwell spoke again.
+
+“I can remember,” he said, “when I was a boy coming across here with my
+father, and walking over the very spot where we are now talking, hand in
+hand with him. It was just such another day as this, warm and bright and
+clear; there were vessels coming and going; the sea was blue and calm;
+the fishermen were drying their nets in the sun. Well, the years have
+passed since then—passed like days. I have been lying here thinking how
+short a day life is after all, and wishing that we could endure through
+the centuries like the mountains, or the ocean yonder.”
+
+“It would be very sad if we could, I think,” answered Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Do you really mean what you say? But we are so differently constituted
+that one man’s meat is literally another man’s poison. To me it has
+always seemed that life is so short, while there is so much to be done
+in the world.”
+
+“Ay! but by successive gangs of labourers,” replied Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Shall we go?” asked Mr. Maxwell Drewitt, hastily springing to his feet.
+“Have you seen enough of Burrow? Shall we call at Kincorth as we return,
+and ask how my uncle is to-day?”
+
+“I should like to call on Mr. Drewitt,” said the other. “The last time I
+saw him he was lying on Doctor Sheen’s bed, with his pretty young wife
+nursing him. I suppose twenty years has changed them both.”
+
+“It has changed everybody excepting you, Geoffry,” exclaimed Mr. Waller,
+who heard the last words. “I think you must be one of the immortals.”
+
+“It has changed me, Harry,” was the reply, spoken sadly, though with a
+smile. “Twenty years lie behind instead of before me; that is all the
+difference; but, after all, that difference is considerable.”
+
+It was a long way from Durrow to Kincorth—ten Irish miles to ride,
+though probably not more than four, had the road followed the flight of
+the crow.
+
+“But what road in Connemara ever did follow the flight of the crow?”
+demanded Mr. Waller; whereupon Maxwell asked what engineer could bridge
+the bays, and make a way through the rocks and precipices.
+
+“Besides,” added Mr. Gyton, “to a man not pressed for time, the windings
+in and out are pretty and picturesque: but only fancy, uncle,” he said,
+turning to Mr. Pryor, “how one would curse these curves and turnings if
+one were riding for one’s life, or for a doctor.”
+
+Maxwell Drewitt seemed impressed with this idea. “I never thought of
+that before,” he observed; “but then, I suppose, no man ever did ride
+for his life through Connemara. It would be all foot-work over the
+hills.”
+
+And yet when they rounded the base of another mountain, as they turned
+another corner sharply, Maxwell pulled up.
+
+“I cannot get that notion of yours out of my head,” he said, noticing
+that the others pulled up also. “Riding for one’s life—what a strange
+fancy!”
+
+“I tell you what is a strange fancy to my mind, Drewitt—going to a sick
+man’s house with six horses and two servants, like a troop of dragoons,”
+exclaimed Mr. Waller.
+
+“We need not ride up to the hall-door,” answered Maxwell; while Mr.
+Pryor said—
+
+“Well thought of, Waller; we might have had enough sense for that
+ourselves.”
+
+“But we had not, you see,” summed up Mr. Gyton, and the four rode on
+abreast.
+
+“I never pass that old ruin,” said Mr. Waller, pointing to a tower and
+some walls belonging to an ancient castle lying back among the hills,
+“but I think of Murphy. You remember Murphy, don’t you, Drewitt, that
+used to be with Sheen?”
+
+“I remember some fellow of that name, but what the devil had he to do
+with Castle Cronach?”
+
+“Why, there was a squireen lived at that house in the hollow, where the
+honeysuckles are growing, and he had a wife who used to drink
+tremendously—spent every farthing on whiskey, and sold everything she
+could lay her hands on to get more. The poor fellow was almost at his
+wits’ end what to do about it (she did drive him to America in the long
+run), and so he went to Murphy for advice in the matter.
+
+“‘Could the doctor give him nothing?’
+
+“‘Is it poison you need?’ said Murphy; ‘because if it is, say so like a
+man.’
+
+“‘Of course it was not poison he wanted, but only some trifle to cure
+her of drinking. Could Mr. Murphy not mix her up something?’
+
+“‘If we could mix up anything to cure that disorder,’ says Murphy, ‘we
+should be made men: but I tell you what, take home a gallon of whiskey,
+and let her drink as much as she likes, and I will be round with you
+before night.’
+
+“It was in the summer-time, but not moonlight, and when the woman was
+thoroughly drunk, Murphy and the husband carried her down into the
+vaults of that old castle and laid her down on some boards till she
+should come to.”
+
+“I suppose she never ‘came to?’” suggested Mr. Gyton.
+
+“Didn’t she, though? but she had a good sleep first, and when she woke
+about twelve o’clock she began calling out and asking where she was.
+
+“‘Well, you are in the vaults underneath Eversbeg Abbey, ma’am,’ Murphy
+says.
+
+“‘And how long have I been here?’ she inquired.
+
+“‘A matter of ten or twelve months,’ he answered.
+
+“‘Then I’m dead, in course?’ she says.
+
+“‘As a doornail,’ wound up Murphy.
+
+“‘And are you dead too?’
+
+“‘Yes, ma’am.’
+
+“‘And how long have you been here?’
+
+“‘Somewhere about five years,’ he said.
+
+“‘Then we are all dead?’
+
+“‘Yes.’
+
+“She sat down on the floor and thought the matter out a bit. Murphy said
+he could not imagine what she would say next, and was just trying to
+fancy, when she began—
+
+“‘You must know the ways of his country a good deal better than me.
+Where can you get a drop of good whiskey now, reasonable?’
+
+“‘That floored me,’ Murphy finished. ‘Squire,’ said he, ‘you’d better
+take your wife home; if she thinks there are whiskey-shops in Hades, it
+is of no use trying to frighten her with death. Take her home and let
+her live.’
+
+“And he let her live; but she ruined him and died a beggar in Spanish
+Place, in Galway.”
+
+“I wonder what has become of Murphy?” said Maxwell, while they rode,
+with loose bridles, at a slinging trot over the hard Connemara roads,
+neck and neck together, hoofs keeping time, all four abreast; the
+Irishmen with their feet well in their stirrups, riding only on the
+snaffle, bending a little over their horses’ manes; the Englishmen
+sitting more stiffly and more erect in their saddles, with only their
+toes in the irons, holding both bridles equally in their hands.
+
+There is not much in these things perhaps, but there is something, and
+the grooms riding behind remarked the difference, as all Irish people
+do.
+
+“Murphy is, I hear, doing very well indeed, in London,” answered Mr.
+Waller. “He was a clever fellow, a man who loved you for your ailments,
+who adored a complicated case, who—”
+
+“Murphy!” repeated Mr. Gyton; “Murphy! a Mr. Murphy was telegraphed for
+once when my father met with an accident at Tunbridge Wells—an awful
+curiosity—he attended him afterwards in London. I remember the man
+perfectly. A long, loose fellow, with rusty hair and greenish-grey eyes,
+and an astonishing brogue. Is it likely to have been the same?” he
+asked, turning towards Mr. Waller.
+
+“Had he tremendous legs and no body to speak of, arms like flails, and a
+habit of turning his side to you when he spoke?”
+
+“Yes; and there was no one place where his clothes seemed to fit him. He
+was all joints, too, and he used to turn up his coat-cuffs and the
+wristbands of his shirt before he felt my father’s pulse. I remember
+tooling him over to the station one morning, and he kept me in screams
+all the way. He used to take people’s legs off ‘In the name of God.’ We
+never ceased laughing from the time he came into the house till he went
+out of it. He told us lots of stories about the notions of the Irish
+concerning physic—how they considered doctors liked red-haired men the
+best for ‘cutting up’—how they thought rhubarb was a decoction of dead
+bodies—how they believed fever came up the road in a ‘swirl’ of dust,
+and entered the house where it was destined to prove fatal like a
+visible simoom—how they believed in ‘possessions’—how he was told of a
+spirit who threw a bad man down stairs and broke his arm, and then
+called out to him, ‘I have not done with you yet.’ ‘And they went on to
+recount,’ added Mr. Murphy, ‘how the spirit twisted his head round on
+his shoulders, and how, for the future, whenever he walked forward, the
+back of his head came first. That was a case I should like to have
+attended,’ he finished. ‘I candidly confess I should.’”
+
+“It must have been our Murphy,” said Mr. Waller; “there could not be two
+of the same kind of the same name.”
+
+“This man was born in Roscommon, wherever that may be; for I remember
+him telling me the morning I went over with him to the station, that
+when the examiners were asking him for a certificate of baptism, he
+said—
+
+“‘And, my God, gentlemen, do you know so little about Ireland in England
+as to ask a man from the County Roscommon for a certificate of his
+birth? I have heard my mother, and a decent old woman she was too as
+ever brought up a family on potatoes and buttermilk, say I was born the
+day Widow O’Flynn’s cow was lost in the bog, and that is all the
+information I can give you on the subject.’”
+
+“What is he, surgeon, or physician, or what?” inquired Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Surgeon,” answered Mr. Gyton. “My mother asked him something about it,
+and he said, ‘If you want a leg or an arm taken off I shall be most
+happy to oblige you, ma’am; but pills and potions are out of my line
+altogether.’ I had enough of physic in Connaught to last me my lifetime,
+and I prescribe for nobody. Operative surgery, ma’am, is enough for me;
+“_Satis supraque;_” which being freely translated, for I won’t insult a
+lady of your position by supposing you understand Latin, means, ‘Lashins
+and Lavins.’”
+
+“How the devil,” demanded Maxwell Drewitt, “does such a fellow contrive
+to make his way into any respectable house?”
+
+Mr. Gyton looked at him in surprise.
+
+“There is nothing to prevent Mr. Murphy entering any house in England,”
+he answered, a little stiffly. “Perhaps the Irish are more exclusive. He
+stands very well in his profession; has a very good house in one of the
+West-end squares; and though he is eccentric, he is not more eccentric
+than many of our first-rate men have been.”
+
+“John Hunter, for instance, was not merely eccentric, but vulgar,”
+chimed in Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Well, Murphy was never vulgar,” said Mr. Gyton. “He never said a word
+to which you could have taken exception, and then he always brought such
+a cheerful face with him that he was half the cure himself.”
+
+“Was that the person who was Dr. Sheen’s assistant at the time of the
+Duranmore election?” asked Mr. Pryor, looking towards Maxwell Drewitt.
+
+“The same; a fellow without a second coat to his back, and possessed of
+no one single talent except impudence,” was the reply.
+
+“He must have put out his capital to great advantage, then,” said the
+barrister dryly, “for it to have produced such results.”
+
+“He married well,” explained Mr. Gyton; “he married a rich old maid, who
+was, I believe, the first paying patient he ever had in London, and that
+gave him a lift. Anyhow,” added Mr. Gyton, “he is a rising man now.”
+
+They had been walking their horses up a steep hill during the latter
+part of this conversation, but as the young Englishman concluded his
+sentence they reached the top and saw Duranmore lying in the hollow
+below them. Duranmore and the road branching off to Kincorth!
+
+“I wonder how we shall find my uncle to-day,” said Maxwell, looking at
+the woods in which the house lay sheltered; “perhaps if Mr. Murphy were
+here now he could cure him.”
+
+“Is Doctor Sheen not able to do so then?” inquired Mr. Pryor.
+
+“It would seem not,” was the answer, “for he grows worse rather than
+better,” and Maxwell Drewitt, after they got to the foot of the hill,
+gave his bridle a shake, and the rest taking the hint touched their
+horses lightly with whip and spur, and followed him at a hand gallop
+along the shore road to the entrance-gates of Kincorth.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ A Little Leap.
+
+
+A man may be very nearly ruined and yet make few signs: Mr. Drewitt was
+close on the edge of the precipice, but still he uttered no cry. To have
+ridden through the gates, to have passed the porter’s lodge, to have
+reined in your horse and alighted at the beginning of the avenue, and to
+have walked beneath those over-arching trees up to the house, no person
+could have imagined the end so nigh at hand.
+
+And yet Kincorth had virtually passed away from Archibald Drewitt and
+his family. He was only now waiting for the end—only—ah, me!
+
+He was growing old, his health was broken, his hopes were gone, but
+still at times the cheery buoyant spirit of old would return to inspire
+him with fresh courage.
+
+“When the boys grow up they will see to things,” he would mutter to
+himself. “Brian will be a great man yet, and Harold, God bless the boy,
+he may rise to anything he likes.”
+
+So with ruin only waiting without to enter, involved beyond all hope of
+extrication, swamped with debt, harassed with duns, Archibald Drewitt
+still clung to the delusion that Kincorth would never pass away from
+him—that something would still turn up, that his creditors would give
+him time, that his sons would save the property, and do as well for
+themselves as Maxwell Drewitt had done for himself.
+
+“You must make haste and be a man, Harold,” he was wont to say to his
+youngest born, and Harold would reply—
+
+“I am a man now, father, what would you have me do?”
+
+Over the broad avenue the trees bent their long branches; across the
+drive their arms met and intertwined. The place was lovelier than ever,
+for the timber had grown and grown during the twenty years, and the
+sunbeams had to steal their way through closer tracery of leaf and twig
+and bough to the grass beneath. The shrubs grew luxuriantly, the flowers
+were bright under the summer sky; the house itself looked gay and
+cheerful, with every window reflecting back the afternoon sunshine, and
+Maxwell Drewitt, as he walked up the ascent, felt already the pride of a
+possessor, and pointed out the beauties of Kincorth with a certain
+triumph which was intelligible enough, and sad enough, to Geoffry Pryor.
+
+“You will be merciful, I hope,” he said in a low tone aside to Maxwell
+Drewitt, “in the hour of your strength.”
+
+“Have I not said?” was the reply, and they all passed on together.
+
+In an arm-chair placed on the lawn before the house, an old grey-haired
+man was seated so busily engaged in reading the newspaper that he took
+no heed of the approaching strangers.
+
+“Is that your uncle, Mr. Drewitt?” inquired Mr. Pryor. “Can that be he?”
+
+“That is he,” Maxwell answered. “Twenty years have done their work with
+him, have they not?”
+
+Had they not indeed? Feeble, bent, emaciated, but still with the same
+old grace of manner, with the same frank heartiness as had won his young
+wife’s heart and kept her love through all those years fresh and green
+as ever, Archibald Drewitt rose to meet his visitors.
+
+“You will scarcely recollect me, sir,” said Geoffry Pryor, holding out
+his hand, which the old man took cordially.
+
+“I do not recollect you,” he answered, “but you are welcome, whoever you
+may be.”
+
+“It is Mr. Pryor, uncle,” said Maxwell, “Mr. Pryor, who stood for
+Duranmore long ago; don’t you remember?”
+
+“Yes, yes,” exclaimed Mr. Drewitt. “Yes, yes, you are coming over to buy
+Durrow, I hear: but have a care, sir, have a care. Ireland is not what
+it used to be. The old families are ruined, and the fresh owners are not
+gentlemen, and the people have acquired new-fangled notions, and the
+breed of horses is deteriorating, and our best tenants are gone to
+America. Ah! well, it was God’s will I suppose, and we ought not to
+grumble; but an old man finds such changes hard to bear. Won’t you come
+in, Mr. Pryor? Maxwell, show Mr. Pryor the way.”
+
+But Geoffry Pryor declined Maxwell’s guidance, and remained behind with
+Mr. Drewitt, who walked feebly towards the house.
+
+“I am not so young as I used to be,” he remarked, “and the famine was a
+terrible affliction to us owners of property as well as to the poor. I
+know it aged me a dozen years,” he said, taking Mr. Pryor’s proffered
+arm and leaning on it as he walked. “And so you are the young fellow who
+gave us so much trouble twenty years ago? Ah! the last election was a
+tame affair—there are no elections now like what there used to be.”
+
+They were by this time in the drawing-room, and Mr. Pryor left his
+companion for a moment while he spoke to Mrs. Drewitt.
+
+Would he have recognized her? Certainly not; and looking at her hair,
+which had threads of grey in it; at her eyes, which were not so bright
+as they had been; at her hands, which were plump no longer, but thin and
+worn; at her face, which was wrinkled and altered—Mr. Pryor turned
+coward for the moment, and wished he had never come back to Duranmore to
+see such changes as these.
+
+But there were other changes, and not disagreeable ones either: there
+were the boys, unborn when he stood for Duranmore, tall, strong, and
+handsome; and there was Geraldine! I had better say at once that Mr.
+Pryor fell in love with the girl on the spot, and so save myself any
+lengthened description of his state of mind.
+
+“Is not she pretty, uncle?” asked Mr. Gyton, the first opportunity he
+found of putting the question. “Is not she pretty?”
+
+“Pretty!” echoed Mr. Pryor; “she is perfection.” And so I think
+Geraldine was; perfect in every womanly grace, in every womanly beauty,
+yet not so handsome as Harold, who never left Maxwell’s side for a
+moment, but stood beside his chair, talking to him, laughing with him,
+and evidently longing for the invitation which his cousin at last gave.
+
+“You will come back with us to dinner? You can ride Trumpeter, and
+Dickson shall walk.”
+
+“I have got my own horse, thank you,” returned the young king, with a
+grand air of proprietorship. “I can have the saddle put on Madcap in
+five minutes.”
+
+“What!” exclaimed Mr. Maxwell Drewitt; “do you ride Madcap now?”
+
+“Yes, my father says he is never likely to want her again. I say Max,”
+and here the boy lowered his voice to a whisper, “do you think he is so
+very bad?”
+
+“Not a bit of it. His life is good enough for twenty years yet. If you
+are coming with us,” he added in a louder tone, “you had better tell
+them to bring round your horse. We did not know how ill you might be,
+sir” (this to his uncle), “and so left our nags at the lodge.”
+
+“I am better to-day, thank God,” answered Mr. Drewitt, “much better. I
+have been ill, but it is nothing to signify, nothing.”
+
+“I think, Harold, you ought not to go down to the Headlands this
+evening,” said Mrs. Drewitt, gently, as the boy passed her on his way
+out to the stables, “and I hope you will not in any case ride that
+hunter.”
+
+“Pooh! Agnes,” exclaimed her husband, “what can that signify? Harold
+could ride any horse I ever saw, and the exercise will do him good.”
+
+“But he will be out so late,” urged Mrs. Drewitt.
+
+“You cannot get all boys to come home like young chickens at sundown,”
+said Maxwell, scornfully. “Go and get your horse, Harold. I am sure your
+mother is too wise a woman to wish to keep both her sons tied to her
+apron-strings.”
+
+But still Harold hesitated.
+
+“There is no danger, my dear, indeed there is not,” said Mr. Drewitt;
+and then his wife added, “You may go, Harold,” but she spoke the words
+with a sigh.
+
+“Are you not coming with us too?” asked Mr. Pryor, addressing the elder
+brother.
+
+“I have not been asked,” was the reply.
+
+“But your cousin surely——”
+
+“Does not want me,” interrupted Brian, and Mr. Pryor was silenced.
+
+“You will come and dine with us?” said Mr. Drewitt to his visitor,
+holding Mr. Pryor’s hand almost affectionately in his own. “Agnes, my
+dear, these gentlemen will fix a day. It had best be soon, before I have
+another attack. You will see to it, Maxwell; you will let us know?”
+
+“Yes, sir, I will let you know,” answered Maxwell; and then he muttered
+something about not thinking it had been so late, and that Lady Emmeline
+would be expecting them, as an excuse for hastening their departure.
+
+“I will see you to your horses,” said Brian, gravely, taking up his hat;
+and while Harold went cantering off over the grass, the elder brother
+walked down the drive, talking to Mr. Pryor as he went.
+
+As a matter of habit he felt the horses’ girths, as a matter of habit
+also he patted the horses’ necks, as a matter of courtesy he waited till
+each man was in his saddle, till Harold had joined the party and was
+expatiating in the most boastful manner concerning the fine points of
+the young mare he was riding; then Brian laid his hand on Maxwell’s rein
+and detained him for a moment.
+
+“Well, Master Brian, and what can I do for you?” asked Maxwell, with a
+sneer.
+
+“I want to know, sir,” and Brian’s hold of the rein grew tighter; “I
+want to know how you dare speak to my mother as you do.”
+
+“You are ruffling up your feathers early, young gentleman,” retorted his
+cousin.
+
+“Birds who have feathers have sometimes also spurs,” was the reply.
+
+“When a bird’s spurs are too sharp to serve our purpose, we cut them,”
+answered Maxwell. “Let me pass, boy,” he added, angrily. “Let me rejoin
+my guests.”
+
+“One second,” said Brian; but Maxwell wrenched his hand off the bridle,
+and striking his horse with his heel, for he wore no spurs, galloped on
+to overtake his companions.
+
+“It does not matter now,” Brian said to himself, as he stood looking
+after his cousin; “I can wait.”
+
+And you had but to see Brian Drewitt to feel sure he could wait from
+boyhood to manhood—from youth to age, till the hour of his revenge came.
+
+Meantime Harold was leading the way towards Eversbeg. He could scarcely
+hold the chesnut to any reasonable pace, and, even as it was, the brute
+went dancing and curvetting about the road like a mad thing; and as she
+danced and kicked and curvetted, Harold turned round in his saddle, and
+laughed back at his companions for very pride and happiness.
+
+“He rides splendidly,” said Mr. Gyton, whose equestrian performances
+were as nothing compared with those of this wild Irish lad.
+
+“So he may,” answered Maxwell; “he rode from the time he walked or
+thereabouts, I think. I can remember seeing Harold riding his father’s
+hunters barebacked round the field when he was so little, a man had to
+lift him up to his seat. The boy never knew fear. I have found him many
+a time among the horses’ feet in the stable, hugging them, and they
+never put a hoof on him. That is what makes a man a rider. I’ll be bound
+now Harold could manage that devil just as well without saddle or
+stirrup, with nothing on her but a surcingle, and nothing in her mouth
+but a common bit. Harold!” he shouted, and Harold rode back, while the
+mare kicked her best and laid her ears flat on her neck because he would
+not give her her head and let her make for Kincorth as though she were
+running a race.
+
+“Would you take the mare over that hedge and fence at the Headlands
+barebacked?”
+
+For a moment the boy looked grave. He held the reins in one hand while
+he put the other behind him on the saddle, and so leaned round towards
+his cousin.
+
+“It’s a stiff leap, Max,” he said.
+
+“I know that. Do you think she is able for it? I should like to show
+those gentlemen what an Irish horse can do.”
+
+“I should not like anything to happen to her, you know,” remarked
+Harold. “I only got her yesterday.”
+
+“If anything happens to her you shall have Trumpeter,” said his cousin.
+
+“It is not that—it is not that,” the boy said hesitatingly; “but I think
+she can do it, Max, don’t you?” and he brightened up.
+
+“Do it—of course she can; but will you do it barebacked?”
+
+“If Madcap can go over it, I can,” was the answer; but Geoffry Pryor
+broke in—
+
+“I would not see you do it for any money if it be that ditch and hedge
+beyond the gardens; don’t attempt it, Harold. I am sure you could stick
+on, and I am sure the mare could take the leap; but still—”
+
+“Still what?” demanded Harold.
+
+“Accidents will happen,” was the reply, and the pair looked at each
+other for a moment, Harold manifestly wavering.
+
+“So they may riding along the Queen’s highway,” said Maxwell.
+
+“Do you really wish him to take such a leap?” Mr. Pryor inquired; and
+Maxwell answered coolly, “I do not like to see a boy a milksop.”
+
+“I’m not a milksop, at any rate,” burst out Harold; “we’ll show them how
+we can take our fences, won’t we, old girl?” and the boy patted the
+mare’s neck, which she arched as consciously and proudly as though she
+knew what her rider said.
+
+“Isn’t she a beauty—isn’t she, now?” Harold said, addressing Mr. Gyton.
+“My father was offered two hundred and fifty guineas for her the other
+day and would not take it. Think of that.”
+
+“Have you found a gold mine anywhere about Kincorth?” asked Maxwell,
+sharply.
+
+“Not that I know of; why do you ask?”
+
+“I thought you must have done, when your father could refuse a sum like
+that for a horse.”
+
+“He said he would rather I had her,” answered the lad; but the colour
+came into his cheeks, and unless Geoffry Pryor were greatly mistaken,
+the tears into his eyes, as he pulled Madcap to one side, and let
+Maxwell get on in front.
+
+“I think the Irish are the strangest sort of people under the sun,”
+decided the lawyer; and he worked away at this puzzle of race and
+constitution and temperament till they arrived at the Headlands.
+
+“Are you not going to see the leap?” asked Maxwell Drewitt, noticing
+that he turned to enter the house.
+
+“Thank you, no,” he replied; “if anything happened to the boy, I could
+never look his mother in the face again.”
+
+“Nonsense!” retorted Maxwell, “nothing can or will happen; he was only
+afraid of the mare; and if she should make a mess of it, without saddle
+or stirrups he is safe enough. Come along; he will take the fence anyhow
+now, and you may as well be there to see fair play.”
+
+In his heart Geoffry Pryor wanted to see that leap taken; he wished to
+know if the boy would flinch—if his heart would fail.
+
+This problem of weakness and strength, of timidity and courage,
+interested him immensely; and accordingly he suffered himself to be
+persuaded, and walked down with Maxwell to the field, where Harold was
+already cantering the mare up and down to quiet her for the leap.
+
+I wish I could bring that summer scene before you, my reader, as Geoffry
+Pryor often recalled it to himself when he was back in London hard at
+work among his briefs.
+
+There was the smooth, soft turf; there was the calm blue bay; there was
+the village of Eversbeg and the evening sun shining down upon it; there
+were the fast-growing trees Maxwell had planted, standing still and
+quiet in the rich, warm light; there was the house, covered with
+climbers and creepers, with ivy and honeysuckle, with roses and myrtles;
+there were the gardens, well sheltered from the north and east; and for
+foreground there was the hedge and ditch, over which Master Harold
+Drewitt purposed taking his new possession.
+
+“Had not you better think twice about it, Harold?” asked Mr. Pryor,
+laying his hand kindly on the boy’s shoulder.
+
+“We Irish,” said the lad, “leap twice before we think once,” and he
+flung himself out of the saddle and began to unbuckle the girths.
+
+“Bring a cloth,” Maxwell ordered; but Harold said, “No, I would rather
+have her without. Never mind, Dickson.”
+
+Then he took off his coat and waistcoat, and tossed his cap down beside
+them.
+
+“Give me a hand, Max,” he said, and next minute was on Madcap’s back.
+
+“Now, madam, show your breeding,” and he went at the leap full swing.
+
+Anything more perfect than the boy’s riding Mr. Pryor had never seen. He
+sat that horse as though he were part of her, and yet there was no
+stiffness, no tightening of the bridle, no gripping of her sides with
+his knees: as easily as a bird on the wing goes through the air Harold
+flew past on Madcap; and as he neared the leap, Mr. Pryor involuntarily
+held his breath.
+
+“Damn her!” said Maxwell Drewitt, heartily, for the mare refused the
+fence.
+
+Once again Harold put her at it, and once again she swerved.
+
+“Give me your whip, Max,” he cried, while Mr. Pryor implored him to give
+in.
+
+“We see what you can do,” he went on, “and we will take what she can do
+for granted.”
+
+“I must take her over now,” Harold answered.
+
+“Why must you?” asked Mr. Pryor; but the boy was out of hearing.
+
+“Because she would never be worth a curse again if he let her master him
+once,” Maxwell explained.
+
+On they came for the third time, the sun shining on the chesnut’s glossy
+coat, and Harold’s black hair streaming in the wind caused by his own
+rapid passage through the air. On they came, the mare with her nostrils
+distended—with her eyes like fire—with her tail straight out behind
+her—with her hoofs, as she bounded along, scarcely touching the
+grass—the boy riding lightly and easily as ever, with his left hand low
+on her neck, with his right hand resting on his thigh, while he swept
+past the spectators. Then all in a moment he tightened his rein, struck
+her smartly with his feet, gave her one blow with the whip, and lifted
+her to the leap. The creature rose so high that Mr. Pryor thought she
+never could come down again; and as she rose she went, it seemed to him,
+straight through the air as though she were flying. Her forefeet were
+doubled under her, her hind quarters were stretched out almost on a
+level with her body, and she lighted on the grass on the other side the
+hedge as safely as though she had been a greyhound.
+
+“I would not see that done again for fifty pounds,” exclaimed Mr. Pryor,
+while they walked into the next field, where Harold, dismounted already,
+was standing beside the mare.
+
+“Bravo!” said Maxwell, clapping the boy on the back; “but you took too
+much out of her, less height would have done.”
+
+“Just try to leap it yourself,” retorted the boy, and Mr. Pryor noticed
+that both horse and rider were reeking—that the mare was wet and
+trembling, and that the perspiration was standing in beads on Harold’s
+forehead.
+
+“Will you take her back over it now?” asked Maxwell, but the lad
+answered—
+
+“No, thank you. I never felt afraid before, and I never want to feel
+afraid again.”
+
+He slipped his arm through the bridle, and walked Madcap half a dozen
+yards from the hedge, when he tossed the reins towards Mr. Waller.
+
+“Take her quick,” he said, and before any one could reach him he threw
+up his hands in the air as if to steady himself, and fell all in a heap
+on the ground.
+
+“He has more spirit than strength,” remarked Maxwell philosophically,
+but he knelt down, and, not without some show of tenderness, lifted the
+boy’s head and bade one of his men run in and get some whiskey.
+
+“He will never make old bones,” added the owner of the Headlands, and
+there was something in his words and the way he spoke them that
+astonished Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Is he fond of the lad?” thought the barrister, and he looked curiously
+at his host, who was still kneeling on the sward, and holding Harold’s
+head against his breast. “Is he really fond of the lad?” but there was
+nothing in Maxwell Drewitt’s expression to favour such a supposition.
+
+He was looking out over the sea, as if he saw something of which Mr.
+Pryor knew nothing standing out against the horizon. And with his mind’s
+eye he did see something—Harold’s double—his own son.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ Help.
+
+
+The negotiations for Durrow went on apace, and still Mr. Pryor remained
+at the Headlands, a welcome guest to Lady Emmeline—a guest not so
+welcome, perhaps, to her husband. For Mr. Maxwell Drewitt could not be
+blind to the fact that the barrister did in some matters join issue with
+him; that he belonged rather to the Kincorth party; that he rather
+affected the Kincorth interest. “It is Bryan and Geraldine together,”
+Maxwell decided, and Maxwell was right. Brian and Geraldine and Mr.
+Pryor’s own eyes caused the barrister to suspect that nature had
+forgotten an important item when she made Maxwell Drewitt.
+
+“My cousin is totally heartless,” Brian said one morning when he and Mr.
+Pryor were walking by a near cut across the hills from Kincorth to
+Durrow, “and for that reason I am quite in earnest concerning myself. I
+desire to get some employment; to be ready for the evil day when it
+comes.”
+
+“What makes you think an evil day is coming?” asked Mr. Pryor.
+
+“There was a person told me,” answered Brian. “Four years ago, Mr.
+Pryor, when I was only fifteen. I got a warning. I was told to learn
+diligently; to be on my guard against bad company; to keep my eyes open
+and my mouth shut; for that Maxwell Drewitt had made up his mind to own
+Kincorth, and that I should have to turn out and earn my bread some day.
+I am not going to tell you who warned me,” added Brian; “but I took the
+advice. I have tried to learn. I have kept my eyes open, and I know
+Maxwell means to do us harm if he can.”
+
+“Why should he do you harm?”
+
+“Why? Because, as he says, we have been idle while he has worked;
+because we have sat with our hands folded while he has been toiling and
+struggling; because my grandfather willed Kincorth away from the elder
+brother and left it to his younger son; because my father married and
+had children; because he hates us,” finished Brian Drewitt, “as I hate
+him.”
+
+Mr. Pryor turned and looked at the boy as he spoke these last words.
+There was a something more terrible than any passion could have been in
+the stern restraint of Brian’s manner; in the strong curb he seemed to
+put on himself—on his words, on his gestures. There was no fury—no
+outbreak of rage—no outburst of violent indignation. He spoke of
+hate—sullenly, calmly—without a change of colour; without a variation in
+his voice.
+
+“Why do you hate him?” inquired Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Because I do. That is not a very civil answer, you will say, and yet it
+is the best I can give you. Why I hate him I feel; but I could not
+explain what I feel, except that I know he wants to grind me under his
+foot as I grind this gravel,” and Brian stamped his heel upon the
+ground; “but he shall never have the chance, I swear.”
+
+“But for a young man of property——” argued Mr. Pryor.
+
+“I am not a young man of property,” the youth replied. “Have you really
+no idea how we are actually situated? Do not mention it to my mother,
+because she thinks that Kincorth is clear, at any rate; but Kincorth is
+mortgaged, like everything else. We have not an acre of land that is not
+owned by strangers, and I am quite confident if anything were to happen
+to my father, and that the mortgagees sold the estates, Maxwell would
+buy them all, and then where should we be?”
+
+“Where should you be whoever bought them?” asked his companion. “It
+would not matter whether he or Queen Victoria bought them so long as
+they were sold.”
+
+“No; only so far as this, that perhaps one could do something with other
+people, while one could not with him. For instance, I might be agent to
+anybody else, but I would not serve Maxwell. I wish, Mr. Pryor,” added
+the boy, for though he looked so manly, he was but nineteen after all;
+“I do wish I had known you were going to buy Durrow, for I would have
+asked you to give me the agency until I saw how it was going to be with
+my poor father.”
+
+“I have promised it to Connor,” said Mr. Pryor, regretfully.
+
+“I know you have, and Maxwell recommended him to you. Mr. Waller told me
+that,” went on Bryan; “but I should have suspected it anyhow, for he
+knew I wanted something to do, and thought he would be beforehand with
+me; but I will make my way in spite of him, if he were ten times as rich
+as he is.”
+
+“May I ask you something, Brian; and will you answer my question
+honestly? Why is there such bad blood between you and your cousin?”
+
+“I told you before I should never be able to make you understand,” was
+the reply. “We have never had a quarrel, and yet we have never been
+friends. He does not treat my mother as I like. He is trying to take
+Harold from us, and he is a bad man—a bad, heartless man, without a
+conscience.”
+
+“How do you make out that he is a bad man? I knew him before you were
+born. He was poor then; but he has worked hard since, and earned great
+possessions. Is there any crime in that?”
+
+“No; but there is harm in the way he has got rich. You do not like
+usurers in England. You do not like people who take advantage of their
+neighbours’ necessities. Well, Maxwell is a usurer. He has got a
+‘backer,’ I think you call it, in Liverpool or London, or some of those
+great towns, where you come from, who lets him have as much capital as
+he wants; and then when they make a good hit they share the spoil.
+Maxwell got lots of properties into his hands that way during the
+famine. Gentlemen were hard up and wanted an advance; then he let the
+interest drop behind, and wanted principal, and interest, and compound
+interest, just in a day. He never bought Mr. Munks’ place, nor that
+enormous estate he has in the Joyce county. He foreclosed on both, or
+rather his agent did it for him. He has a man who does all his dirty
+work cheap—a lawyer, called Ryan.”
+
+“Surely that is the name of Mrs. Connor’s brother?”
+
+“Yes, he is Mrs. Connor’s brother; but that is nothing against either
+Connor or his wife, and you are safe enough in letting Maxwell’s
+_protégé_ have the agency; for even if his man were not honest, my
+cousin would try no tricks with _you_.”
+
+“Go on—what were you saying about Ryan?”
+
+“He has Ryan under his thumb somehow, and can make him do just what he
+pleases. It appears that at one time they were great friends: that at
+the time when you stood for Duranmore——”
+
+“I remember a young lawyer who was always with your cousin—a clever,
+artful dog I thought him. Is that the Ryan you are talking about?”
+
+“The very same. Ryan had Mr. Waller’s agency for a long time, until, in
+fact, he displeased Maxwell somehow or other, and then everything went
+wrong with him. He lost his agency and his clients, and finally went as
+clerk to a new attorney who came to Duranmore. Whatever happened then I
+cannot tell you; but he got into some trouble, either through drinking
+or want of money, which Maxwell saw him out of. From that time on, Ryan
+has been back in business on his own account, and is Maxwell’s
+factotum.”
+
+“I am afraid, Brian,” said Mr. Pryor, “that you are a sad gossip.”
+
+“If I am, it is only about one man,” was the answer; “and sometimes I
+fancy,” here the lad lowered his voice, “that it is really he who has
+got the mortgage over Kincorth, and if it be——”
+
+“If it be—what then?” demanded Mr. Pryor.
+
+“Why the place will not be ours even during my father’s lifetime,”
+finished Brian; “let alone afterwards.”
+
+“But supposing—even supposing he have lent money on the property, it
+would do him no good to turn you out; it surely would answer his purpose
+much better to let you all remain.”
+
+“As dependents on him! thank you, Mr. Pryor. No one belonging to me
+shall ever eat his bread, if I have any say in the matter.”
+
+“But would it not be wise to keep on good terms with him? Would it not
+be less galling to take an obligation from him than from a stranger?
+Your father provided for him. It would be a simple matter of justice if
+he were to provide for you.”
+
+“Ay; but my father had the property, remember, that ought to have
+belonged to Maxwell’s father; that is the cause of all his ill-will
+towards us; and from what I can hear he had nothing but his keep out of
+the place, just as we have never had anything that with better
+management we ought to have had. He told my mother that he disliked her,
+not for herself, but for being the mother of the future owner of
+Kincorth. I can remember quite well, about ten years ago, Harold—he was
+a little fellow then—saying to him one day in a passion, ‘Go home, go
+home, this is not your home,’ and Maxwell made the remark, ‘And it won’t
+be yours either, my boy, when I come back.’ No later than Friday last I
+spoke to him about letting Harold take that leap on Madcap, and he told
+me—I repeat his words, Mr. Pryor—‘to hold my blasted tongue, and not
+presume to speak to my betters.’”
+
+“And you——”
+
+“I am waiting, Mr. Pryor.”
+
+There was a long pause while they stood together on the top of the hill
+resting. Everything on earth and in heaven looked peaceful and serene.
+There were no clouds in the sky, there were no billows on the ocean. You
+would have thought that for very sympathy, the heart of man would in
+such a place have throbbed quietly through its allotted time, untroubled
+by jealousy, undisturbed by passion.
+
+And yet here, of all places in which he had ever set his foot, it seemed
+to Mr. Pryor that men’s passions were strongest—that their hate was
+fiercest. He had heard such stories of cruelty—of vengeance—of
+heartburnings—of envy—of unforgiveness, that had he not heard likewise
+histories of patience—of devotion—of constancy—of faithfulness—of
+endurance, and of love, he might have thought he was not on earth at
+all, but in hell; and now here, with the blue mountains looking calmly
+down upon them, with the great sea stretching away for thousands and
+thousands of miles at their feet, with the beauties of nature all
+around, and a great silence, an intense stillness, pervading the scene,
+was this boy nursing up his wrath likewise against a coming day.
+
+“I am waiting,” and Brian’s face never changed, his eye never dropped
+under Mr. Pryor’s scrutiny.
+
+“You are thinking,” said the youth, when his companion’s glance at last
+came back from the ocean and rested once again on his face, “that I am a
+fool; that if Maxwell does not do all I want him to do, it will be a
+short shrift and a long sleep with one or other of us; but you are
+mistaken. I would not hurt his body. I would not thrash him. I would not
+even put a bullet through him; but I would make him feel. There is an
+old epigram,” he proceeded, “that I read lately and learned by heart,
+because it put me in mind of Maxwell. I wonder if you know it,” and he
+repeated:—
+
+ “Death threw his dart at Bindon’s heart,
+ But how was he astounded,
+ When from the part, as with a start,
+ The weapon quite rebounded:
+ ‘Ho! ho!’ quoth Death, and drew his breath,
+ ‘My slaughtering arm you mock at;
+ But here’s a blow shall lay you low,’
+ And smote him through the pocket.”
+
+“Then your idea is to injure him pecuniarily?”
+
+“If he do not alter his manners to my mother; if he encourage Harold in
+drinking, gambling, and all kinds of folly, as he has done hitherto; and
+if he vents any more of his temper upon me—yes; because I know that
+Maxwell’s only vulnerable point is money.”
+
+“Brian,” began Mr. Pryor, and the lad looked surprised at the change in
+his companion’s tone—“Brian, you are laying up great trouble for
+yourself. You are preparing an awful curse for your future days. You are
+nourishing a viper and hugging it to your breast: when it comes to life,
+it will bite you worse than it will ever bite him. Put all these
+thoughts and fancies out of your head, boy. At your age the cup should
+be sweet, not bitter. Whatever your cousin may have done—whatever he may
+be, it is not to you he will have to answer for his misdeeds; but you
+will have to answer for yours, Brian; and for sins, too, if you do not
+crush this hate out of your heart and turn, before it is too late.”
+
+“What can I do? What would you have me do?”
+
+“I would have you go on your way, and not ever cast your eyes on his——”
+
+“But he will not let me go on my own way. Look here.” And Brian pulled a
+couple of letters out of his pocket. “There is an old Quaker who has
+been very good to my father. I thought I would write and ask his advice,
+and tell him I wanted to work, as the properties were so much involved;
+and that if he could find anything to do I would work hard and try to be
+worth my salary. Here is his first letter. You see how kind—how
+encouraging. Here is his second. Just time enough between, you perceive,
+for him to write to Maxwell and get back his answer. You will say I do
+not know he wrote to Maxwell or that my cousin said anything about me;
+but I am as sure his fingers have spoiled my pie as that I am living.”
+
+“You did not reply to the first letter.”
+
+“No. I was waiting to see how my father would be after that last
+attack.”
+
+“It seems strange,” remarked Mr. Pryor.
+
+“No, it does not seem strange to a person who knows Maxwell as I do,”
+and Brian folded up the letters again, and put them back in his pocket.
+
+“What makes you want so much to get to England?” asked the barrister,
+after a pause.
+
+“Because there is no way in which a man can make money here.”
+
+“Your cousin has made money here. Why not have a turn at some of your
+waste lands, and do as well as he has done?”
+
+“He never would have done so well but for his wife; and I would not
+marry an old woman. No, not if she was hung with diamonds. Besides, it
+is not often Connemara sees an heiress, even if I were inclined to try
+my luck.”
+
+“But supposing, now, Kincorth were your own, could you not make a living
+out of it?”
+
+“If it were clear of debt?”
+
+“No. Suppose it were mortgaged to close upon its present value, could
+you do no better for yourself than your father has done?”
+
+“I would make a try to do better anyhow.”
+
+“Would you work? Would you put your shoulder to the wheel, and cut down
+the expenses, and be brave, as your cousin was, disregarding
+appearances?”
+
+“Whatever a man could do, that I would do,” was the answer.
+
+“But you are not a man yet,” said Mr. Pryor, with a smile.
+
+“Am I not? I wonder when I shall be one then,” was the reply.
+
+Mr. Pryor stood still—he was looking back through the years and trying
+to remember what he was at Brian’s age in the days before he came over
+in compliance with the wishes of a certain very wealthy and influential
+relative to contest Duranmore.
+
+He had not a care in the world at nineteen. Life was to him fairyland—to
+be young was to be happy. He had never had a sorrow in his life, save
+about his lessons at school or his examinations at college. He could
+look back and see himself as he was then. He could look back at himself,
+as though at another person. He could see the lad with his fair
+hair—with his happy, frank face—with his little airs of dandyism—with
+his cheerfulness, his hopefulness, his _insouciance_—and contrasting
+that picture with this, his heart bled for this poor lad, to whom the
+cares of life had come so soon, on whose shoulders the burden of
+existence was pressing already so heavily—who had to think for father,
+mother, sister, brother, and be tender and careful for all.
+
+Brian’s face was still smooth as a girl’s, but he was a man for all
+that—and as a man, Mr. Pryor addressed him.
+
+“My boy,” he said, “I will talk to you now as if you were thirty-nine
+instead of nineteen. If you will do all you say, if you will be a good
+lad and give up the next ten years of your life to work, putting your
+cousin out of your thoughts, and making up your mind to pursue one
+certain course irrespective of him and his concerns, I will help you in
+this matter. Have you sufficient influence with your father to get him
+to give you the management of the estate?”
+
+“I think so, if nobody puts it into his head that I am wanting to take
+the whole property from Harold.” And for the first time during the
+conversation, Brian’s lip trembled.
+
+“Do you mean to say any one has ever raised such a question?”
+
+“Yes: Maxwell told me once that probably my father would do like the
+rest of the Drewitts—cut me out for his favourite son; and he has tried
+to make Harold dissatisfied about my being the eldest. But Harold does
+not care who has the place as long as he rides the hunters. If he had
+been fond of money, or greedy, Maxwell would have made him hate me long
+ago.”
+
+Geoffry Pryor was a man who, as a rule, did not swear, but he could not
+help uttering an oath then.
+
+“I am that fellow’s guest,” he thought, “but hang me if it is fair or
+honest for me to eat his salt now!” And he made up his mind that he
+would get pressing letters from London, and return thither as soon as
+possible.
+
+“Will you take the matter into consideration, and see if it be possible
+for you to assume the reins?” he said.
+
+“If I promise you to drive, I will get the reins somehow,” was the
+reply; “only tell me how you mean to help me—only show me how I can save
+Kincorth, and give my mother some ease, and keep my father free from
+anxiety, and I will work—never fear—I will work.”
+
+“I will advance money to pay off the present mortgage, and be your
+creditor myself; and whatever sum, in moderation, you require to work
+the estate satisfactorily, you shall have.”
+
+Three times Brian Drewitt made an effort to speak, and three times the
+words would not come. Then he held out his hand to his benefactor, and
+the tears he could no longer keep back rolled down his cheeks,
+separately, singly, one by one.
+
+It was not weeping—it was not excitement, the barrister had never seen
+anything like it before, and he was never likely to see anything like it
+in the future; for in the hour of his blackest trouble—in the time of
+his worst agony—in the day of his deepest remorse—Mr. Pryor never saw
+Brian Drewitt’s eyes wet again.
+
+His kindness wrung tears out of them once, but grief could not open
+those fountains, which seemed thenceforth dried up for ever.
+
+Brian Drewitt’s wife may have seen him cover his face, and heard him sob
+aloud, but I, who can only follow his footsteps to a certain point, know
+no more than this, that the only sign of human feeling Geoffry Pryor
+ever saw him evince, was when he stood on the heights near Durrow,
+grasping his hand as though he held it in a vice, while the big tears
+fell from his young eyes, one by one.
+
+
+ END OF VOL. I.
+
+ PRINTING OFFICE OF THE PUBLISHER.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ February 1887.
+
+ Tauchnitz Edition.
+
+ Latest Volumes:
+
+
+ Alicia Tennant. By Frances Mary Peard, 1 vol.
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+ Living or Dead. By Hugh Conway, 2 vols.
+
+ King Arthur: not a Love Story. By Mrs. Craik, Author of “John
+ Halifax,” 1 vol.
+
+ A Mental Struggle. By the Author of “Molly Bawn,” 2 vols.
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+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+ ● Fixed typos; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ ● Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78945 ***
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+ </head>
+
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78945 ***</div>
+
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='small'>EACH VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY.</span></div>
+ <div class='c001'><span class='large'>COLLECTION</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>OF</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>BRITISH AUTHORS</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>TAUCHNITZ EDITION.</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>VOL. 809.</div>
+ <div class='c002'>MAXWELL DREWITT BY F. G. TRAFFORD</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>IN TWO VOLUMES.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>VOL. 1.</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>LEIPZIG: BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ.</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>PARIS: C. REINWALD, 15, RUE DES SAINTS PÈRES.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'><i>This Collection</i></span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><i>is published with copyright for Continental circulation, but all purchasers are earnestly requested not to introduce the volumes into England or into any British Colony.</i></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='large'>COLLECTION</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'>OF</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>BRITISH AUTHORS.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'>VOL. 809.</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='large'>MAXWELL DREWITT BY F. G. TRAFFORD.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'>IN TWO VOLUMES.</div>
+ <div class='c002'>VOL. I.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c004'>MAXWELL DREWITT.<br> <span class='large'>A NOVEL.</span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>F. G. TRAFFORD,</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “GEORGE GEITH,” ETC.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><i>COPYRIGHT EDITION.</i></div>
+ <div class='c002'>IN TWO VOLUMES.</div>
+ <div class='c002'>VOL. I.</div>
+ <div class='c003'>LEIPZIG</div>
+ <div class='c002'>BERNHARD TAUCHNITZ</div>
+ <div class='c002'>1866.</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'><i>The Right of Translation is reserved.</i></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS<br> <span class='c006'>OF VOLUME I.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'></td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <th class='c010'>Page</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>CHAPTER</td>
+ <td class='c008'>I.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Diamond cut Diamond</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>II.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Maxwell’s Little Game</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>III.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>The Master of Kincorth</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_33'>33</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>IV.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Coming Home</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_50'>50</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>V.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Peacemaking</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_62'>62</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>VI.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>At the Hustings</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_76'>76</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>VII.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>The Result of the Poll</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>VIII.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Not Dead</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_113'>113</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>IX.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Mrs. Drewitt understands</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_125'>125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>X.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Maxwell’s Engagements</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_142'>142</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XI.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Warned</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_158'>158</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XII.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Son and Heir</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_172'>172</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XIII.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Maxwell’s Improvements</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_187'>187</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XIV.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Next</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_203'>203</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XV.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Man and Beast</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_218'>218</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XVI.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Poor Jenny</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_230'>230</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XVII.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Master Harold</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_243'>243</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XVIII.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>A Little Political Economy</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_260'>260</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XIX.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Durrow</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_278'>278</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XX.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>A Little Leap</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_294'>294</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c008'>XXI.</td>
+ <td class='c009'>Help</td>
+ <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_307'>307</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span></div>
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>MAXWELL DREWITT.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I.<br> <span class='c011'>Diamond cut Diamond.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Confoundedly unlucky for you, Max.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Truth, though you spoke it, my boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Having uttered which civil reply, Mr. Maxwell
+Drewitt flung the fag-end of a cigar he had been
+gnawing out of the window, lit another, and commenced
+smoking like a chimney.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I wonder, reader, what opinion you, looking into
+that little sitting-room, would be inclined to form concerning
+the two men who tenanted it—what sort of
+character you would naturally attribute to each—what
+precise road through life you might think it most probable
+they would respectively follow.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That tall one lolling on the sofa will, if you ask
+his name, answer, “Tim Ryan, at your service;” whilst
+the younger man, supposing you put the same question
+to him, would first inquire, “What the deuce business
+it was of yours?” and finally give in to the fact, that
+people did call him Maxwell Drewitt, nephew to Archibald
+Drewitt, Esquire, of Kincorth, near Duranmore,
+Connemara, Galway, Ireland.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is the story of Maxwell Drewitt’s life which I
+am about to try to tell, and I must ask you before we
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>go further, to look attentively at him, and at the man
+whom for lack of a better word must be called his
+friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There they sit in the sunlight, in the parlour of
+Mr. Ryan’s house, which is a long, low, two-storey,
+whitewashed cottage, standing a little back from the
+highroad leading to Duranmore. There they are for
+you to study at your leisure. Ryan fair; Drewitt dark;
+the former grey-eyed, reddish haired, wide-mouthed,
+and eight-and-twenty; the latter nearly six years
+younger, slightly made, and rather under than over
+the middle height, with dark eyes, dark complexion,
+and regular features.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Nothing very remarkable, you think, about either
+of them in face, dress, circumstances, or expression.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Perhaps you may judge that Ryan is inclined to
+mirth, whilst Drewitt affects gravity; that Max has
+more brains than Tim, and Tim a better temper than
+Max; but still, notwithstanding Ryan turns his eyes at
+times in a way which is not pleasant, and although
+when Drewitt speaks he has a peculiar and most ungraceful
+knack of not moving his lips like other people,
+you see nothing evil in either face.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Look again, look steadily, and be sure. Nothing
+evil? No, decidedly not; and this time you are certain
+of the accuracy of your observation.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All of which only proves that, spite of Lavater,
+faces are oftentimes great lies. They are the paper-money
+of society, for which, on demand, there frequently
+proves to be no gold in the human coffer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell Drewitt’s face, at any rate, was a lie, for
+it told no unpleasant tales about his character. There
+was nothing disagreeable in its expression; there was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>no shadow of evil in his eyes, and yet the person that
+knew him best perhaps on earth—his uncle—once
+declared, “the man who trusted Maxwell Drewitt twice
+was a fool.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had been that fool, so it is fair to suppose him
+a competent judge in the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Wherever Maxwell Drewitt had been born; under
+whatsoever circumstances he had been brought up; had
+he been the son of a bishop, or the heir of a duke,
+there can be no reasonable doubt but that he would
+have turned out just as bad a man, though, perhaps, a
+man differently bad.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With Timothy Ryan the case was different. It
+seemed as though Nature had hardly been able to
+decide what to make of him; that she had hesitated
+between an honest man and a rogue; and that while
+she remained irresolute, training and nurture took the
+matter into their own hands, and did the worst for him
+they could.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He himself was wont to declare he was as honest
+as he could afford to be; and if such were the case we
+can only suppose that the smallness of his capital restricted
+his expenditure of probity and fair dealing to
+almost a minimum sum per annum.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There ensued a long pause after the two remarks
+I have recorded, during which the younger man puffed
+the smoke of his cigar out into the summer air, and
+the elder toyed with the tassels of the window-curtains
+and looked forth upon Duranmore Bay.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Confoundedly unlucky,” he at length repeated,
+bringing his eyes back from the sea and the mountains,
+and stretching one long leg across a neighbouring
+chair—“confoundedly unlucky, indeed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>“You have made that remark three times,” answered
+Mr. Drewitt, “and I do not see that it grows
+any less true by repetition, for which reason let us
+quit talking about the matter. If I am not at Kincorth
+I shall be elsewhere. We must always be someplace,
+Tim; on the earth, or in it. What’s done is done, and
+there is no use fretting over it. When one door is
+shut, another is open. The thing that has been predestined
+from the beginning of time must come to
+pass before the end of it. Are not those your sentiments?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, but then we never know what has been predestined
+till it actually happens; and this cursed marriage
+has not come off yet. Though I am a firm fatalist,
+still I never leave anything for fate to do that I can
+do for myself, and should advise you ditto. Can’t you
+scotch the wheel, Max?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I? No,” replied the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Nor loosen a screw, nor upset the coach matrimonial,
+nor—nor do anything, my son?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not a thing,” said Mr. Drewitt out of one side of
+his mouth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Could you not go to London and marry her yourself?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And saddle myself with a poor wife, and in due
+time a tribe of hungry brats, leaving my worthy uncle
+at liberty to marry any one else whom he might take
+it into his wise head to fancy. No thank you, Tim,
+I am rather too wide awake for that. Let him bring
+home his young wife; I won’t try to prevent him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They say she is pretty, Max, as well as young,”
+remarked Mr. Ryan. “She will wind him round her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>finger. There will be some stir at the old place when
+she comes over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, the same stir there always has been,” said
+Maxwell Drewitt with a malicious smile, “a rustling of
+bills, and clamour of duns, a rumour of writs and dread
+of bailiffs. I wish the lady joy of her bargain. She
+will see hundreds going out, but not a sixpence will
+she ever be able to keep in her purse. She will have
+to pay the servants’ wages with promises, and manage
+her housekeeping on credit, and turn her silk gowns
+three times. She will be the scapegoat in trouble, the
+stay at home in pleasure. She will have to teach Willy
+and Katty, and fight it out with Sue. She will have
+no excitement from year’s end to year’s end, for it is
+not likely she can either drink or hunt. Altogether,
+Mrs. Archibald Drewitt of Kincorth will have an
+agreeable life of it, and if she were the devil I pity
+her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At that Ryan looked up. “You pity her?” he repeated
+slowly and doubtingly, for he knew his companion
+seldom pitied any but those he was resolved
+should ere long require an abundance of the article
+from some one. “You pity her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, faith,” answered the other; “I know what
+Kincorth has been to us; I know what it will be to
+her. But hang it, Ryan, let us quit talking about
+this new martyr; put a cigar in your mouth and shut
+up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They say,” continued Mr. Ryan, unheeding his
+friend’s polite request, “that your uncle intends settling
+Kincorth upon her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a moment Maxwell Drewitt remained silent,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>while his face changed and darkened; then he answered—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Likely enough. The man’s in love, you know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So he may be,” replied Ryan, “but justice is
+justice for all that; and it is not justice to cut you out
+of the house and demesne for ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And a day,” finished the smoker; “but bless your
+soul, it may just as well be decided, now that I am
+never to be a farthing the better for any Drewitt living
+or dead, except myself. It must have come to this
+sooner or later, and I say it is better sooner, than
+later.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then how am I to be paid?” inquired the other.
+At which question Mr. Maxwell Drewitt raised his eyebrows
+and shrugged his shoulders and looked full in
+his friend’s face while he laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the devil is amusing you?” asked Ryan
+angrily.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So you were waiting to be paid out of Kincorth,
+were you?” answered Mr. Drewitt. “You would have
+been content to run barefoot till Archibald Drewitt
+dropped off his shoes some fine winter morning following
+the hounds, or slipped his feet out of them after a
+night’s hard drinking preparatory to taking a sound
+sleep in Eversbeg Abbey. Laugh!—it is enough to
+make a cat laugh to think of such patience.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I was not waiting for his death,” retorted Ryan.
+“I thought he would do something for you before long—make
+some suitable provision for the next heir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You chanced to be damnably out in your thought,
+then,” replied the younger man; “that is all the remark
+I have to offer on the subject.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, then, how am I to be paid?” repeated Mr.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>Ryan. “You owe me more than I can afford to lose,
+Max, and——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t trouble yourself to make a speech,” interrupted
+Drewitt, “there is no audience; you want to
+know how you are to be paid. I’ll pay you. You
+perhaps want to know when. Within twelve months.
+You may further desire to know how, but that is my
+business, not yours. Now let us talk about something
+else.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If you have not much gold, you have lots of brass,”
+remarked the other: “you borrow and borrow and borrow,
+and then say I am not to ask a question about
+repayment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Are you going to dun me, Ryan?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do not want to dun you; I only wish to know
+how I am to be paid.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have told you I will pay you within twelve
+months from this present hour.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But how? How is it possible?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Mr. Timothy Ryan,” broke in his friend, “there
+is only one way in which a man without a pound note
+in his pocket can possibly pay his debts honourably—with
+an ounce of lead. If you would choose that settlement
+between us I can have no possible objection to
+such an arrangement; but if, on the other hand, you
+prefer taking your principal and interest in the coin of
+the realm you must wait my time, and my time is a
+year from this date.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have your year, then,” said the other, sulkily.
+“I don’t want to press you. I only——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That’s right,” answered Mr. Drewitt, as his friend
+paused. “Now let us talk about something else.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What else? The election?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>“Thank you. I hear enough about that up at the
+house. The very name of it drives me away. I am
+sick and tired to death of the whole confounded humbug;”
+and as he concluded, the young man rose from
+his chair, placed a somewhat shabby hat jauntily on
+his head, and prepared to take his departure.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Stop a minute,” entreated Ryan. “You know the
+seat is to be contested this time, and pretty hotly too.
+Sache is not going to walk over the course as Abbott
+did. You are old enough to take some decided part
+on your own account. Which party do you side with?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Really, I have never thought about the matter;
+but I will now. Let me see—who is my uncle for?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Sache, of course.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then I am for Ryan, of course,” returned Mr.
+Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“May we count upon your assistance?” asked Ryan
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do not know,” answered the younger man. “Any
+good likely to come of it?” he inquired, after a moment’s
+pause.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What is your figure?” said Ryan. (Among friends,
+you see, reader, much ceremony can be dispensed with.)
+“What is your figure?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That place of Lynch’s has just fallen in—that
+place near Eversbeg—round the headland, I mean—between
+the abbey and the shore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, that! It is promised to Hunter, a Scotch
+fellow. He talked about building a good house on it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Did he? Well, talk’s cheaper than building, any
+day. It is a nice farm though, and you can just mention
+to Waller that I like it, and that Hunter is a
+Sacheite. I would take it without a fine, on lease of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>Waller’s life. You might think it over. Good-bye.”
+And without waiting for an answer, Mr. Drewitt strolled
+leisurely out of the house, and wended his way towards
+home.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is my belief,” remarked Mr. Ryan, as he watched
+his visitor’s departure, “it is my belief, Max, that you
+are the making of as great a scoundrel as ever broke
+bread.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And considering Mr. Timothy Ryan was a long
+way from being a honest man himself, this remark
+may be regarded as a solemn truth, for Mr. Maxwell
+Drewitt’s friend was by no means biased in his judgment,
+either by the prejudices of superior virtue or by
+any contracted ideas as to the number of vices requisite
+to form a scoundrel.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was simply the confession of faith of a man who
+stuck at few things, concerning the character of a man
+who stuck at none; and when he had given utterance
+to his opinion in the sentence recorded, Timothy Ryan,
+Esq., solicitor, felt himself wonderfully relieved, and at
+liberty to retire from the window to a table covered
+with books and papers and letters and deeds and leases,
+where he was soon up to his ears in business.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had not been writing for more than fifteen
+minutes, however, when Maxwell Drewitt re-appeared.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He came lounging into the room with the same
+immoveable expression on his countenance, and the
+eternal cigar between his lips—for Maxwell Drewitt
+lived smoking; he did nothing without either a pipe or
+a weed in his mouth, and the principal reason perhaps
+why he liked tobacco was, because his uncle detested
+it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I say, Ryan,” began the young man, taking one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>hand out of his pocket in order to knock the ash off
+his cigar, “I say, Ryan, lend me a pen and sheet of
+paper, will you, for five minutes? I want to send a
+letter off to-day, and it will be too late for post, I find,
+if I go back to Kincorth. There, don’t disturb yourself—that
+will do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And as he concluded, the speaker pulled a chair
+up to the opposite end of the table, dragged the writing
+materials his friend looked out, towards him, and
+then, after sitting biting his nails for a few seconds,
+shaded the top of the sheet with his hand, dipped his
+pen in the ink, muttered an oath about the latter being
+so infernally thick, and began.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Busily the quill at the lawyer’s desk went scratching
+over the foolscap; rapidly was line after line completed;
+hurriedly were erasures made and other sentences
+substituted; but spite of all his hurry, Mr. Ryan
+managed to keep an eye on his visitor, and tried to
+make out what he was writing.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He might as well have spared himself the trouble,
+for even when Maxwell did lift his hand for a moment
+from the top of the page to the end, that he might
+finish biting his nails down to the quick, Mr. Ryan
+found it impossible to read his friend’s letter upside
+down.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Never mind,” he thought, “I shall know all about
+it one of these days. Judging from his face, he means
+no good to some poor devil.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Ryan was right, and if you, dear reader, would
+like to watch the progress of Mr. Maxwell Drewitt’s
+little game, we can walk round to the other end of the
+table, and read the epistle over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span></div>
+<blockquote>
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>[PRIVATE.]</div>
+ <div class='line'>“Inchnagawn Cottage, near Duranmore,</div>
+ <div class='line in22'>June 11th, 18—.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“<span class='sc'>Dear Sir</span>,—I suppose you have heard ere this
+that my uncle is going to be married to a young lady
+named Dyak, a daughter of Colonel Dyak, of London,
+but conclude that his intention of settling Kincorth
+upon her will be as new to you as it was until last
+night to me.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am sure it will seem but natural to you that I
+should wish to prevent this, as you are aware that by
+the terms of my grandfather’s will, my father, the elder
+son, was disinherited, and that my sisters and self were
+consequently left dependent on the generosity, or justice,
+of my uncle.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will at once see the effect of such a settlement.
+It would cut me off for ever from all hope of
+possessing this portion of my grandfather’s property; as
+in case of my uncle dying without issue, Kincorth
+would pass absolutely to Mrs. Drewitt, who would thus
+be left at liberty to contract a second marriage, and to
+will the house and demesne to whom she pleased.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Further, it would render your chances of repayment
+almost indefinite, Kincorth being the gem of the
+property; indeed, the result of the whole arrangement
+would be to place Kincorth beyond the reach of Mr.
+Drewitt’s creditors; and though there is no doubt but
+that he would bitterly repent his imprudence in after
+years, at the present moment any remonstrance on my
+part would only tend to produce an estrangement between
+us.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I want nothing except what is fair, and certainly
+think as the lady has no fortune of her own, that some
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>settlement is desirable. But an equitable settlement
+is one thing, and making over an entire estate to a
+stranger, another.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“However, I now leave the matter entirely in your
+hands, to act as you think best, <i>for you are the only
+person who can interfere with advantage to all parties</i>,
+and shall only beg that you will in any case consider
+this letter as strictly confidential.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Trusting your health is re-established,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I remain, dear sir,</div>
+ <div class='line in8'>“Yours faithfully,</div>
+ <div class='line in16'>“<span class='sc'>Maxwell Drewitt</span>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“P.S.—I am at present staying with my friend
+Mr. Thomas Ryan, and shall feel obliged by your directing
+me here <i>under cover</i> to him.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So you have finished at last, Max?” remarked
+the attorney, as his visitor commenced folding up his
+letter. “I think the sky must be going to fall when
+you take to the quill. Surely you have not gone and
+done it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Gone and done what?” demanded the younger
+man, hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Put your foot in your fortune—made a fool of
+yourself—fallen in love.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Fallen in nonsense!” retorted Mr. Drewitt. “No,
+Tim, I’m not in love with anybody, unless it be with
+myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ah! that’s best. You will have no rivals there,”
+replied the lawyer, which remark Maxwell affected
+not to hear.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>“You are not writing love-letters, then?” persisted
+Mr. Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not I, faith; the sort of love-letters I want to fall
+in with are money letters. Thank God, I am not such
+a fool as you are, Tim.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are thankful for small mercies,” was the retort,
+uttered as Mr. Drewitt reached the door. “Are
+you off in a huff? Well, good-bye—but stay—when
+shall I see you again about the election?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Damn the election!” replied the young hypocrite.
+“Do you think I have nothing to interest me but
+drunken voters and lying candidates? I’ll come when
+it suits me; and besides, I have not yet made up my
+mind whether I will be your man or not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You had better, then, lose no time about making
+it up,” snapped back Ryan; “for Sache and his people
+are in the field already, and we ought to be there
+too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is your affair,” said Drewitt, as he passed
+out into the hall. “Adieu, my dear fellow, <i>au revoir!</i>”
+And this time he banged the door after him and was
+fairly off.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Some day,” soliloquized the lawyer, “some day,
+Maxwell Drewitt, I shall pay you out in your own coin.
+Some day when you stand in no need of me, nor I of
+you, then we shall be equals—then we shall have
+many an old score to settle. Meanwhile——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He went back to his work, leaving the remainder
+of the sentence unspoken; and as it would be but waste
+of time for us to follow his thoughts, we will step out
+into the bright sunshine, and track Mr. Drewitt’s indolent
+footsteps home.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II.<br> <span class='c011'>Maxwell’s Little Game.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Very leisurely Mr. Maxwell Drewitt lounged along,
+for it was part of that young man’s creed to work
+rather with his head than with his body. In that caldron
+he was eternally brewing something which turned
+out food for him, and poison for other people.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>From childhood he had been plotting and scheming,
+and by dint of long thought and care and study he had
+finally reached almost the top step of the ladder of
+hypocrisy, and was, as Ryan said, “the making of as
+great a scoundrel as ever lived.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>So he went on his way very slowly, with his hands
+plunged in his pockets. Kicking the small stones ruthlessly
+before him, he went along the road leading to
+Duranmore, where, having posted his letter, he turned
+aside from the regular thoroughfare and descended to
+the beach, along which there was a path, though a
+circuitous one, home.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Sometimes he looked over the bay; but more generally
+he kept his eyes riveted on the ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Written on the sands he saw the story of his future
+life traced out—riches, prosperity, success; he beheld
+them all. There were obstacles, but he crushed them;
+impediments, but he removed them; foes, but he annihilated
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, yes,” he cried at last, halting suddenly, and
+looking away towards the hills that rose to heaven—“Yes,
+yes, Kincorth, you shall yet be mine—you and
+many a fair property beside; but you in especial, because
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>I have sworn that neither man nor devil shall
+keep you from me. And shall a woman? No, before
+God!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And the veins came swelling up in his forehead as
+he stretched out one clenched hand towards Kincorth,
+and registered his oath.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There lay his home—his home where he lived a
+dependent—which was his, only so long as his uncle’s
+charity chose to give him the shelter of its roof.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Look at it, reader, intently as he did, for it was
+destined to bring agony unto many hearts, to curse
+many lives, to peril some souls.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Kincorth! there was not a lovelier spot in Ireland;
+and is not that almost equivalent to saying there was
+not a lovelier spot in the wide world?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Halfway up a hill stood the house, backed by dark
+plantations, surrounded by woods and long belts of
+trees, and verdant fields and trickling streams. It was
+built of the blue granite for which Galway is noted,
+and some Drewitt had in other days erected a porch
+of black marble, around the pillars of which wreathed
+roses and fuchsias and myrtles.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was the flower-garden, with its hedges of
+sweetbriar and evergreens, with its baskets of wickerwork
+filled with mignonette.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There were rose-trees covered with buds, and little
+wild Scotch bushes that crept close to the ground, and
+strewed it with a carpet of white and yellow leaves.
+There were perfumed syringas, Italian broom, and
+barberry-trees, and beds of tulips.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was a fountain in the centre where the supply
+of water never failed, and creepers and passionflowers
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>and honeysuckles grew about the inclosure at
+their own sweet will.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Kincorth had also its glen and waterfall, and at
+the top of the fall there stood a dilapidated summer-house,
+from which you could see away and away over
+the sea and the land. The trackless ocean and the
+distant mountains, the villages and hamlets below, and
+the dashing water near at hand—all were visible from
+this place, which was made of fir, and ornamented with
+shells, and shaded with sycamore and chesnut trees.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then there was the old entrance, built of the same
+dark stone as the house, half covered with wild white
+roses, whilst the lodge looked brilliant in its scarlet
+deckings of pyracanthus, the blossoms of which mixed
+among the white buds that were straggling about everywhere,
+and trying to effect an entrance even at the
+latticed windows.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There were holes in the roof and breakages in the
+wall; but trees shaded the one, and wild flowers concealed
+the other; and Kincorth, with all its dilapidations—with
+its ruined buildings, and trailing brambles,
+and unmown grass, and unpruned trees—looked
+beautiful in the dancing sunshine.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And it was this place he wanted to settle on her,
+and secure from me,” muttered Maxwell, as he entered
+the drive, across which the branches of the dark trees
+met and formed a sort of cathedral roof; and again he
+paused, and with arms folded across his chest, with his
+lips tightly pressed together, and his dark brows bent
+down looked up at the house once more.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Look at him now, reader. Would you like to be
+an obstacle in his path? Would you care to be a
+thing in his way? Cannot you see he would stamp
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>you into the earth as he stamps his heel into the gravel?
+Would it not be an awful thing to have to plead to
+that man for mercy?—to hear him answer you with
+that mocking devil in his eyes, out of those thin, relentless
+lips?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He is young now: what will he be when he is old?
+He is just starting on life’s journey: what will he be
+when the road has been traversed—when the world
+has hardened him—when experience has matured him?
+If you come on to the end, you shall see what he is
+like when the raven hair is gray, and the keen eyes
+dulled, and the devil within satisfied—you shall see.
+Meantime he stands with the evening sunbeams making
+their way through the trees and falling aslant on
+his figure, and lighting up the green and beautiful
+sward and the plotting, scheming, wary man whose
+heart was full of bitterness, whose soul was full of
+hate.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Kincorth should have been his! If primogeniture
+were worth anything—if being the eldest son of the
+eldest son entitled a man to name and land and
+houses—Maxwell Drewitt ought to have been
+master of Kincorth, and Archibald should have been
+eking out existence somewhere else as best he could.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>What had George Drewitt done that his father
+should cut him off? In the natural course George
+Drewitt would have succeeded Nicholas Drewitt, Maxwell’s
+grandfather, save for one deadly sin which he
+committed. He married a nobody, and a Roman Catholic;
+and though he tried to keep his indiscretion a
+secret, it came finally to his father’s ears, who cut him
+off with a shilling on the spot.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would as soon you had married the devil, sir!”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>thundered the old man; and before very long poor
+Nicholas Drewitt found he might almost as soon have
+mated with that objectionable personage as with his
+wife, who, fortunately perhaps for all parties, died in
+giving birth to her fourth child, leaving George Drewitt
+at liberty to marry again if he pleased.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But George Drewitt did not please; he lived to
+get his shilling certainly, and to see his brother Archibald
+owner of Kincorth; he lived to move himself and
+his children back as guests to the old place which he
+had expected to possess; and then he quietly slipped
+out of this world, leaving Maxwell and his sisters to
+be provided for by their uncle, a man full of good intentions,
+who offered to see to them as if they were
+his own boys and girls.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I promise you, George, so long as I have sixpence
+they shall share it. I swear it, and you may
+die happy,” he said to the dying man; who, whether
+he died happy or not, accepted the promise and departed,
+leaving Archibald Drewitt to perform his good
+intentions if he could.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is something more than probable that the owner
+of Kincorth fulfilled his promise strictly to the letter,
+though his own embarrassments and wretched mismanagement
+made it impossible for him to carry out
+the scheme he had proposed to himself in the spirit.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will put aside a certain amount,” he determined,
+“and devote it to Maxwell’s education and to portioning
+his sisters.” A good resolution, and perhaps only
+fair, but one which Mr. Drewitt found he could never
+carry into practice.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He would have done just the same by his own
+children; he would have planned all manner of good
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>things for their benefit, and then he would have let
+them grow up as he let his nephews and nieces grow
+up—uneducated, untrained, unprovided for.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The curse of the Drewitts, improvidence, was on
+him, and the consequence was that, though Maxwell
+Drewitt and his sisters had food and shelter out of
+their grandfather’s property, they had little more.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell was not sent to college nor the girls to
+school. Ready money was one of those things which
+Mr. Drewitt only knew by name; of himself he had no
+acquaintance with it. That George Drewitt’s family
+did not grow up idiots was attributable rather to their
+own natural cleverness than to any advantages of
+society or education provided for them by their uncle.
+Kincorth was swamped with debt. Every blade of
+grass, every ear of corn, was due to some one ere ever
+it lifted its head above ground; the description given
+to Ryan by Maxwell of the state of things at his
+uncle’s was not exaggerated in the slightest, and while
+duns and bailiffs besieged the old home of the Drewitts,
+Maxwell looked on, and gnashed his teeth, and thought
+how, if <i>he</i> had the management, Kincorth should soon
+be clear of debt and the Drewitts rear their heads in
+the county once again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>From his mother he had inherited a clear clever
+head—a head calculated to look closely and warily
+after the interests of No. 1. His hospitality would not
+have carried him away; his generosity would never
+have made him a poorer man; and it was natural perhaps
+for such a temper to be irritated with the senseless
+prodigality of his uncle’s <i>ménage</i>, and to feel more
+angry at what Mr. Drewitt had left undone than grateful
+for that which he had performed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>Above all, Maxwell Drewitt had been brought up
+a martyr; since boyhood he had thought his uncle a
+usurper, himself the lawful heir. With that love for
+the first-born which is so distinguishing a feature of
+the Irish, his nurse had always regarded him as
+“wronged,” and had taught him to believe himself so.
+We read in a very ancient book that when Jacob put
+his hand on the head of Ephraim, Joseph was displeased,
+and just so the mass of the poorer population,
+much as they liked Archibald Drewitt, still considered
+that the boy had been hardly done by, and that he
+was the rightful owner of all the broad acres that went
+sloping to the sea.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With this idea Maxwell grew up: he had been
+done out of the estate by his grandfather; he was
+being kept out of it by his uncle, but the day must
+come when the property would revert to him. He was
+the heir. Kincorth must eventually return to the only
+son of the eldest son—and then—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then all at once came the news that Mr. Drewitt
+was about to marry.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And if he marry,” thought Maxwell Drewitt, as
+he lay awake and tossed about from side to side of
+his bed; “and if he marry—and if he have sons—where
+am I?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That was the question Archibald Drewitt ought to
+have considered when he adopted the children, but
+which he had never thought about, first or last.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What was to become of them?” girls who could
+never earn enough to buy shoes to their feet? A young
+man who could ride across country—bring down his
+bird—dance all night—walk all day—but who
+knew nothing likely to put a guinea in his pocket—what
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>was to become of him?—“What was to become
+of them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I echo the question which Maxwell Drewitt put to
+himself as he lay thinking out all manner of disagreeable
+and evil thoughts in the darkness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All the stories he had read and scoffed at of self-made
+men came into his head. “Why should not a
+gentleman’s son do well too? Why should not a Drewitt
+and an Irishman make money if he could? What the
+devil could there be in those English people that made
+them seem able to turn the very dirt under their feet
+to gold? Could <i>he</i> do nothing? Was there no El
+Dorado to which he might turn his steps? If he had
+Kincorth, could he not make money out of it? And if
+he tried the same scheme with any other place, might
+he not do well with that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Maxwell Drewitt sprang out of bed as he
+thought of this, and looked down over the trees, away
+and away towards Duranmore, which lay by the sea-shore,
+looking dark and disconsolate in the first dawn
+of morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He looked beyond Duranmore—at something he
+saw in his mind’s eye, but which certainly his outward
+vision could not have presented to him. “I will have
+that,” he said, and he went back to bed again and fell
+asleep as calmly and peacefully as a child.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>From that night the young man formed his plans.
+Ready money he, like his uncle, had none, and like
+his uncle also he was considerably in debt. He had
+no property save some forty acres of freehold land
+that came to him through his maternal grandfather,
+and which, having been let during his minority to a
+farmer, were now available if Maxwell chose to give
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>him the usual notice. The land, however, was poor
+and unproductive, and though there was a house on
+the ground, it had been left to go to rack and ruin
+for so long a time that it was almost uninhabitable.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>So far the future was unpromising enough. Poor
+and involved, with no profession, with no cash in
+hand, with no property save a neglected piece of barren
+land, value certainly not exceeding 25<i>l.</i> a-year—how
+could the man push his way to fortune?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was not a cheerful prospect for any one, but
+still Maxwell Drewitt looked out over it bravely,
+and hour by hour, and day by day, perfected his
+schemes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He would be idle no longer—he would work, he
+would be a rich man, when Archibald Drewitt was a
+beggar. Kincorth should <span class='fss'>NOT</span> pass away from him.
+His uncle should yet be glad to give over the whole
+place and receive an allowance from his nephew. It
+would take him, say ten years to compass this end,
+and then he would paper and paint Kincorth from
+garret to cellar; he would give every old servant
+notice; he would keep the gardens and grounds in
+such order that Kincorth should be the talk of all the
+county; and when he had got his own again he would
+marry—he would marry birth, money, and rank, and
+take his leisure under the shadow of his vine and his
+fig-tree.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In the middle of this day-dream came Ryan’s announcement
+of his uncle’s intention to settle Kincorth
+upon his wife; and it was the thought of the possibility of
+such a settlement being effected that made Maxwell
+Drewitt stand still as he entered the drive, and look
+eagerly, longingly over Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>There came a day when he looked over it with
+different eyes, when the netted sunbeams fell aslant on
+the figure of a bowed and broken man; when, satiated
+with possession and wearied of all he had struggled
+and sinned to obtain, Maxwell Drewitt walked feebly
+under the shadow of those self-same trees, thinking
+not of this world, wherein he had laid house to house
+and acre to acre, but with a terrible dread, with a
+horrible affright, of that other, to which the treasures
+of earth may not be carried.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But on the summer evening of which I am speaking
+youth was present and age afar off. He was strong,
+he knew neither ache nor pain, life was all before him,
+it was the spring of his year, the time of budding promise,
+of fearless hope. He had no dread of anything
+save of Kincorth being placed beyond his reach, and
+he had but little fear of that, for when he finished his
+reverie, and walked on towards the house, he muttered—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I think I have scotched that wheel. Old Turner
+has too tight a hold over my good uncle to let that
+cock fight. I would give five pounds to see the old
+fellow’s face when he reads my letter.” And Maxwell
+Drewitt laughed aloud as he pictured to himself the
+Quaker’s consternation on receipt of his communication.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Had Samuel Turner been anything except a
+“friend” he would have relieved his mind by swearing;
+as it was he merely said “infamous,” and went straight
+off to his solicitor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>After a consultation with that gentleman, who comforted
+him exceedingly, he sent back the following
+reply to his young correspondent:—</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span></div>
+<blockquote>
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Ashton-under-Lyne, June —, 18—.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Friend Maxwell</span>,</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Thee hast done quite right, and acted (an unusual
+thing for youths of thine age and country) with sound
+sense and good feeling. Be satisfied I shall do the
+best I can for thee and thy sisters. I grieve that thy
+uncle, a sensible man, should think at his time of life
+of marrying a young wife, and she a fashionable woman
+from London.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Thy sincere friend,</div>
+ <div class='line in8'>“<span class='sc'>Samuel Turner</span>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If thee should turn thy attention at any time to
+business, I would try to advance thy views if in my
+power.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class='c013'>Which letter, coming to Mr. Ryan amongst a
+number of others, was opened by him in mistake, and
+read right through by intention. He read it once, he
+read it twice, and then laying it down, he said to himself,
+“So this is your dodge, Maxwell Drewitt, is it?—this
+is the first step.” And when Maxwell himself
+appeared he handed him the epistle, adding, “You
+are a deal cleverer than I thought you. You will—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the devil, sir, do you mean by opening my
+letters?” burst forth his visitor, the blood rushing up
+warm and red even through his dark complexion. “I
+tell you what it is, Ryan,” he went on, “for many a
+less thing than this a fellow has had a bullet in his
+skull.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Hold your tongue, my son, and don’t talk like a
+fool,” interrupted Mr. Ryan. “How the deuce am I to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>know a letter is not for me till I have read it? On my
+honour I was half way through the thing before it occurred
+to me there was any blunder.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I don’t believe you,” said Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“For less than that many a man has been sent
+into kingdom-come at twelve paces,” retorted Ryan;
+“but there is one blessed comfort in the affair, which
+is, I don’t care whether you believe me or not. There
+now, boy, sit down, and don’t make such a confounded
+row about the matter. Honour among thieves, you
+know; and I am not going to turn informer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are an unprincipled scoundrel,” Maxwell persisted,
+“to open another person’s letter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, for Heaven’s sake! drop the saint,” exclaimed
+his friend. “Maxwell Drewitt talking about principle,
+and Satan reproving sin, always seem to me to sail
+together in the same boat. I tell you I did <span class='fss'>NOT</span> open
+the letter of malice afore-thought. Now I have made
+all the apology I intend to make, and if you do not
+like to take it you may leave it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“When a letter comes to you under cover, you
+cannot open it by accident.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Hang the lad!” exclaimed Ryan, pettishly, “the
+thing did not come under cover at all. There is the
+whole cursed concern.” And he flung letter and envelope
+to their rightful owner, who, turning up the latter,
+read:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span class='sc'>Maxwell Drewitt</span>,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>“Care of T. Ryan,</div>
+ <div class='line in4'>“Inchnagawn Cottage,</div>
+ <div class='line in6'>“near Duranmore, Galway, Ireland.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What an idiot the old fellow must be. I told him
+as—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>“I know all you said as well as if I had seen your
+letter,” interrupted Ryan. “Besides, what does it
+matter about my knowing you wrote to Turner?
+Whenever I heard Mrs. Drewitt’s jointure was cut
+down, I should have been sure you had put your foot
+in it somehow. Indeed, Max Drewitt, you are a very
+promising young man, and your uncle has every right
+to be proud of you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He is proud of nothing just at present, I fancy,”
+answered the other, recovering his temper at this
+neatly-turned compliment, and flinging himself into a
+chair as he spoke. “I left him wishing all Quakers
+and lawyers in the hottest of hot quarters. We send
+for our letters, you know, and so get them earlier than
+you do; and you may depend the opening of the bag
+made an uncommon fuss at Kincorth this morning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Let the cat out?” suggested Mr. Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, faith. If it had I might have walked. As it
+was I had nothing but black looks and short answers.
+Turner has lost no time about the affair though, has
+he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Trust a Quaker for that,” said Mr. Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It seems to me,” remarked Mr. Drewitt, “that a
+dislike to losing money is common to both churchmen
+and Quakers; but really you should see my uncle, he
+is worth travelling from here to Kincorth to get a
+sight of.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What will he do now?” inquired his companion.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How should I know? write, I suppose, to his
+father-in-law elect, and tell him unforeseen circumstances,
+etcetera, etcetera, etcetera, prevent his fulfilling
+his liberal intentions; or he may try to raise
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>money to pay off Turner. He could scarcely do it in
+the time though,” added Maxwell, reflectively.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Scarcely,” acquiesced Ryan. “But now, I say,
+Max, tell me why is this woman marrying your uncle?
+You declare she is young, pretty, well-born—she can
+therefore scarcely be in her last wonder yet. What is
+the attraction?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Kincorth,” sneered his visitor, pulling his chair
+up to the table as he spoke, with a violence which
+spilt the contents of the lawyer’s tea-cup over his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You don’t think she loves him, then?” persisted
+the other, as he wiped the tea off his sleeve and wristband.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why, what on earth should she love him for?”
+asked Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot tell—perhaps because he is frank, handsome,
+generous, amiable. Although he is nearly
+twenty years older than you, Master Maxwell Drewitt,
+I know if I were a woman, which thank heaven I am
+not, I should fall in love with him sooner than with
+you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You cannot tell what you might do if you were a
+woman,” answered the youth, thus plainly complimented;
+“but in this case what I tell you is true. The
+Colonel, her father, is poor as a church-mouse; he has
+this daughter single, and no sons; his income dies with
+him. It follows, therefore, that the girls must either
+marry or starve, and there is Kincorth for the one who
+is left. A pretty little catch it sounds. Fifteen thousand
+a year, with no encumbrance that she knows of,
+is worth looking pretty and pleasant for, eh, Ryan?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“In theory,” replied Ryan, “but not in fact. If
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>they are playing such a game it is a pity they should
+lose it; my creed is that whatever people marry for,
+whether for love or money, or position or birth, they
+should get it; and they have mistaken the cards over
+in England if they are reckoning on Kincorth as a
+trump. Suppose, however, Max, that you are wrong,
+and that this Miss Dyak is marrying your uncle not
+for love of Kincorth, but for love of himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Love of folly!” was the civil answer. “Why,
+man, you are turning spooney all at once.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No I am not,” said Ryan. “Mr. Drewitt is still
+very handsome; he is a thoroughbred Irish gentleman,
+just the sort to take a girl’s fancy. Everywhere but
+at Kincorth he is as lively and talkative as a boy. I
+do not see why she should not love him; and if she
+do, God help her!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And wherefore?” demanded his visitor, who was
+employing himself in cramming hot buttered toast
+down his throat—“and wherefore?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because love is too valuable and scarce a commodity
+to be wasted,” answered the lawyer, oracularly;
+“and further, if Miss Dyak be a woman who can love,
+she will probably feel inclined to do her duty, and if
+she do her duty, why God help her again, I say.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You mean with Sue?” This was interrogative.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I mean with everything: all is wrong at Kincorth—master,
+nephew, nieces, servants, labourers, tenants,
+everything!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’d soon make all right if I had the management,”
+remarked Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Old maids’ children and bachelors’ wives,” sneered
+Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I keep every soul about the place in order when
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>my uncle is away,” returned the other, hotly. “I
+should like to see the man that would disobey my
+orders if I were master. I’d undertake to tame any
+dog, horse, or woman in a week. But what is the
+matter with you, Ryan, you are as white as a sheet?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Ryan did not answer: he got up and walked
+to the window; after standing there for a minute he
+came back and reseated himself at the table.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What ails you?” persisted his companion, “are you
+not well?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, I am not,” was the reply. “I feel as weak
+as a cat at times, and if I were standing in the biggest
+room at Kincorth I should seem suffocating when the
+fit takes me. I don’t intend to work at home at all
+for the future, and I wish you would come and see
+me at the office, after Monday next, when you want
+to see me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Upon my soul, you are civil. I like that,” said
+his visitor. “Why do you want me to call at the office?
+Why do you not want me to come here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because I want my house to be my home after
+this week,” was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are going to be married!” exclaimed Mr.
+Drewitt. “Saul is among the prophets.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish I were married,” answered the lawyer, “if
+only for my poor little sister’s sake. She is coming
+back to me now her aunt is dead, and I must shift for
+her as best I can. That is the reason I want you to
+call at the office. Do you understand?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are afraid I might fall in love with her, I
+suppose,” laughed Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; but I am afraid, nothing being impossible, of
+her falling in love with you, and,” went on Mr. Ryan,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>speaking rapidly and, I might almost add, fiercely,
+“as you and I know one another so well that we need
+not stand on ceremony, I may say that although I do
+not pretend to be either a very good or a very
+scrupulous man, I had rather put the child in her grave
+than give her to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do not know what may be the fashion in your
+rank,” said Maxwell Drewitt, “but in ours we do not
+consider it the thing to refuse our sisters till they are
+asked for, and I shall certainly never ask you for
+yours. It is all very well for me to know you, but
+Miss Bourke is a different affair altogether. When I
+take to running in double harness it shall be with
+something more thoroughbred. Tit for tat is fair play.
+Never look so cross about being hit back, man. Let
+us get to business. I am your man throughout the
+election—at least I think I am; and if you like,
+whenever my uncle leaves for England, I will go canvassing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How many voters can you insure?” asked Ryan,
+“because if you can bring nobody but yourself, I
+don’t know that you will be of much use.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Bless my heart, how independent we are all of a
+sudden!” exclaimed young Drewitt. “Shall I go and
+tell Pryor’s committee you think me a bird not worth
+catching? How would it be with Waller’s agency
+then? What have you got to say to that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Simply what I said before—a single voter is
+not worth the having, even though he be a Drewitt.
+How many can you bring with you?” And the
+pair looked straight into one another’s eyes as Ryan
+finished.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Two dogs might have looked in the same way before
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>flying, with hungry teeth, each at the throat of
+his fellow, but the two men drew off. If Drewitt had
+not changed his tone there would have been a quarrel,
+but the young man spied danger, and answered quietly
+enough—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That depends on the cash. I can bribe where
+you could not. I can get refractory fellows out of the
+way. I can do lots of things if you make it worth
+my while. In short, I will do anything you please, on
+two conditions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There was only one the other day,” remarked the
+lawyer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There are two now, though,” was the reply.
+“First, the farm, which I suppose we may call settled;
+next, I must second Pryor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have a crow to pluck with Sache, and I can
+then have it out with him,” answered Mr. Drewitt.
+“Even you have no idea how much I can help you if
+I choose. Pitted against me, my uncle has no chance.
+He is an intruder—a man who has no earthly right
+to be at Kincorth. He has brought me up as his heir
+until now, and now he takes a young wife to himself,
+so as to cut me out for ever. On principle I am opposing
+him. Contrary to my own interests I am leaving
+the old ship of the Drewitts. If he would only
+turn me out of the house it would be the best thing
+possible for the Liberal party. Would not it be capital
+for us? Heavens! what fools people are, and what
+humbug they will swallow!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Having concluded which complimentary speech relative
+to the understandings of his fellows, the young
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>man stuffed his hand into his coat pocket, and produced
+thence a book, which Ryan seized eagerly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There are their voters,” remarked his friend, “and
+a precious job I had to get it. There you have them
+all—dead, doubtful, and certain. Now how many of
+our own dead can we personate, and how many of
+their doubtfuls can we get?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That depends greatly on you; but are we not
+losing time most needlessly? Sache and Munks and
+Marsden and Tooley and your uncle have been hard
+at work for days past, and here are we, with all the
+landed interests against us, doing nothing—literally
+nothing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“True; but when once I do start I won’t let the
+grass grow under my feet. There has been many an
+election at Duranmore, but this will cap everything.
+I hear my uncle is going to bring the new mistress of
+Kincorth home right away, and there are to be election
+balls and dinners and Heaven knows what besides,
+up at the old place. I should have thought the excitement
+of marrying ought to have been enough for him,
+without any extra fuss; but Archibald Drewitt is like
+no other human being on earth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is not a man in the county much better
+liked at any rate,” remarked Mr. Ryan, drily. “I wish
+we had him on our side.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Stuff!” exclaimed Maxwell; “can’t you take the
+book and let us get to business?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is impossible to refuse a request urged with
+such politeness,” answered the lawyer, moving over to
+his writing-table, indistinctly catching, as he did so,
+Maxwell Drewitt’s comment, which was, “Damn your
+politeness.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III.<br> <span class='c011'>The Master of Kincorth.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Archibald Drewitt, Esq., of Kincorth, was born
+a mistake. He said so himself, and therefore there can
+be no discourtesy in my repeating the observation.
+Whether different circumstances and a different training
+might have rectified nature’s error, it is hard to
+say. Circumstances and training did nothing for him,
+and accordingly a mistake he remained to the end of
+the chapter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel;” that
+was the pleasant programme sketched out for him.
+“Unstable as water, he did not excel,” and he made
+everybody who had the misfortune to be connected
+with him, miserable in consequence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Unstable as water!” Good heavens! how could
+a man, not, to be a bad man, have more said in his
+dispraise!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Unstable as water, his purposes flowed backwards
+and forwards perpetually. With youth, health, ample
+means, fair talents, he started at six-and-twenty with
+as fair prospects of happiness as need to be possessed
+by any man. Life was before him,—life with its objects,
+its pleasures, its duties; but the duties he never
+fulfilled, the pleasures he never tasted, the objects he
+never attained. At twenty-seven existence seemed a
+vast conception; at forty-one it was an unfinished, unsatisfactory,
+miserable failure.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>God deliver us, friends, from such a result! God
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>grant that, when the noon of our life comes, it may
+find some work finished, some duty discharged, so that
+as the sorrowful sunset draws near—as the darkening
+twilight and the darker night approach, we may be
+able to look back on the bright mid-day hours without
+tears of anguish, without the bitterest thought humanity
+knows, of having lost time, which, even with all eternity
+before us, we may never retrieve—never—for
+ever!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Unstable as water, the force with which the current
+of his feelings hurried him along to an object
+one moment, was only equalled by the violence of the
+flood by which he was distracted from it the next.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Over the sea of life he floated—a boat without a
+rudder, a mariner without a star—tossed hither and
+thither by every wave of passion, by every caprice
+and impulse. Almost continually he kept within sight
+of the promised land of peace and comfort and content;
+but never once, ah! never, did he manage to
+touch its shores.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Always planning, never executing. Always commencing,
+never completing. Always borrowing, never
+repaying. Always thinking, never acting. Always
+proposing, never performing, he spent the whole of his
+boyhood, manhood, and age in sending down lost opportunities
+and good intentions to that place which is
+paved with the one and roofed with the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was not, I need scarcely add, that he meant to
+break his word or intended to disappoint any living
+being; it was merely that his theory proved better
+than his practice, that purposing and promising to do
+everything he finished, like many another, by doing
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>Unstable as water, there was not a trait in his
+character but was counteracted by some diametrically
+opposite peculiarity. He was not religious, yet he
+was superstitious and bigoted. He hated the Roman
+Catholics, yet he was always asking the priest to dinner;
+he was prodigal, but still gave little away; he
+was impatient, yet bore disappointment as calmly as a
+philosopher; he was popular, yet always at feud with
+some one. He was by turns energetic and indolent,
+kind and harsh, forbearing and provoking. His abstract
+ideas on the subject of obedience were excellent,
+yet his servants and nieces ran counter to his orders
+before his face. He was a stickler for birth and blood,
+yet he supported with heart and soul Mr. Sache—a
+parvenu, and blackguard. He was honourable, yet he
+could never pay a debt to the day; his bills had always
+to be lifted by a friend, the interest on his mortgages
+was always falling behind, somebody was for
+ever suffering through, or being embarrassed by him.
+He loved punctuality, yet he could not keep an appointment
+to the hour. He was never out of hot
+water, yet he looked as well and happy as though care
+and duns and anxiety were meat and drink to him.
+He never had a settled plan, yet he would not adopt
+any other person’s scheme. He was for ever asking
+advice and never following it; in brief, Maxwell
+Drewitt described his uncle to a nicety when he said
+that he was “consistent in nothing except his inconsistency.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But notwithstanding all his faults, Archibald Drewitt
+was better liked than many a better man. He
+had such frank, gracious manners; he was such a
+thorough gentleman in his ideas, his appearance, his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>bearing; he had such a knack of turning a compliment,
+of saying pleasant things as if he meant them, of implying
+that the man to whom he was talking at the
+moment was his friend of friends—his friend beyond
+all other friends, that it was impossible to resist him,
+as impossible to remain cold and calculating in his
+presence, as it is for ice to keep from thawing in the
+sun. Let a creditor be ever so angry, an interview
+with Mr. Drewitt satisfied him. Those who had made
+vows concerning paper lent their name to the owner of
+Kincorth; even Samuel Turner, an Englishman, a
+Quaker, and a merchant, who, for his sins, had once
+enjoyed the hospitality of the Irish gentleman, did bills
+for him, and was wont to lie awake whole nights
+wondering how they were to be met, till Mr. Drewitt
+cut the knot of his perplexity by a long and pathetic
+letter setting forth how that he could not take up the
+bill, stating why he could not do so, explaining when
+he should have money in abundance, and imploring
+Mr. Turner meanwhile to do what was needful under
+the circumstances. “Please renew,” was the burden
+of Mr. Drewitt’s everlasting song, a burden with which
+many business men are conversant; but very few business
+men meet with such correspondents as fell to the
+lot of the owner of Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If was entirely his own fault getting into debt, but
+people forgot that and pitied him for it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There never was a man who drew so largely on
+the sympathies and purses of his friends, and yet his
+cheques never came back dishonoured. Liking was
+not the word to express the feeling Mr. Drewitt inspired
+in those with whom he came in contact. He
+was loved, he was idolized, and yet he left no track
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>of good deeds behind him as he walked through life.
+Even his charity, which consisted in letting every
+tramp who listed walk into the kitchen at Kincorth,
+and drink a basin of milk, or toss off a glass of poteen,
+before he trudged away with his wallet full of broken
+victuals, was as purposeless and as useless as every
+other action of his life. He helped no man who was
+helping himself; it was not the struggling tradesman,
+the hard-working labourer who benefited by Mr. Drewitt’s
+careless open-handedness; rather, it was the
+worthless vagabond, the lazy idle beggar, who fattened
+on the waste and profusion of Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Open house to all comers: covers for a score if a
+score liked to drop in; great sirloins of beef, fish as
+fine as ever swam in the sea, wine of the best, whisky
+of the strongest, brandy that had never paid the king
+a halfpenny, claret that was in the same predicament;
+“<span lang="gd">cead mille failthe!</span>” uttered in a rich soft Irish brogue—this
+was the order of things in the parlour; whilst
+in the kitchen there was a bit and a sup for all who
+chose to claim hospitality; for hungry dogs and for
+hungry men and women. There was the heat of the
+piled-up turf fire for the lame and halt who stood
+looking over the half door, muttering, “God save all
+here!” There was the cup of tea for the deaf and
+dumb, who, by reason of their misfortunes, were considered
+able to read the fortunes of others, and who
+kept all the maids from their work by prophesying in
+signs and gestures the advent of certain husbands,
+probable journeys, possible misfortunes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If the prayer of the poor avail, Archibald Drewitt
+should have been a happy man; for never a day passed
+over without “God bless him” being repeated thirty
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>or forty times. To be sure, the lips that blessed would
+have cursed even more volubly had help been refused;
+but the help never was refused. It was <i>but</i> a handful
+of meal, <i>but</i> a plate of broken meat, <i>but</i> the bag of
+potatoes, <i>but</i> the screw of tea, <i>but</i> the blessing lightly
+earned, the curse readily averted; and still Archibald
+Drewitt did not prosper, still the property went like
+the house, like the grounds, like the porter’s lodge,
+like the entrance—to rack and ruin.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Would you grudge the craturs a bite to keep life
+in them?” asked one of the old servants one day when
+Maxwell Drewitt had made some remark concerning
+the number of beggars he saw about the place.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’d make the rascals work and earn it,” he answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yer grandfather, God rest his sowl! would niver
+have made a spache like that about poor done men,”
+she replied. “There was many a one thought he had
+done wrong,—I thrust he is now in glory—in passing
+by his eldest son to lave the place to the masther;
+but there is one thing sure and certain, that it is a
+blessing for the poor you did not get it, Masther Maxwell.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The poor had best make the most of their blessing
+then while it lasts,” remarked the young man;
+“for a man cannot go on feeding a county for ever,
+and my uncle is making ducks and drakes of Kincorth
+as fast as he knows how.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, Masther Maxwell, it’s not for you to be
+saying anything about who he feeds.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because he has fed me, I suppose; because he
+has kept me like the beggars in poverty and idleness,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>remarked Maxwell. “I owe him no thanks for that,
+Nannie, rather the reverse.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I always heard that Nicholas Drewitt was a terribly
+wise old gentleman, but I am sure of it now,”
+answered Nannie.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, do you be a wise old woman,” recommended
+Mr. Drewitt, junior, “and make a purse for
+yourself and keep it; for I swear to you, Nannie, that
+if ever I am owner of Kincorth I’ll clear it of all the
+vermin that are eating the heart out of the corn now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And with this Maxwell Drewitt turned on his heel
+and walked away, thinking, “If ever it do come to
+me it will be valueless, and I—I would have kept
+it together; I would have made Kincorth something
+worth talking about. Curse him,” said the young man
+stopping suddenly. “Curse him for a fool!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was hard. His uncle ought either to have cast
+him off or provided for him suitably. The very
+beggars had almost as much good of the estate as he,
+and they had no claim on Kincorth as he had—a
+claim in equity though not in law.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Why did the man want to marry now? Had he
+not been in love fourteen years before? and was not
+one love enough for such a temperament for life?
+Had he not been jilted? Had he not stood with the
+muzzle of a pistol touching his forehead, when his
+brother found him? and did not the pistol miss fire?
+and had not the pair a fight for the weapon, which
+ended in George Drewitt knocking the owner of Kincorth
+down and sending for a doctor to bleed him till
+he fainted?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish he would take the same notion again,”
+thought Maxwell, “and that I had the loading. He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>would not fall in love a third time;” and the young
+man sneered bitterly as he remembered his father’s
+weakness in interfering to save the life that stood
+between him and Kincorth, as he thought of all the
+oaths Archibald Drewitt had sworn when the fever
+passed away about dividing the estate, about giving
+his brother a share, about all he would do for the
+children, about how he would never marry, never look
+with love on the face of any woman again, but live
+single, and bring up Maxwell and his sisters as though
+they were his own son and daughters.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If an amiable man does us a wrong we hate him
+fifty times more than if he were as black as Erebus—hate
+him because the world joins issue with us on the
+question. Had Archibald Drewitt been like Maxwell
+Drewitt, nephew and uncle could have fought the
+matter out on equal social grounds; but as it was
+society could never be made to believe that Archibald
+Drewitt could be wrong, for which reason Maxwell
+Drewitt hated him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was hard. I can imagine no cross harder to
+bear than that of a man like Maxwell Drewitt placed
+in Maxwell Drewitt’s position.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In England such a position would have been bad
+enough; in England, where any one with courage, and
+industry, and cleverness, may eventually make his
+way; but in Ireland, in Connemara, in a country where
+trade is looked down upon, where work is ignominy,
+where there are but two classes—the very rich who
+do nothing, and the very poor who do as little as they
+can help, my reader, think of it!—think of a gentleman
+beggar—of a man who had all the instincts
+of his class—who looked upon a merchant as an inferior
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>being—who had been brought up to no profession—whose
+proud stomach could never have
+brooked the idea of business—who laughed scornfully
+at Samuel Turner’s well-meant postscript—who would
+have tried to keep up the name and the property and
+the family dignity,—and who was still a pauper.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Think of it. He was hardly done by, and all the
+more hardly, perhaps, because Kincorth belonged to
+an interloper—to one of those younger sons who,
+since the time of the patriarchs, have been continually
+putting the noses of elder sons out of joint.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Never a Drewitt before had thought of making
+money; but Maxwell was determined to make it now.
+He was born in advance of his age; the men of thirty
+years ago did not think much of draining, of subsoils,
+of top-dressing, of the rotation of crops, and for that
+matter indeed to look at Connemara now, one would
+think that the men of the present day thought as little
+of these matters as their predecessors.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Once Maxwell had visited England—once he had
+seen corn growing, where for centuries previously
+nothing had thriven save rushes and reeds and wild
+fowl. He had asked how the change was effected,
+how the morass was turned into a garden, the
+wilderness into a fruitful plain; and while his host
+told him he thought of Galway—thought of the
+rushes and the bogs there—thought as only an
+Irishman can think of his native country, and of the
+best way of bettering his condition.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In England, too, he saw smiling cottages, well-fed
+men and women, children with clothes on their
+back and shoes to their feet. Again he asked for
+information, and again he was told that these men,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>who were better clad than the best tenants who reluctantly
+came to Kincorth in May and November,
+were not landholders, only labourers.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is it,” thought Maxwell Drewitt, then only a
+lad; “the small farms are the curse of Ireland. Our
+tenants ought to be our labourers—that is it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And he went back, Irish like, making fun of the
+English for having a good dinner, and yet scorning
+his countrymen for being contented with potatoes and
+salt. It is the Irishman of thirty years ago and more
+I am talking about, remember. It is not to be supposed
+the Irishman of 1865 bears more than the
+faintest family resemblance to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At any rate, the individual whose story I am
+telling detested the English as English, and yet was
+willing to learn a lesson out of their book of prosperity.
+He liked the flesh-pots, but he hated the country. He
+loved the wealth, but he could not stand the accent.
+He could have horsewhipped the first Irish peasant he
+saw shrinking out of the way of his galloping horse,
+and yet he thought the English too independent.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Look at England,” he would say in Ireland, and
+yet in his heart, while he was in England, he loved
+Irish ways and Irish manners best.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He thought of those great English farmers riding
+their thoroughbreds, sending their daughters to boarding-schools,
+walking to church beside their wives, who
+were dressed in silks and merinos, and then he looked
+into Irish hovels, where the owner of the soil—owner
+so far as paying his rent can make a man so—never
+knew what it was to eat an egg laid by his own hens,
+to taste butter made from his own cows’ milk, year
+after year.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>“It is all wrong,” concluded Maxwell Drewitt;
+“these men ought to be labourers: they ought to be
+eating fat bacon and drinking strong ale like the
+English. How <i>do</i> the English make money as if it
+was to be picked up by the road side? Give Galway
+to them and in twenty years they would be advertising
+villa sites—villa sites”—and the young man looked
+away towards the mountains and smiled to think how
+soon the Cockneys could spoil Connemara.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But they would live like fighting cocks out of it—they
+would,” finished Maxwell Drewitt; “and it is
+a burning shame and a crying disgrace that the Irish
+cannot do the same.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We do very well as we are, Max,” said his uncle,
+when he propounded these heretical doctrines to him.
+“Let well alone. The Almighty never intended us to
+be like England or he would not have given us such
+an iron-bound coast. The country is different and the
+people are different and our ways are different. If
+you put shoes and stockings on the children they
+would limp along the roads. If you washed their faces
+and sent them to school they would cry their eyes out.
+If you put Davy Blake into an English farmhouse
+and told his wife she must keep it clean, they would
+be wretched. Each nation goes through the centuries
+its own way, as each man travels to heaven by a different
+road. Many a person has tried to mend us,
+and many a person has come to grief. Stick to your
+horse across country, Maxwell, and leave the rights
+and wrongs of Ireland to those whose business it is to
+study them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Admirable advice doubtless, and kindly meant;
+but then the giver was a man whose way had been
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>made for him, and the receiver had to try and make
+his own way as best he could. And gold mines were
+not common in that part of the country. Money was
+not lying under foot as it was reported to be in London;
+where, however, Colonel Dyak had not improved
+his opportunities any more than Mr. Archibald Drewitt
+had improved his, in Connemara.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>No two men ever travelled to the dogs at so equal
+a pace as the Englishman about town and the Irish
+country gentleman. They went by different roads, but
+their destination was the same: and yet each looked
+up to the other, and while Dyak thought Drewitt was
+rolling in wealth, Drewitt considered Dyak an individual
+without a care.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They had met after a fashion common enough in
+Galway. Colonel Dyak went there to fish, and Mr.
+Drewitt coming across him one day, on the shores of
+one of the innumerable lakes, asked him to dinner.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Colonel Dyak accepted the invitation, and
+ate Mr. Drewitt’s mutton and drank his claret, and
+rode his horses every day for six weeks; at the end
+of which time he insisted on carrying his host back to
+London with him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Nothing loth, Mr. Drewitt went over twice, and
+the second time he returned to Kincorth it was as an
+engaged man; who by way of bettering his prospects
+had asked a young and portionless woman to cast in
+her lot with his.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was one kind of wife who might have saved
+both him and Kincorth. A wife with a clear head
+and a strong will, able to carry things with a high hand—clever
+and active and determined and economical
+withal, would have queened it at the old place and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>kept the mortgaged acres together; but, as a matter of
+course, Miss Dyak was gentle and loving and trusting—a
+woman perfectly incompetent to fight out any
+battle—a woman with a sweet placid face—with
+calm, thoughtful eyes—with smooth, glossy hair—with
+a soft, white, satiny skin—with a low voice—with
+timid, caressing manners—with no head to
+plan; but with a heart to be broken.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is hard for me to write about her—hard for
+me to go on from this point and tell of the storms and
+rain that fell upon that drooping head—of the trials
+and crosses that bowed that poor heart before she lay
+down to sleep the only really peaceful slumber our
+poor humanity knows.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She was not the wife for Mr. Drewitt, and Mr.
+Drewitt was not the husband for her; but notwithstanding
+that, they chose to take one another for better
+or for worse.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was no better to the matter, however—it
+was all worse; it was like everything Archibald Drewitt
+did or proposed to do—a mistake.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Colonel Dyak was charmed with the match, and
+delighted with his son-in-law elect. He had enjoyed
+himself greatly at Kincorth. He knew Mr. Drewitt’s
+horses were capital. He had landed salmon twelve
+pounds weight. The lakes in Galway were alive with
+fish: the mountains were covered with game.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A fine country, I believe,” remarked one of his
+club acquaintance to him. “Magnificent scenery, they
+tell me—monstrous properties—capable of being
+improved to any extent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Whereupon Colonel Dyak broke ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A fine country! Why, sir, there is not an Englishman
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>breathing knows what a country it is; there is
+not a Londoner would believe in such scenery being
+within five hundred miles of him unless he saw it.
+Mountains! I couldn’t tell you how high they are.
+Lakes! God only knows how many hundred lakes I
+saw in one day. Harbours! why the coast is a succession
+of front doors facing America. Rivers! if you
+turned the Thames the other way, and made it run
+from Yorkshire south, it would not be half so fine as
+the Shannon. Fuel! you can’t imagine what a magnificent
+fire turf makes. Land! there are thousands upon
+thousands of acres that have never been turned up by
+a plough. Labour! eightpence to tenpence a day in
+the summer, sixpence to eightpence in the winter.
+Society! I never was among a more jovial set of
+people in my life. Ay, that is a country! with building
+materials lying by the wayside, with granite roads,
+with marble quarries, silver mines, rock and mountain
+and lake and sea. You must come to Galway with me
+sometime and judge for yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I should like to go greatly,” was the reply. “I
+am curious to know why such a country should not
+prosper.” And the little Londoner took snuff, and then
+adjusted his double eye-glasses, thinking doubtless that
+he could solve the problem, which is about as dark as
+the Sphinx, in a scamper through Ireland.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That is one of the beauties of Ireland, I may here
+remark. Everybody imagines, when he begins the
+pleasing study of her manifold sorrows, of her excessive
+poverty, that he has got hold of the right end of
+the stick at last; that he has hit on the word with
+which in some remote age the puzzle was locked so
+carefully that no one has ever been able to open it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>since; and led on by this delusion, he proceeds triumphantly
+only to discover that the riddle seems to
+have no solution, that all arguments about the sister
+island work in a circle, and return to the same point
+in the end.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Colonel Dyak, however, was a man who did not
+trouble himself with questions of this kind. He took
+things as he found them: if they were well, he was
+pleased; if they were ill, he trusted they would right
+themselves in time; and if they did not right themselves,
+it still was no business of his; and he felt something
+more than satisfied with the match his daughter
+proposed to herself, although her intended husband’s
+property was situated in Ireland; in a country the nonprosperity
+whereof puzzled the wise head of his club
+acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Good fishing, good shooting, good hunting could
+not, however, quite reconcile Mrs. Dyak to the idea of
+Agnes throwing herself away upon a commoner, and
+that commoner a man unable to make satisfactory marriage
+settlements upon her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If she <i>must</i> marry,” remarked the eldest daughter,
+who, on the strength of having secured a baronet, took
+upon herself airs in the family cabinet—“if she <i>must</i>
+marry a baronet, why did she not make sure that he
+was a rich one?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But your papa says, my love,” put in Mrs. Dyak,
+mildly, “that Mr. Drewitt’s income is fifteen thousand
+a year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“More likely fifteen hundred,” answered Lady
+Ebbutt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And he settles an estate of I think it is two thousand
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>acres on Agnes,” went on Mrs. Dyak, not heeding
+her daughter’s remark.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Depend upon it the estate is a mountain, mamma,”
+said the baronet’s wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, Bertha, whether it is a mountain or not we
+cannot help ourselves in the matter now. Agnes and
+her papa have set their minds on the match; and indeed,
+my dear, I may tell you in confidence, that as
+we could not have afforded another season in town, it
+is a great blessing Aggy has made a choice. For we
+must go abroad, and what chance would there be of
+her marrying abroad, tell me that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But Lady Ebbutt declined to gratify her mother’s
+desire: she only observed that she thought it would be
+better for her parents to reside in Ireland rather than
+on the Continent.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Papa would like it of all things,” she finished.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I should not,” answered Mrs. Dyak, and the conversation
+dropped.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Thus the marriage was finally agreed to by all the
+parties interested. As a matter of course Mrs. Dyak
+protested against it, and maintained for some time sufficient
+coolness of demeanour to impress Mr. Drewitt
+with a due sense of the honour Miss Dyak had conferred
+upon him by accepting his hand, and the very
+moderate settlement that accompanied it; but in the
+end Mrs. Dyak gracefully gave way; and in a very
+fashionable church, and attended by a little crowd of
+bridesmaids, Archibald Drewitt and Agnes Dyak were
+made man and wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a very gay wedding. There were plenty
+of grand people in the church: there was no lack of
+fashionable guests at the breakfast.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>Everything was in the best style. It was Colonel
+Dyak’s last shot, and he did not spare the powder.
+Any one might have thought his yearly income something
+enormous. Even Mr. Drewitt wondered how it
+happened that behind such a marriage feast there
+should be no marriage settlement, little dreaming that
+if there had been, Miss Dyak would never have been
+permitted to marry a man who lived in Ireland, who
+had no house in London, or even in Dublin, who never
+resided abroad for any part of the year, and whose
+estates were embarrassed to such an extent that only
+two or three people had other than the faintest idea
+which part of his property belonged to him and which
+to his mortgagees.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a nice fate, truly, that Agnes Dyak was
+robed that morning, all in pure white, to go out to
+meet.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who shall say that human sacrifices have ceased
+to be offered in Britain?” whispered one cynical bachelor
+to his neighbour, when the pair joined hands and took
+one another till death should part them. “Who shall
+say there are no victims slain on the horns of the altar
+now?” And the speaker laughed, and his friend laughed,
+and the friend said the idea was “devilish good,” and
+the speaker thought in his heart that he had put it
+rather neatly, while both forgot how true many words
+spoken in jest may be; and neither imagined that when
+Agnes Drewitt walked down the long aisle a wife, she
+was walking on, at the same time, to endure her
+martyrdom.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV.<br> <span class='c011'>Coming Home.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>When a man goes a-wooing, he does not, as a rule,
+turn the worst side of his affairs out for the inspection
+of his ladye love and his ladye love’s family. Rather
+on the contrary: he is apt to throw a little <i>couleur de
+rose</i> over his prospects, and to insist that all whom the
+matter may concern shall view the landscape through
+that medium, instead of by any truer light.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>This had been Mr. Drewitt’s policy, at all events.
+He had kept his advantages in the foreground—his
+drawbacks well in the rear. He intended to reform
+Kincorth, so what use could there be in talking about
+its previous state of wretched mismanagement? He
+was quite determined to make a radical change with
+regard to Maxwell and his sisters; so why, when the
+Drewitts’ soiled linen was all going straight off to the
+laundress, should he trouble himself to wash it in
+London, in the sight of the enemy?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Only let me get this election business over,”
+thought Mr. Drewitt, “and I will send the two younger
+girls to school, and try if I cannot buy or beg Maxwell
+a commission. Susan is my greatest difficulty. I
+wish to heaven somebody would marry her. I might
+manage a small portion.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Alas! and alas! for the good intentions unfulfilled,
+for the faithful promises broken, for the debt of gratitude
+that had now become burdensome, for the trust
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>he had broken, for the noble plans he had never carried
+out.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Is there nothing pitiful to you, my reader, in the
+picture of this middle-aged man, whose work remained
+for ever undone, who had planned in youth to reap
+such abundant harvests, but who stood now, in the very
+prime and summer of his age, with the spring crops
+still unsown, with the fields of his life bare and barren,
+with the broad lands of opportunity still untilled, with
+his Lord’s talents still unemployed—still bringing in
+no interest against the day when his accounts would
+be required of him?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If we miss the seed time, what shall we even think
+of casting into the ground when our neighbours’ wheat
+is ripening? Even such poor intentions as Mr. Drewitt
+now muttered to himself, in lieu of those great honest
+designs that he had once promised to work out for the
+benefit of his brother’s children. Half his wealth, all
+his influence, all his care, had come to a vague commission
+for Maxwell, a possible school for Wilhelmina
+and Kathleen, and an uncertain fortune for the <i>bête
+noir</i> of the establishment, Susan Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was all wrong together—the time had not
+been redeemed, the seed had not been sown, the talent
+had not been put out at usury—it was all wrong;
+and so Archibald Drewitt found when the harvest time
+arrived, and there was no grain for the gathering.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But in those bright sunshiny days, when he brought
+home his bride, the summer sun was gladdening the
+earth, the autumn was afar off; and cursed with that
+peculiar temperament which always believes that “the
+future is the time to mend,” Archibald Drewitt made
+himself happy in the present, and still permitted his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>wife to view her future prospects through the medium
+of that stained glass to which I have already referred.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She knew, of course, that Maxwell and his sisters
+resided at Kincorth; and if there was anything unpleasant
+to hear about them she would become acquainted
+with it soon enough, seeing that she was travelling
+home as fast as a very indifferent pair of post
+horses could take her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell had been right. London is a long distance
+from Galway now, and in the days of which I am
+writing it was further still.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It had cost Mr. Drewitt some ready money to get
+to London at all, and although he was the bridegroom,
+it had cost him more to get married. Elsewhere the
+fact has been stated that coin of the realm and Mr.
+Drewitt were comparative strangers—adding all of
+which together, the result arrived at is that a bridal
+tour was beyond his means, that he could only do
+what he did do, viz., bring home his wife with as little
+delay as possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>We read that when Elijah the Tishbite fled from
+the wrath of Jezebel he journeyed into the wilderness,
+and travelled thence forty days and forty nights, till
+he came to that cave in Horeb where his wanderings
+ended.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In the wilderness, on the mountain, the queen’s
+anger was impotent to hurt him—towards those fastnesses,
+the hand of that “cursed woman” was stretched
+out in vain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When, in the after-time, Agnes Drewitt heard the
+story of the prophet recited, she always fancied that
+from all the haunts of men, from all the towns and
+cities in which Baal was worshipped, Elijah must have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>fled to a country like Connemara, where, beside lonely
+lakes, the plover whistles and the bittern cries, where
+desolation reigns supreme, where there is a solitude
+which may be heard, a silence which has a voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Under the shadow of those never-ending mountains
+they travelled on; beside those interminable lakes the
+road wound in and about. Away to the left were hills
+without end; to the right the blue conical mountains
+reared their heads towards heaven. In the valley—which
+has no end, but runs between chains of mountain,
+the commencement of which lies so far behind that
+one forgets when a view of any extent of level land
+was last obtained—in the valley, I say, the very
+genius of desolation appeared to Mrs. Drewitt to have
+taken up his abode.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Here were no smiling fields, no neat farmhouses,
+no cows luxuriating in pleasant pastures, no gentlemen’s
+seats, no hedges, no gardens, no homesteads.
+Mile after mile stretched away the valley; no turn in
+the road brought with it a change of scene; and often,
+as the road turned, far as the valley extended, nothing
+met the eye save lonely lakes and swiftly-flowing
+streams, thousands of acres of bog land, thousands more
+of moor, where a few sheep and a few ponies grazed
+at will among the blocks of granite and the huge
+boulders, that, becoming detached from the mountain
+side, had fallen through the centuries, and still lay
+where they had fallen.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Lakes where water-lilies float, where the tall reeds
+grow sparingly—lakes, the shores of which are bog
+and moorland—lakes that for number are well-nigh
+countless, that are desolate, and solitary beyond all
+power of description; rivers that wind not between
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>wooded banks, or in deep beds of their own digging,
+but that crawl on in the summer over stone and granite,
+and that in winter spread wide as they like over moorland
+and bog, carrying with them detached fragments of
+rock, which seem in the arms of the mighty flood to be
+borne lightly as feathers, away and away! A country
+without wood, without a house; a country where it seemed
+out of place, out of keeping, to meet a living being.
+This was what Agnes Drewitt saw as the post-horses
+laboured up the hills, or were lashed into a weary
+canter down them; this was the strange land which
+she was entering as a pilgrim and a stranger, wherein
+she was going to try to make her home.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is all very well to travel through these Irish
+Highlands. The kingdom of Connemara is a grand
+kingdom, and the guide-books do not exaggerate when
+they call its scenery solemn and sublime; but it is one
+thing to visit a country and another to reside in it.
+The young Englishwoman looked out with dread and
+dismay on those over-shadowing mountains, on those
+endless lakes that looked stern and desolate even with
+the summer’s sun shining down upon them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The wilderness Elijah fled through could not have
+been more lonely than Connemara; the cave at the
+mouth whereof he stood while the strong wind passed
+by, and the earthquake shook the hills, and the fire
+flashed before him, might have been in just such a
+mountain as any of those that frowned upon her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Ahab’s wrath was powerless to touch the prophet
+there; the king’s writ, she had heard, was not worth a
+halfpenny in the land through which she was travelling;
+and Mrs. Drewitt was just thinking of this saying,
+and wondering what such a savage country would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>be like when winter’s frosts covered the ground, when
+winter’s rains and snows swelled the torrents,—when
+suddenly, the road taking a sharp curve, the view
+changed—the bogs and the lakes and the mountains
+were left behind, and the sea burst upon her view.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>How shall words ever give even the faintest idea
+of the exquisite beauty and peace of that summer’s
+evening scene? How can pen and ink ever tell how
+green looked the grassy knolls that lay down by the
+shore; how fair were the islands in Duranmore Bay;
+how soft, and rich, and mellow the golden light that
+lay on wood and water, that steeped the trees and fell
+in great patches on the hill sides? With what a glad
+sound of welcome the “sweet chimes of the waves”
+sung their low song in the stranger’s ear! “From
+Newfoundland and from Labrador,” as has been happily
+said, they had come “to mingle their voice in harmony,”
+on that sea-beat shore; and Agnes Drewitt fancied
+she knew what they were telling her, and listened
+to their melody with an answering music swelling in
+her breast.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was like heaven bursting upon her view; it was
+like light after darkness; it was like liberty after
+slavery; it was like everything her fancy had painted—her
+heart desired; it was beautiful—it was perfect;
+and Agnes Drewitt, young, impressionable, imaginative,
+basked in the loveliness and the sunshine, and was
+happy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On one of the roads through Connemara there is a
+stone bearing the singular statement that from there it
+is twenty-one miles to Hell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Where the Hell referred to may be—whether in
+this world or the next—I am unable to tell; but I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>am sure had Mrs. Drewitt been intrusted with the preparation
+of a table of distances she would have called
+Duranmore heaven, and given it as the ultimate destination
+of all tourists in Galway.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That sweet bay! those soft green hills! those grand
+headlands! seemed beautiful—thrice beautiful, after
+the bleak desolation, the utter loneliness of the wilderness
+through which she had passed; and she leaned
+forward in the carriage and strained her eyes over the
+landscape, while she said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How exquisite! How perfect!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is Kincorth,” said Mr. Drewitt, pointing to
+the northern side of the bay. “That is Kincorth,” and
+he sighed as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>From sea, from hill, from wood, from mountain
+Agnes Drewitt withdrew her eager gaze, to turn towards
+her husband and inquire the meaning of that sigh. She
+was a clinging creature, reader, a woman who could
+not bear the sight of unhappiness, the sound of woe;
+she was a loving woman, who could not endure that
+her husband should have a care or a sorrow hidden
+from her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Why did he sigh? Was he tired? Was he ill?
+Was he unhappy? And the little hand stole out to
+clasp his, and the sweet eyes turned towards him full of
+a ready sympathy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Unhappy!” he answered, carried away by one of
+those impulses he was as impotent as a child to control.
+“Unhappy! I have never been happy before. I never
+knew the meaning of the word till I saw you. I never
+felt peace, perfect peace till I sat thus, with your hand
+clasped in mine. If I sighed it was because I felt at
+last happy and contented—as one takes a long, deep
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>breath, when sitting down, after a weary journey, to
+rest. Do you understand me, darling? Life has been
+that journey, and you are the rest to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She did not understand him then, though she comprehended
+his meaning perfectly afterwards. She did
+not know that instead of bringing her home to comfort
+and bless her, he was bringing her home to comfort
+and bless him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A slight, fragile thing she was, yet strong enough
+for this poor, weak, unstable creature to lean against
+and feel secure. From that day forth she was to be
+the crutch and he the cripple; she the rock and he the
+billow; she the nest and he the bird. Maxwell Drewitt
+had sketched the outline of her future life to perfection;
+but he had not been equally accurate in calling
+her choice mercenary, her marriage an interested one.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had elected to cast her lot with Archibald
+Drewitt because she loved him; and loving him, she
+would have gone through fire and water for his sake.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is strange that such men are able to secure such
+wives; but it is not more strange than that the most
+unselfish of men draw so often viragos out of the
+matrimonial lottery.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>We hear a great deal about the balance of power;
+is this the balance (matrimonially) of good and evil?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>After his little lament about having found life’s
+paths rough and dreary, Mr. Drewitt became both
+talkative and cheerful, and discoursed concerning the
+improvements he purposed effecting, concerning the
+alterations he intended making.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Next year,” he said, “I will rebuild the porter’s
+lodge; and you shall draw me a pretty design for
+one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>In her heart Agnes thought that a new lodge ought
+to be erected at once; but she had sense enough not to
+say so, and merely remarked that the creepers and
+climbers which covered the damp walls and the broken
+roof were extremely picturesque.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Irish picturesqueness, however, could not make up
+to this stranger from a wealthier land for the absence
+of all comfort, for the ruined walls, for the unmown
+grass, for the unrolled gravel, for the unswept walks.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The place, as Maxwell Drewitt in his pride thought
+he could keep it, would have suited Mrs. Drewitt a vast
+deal better than Kincorth, as it was.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Within the gates, under the arching trees, the old
+feeling of loneliness and desolation came upon her once
+more, and she shivered she scarcely knew why; and
+Mr. Drewitt wrapped her shawl more closely round her,
+while he whispered tenderly—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Welcome home, my darling; welcome home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They were on the very threshold of home now; but
+no one came forth to greet her. The hall door stood
+wide, but no servant was there—no relation, no
+living thing to meet the woman who, with that lonely
+feeling growing stronger every moment, walked into
+the house which she never left for any other habitation
+until she passed from under its roof-tree in middle age,
+with children beside her, with youth behind her, wearing
+widow’s weeds for the husband of her choice, old
+before her time, with wrinkles across her forehead,
+with silver threads sprinkled through her rich dark
+hair.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When I come to tell you of how she left Kincorth,
+I would ask you to remember how she entered it—how
+she stood in the hall while the driver brought in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>the luggage and her husband fee’d him handsomely
+with almost the last money in his purse, how she followed
+Mr. Drewitt as he flung open the door of room
+after room to find each in succession empty, how she
+sat down finally in a little breakfast parlour and
+watched her husband first pull the bell till he broke
+it, and then go to the kitchens personally, to summon
+assistance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In the distance she heard him rating and raging
+and cursing and swearing as she had never heard any
+one rate and rage and curse and swear before; and
+then the tempest lulled as suddenly as it had arisen,
+and Mr. Drewitt returned, followed by Nannie, who,
+curtseying reverentially to her new mistress, at once
+broke the ice with,</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s welcome home ye are, ma’am, and shure an’
+we did not expec’ ye for a couple of hours yit, Mr. Maxwell
+said—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Show your mistress her room, Nannie,” interrupted
+Mr. Drewitt, “and I’ll see to the trunks being taken
+up. And Agnes, my darling,” he murmured, while
+Nannie, who was “up to the manœuvres of new-married
+folks,” discreetly left the room, “if the house seems
+cold to you just at first, don’t be vexed; they did not
+mean it, they did not know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She lifted her sweet face to his, but she did not
+raise her eyes, for they were full of tears, and she did
+not want him to see that they were so. It was all
+mightily unlike the coming home she had so foolishly
+pictured to herself. No friendly hands stretched out
+towards her! no warm Irish words of welcome! But
+she would not let that discourage her: she would be
+brave, she would be strong, and do her duty.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>She made this vow to herself with her husband’s
+kiss warm on her lips. And she was strong, she did
+do her duty, and she had her reward.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An’ shure, ma’am, an’ it’s myself is heartily glad
+to see a mistress comin’ home till the ould place,” remarked
+Nannie, as she assisted Mrs. Drewitt to change
+her dress and unpack her boxes, and put some portion
+of their contents in order. “The lonely dissolate place
+this has been, the Lord knows, wantin’ a lady to keep
+things straight and genteel. An’ ye have come all the
+way from London, I hear; and it’s a terrible big place,
+they tells me. I hope ye won’t be feelin’ lonesome
+here, ma’am; for though it is a fine country—God
+bless it!—ye’ll know it strange and solitary like at
+first.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At that Agnes Drewitt gave way, and she stooped
+her head for a minute while her tears fell fast as rain.
+Then she recovered herself and said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is strange and solitary; you are right. You
+have put what I was feeling into words for me; but it
+is a fine country, and I will love it for my husband’s
+sake, and I will love its people too, if they will let
+me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They would be mighty queer people if they did
+not love ye back, my lady,” answered Nannie, in all
+sincerity; “so don’t fret, ma’am, but just give them the
+pleasant word and the bright smile and they’ll come to
+like you so well they’ll forget you’re not Irish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Having administered which piece of comfort Nannie
+proceeded with her folding and straightening, and Mrs.
+Drewitt bathed the traces of tears from her cheeks preparatory
+to returning to the room where she had left
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>Mr. Drewitt was not there, however, when she
+descended; but she met in his stead a young man who,
+with his hat on his head, and his hands buried deep
+in his pockets, was whistling to himself that loveliest
+of all the Irish airs—Cushla ma cree.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At sight of Mrs. Drewitt he pulled his hands out
+of his pockets, took his hat off his head, and introduced
+himself to her as Maxwell Drewitt. “And these are
+my sisters,” he added, as three girls came trooping
+into the room.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And consequently my nieces,” finished Mrs. Drewitt,
+kissing them all round; an attention the young
+ladies seemed to regard as altogether superfluous and
+ill-timed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Does she know who we are really?” thought Maxwell
+Drewitt, as he saw Mrs. Drewitt’s glance resting
+first on his sisters’ shabby dresses, and then reverting
+to her own rich attire. “Does she know I ought to be
+master here—that I am the eldest son of the eldest
+son? or can she fancy we are pauper dependents on
+the bounty of her husband? I will take care she does
+not long remain in a state of blissful ignorance about
+that matter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And he did take care; before three days he had
+found opportunity to tell her the whole story; before
+three days he had opened the skeleton-closet at Kincorth,
+and anatomized its contents for her benefit.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is very hard for them, and it is very hard for
+me,” argued poor Mrs. Drewitt; “but I will try to do
+my duty by them—and by everybody about the place.
+I will—I will—I will.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V.<br> <span class='c011'>Peacemaking.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Doing one’s duty (a charming phrase in the abstract,
+doubtless) is usually much less agreeable in
+practice than in theory, seeing that it generally involves
+annoying oneself, and displeasing other people.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>No credit attaches to it, because after all we have
+only done what we ought to have done; duty goes to
+bed weary and rises early; duty darns stockings and
+turns its dresses; duty does needlework, and pricks its
+fingers in the process; duty tends the sick and humours
+the fretful; duty gives to the poor, and goes about clad
+in the garments of humility; and for many and many
+a long day—perhaps until, there being no more
+duties to be performed in this world, it betakes itself
+to the next—duty has the felicity of receiving all
+the kicks of which society is so liberal, while halfpence
+and silver and gold are showered upon those
+who do not go in for duty at all, but simply for
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There is nothing so hard to discharge, satisfactorily,
+as our duty; there is nothing for which we get so little
+thanks. It is like work looked down upon as a vulgar
+virtue: and yet when the small sums that go to make
+up life’s great account come to be cast out, duty and
+work may be found to have borne good interest; though
+the one has oftentimes seemed to our eyes but as the
+toil of the ant, and the other but useless labour, but
+misspent energy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>Shall we say for all this, however, that the weakest
+among us is right to drift with the stream—to make
+no effort to stem its torrent? Would it have been better
+for Mrs. Drewitt to have never attempted to mend the
+ways of that wretched Irish household?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She never achieved a great deal, but she did something.
+After all it is not given to many women to
+accomplish much, and she tried her best; and, as I
+have said before, in the long run she had her reward.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>During the first few weeks of her residence at
+Kincorth the establishment was in a state of anarchy,
+for was not the election coming on, and did not an
+election always upset everything?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Gentlemen from Dublin—gentlemen from England—gentlemen
+from the remotest parts of the country
+came to Kincorth the moment Mr. Drewitt’s return was
+announced, and took up their quarters there.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was breakfast all the morning—it was luncheon
+all the day—it was dinner all the night—it was
+noise and confusion and excitement from one sunrise
+to another.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Canvassing was about the last work Mrs. Drewitt
+was fitted for, but out canvassing she had to go, with
+the Honourable Mrs. Munks and the Countess of
+Popingham.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was not a description of bribery she did not
+see practised.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am hungry,” Lady Popingham would say, with
+her arch Irish face lighted up by a very intelligible
+smile; and she would go into a baker’s shop in Duranmore
+and ask for a bun.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You’re for Pryor?” she would remark—her mouth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>full of new bread, and her small fingers fiddling with
+half her purchase—“You’re for Pryor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, I am not quite determined, my lady. They
+were in here the other day, and were bidding uncommon
+high; but your ladyship understands that I never
+did sell my vote, and I never will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is honest and independent, is it not, Mrs.
+Drewitt?” observed the Countess. “I suppose you will
+not consider it bribery though to ask you to a ball,
+Mr. Rorke? There is to be one over at Kincorth to-morrow
+night, and Mrs. Drewitt will be very glad to
+see you there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And with that Lady Popingham left her unfinished
+bun on the counter, and the baker said he would come
+and bring “the wife.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And we may count on you, Mr. Rorke,” remarked
+the Countess, from the doorstep; “you would rather
+give your vote to us than sell it to Mr. Pryor.” At
+which observation the man laughed and the lady
+laughed, and the bread was swept into the till, and
+the Conservatives could count one more on their
+side.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is not in flesh and blood to be near a contested
+election and not to become interested in it; and before
+long Mrs. Drewitt found herself doing what she could
+to secure voters and to please their wives. She danced
+with the men—she danced with that identical baker—and
+had for her <i>vis-à-vis</i> Lady Marsden and a
+Duranmore butcher. She invited a hundred frieze-coated
+men into the drawing-room and sang for them
+till she was hoarse. She ordered some thousands of
+yards of blue ribbon, and paid for it herself; and she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>and Lady Popingham and Mrs. Munks made it up into
+rosettes for future use.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mrs. Drewitt had expected her nieces to assist her
+in the work; but Susan, for self and fellows, flatly
+declined to do anything of the kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If we wear anything we shall wear red,” she said.
+“Our brother is for Mr. Pryor; and we are for Mr.
+Pryor too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At this Mrs. Drewitt drew back astounded.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you mean,” she said, “that Maxwell and Mr.
+Drewitt are on different sides?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Our mother was a Roman Catholic,” explained
+Miss Drewitt; “and it is only right that Maxwell
+should remember that, and vote accordingly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If it were not for landlord terrorism,” put in
+Wilhelmina—she was usually called Willy—“no
+one who was not for the Catholics would ever be returned
+in Ireland.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The very servants about the house are all for
+Pryor,” added Susan, “only they would be discharged
+if they were to say so.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And Maxwell was telling us that if you had been
+wise you would not have taken so active a part in the
+canvassing, because it will set the poor people against
+you,” capped Wilhelmina.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But I only did it to please your uncle, and he is
+liked by every one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Perhaps so,” answered Miss Drewitt, with a sneer;
+“but at any rate <i>he</i> is not English.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And that makes a difference, you think?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That makes all the difference, I know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Miss Susan Drewitt drew up her tall figure
+and looked down upon her aunt, who was at least
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>half a head shorter, as she made this pleasant remark.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s just beyond me, childer,” said Nannie to
+them one day, “till understand what delight ye can
+find in making that craythur’s life a burden till her;
+she has not a bit the same look in her face she had
+when she came here first.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She had no business to come here at all,” answered
+Miss Drewitt. “Ireland for the Irish, as Maxwell says:
+we want no strangers here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But shure and it’s most of all because she is a
+stranger that ye ought to be good till her, so that she
+might not always be fretting for the country and the
+friends she has left behind her. Why can’t ye make it
+up, young ladies, and live agreeable? See, now, how
+Miss Kathleen has taken to her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are an old hypocrite, Nannie,” returned Miss
+Drewitt. “You and Miss Kathleen both like Mrs. Drewitt
+for the sake of what she gives you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Now may I niver, Miss Susan! may I niver die
+in my bed if the mistress—God grant her a long
+life!—ever give me more than ‘Thank ye, Nannie,’
+or ‘If ye plaze.’ Miss Kathleen has I know got many
+a thing from her; but I mind hearing you, Miss Susan,
+tell your aunt, when she wanted you to get that illigant
+blue silk let down and wear it yourself, that
+your brother would not allow you to wear any person’s
+cast-off gowns, ye did; and ye knew she had never
+had that same silk on her back; and she went away
+to her own room and cried so pitiful! I’d have gone
+in and told her never to heed what you said, for
+that nobody did, only I was afraid she might be
+angry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>“Well, I tell you what, Nannie,” said Willy, at
+this juncture; “if you get her to give me that new
+riding-habit she brought over with her, I’ll be friends,
+for I am rather sick of war.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If you take it you are quits with me,” remarked
+her sister.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is no chance of your giving me a riding-habit,
+Sue,” retorted the other, “and I do want one
+so badly; Loo Munks is so proud of hers from Dublin,
+and it is nothing like such a beauty as Mrs. Drewitt’s.
+Ask her, Nannie, like a good old soul, which you’re
+not, and see if she will give it to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Give it to you! she would cut the hair off her
+head and give it away if she thought it could pleasure
+you; but I won’t ask, faith I won’t, for she has only
+the one, and it’s meself hopes to see her riding with
+the masther over to Tully Kill whenever the hunting
+begins again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then I will ask her,” said Wilhelmina; and she
+was rushing into the drawing-room to prefer her request,
+when the sound of angry voices and loud speaking
+frightened her back.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was Mr. Drewitt and Maxwell having it out concerning
+the election—concerning Maxwell’s canvass
+of Colonel Vervensoe’s tenantry.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He was over here himself this morning,” said
+Mr. Drewitt</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It was not likely he would come over as anybody
+else,” remarked Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t mock me, sir,” shouted out the owner of
+Kincorth. “Keep your insolence for other people, for
+d—n me if I’ll stand it. And I won’t stand your interference,
+either, You shall not tamper with our voters.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Vote for Pryor yourself if you like, and be hanged to
+you; but don’t try to get up a party against me, I
+advise you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I was not aware you were going to stand,” observed
+Maxwell, coolly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You know I am for Sache, at any rate,” retorted
+Mr. Drewitt, “and you know you turned round to Pryor
+without ever telling me your intention, without ever
+saying a word to put me on my guard. And now
+listen to this: Colonel Vervensoe swears that if ever he
+finds you about his house again, he will horsewhip
+you; and he is a man to keep his promise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He had better not try to horsewhip me,” said
+Maxwell, slowly, “not if he values his life; for so
+sure as he attempts it, I’ll break every bone in his
+body.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He is a stronger man than you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And he declares he will not have his tenantry
+tampered with, or endure any man dangling after his
+wife.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He must speak to Lady Emmeline about that.
+If she likes me to canvass with her, I shall certainly
+do it, and I shall do my best to get Geoffry Pryor returned,
+if the devil himself tried to stop me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You shall not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I shall;” and Maxwell turned to leave the room,
+but Mr. Drewitt prevented him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Look here, Maxwell,” he said, “it is time you
+and I came to an understanding.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh! Archibald,” implored Mrs. Drewitt, “do not
+say any more while you are angry—do not speak while
+you are irritated. If Maxwell thinks Mr. Pryor ought
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>to get in, why should he not canvass for him? I am
+certain you are wrong in this matter, love; I am,
+indeed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You know nothing about it, Agnes; you are talking
+on subjects you do not understand,” said her husband;
+while Maxwell, with a grave bow, thanked her
+for her interference, but remarked he and his uncle
+had argued out many a point before, and settled many
+a dispute, without the help of a third party.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Which speech was intended to cut two ways—to
+make Mr. Drewitt more angry than he was, and to
+send Mrs. Drewitt out of the room.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It did neither. Mrs. Drewitt would not go, because
+she felt her presence was some restraint upon both, and
+Mr. Drewitt calmed down in a moment, and said, “I
+see what you are driving at, Maxwell, but you may as
+well save yourself the trouble, for I will not turn you
+out of the house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There are more ways of killing a dog than hanging
+him,” answered Maxwell, “and it is possible to
+make a place so confoundedly uncomfortable for a man
+that he may leave it of his own accord. We need not
+quarrel any more, sir,” he went on, his face hardening
+and setting as he spoke, “for I shall leave Kincorth
+without being shown to the door.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You shall not leave Kincorth,” said Mr. Drewitt,
+forgetting his anger in the rush of memories that came
+swelling up in his heart. “Vote for whom you like,
+I’ll say nothing more to you about it. I may have
+been wrong. Don’t go away like this. You shall not
+go, Maxwell;” and as he spoke, he laid a detaining
+hand on his nephew’s arm.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell shook it off scornfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>“It is not in the power of any man to make another
+stay in hell,” he answered; “and for many a
+long day Kincorth has been like hell to me. You have
+my father’s property, but you shan’t have my father’s
+son as well;” and with that Maxwell walked past his
+uncle, and out of the apartment.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Agnes, stop him, talk to him, don’t let him go,”
+said Mr. Drewitt; and only too glad of the order, his
+wife ran up to her nephew’s room, at the door of which
+she knocked gently.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who is there?” asked Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is I,” she answered; “let me in, Maxwell—let
+me speak to you. I have something particular to
+say; I have, indeed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is my uncle with you?” he inquired.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, I am here alone; there is no one with me;
+let me in, Maxwell, do——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He unlocked the door, and held it open for her to
+pass in; then he bolted and locked it, putting the key
+in his pocket; after which he placed the only chair the
+apartment boasted for her to sit on, and shutting a box
+he had just commenced packing, he sat down himself,
+and waited patiently for her to commence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All round the room Mrs. Drewitt’s glance wandered.
+She had often been in it before, and done her
+best to make it more comfortable for its occupant; but
+now it seemed to her to look more bare and wretched
+than ever, and she wondered whether she had done
+right in letting Maxwell keep his den, instead of insisting
+on his occupying some of the spare chambers
+on the first floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Those spare chambers had been full of guests almost
+ever since her own arrival, so that she need
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>scarcely have blamed herself in the matter; but Mrs.
+Drewitt was one of those women who always magnify
+their own shortcomings, and she could have burst out
+crying to think Maxwell was going, and she should
+never have a chance of doing better for him than
+that.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He half guessed what she was thinking about, and
+said:</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You have done as much for it as could be done,
+but it is not a very first-rate bedchamber. In the
+winter time the rain comes in there, and there, and
+there, and the wind blows the candle out, and it is
+damp, and cold, and wretched. Till you came—well,
+you know what it was when you came, and I
+see what it is now. Don’t think I blame my uncle
+for things like this, though,” he added hastily, “or
+that I am so effeminate as to care for them. I only
+regret the years I have wasted here. I only reproach
+my uncle for having let me live here in idleness
+when he knew the day must come that I would have
+to turn out from even this shelter and earn my living
+as I could.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you will not go,” she pleaded; “your uncle
+told me to ask you to stay. We will do what we can
+for you, only remain—only—only—remain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And she stretched out her hands imploringly towards
+Maxwell, who sat with his hands clasped tightly
+together and his head bent down, for a moment
+silent after she had ceased speaking. Then he answered:</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because you ask me, I would remain if I could;
+but I cannot. Mr. Drewitt thinks that he and I might
+make up this quarrel; and so, perhaps, we might.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>But if we healed this sore, it would only break out in
+a fresh place to-morrow. I am too old now for there
+to be peace between us,” he went on fiercely. “He
+ought either never to have undertaken to do anything
+for us, or he ought to have done it. If he had given
+me even a chance of earning my living, I would have
+worked and slaved to make myself and my sisters independent.
+It could not have been a great expense
+had he put me through college; but he never could
+afford to send me to Trinity—could not afford with
+Kincorth, and Analore, and twenty other nice little
+properties beside! When he came into this estate he
+had, if you believe me, Mrs. Drewitt, eight thousand
+a year clear—I think there was a mortgage on the
+place, which brought the rent-roll down to eight thousand—but
+a man may live on eight thousand a year,”
+finished Maxwell Drewitt, bitterly. “It is a long way
+off starvation that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If he has been imprudent,” remarked Mrs. Drewitt,
+“he is sorry for that imprudence; if he has never done
+anything for you, it is not too late for him to mend
+his error now. I am not saying, Maxwell, remember,
+that he has acted rightly—indeed, I am afraid he
+has been very wrong; but he has done wrong without
+intending it, and if you stay, he can try to make reparation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He has not the means now,” answered Maxwell;
+“if he had the will he has not the power. He is mortgaged
+up to his ears. There is nothing free, excepting
+Kincorth, and Kincorth will have to be pawned to
+provide funds to pay for the expenses of this election
+and a few other extravagances in which he has lately
+been indulging. I have waited long enough—I have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>waited and I have hesitated; but now I will take my
+pack on my back and go to seek my fortune.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you will not go at once,” she said. “You
+will stay and see—you will not part in anger when
+you do leave. Your uncle is dreadfully grieved, and,
+Maxwell, you were insolent! You ought not to have
+tried his patience as you did.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A beggar has only one weapon, and it is hard if
+he may not use that,” replied the young man. “No,”
+he continued, “I must either go now or never—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Let it be never, then,” she interrupted; but Maxwell
+shook his head.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Mrs. Drewitt,” he said, “I put it to your own
+sense. Can I stay here? Would it be well for me to
+do so? Would it be wise—would it be manly?
+Would you like to see any one you cared for, occupying
+the dependent position I fill? Would you not bid
+him rather go out and work—earn his bread, rather
+than have it given to him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Perhaps so,” she assented; “but I would have no
+one go in anger. Your uncle was saying something
+about thinking you might like a commission, Maxwell.
+Should you like it? My father might be able to get
+you one; or if not, I am positive my brother-in-law
+could obtain some government appointment for you, in
+England or the colonies. Should you care for that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, thank you, Mrs. Drewitt,” answered Maxwell;
+“an officer without private means is only a pauper in
+uniform; and besides, to be frank,” he went on, “I
+would rather take no favour from your family.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You dislike me so much, I suppose,” she said, a
+little flush coming up into her face. She had never
+been disliked before, and it hurt her to think she could
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>only make enemies, let her try her best to gain friends.
+“You dislike me so much.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not personally,” he replied. “I only dislike you
+as being Mr. Drewitt’s wife.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But what difference can being his wife make?”
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot tell you that now,” he said, “but perhaps
+I may some day. What I can tell you at this moment,”
+he proceeded, suddenly returning to the question at
+issue, “is, that I wish to leave Kincorth at once, on
+account of the election. My uncle wants me to stop
+for a similar reason. He thinks it will damage his canvassing
+if—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If people imagine you and he have quarrelled,”
+finished Mrs. Drewitt, as he paused and hesitated.
+“Then, Maxwell, was he right? Were you trying to
+provoke him to tell you to leave the house?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was a moment’s hesitation, but then Maxwell
+Drewitt said boldly—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You may as well know me for what I am at once.
+I was wanting him to turn me out. As he is too wise
+to do that, I am going to turn myself out. You look
+shocked. You begin to see that there may be things
+in heaven and earth undreamed of in your hitherto
+very limited philosophy; but in the future, when you
+are thinking what a sinner I am, remember that I have
+had no opportunity of becoming a saint. Life has not
+been a bed of roses to me. The teachings I have
+listened to have not always been such as the regenerate
+hear in church. As time goes by you will come to
+understand what kind of a home Kincorth has been to
+us, and then judge us if you like. You will do what
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>you can for the girls, I know, till I am able to take
+them from you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t go, Maxwell,” entreated Mrs. Drewitt, and
+there was a sick, dead feeling about her heart as she
+spoke. “Don’t go; let us try all together to make a
+better use of your life; let us live in peace and unity,
+as such near relations should.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Did Esau live at peace with Jacob?” asked Maxwell,
+who was weary of the discussion. “Was Ishmael
+suffered to remain after the new heir was born? Do
+you suppose Lazarus, living on the crumbs that fell
+from Dives’ table, had a friendly feeling towards the
+men who fared sumptuously every day? If Solomon
+had not slain Adonijah, would Adonijah ever have
+ceased troubling his brother? Can you remember an
+instance where the disinherited loved the man who
+inherited? Is it not better for us to live apart in
+peace, than under the same roof at war?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish I were a better peacemaker,” she said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If an angel came down from heaven, unless indeed
+he were the angel of death,” said Maxwell, with an
+emphasis on the latter part of his sentence which was
+not quite intelligible to his auditor, “he could not keep
+me in Kincorth now. It will not take me long to pack
+my clothes, I have not so many of them, and then I
+mean to go. Tell my uncle I thank him for wanting
+me to stay all the same, but I would rather travel my
+own road, and that leads me out of Kincorth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Having finished which explicit speech, Mr. Maxwell
+Drewitt unlocked the door, and held it open for
+his aunt to pass out, as he had held it open for her to
+pass in.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI.<br> <span class='c011'>At the Hustings.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Mr. Drewitt and his nephew did not part quite
+as friends, and yet to the eye of the world they did
+not part as enemies. Finding his wife’s intervention
+useless, the owner of Kincorth, though grievously
+wounded and worsted, let matters take their course.
+Had the quarrel originated in anything else than the
+election, Mr. Drewitt would have felt its consequences
+more bitterly than was the case. He could not have
+let his dead brother’s only son leave Kincorth in such
+a fashion had a question of politics not been raised
+between them; but as it was so it was. Maxwell had
+done what his father would not have done—helped
+a man’s wife to tamper with his tenantry; and if he
+liked to go, and if nothing could hinder his going,
+why, he must do so, and take the consequences.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He will be glad enough to come back when the
+election is over,” thought Mr. Drewitt; but in this idea
+he was wrong. Maxwell had made up his mind by
+very slow degrees to moving; but once made up it
+would have been impossible to induce him to return.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He and his uncle had often had quarrels before,
+and Maxwell had frequently hinted that if pushed too
+far he might leave Kincorth altogether.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On one of these occasions Mr. Drewitt had told him
+he might go to the devil if he chose, and Maxwell had
+retorted that his uncle had taken precious good care
+he should not travel post at any rate.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Between such near relations little amenities of this
+kind meant nothing, or next to nothing; but now the
+case was different. With no great provocation, the
+young man had elected to leave Kincorth, and could
+not be persuaded to remain in it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If he repented of his choice at any future period,
+Kincorth was free to him still. Meantime, as he sowed
+he must reap, and Kincorth could do without him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Supposing Archibald Drewitt ever reasoned out the
+question, it is very likely he did it in somewhat the
+preceding fashion; but truth was, he had little time
+for thinking. He was so taken up with the election—he
+had such hosts of people to see—he was so eternally
+occupied, that he had no leisure to observe things
+which did not, however, escape his wife’s observation.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She saw her husband was not quite so popular as
+formerly. She perceived that the lower orders were
+looking coldly on her; she heard indirectly that the
+Liberals were making way; she understood that Maxwell’s
+departure was being made a party question; she
+learnt that many laid the blame of the fracas on her;
+when she passed through the tents that were erected
+on the lawn, where the populace got drunk <i>au discrétion</i>
+at her husband’s expense, she heard muttered remarks
+on the subject of English pride, and outlandish airs,
+and “interlopers.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The election had seemed good fun at first; if it
+had done nothing else, it had served to divert her
+attention from household grievances, from domestic
+shortcomings; but now, when she laid her aching head
+on her pillow, she sighed for the peace and the happiness
+of her father’s house, and prayed for the contest
+to be well over.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>Then, as in the future, Mrs. Drewitt had to fight
+out her fight alone. From the first hour in which she
+set foot in her husband’s house she kept her trials to
+herself; she made up her mind not to worry him about
+trifles, and before long she came to the conclusion it
+would be quite as well not to worry him about great
+things either.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Unstable as water! Who would entrust a pearl of
+great price to the mercies of the stream, to the keeping
+of a river?—and yet this was precisely what
+this poor soul had done all unwittingly. Her love was
+her pearl; her happiness was her sole treasure; and
+she had cast both at the feet of a man who, never
+having done well for himself, was never likely to do
+well for her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Unstable as water! the streamlet ran by; unstable
+as water! the waves came and went, and ebbed and
+flowed, and she keeping up a brave face through the
+day, cried herself to sleep at night.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She never saw her husband except in the middle
+of a crowd of voters or else at the end of a long
+dinner-table. The house was crammed with visitors.
+Sorely against her will she had even to move Kathleen
+to Maxwell’s old room, and give the girl’s bedchamber
+to a bachelor guest.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is always like this in the hunting season,
+aunty; don’t mind about me,” said Kathleen. “I have
+had to sleep many and many a night on the floor, because
+they sat up so late it was no use trying to get
+a sofa; on the floor with nothing but a blanket under
+me, and hard work to get that. Maxwell did not like
+being turned out constantly, so he came up here at
+last. When will he be back, aunty darling?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>“After the election, I hope, Kathie,” answered
+Mrs. Drewitt, as she kissed the girl and bade her
+good-night. “After the election.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish it was over,” sighed Kathleen.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She did not wish it over more than her aunt, who
+firmly believed that the contest never would have an
+end, for the minutes seemed to be like days, and the
+days like years.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But at last the nomination day came round, and
+both parties girt up their loins and prepared for war.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a fine morning, “God bliss it,” as the country
+people remarked one to another: no better weather
+could have been desired for the nomination of candidates.
+That was going to be a great day for Connemara,
+at least for that portion of it in which we are at
+present more particularly interested. The right of the
+Earl of Popingham to return his nominee was going
+to be fiercely disputed; there was going to be, at last,
+a thoroughly well-contested election. Hurrah! hurrah!
+hurrah! and caps and hats went flying up in the air,
+and “Three cheers for Sache,” and “None o’ that, but
+three times three with a will, boys, for Pryor,” re-echoed
+through the usually quiet streets of Duranmore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Hurrah! and huzza! and hooroo! Who would not
+yell and cheer and shout till he was black in the face?—for
+had every public-house not been open to the
+populace for weeks past? and was not every “free and
+independent” drunk? and had not each man amongst
+them who was wavering in the least pocketed his five,
+or ten, or twenty pounds? and was not Irish enthusiasm
+and Irish excitement worked up by whiskey and party
+feeling to fever-point on that glorious August morning
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>when Geoffry Pryor was to be seconded by Maxwell
+Drewitt?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The town was fuller than a fair; the electors were
+drunker than fiddlers; the canvassers were busier than
+ever; the candidates were in an agony of suspense;
+the windows opposite the hustings were crowded with
+ladies; the inn-yards were a sight to behold, crammed
+full of carriages. There were opposition bands playing,
+and flags waving, and ribbons fluttering, and
+people jostling, and boys shouting, and women screaming,
+and children being crushed to pieces, and police
+plunging through the crowd. Two companies of horse
+occupied one side of the market-place, ready to charge
+the populace at a moment’s notice; and, altogether,
+Duranmore was a great and cheering sight, for in the
+days of which I am now writing elections were no
+child’s play. Lives were lost, men trampled under
+foot, ridden down by the soldiers, kicked, stoned,
+cudgelled. Heads were cracked, limbs broken. Donnybrook,
+at its worst, was a peaceable sort of scene in
+comparison to an Irish election at its best, where men
+of station and of standing sacrificed fortune, character,
+position, truth, honour, honesty, their fellow-creatures’
+happiness, and, in many cases, their fellow-creatures’
+lives, to return for their representative in Parliament
+perhaps as great a vagabond as ever cheated the
+sheriff.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Duranmore and West Connemara was, for various
+reasons, considered by the landlord interest in that
+part of Ireland a stronghold of considerable importance;
+and the interest of the approaching contest consisted in
+the fact that it was to be a kind of fight for independence.
+Was the seat virtually to belong to the Earl
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>of Popingham, or not? Were the Roman Catholics
+going to let the sworn enemy of their church return
+his nominee again?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The priests had been busy; the priests had their
+crow to pluck with the Earl, and were going to make
+the election expensive to him at any rate. Whilst the
+landlords threatened ejection from their holdings, the
+priests threatened exclusion from heaven. While the
+Earl of Popingham said, “Vote for Sache—or notice
+at November,” the proprietors of snug little locations
+in the next world whispered, “Vote for Pryor—or
+everlasting damnation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a nice fix for men to be placed in. Starvation
+in this world, or hell fire in the next—a lively
+prospect either way; so cheerful that we can scarcely
+wonder that in many cases the tenants preferred facing
+the danger which was furthest off, and chose rather to
+fall into the hands of the devil than into those of their
+landlord.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is of many and many a year ago I am talking,
+I pray you bear in mind. If the landed proprietors
+of those days were not unexceptionable, their successors
+have doubtless made all up to the generation of
+tenants that pay rents now; and as it is not very
+graceful to cut down into old sores, I will only add,
+there was not a place in the United Kingdom where
+party feeling ran so high, where bribes were so heavy,
+where such an amount of virulence and animosity was
+displayed, as it was in that out-of-the-way corner of
+the earth where two fit and proper candidates were
+about to contest the honour of representing the people
+in Parliament.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As a matter of course, there had always hitherto
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>been some fight made, and equally perhaps of course
+the nominee had always heretofore won; but on this
+occasion the claims seemed more nearly equal than
+had ever been the case before, for it was well known
+that young Mr. Waller of Eversbeg had deserted his
+late father’s principles and gone over to the enemy;
+and it was reported that—instigated thereto and
+encouraged therein by Lady Emmeline Vervensoe and
+Mr. Maxwell Drewitt—the Vervensoe tenantry had
+turned restive on a papistical question, and were intending
+to vote according to the dictates of their unenlightened
+consciences for once.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Altogether, Duranmore was a great and glorious
+sight.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was enough to make any one madly in love with
+our representative system, and with the way seats in
+Parliament are secured, to see the spectacle the town
+presented.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a month the place had been drunk—not
+figuratively, but literally—for weeks men had not
+been men, but rather casks full of spirits: they drank
+till they were blind, and then slept till they could see.
+The whole town and all the inhabitants thereof smelt
+of whiskey; every free and independent was in a state
+of greater or lesser incapability; every barmaid was
+frightfully active; every servant went about like a
+walking ribbon-shop; every wife was on the look-out
+for money: if the husbands were drunk, that was no
+reason why business should be neglected.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They would see to the votes when the time came;
+meanwhile they would take care of the notes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Towards the last there was no attempt to do the
+thing under the rose; gentlemen and ladies went about
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>buying votes—not begging them—not even going
+through the ceremony of appearing to believe open
+bribery could be, as the Countess of Popingham said,
+“hurtful to their sensitive feelings.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Rents were forgiven; fines remitted; leases promised;
+farms let on advantageous terms; money was
+cheerfully paid for getting voters out of the way; personation
+fees ran high—in short, neither side left a
+stone unturned, or a trick untried, likely to prove
+beneficial to what they were severally pleased to call
+the “good cause.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>To be strictly impartial, there was not a toss up
+between them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If you had shaken the Tories and Whigs up in a
+bag together,” remarked Ryan afterwards, “I do not
+know which would have come out first.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There were no clean hands among either party; no
+man was so free of blame that he could have thrown
+stones at his opponent. The game had been a tremendously
+expensive one; and “whoever wins, the
+people get the stakes,” said Mr. Timothy Ryan regretfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>What a gay sight the town presented! The windows
+of every house commanding a view of the hustings were
+full of women—young, well-born, beautiful—who exhibited
+red or blue ribbons, according to the side they
+affected.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The fair Sacheites, headed by the Countess of
+Popingham, Mrs. Munks, Lady Marsden, Mrs. Hickman,
+Mrs. Drewitt, and a bevy of other county notables
+took possession of the assembly room, which
+chanced to be Lord Marsden’s property; whilst conspicuous
+among the ladies in the Liberal interest, who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>occupied the Court-house, appeared in white dress and
+red ribbons the still beautiful though somewhat <i>passée</i>
+Lady Emmeline Vervensoe, who having openly deserted
+her husband’s colours, had gone about canvassing, in
+company with Mr. Waller and Maxwell Drewitt, to the
+intense mortification of her husband and the extreme
+scandal and disgust of the Popingham faction.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Lady Emmeline had come of great people; she was
+an heiress in her own right, she had condescended to
+marry a commoner; further, she was a poetess and had
+written some very charming lines to the cuckoo, and
+a few verses of a highly laudatory character concerning
+Duranmore Bay—for all these reasons Lady Emmeline
+did as she pleased, and suffering no one to say her
+nay, sat on the opposition benches, smiling in conscious
+loveliness, the observed of all observers.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The town was like a garden; every flower-bed for
+miles round having been rifled of its treasures to deck
+the houses, horses, and hustings.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Triumphal arches of red and white dahlias, long
+festoons of evergreens relieved by flowers formed of
+blue calico and tied with floating ribbons, branches of
+oak, sycamore, and elm, yards of ivy, hearts, stars,
+mottoes formed of every imaginable flower hung fading
+in the sun.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Blue flags and red flags danced in the light breeze;
+the opposition bands played at one and the same time
+Garry Owen and God save the King; full-length caricatures
+of Sache and Pryor were exhibited on every
+available yard of wall; election ballads were chanted
+at the extremest pitch of the human voice; there were
+drums, there were horns, there were Jew’s harps, there
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>were penny whistles, there was every imaginable instrument,
+there was every imaginable noise.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Sache’s supporters drove into town, their servants
+dressed in blue and silver liveries, and their carriages
+decorated with blue hammer-cloths, edged with silver
+lace. Pryor’s friends—for the most part young bachelors
+who affected different opinions from those their
+fathers had held—came galloping into the market
+square with their saddles and bridles ornamented in
+red and gold.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Such splendour! such misery! such evidences of
+wealth! such signs of poverty! such sleek, well-groomed,
+gaily-caparisoned horses! such under-fed, dirty, half-clothed
+men and women!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Ah! reader, how can I ever hope to show you the
+violent contrasts that were presented to view within so
+small a space—contrasts that would have been shocking,
+had they not been ludicrous also?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The candidates were so spruce, the constituents
+were so shabby; the hats of the first were faultless,
+the head-gear of the latter wretched: the blue or red
+colours of the gentry showed to advantage over glossy
+broadcloth, over snowy waistcoats; the rosettes of the
+electors were pinned on tattered garments, that had
+been patched and patched till they were like unto the
+coat of many colours that brought Joseph so much
+ill-will.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But though poor, they were merry; they were, as
+the Earl of Popingham said, perpetrating an execrable
+pun, “full of spirits;” and fuller of whiskey than they
+had ever been of food, laughing, jeering, jesting, yelling,
+shouting, they shoved and pushed and fought their
+way up towards the hustings.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Mr. Sache was not popular among the lower orders,
+and he knew it. He was no hero—morally and physically
+he was a coward; and though he had drunk
+brandy enough to have, as Lord Marsden contemptuously
+told him, brought colour into the cheeks of a
+corpse, yet when he appeared on the hustings he looked
+the very embodiment of terror and despair.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Gazing down upon the sea of upturned faces, listening
+to the jeers and menaces of the crowd, in mortal
+dread of dead cats, rotten cabbages, and still more
+rotten eggs, he thought a seat in Parliament hardly
+worth passing through such an ordeal to gain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the deuce brought me here?” he said to
+Mr. Munks, and his lips were white and his body all
+of a tremble while he spoke.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the deuce brought you here, is it?” asked
+Mr. Munks; “why, we did, and damned idiots we have
+been, I consider, for our pains. But now you are here,
+there is no help for the matter; and if you show the
+white feather, by —— I’ll shoot you dead!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And then Mr. Munks faced round on young Waller
+of Eversbeg, who was mocking Mr. Sache, and laughing
+at the creditable figure cut by the Conservative
+candidate; turned round, and asked him how <i>he</i> would
+like to have his account settled, “in cold steel or hot
+lead?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Whereupon Mr. Waller demanded if Mr. Munks
+wanted to make his will. “Because,” he went on,
+“Ryan can draw you out a draft, and Mr. Pryor would
+give an opinion on it, and I dare say make no charge
+under the circumstances.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Get to business—get to business, Munks,” whispered
+Mr. Drewitt, impatiently, “for heaven’s sake let
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>us have it over;” and thus exhorted, Mr. Munks, whenever
+the cheering and groaning consequent upon the
+appearance of the candidates had in some measure subsided,
+commenced, “Gentlemen——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Three groans, my boys, and don’t listen to him.
+Hiss——” and there came a storm of yells and hisses
+and execrations, accompanied by a smart shower of
+missiles, most of which fortunately fell short of the
+target.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Gentlemen,” again essayed Mr. Munks, who, whatever
+other virtues he lacked, certainly was game to the
+backbone. “Gentlemen——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who raised the rints last half——?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who broke the leases?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who put Dick Benton to the dure?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who took the roof off the Widdy Martin, and her
+down in the favar?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Och! ye murthering villain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Och! ye blackguard thafe.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Put a praty in yer ugly mouth; here’s one for ye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Gentlemen——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Hould yer tongue.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He couldn’t do it. He’d slobber his chin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Gentlemen, I beg to——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Beg of somebody, then, that doesn’t know ye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Och, can’t ye let the man spake? Shure his wife
+never lets him have the chance at home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Go away and send up Betty!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“In her ridin’-habit!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That she is goin’ to be buried in!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Come, come, my lads, this won’t do!” yelled out
+Ryan, in a stentorian voice, which was distinctly
+audible even above the din. “Fair play is a jewel.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>Never refuse to listen to anybody. Hear Mr. Munks—you
+don’t know what he may be going to promise
+you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Talk’s chape!” shouted out a refractory voter.
+“Fine words butther no parsnips!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ye can’t boult the dure wid a boiled carrot!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Be quiet, will you!” vociferated Ryan, “and attend
+to the gentleman’s speech;” and thus exhorted the
+crowd permitted Mr. Munks to commence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He said he hoped they would return Mr. Sache,
+that he was no stranger, but a resident in the neighbourhood,
+and known to every one of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A d——d sight too well!” hiccupped a tipsy tailor;
+at which remark the hubbub began again with
+twenty times greater vigour than ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Hissing, yelling, hooting, cheering, cries of “Go
+on, Munks!” “Go in and win!” “Speak up, man!”
+“Make haste or you’ll be late!” “Are you afraid of
+Betty? Lord, man, we won’t let her touch you here!”
+with peals of laughter and volleys of oaths, compelled
+Mr. Munks finally to give up in despair.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is of no use,” he exclaimed; “they won’t listen
+to us; there is a conspiracy; the crowd is packed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On this Maxwell Drewitt came hurriedly forward.
+“If you won’t hear Mr. Munks,” he cried, “hear my
+uncle. We are on opposite sides, but I am sure he
+will tell you a great deal you would not willingly miss.
+Now three cheers for Archibald Drewitt, who never
+defrauded the poor man yet! Cheer like Irishmen,
+and not like a set of over-fed, beer-drinking Saxons.
+Cheer, you rascals, cheer!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Thus exhorted, the rascals did cheer, till they were
+hoarse, for Archibald Drewitt, for Maxwell Drewitt
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>for Waller and for Pryor; but somehow Mr. Sache’s
+seconder did not seem much elated by the applause.
+Pushing his nephew aside, he said, the moment a lull
+in the tempest permitted his words to be heard——</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I need no one to claim a hearing from me. I am
+not afraid of your refusing any request of mine. You
+will give a patient hearing to your old friend Archibald
+Drewitt—(tremendous cheering and cries of
+‘That we will!’) We are old acquaintances, and do
+not need to be introduced to one another by anybody.
+We have not always agreed about politics, it is true,
+but we have agreed to disagree. Some amongst you
+go with me, and others do not; but to one and all my
+advice is—Return Mr. Sache! [Uproar and yells of
+‘No, we won’t!’] Yes, gentlemen, you will. He is as
+honest a man as you’ll find. [Interruption, and a remark
+that ‘Honest men must be scarce!’] Yes, my
+friends, I admit that they are scarce, and for that very
+reason you ought not to let Mr. Sache slip through
+your fingers. He will do you justice in Parliament!
+[Great confusion.] He knows your wants, and you
+know his principles. [‘To be very bad!’] He is a
+gentleman who will never deceive you.” [‘No, faith,
+we know him too well to let him do that. He was cut
+out for a gentleman, but the devil ran away with the
+patthern!’] And then came another burst of yelling,
+hissing, and fighting.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Now, now, my friends,” said Mr. Drewitt, “I
+asked you for a peaceable hearing, and I thought you
+would have done that much for me. It is not so often
+I make a speech that you should interrupt me when I
+do. Just give me five minutes to tell you why you
+should return Mr. Sache, and I will promise not to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>detain you longer. [A prolonged howl, and cries of
+‘We want to hear nothing about him.’] Very likely;
+but I want to tell you something about him. His
+political views are sound; if you do not approve of
+them, it is not because they are bad, but because you
+cannot see what is good for you. He is an Irishman,
+has an interest in the soil, loves the country of his
+birth, will speak up for your rights——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Arrah! hear that. The man can’t say boo to a
+goose. Him spake up!” And ironical cheers and
+perfect shrieks of laughter drowned the remainder of
+Mr. Drewitt’s sentence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, gentlemen,” he resumed, when a partial lull
+enabled his words to be heard, “I suppose if I appeared
+before you a candidate for the honour of representing
+you in Parliament, instead of trying to
+second Mr. Munks’s statement, that Mr. Sache is a fit
+and proper person to fill that office—in that case
+also, I suppose, you would refuse to hear a syllable I
+had to say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, we would not; we’d return you and send you
+up to London flying. Propose yourself, Archibald
+Drewitt, and we’ll second you. Hurrah!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had them on the hip now, and pushed his advantage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then it is to Mr. Sache himself and not to his
+political principles you object. They cannot but be to
+your liking, because you say you would have me for
+your member, and my views are identical with his.
+My friends, you are acting at this minute much like
+children who strike a hard table when they have
+knocked themselves. You think you will hurt us by
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>returning Mr. Pryor, and in reality you will only hurt
+yourselves. Mr. Sache wishes to serve you; but as
+you do not happen to like him, you cheer and shout
+for a man who will not serve you at all. Mr. Pryor,
+a very estimable young gentleman no doubt, is not
+fitted to be your representative. What interest has he
+in the country? Though an Irishman, I believe, by
+descent, he is yet English by birth, education, and residence.
+He is a stranger, a lawyer, a mere boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Fifty times betther man than Sache, the dirty
+spalpeen! We won’t hear a word against Pryor.
+We’ll gag the first that cheers for the hardhearted
+landlord.” Which speech being accepted as a challenge,
+gave rise to a regular shindy, that diversified and
+enlivened the proceedings. Heads were cracked,
+shillelaghs waved, lips cut, an arm or two broken: the
+police had finally to interfere to restore order, and
+then Mr. Waller came to the front, and was greeted
+with tumultuous acclamations from the one side and
+by hisses, groans, cabbagestalks, bad eggs, and rotten
+fruit from the Sacheites.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Gentlemen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Three cheers for Lady Emmeline! Three times
+three!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Lady Vervensoe, who had drawn public attention
+to herself by waving a crimson scarf out of
+the window, now rose and bowed right and left to the
+crowd in acknowledgment of their compliment.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With her white dress and red ribbons, with her
+chip hat and plume of red feathers, her grace and
+beauty, she created quite a furore; and during the excitement
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>attendant on this demonstration Mr. Waller
+managed to move the election of his cousin, Mr. Pryor,
+as a fit and proper person to represent Duranmore and
+West Connemara in Parliament.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is my turn now,” whispered Maxwell Drewitt
+to Ryan. And he came forward, and leaning over the
+rails, and jauntily holding in his left hand a brand new
+hat, began—</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII.<br> <span class='c011'>The Result of the Poll.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Electors of Duranmore and West Connemara—for
+I am not going to call you, for a purpose, gentlemen,
+which you are not, nor friends, because I see
+a good many faces below there which belong to my
+enemies—but Electors of Duranmore and West
+Connemara. I want you to listen to what I have got
+to tell you about the way elections have been previously
+managed in this part of the country, and of how
+we intend that they shall be managed in future——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Cheers from the Reds, hisses from the Blues.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“For shame, Maxwell Drewitt!” cried one.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Siding against your uncle.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is it to the likes of you we’re going to listen, do
+you think?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Go home, boy! out o’ that”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Home is it?” shouted another; “has he not been
+turned out of the only one he ever knew?” And at
+the words Archibald Drewitt turned sick.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Isn’t it himself ought to be at the ould place now
+instead of them that owns it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, it is not,” answered Maxwell Drewitt, whose
+face was scarlet, but not with pain. “It is not; Archibald
+Drewitt came into Kincorth fairly. Long may he
+keep it!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ye wish it, don’t ye Max?” cried some one among
+the crowd. And then there came shrieks of laughter
+and cheers and hisses.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>“Make it up with him, man; it’s not too late yet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why didn’t ye quarrel till he married?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why could ye not have let somebody else put in
+the spake for Pryor?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because I wanted to tell you what nobody else
+will tell you: because my family affairs have nothing
+to do with anybody in Duranmore: because I see no
+reason why I should wear my uncle’s political opinions,
+if they do not chance to fit me, any more than his
+clothes. Conservatism is stationary. Liberalism is
+progressive. Toryism may suit those who have had
+their way made for them, but those who have to make
+their way for themselves see that the Whigs have the
+best of the argument.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am now in the same boat with the poorest man
+amongst you. He wants to rise, so do I; he wants to
+make money, so do I; he does not want to be ground
+under the carriage wheels of the upper ten thousand,
+neither do I. We are all of one mind in this matter;
+we want butter to our bread, and ham and eggs to our
+breakfast, and clothes to our backs, and good roofs
+over our heads, and something to lay by against old
+age. Here is a man to get what we desire for us.
+Three cheers for Geoffry Pryor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And the people cheered, and the people shouted,
+while Maxwell Drewitt took breath; and some cried
+out that it was all true, and others told him to go home—that
+he was a humbug, and that they would have
+nothing to do with him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Am I a humbug?” he yelled, almost cracking his
+voice in his efforts to make himself heard. “Am I a
+humbug? If I am, then humbugging must be a devilishly
+unprofitable trade. And as long as you have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>chosen to introduce this subject, I may say that I have
+given you as good proofs as any man can, that, let
+my principles seem bad or the reverse in your eyes, I
+at least have adopted them in sincerity of heart—with
+integrity of purpose. All of you know that I
+had not much to give up, but still I have given up
+the little I had, and stand before you a man who,
+having relinquished everything for what he conscientiously
+believes to be the good of his country, has
+a right to claim from you, at any rate, a calm and
+impartial hearing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Go on, Max; we’re listening.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We’re as quiet as mice in a meal bag.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Go on, man. Go on, go on, go on.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I know I am not so popular as my uncle,” began
+Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Cries of “Yes, yes, you are.” “No you are not.”
+“Finish your speech, the schoolmaster could not have
+laid it off better. Who wrote it for ye, Max?” “Go
+on, and don’t keep us here all day. Go on, go on.”
+And the crowd shouted and yelled and laughed, and
+Maxwell cursed the crowd in his heart while he proceeded.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am going on, if you will let me. I was saying
+that I know I am not so popular as my uncle.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We mind that. Ye said it afore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He is a man who deserves all the love and respect
+you can give him, and I am sorry we should stand this
+day on opposite sides.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why don’t ye go over till him then? He’s near
+enough to ye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why don’t I go over to him? That brings me to
+the point I was wanting to reach. Let me ask you a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>few questions, and give you honest answers to them,
+and then you will see if you can still blame me for
+deserting the ‘Dirty Blues.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you want to have a man of family representing
+you in Parliament? Yes. Then surely Mr. Sache cannot
+be your member!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you want a gentleman? Mr. Sache can lay no
+claim to such a distinction!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you want a person clever and fluent, able to
+lay your grievances before Parliament, and insist on
+their being redressed? Alas! my fellow-electors, Mr.
+Sache is no orator!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you want a man of mind, capable of grasping
+facts, of comprehending the necessities and wishes of
+his fellows? Mr. Sache is not possessed of a second
+idea; his only one, and that a very small one indeed,
+being himself!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you desire to do credit to yourselves by sending
+a good man, an independent man, a man of talent
+and character, into the British Senate? If you do, you
+must never return Mr. Sache!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you want a man—handsome, energetic, fearless?
+Look at your would-be member, voters of Duranmore—electors
+of West Connemara—look at your
+landlords’ nominee! Look at the poor, frightened, incapable
+creature your tyrants want to compel you to
+select, and say if I, Maxwell Drewitt, were not right
+to choose a more energetic leader—one able and
+willing to battle out your cause against the United
+Kingdom, and to state your grievances to the world.
+Look at him, I say, and cheer that poltroon if you
+dare!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was probably the very audacity of this address
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>which had kept his audience silent, for whenever Maxwell
+Drewitt, with hand stretched out towards Mr.
+Sache, with finger pointed at him, paused for a moment
+in his speech, there burst out upon the air such
+a tumult of laughing, cursing, joking, yelling, cheering,
+hissing, shouting, that the unfortunate object of
+the younger Drewitt’s tirade looked wholly stupefied
+and bewildered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Lady Emmeline was so delighted that she clapped
+her little hands together with might and main; she
+waved her eternal scarf over the heads of the multitude,
+and flung a bouquet towards Maxwell, which, falling
+short of the hustings, was caught by a man, who took
+off his battered and brimless hat, and said, “Thank ye
+kindly, my lady.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If anything had been wanting to make Colonel
+Vervensoe boil over, this would have settled the matter.
+Absolutely quivering with rage, he shook his fist in
+young Drewitt’s face, and threatened him with condign
+punishment on the spot.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Only lay a finger on me,” said Maxwell, “and
+I pitch you head foremost into the crowd, who will
+soon make mincemeat of you. Stand back, sir, stand
+back!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If you say another word, Maxwell, you shall never
+darken my doors again,” foamed Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Time enough for you to shut your doors when I
+show my face at them,” retorted Maxwell. “Be quiet,”
+he shouted, addressing the electors, “for I have still
+to tell you how your members have been returned
+hitherto. By bribery and corruption—by threats and
+intimidation—by turning the screw on poor men, who
+had, for the sake of their families, to put pride and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>self-respect and independence, ay, and common honesty
+in their pockets. You have been treated like slaves
+instead of like Irishmen. Why was O’Shane not successful?
+Because honest men were put out of the way,
+while rogues voted in their names; because refractory
+electors were kidnapped and carried off to Arran and
+Achill, and in one or two cases even to America; because
+men were made drunk and stripped naked, and
+left without a stitch to their backs, till the polling was
+over; because dead men were brought to life again;
+because tenants were threatened with expulsion; because
+Government posts were promised to the sons of
+the shopkeepers and small gentry; because the landlords
+formed a league against the men who enable them to
+live; because there was not an atom of honour or
+honesty amongst the friends and supporters of your
+taskmasters’ nominee.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Maxwell, I command you to be silent!” exclaimed
+Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My uncle commands me to be silent,” persisted
+the young man, “but my conscience commands me to
+speak. As a boy I saw these things done, and held
+my peace; as a man I remember what I saw, and
+choose my side accordingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How does the Earl of Popingham expect to win
+this election? By intimidation, by dead cats, such as
+this” (and he dexterously caught one by the tail, and
+pitched it back in the face of the man who had thrown
+it at him), “by the strong arm, by the might of rank,
+and power of money, and the majesty and omnipotence
+of landlordism. The things which have been done by the
+Conservatives are almost past my telling. Popingham’s
+pets are among you now with orders to keep the reds
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>back from the polling booths; they are wearing red
+rosettes; but you will be able to pick them out for all
+that when the time comes. As I rode into town this
+morning a lad told me Marsden had offered him half-a-crown
+to pelt the reds, but that he was willing to
+pelt Marsden himself for eighteenpence. Will you have
+this, fellow-countrymen? It only requires a vigorous
+effort on your part to free yourselves from the yoke.
+A long pull, and a strong pull, and a pull altogether,
+and we will stand a respectable and independent body
+of electors, with a better man than any lordling’s nominee
+representing us in Parliament.” And amidst a
+Babel of cheering, groaning, clapping, and hissing,
+Maxwell concluded his speech.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Now, Sache,” whispered Lord Marsden.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not a word to say. I—I couldn’t do it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you shall do it,” said Mr. Munks. And he
+and Mr. Drewitt shoved him up to the front of the
+hustings.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>What he said, however, or whether he ever said
+anything, nobody had the slightest idea. His speech
+appeared in the county paper, but it was generally
+supposed that the reporter wrote it himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had the worst of the day’s storm. Imprecations
+were shouted out against him. He was pelted, insulted,
+reviled. “How much does the Earl give you?” asked
+one wag.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Doesn’t the divil take care of his own, Sache?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why don’t you speak up like a man?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Couldn’t they have got anybody betther than
+you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Abbott wouldn’t do their dirty work any longer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>“And it’s betther to sup with a cutty than want a
+spoon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Spake up, man, spake up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They’ll niver pay ye for the job if ye don’t work
+for yer money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Go out o’ that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Betther be a coward than a corp, Sache.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ye dirty blackguard.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who ate up Dan Joyce’s crock o’ butther?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who counts the very chickens as they’re chipping
+the shell?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Let him alone, can’t ye? What’s the use of pouring
+water on a drownded rat?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t look so scared, Sache; niver howl till ye’re
+hurt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We won’t hear ye; we’ll bate ye black and blue.
+Go out o’ that or there won’t be an egg left in Duranmore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How do ye like it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do like the women: say no and take it” And at
+every sentence there arose a howl, and then came a
+shower of dirt and filth of all description.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I never heard anything to equal this,” said Mr.
+Pryor to his cousin.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You’ll have to run the gauntlet in a minute or
+two,” answered Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s good for the tailors, that’s one comfort,” observed
+Maxwell Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We want Pryor: go back and send out Pryor.
+Take him away, Munks, he’s no credit till ye. I
+wondher ye’d be seen out with him. We’re run short
+o’ eggs, and we’ll have to fall to the pavin’ stones next.
+Take him out o’ that. Pryor, Pryor; three cheers for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>Pryor, and three more for Butler, and a good one for
+Waller, and keep your best and longest for Lady
+Emmeline.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Are you going to give me a hearing, my friends?”
+asked Geoffry Pryor, coming forward as Mr. Sache,
+who by this time presented a pitiable spectacle, drew
+back.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No we’re not. Yes we are. Ye’ll be served
+worse than he was. Why did ye put on your best
+coat? ye might as well take it off and give it to me.
+It ’ud look mighty purty turned up wid yellow. See
+that now!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An there’s a flower for your buttonhole.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have ye nearly done?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, we havn’t begun. Why don’t ye go on?
+Ye’re as bad as Sache.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Had you not better hear me first, and then speak
+yourselves afterwards?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, we hadn’t.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Shall I not speak at all?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If it’s any pleasure till ye, ye may.” And then
+the people laughed and cheered and shouted, and
+Geoffry Pryor went on to tell them how they were an
+oppressed and injured race; how justice had never been
+done to them; how the English knew nothing of the
+way in which the Irish lived; how everything was
+wrong in the management of the country; how he
+pledged himself to advocate the poor man’s right; how
+he would miss no opportunity of letting the English
+know of their manifold grievances.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Every labourer is worthy of his hire,” proceeded
+Mr. Pryor, “and the man who tills the ground should
+eat of its produce: you ought to have your land at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>such a rent that you can live off it, and not starve on
+it. Politically I am a thorough reformer; in religion I
+am for letting every man go to heaven his own road;
+and, in conclusion, I can only say, if you return me I
+shall try to serve you faithfully; if you do not return
+me I shall try to be content. I would entreat each
+man among you to vote according to his conscience:
+not for Sache or Pryor, not for red or blue, but for
+the right and the principle that is in him. And whatever
+the result of the contest may be, Mr. Sache,” he
+added, turning towards his opponent, “I hope we shall
+be enemies only in public, never in private life; and I
+should like, though I suppose such a proceeding is not
+usual on the hustings, to shake hands with you in token
+that ours is an amiable warfare.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Mr. Pryor stretched out his hand to Mr. Sache,
+who had been, he felt, roughly dealt with. Perfectly
+stupified, however, with brandy and terror; bespattered
+from head to foot, with his cheek cut, and one eye
+closed up, Lord Popingham’s nominee made no movement
+to take his opponent’s offered hand till he was
+pushed forward by Mr. Drewitt, who, having lost
+patience with everybody, was in no very gentle or forbearing
+mood.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The show of hands is in favour of the Reds,” he
+said to Mr. Munks. “We must demand a poll.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And a poll was demanded accordingly; but the
+result was the same as the sheriff had declared the
+show of hands to be, viz., in favour of Geoffry Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In the days of which I am writing there was no
+earthly reason why an election should not have lasted
+for ever. Government had not then put any limit to
+the period over which the innocent amusement of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>breaking heads should extend. On the contrary: as
+there was but one town in each county or portion of a
+county returning a separate member where votes could
+be legally polled, government seemed rather to have
+erred on the side of humouring the popular taste a
+little too far, than of considering it too little. Those
+were the palmy days of electioneering; those were the
+days of delightful uncertainty—of charming fluctuation.
+You were getting on to-day—you were far
+behind to-morrow; from hand to hand the political
+ball went tossing; now the Tories had it—now the
+Whigs. Now it was all up with the Reds—now the
+Blues had not a chance. As for trade! nobody even
+tried to transact any business while the election lasted,
+unless, indeed, the owners of public-houses and the
+landlords of hotels.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They took the business of the town and did it.
+If you had not a pair of shoes in the world, do you
+think any cobbler in the parish had leisure to attend
+to your wants? Was the rain pouring in through
+your roof, or your house falling down; were the spokes
+in the wheels of your gig rattling like castanets, or
+every pane of glass in your windows smashed? If
+you were not a glazier, wheelwright, bricklayer, or
+slater yourself, why, windows, and wheels, and houses,
+and roofs must remain as they were till the members
+were returned—till the free and independent were
+sober and hungry once again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was carnival time—a time not of sweetmeats
+and bouquets, but of whiskey and fighting, of rotten
+eggs and blackthorn shillelaghs; a time when family
+feuds were established that would last rival houses
+for life, and be handed down as heirlooms to their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>posterity; when even sober men—sober and discreet—lost
+their heads and got drunk with political excitement;
+when wrongs were done that never could be
+righted subsequently; when words were spoken that
+never could be forgotten; when insults were uttered
+that could never be forgiven.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If the elections of those days were relics of the
+“good old times,” we may fervently thank our stars
+that such times have passed away for ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Canvassing had seemed to Mrs. Drewitt a sufficiently
+weary season; but what was canvassing to
+making sure of the promised votes, to keeping the
+electors up to the mark?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Drewitt worked himself into a state of frenzy,
+and he and Colonel Vervensoe and Mr. Munks and
+Lord Marsden and the Earl of Popingham, and a host
+of other influential Blues, went about the country like
+so many madmen, hunting up voters and bringing
+them to the polling-booth <i>nolens volens</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If anything had been wanting to egg the Blues on
+to greater exertions, Maxwell Drewitt’s speech would
+have proved a whip powerful enough to lash them to
+fury.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If Mr. Sache were not returned, every tenant
+should be ejected—every man who had a vote sent
+adrift; the cottages should be unroofed; the land might
+remain untilled; children might starve; women might
+die! From time immemorial have not the innocent
+suffered with the guilty? has not the house of Ahab
+always suffered for the sin of Ahab, from the time of
+Elijah until now.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Most of the landlords were kindly men—not
+proud, not uncourteous, not unfeeling; but they were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>like the rest of us, weak on one point, and that point
+was politics. There is a savage in most which only
+requires waking to be dangerous. Spite of all our
+civilization we are forced at times to admit we must
+have come originally of a rude stock, that we are
+closer to Jael, that we are nearer to Jehu than we
+would willingly confess.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The most delicate taste cannot distinguish between
+port and sherry in the dark; and in the same manner
+there is a mental darkness in which the tenderest conscience
+fails to discern the difference between right
+and wrong.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That was the state to which politics reduced men
+in the days of which I am writing; that is the state
+to which politics would reduce men now but for the
+extra vigilance of civilization, but for the coolness and
+calmness of the fourth estate, which will have none of
+it, which insists on pouring light in on darkness, of
+calling a spade a spade, let the implement so named
+be used by peer or peasant.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With the landlords I have mentioned the case was
+different—the savage was roused in them: blinded
+by passion, they stood, with the noon-day sun shining
+on them, in darkness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It had become a question of might <i>versus</i> right—of
+lord against serf—of Protestant against Catholic—of
+“You shall” against “I shall not;” and such a
+question can never be solved except by the result of
+the battle of man against man.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I am not advocating one side or another. God
+knows,—God who knows all things—that though
+the profession of each was different, there was not,
+long ago, a turn of the scale in favour of either Whig
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>or Tory. Drewitt of Kincorth would have served his
+own father with notice to quit had his father voted
+against Sache. Waller of Eversbeg would have ejected
+every man on his estate had every man not chanced
+to want to return Pryor. There was no choice between
+them. It was war to the knife on both sides:
+and when war of any kind is being waged, men are
+not apt to be too particular.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Day by day the fight got fiercer, the combatants
+angrier. In the race each side strained every nerve
+for victory: all stratagems were allowed—all tricks
+were resorted to. It was a Derby where every man
+was trying to bribe his neighbour’s jockey; where he
+was slyly trying to loosen his girths, to unbuckle his
+bridle, to lame the favourite. It was a boat-race
+where people strove not only to row their best, but
+endeavoured to prevent others rowing at all. If you
+can fancy a three-mile heat, with the riders standing
+in their stirrups and lashing one another back; if you
+can imagine a rowing-match where, when hard run,
+the crew rose up and battered their opponents with
+their oars; if you can picture a battle without any
+order or regularity; if you can crowd into your mental
+canvas everything hopelessly unfair, dishonest, brutal,
+mean, you may perhaps form some idea of Duranmore
+during the time which elapsed between the nomination
+and the return.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was many a purse filled—there was many
+a spirit broken. Many a man thought of the children
+at home, and the tract of wretched land that he had
+done his miserable best to till; thought of how the
+children would cry for want of their potatoes; thought
+of the empty pot, of the lonely hill side, of the deserted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>cabin; and voted against his conscience. His
+opinions might not be right—more than probable
+they were all wrong—but they were not more wrong
+than those held by many of his betters; and his betters
+were able to vote as they liked, while he had to vote
+for the man he detested.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If the masther ’ud just let me be, ma’am,” said
+one poor fellow to Mrs. Drewitt, “it’s meself ’ud niver
+go to the poll at all at all. I’d vote for Mr. Pryor if I
+could; but as it’s not plazing to Mr. Drewitt, I’d
+rayther not vote for aither.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had been artful, this uneducated Irishman: he
+had thought to get at the soft side of Mr. Drewitt
+through his wife; and Mrs. Drewitt herself imagined
+that so reasonable a request might be granted.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He will never force Byrne to vote against his
+conscience,” argued Mrs. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Wouldn’t he though? Mr. Drewitt soon showed his
+wife the reverse of the picture; and the reverse was
+not pretty.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Byrne should vote or give up his lot.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then,” said Byrne, “I will give up my lot; but
+if I do I’ll vote for Pryor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And he did.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>After that Mr. Drewitt desired his wife not to allow
+any of his tenants to speak to her on the subject
+of the election. He knew she did not go with him in
+his ideas; that in fact she was getting perfectly bewildered
+with the strife of contending opinions; for
+which reasons he bade her send all reluctant voters to
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I understand them, and you do not,” he said. “I
+know how to manage them; and they think they can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>manage you.” And thus, happily for herself, Mrs.
+Drewitt was withdrawn from the political arena, and
+only permitted to look on at the fray.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>What a fray it was!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not been in bed for a week,” said Maxwell
+Drewitt to Mr. Waller, on the morning which was
+to decide the result.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Nor have I,” answered the owner of Eversbeg;
+“but to-day will, I hope, repay us for all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That was what the Blues were saying as well.
+They were sanguine of success also; so sanguine, that
+Mrs. Munks, and Lady Marsden, and a number of other
+ladies—Mrs. Drewitt amongst them, by her husband’s
+special desire—took possession of the Assembly
+Room, to hear the earliest tidings concerning
+the winner.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Not to be behind on such an occasion, Lady Emmeline
+and her staff occupied the opposition benches.
+She and Colonel Vervensoe had not spoken to one
+another for a month previously, and it was currently
+reported that if Mr. Pryor got in he would never
+speak to her again. If, on the other hand, Mr. Sache
+were returned, people believed that she would never
+speak to her husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There can be no doubt that the attitude assumed
+by this lady added greatly to the excitement of the
+election. In the Hickman family brother was against
+brother; among the Drewitts uncle and nephew were
+bitter opponents; but all this was nothing to husband
+and wife openly supporting different sides.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was the flavouring to the soup; the sauce to the
+fish; the lemon to the punch. Without that element
+the election would have been, to a great extent, like
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>other elections: as it was, in the memory of the
+oldest inhabitant there had never been such fun in
+Duranmore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On the last day of the poll the town presented a
+perfectly indescribable scene of riot, misery, and contention.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Everything which had made the nomination rather
+a grand affair, tended to make the final combat
+wretched and squalid.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The wreaths were faded, the evergreens had turned
+brown, the arches were partly broken down, the
+flowers were dead, the banners were torn, the rosettes
+were crumpled and soiled, the instruments of the respective
+bands having been used as weapons of offence
+and defence had come to grief, the leading men on
+both sides looked worn-out and jaded, the voters had
+hardly a whole coat among them; they were tired of
+fighting, they were weary of being dragged hither and
+thither, they had passed through every known stage of
+drunkenness, and many of them were by this time in
+a state of sickly sobriety.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Altogether the ball had lasted too long: the soldiers,
+the police, the musicians, the voters, the candidates—all
+were alike exhausted. No one seemed so
+bright as on the first day, excepting the ladies; and
+even some of them looked a little drooping.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Not so Lady Emmeline, however: whether she
+slept well or rouged well it is not for me to say, but
+the colour in her face was brilliant as the dye of her
+scarf.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If we do not win I shall die,” were her parting
+words to Maxwell Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We shall win,” was his last answer. Every half-hour
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>he despatched a messenger to tell her the state of
+the poll: every half-hour Geoffry Pryor’s chances
+seemed to brighten, while the anxiety of the Sacheites
+increased.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As the day wore on and the excitement became
+more intense, rioting began, and the fighting and
+pushing which had hitherto been confined to the neighbourhood
+of the polling-booth, spread through the
+crowd, till the row became general.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There could be no mistake about the matter now.
+The affair was growing serious, the people were getting
+earnest and dangerous. The Reds were cudgelling the
+Blues, and the Blues were paying back the Reds with
+interest. The authorities were beginning to be
+alarmed. There was a yell for the military, and every
+soldier settled himself more firmly in his saddle, and
+gathered up his reins, while he waited for the order
+to charge. Every spectator was holding his or her
+breath, waiting for “what next?” when suddenly a
+piercing scream rang out over the heads of the crowd,
+and a cry of “Save him!” issued from the windows of
+the Assembly Room.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a moment the play of shillelaghs ceased in the
+centre of the market-place square, and Geoffry Pryor,
+in the very heart of that surging, seething mass of
+human beings, could just distinguish two men struggling
+over a voter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The fellow’s coat was torn off his back, and Maxwell
+Drewitt, with his head bare, with clenched teeth,
+and with his face flushed and furious, was dragging
+him by one arm, while Mr. Drewitt was tugging him
+away by the other. The elder and more powerful man
+seemed to be getting the best of it, when, quick as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>thought, a stick whizzed through the air and came
+down on Mr. Drewitt’s skull. He dropped on the instant,
+and as he dropped there was a rush of the rabble
+to one side, and right over his body rode a company
+of hussars.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then the light left Geoffry Pryor’s eyes; a deathlike
+sickness came over him, and he fainted away.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The whole scene, which it has taken me so long
+to describe, was acted out almost in a second; and
+next moment eager hands were raising the owner of
+Kincorth from the ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My God, he’s dead!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Och, docther, dear, say that the life’s not out of
+him!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Bleed him, docther darlint.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“For the sake of the blessed Vargin, lift him
+aisy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, swate father! what is this at all at all?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Keep the craythur back. Shure it’s the young
+wife he married only the other day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But Agnes Drewitt would not be kept back. Unmindful
+of the crowd, heedless of danger or difficulty,
+she made her way towards the knot collected round
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Doctor,” she said, “you must bring him back to
+me. He is not dead: tell me he is not dead.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Carry him to my house. I can do nothing here,”
+was all the answer he made; but he pulled Mrs.
+Drewitt forcibly from her husband’s side, and keeping
+her hand in his, followed close behind.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The doctor’s house was not fifty yards distant, but
+to Agnes Drewitt it seemed fifty miles.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The mob closed up again as they passed through,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>and, as in some terrible dream, she heard loud
+shouts and continuous yells and oaths and threats and
+curses.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Very vaguely it seemed to her as though she had
+crossed into a frightful eternity in which the tumult of
+earth was still distinctly audible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Behind her lay the great battle-field of the contested
+election, where her husband had fought for what
+he thought the right so gallantly and so long. To her
+it was all gone and past: gone with its excitement, its
+sorrow, its shock, its trouble.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She felt stupified, she felt stunned. As she crossed
+the threshold of the doctor’s house, she scarcely heard
+a prolonged howl of anger and disappointment that
+rent the summer air.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What’s that?” cried Lady Emmeline, starting up;
+but next moment she sat back in her seat, clenching
+her hands together and beating her little foot in impotent
+rage against the floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s lost! it’s all over!” she shrieked out. And
+she was right. At the eleventh hour every one of the
+tenants she had promised Mr. Pryor were marched up
+to the polling-booth by her husband, where they recorded
+their votes for Mr. Sache.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They turned the fate of the day.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That settles it!” muttered Ryan, with a fearful
+oath; and he was right, for Geoffry Pryor was
+beaten, and the Earl of Popingham’s nominee had
+won!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII.<br> <span class='c011'>Not Dead.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>If there be one thing under heaven for which
+more than another the lower order of Irish have a
+passion, it is for offering medical advice; and accordingly,
+whenever the eager crowd who had hustled and
+shoved their way after the “body,” as they called Mr.
+Drewitt, beheld him safely deposited on Doctor Sheen’s
+bed, they opened fire on that gentleman in a style
+which set at defiance the knowledge of Apothecaries’
+Hall, and might have made the whole College of
+Surgeons stand aghast.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Lay him down there,” growled the doctor. “Gently,
+gently—do you hear?—and not as if he was a sack
+of potatoes: and now be off, everyone of you; I don’t
+want you here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But, Doctor dear——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Open an artery. Och! see if the blood’ll come.
+Sweet father, what’ll we do at all—at all? Musha—oh!
+Wirrastrue.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Jist touch him in the arm”—improved another—“a
+bit above the elbow—where Sergen Brabsen—long
+life till him—put the lance in me and brought
+me back after I died of the squinazy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Could ye not put a dhrop o’ spirit down his throat,
+Docthor darlint?” suggested a fourth; “it might lift his
+heart again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do, an’ may the heavens be yer bed: we’ll dhrink
+ye’re health night and day, an’——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>“Come, be off!” interrupted Doctor Sheen. “I
+can’t do with you crowding about me, yelling enough
+to pull the house down.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If ye’d put a feather till his nose,” broke forth
+the first speaker with greater vehemence than ever, “I
+can catch one of the hens in a minit, or let me hould
+a bit av a lookin’ glass afore his mouth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An’ fit his arm straight in place: see how it
+hings.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An’ look if the skull’s knocked in entirely, an’
+pick out the broken bits afore they get down intil his
+brains.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Pick them up with the pincers, and then join
+them cleverly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An’ sen’ for ould Peggy Magore; shure she has
+dhrinks made out o’ herbs that would entice a corpse
+to speak, if it could only be made to swally them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An’ docthor, wouldn’t ye let his head down a
+bit?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An’ lift his feet on a pillow?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And feel if there’s a ticking in either of his
+heels?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Which last speech bearing, as it did, on the idea
+that before death a pulse may be felt in the heel,
+produced such a wailing and mourning—such laments
+over the man who had been taken from them—such
+tributes to his virtues—such regrets for his untimely
+end—that at length Doctor Sheen fairly lost his
+patience, and shoving the loudest of the talkers out of
+the room, and ordering the rest to follow, he locked
+and double-locked the door, and found himself alone
+with his patient, Mrs. Drewitt, and his assistant.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Without, there was noise and riot and shouting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>and fighting: within, there was silence like the grave:
+without was life; within, the shadow of the angel of
+death.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>No one in the room spoke a word while Doctor
+Sheen felt Mr. Drewitt’s pulse, opened his coat, waistcoat,
+and shirt, and placed his hand on his heart; but
+when at last he looked up doubtfully, Mrs. Drewitt
+said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Doctor, he shall not die?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Very well, ma’am,” answered the doctor, and
+pressed his fingers on Mr. Drewitt’s wrist once more.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then Doctor Sheen whispered something in the
+assistant’s ear, to which the assistant replied:</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, only stunned.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you think so?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am sure of it,” answered the other; “haven’t I
+had dozens of them here just as bad?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But not with that,” said Doctor Sheen, still
+speaking in so low a tone that his words could not
+reach Mrs. Drewitt, and pointing as he spoke to Mr.
+Drewitt’s head, “but not with that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And what’s that?” inquired the assistant contemptuously;
+“he’ll be all right again in a week;”
+and he took the injured arm, and began manipulating
+it, as though he were playing a tune on a piano.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There you are,” he said. “Harder, sir, harder;
+his pulse is not in his skin; give him time, there’s no
+hurry; he’s coming as fast as he can. Now I’d give
+five shillings,” added the young man, stepping back
+and surveying Mr. Drewitt, “I’d give five shillings to
+know where he has been.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Where who has been?” asked Mrs. Drewitt, turning
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>her face, which was wet with tears, towards the
+speaker.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Where your husband has been, ma’am; all our
+anatomy won’t teach us that; it’s a good quarter of an
+hour since he went away, and he is only coming back
+again now—here he is,”—and as he said the word
+Mr. Drewitt opened his eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With a little cry of thanksgiving his wife fell on
+her knees beside him. She had been afraid to say she
+feared before; but now the very excess of her joy
+proved how great had been her previous dread.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will be quiet,” she said, as Doctor Sheen tried
+to draw her from the room; “I will be quiet—you
+need not be afraid of me again—I won’t say a word
+you may trust me, indeed—indeed you may.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am going to set his arm,” persisted Doctor Sheen,
+“and see to this cut in his head, and——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And there is no one so fit to stay here as I am,”
+she interposed eagerly: “you would wish me to remain,
+you would like me to be near you—would not you,
+Archy?”—and she looked into the scarcely conscious
+eyes half hidden by a weight of heavy eyelid while
+she waited for an answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Archibald Drewitt could not answer her; she had
+not been accustomed to illness, poor soul, or she might
+have known better than to expect it; but he made a
+vain effort to turn towards her—a faint attempt to
+move his uninjured arm and clasp her hand in his.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was too much; a more ghastly pallor came over
+his face, the eyelids closed again, and——</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He’s dead! he’s dead!” exclaimed his wife, starting
+up and endeavouring to throw herself on the body, but
+Mr. Murphy prevented this.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>“Dead, ma’am!” he said, still keeping a firm hand
+on her shoulder: “dead, ma’am! he’s worth a dozen
+dead ones yet. Now—now”—and Mr. Murphy
+patted her back, apparently under the delusion that
+she was a baby choking—“do be reasonable and just
+leave him to us. He’s not dead, and isn’t going to
+die. So far as this goes, he may live to bury you;”
+and without any more ceremony the young man walked
+Mrs. Drewitt out of the room, and sat her down in
+the surgery, where he left her alone, after having
+procured for her a well-thumbed copy of “Clarissa
+Harlowe,” which would, he said, “serve to divert her
+mind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And keep yourself easy, ma’am,” he finished, “for
+Mr. Drewitt will be about again, in no time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You should be more careful, Murphy,” remarked
+Doctor Sheen that same night, when he and his assistant
+were seated together over their respective tumblers of
+punch. “I did not exactly like your saying to Mrs.
+Drewitt that her husband might bury her. Some of
+the English don’t take those kind of things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, wasn’t I right?” demanded the other; “mayn’t
+he bury her? isn’t he going on as well as a man could
+go on? and won’t he live to have sons of his own, please
+God, and keep Maxwell out of the estate?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He has been here three times this evening to ask
+after him,” said Doctor Sheen, reflectively.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And did he seem sorry when he heard it was
+for Kincorth, and not for the Abbey, his uncle was
+bound?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, he seemed glad.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Did he now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And he says he did not strike the blow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>“Who ever thought he did? He had not a stick
+in his hand at all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“His aunt did not know that, for she went on at
+him, and he could not edge in a word till she was
+tired; but then he began, and told her this, that, and
+the other, till he got round her completely: she’s as
+soft as salve, and she begged his pardon, and they
+are now as thick as thieves. Oh! faith,” added the
+Doctor, “and it’s Master Maxwell Drewitt that can
+wile the bird off a bush when he likes. It’s a wonderful
+tongue he has: to hear him sometimes, you would
+think butter could not melt in his mouth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And to hear him at others you would know cheese
+would not choke him,” said Mr. Murphy, who had his
+own reasons for disliking Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Still it’s a great pity of the young fellow,” said
+Doctor Sheen, mixing himself another tumbler of punch,
+“for he ought to have had Kincorth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It would have been a greater pity of other people
+if he had had it,” remarked Mr. Murphy; in which
+opinion, however, he chanced to be wrong.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>No man could have done worse for other people
+than Archibald Drewitt, who, spite of Mr. Murphy’s
+hopeful predictions, lay between life and death for
+more than a month at Doctor Sheen’s, during which
+time the house was besieged with visitors and inquiries.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You must pull him through, Sheen,” said the
+Earl of Popingham. “We cannot afford to lose Mr.
+Drewitt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You need never show your face at the Hall again
+if he is not able to ride to the first meet this season,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>chimed in Colonel Vervensoe, while Mr. Pryor, Mr.
+Waller, and all the Reds were, if possible, more eager
+in their anxiety, more impatient for good tidings, than
+the Blues.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But he will get through it, won’t he, Murphy?”
+asked Mr. Waller one day when he had met Doctor
+Sheen’s assistant on the road near Eversbeg, and insisted
+on taking him up to the house for lunch.
+“There is no fear now, is there?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; he is out of danger; that is, he is out of
+danger now, so far as we know. He will do, if he
+takes care of himself. His arm is the worst; we can’t
+make a good job of that at all. It was a beautiful
+case, and a splendid fracture; but it will never be a
+good arm again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will it hinder his hunting?” asked young Waller,
+who thought anything that stopped a man’s course
+across country the most grievous misfortune possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Hinder his hunting? Is it the like of that would
+keep Mr. Drewitt back, do you think? If that was all,
+couldn’t he ride with the bridle in his teeth, like a
+gentleman I knew down in Tipperary? You may believe
+me or not, Mr. Waller, just as you like,” proceeded
+Mr. Murphy; “but he had neither arms nor
+legs, and yet he hunted as regularly as you do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’d go from here to there to see him,” was Mr.
+Waller’s only reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And, indeed, it’s himself would make you welcome,”
+answered Mr. Murphy; “that is, if he’s alive;
+there was not a funnier fellow nor a harder drinker in
+the county.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My cousin was round seeing Mr. Drewitt the other
+day,” remarked Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>“Yes, but he did not see him,” said the assistant.
+“He had a long talk with Mrs. Drewitt. We’re glad
+of anybody that will keep her out of the sick room;
+and Mr. Pryor wanted to get speech with some of
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes,” said the other, “he was going back to London,
+and wished to express his regret and all the rest
+of it. Upon my conscience, I never was so frightened
+in my life. He went down—Pryor, I mean—as
+if he had been shot. Fainted dead away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He ought to take three tumblers of punch every
+night going to bed,” observed Mr. Murphy; “it would
+strengthen his nervous system.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He was delighted with Mrs. Drewitt—came home
+here in perfect raptures about her. She did not strike
+me as being anything remarkable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Miss Susan Drewitt is a handsome woman,” answered
+Mr. Murphy; “but Mrs. Drewitt is more of a
+woman—do you understand me, sir? She has not
+much spirit, but she has a sweet temper. She is pretty,
+to my taste; and for a woman, I consider her uncommonly
+sensible—uncommonly,” and Mr. Murphy drained
+a bumper to her health, after which he suddenly recollected
+that Dr. Sheen would be expecting him, and
+rose to take his departure.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“When do you think of moving him?” asked Mr.
+Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“In about a week’s time, if he goes on well,” said
+Mr. Murphy. “We are to have down a mighty easy
+carriage from Lord Marsden’s, and I think it won’t
+hurt him. It must be uncomfortable for Mrs. Drewitt
+staying at Dr. Sheen’s, though we do our best; and
+this much I’ll say for her,” added Mr. Murphy, “that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>an easier-pleased or an easier-served lady I would
+never wish to see. She makes no fuss and she gives
+no trouble, and, for my own part, I wish she was to
+live in the house for ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As for Mrs. Drewitt herself, she was Mr. Murphy’s
+friend for life. What she would have done without
+him during that illness she never knew. He did not
+seem to know the meaning of the word despondency.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It was a doctor’s business to cure, to be sure it
+was. When a doctor could not cure, send for the
+nurse, and a coffin, and a lawyer to make the will; but
+till Mrs. Drewitt saw the lawyer, at any rate, she ought
+not to give way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He went up to Kincorth for her. He did her errands;
+he posted her letters; he kept watch while she
+slept; he told her stories; he listened to her while she
+talked about England.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That’s the place I’d like to go to,” he said.
+“What chance has a man in a place like this? a man
+that is a man, I mean, and has any push in him.
+What do you see in a place like this, but broken heads
+and fever, and children being born, and old men and
+women dying? Except, may be, an odd case of cancer,
+middle-aged people never die of any out-of-the-way
+disease. A child could prescribe for them. And as
+for work, ma’am, nobody in London would credit it!
+Doctor Sheen is the dispensary doctor, you know.
+Well, if we were earning ten thousand a year each
+out of it, there could not be more expected from us.
+They come in the middle of the night here, and ring—ring—ring,
+just as if one ought to be standing
+behind the door waiting to answer it, and then, ‘It’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>the misthress is taken ill, and ye’re to come at wanst,’
+and then we’ve to go through the rain and the snow
+and the wind to find the woman. ‘Sorry to have given
+us the thrubble, but when she sint she was very bad,
+entirely.’ I’d like well to go to London, I would.
+Perhaps I might be there before I’d die.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you must remember, Mr. Murphy,” Mrs.
+Drewitt was wont to say, “that the streets are not
+paved with gold there, though I know many country
+people imagine they are.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“True, ma’am; but they must be full of patients.
+I have always fancied that there must be some place
+on the face of God’s earth where, if men are willing
+to work hard, they may gather abundantly; but let
+that place be where it will, it is not Duranmore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All of which set Mrs. Drewitt thinking, and wondering
+more and more what Maxwell was to do. Would
+he come back to Kincorth, she marvelled? Would her
+entreaties avail now? After what had happened, would
+he listen to her? Give her the opportunity and she
+would try. And Maxwell gave her the opportunity by
+asking if he could assist her in any way when she was
+removing his uncle to Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Can I help—may I help?” he said eagerly; but
+Mrs. Drewitt answered—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am afraid to let him see you for the present. I
+do not wish to speak to him about you; about the
+election, I mean, for a little while. But I should like
+you to return to Kincorth. I know he will be glad,
+when he is better, to hear you are under the same
+roof with him. I can take so much on my own responsibility,
+Maxwell; and I do take it, and ask you
+most earnestly to come back to us once more.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>“I have started on my road,” he said, “and I may
+not retrace my steps; but I thank you all the same.
+Whenever he is strong enough to see me, tell me to
+come, and I will come to Kincorth, though not to stay
+there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish there was not any Kincorth standing between
+us,” answered Mrs. Drewitt, very truthfully,
+“and that we could all live at peace together.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Perhaps we may, some day,” was Maxwell’s reply.
+He was thinking of the vow he had made to himself,
+of the time when he was to be rich and his uncle poor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Would there be peace then? When the tables were
+turned—when he was the benefactor, could he afford
+to let bygones be bygones; could he then be generous
+enough to say, let there be peace between us at last?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That was what he was wondering while Mrs. Drewitt
+stood silent and looked in his face, and marvelled
+what made its expression change so swiftly and vary
+so often.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There came a day when she knew all, when she
+hated Maxwell more than he had ever hated his uncle;
+when she spurned his proffered kindnesses, when there
+was war waged between them, war to the death, which
+ended but with life.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Had anyone told Mrs. Drewitt then that she could
+ever learn to prefer strife to peace, she would have
+declared it was impossible; and yet as time went by
+the impossible grew possible, and the possible came
+to pass.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But at that early stage of her married life Mrs.
+Drewitt had no strong interests blinding her, no feeling
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>in favour of this person or against that, warping
+her judgment and leading her astray.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She loved her husband, who owned Kincorth; she
+was sorry for Maxwell, who did not own it; but at the
+same time Mr. Drewitt, whom she loved, was master
+for life, while his nephew had not a penny.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Reverse the cases, and how would Mrs. Drewitt
+have felt? That, my reader, is what we shall find out
+when the tale of the years is completed—when the
+story of the years is told.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX.<br> <span class='c011'>Mrs. Drewitt understands.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was winter—winter on the grand sea-coast—winter
+among those everlasting hills; and Agnes Drewitt
+came to understand how the season might be more
+endurable in the country than in London; came to see
+how the breakers dashing on the rocks—how the
+waves rolling up on the shore—how the mountains
+covered with snow—how the swelling streams, and
+the roaring torrents might be less monotonous and depressing
+than the fine perspective of a London street,
+or the exhilarating spectacle of a yellow fog.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She was beginning to like Kincorth. Home—be
+it ever so homely, ever so lonely, ever so uncomfortable—has
+a great charm for a woman like Mrs. Drewitt;
+and though her lot was in many respects not an enviable
+one, still she was becoming reconciled to it. She
+was growing to know the people and to like them; she
+was contriving how to get her household into more
+orderly ways. She had talked with her husband, and
+got him to consent to see Maxwell. Altogether, on
+the particular afternoon of which I am speaking, Mrs.
+Drewitt did not feel unhappy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She was going out for a walk, a long walk, all by
+herself; and after long confinement to the house, after
+constant attendance on an invalid, the idea of fresh
+air, of a little pilgrimage beside Duranmore Bay, all
+round Eversbeg Head, and so on nearly to Eversbeg
+Abbey, did not prove unpleasant.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>She had been rather a prisoner since her arrival in
+Ireland, and freedom seemed sweet. She had never
+been round Eversbeg Head, which she could see so
+plainly from her bedroom windows. She had never
+been very near the Atlantic, for she did not call Duranmore
+Bay the Atlantic; and she wanted to dip her
+hand in it for once, and write to her sister, “I have
+touched the great ocean.” She longed to stand on
+some point of land whence she could see thousands and
+thousands of miles away. She had some vague notion,
+I fancy, of getting a glimpse of America; but be this
+as it may, she intensely enjoyed the idea of the walk,
+and meant to make the most of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is a much nearer way you know, Auntie,”
+said Kathleen, “thrau the road by Eversbeg Head;
+but if you wish to get a good view of the Atlantic,
+you must go by the coast. It is not a nice clear day,
+though. You ought to have seen it in fine weather.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh! I think it a lovely day,” answered Mrs. Drewitt,
+and as she walked along, while the wind drove
+the clouds before her, she repeated to herself that it
+was lovely—that she had never enjoyed anything so
+much in all her life before.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The election had long been over. Mr. Sache and
+his family were in Dublin, and the “Castle,” as he
+somewhat pompously called his house—a building all
+wings and turrets and loopholes and weathercocks—was
+left in charge of servants.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Duranmore had subsided into its state of normal
+dullness. Fishermen mended their nets, labourers went
+about their accustomed work, the shopkeepers did their
+usual small amount of business. There was no more
+fighting in the streets, the public-houses were emptied
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>of the crowds of drunken men that had once filled
+them full to overflowing. The Earl and Countess of
+Popingham were in France, Lord Marsden in Rome,
+Mr. and Mrs. Munks in London, and thus Mrs. Drewitt
+had, after a fashion, the country to herself, to enjoy
+thoroughly and completely, if she liked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And she did like. She loved to look at the
+mountains with the clouds flying fast over them as
+though hurrying, hurrying away. She loved the wild
+hills, the distant ravines, the rivers that came bounding
+down from the far-off heights and went rushing to the
+sea. She loved the bay when the waters were dark
+like the sky, when the waves came up towards Duranmore,
+that was now so quiet and orderly. She loved
+to pause and look at the whitewashed cottages, at the
+pretty, picturesque children, who hung their curly
+heads abashed as the lady passed by. She loved the
+salutation of the country people, some of whom “made
+bould to ask her how the masther was.” She was not
+a stranger among strangers now. She was taking root
+in the soil, and learning to love the very shamrocks in
+the grass.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She left Duranmore behind her, and still went on.
+Spite of recent rains the granite road was hard and
+dry beneath her feet. Above her head the high wind
+drove the clouds before it. “You are going to England,”
+she thought, “but I do not wish to be travelling
+there with you now.” The western breeze blew a
+colour into her cheeks, and disarranged her hair, and
+lifted her veil, and kissed her sweet face caressingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I love the wind,” she thought; “it is fresh and
+pure, and it comes from travelling over the great sea,
+instead of bringing the taint of large cities on its
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>breath;” and she turned, even while she was thinking
+this, round Eversbeg Head, and the wide Atlantic and
+the full force of the western breeze burst upon her
+at once.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Thousands of miles! Millions upon millions of
+tossing billows! Oh! thou great God Almighty! who
+can look across the restless ocean and not think of
+Thee! Who can forget, while standing by the sea and
+watching the great waters come thundering upon the
+shore, that Thou hast set bounds to the waters and
+said, “Here shall thy proud waves be stayed”—who,
+looking over the trackless expanse of ocean, but must
+feel that all unseen the feet of the Most High have
+traversed it?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When we see this work of the Lord, His wonders
+in the deep; when we perceive how at His command
+the floods arise, and how at His word the storm ceases;
+when we remember that though the waves of the sea
+are mighty and rage horribly, still that the Lord God
+who dwelleth on high is mightier; when we think that
+he holds the waters in the hollow of his hand, do we
+not seem for a moment, amid raging tempests and
+foaming billows, to catch a glimpse of the Infinite?
+Looking over the waste of waters, does not our weak
+mortality appear able to grasp for an instant the idea
+of immortality? Can we not imagine that no material
+horizon bounds our view—that we are gazing away
+and away across the ocean into eternity?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Thousands of miles, friends! Which of us has not
+at one time or other let his heart go free over the
+waters? Who has not stood by the shore silent, while
+his inner self—his self that never talks save to his
+God and his own soul—has gone out from his body
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>and tossed with the billows, and answered the sullen
+roar of the waters, and risen and sunk with the waters
+as they rose and fell, rose and fell, and felt the
+breaking of the foam, the sobbing plash of the great
+ocean, as it rolls up on the sands and over the rocks
+and stones and shells of earth, while depth calleth unto
+depth and the giant floods clap their hands together?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And oh! with what a terrible sadness does that
+second self come back to us! It has been out listening
+to strange voices, hearing strange sounds, learning
+solemn truths. It has been out on the billows, on the
+foam, among the spray and the clouds and the tempest—out
+and away to the very confines of the invisible
+world. It has been restless like the ocean, and it comes
+back to be set within the bounds of flesh; it has been
+free, and behold it must return to chains and fetters;
+it has been telling of its troubles to the ocean, and the
+ocean has lifted up its mighty arms and mourned out its
+sorrowful reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mourning—mourning—never silent, never still—now
+lashing itself up into fury—now tossing
+hither and thither as it seems to us without plan or
+purpose; now wave following after wave, as man follows
+after man in the ranks of a vast army; now flinging
+its waters on the shore—now striving to climb the
+steep sides of some rugged rock; fretting itself as we
+fret ourselves—moaning as we moan—toiling as we
+toil—restless as we are; now receding—now advancing—but
+never at peace; in its strong moods
+wild and tumultuous—in its calmest moments stirred
+by the ground swell, ruffled by the lightest breeze!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Well may man love this deep, inexplicable, unfathomable
+ocean, for as it through the ages has gone
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>on sobbing and mourning and struggling, so man
+through the years of his life goes mourning and struggling
+too.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Some thoughts like these passed through Mrs. Drewitt’s
+mind as she stood at the base of Eversbeg Head,
+and looked out over the Atlantic. She had never seen
+anything like it before; the ocean had never filled her
+heart and saddened it till now.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Though not much of a traveller, she had, like most
+people, known the sea in its quieter aspect. She had
+visited Brighton; she had been to Hastings; she had
+seen the flat Norfolk coast, and beheld the mud banks
+in the Essex Hundreds; but the sea in any of the places
+I have mentioned was not like the sea that broke over
+the rocky headlands of the wild West; neither was the
+desolate shore she stood on like unto the civilized
+shores she was once familiar with, where bathing boxes
+were drawn up on the shingle, and men and women
+walked upon the parade, and the bare windows of
+lodgings to let looked out above the calm blue waters.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>An unromantic lady—middle-aged, shall we say—and
+with no particular beauty of face or figure, who
+pursues the even tenour of her unexciting life, is of
+the same genus, doubtless, as Lady Macbeth, Joan of
+Arc, or Mary Queen of Scots. Naturalists would declare
+them to be all women together; but then they
+were different women, and not much alike, we may
+suppose, in personal appearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is thus with the sea: we have now the respectable
+matron, and anon the queen of tragedy; we have
+the smooth face, the well-established conventionalities;
+the world’s customs in one place, in another we have
+anger and passion, and wild beauty and rugged grandeur;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>and, above all, thousands of miles of ocean, millions
+of tossing billows.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had never seen anything like it—never seen
+such a sea under such a sky before; never seen a vessel
+out before in rough weather; never thought to look
+upon such an expanse of angry waters as now met her
+view.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She turned and looked towards Kincorth. There,
+secure on the hill-side, it stood in its tranquil beauty;
+she looked further north still, towards Duranmore Point,
+and saw it gloomy and impassable, stretching out into
+the sea. Far and far out she could tell where the
+sunken rocks lay—she knew by the sheets of white,
+foam that broke upon them; to her left, on the other
+side of Eversbeg Bay, she saw a low green hill—green
+even under that wintry sky, which looked calm and
+tranquil, though the wild waves were dashing round
+and about it. Up the bays the water rolled dark and
+sullen, but still calm by comparison with what they
+looked out to seaward.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Among the billows a ship was labouring and striving,
+and when Mrs. Drewitt reluctantly pursued her onward
+way, she left it making with caution for Duranmore
+Bay, putting in there out of the way of the coming
+storm.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘And so He bringeth them into the haven where
+they would be,’” murmured Mrs. Drewitt, as she neared
+her own destination.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Did she ever forget her first view of the great Atlantic,
+do you imagine, my reader? Did the stormy
+ocean, those foaming billows, those restless waves ever
+fade out of her memory as the years went by?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When she passed, in a far different place, to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>haven which God had appointed for her, was not the
+roar of those mighty waters still in her ears? did she
+not feel like that reeling vessel, weary of the struggle
+with the winds and the waves? and was she not glad
+to turn into any harbour where she might be at rest?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Thinking of the boundless Atlantic, she continued
+on her way, till she came to a tract of poor, barren
+land, on the very edge of Eversbeg Bay, which tract
+of land was Maxwell Drewitt’s sole inheritance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A child whom she met on the way gladly turned
+back and showed Mrs. Drewitt which was Headlands
+Cottage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Headlands Cottage! Headlands Hovel would have
+been nearer the mark, she thought, as she knocked
+with her knuckles at the door, which, for a wonder in
+that description of house, was shut.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell Drewitt answered her summons in person,
+and requested her to enter his poor habitation with all
+the courtesy of a grand seigneur.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The cabin—for it was nothing better than a
+cabin—contained but two rooms, in one of which
+Maxwell slept, whilst he lived, read, ate, wrote, and
+planned in the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had an old woman who came in and “did for
+him,” so he explained to his aunt, and who, being at
+that present moment in a kitchen which he had extemporized
+out of a cow-shed, would be happy to
+make Mrs. Drewitt a cup of tea if she wished for it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But in any case,” finished Maxwell, “I will tell
+her to bring it in;” and he left the room to do so,
+while Mrs. Drewitt looked round at her leisure.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was a blazing turf fire on the hearth, and
+near the fire stood a common deal table covered with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>books, papers, and plans. The apartment boasted two
+chairs, and Mrs. Drewitt occupied one of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The floor was of earth, swept clean; the walls were
+whitewashed; the roof was unceiled, and between the
+blackened rafters she could see the thatch. Besides
+the table and chairs, the room boasted no other furniture
+of any kind, sort, or description, except a writing-desk
+and a hair trunk. The walls were decorated with
+pistols, guns, riding-whips, and fishing-rods. It was in
+a place like this Maxwell Drewitt had elected to make
+his first start in life, and Mrs. Drewitt could not help
+admiring him for it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I wish I were able to sketch that room for you. I
+should like to show how the firelight fell on Maxwell’s
+dark face; how the shadows lay on the floor while the
+gloom of the winter evening gathered, deepened and
+deepened, out of doors.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was no false pride about Maxwell Drewitt.
+He had that virtue, at any rate. If the king had
+called, in passing, the young man would have felt no
+shame about receiving royalty in the only house he
+owned; and for this reason Mrs. Drewitt found that it
+was impossible for her to speak about the place in
+which she found him. She could as soon have remonstrated
+with an Indian on the inconvenience of living
+in a wigwam as she could have talked to her nephew
+concerning his abode.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was his, and he was a gentleman, and he had
+chosen it for himself. She had no more right to come
+there and pity him for his earthen floor and his scant
+furniture than royalty would have to find fault with
+the dinner-service at Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>Headlands Cottage was Maxwell Drewitt’s castle,
+and being his castle, Mrs. Drewitt respected it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She had come to speak to him about many things,”
+she said. “First of all, your uncle is much better—almost
+well again, thank God, and he is able and wishful
+to see you. I thought, perhaps, you would come
+back with me this evening,” she hesitated; “but in
+case you were unable to do so, I told one of the
+men to walk a little way on this side Duranmore to
+meet me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have an appointment for this evening,” answered
+Maxwell, “but I will walk back with you as far as the
+lodge gates.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And when will you come to Kincorth?” she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“To-morrow, if it be convenient to you,” he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“As if any time were inconvenient!” she exclaimed;
+“as if I should not be only too glad to see you back
+there, for good and all, I mean.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have got so far on my road,” he replied, “I am
+not likely to try another now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But, Maxwell,” she inquired, “what are you going
+to do? Forgive me if I seem impertinent; but how are
+you going to live? Do you mean to stay here? What
+do you purpose doing for money?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I purpose to work for it,” he answered, “and I
+mean to obtain it. I know you only ask what my plans
+are, out of kindness, and I, therefore, cannot consider
+any question impertinent. You must not, however,
+think me rude if I reply that men are not like women;
+they do not act from impulse; they do not commence
+to build without counting the cost; they do not start on
+a journey without knowing something of the land towards
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>which they are travelling. To speak more plainly
+still, I did not leave Kincorth without sketching out a
+plan for my own future, and I mean to perfect that
+plan if I can. When I have perfected it, you shall see
+the result. Meantime, be satisfied,” he added, with a
+smile. “I have food, I have raiment. I have a roof
+to cover me, and I have a fire at which to warm myself
+withal. More than this,” he went on, “it is all
+mine own; that is, mine, so long as I pay my rent
+punctually. If you came round Eversbeg you must
+have passed some land which is mine without paying
+rent at all, and in another year I mean to have it in
+my own hands. This farm joins my land, so I have
+my territories close together, and there is a small house
+on my freehold which, when once Blake gives up possession,
+I mean to have put into thorough repair, and
+where I hope you will come and see my improvements.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then you never mean to return to Kincorth?”
+she said. “Never?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He looked at her, and then he looked into the
+fire, and then he flung on a few more peats before he
+answered—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I may, perhaps, but you ought not to wish me
+to do so.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why?” she asked; and as he only laughed in
+reply, she went on. “You always speak in riddles,
+Maxwell. What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You really wish to know?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do; of course I do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then I will tell you before you go. Now, what
+else did you want to speak to me about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>“About your sisters—about twenty things. First
+about your sisters. They are a great care to me, Maxwell.
+I do not know what I ought to do. I do not
+know if I can do anything.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What is the particular emergency?” inquired Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Their position is not what it ought to be,” she
+explained, “and I cannot make it different. If Susan
+and Wilhelmina would do their parts,” she continued,
+“things might be better; but they seem to take a delight
+in thwarting all my plans. Wilhelmina rides from
+morning till night. She visits with people your uncle
+does not seem to know and that I have never seen.
+She will not read or practice, or improve herself in
+any way: and as for Susan—” but here Mrs. Drewitt
+paused.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, what about Susan?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is a Captain Ellenham who is always about
+the house,” said his aunt; “always with Susan,” and
+she stopped again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He is possibly in love with her,” remarked Maxwell,
+with a smile, “though it does not say much for
+his taste.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But if he were in love with her,” argued Mrs.
+Drewitt, “should he not want to see her uncle, to see
+me, to ascertain how her family were likely to receive
+him? There is a secrecy about it which puzzles me.
+I do not wish to speak to your uncle, but I thought
+that you—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do not wish to have anything to do with Susan’s
+affairs,” answered Maxwell, shortly; “I think my uncle
+is the proper person to interfere.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And Wilhelmina?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>“Wilhelmina will not hurt, unless she gets her
+neck broken some of these days.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And Kathleen?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What about Kathleen?” asked Maxwell, raising
+his head and looking at Mrs. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Nothing, only your uncle wants her to be sent
+to school: now, Maxwell, ought I to let her go? I can
+teach her all she needs to learn; I can see to her when
+she is ill; and she is such a comfort to me, I am so
+fond of her—so fond!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But still, would it not be better for her to go to
+school?” asked Maxwell. “Would the companionship
+of girls of her own age not be desirable? would the
+early hours, the regularity, the whole discipline of a
+school not be good for her? If Susan and Willy had
+been sent away they might have been different to what
+they are. You will never have time to attend to
+Kathie. Altogether, if my uncle be willing to pay for
+her, it is best she should go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You think so?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But she is so delicate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She will be stronger out of Galway.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And we are so fond of each other.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is quite another matter,” said Maxwell, and
+then, to his amazement, Mrs. Drewitt began to cry.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>His decision was different to what she had expected
+it would be, and she and Kathleen had agreed to abide
+by that decision.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I feel certain,” he said, “that you would rather
+do what is best for Kathleen’s future than what you
+and she would like in the present. I think it is a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>good thing for her to go to school, but of course that
+is a matter for you and my uncle to settle.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is for you to settle,” answered Mrs. Drewitt,
+“and she shall go to school. Now, about another thing,
+Maxwell. What kind of a woman is Lady Emmeline
+Vervensoe?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You know almost as much of her as I do,” was
+his reply; “you saw her at the election. You may
+judge from that very much what she is.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She has been often over to Kincorth lately,” said
+his aunt, “she seems to wish to be very intimate with
+me; she is very kind and very attentive, but your
+uncle does not like her much, and—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is not to be expected he would like her after
+the part she took against Mr. Sache,” laughed Maxwell.
+“So far as I know, Lady Emmeline has not any
+harm about her; she is much wiser, in my opinion,
+than Mrs. Munks, and she is a great deal prettier. I
+think you would get on very well together, and that
+you might find her a pleasant acquaintance. Does my
+uncle not wish you to visit her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He is very great friends with Colonel Vervensoe,
+you know,” answered Mrs. Drewitt; “but we cannot
+have him, at least I do not like having him, without
+his wife, and I thought I would ask you about Lady
+Emmeline.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is nothing against her, if that is what you
+mean,” Maxwell replied: “she is perfectly and unexceptionably
+proper, although she did wear a red scarf
+at the election and canvass her husband’s tenantry.
+But then, really they are as much her tenants as his.
+She has more money than he, and gives it to him
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>freely enough, I believe. I have not seen her these
+two months.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So she told me,” remarked Mrs. Drewitt; “she
+was asking me where you were and what you were
+doing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How very kind!” laughed Maxwell. “I should
+have thought so insignificant a person far beneath her
+ladyship’s notice,” and Maxwell laughed again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I must go now,” said Mrs. Drewitt, rising to depart;
+“it is getting dusk, and Kathie will be uneasy.
+Now do not think of coming with me, Patrick is certain
+to be somewhere on the road; I left a message for
+him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You must not deny me the pleasure of being your
+escort for all that,” answered Maxwell, and the two
+left the heat of the blazing turf-fire and walked back
+together by the nearer road to Kincorth. As they
+walked they talked—about Ireland, about her scenery,
+about her people, about her wrongs, about her want of
+prosperity. Then Mrs. Drewitt told her nephew how
+fond she was getting of the country, and spoke
+enthusiastically of the view from Eversbeg Head; and
+pleased, almost in spite of himself, by her admiration
+for his native land, Maxwell began to wish they could
+be good friends—that no Kincorth stood between
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Tell me,” she said, as they parted, “why you
+think I ought not to wish you back at Kincorth. I
+can imagine that you might be a great comfort to me
+and a great help to your uncle.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I tell you, I am afraid you will be angry,” he
+answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Angry! you are jesting. What is the reason?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>For a moment Maxwell hesitated, then he said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you remember my saying once that I did not
+dislike you for yourself, but only for being my uncle’s
+wife?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Perfectly; but I hope you do not dislike me now
+for that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, not for that,” was the slow reply; “not for
+that, exactly, but it is not in flesh and blood—at
+least it is not in my flesh and blood—to feel any
+great amount of attachment for a woman whose children
+will keep me out of Kincorth for ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She never answered him by a word. In the twilight
+he could see her turn first red and then white:
+he could see enough in her face to assure him his
+guess had been correct, and that there was an heir
+coming to inherit Kincorth, its woods, its lawns, its
+streamlets.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Never hence by the strength of his own right hand,
+by the power of his own work, by the force of his
+own industry, might the lands of his ancestors return
+to him. The son of a younger son would possess Kincorth;
+while he, the son of the eldest son, was earning
+his bread in his barren farm by the desolate sea-shore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As for Mrs. Drewitt, she re-entered Kincorth a
+different woman to that she had left its gates. She
+understood her position now. She knew at last why
+Maxwell and his two elder sisters detested her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not for myself, but because of the sons I may
+have,” she thought; and it seemed to her that everything
+which was strong and evil in her weak and
+tender nature sprung to life and prompted her to do
+battle for the sake of her still unborn child.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Had he measured her character accurately, would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>Maxwell have spoken to her as he did? I doubt it—doubt
+whether willingly he would have turned her
+friendship into enmity, and taught her to guard the inheritance
+of her children with a jealous watchfulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was not for herself—it was for no benefit she
+ever expected to have out of the property that Mrs.
+Drewitt vowed Maxwell Drewitt should never own
+Kincorth—never if she had a living son.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Who can sow good grain as fast as the Evil One
+can plant tares? who can learn to cleave to the right,
+even in twenty times the space which it takes him to
+adopt the wrong? In the garden of Eden the serpent
+speedily beguiled Eve into eating of the tree; but
+through all the centuries that have passed, with their
+sorrow, away since then, the Maker of the universe has
+never been able to induce his children to cast that evil
+and cursed fruit from them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A moment for the one—thousands of years for
+the other. An instant sows the seed—the labour
+of a lifetime will not eradicate the noxious plant the
+seed produces. We are strong for evil; we are weak
+for good. We are frail; we are erring. God have
+mercy upon us! for even the best man and the best
+woman proves, when put to the test, to be but a
+miserable sinner.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X.<br> <span class='c011'>Maxwell’s Engagements.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>After leaving Mrs. Drewitt at the entrance to
+Kincorth, Maxwell slowly retraced his steps to Duranmore,
+thinking, thinking as he walked. He had never
+done thinking about his plans, his projects, his schemes,
+his hopes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As a man strives to perfect an invention, as he
+meets every mechanical difficulty, as he seeks to understand
+what natural law is standing in the way of
+his success—so Maxwell Drewitt worked out the
+design of his own future painfully and laboriously.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is one thing to sketch out a picture, and another
+to fill it in; one thing to draw a house, and another
+to build it; one thing to say I will do this or
+that, and quite another to accomplish the project.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is easy to plan; it is hard to finish. We can
+dream dreams, sitting in the firelight or lying on the
+green hill’s side, but if we would make those dreams
+realities, we must work hard and think hard; we must
+think till our brains are weary, we must work through
+the years for success.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The lives of all famous men repeat the same story,
+but the hearts of most young people reject it with impatient
+scorn.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They want the harvest and the seed-time to come
+together. It seems to them awful not to be able to
+gather till the autumn, to have to toil before they eat.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Seeing the height to which others have climbed, they
+refuse to believe that the ascent can be so difficult.
+The successes which genius and labour have found it
+the most difficult to compass look to the eyes of inexperience
+easy and commonplace.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Can anything go more smoothly along the lines
+than engine and tender and carriages and trucks?
+Can anything be simpler, more natural, more prosaic
+than a railway train? and yet, oh! friends, how many
+a man’s thoughts are concentrated there! how many a
+man’s work has combined together to make up the sum
+total which you see!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is thus with everything in life, be it small or be
+it great—the result seems to bear no proportion to
+the labour expended to produce it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Time, thought, industry—we must give all these
+before, weary and worn, we can hope to reach the
+goal of such success as our souls desire. We must do
+what Maxwell Drewitt did—spare no pains, repine
+at no hardships, grumble at no obstacles on the road.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And yet there was one thing he lacked if he desired
+to compass such success as might not only
+give him competence and station, but happiness and
+content.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was labouring for riches and position, but he
+forgot that, even in this world, riches and position,
+though much, are not everything. What are the
+daintiest viands, the choicest wines, to the man who
+can bring no appetite to table? What are lands and
+houses, what are fields and trees, if the eyes that
+look over them are dim with weeping, heavy with
+care?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Except the Lord build the house, they labour
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>in vain that build it. Except the Lord keep the city,
+the watchman waketh but in vain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is vain for you to rise up early, to sit up late,
+to eat the bread of carefulness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I wonder how many young men believe these words
+to be true? I wonder how many, walking in the dim
+light through which all, rich or poor, must one day
+pass, would be able to say it was false?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The words which we listen to with careless ears at
+one time of our lives, thinking they were addressed
+solely to men who spent their strength for nought and
+disquieted themselves in vain thousands of years since,
+we come finally to understand hold a meaning within
+them which is and will be eternally true this year and
+next, and through all the years that are to come—true
+for the man who is toiling for fame, for the
+merchant who is heaping up wealth, for the woman
+who is labouring to secure a good position, as it was
+for Maxwell Drewitt walking though the gathering
+darkness by the shore of Duranmore Bay.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was planning, plotting, scheming. He had
+youth, strength, hope, resolution. There was no
+reason why he should not have made a good thing of
+life, a good thing for himself and for others, save this—that
+in the city of his heart he would not suffer
+that sentinel of the Lord—conscience—to keep
+watch; that he was selfish, unprincipled, unfeeling; that
+he did not care whether the car of his progress crushed
+men and women under his wheels; that he was overconfident
+in himself; that he believed, if we exhaust
+the matter completely, man to be stronger than his
+Maker—the creature, than the Creator.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I am not attempting to write a religious novel, I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>am not trying to interleave my book with sermons,
+but there is no author who can tell the story of a
+man’s life truly, and not speak of the mistakes he
+made, of the errors he committed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If it be but an extract out of the volume of
+existence that we profess to give—but the account
+of this one’s love-making, of the disappointment of
+his friend—if we stop short when we find the record
+becoming troublesome to ourselves, or likely to
+prove displeasing to our readers, we may dispense with
+much minutiæ which is indispensable when we are
+tracing a human being’s footsteps from the cradle to
+the grave.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When we take a man’s life, and write his biography,
+indifferently it may be, but still as well as we
+are able, we must tell where he went wrong, and how
+that wrong brought forth bitter fruit in the future.
+We must tell not only of the crimes of which the law
+of the land takes cognizance, but also of those other
+transgressions which are not punished with fine or imprisonment,
+but by the heavy hand of the Lord God
+himself. It is useless to try to tell a story and be
+bound to steer clear of this matter of eternal truth, of
+eternal justice. I might as well lay down my pen at
+once were the subject beyond a novelist’s province;
+for the sum total of Maxwell Drewitt’s mistake in life
+was, that he thought the will of man paramount—that—as
+many a reader will scoff over the few
+last pages—he scoffed at the idea of retribution, of
+repentance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He built his house, but the Lord had no hand in
+it; he made his fortune, but the blessing of God was
+not upon it; he became a prosperous man, but the day
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>came when he acknowledged with bitterness that prosperity
+is not always happiness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In the spring-time of youth he reared his life’s
+edifice on the sands; when the winter came—the
+winter with its storms, its rain, its snows, its frosts—he
+saw the work of years scattered to the four
+winds of heaven.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was just; but it was terrible. To me there is
+something too mournful for words to utter in the idea
+of that man walking on through the darkness—planning,
+plotting, scheming—for the end that I
+shall yet have to tell. Strong to work, willing to
+labour, independent enough to achieve, he had yet the
+seeds of ultimate failure in him—he was walking on
+blindly to meet his doom.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As he walked along, with the wind raising the
+hair from his forehead, he was thinking—how Kincorth
+should yet be his—how the day would come
+when his homeward steps would lead him thither, and
+not away from its gates; and he was thinking of something
+else, too—of something he was going to meet
+that very night—of a girl he had tried to make love
+him, and not without success.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He passed Ryan’s cottage slowly, passed it and
+stopped to listen; then he leaped over the ditch that
+divided the lawyer’s little meadow from the road, and
+made his way round to the place where his friend’s
+hay was stacked. A stream went brawling by to the
+sea, and beside the stream Jenny Bourke was waiting
+for him—poor little girl! poor foolish child!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>From the hour Ryan warned Maxwell Drewitt off
+this ground, Maxwell vowed to win her heart. He
+did not know then whether she were pretty or ugly,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>sweet or sour, able to take care of herself or guileless
+as an infant; but it was all one to Maxwell. He
+would pay Ryan out, let his sister be what she pleased.
+He knew he was handsome; he knew he was a favourite
+with women; he knew he could soon make the
+girl fond of him. When he saw her he discovered
+something more—that the girl made him care for
+her. He had not quite contemplated this possibility,
+and it complicated matters a little; but the fact was
+so, nevertheless.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The only woman Maxwell Drewitt ever loved was
+Jenny Bourke; and the reason that he loved her was
+probably because she was so diametrically opposite to
+himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When he lay a-dying he thought of her; and
+thought then, what I believe to be true, that a prettier
+creature than Jenny Bourke never walked on the face
+of God’s earth—pretty and soft and gentle; and
+faithful to him, at any rate. Oh! sweet Jenny Bourke!
+why did you ever go out to meet such a man? why
+did you disobey your brother’s commands? why did
+you lay your lovely face on his breast, and say that it
+was long since you had seen him—long that he had
+kept away?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Fair, sweet Jenny! there was never a rose in the
+kingdom lovelier, never a lily purer, when Maxwell
+Drewitt first cast his dark eyes upon you. Let me
+try to sketch the face he saw—the saucy piquante
+face that, in the time of his tribulation, in the time of
+his wealth, in the hour of death, was still framed in
+his memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Would she appear before him in the day of judgment,
+I wonder? Maxwell Drewitt said not. He said,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>as solemnly as he said he believed he was dying, that
+Jenny Bourke would be true to him in the next world
+as she had been in this, and that she would never
+turn informer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Dark-brown hair; clear white and red complexion;
+large eyes, that now seemed brown, now grey, now
+black—eyes that varied with the light, with her
+thoughts, with her feelings, with her words; lips that
+were as red as cherries; teeth white and even, but not
+too small; a somewhat short nose;—these were the
+features; but then it was not her features, it was
+the expression of her face; so joyous, so innocent, so
+pure!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I do not know how a man could ever make such a
+woman cry and forget seeing her tears. I cannot
+imagine how Maxwell Drewitt, fair and false, and
+hypocritical and remorseless though he was, could ever
+take such a girl to his heart and teach her to nestle
+there, knowing all the time he never intended to marry
+her; that the hour must come when he would have to
+cast her out from her abiding-place.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I thought you never were coming,” she said, with
+her sweet Irish voice, soft and low and plaintive as
+music over the waters—as the low wind sighing
+among the trees. “I thought you had forgotten me—that
+I never was to see you again—that—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He stopped her words with kisses; but she laughingly
+released herself, and went on.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That you were caring more for the grand ladies
+you are so intimate with than for me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“As if any one of them could compare with you,”
+he answered; “as if there were any creature on earth
+equal to you. How many hundred times am I to tell
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>you that I love you, and you only; that you are dearer
+to me than life or station or anything else in the world?
+But you say these things to try my temper,” he added;
+“you say them to make me contradict you—to make
+me punish you,” and he kissed brow and cheeks and
+lips till Jenny’s face was as red as a rose; till she was
+glad that the darkness hid her blushes from his admiring
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot come out to meet you again,” she said
+at length, timidly and hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Nonsense, Jenny; there is no such word as cannot
+in the whole of love’s dictionary.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, will not then, if you like that better,” she
+answered, more firmly. “Indeed, indeed,” went on
+the girl, “I cannot deceive Timothy any longer; I am
+getting that I am afraid to look him straight in the
+face; that I dread every sentence he speaks; that I am
+frightened of every question he puts. Let us part,”
+and as she made this terrible suggestion Jenny began
+to sob. “Let us part if you cannot have me tell Timothy;
+if you will not speak to him yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The first day I ever saw you, Jenny, what did
+your brother say to you after I left the house?” But
+Jenny remained mute.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Did he not tell you, to keep out of my way; to
+give me no encouragement; to show me no favour?
+Did not he tell you that, although I might be a fit
+acquaintance for him, I was none for you? that I was
+a bad man; a bad nephew; a bad brother; a bad friend?
+Did he not give me the worst character you ever heard
+given to an unfortunate fellow out of favour with fortune?
+Did not he do all this? I know he did, Jenny;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>I know it as well as if I had been sitting in the parlour
+listening to him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Maybe you were near it,” suggested Jenny.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, I was not; but he spoke those words, or something
+very like those words, to me before you ever
+came to Duranmore. He said, ‘I had rather put the
+child in her grave than give her to you.’ That was
+his summing up. I hear it tingling in my ears yet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wonder you ever looked near me after that!”
+remarked Jenny.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ah, Jenny!” said Maxwell Drewitt, “who could
+ever see you and not look after you?” and the young
+man stole his arm round her waist, and drew her
+nearer to him—nearer still.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But if he knew the way things were now, don’t
+you think he might change his mind?” she coaxed.
+“If he thought that you—that I—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If he thought you loved me, is that it, Jenny?”
+he finished. “No, that would make no difference; it
+would only make him bitterer. I am a poor man you
+see, dear; and a poor man is always a bad man: you
+must take patience and wait a while. When I am
+able to drive here in my carriage and ask him to give
+me his sister, he will then perhaps beg me to step inside;
+but till then I must see you as I have seen you,
+on the quiet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot go on with it,” she said. “It is not
+right; and I have heard that good can never come out
+of evil.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If it be wrong,” he answered, “let the punishment
+fall on me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But oh!” said the girl, “we must each bear the
+burden of our own faults.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>“When we come to faults, it will be time enough
+to discuss that question,” he impatiently retorted.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is wrong, though,” she persisted.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If you think it wrong then you do not love me,”
+he said. “You are not willing to suffer anything for
+my sake; you are ready to desert me because I am
+poor and in difficulties. Had I been still at Kincorth
+I should not have been forced to beg so hard for so
+small a favour; but let us part, Miss Bourke, as you
+wish all to be at an end between us. I cannot force
+you against your will. Give me one kiss, Jenny, and
+bid me good-bye. I am used to being scurvily treated.
+I will go back to my wretched home, and forswear
+love for ever. One more—forgive me, it is the last
+time. Now, good-bye. Let me go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But Jenny would not let him go; she hung about
+him, she sobbed, she asked forgiveness, she told him
+how she should die if he left her in anger, left her in
+grief.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He knew her every mood, her every thought almost,
+and he could manage her as easily as he
+might a child. She had her little qualms of conscience
+every now and then about her brother; she had her
+little fits of strength when she made all kinds of resolutions
+and declared her intention of keeping to them;
+she had her instincts too, which perhaps warned her
+that in concealment there is mostly danger—that
+though stolen waters may be sweet they are generally
+unwholesome; she had her hours of sadness, her times
+of bitter self-reproach;—but Maxwell had long known
+how to deal with her in every mood: he was her
+master and she his slave; and the end of all such conversations
+invariably was that Jenny promised to be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>guided by her lover’s advice; to do what he told her;
+to meet him when he asked her; to keep the fact of
+their engagement secret.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He called it an engagement, but whether he wilfully
+deceived her or resolutely blinded himself it
+would be hard to say: Jenny Bourke implicitly believed
+that he would marry her whenever he had
+enough money to do so, and her only trouble was lest
+her brother should withhold his consent.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As for Maxwell’s intentions! He was very fond of
+Jenny, and that is all he ever told even to himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was very fond of the girl: all the worse for her.
+That love was the whole of her life: it was then but
+a part, a small part, of his. He had other aims, other
+objects, other wishes. He had plans into which she
+never entered, projects of which she formed no part:
+there were whole days when he never thought of her,
+or at least never thought save casually. There was
+not an hour, there was not a minute, when Jenny did
+not think of him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When they parted after a few such stolen minutes
+as those I have spoken of, he could put her out of his
+memory, he could thrust her out of his head, he could
+forget the sweet face, the pleading voice, the twining
+arms, the clinging manner, and turn him to his plots
+and his schemes again; nay, he could do more—he
+could part with the sister and go to meet the brother;
+he could make an appointment with Ryan likely to
+keep him out of the way while he talked to Jenny,
+and then he would tell some lie to account for being
+late, and be as mild and gentle as a south wind during
+their interview.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There are not many men in the world, more particularly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>not many of Maxwell’s age, with consciences
+so elastic as to permit such stretches as these. It is
+not usual even for Christians to seethe the kid in its
+mother’s milk, and I fancy there are few who would
+like to think that they had offered a man hospitality
+to the end that they might clandestinely make love to
+his sister. Human nature, though not at all times
+over-nice or over-particular, will turn squeamish occasionally
+about trifles; and if Maxwell Drewitt had
+been at all like other people it must have cut him a
+little to think, after he left Jenny, that her brother
+was waiting for him at Headlands Cottage, wondering
+where the deuce Maxwell could have got to.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Had to see madam home,” was that young gentleman’s
+explanation. “I think I must be a devilishly
+nice sort of fellow when ladies take to visiting me in
+an elegant mansion like this,” and Maxwell threw himself
+into one of the two chairs his ménage boasted,
+and after expressing a hope that Ryan had seen to the
+kettle, began to rattle on about Mrs. Drewitt’s visit,
+about her pressing invitation to Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I suppose you will soon go back to the old place
+now, then,” suggested Mr. Timothy Ryan; “you must
+be pretty well tired of this,” and the lawyer glanced
+contemptuously round the cabin.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would thank you not to sneer at my house,”
+answered Maxwell; “I hope to have a better some day,
+but it is the best I have at present.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Just so,” argued Ryan; “and as I was saying,
+you must be pretty well tired of it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You should think! well, you are not me, that is
+the whole thing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But are you not tired?” asked Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>“No; I have not even thought of being tired yet.
+Time enough for that when I see a better place to go
+to; time enough for that when I have made my fortune!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And how the devil,” asked Mr. Timothy Ryan,
+“do you propose making your fortune here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I mean to set up a private still,” answered Maxwell;
+“I mean to turn alchemist; I intend to discover
+the philosopher’s stone.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You have your work cut out then,” was the
+reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I mean to make the howling wilderness a smiling
+plain,” went on Maxwell, unheeding the interruption;
+“I mean to see corn growing where corn has never
+grown before; I mean to live in advance of my age
+and to make money in Connemara.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You won’t make much,” said Ryan, by way of
+encouragement.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That depends,” answered Maxwell: “meanwhile,
+the certainty before us is punch. Let us drink that
+and be happy,” and he pushed the whiskey-bottle over
+to Ryan, with the remark that the contents had never
+paid the King a halfpenny.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is all the better for that,” remarked Ryan;
+“but, not to seem personal, here’s ‘Long life to
+him.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Amen,” said Maxwell Drewitt, and the two men
+took a pull at the punch together.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And here’s to ‘Ireland: long life to her,’” observed
+the lawyer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Amen,” repeated Maxwell, and the pair emptied
+their glasses.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t spare the potheen,” urged Maxwell; “don’t
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>make the creature so weak that it won’t be able to get
+into your mouth. Remember the good old Irish receipt
+for making punch: first the sugar, then the whiskey,
+and then every drop of water after that spoils
+it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So it may, but I have to get home to-night,” remarked
+Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The more reason you should recruit your strength
+for the walk,” observed Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So you won’t go back to Kincorth,” said Ryan,
+after a pause devoted to whiskey and water.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; I am better off here. I have food and shelter
+in this cabin—as I suppose you would call it. At
+Kincorth, excepting a horse, I had nothing but the
+run of my teeth. I had no chance of making money;
+I had no feeling of independence. In Headlands Cottage,
+on the contrary, ‘I am monarch of all I survey, and
+my right there is none to dispute.’ I have land; I have
+a house; I have bog beyond Eversbeg, I have sea-wreck
+on the shore. I have a future; I have hope; I see my way.
+I mean yet to be a rich man. When you, Mr. Timothy
+Ryan, my worthy creditor, are blacking your fingers
+over deeds of settlement and iniquitous wills, I, at
+present your humble debtor, will be a great man; able
+to make your heart glad by appointing you agent to
+my estates. Mix again, man. We shall have many
+a talk in years to come about this old cottage, about
+these winter nights.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Maxwell laughed, and the turf-fire—the
+bright upheaped turf-fire shone on his dark face; and
+Mr. Ryan, looking around the room, wondered what
+made the young man so merry; what he could see in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>his prospects or his surroundings to inspire him with
+such hopes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I confess,” he said, at length, “that I do not see
+how you are to do it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My friend,” answered Mr. Maxwell Drewitt, “do
+you know anything of the science of agriculture?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No further than that it reluctantly pays rent,” was
+the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you know anything of the rotation of crops?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not the faintest idea what you are talking
+about,” answered the lawyer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you know anything of the nature of soils?”
+persisted his host.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No more than I know of Arabic,” was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have you ever thought much about manures?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Damn it, I am not a farmer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, I am; and I have thought about manures;
+I have studied the nature of soils; I can tell you all
+about the rotation of crops; and I mean to make
+money. I mean to turn up these grass lands, that
+grow nothing but moss and rushes. I mean to manure
+them; I mean to crop them. Harder than ever you
+read to be a lawyer, I have been reading to be a
+farmer. Pryor has been very good; he has sent me
+over books about soils. Turner is a trump; he has introduced
+me to an eminent English agriculturist with
+whom I correspond. I have ploughed and sowed half
+my farm already; I shall get the remainder ploughed,
+so that the frost, if any frost come, may eat into the
+ground. I have collected sea-weed. I intend to keep
+stock after this year. The great mistake in Ireland is
+the neglect of stall-feeding. I mean to try it. If you
+exhaust the secret of England’s prosperity, it is beer,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>beef, and manure; and I think I ought, as a simple
+matter of justice, to have put manure first. Let us
+see what sea-weed and stall-feeding will do in Connemara—what
+perseverance and resolution can effect
+anywhere.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I hope I shall not see you ruined,” was the
+reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A beggar cannot be ruined,” said Maxwell, calmly;
+and the conversation reverted to general subjects, till
+Mr. Ryan rose to take his leave, when Maxwell lighted
+him to the door and out into the night with a dip
+candle.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Wishing it was wax for your sake,” he said, with
+a laugh; and then he went back to his sitting-room,
+and remained there reading and writing and thinking
+for a couple of hours.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Next day he paid his promised visit to Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will stay for dinner?” said Mrs. Drewitt,
+whose manner was, as Maxwell noticed, colder than
+usual.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do, Maxwell,” urged Kathleen.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Of course he will,” chimed in Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Thank you,” said Maxwell, “but I am engaged—that
+is, I have an engagement.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You have always engagements now,” pouted his
+sister.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Shows what a great man I am,” answered her
+brother, as he left to keep another appointment with
+Jenny Bourke—pretty, trustful, foolish Jenny!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI.<br> <span class='c011'>Warned.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>In the days of which I am writing there were two
+kinds of lawyer extant in Ireland—the wholly disreputable
+and the eminently respectable.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Among the disreputable every kind and description
+of man might be found, providing he was decidedly
+clever and not over-scrupulous; the respectable, on the
+contrary, were mostly of one pattern, men of standing,
+having characters to lose, who were socially quite on
+an equality with their clients, and who were as far
+above the stock attorney of Irish novelists as an honest
+merchant is above a swindling adventurer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The worst of the respectable lawyers was that they
+were a little slow; the best of the disreputable lot was
+that they were decidedly sharp and shrewd.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Drawn as a rule from the lower middle class, the
+latter had all the quickness of the lower orders of Irish
+society, all their acuteness of perception, all their
+rapidity of jumping to conclusions. In guerilla warfare
+the regular army had no chance with them; they were
+down on a point of law like a terrier on a rat; they
+had every Act of Parliament at their fingers’ ends;
+they were perfect scourges in court; they were the
+terror of witnesses, the detestation of magistrates. If
+there were a flaw in your title, woe betide you if one
+of them got scent of it. They were clever, well up
+in law, impertinent, impudent, vulgar; they were always
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>talking about the people’s rights; always for the
+man who had shot his landlord or his landlord’s bailiff
+from behind a hedge; always against the Crown; always
+in favour of the Roman Catholics and against
+the Protestants.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Unless a landlord had very dirty work indeed on
+hand he seldom left his family solicitor to seek advice
+from one of these gentlemen; and it was rarely indeed
+that any of them so far deserted his original flag as to
+serve under the enemy. In politics they were Liberals;
+in religion much the same. As a rule, they had been
+articled without the regular fee, and came into the profession
+by the back stairs. They were the hope of
+the vagabond population; they were the deliverers of
+many a man from the grievous terrors of the law; they
+fought so long as there was a rag of a chance left to
+them. If ever they got very rich they settled into
+men who upheld the constitution and the government;
+but so long as they remained poor—and that was
+generally for ever, because they spent as recklessly as
+they earned easily—they were for the people: for the
+women who went about barefooted; for the men who
+lounged through life with their coat-tails trailing the
+ground, with their battered hats worn on one side,
+with their hands in their pockets, and short pipes in
+their mouths.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Of this class Timothy Ryan was a favourable
+specimen. He might not have much principle, but he
+had a heart. He was known to forgive men their
+costs, though he was also known to have done many a
+thing which his best friends could scarcely consider
+honest. He was not a hard agent, though he was
+certainly not an honest man. His conscience had never
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>stood in his way, but his feelings had. He was immensely
+popular with the lower orders, but he had not
+the entrée into any of the gentlemen’s houses in the
+neighbourhood, except into that of Waller of Eversbeg,
+whose agent he was, and to whose table he was often
+invited.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For the rest, he had little society save Mr. Murphy,
+Dr. Sheen’s assistant; the parish priest, and a retired
+sea captain who lived on the Duranmore side of
+Eversbeg Head. With Maxwell Drewitt, whom he had
+known for years, his intimacy was entirely of a business
+character, and yet Ryan was proud of the acquaintanceship,
+such as it was. He felt it gave him a
+certain standing knowing a Drewitt of Kincorth, even
+although that Drewitt had not the remotest chance of
+ever owning Kincorth. He knew he owed Waller’s
+agency—a tremendous lift for him—to Maxwell
+having brought the owner of Eversbeg into Inchnagawn
+Cottage to shelter during a storm; he was well aware
+young Drewitt could benefit him still more if he chose;
+for all of which reasons, Ryan cultivated Maxwell;
+whilst, for various sufficient reasons of his own, Maxwell
+cultivated Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Jenny Bourke was Ryan’s half-sister. They were
+children of the same mother; Mrs. Ryan having changed
+her name for that of Bourke within two years of her
+first husband’s death.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Of the Ryans’ union there had been many sons:
+one, Timothy, the eldest, settled at Duranmore as a
+lawyer; another ran away to sea; a third enlisted; a
+fourth emigrated; and so at last poor Mrs. Bourke departed
+this life in despair of ever seeing them reunited,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>and left her only daughter to the care of her sister and
+to the guardianship of Timothy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As for Mr. Bourke, he had long before deserted
+his wife and married a younger and more attractive-looking
+woman in England; indeed, rumour said that
+Mrs. Ryan was by no means his first essay in matrimony.
+He had a way of winning widows and securing
+their little fortunes, and then disappearing like a flash
+of lightning.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Some people declared Bourke was not his name at
+all; but be this as it may, Jenny had never been called
+by any other, and she never hoped to be called by any
+other, unless indeed it might some day happen that
+Maxwell were able to make her his wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Murphy had something more than a liking for
+the girl, but Jenny turned her coldest shoulder on the
+assistant when he called.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s that blackguard Maxwell at his tricks again,”
+thought Mr. Murphy; “I am sure he sees her somehow:”
+but Mr. Murphy was a wise man and kept his
+own counsel. He did not frighten Jenny by spreading
+a net in her sight, but he drew back and watched who
+threw the crumbs, he felt confident, the girl came down
+to pick up.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’ve my eye on you, my boy,” he would remark
+to himself when he met young Mr. Drewitt and exchanged
+bows with him; “I have my eye on you.
+Give you rope enough and you will run it into a
+noose for yourself, or I am greatly mistaken. Good-morning,
+sir; fine weather this for the country.” And
+he would ride off on his rough pony, while Maxwell
+trudged over the Connemara roads on foot.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>His uncle had offered him leave to take a couple
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>of horses out of the stable at Kincorth, but Maxwell
+declined the gift.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not one of them shall give me a lift up,” he said
+to Ryan, and Ryan applauded his spirit even while he
+wondered at it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Where the deuce does he get the money from?”
+considered the lawyer: “where can he get it? for a man
+is not able to live for nothing, even in a cabin; and he
+pays wages, and buys implements, and hires horses,
+and draws sea-weed. I should like to know who is
+backing him. Can it be Turner? It is not impossible.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Maxwell took every pains to foster this idea,
+and to make Mr. Ryan think not only that Turner was
+backing him, but also that Mr. Waller and Mr. Pryor
+were willing to help him in his endeavours.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In reality, however, he did not for many a long
+day receive the slightest assistance from any of his
+male acquaintances, whether Irish or English.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was Lady Emmeline Vervensoe who helped him
+into the saddle; it was Lady Emmeline who, when she
+heard he had left Kincorth with the intention of trying
+to push his way on in the world, gave him a considerable
+sum of money, saying significantly as she
+pressed it into his hand: “Secret service money for the
+election; you need not give me any account of it, Mr.
+Drewitt.” And Mr. Drewitt did not give her any account,
+and when he found that his farming operations
+required more capital he asked her ladyship to make
+him a further advance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He and Colonel Vervensoe had never healed up
+their old wound. So they passed each other when they
+met without speaking, and Maxwell was never by any
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>chance now asked up to Cragantlet, even in the hunting
+season.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But yet the servants at Cragantlet knew that Mr.
+Drewitt of “The Headlands,” as he was beginning to
+call his new property, occasionally rode up to the house
+when Colonel Vervensoe was from home; and a man
+who was in the habit of attending Lady Emmeline
+when she drove in her phaeton, or rode out on horse-back,
+could have told tales of many a meeting, not accidental,
+between the pair.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was nothing wrong in the affair; there was
+no breaking of the seventh commandment, nor idea of
+breaking it; but still Lady Emmeline liked Maxwell
+so much, and Maxwell found her ladyship so extremely
+useful, that neither thought of discontinuing the acquaintance
+altogether.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>To be strictly truthful, however, the young man
+had thought at one time of persuading her ladyship to
+go off with him—not because being his neighbour’s
+wife made her seem any nicer in his eyes, but simply
+because her husband had insulted him, and she had a
+large fortune.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I am afraid, seeing Lady Emmeline was not over-prudent,
+had Maxwell been sure the game was worth
+the candle, that he would not have proved over-scrupulous
+in the matter; but as it was, Maxwell had a long
+head, and a clear head, and he reflected that, if he ran
+away with Colonel Vervensoe’s wife, that gallant officer
+would either shoot him or ruin him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Her ladyship, at a certain price, might not be
+dear; but her ladyship, with a bullet in some part of
+his body, or with heavy damages from the Ecclesiastical
+Courts, was quite another matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>Mr. Maxwell Drewitt thought that game not worth
+the candle, and so abandoned it, and accordingly Lady
+Emmeline Vervensoe’s character was as safe in his
+keeping as though she had been as ugly as one of the
+witches in Macbeth or as repulsive as Sycorax.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Nevertheless, it was her money that ploughed his
+fields, paid his labourers, bought his seed; and, to do
+Maxwell Drewitt justice, no money was ever more
+judiciously laid out.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was prudent, he was economical, he did not
+encroach on her kindness; he knew when to hold back
+his hand and say “enough.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He required money and she lent it to him—gave
+it to him, she said but Maxwell preferred the other
+way of putting it. Once he had got the start, however,
+he worked manfully to keep it: he wanted to
+show Lady Emmeline, and to convince himself, out of
+what small beginnings even an Irishman may make a
+fortune; and so he laboured on, bringing first one piece
+of land and then another under cultivation, till people
+finally began to talk of Maxwell Drewitt as a wonder,
+and to marvel how he did it; while pretty Jenny
+Bourke thought within herself, “He will soon be rich
+enough to ask Timothy for me now;” but she never
+ventured to say this to him again, although she still
+stole out to meet him, either by the stream, or on the
+shore, or up in the mountain gorge that lay at the
+back of Inchnagawn Cottage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is a mighty nice walk on a summer’s evening,”
+remarked Mr. Murphy, pointing up this gorge, as
+he and Mr. Ryan stood looking inland one fine morning in June.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is it?” said the attorney, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>“I like to listen to your innocent talk,” replied
+Mr. Murphy. “‘Is it?’ he says, just as simple as a
+lamb.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, is it?” repeated Mr. Ryan. “How should
+I know anything about the place; I never was up the
+stream in my life!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Never were out with any young woman either, I
+suppose?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not been this many a year, at any rate,”
+returned the other. “The only girl I ever was to say
+sweet on was not sweet on me; and somehow I never
+fancied another since.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, it is mighty queer,” remarked Mr. Murphy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What is queer?” asked his friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why, the lies men will tell when women and
+money are concerned. It was no later ago than last
+night that I followed a pair of lovers from the top of
+the gorge down to that big rock; you see it there,
+don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes. You followed them; what then?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why then, Mr. Timothy Ryan, as I did not want
+to be seen, I stopped behind that lump of granite and
+watched; and I saw them in the darkness come down,
+down, down. The young woman wore a light dress;
+and I am positive that dress, at any rate, went round
+your haystacks and in by the back gate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You did not think it was me, Murphy?” said
+Ryan; but his voice sounded hoarse as he asked the
+question.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You in the light dress? in course not; but if the
+man wasn’t you, who was he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are sure you had not been drinking?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’ll swear it for you, if you like.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>“And you are certain you were not mistaken?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Sure and certain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The man was not as tall as I am?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He might not have been.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Was he anything like Maxwell Drewitt?” inquired
+Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They could have passed for twins,” replied Mr.
+Murphy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That’s enough, Murphy, thank you,” said Ryan,
+and he drew a long, deep breath. “It’s warm to-day,”
+he observed, lifting his hat off his head, and letting
+the light wind fan his temples. “I must be getting
+towards Duranmore now,” he added abruptly; “are
+you going to walk that way?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I can walk any way,” was the reply. “Trade is
+mighty dull just now. There has not been a child
+born this week, I think; and only one accident, and
+he was carried home dead as a doornail. It’s a cursed
+place at the best of times,” proceeded Mr. Murphy;
+“but the like of it this June nobody would credit. I
+have made up all our calomel into pills and powders,
+just for want of something to do; and I have been
+trying how much nux vomica I could take without
+bringing on tetanus, for the sake of whiling away the
+time. I don’t think there is another such hole in the
+entire of Great Britain or Ireland. Whenever my
+mother dies, and she can’t last long, poor old girl, I
+shall cut Ireland altogether, and make for London.
+That’s the place, my boy—that’s the chance for men
+like me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Mr. Murphy rattled on after this fashion all
+the way to Duranmore, leaving it quite optional with
+his companion whether he answered him or not.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>Ryan elected not to answer him, and not to speak
+till they were shaking hands at the door of his office
+in the High Street; then he said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They did not see you, did they?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Does a corpse see the sexton when he is shovelling
+the mould in on the top of him, do you think?”
+asked Mr. Murphy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And with that they parted.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For many a night afterwards Mr. Ryan kept watch;
+many a time he pretended to go away from home, and
+kept guard in the gorge, in the twilight, in the starlight,
+in the moonlight—all in vain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He would not speak to his sister nor to Maxwell.
+He bided his time, and he waited without result until
+one evening when he was returning, a day sooner than
+he had expected to be back, from an outlying portion
+of Mr. Waller’s property, among the wildest part of
+the Joyce country.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There he had bought a new horse, a young, handsome
+creature, bay with black legs, leaving in exchange
+his old white mare and a not unreasonable
+number of pound-notes.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was proud of his new purchase: it had a long
+easy trot, and had brought him by bridlepaths up
+hilly roads, through lonely valleys, thirty Irish miles
+without turning a hair; and he was so careful of this
+good steed that he stopped at the top of the hill above
+Eversbeg in order to lead him down the steep descent.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With his arm passed through the bridle and his
+hand on the horse’s glossy neck, Mr. Ryan paused at
+a turn of the road, and looked at the view spread out
+before him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Nestling at the foot of the hill, huddled up among
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>its woods, stood Eversbeg, and nearer to him still were
+the ruins of Eversbeg Abbey. He could see the
+pointed windows half concealed by ivy; he could see
+the grave-stones and the crosses and the monuments;
+he could see away over Eversbeg Bay, out to the
+great Atlantic; and he could discern, like a speck in
+the distance, Maxwell Drewitt’s cottage lying away
+near Eversbeg Head.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was a great hush and calm over everything—over
+the sea and the land, the mountains and the
+valleys—and Ryan could not help feeling subdued
+by that virtue of stillness, by that calm which seems
+oftentimes to follow the sun’s setting, as though nature
+were lying quiet ere falling to sleep for the night.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>After this pause he went on, descending the hill
+by a winding road, which soon shut out from his view
+Eversbeg and the Abbey and the Atlantic, but brought
+him at a sharp turn within sight of Kincorth and
+Duranmore and Duranmore Bay, which was more like
+a lake than like an arm of the sea, and his own white
+cottage close to the shore, where Jenny would not be
+expecting his return.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As he thought of this, Ryan pulled up short. He
+had twisted his hand in his horse’s mane, he had lifted
+his left foot half way up to the stirrup, but on the instant
+he unwound his fingers from among the coarse
+black hair, and stood beside his steed, while the animal
+lifted up its head and looked out over the bay, too, as
+though he had been a Christian.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>While he stood irresolute, Ryan saw a man leave
+the shore road, and, after looking round, follow the
+course of the stream I have spoken of as flowing at
+the back of Inchnagawn Cottage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>It was Maxwell Drewitt. Though it was getting
+dusk, though there was a considerable distance between
+them, still Mr. Ryan recognized the man he had
+been waiting for.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When there are not a dozen gentlemen within a
+circuit of twenty miles it is not easy to mistake the
+identity of any of them, and Ryan felt that he was not
+deceived—Maxwell Drewitt was going up the stream
+to meet Jenny, and he might catch them yet; and he
+would catch them, “he would, by——.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He flung the reins to a lad who stood at a cabin-door
+by the wayside, and bidding him take care of the
+horse, Ryan left the main road and dashed down what
+remained of the hill, across bog and river, among
+brambles and heather, home. He had his riding-whip
+in his hand, and involuntarily he shortened his hold of
+it as he drew nearer—nearer still.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Every now and then he stopped, for there was a
+noise in his ears like the raging of distant waters. It
+was his passion—it was the tumult in his breast
+which sounded to him as the roar of the sea.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He came on—on; he gained the high road; he
+stole round by the back of his own house; and there,
+by the stream, were the pair still talking.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Timothy!” shrieked Jenny—and she had reason:
+in a moment he held Maxwell by the collar, and
+showered down blows upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Villain! scoundrel! coward!” he said, and he
+literally ground his teeth with rage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Hands off, fool!” shouted Maxwell, and he clasped
+his own round Ryan’s throat.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was an awful struggle for a moment, but
+then Maxwell tripped his opponent up, and putting his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>knee on his chest, tore the whip out of his grasp, and
+sent it flying among the weeds and rashes that grew
+on the other side the stream.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who is villain, scoundrel, coward now?” he
+asked, with a sneer; with his face black with rage,
+with the veins in his forehead swelled, with the devil
+that was in him looking out of his eyes. “Who is a
+spy and a listener? I won’t thrash you, because you
+are her brother; I won’t shoot you, because you are
+not worth the trouble; but I’ll leave you to think what
+you have made by this move;” and Maxwell released
+his adversary, picked up his hat, which had fallen to
+the ground, and saying to Miss Bourke, “I will see
+you another time, Jenny,” was about to walk off, when
+Ryan called out, “Stop!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You shall never see her to speak to again. Only
+let me catch you near the house—only let me hear
+of Jenny ever looking to the side of the street where
+you walk, and I will shoot you like a dog.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have you finished?” asked Maxwell; “because in
+that case I may wish you good-morning.” And he
+lifted his hat to Jenny, whose face was as white as
+the cottage walls, and was gone.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Within a week Ryan took a house in Duranmore
+next door to his office, and moved his furniture and
+himself and his sister away from the pretty cottage by
+the shore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But the waves came rolling up the bay for all
+that: though there was no human ear to listen to their
+music, they still rippled over the stones and sand—the
+shutters of the cottage-windows were closed and
+fastened, but the fuchsias bloomed the same as ever—no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Jenny now stood by the stream, singing her love
+songs, dreaming her love fantasies, but the stream went
+dancing over the stones to the sea none the less joyously—there
+were none to look up at the everlasting
+hills, but the summer’s sun shone on them, and the
+winter’s snows lay on them, as the sun had shone and
+the snow had lain since the beginning of time.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XII.<br> <span class='c011'>Son and Heir.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Meanwhile there had been changes at Kincorth,
+such changes as the birth of a son and the management
+of a careful and educated woman were likely to
+produce; but the greatest change of all had perhaps
+been that wrought in Mrs. Drewitt herself, who, looking
+back twelve months, could not help marvelling if
+the Agnes Drewitt who sat nursing her child in her
+bedroom at Kincorth were the same with the new-made
+wife who had wept bitter tears in that self-same
+chamber, who had grieved over Maxwell, who had
+wanted to keep him in the house at any sacrifice, at
+any cost.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Since those early days, Mrs. Drewitt had grown
+very jealous for her son’s inheritance, very watchful
+over the interests of her baby. Maxwell had opened
+her eyes and taught her to discern between good and
+evil; and with all a woman’s quickness of perception
+she had seen that there would be war between her
+children and the children of the elder brother; that
+Maxwell wanted the estate, and was resolved some day
+to have it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But he shan’t, darling, shall he?” and Mrs.
+Drewitt kissed every one of her son’s toes in succession
+as though he had been a pope.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There is no accounting for tastes, or otherwise one
+might wonder at the fancy mothers have for this form
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>of refreshment. Pink and plump and pretty the creature’s
+toes looked peeping from under the long white
+robe, but there was no earthly reason why she should
+have kissed them for all that.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She did perform the ceremony, nevertheless,
+rapturously, and then she lifted her eyes and looked
+out over the waving woods and the sunny fields that
+went sloping towards the sea.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a fair property. I have said what Maxwell
+thought of it as he stood gazing up at Kincorth on the
+summer’s afternoon when you, dear reader, were introduced
+to him, and it was perhaps natural that Mrs.
+Drewitt longed a little greedily to secure it for her
+boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Women nursing babies are all alike. They think
+nothing good enough for the new king, and they expect
+every created being to fall down and adore the
+autocrat as they do.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Women whose children are growing up get, as a
+rule, more sensible and fairer dealing year by year.
+They see their white crows throwing out black feathers,
+they begin to understand that other people have
+children too, and that the meadow-lands of existence
+cannot be kept clear so that their young lambs may
+browse over them undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But a baby!—there is so much left to the imagination
+about a baby. It may grow up to be as
+handsome as Apollo, as wise as Solomon, as eloquent
+as Demosthenes, as just as Aristides, as holy as George
+Herbert.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is so delightful to be able to sit in the sunlight,
+as Mrs. Drewitt was doing, nursing a two months’ old
+monarch, and picture for him a reign long, glorious,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>and triumphant. If mothers did not mercifully forget
+these dreams, how could they ever live and face the
+downfall of all these airy castles? How could they
+bear to see their sons and daughters grow up, not as
+the polished corners of the temple, but sometimes no
+better than other folks’ sons and daughters—oftentimes
+much worse?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A baby!—a monarch, a pope, a little god, a lord
+mayor for a year and a day, and then another lord
+mayor rides in gilded coach to fortune, and inhabits
+his brother’s grand chateaux en Espagne.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The king is dead, long live the king! and autocrat
+No. 2, No. 3, No. 4, as the case may be, appears on
+the daïs for the household generally to bow down before
+and worship.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A baby!—well, well, Maxwell Drewitt had been
+a baby once, and perhaps his mother dreamed such
+dreams for him as Mrs. Drewitt of Kincorth was doing
+for her baby now.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There are some things in nature which we shall
+never understand on this side eternity, and one of
+them, I think, is, why having a child born to her
+should make a woman unjust for the time being.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I know there will be an outcry of indignation at
+this assertion; but it is true for all that. Beyond her
+baby, a woman has at first no sympathy. Nay, I go
+further, and say she has no liking save for those who
+serve, honour, and obey her Moloch.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There are men who are worse than women in this
+matter, but not many, thank God! If there were, the
+shop of the world might be shut up, and human nature
+would have to retire from business altogether.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Her baby!—there came a day when Mrs. Drewitt
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>turned from her first allegiance and worshipped another
+baby. All her life long she was somewhat of an
+idolater, and her gods did nothing for her, as is the
+way with the gods we rear for ourselves—only
+brought trouble and sorrow to that gentle breast.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But sitting in the sunshine, kissing the fat toes of
+her first-born, Mrs. Drewitt was happy, and she was
+all the happier perhaps because she felt no sorrow for
+the man whom the birth of her son cut out from Kincorth
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If we exhaust the matter, the young mother thought
+in her heart it ought to be a pleasure for Maxwell to
+stand out of the way of the new king’s progress; and
+as she felt sure it was no pleasure to him to do anything
+of the kind, she began to entertain a very sincere
+dislike for her husband’s nephew.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Holding her baby from her at arms’ length—laughing
+when it laughed, clasping it to her heart,
+touching its little fingers, its little hands, its meaningless
+face, with a delight ever strange and ever new—something
+even in that happy moment came over Mrs.
+Drewitt that made the tears start into her eyes, and
+caused her face to change and sadden under the sunlight.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She was sorry that she did not feel sorry for Maxwell,
+that she did not like him, that she was not so
+glad to see him as formerly, that she could not care
+for Susan and Wilhelmina. She had resolved to do
+her duty, and this was the end of it. Human nature
+is stronger than duty, and it was impossible for Mrs.
+Drewitt to help her feelings. The child she had
+brought into this world was nearer to her than any
+other person’s children could be.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>It was natural she should long to secure Kincorth
+for the baby—that she should dislike any one who
+seemed to stand in antagonism to her son.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The child had changed her, and it was the consciousness
+of this change having taken place that made
+Mrs. Drewitt’s eyes fill full of tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As for Mr. Drewitt, he had received the new arrival
+just as such a man usually does receive such donations—ecstatically!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>To have heard him talk, any stranger might have
+thought that Mr. Drewitt only held the property in
+trust until his son should come of age. If his bailiff
+spoke to him about cutting down a tree, he hesitated.
+He would grant no lease for more than seven years.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The expenses must be curtailed, the household
+expenditure retrenched. His agent must see that the
+rents were paid more punctually. When Brian came
+of age it would not do for him to find the tenants all
+in arrear. He trusted those girls would marry, or that
+if they did not, Maxwell would have them to live
+with him. “I must try to make him an allowance for
+their maintenance till they all come of age, when I
+can perhaps manage to settle a certain sum on each,”
+said Mr. Drewitt to his wife. “I should not like Brian
+to marry one of them, and if they grow up together
+who knows what might happen?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Who indeed? but meantime the state of mind in
+which Mr. Drewitt went about the house, and walked
+round the shrubberies, and exchanged greetings with
+his friends, and answered the congratulations of his
+acquaintances, was involved and ridiculous beyond
+description.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is a far cry to Loch Awe,” Maxwell observed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>drily, when Wilhelmina told him, with shrieks of
+laughter, how her uncle was doing everything with an
+eye to the pleasure and advancement of the young heir.
+“What kind of a creature is it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What kind of creatures are all babies?” inquired
+Miss Susan Drewitt, scornfully. “Though to be sure,
+to hear the way they go on about it, anybody might
+imagine it was not a baby at all, but an angel. Nannie
+says it is like its papa, and the doctor says it is like
+its mamma; but for my part, I think it is a cross between
+a star-fish and a lobster.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You really ought to be in the house with uncle,”
+remarked Wilhelmina. “He won’t let a window be
+open for fear of the brat catching cold. He won’t let
+any stranger touch it for fear the said stranger should
+have any dreadful and communicable disease. He
+was going to put Mr. Murphy out of the hall-door, the
+other day, because the poor man said, after uncle had
+quite worn him out, ‘Tut, tut, tut, Mr. Drewitt, the
+egg is all very well, but it is not worth the cackling
+you make over it.’ I really thought I would have
+died, Maxwell. I had to put the whole of my pocket-handkerchief
+into my mouth, or I should have laughed
+outright.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Sir!’ says my uncle, and he drew himself up
+like a grenadier.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘You need not be offended, Mr. Drewitt,’ says
+Murphy. I do love that man, it is so hard to put him
+out of countenance. ‘A hen with only one chicken
+always makes ten times the fuss she would if she had
+a good clutch to go about with; and by the time you
+have a dozen, I’m thinking you won’t be caring so
+much whether a few of them should catch some infection
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>or not. Excuse a jest, sir, it is only my way.
+The baby is a fine baby. I don’t know that ever I
+saw a handsomer.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And as he said that he looked over at me, and
+you know, Maxwell, what his looks are.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He is an impudent scoundrel,” remarked her
+brother. “If I hear of him looking at you at all, I
+will wring his neck for him—and glad of the excuse
+too,” added Maxwell, <i>sotto voce</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You never saw a man make such an idiot of himself
+in your life,” said Susan, laying a true Hibernian
+emphasis on the last word in her sentence. “He ought
+to build a little chapel and have a shrine made, and
+let people only look at the brat from a distance. And
+that reminds me, Maxwell—do you know Kathie has
+never gone back to school yet? She is not well enough
+to go, Sheen says, and my uncle wanted her to keep
+away from the heir, seeming to think it might be
+something of consumption, and that the young gentleman
+would take it from her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And Kathie cried, till I told her she was a greater
+idiot than uncle and a bigger baby than the heir,” put
+in Wilhelmina. “Mrs. Drewitt would not listen to such
+nonsense, though; she said Kathie should be with her
+and Brian if she liked. That is one thing I will say
+for Mrs. Drewitt—that she is good to Kathie. Give
+the devil his due, her own mother could not be better
+to her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But do you think Kathie ill, seriously ill, I
+mean?” asked Maxwell: if the young man had ever
+loved any of his own flesh and blood, it was Kathie,
+and he put the question anxiously.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, you know she never was strong—she was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>always, as Nannie says, the ‘crowl’ among us,” answered
+Wilhelmina, who looked both strong and handsome,
+and had a rich colour in her cheeks with walking
+to Headlands Cottage; “she ought not to have gone to
+school, and it was not with Mrs. Drewitt’s good will
+she went, but you and uncle would have it. You know
+it was your doing, Maxwell, and she got a cold, and
+the cold got worse, and you should see for yourself
+how she looks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What are they doing for her?” he inquired.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Dr. Sheen has sent her some medicine, and Mrs.
+Drewitt tries to coax her to eat,” Wilhelmina replied;
+while Susan added—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I think they have an idea of sending her abroad.
+I am sure I heard some one talk of letting her spend
+the winter with the Dyaks, if money for her travelling
+expenses could be raised.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then Maxwell Drewitt rose up, walked across the
+room, took a cigar out of a paper lying on the table,
+lit it, and began to smoke. When he had puffed away
+for a little time he said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Kathie shall not go to the Dyaks. I won’t have
+my sister eating the bread of a dependent in the house
+of any of Mr. Drewitt’s relations. If she needs a
+milder climate I will find somebody to take charge of
+her, and I will find the money too, which the great
+people up at Kincorth seem to think a thing so devilishly
+hard to raise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That’s right, Maxwell. Go it,” exclaimed Wilhelmina,
+clapping her hands. “Send us all abroad,
+and come yourself—we’d make our fortunes at <i>rouge-et-noir</i>.
+Wouldn’t it be capital sport?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>“You seem to think so, at any rate,” remarked
+Susan, shortly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And you—ten thousand pardons. I forgot.
+You would not like to leave——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Whom?” asked Maxwell, as his sister stopped
+abruptly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The baby, I suppose,” laughed Wilhelmina;
+whereupon Maxwell made some remark about the baby
+which did not sound like a blessing.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the deuce is their fancy for calling the
+young beggar Brian?” he inquired. “Is it Brian
+Boroïhme they have gone back to, or is it some of
+her people, or what?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There was a good Drewitt once,” answered Wilhelmina;
+“at least, so tradition says, though I believe
+there is not a syllable of truth in the story. There
+was a good Drewitt once—good and wise, and his
+name was Brian. There is a long rigmarole about
+him on some old stone in the abbey, and Nannie told
+Mrs. Drewitt a great history about what grand people
+the Drewitts were in his day, and about what a pious
+man he was, and how he repaired the abbey, and how
+he planted that huge yew-tree in the churchyard, and
+that hollow ash, and that rotten beech on the lawn at
+Kincorth. And Nannie told her, too, how a child
+always strains after the person it is called after, and
+how luck follows names, and worked her up to such a
+pitch finally, that nothing would do her but the young
+gentleman must be called Brian—and accordingly
+Brian he is—Brian Archibald. It is not an easy
+name to make fun out of; so all I can do is to call
+him Brin Baldy. It’s a pretty conceit, is not it? as
+Lady Emmeline would say, and it has the great advantage
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>of being unintelligible. I have ventured to
+talk about Brin Baldy to Susan before uncle, and he
+had not the remotest idea of whom I was talking.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I shall come up to see Kathie,” said Maxwell,
+when his sister stopped—a little irrelevantly it is
+true, but still in consequence of some train of thought
+he had been pursuing during her sentence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am sure <i>we</i> ought to be grateful,” remarked
+Susan. “Get up and make a courtesy, Willy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Which Willy accordingly did, observing, at the same
+time, she thought somebody ought to come and see
+Kathie, and rouse her up.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Talk about peaches! You should have seen the
+peaches the Countess gave me the other day to take
+home to Kathie,” she went on; “they were as big—oh!
+as big as Susan’s head—four times as big as any
+I ever saw grow at Kincorth, and do you think she
+would touch them?—not a bit of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘You little ungrateful wretch!’ I said, ‘and I have
+brought them all the way from Laddenwell home for
+you, and it was as much as I could do to keep from
+eating them on the road. You <i>shall</i> take them!’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So she took one, and tried to swallow it, but she
+did not like peaches, she told me.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Will you have grapes, then?’ I asked her, but
+she would not have grapes. At last I worried out of
+her what she could eat, and what do you think it was,
+Maxwell? I will give you six guesses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t be childish, Willy; go on.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Crabs!” exclaimed that young lady. “Now you
+know crabs are things uncle can’t bear the sight of,
+and that he thinks nobody else ought to be able to
+bear the sight of either; so I had to get one smuggled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>up for her. But when it came, would she touch it?
+I don’t know what to do with Kathie,” finished Wilhelmina,
+in despair.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She ought to take a good canter every day of
+her life,” said Susan, “and keep out of the nursery.
+There is nothing the matter with Kathie except the
+mopes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you know what your mother died of, Susan?”
+asked Maxwell, a little sternly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She died when Kathie was born. I suppose it
+was of that,” answered Miss Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She would not have died of that if she had not
+been in a decline beforehand,” said Maxwell; “and
+from what you say, I’m afraid it is consumption Kathie
+has got. I will come up and see her,” he repeated.
+“I will walk back with you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When Maxwell passed through Duranmore, on his
+way from Kincorth to Eversbeg, he stopped at Dr.
+Sheen’s, and not finding that gentleman at home, spoke
+to Mr. Murphy about his sister’s health.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Had not you better step round when the doctor
+is within?” asked the assistant.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have got something else to do than dance up
+and down from Eversbeg here, after him or anybody
+else,” answered Maxwell, with that graciousness of
+manner which distinguished his treatment of any one
+he considered beneath him in station.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is not my place to talk about Doctor Sheen’s
+patients,” persisted Mr. Murphy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the devil is the use of your getting on in
+this way to me? She is my sister, and I must know,
+and I will know, what is the matter with her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And how should I know what is the matter with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>her?” demanded the other. “Sure we never know for
+certain what is wrong with man, woman, or child, unless
+we open them, and I suppose you don’t want me
+to do that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will you tell me, as far as you do know, what
+ails my sister, or not? If you do not choose to do so,
+I must take her to somebody who will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would rather you would ask Dr. Sheen. I am
+only his assistant, and I have not had his experience;
+and to be plain, the doctor and I don’t agree about
+the case. Ask him; or if you like, I will tell him to
+write to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I want your opinion,” persisted Maxwell. “All
+you say I shall consider as spoken to me confidentially,
+if you wish, only tell me exactly what you think is
+wrong with Kathleen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do believe you are fond of her,” said Mr. Murphy,
+with a vague wonder in his voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What the deuce is it to you whether I am or not?
+Tell me your opinion, without beating about the bush
+any longer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you want me to tell you the truth or a
+lie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I want the truth, whatever the truth may be,”
+was the answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because,” went on Mr. Murphy, “there’s many a
+one says he wants to hear the truth, and then is angry
+at the man who tells it to him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Whatever you think, out with it,” exclaimed
+Maxwell, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Your sister is very far from strong.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I can see that without the help of any doctor’s
+eyes,” answered the young man; “but is she likely
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>to get worse? Will the medicine she is taking cure
+her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Doctor Sheen thinks it will,” was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But what do you think, Mr. Murphy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I consider Miss Kathie to be in a very bad way,”
+said the assistant.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will it be life or death?” asked Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t ask me. What is the use of it? Sure you
+know yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a minute there was silence—for a minute
+the thought of the only enemy that in youth a man
+like Maxwell Drewitt is afraid to face cowed him.
+Then he said:</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Would a warmer climate, Mr. Murphy——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Save her, I suppose you mean. You can try it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Slowly and reluctantly, Maxwell turned to go.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“One thing more, Mr. Murphy,” he said. “Was
+the cold she caught at school the cause of this?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If she had not caught a cold there she would
+have caught it some place else,” was the answer. “You
+can’t keep a person shut up in a band-box for ever;
+and the fire was always ready laid in her, to be kindled
+some chilly winter’s morning. But people invariably
+like to attribute disease to accident: they think if they
+could guard themselves against that they would be immortal,”
+added Mr. Murphy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell went out into the air. He walked home
+round by Eversbeg Head, from whence he had a view
+over the wide Atlantic, looking under the summer’s
+sky like a glassy lake. He saw the ships going past
+with their white sails shining and glistening in the
+sun; he beheld the ocean at peace with man—the
+land kissed softly and gently by the waves; he saw
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>his own fields looking rich and cultivated, in the warm
+glow of the afternoon light;—but there was a sorrow
+in his heart, the memory of which the peaceful scene
+could not chase away.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Many a feeling which passes through our breasts
+to-day we forget to-morrow; we fear, and with a new
+sunrise the dread is gone. We settle down to think:
+something comes to prevent our doing so, and the impression
+made, fades away and is forgotten.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Could Maxwell Drewitt have stereotyped in his
+memory all the feelings which saddened him when he
+stood, that day, looking out over the great Atlantic, I
+think—I believe—he would have gone through the
+rest of his life a better man.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But as it was, they were merely as words spoken
+to the air—as letters traced on the sand.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The next wind of passion bore them far beyond
+his reach and his recollection; the next wave of life,
+rushing up on the shore of his existence, obliterated
+their meaning.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Life and death, friends—life and death!—are
+these two not ever walking through this world hand in
+hand together?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The tide that brings a fresh soul into existence
+on its flow, bears a pale corpse out to the great sea as
+it ebbs.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was a child born—there was a girl dying:
+there was a son and heir, over whose birth exulting
+parents rejoiced—there was an orphan waiting to
+rejoin her father and mother also.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was life in the boy, who crowed and shrieked
+in the nursery: there was death in Kathleen, who walked
+about the grounds and through the rooms at Kincorth—who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>had learned her last lessons, who was never to
+go back to school any more—who was never to have
+lovers, never to be married—never to be anything
+except a slight, dark-eyed, loveable, delicate girl—who
+cooed and fondled the baby as long as she had
+strength to do it, and who delighted in the newcomer,
+even although he did cut Maxwell out from
+the property.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And Maxwell was always kinder to me than he
+was to anybody,” sighed Kathie to Mrs. Drewitt; “I
+wish he was out of that cottage—I wish he was back
+at Kincorth!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But when her wish was fulfilled, when Maxwell did
+return to Kincorth, I think it was best for Kathleen
+that she could not see him there—that she had then
+been sleeping for twenty years in Eversbeg Abbey,
+away from all the sinful jealousies and wicked passions
+which make the world so often seem only like
+a battle-field, where man stands up to war against
+man.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIII.<br> <span class='c011'>Maxwell’s Improvements.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Three years passed away—slowly enough, for in
+a place like Duranmore time’s flight is never very
+rapid; and during the course of those three years the
+novelty of having a son had worn off, and Mr. Drewitt
+cut down trees, and renewed leases, and took fines,
+and raised money without the slightest reference to his
+heir’s interests. In the house matters were better
+managed; out-of-doors, worse. Every day the property
+was going more surely to the dogs; every day money
+seemed more difficult to be had, more impossible to be
+kept.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When Brian lay in his cradle, Mr. Drewitt proposed
+building a house on the farm he had settled on his
+wife before her marriage. “It will increase the value
+of the place,” he said; “and if I live till Brian grow
+up and marry, he can reside there and be independent
+of us altogether; while, on the other hand, should you,
+dearest, ever have to leave Kincorth, it would be a
+home for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All in vain Mrs. Drewitt remonstrated. All in vain
+she entreated him to wait, observing that it would
+surely be time enough to build a house for Brian’s
+wife when Brian was put into jacket and trousers. She
+pointed out that money was not very plentiful; that
+workmen would have to be paid; that somebody must
+live in the house if it were finished; and that it would
+be a continual expense and worry.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>Mr. Drewitt overbore all her objections. He insisted
+that the thing, being proper to be done, should
+be done at once; that a dower-house ought immediately
+to be erected; that the expense would be nothing, the
+advantages incalculable; and straightway he had granite
+quarried and drawn to the farm, chose a site, set labourers
+to dig at the foundations, and neglected every
+other concern of his life in order to ride over each day
+and see how the work progressed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Where are you drawing those stones to?” Maxwell
+asked one of his uncle’s men who was driving a
+cart and horse across the hills.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“To Analore, yer honour,” was the answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What for?” pursued the young man.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“To build a house for Masther Brian. The masther
+is greatly taken on with the notion entirely.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Fools build houses,” thought Maxwell, “and, my
+God, what a fool he is!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Twelve months afterwards Maxwell rode over to
+Analore, and tying his horse to a gate walked leisurely
+up the hill to see how Brian’s castle was getting on.
+Analore lay inland; it was, as Lady Ebbutt had said, a
+mountain: the farm was nothing more than a sheep-run.
+Nature had not made it a garden, and Art had left
+Nature’s handiwork alone. Over the short grass Maxwell
+picked his way: there were boulders, there were
+brambles, there was bog, there was morass—Maxwell
+rounded them all, still keeping up the hill to the site
+Mr. Drewitt had chosen.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a winter’s morning, bright, clear, and bracing;
+but there was nothing of elasticity in Maxwell’s
+step—nothing youthful about his movements.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Every now and then he stopped and looked about
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>him; not that the place was unfamiliar, for the young
+man knew every rood of his uncle’s property much
+better than his uncle did himself. He was scrutinising
+the land professionally; he surveyed it as a jockey
+might a horse. He was contrasting it with Headlands,
+and thinking he had made a mistake in choosing a
+farm by the sea. He dug up the turf with the heel of
+his shoe, and taking a piece of the earth in his hand
+examined it minutely.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Curse him!” said Mr. Maxwell Drewitt as he threw
+the mould away, “this soil is better than mine,” and
+he pursued his walk up the hill, thinking while he
+walked, till he reached the place where Mr. Drewitt
+had thought to build his house.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a lovely site. “A property in such a situation,
+within twenty miles of London, would be worth
+a king’s ransom; the view alone would be a fortune,”
+thought Maxwell, while he looked over lake and valley,
+over gorge and mountain, and then he laughed, to see
+nothing but the foundations built up, no sign of bricklayer
+or labourer at hand. There were cartloads of
+granite on the ground; there were heaps of sand and
+marks of where mortar had been mixed; there was the
+earth that they dug out of the foundations wheeled
+away on one side, and in this state the edifice was
+left.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If he had given this to me instead of settling it
+on her; if he had said, ‘Maxwell, you have been hardly
+done by, and it is not much I can give you, but there
+is Analore, take it, for you and your heirs for ever;’
+if he had made it over by any binding legal document
+and helped me to raise a thousand pounds upon it, or
+lent me a thousand himself, as he might readily have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>done, I should not have cared to call the king my
+cousin,” were the thoughts that chased one another
+through Maxwell Drewitt’s mind. “I could have built
+a house of those boulders; I could have drained this
+land; I could have grown potatoes here till the ground
+was fit for oats; I could have made a fortune out of
+the place, and so might he, if he were not what he is—a
+purposeless idiot, a thickheaded ass.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All the world over, the man who has got hold of a
+new idea abuses the man who sticks to the old: in Ireland,
+as in England, the man of business hates the man
+of pleasure; the worker detests the idler.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Drewitt might be a fool, an ass, an idiot; in
+some things, indeed, I am afraid he was all three; but
+had Maxwell been born to a great estate, he would
+scarcely have seen his uncle’s shortcomings so clearly;
+he would not have looked so closely after soils himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Give a property to a man whose eyes have once
+been opened and he can see clearly enough how to
+improve it; but till necessity has sharpened their inventions,
+I think few people notice everything which
+is lying within their ken. It was his uncle’s marriage
+that sharpened Maxwell Drewitt, that enabled him to
+see exactly to what extent the rent-roll of Kincorth
+might be increased.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If it were clear to-morrow it would be worth
+fifteen thousand a year; increase those mortgages, and
+I could make it worth forty thousand a year.” This
+was Maxwell’s calculation as he sat on a great stone,
+looking over the lake, and the valley, and the distant
+mountains. “I must try to get some land in this
+neighbourhood, and so make the most of my rights of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>sea-weed,” was the practical conclusion he arrived at
+ere he left Analore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A man like this deserved to succeed,” I hear some
+say at this juncture; and my answer is, “He did succeed—he
+did lay house to house and acre to acre.”
+He gained all that he set out determined to achieve,
+and if he did not secure the great prize, towards which
+all human efforts aim—happiness—it was only because,
+thinking he should find it in wealth and position,
+in lands, in smiling fields, in verdant pastures, he strove
+to become the owner of these good things, and of these
+only.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Knowing what need Ireland has of such men, fresh
+from the sight of her wretched poverty, her miserable
+management, her forlorn condition, I could almost wish
+I had chosen a different hero, and taken a better man
+to show what energy and perseverance may do for an
+individual as well as for a people.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There are such in Connemara; there are little oases,
+formed by their industry and talent, in the wilderness;
+there are gardens in the desert; there are resting-places
+where the tired mind and the weary heart may sit down
+and take refreshment, seeing what even one man has
+been able to effect. Kincorth is one of these; but the
+mind that saw what Kincorth might be made has long
+ceased to fret itself with schemes, to vex itself over
+disappointment; while the man who owns Kincorth now
+is grave beyond all mortal comprehension.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Let me go on with my story, friends, for I must
+not write of the end yet.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All the plans of Mr. Drewitt’s life came to nothing,
+like the dower-house at Analore. All the good he purposed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>died in the birth, all the reforms he intended
+were never carried out.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The road to ruin was the one he voluntarily chose
+in youth, and he always lacked strength of mind
+enough to turn back at any stage of his journey and
+try to make for fortune.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a time Mrs. Drewitt endeavoured to mend
+matters, urging him to look his affairs boldly in the
+face, and not to allow them to get more and more involved;
+but before she had been married two years
+she, too, learned that speaking was useless, and contented
+herself with entreating that he would not mortgage
+the house and demesne of Kincorth; that he would
+endure any inconvenience, practise any economy, rather
+than jeopardize <i>the</i> inheritance of their son.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Drewitt promised, and then broke his promise,
+comforting himself exceedingly the while by thinking
+that his wife need never know he had done so.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mortgaging in one class is very like pawning in
+another. Money is wanted, and a few thousands can
+easily enough be raised. Money is needed, and it is
+only a step to the three balls.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But in either case it is the repayment that proves
+difficult, and with Mr. Drewitt repayment was simply
+impossible. Still on—on—along the road to ruin he
+pursued his way, riding his hacks, keeping his hunters,
+making guests welcome, running into debt recklessly
+as he travelled.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was plenty of good company taking the
+same journey with the owner of Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>His was no isolated case—no exception to a general
+rule—only perhaps there were few who, while
+beggaring themselves, made so little show of wealth as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>he—few who seemed to do so small an amount of
+good, either to their families or to their friends, as
+this weak, amiable, purposeless, loveable Archibald
+Drewitt, who put down his misfortunes to every cause
+save the real one, who shifted the blame to any man’s
+shoulders rather than carry it himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Much as she loved her husband, Mrs. Drewitt could
+not be blind to his shortcomings; she could not avoid
+seeing that different management might have produced
+different results.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She heard how well Maxwell was doing, and asked
+his uncle whether he could not reclaim some portion
+of his own land likewise.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I had started unencumbered as he has done,”
+replied Mr. Drewitt, with a sigh, “things might have
+been very different; but I have been in debt from the
+first. I had a heavy establishment to keep up. I had
+those children to maintain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And the owner of Kincorth spoke in a tone of such
+sincere self-pity that Mrs. Drewitt had no courage left
+to remind him of the fact of his having started with
+eight thousand a-year clear, spite of the mortgages.
+She held her peace, and Mr. Drewitt still continued
+traversing the road that for him could have but one
+end.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Three years passed away. Kathie was dead, Susan
+had eloped, Wilhelmina rode as fast, as far, and as
+fearlessly as ever. There was another child at Kincorth—a
+daughter named after its paternal grandmother,
+Geraldine. There was a third infant coming,
+and Mrs. Drewitt’s face was beginning already to tell
+tales of sorrow and anxiety. Poor lady! four years of
+married life, of an irregular household, of a dissatisfied
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>family, of regret, of sickness, of struggle, had rubbed
+some of the beauty of youth off her countenance, had
+altered and saddened her expression.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had mourned for Kathleen, she had wept over
+the girl in the watches of the night; she had kept her
+with her so long as human love and human care could
+avail; and when at length Kathleen floated out from
+the river to the sea, Mrs. Drewitt watched her as she
+drifted towards the great ocean with eyes dimmed by
+crying, with a heart bowed down by grief.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Though she had her baby, though she did now
+own that great and powerful king, still she missed the
+friendship and the companionship of the girl who had
+taken to her so kindly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had never feared to talk to Kathie about her
+perplexities, her difficulties, and now she knew that
+through the years to come she must live entirely without
+sympathy, and without assistance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If anything had been wanting to fill her cup of
+sorrow at that time, a remark of Maxwell’s, which
+through the officiousness of an acquaintance came to her
+ears, would have caused it to overflow.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He said what he knew to be false, that if Kathie
+had been properly attended to when she first returned
+from school, she need not then be lying in Eversbeg
+Abbey.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was not true; and Mrs. Drewitt herself chanced
+to be aware that no care or attention could have saved
+Kathie at any stage of her disease; but the blow went
+home for all that.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She reproached herself; she thought she had not
+noticed Kathie’s malady so soon as she might; she remembered
+that she had mistaken the flush on her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>cheeks for strength—the brightness of her eyes for
+health.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She knew she had been taken up with herself and
+the baby; for a time she remembered she felt so ill
+that exertion of any kind was a trouble; and then she
+was so happy about the birth of her son, that she did
+not pay much attention to any one save the young
+autocrat.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had put the boy first (this was what she
+thought), and, being her own, she ought to have seen
+to poor motherless Kathie, even before thinking of her
+child. Heaven help her!—many a time that winter
+the baby went a little to the wall, while the sick girl
+was nursed and tended.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If Maxwell had exhausted all his ingenuity in trying
+to make her wretched, he could not have succeeded
+better.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had been selfish, she had been absorbed, and
+it was wrong for her to be either, though nothing could
+have saved Kathie, though no help of man could have
+averted the decree of death.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She and Mr. Drewitt had both been foolish. She,
+gentle soul, could see it all clearly enough when the
+idol had been taken down from its pedestal, when its
+father ceased to consider its future prospects every
+moment in the day, when she found life had its duties,
+though she was a mother—when she discovered that
+even a baby may usurp too much attention, and lead
+with its fat toes, with its plump legs, with its soft,
+yielding body, with its clenched fists, with its meaningless
+face, its unseasonable grief, and its maniacal merriment,
+the wisest parent into temptation every day.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>Poor Kathie! Mrs. Drewitt mourned for her as no
+one of her own flesh and blood sorrowed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell was busy with his schemes; Susan was
+full of her lover; Willy thought the house dull, and
+lived as much out of it as possible; Mr. Drewitt had
+his own anxieties and troubles, and besides, he said
+“he always expected Kathie to follow her mother.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mrs. Drewitt alone, did not forget the girl, but
+thought of her when the winter snows were on the
+ground, when the February rains deluged the earth,
+when the spring flowers were blooming and the summer
+splendour glorifying the hills. Nothing could be quieter
+than Eversbeg Abbey, nothing more beautiful, more
+peaceful, and Kathie always longed for peace and
+quietness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was best so—it was best.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The birds built their nests in the ivy that grew
+over the window beneath which the vault of the Drewitts
+lay. They went twittering in and out, chirping
+and singing all the day, from early morning till late
+at night. The sheep came in over the broken wall,
+and browsed at will among the graves, undisturbed by
+resident or stranger. The ferns grew among the old
+walls, and the grass was long and rank in the hollows
+between the tombs. Nettles tall and luxuriant flourished
+where the priest had once performed mass, where the
+worshippers had once knelt before the altar.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was no roof to the Abbey, save the sky.
+The once perfect arches of doors and windows were
+falling to decay. The evening wind lightly stirred the
+leaves of the ivy. In the stillness the ripple of the
+waves upon the shore could be distinctly heard, and it
+was in this quiet nook—quiet and neglected, desolate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>and beautiful—that Kathie, with her hands folded on
+her breast, slept among her kindred, far beyond the
+reach of sorrow or regret.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>One trouble drives away the memory of another,
+and Susan’s elopement proved even a greater trial to
+Mrs. Drewitt then Kathie’s death. She knew where
+the one was, but did not know what had become of
+the other. She only felt that the evil she was unable
+to avert had come at last. She had spoken to Susan,
+to Maxwell, to Mr. Drewitt, and behold the end was
+an empty room one morning, and a note from Miss
+Drewitt, stating that as anything seemed preferable to
+remaining at Kincorth, she had determined to cast her
+lot with the only man who loved her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What lot has she chosen, Maxwell, what lot?”
+asked poor Mrs. Drewitt, as with blanched face she
+showed this note to her nephew, and entreated him to
+trace his sister and bring her back.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Would she stay, do you think?” asked Maxwell.
+“Could you or I, or anybody living, keep Susan here
+if she made up her mind to go away? But I will follow
+them to Dublin. I will see whether they are
+married, and if not, he shall marry her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But the fugitives were gone to England, and at
+Liverpool Maxwell lost all traces of them. He could
+not devote his life to running after his sister. He had
+not the time, he had not the money, he had not the
+inclination.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“As Susan had sown she must reap,” he remarked
+to Mrs. Drewitt, and he went back to his farm by the
+shore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>What more could be done for Susan was done by
+Mrs. Drewitt, who wrote to her brother-in-law, Sir
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>Everard Ebbutt, begging him to ascertain Captain
+Ellenham’s antecedents, and to give her tidings of her
+niece, if possible. Further, she asked him not to mention
+the matter to his wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Sir Everard lost no time in replying to this letter.
+To begin with, he stated that Captain Ellenham could
+not have married Miss Drewitt, because he had at that
+moment a wife and three children living in London.
+Further, Captain Ellenham’s regiment having been
+ordered abroad, it was more than probable Susan had
+gone abroad with him. Should he obtain any further
+information he would let her know.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is a blessing she has gone abroad. I hope she
+will die there!” was Maxwell’s only remark when Mrs.
+Drewitt communicated these particulars to him. “And
+if ever I come across that fellow, I will shoot him.
+Meantime it will be as well to say to every one that
+they are married.” Having summed up the duty of
+the family in which explicit sentence, Maxwell dropped
+the subject, and never, of his own free will, mentioned
+his sister afterwards.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was building a house at the time on the piece
+of barren land that had come to him from his grandfather,
+and he paid particular attention to the masons
+during the whole of the summer following Kathie’s
+death.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A bare staring place,” Mr. Drewitt told his wife,
+“that it made him feel cold even to look at. What a
+pity for him not to have chosen a better site! It is a
+good house too;” and then he asked Maxwell why he
+had not selected some finer position, somewhere on
+the side of a hill, and where there was more of a
+view.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>“Beggars cannot afford to be choosers,” answered
+the younger man; “besides, wait a while, sir, and
+you will not call my choice so bad a one. Further,
+remember the land I am laying money out on now is
+<i>my own</i>, and that I am not in a position to both build
+and buy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But money can always be raised, you know,”
+suggested Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Can it?” was the reply. “That is not my
+opinion, and I hope you will never find reason to alter
+yours.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>This little rap ended the conversation. It is not
+easy to talk with a man who has always the last
+word and the best word; and besides, it suddenly occurred
+to Mr. Drewitt that the house at Analore was
+not two feet above the ground, and that perhaps
+Maxwell might inquire why he did not raise money to
+finish it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He must be excessively clever, I think,” sighed
+Mrs. Drewitt, when she heard in the following spring
+how Maxwell was buying young trees from Waller of
+Eversbeg, and planting them round his new abode.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They won’t live—they can’t live; it is impossible,”
+said Mr. Drewitt, who, although he did not
+exactly grudge Maxwell his success, still thought that
+such innovations ought not to be encouraged by Providence.
+“They cannot live; consider the sea-breeze—the
+exposed situation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Mrs. Drewitt, of course, was of her husband’s
+opinion. Maxwell had made a mistake at last; the
+trees could do no good. But the trees throve for all
+that. Maxwell had considered the matter before ever
+Mr. Drewitt thought of it. He had a south aspect;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>he was well sheltered from the north and east; he
+knew that the woods surrounding Eversbeg must have
+been planted by some one, and he thought he would
+risk something at any rate, and make the experiment.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There is many a lovely place across the water,
+many a sweet nook in the Green Isle, but I doubt
+whether in its way—which, of course, is not a grand
+way, but only very quiet and enchanting—the tourist
+could chance to see a prettier spot than “Headlands”
+at this day.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If you row across the bay from the little fishing
+village of Eversbeg, you see the house built of granite
+lying among the trees. The lawn slopes quite down
+to the edge of the shore, while the woods, spreading
+out like a semicircle, enclose this piece of green, which
+is soft as velvet. Down almost to high-water mark
+the plantations extend, and when the tide is in the
+willow, and the birch, and the spruce-fir droop their
+branches over the tide. See it on a fine day, when
+the bay resembles an opal; when the new-mown grass
+appears in the distance to be an emerald set in a
+darker band of green; when the rugged headland
+shows dark and steep against the calm unruffled ocean;
+when there is hardly a ripple on the sea, when there
+is scarcely the lightest breeze stirring among the treetops;
+when the little fishing village nestling on the
+side of Eversbeg Point looks white and picturesque in
+the bright sunlight; when the mountains look higher
+and nearer than usual, and rear their great heads towards
+the sky; when the ruins of Eversbeg Abbey
+appear close at hand; when the fresh-shorn sheep are
+climbing the hill-sides; when no sound breaks the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>stillness save the plash of the oars as the rowers pull
+across the bay, and the drip drip of the water from
+the blades, as they hold them above the sea and float
+gently towards the shore;—see it thus, I say, and
+you can well fancy you have beheld fairyland. It is
+a place you cannot bear to leave—that you turn
+back and look at with an indescribable emotion—that
+you wave your adieu to with the tears filling
+your eyes, though you could not give a reason why or
+wherefore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell Drewitt found it a wilderness—this is
+the paradise he left it. Think of that as you lean
+over the stern, and the rowers bear you away from
+the garden of Eden, and think, also, if you had such
+a nest on earth you might find it hard to leave the
+world, and that, perhaps, it is best for you to own nothing
+so perfect, so exquisite of its kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Headlands is too beautiful—that is all any person
+can say. It seems too charming to be real; and
+when you have left Eversbeg behind you, and are
+travelling away towards Oughterard through the valley
+of desolation, through the land of a thousand Dead
+Sea lakes, you come gradually to believe that “Headlands”
+was a dream—that such a place never
+existed—that the lawn does not slope down to the
+glassy sea—that the trees do not overhang the
+water—that Maxwell Drewitt never planted the
+ground at all, but that it remains barren and sterile
+to this very day.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Nevertheless that modern garden of Eden lies in
+Connemara, on the shores of the wide Atlantic; within
+sight of its tremendous billows, of its restless waves.
+Eversbeg Bay is much more open than Duranmore,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>which almost resembles a lake. On the north side of
+Duranmore stands Kincorth, well sheltered from all
+breezes save the south, high up on the hill, the house
+conspicuous for miles; on the north side of Eversbeg,
+lying low by the shore, is the modest mansion Maxwell
+reared for himself in the days when he was a
+poor and a struggling man.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The trees grew and spread out their branches, the
+land improved and began to pay him well.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>While difficulties increased at Kincorth, everything
+grew smoother and easier at Headlands; and yet one
+difficulty had arisen in Maxwell Drewitt’s path.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Colonel Vervensoe was dead; and Lady Emmeline,
+by consequence, was left a widow.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It took Maxwell a few days to realize the difference
+that this fact might make in his position; and
+then he drew back his breath and paused, asking himself,
+“What next?”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIV.<br> <span class='c011'>Next.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>If the fact of Lady Emmeline being Colonel
+Vervensoe’s wife, and unattainable, had not enhanced
+her charms in Maxwell Drewitt’s eyes, the fact of her
+being Colonel Vervensoe’s widow, and available,
+rendered her less desirable still.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There had been a time, indeed, as previously
+mentioned, when the young man hesitated about
+running away with her, and settled not to do so; but
+then his future looked dark in the extreme—now it
+was bright and hopeful.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If only Colonel Vervensoe had remained at Cragantlet,
+as any other Christian would, instead of dying at such
+an unlucky crisis!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It seems as if he had almost done it to spite me,”
+muttered Maxwell; and the young man cursed his
+neighbour for having departed this life at all.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In former days Lady Emmeline’s loan to Maxwell
+had smoothed matters for him; but four years after
+that loan complicated his difficulties, and made him
+walk round and round Eversbeg Head, and round
+Eversbeg Bay, asking himself as he kicked the stones
+before him, What next—what next?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The financial crisis which troubled Maxwell was
+this:—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Suppose he did not marry Lady Emmeline—her
+ladyship would be certain to ask for repayment. He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>could not mortgage to repay, because his land was
+mortgaged to its full value already. Suppose he
+offered to marry her, and that they kept the engagement
+secret, and that he never fulfilled his promise?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Before he was well out of his difficulties, somebody
+else would marry Lady Emmeline—she was
+sure to leave Connemara, because the next heir would
+require possession of Cragantlet; and if she went to
+Dublin or London, how long was it probable she would
+remain a widow? Suppose he did marry her—he
+would get fortune and position, but then he would also
+get a wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is the devil of it!” said Maxwell Drewitt,
+with that charming frankness which characterized all
+his mental conversations. “That is the devil of it!”
+and he hesitated and waited on, while Lady Emmeline
+grew kinder and kinder; and, free at last to follow the
+bent of her inclination, absolutely forced money on the
+man who could have sworn at her for ever having lent
+him any.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had his own ideal of a wife, and Lady Emmeline
+did not come up to it. He had an ideal the
+reality of which was not unlike Jenny Bourke, if
+Jenny Bourke had been rich, and well-born, and accomplished.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is not fair to contrast twenty and forty-four—the
+bloom of youth and the bloom of rouge—the
+charms of purity and innocence and the graces of
+fashion and affectation; but, on the other hand, poverty
+can bear no comparison with wealth, low birth with
+long pedigree.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He could not marry Jenny. Were he as rich as
+Crœsus, as great a man as the Duke of Leinster, Maxwell
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>felt it would be impossible for him to marry
+Ryan’s sister and remain in Connemara.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There are some things which to some men are impossible,
+and a low match was one of these to Maxwell
+Drewitt. No love, no beauty, no truth, no devotion
+could reconcile him to that.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Though he had lived in a cabin, though he would
+not have minded working like a common labourer to
+achieve an object, still Maxwell Drewitt was as proud
+as Lucifer; and for the blood of his wife, of the mother
+of his children, not to be of the regulation colour and
+quality, was a thing terrible to contemplate.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He could not marry Jenny Bourke—poor Jenny!
+And Maxwell Drewitt’s dark eyes grew darker as he
+thought of the girl who loved him, who was staying
+single for his sake, who managed, spite of all her
+brother’s precautions, sometimes to see him; who had
+got pale, poor child! pale and thin, because of that
+hope deferred which maketh the heart sick.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He could not marry Jenny, but he could marry
+Lady Emmeline; and he could have her Connemara
+property, which lay among the mountains beyond
+Cragantlet, and her money to improve his own properties.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He could buy, he could drain, he could till; in
+imagination he saw corn waving where the sheep now
+browsed. He could be wealthy and independent; he
+could soon be almost as great a man as the Earl of
+Popingham. He could pay out everybody who had
+ever been insolent to him. He could take up the
+mortgages on his uncle’s estates; he could make Headlands
+the wonder of Galway, the admiration of strangers,
+a place to be proud of himself. He could do all this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>if he married Lady Emmeline; but then, when he had
+done all, he should not be able to get rid of her: that
+was the devil of it, that was where the shoe pinched.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But then,” reflected Maxwell, “hang it! a man
+cannot have everything in life; and if he gets the best
+thing he must be content. Isn’t it better to satisfy
+one’s ambition than one’s love? If we fulfil our ambition,
+the gratification remains; if we gratify our love,
+the pleasure is transient. Anyhow, I am not called
+upon to make a choice, because, though I do love
+Jenny, I still cannot marry her—could not if there
+were no Lady Emmeline in existence. Hang marriage!
+it is like going through life with a halter round one’s
+neck. It is the most terrible ‘must’ in existence, because
+we seem to have some choice in it, and have, as
+a rule, nobody but ourselves to blame if it turn out
+ill. All experience is against it—all proverbs are
+against it. ‘Next after single a good wife’s best;’ but
+the single is better than the good wife. ‘Better marry
+late or never.’ I don’t think that is true. I fancy it
+must be better to marry young or never. I wish I
+had not to decide; and yet, after all, many a man
+would consider himself a deuced lucky fellow to be
+standing in my shoes. Success has spoiled me. I
+would have married her four years ago and welcome.
+Oh! Jenny, I wish I had never seen you.” And Maxwell
+Drewitt crossed his arms on the table, and leaning
+his head on them, thought this problem out—this
+wonderful problem of not loving a woman well enough
+to marry her, and yet of loving her so much that it
+made the idea of marrying another hateful to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He could not make up his mind; he grew restless,
+he became soured; he would ride halfway to Cragantlet,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>and then turn back again. He was so young to sell
+himself for money; but yet such a chance might never
+come in his way again. Lady Emmeline had been
+thought a catch for Colonel Vervensoe. What would
+she be therefore for Maxwell Drewitt? It was folly,
+it was nonsense, it was midsummer madness; and the
+young man began to visit regularly at Cragantlet,
+which the courtesy of the next heir had left at Lady
+Emmeline’s disposal for twelve months till she should
+form her future plans. Mr. Maxwell Drewitt had his
+own opinion about this next heir—a distant relative
+of the late proprietor—which was not favourable.
+He thought he wanted to marry Lady Emmeline himself,
+and perhaps so did the widow, for after a time
+she began playing off Dolf Vervensoe against Max
+Drewitt. Dolf often came down to see to the management
+of the estates, and people soon commenced
+talking (they talk and chatter in Connemara the same
+as in any country village), and saying that Lady
+Emmeline would not have to leave Cragantlet at all
+except to be married.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She can go to Dublin and buy her trousseau, and
+get it all over there,” laughed Mrs. Munks, a little
+bitterly, for Cragantlet was a fine property, and the
+Honourable Mrs. Munks had daughters.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But surely,” suggested Mrs. Drewitt, “she would
+not marry so soon after her husband’s death?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He has been dead a year nearly,” was the reply,
+“and I dare say Mr. Vervensoe would let her keep
+Cragantlet another for the sake of her fortune; besides,
+is there any person on earth who could say for certain
+what Lady Emmeline would or would not do? Louisa,
+my dear,” went on Mrs. Munks, turning to her second
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>daughter, “do you remember that funny Scotch song
+Miss Macpherson so amused us with the other evening?
+Talking of Lady Emmeline puts me in mind of it.
+Something about a widow; don’t you recollect?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, I know,” exclaimed Miss Munks, holding up
+her riding-habit while she walked across the room, for
+as usual the mother and daughter had galloped over
+to Kincorth; “at least, I know the song you mean. I
+think I can repeat the last two verses, though of course
+it would be impossible for me to say the words anything
+like Miss Macpherson.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Good gracious! Miss Macpherson! You should
+hear her talk, Mrs. Drewitt,” exclaimed Mrs. Munks,
+who spoke with a fine brogue fresh as the day it was
+imported from the county of Cork.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mrs. Drewitt vaguely wondered whether Miss Macpherson’s
+Scotch accent <i>could</i> be any worse than Mrs.
+Munks’ Irish, while Miss Louisa began:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“‘Tam withered like a sickly flower that frae its stalk does fa’,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And in a twelvemonth after that puir Pate was ta’en awa’;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And as I laid him in his kist and closed his glazèd e’e,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I wonder’t if the yirth contained a lanelier thing than me.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“‘Noo I’m a waefu’ widow left, a’ nicht I sich and grane,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And aften in my musin’ moods when sitting here my lane,</div>
+ <div class='line'>There’s ae thing I’ll confess to you, ‘bout whilk I’m sair perplext,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I aften wonder, Janet, noo, whose lassie I’ll be next.’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“For my part,” concluded Miss Louisa, “I wonder
+that while there are more women than men in the
+world, widows are allowed to marry at all—I do
+indeed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There was a time when I thought if Colonel Vervensoe
+died, another person would try for Lady Emmeline,
+and try successfully; but it appears I was mistaken,”
+said Mrs. Munks.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>“Who was that other person?” asked Mrs. Drewitt,
+being naturally curious on the subject, for where there
+are few neighbours, even the quietest woman cannot
+help being interested in their affairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My dear, you are far too sly,” answered Mrs.
+Munks. “You know as well as I do;” and when Mrs.
+Drewitt declared and protested that she did not know,
+that she had not the faintest idea of whom her visitor
+was speaking, Mrs. Munks only laughed the more, and
+declared it would be better for her not to enlighten
+such pristine innocence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Lady Emmeline never did flirt with any one you
+remember, and consequently there can be no person
+whom her marrying Mr. Adolphus Vervensoe will disappoint,”
+went on Lady Emmeline’s friend. “Colonel
+Vervensoe never did forbid any gentleman the house—never
+cut any acquaintance of yours when he met
+him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You surely do not mean Maxwell!” exclaimed
+Mrs. Drewitt. “Why he is young enough to be her
+son.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Exactly so; and he is not rich either; while Mr.
+Vervensoe—is forty, though he has Cragantlet. Still
+I fancy your nephew will be disappointed. We have
+met him often of late riding in that direction. Have
+not we, Louisa?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, mamma,” answered Louisa, who would have
+said “yes,” even if her mamma had stated a falsehood.
+“But if you remember he told us he was looking after
+some land that was for sale.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A man must say something,” remarked Mrs. Munks.
+“In my opinion, Lady Emmeline will do best to marry
+Mr. Vervensoe.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>“I think so decidedly,” said Mrs. Drewitt, “if she
+marry at all. But from what Lady Emmeline dropped
+the other day about her future plans I should think
+she meant to remain a widow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Time will show,” was Mrs. Munks’ reply. And
+time did show, for Maxwell Drewitt proposed that very
+same evening, was accepted by Lady Emmeline, and
+rode home to Headlands an engaged man.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The die was cast; the game played out. He had
+won a wife: he had made his fortune.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In after days it was one of Maxwell Drewitt’s
+favourite remarks that “a man may get anything he
+wants in life if he be only willing to pay high enough
+for it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Was he thinking then of the price he had paid for
+his wealth, of the exchange he had made for position?
+Who can tell? Who ever knew for certain what
+pleased or troubled Maxwell Drewitt, until that great
+sorrow came which clouded with darkness the evening
+of his life?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>One fact was sure, however, viz., that when the
+young man finally chose to sell himself for money,
+to follow ambition and eschew love, he flung his last
+chance of making a better thing of existence away for
+ever. But he had set out to conquer fortune, and he
+gained the day. He had decided that such a prize as
+Lady Emmeline might never cross his path again, and
+he determined to secure it while within his reach. He
+would continue to live at Headlands, and he would
+beautify and improve his property. He would farm
+Lady Emmeline’s estate, and add acre to acre, and
+thousand to thousand, till, when Kincorth did come to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>him, as come it should, Drewitt would be a name worth
+talking about.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Better than ever the Martins were known, the
+Drewitts should be remembered. They had not sprung
+from any trooper of the merciless “Protector;” they
+had not kept their estates by currying favour with any
+king. The English papers should tell how a man—poor,
+disinherited, well-born—worked his way back
+to fortune, unassisted by his family, unhelped by patronage.
+Tourists would come and wonder to see, in
+the midst of that wild region, smiling fields and waving
+woods, and neat cottages and blooming gardens.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They would go back and speak of what one individual
+had effected. He should have to give evidence
+on parliamentary committees: when he grew very, very
+rich, perhaps he would go up to Parliament himself.
+He could reclaim mile after mile of barren country.
+He would drain and cultivate the bogs; he would do
+away with the loose stone walls which divided the land
+when any division was attempted into about half-acre
+plots; he would plant trees up the mountains—there
+was no reason why trees should not grow among those
+fastnesses that he could understand; he would change
+the aspect of Connemara. Did he think of possessing
+the whole of it? Had he any vision about all Galway
+one day having but one landlord, and that landlord’s
+name being Drewitt?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He reduced the 1,566,354 acres Galway contains
+into hundreds, and after deducting a certain portion
+for lake and mountain, calculated how long it would
+take to bring them under cultivation. He thought how
+useful those lakes would be for watering cattle, for
+purposes of irrigation; he ran over the best sites for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>towns and villages; he saw, in fancy, ships putting
+into each secure harbour; he saw the mines worked,
+the quarries filled with well-paid labourers, the country
+prosperous, the people warmly clad and sufficiently fed.
+He was doubtful whether Mayo ought not to figure in
+his programme too. As he rode out of Cragantlet
+gates he gave the rein to his imagination, and bid it
+conjure up before him fame, wealth, success. He held
+the bridle loosely in his hand, letting it lie on his
+horse’s neck, while he reflected on what he had just
+done, and on what fruit that act might bring forth for
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Gold begets gold,” they say; that was what Maxwell
+hoped it might. “Money makes money” is oftentimes
+a great truth. Maxwell trusted it would prove
+a great truth in his case.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The kingdoms of this world and the glory thereof
+seemed to spread out before Maxwell’s mind when he
+thought of what he had achieved on little, when he
+considered what he might effect with much.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The kingdoms of this world were around him—there
+was land to be cultivated—there were the
+resources of nature to be developed—there were
+the hidden riches of the country to be brought to
+light. There was fuel to be had for the cutting—fish
+for the catching—cattle for the rearing—corn
+for the growing—wealth for the hand of industry
+to gather in. There were barren wastes to clothe
+with verdure—there were hills to plant with trees—there
+was granite to build houses—there was a
+land to be peopled—there was a people to elevate
+and civilize.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was all very fine; nay, it was more, it was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>glorious; and yet, as the moon sailed out from behind
+a bank of watery clouds and shone over the country
+this man was traversing, a feeling of loneliness, of desolation,
+of misery came upon him which he could
+neither explain nor analyze.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There were the tremendous mountains, there the
+bare, solitary-looking lakes; far as his eye could see
+across the valley, nothing met his view but water,
+and stone, and bog: there were hills lying dark, and
+silent, and sullen in the distance. Above his head
+was a cloudy sky, where the moon kept wandering in and out like a troubled spirit. Now his way was
+dark, now light: now the moon shone clear on the lake,
+and the road, and the mountains, and then, again, she
+played fantastic tricks with the stunted bushes—with
+the huge boulders. She would lay a white trap along
+the highway and up the mountain-side, at which Maxwell’s
+horse would shy frightened; she would dance
+on the ripples of the waters; she would thrust her full
+face out of window, as it seemed, and stare down at
+the earth, and then she would plunge behind the
+fringed curtains of the night, and be invisible for a
+time again, after which she would come shyly forth
+and gaze upon the man who rode slowly and alone
+through that desolate portion of God’s fair earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Is it not necessary for a person to be very sensitive
+or very poetical for a scene like this to produce a profound
+impression upon him. An individual who has
+not an amazingly warm heart can yet feel something
+stir within him when he looks upon a fine picture; and
+those who have lived in the country all their lives are
+as susceptible to the influences of nature’s varying
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>moods as though her every change was fresh to their
+comprehension.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All his life Maxwell Drewitt had loved scenery as
+he loved his country. All his life the sun, and the
+wind, and the snow, and the frost, and the sea, and
+the mountains had talked to him as they oftentimes
+fail to speak to a better man; and now, as the moon
+shone with a fitful brightness over the landscape, as
+her cold light fell on the breast of the lonely waters,
+as the clouds rolled up and shrouded the mountains
+in darkness, as the eternal hills returned his eager
+glance with a hard unsympathising gaze, as they
+looked with stony eyes down upon him as they had
+looked on others who had gone under their shadow
+sighing or singing, laughing or weeping—as he
+paused and listened to the dash and flow of the
+waters, as he heard the whistle of the plover and the
+cry of the curlew, some voice through the still night
+spoke as clearly and distinctly to Maxwell Drewitt’s
+soul as the “Preacher,” who tried all things, and
+pronounced them vanity of vanities, tells the same tale
+to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Most probably Maxwell Drewitt had never read
+Ecclesiastes. If he had, he would certainly not have
+recollected any portion of it; and yet it was the same
+story as that told so many thousand years ago by the
+great king of Israel, which the night, and the clouds,
+and the moonlight, and the mountains were whispering
+prophetically in his ear—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I made me great works; I builded me houses;
+I planted me vineyards: I gathered me also silver and
+gold, and whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept not from
+them, I withheld not my heart from any joy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>“Then I looked on all the works that my hands
+had wrought, and <i>behold all was vanity and vexation of
+spirit, and there was no profit under the sun. Yea, I
+hated all my labour which I had taken under the sun:
+because I should leave it unto the man that shall be after
+me.</i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is a desolate place,” thought Maxwell. “It
+gives a man the blues!” and he struck his heel against
+his horse’s flank, and the animal sprang forward along
+the hard road, and the flints flashed fire as the iron
+hoofs dashed over them. He passed by lonely lakes,
+round the base of steep rocks, over bridges beneath
+which the mountain streams brawled noisily among the
+stones. He passed by silent cabins, by unroofed cottages,
+by deserted hearthstones gleaming white and bare
+in the moonlight; by a lonely chapel, by a forsaken-looking
+graveyard, where the tombs were covered with
+moss, where the crosses were black with weather, wind,
+and age.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On, on, he rode, and as he rode he sung, either
+to encourage his horse or to reassure himself, that
+cheerful ballad which recounts the loves of King
+Connor and the fair Kathleen, and the sad fate of the
+latter:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“‘The castle portal stood grimly wide,</div>
+ <div class='line'>None welcomed the king from that weary ride,</div>
+ <div class='line'>For dead, in the light of the dawning day,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The pale sweet form of the welcomer lay</div>
+ <div class='line'>Who had yearned for his voice while dying.’</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“While dying!” hummed Maxwell, and the words
+brought him within sight of Eversbeg.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was the sea, the fair, calm open sea, with
+the moonlight sleeping in it as peacefully as if he had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>not seen the same light wandering about the hills and
+through the valleys he had just left. There was
+Eversbeg Abbey, where poor Kathie had been lying
+dead this many a day. There was Eversbeg Head,
+round which Mrs. Drewitt had walked when she came
+to speak to him about Susan and Kathie and Lady
+Vervensoe.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was the cabin where he had received her,
+where they had sat beside the turf-fire talking; there
+were the woods of Kincorth high up on the other side
+of Duranmore Bay, and there close down by the bay
+was his own place, which he meant to convert into the
+garden of Erin. Was he sorrowful when he came in
+sight of all these things? My reader, no! the dark
+hour had passed away, and Maxwell Drewitt was a
+man of the world, in the world, loving the world once
+more.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was glad to have done with uncertainty, to
+have settled his future past recall, to feel no more
+hesitation, to have laid down a course to which he
+meant to adhere.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was glad; he had done well: he should do
+better. It was a good match. He knew half the
+county would say what a capital thing he had done
+for himself. He knew many a man would gnash his
+teeth with rage when he heard of Drewitt having carried
+off the prize.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Altogether, Mr. Maxwell Drewitt was a contented
+man; and yet, as he came along the road that led
+down towards the bay, he stopped his horse for a moment,
+and strained his eyes away to a little cottage
+gleaming white and ghostly in the moonlight.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>It was a deserted cottage now, and he had made
+it so. There was no Jenny waiting for him by the
+stream or up the ravine. She had long been living
+with her brother in Duranmore, and many suitors had
+sought her hand in vain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She will marry now,” was the idea that passed
+through Maxwell’s mind; and then, with a pang of
+remorse, he added, “Poor Jenny!”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XV.<br> <span class='c011'>Man and Beast.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>There is a great pathos about the life of a common
+man, about the story of any one whose wishes are
+moderate, whose pleasures are limited, whose hopes are
+small, whose way through existence is along the river
+instead of across the sea, adown the valley rather than
+over the mountains; and for this reason that little deserted
+cottage close by Duranmore Bay, looking white
+and ghostly in the moonlight, was as pitiful an object
+as Maxwell Drewitt’s eyes could have rested on.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>No person knew better how Ryan had loved that
+cottage; how he had delighted in the look out over the
+bay, in the view up the ravine. He had seen him
+pacing beside the stream and superintending the mowing
+of his little crop of hay. He remembered the
+various articles of additional furniture with which Ryan
+had adorned the rooms in honour of Jenny’s arrival;
+how he had planted creepers by the porch, and nailed
+trellis-work together for the honeysuckle and the clematis
+to clamber over; how he had laid out his little
+garden sloping towards the south, and filled it with
+London-pride and lavender, with red daisies and
+hepaticas, with cabbage roses and sweet Williams, with
+daffodils, and pinks, and southernwood, and tulips, and
+gentianallas, and all the common flowers which are so
+beautiful in their homely simplicity and sweetness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As a man plants and sows and beautifies for his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>wife that is to be, so Ryan, knowing that dream could
+return no more, that love could never come back again
+with its freshness, planted and sowed and beautified
+for the young sister who was going to make his house
+a home for him at last.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All this Maxwell Drewitt remembered. He recollected
+also what a different man Ryan seemed after
+his sister’s return; how much more comfortable he appeared
+to be; how he used to hurry home from Duranmore
+to his little cottage; how busy he was wont to
+make himself with spade, and rake, and hoe.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The simple pleasures of a common life came back
+to Maxwell’s memory separately and singly with the
+power of a curse. He had driven Ryan away from
+Inchnagawn; it was he who had laid the garden waste;
+he who had broken down the trellis-work and left the
+cottage desolate.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As regarded the horsewhipping, he and Ryan had
+long been even; for Maxwell had worked on and till
+he got Waller’s agency withdrawn from Ryan and
+given to a <i>protégé</i> of Mr. Samuel Turner.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had made no secret of this to the lawyer, for
+he knew for his sister’s sake Mr. Ryan would make no
+complaint of unfairness to Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You’ll spy again, Ryan, will you?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, and thrash you again if I catch you meddling
+with her,” was the spirited reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At which answer Maxwell laughed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I owe you a good turn for your interference,
+though I have done you a bad one for meddling in
+my affairs. But for you, I really think I should have
+married Miss Bourke.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>“I am greatly obliged for the intended condescension,”
+said Ryan.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You would have been more obliged to me for
+the actual condescension, I suppose?” suggested Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I told you once I would rather put Jenny in her
+coffin than give her to you,” answered the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Nonsense,” retorted young Drewitt; “you only
+said that because you thought I never would ask her
+honourably.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Repeat that sentence—I wish you would repeat
+it,” said Ryan, facing round on his tormentor, who,
+however, declined to oblige him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You understood my meaning well enough. I
+need not go over the ground again. You are wrong.
+There was a time when I loved your sister very much;
+when—when I might have made a lady of her. But
+you cured me of my folly; and I vowed then to be
+revenged. I am revenged. Let bygones be bygones.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The pair had never ceased to be on speaking terms.
+Maxwell was too wise and Ryan too careful to permit
+the little world of Duranmore to imagine there was
+any open rupture between them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They nodded in the street, they shook hands when
+they met in a room; only Ryan did not go to Headlands,
+and Maxwell never entered Ryan’s office in
+Duranmore. Ryan never ceased keeping a watchful
+eye on Jenny, and Maxwell carried his pebble in his
+pocket, and turned it every now and then, biding his
+time.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had sworn to be revenged, and he was revenged.
+Did that fact comfort him now, as he looked down on
+Inchnagawn, lying white and silent in the moonlight?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>This man had owned no wide acres, no fine park,
+no great house. He had but a little patch of land,
+and behold he was cast out of it! He had been doing
+very well, and all at once the ground was cut from
+below his feet. Every man over whom Maxwell had
+any influence left him and went to the opposition
+lawyer. Poor Ryan’s conduct had not in all cases
+been above fear and above reproach; and Maxwell,
+having once been his confidant, fought and killed him
+with his own weapons.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had almost to commence again, and there were
+times when he thought of leaving Duranmore altogether,
+and seeking his fortune elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>That was what Maxwell wanted to make him do.
+He wished to see the back of Mr. Timothy Ryan, and
+of his sister also.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was the old story of the poor man and his ewe
+lamb over again. Ryan had not much, but what he
+had Maxwell took from him. Maxwell was gaining
+great possessions; but, like Ahab, he longed for the
+vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite as well.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Besides, Ryan knew too much of him and of his
+affairs, and he desired to be rid of his former friend.
+When you have made all the use you can of a weapon,
+it is as well to break it, so that the steel may
+not prove dangerous in other hands. That was what
+Maxwell wanted to do. He wished to get Ryan out
+of his way, and he had not stood over-nice about compassing
+his end.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Was it pleasant for him to remember these things
+as he rode slowly homeward under the moonlight?
+Was there nothing pathetic even to him in Ryan’s
+worn face, in Jenny’s pale cheeks?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>“If she will marry Connor,” was the conclusion
+Mr. Maxwell Drewitt arrived at that night, “I will try
+to push him on; but I cannot do anything for her
+brother. He must leave Duranmore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Jenny at that very moment was lying awake
+in the moonlight, thinking, with the tears in her eyes,
+of him; whilst Ryan was sitting in his office, facing his
+affairs and cogitating concerning ways and means.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell could have made them both happy, had
+he chosen; but he elected not to make them happy,
+and fell asleep contented.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There had been many minor changes in Duranmore
+during the four years I have spoken of. There was
+an opposition doctor in the town, and another attorney.
+A queer old bachelor had taken up his quarters, for a
+permanency apparently, at the “Marsden Arms.” Mr.
+Murphy was gone to London, from which place he sent
+occasionally notes of rare and exquisite cases to Dr.
+Sheen, who, not having the same enthusiasm for his
+profession, thought that the “good old way” seemed
+best after all.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot help fancying,” he wrote back on one
+occasion to his late assistant, “that the operation you
+mention (laryngotomy) must have been excruciatingly
+painful to the patient.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No doubt it was,” replied Mr. Murphy, in dudgeon;
+“but, good God, sir, consider how interesting!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is all very true,” remarked Dr. Sheen to
+Mr. Murphy’s successor, “but I never was fond of
+diseases out of the common;” which was all the more
+fortunate for Dr. Sheen, as he did not meet with many
+singular cases amongst his patients, and could not have
+cured them if he had.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>The most out-of-the-way ailment he ever had to
+puzzle over was that of an old lady named Connor,
+who lived with her son in the cottage near Eversbeg
+Head (on the Duranmore side), which, at the time Mrs.
+Drewitt first beheld the Atlantic, was tenanted by a
+retired sea captain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mrs. Connor’s complaint was gastric carcinoma—a
+disease which was, in those days, to the faculty precisely
+what an unclassified animal or a strange fish
+proves to the naturalist. Mr. Murphy would have been
+enchanted with the case, but not so Doctor Sheen.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>To Mrs. Connor herself it seemed as terrible an
+affliction as could have been laid upon her. She found
+nothing interesting or entertaining in the matter. It
+was dying by inches. It was sinking in the ocean
+with help all around. It was wasting off the face of
+the earth under the influence of a disease more depressing
+than consumption, and equally hopeless—a
+disease of which science could give no account—for
+which skill could prescribe no remedy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There were no alternations in this ailment—no
+days of hope, no times of relief. It was like hiring a
+hearse, and driving by slow stages to the grave. It
+was not life; it was not death; but it was dying, day
+after day, week after week, month after month, with
+starvation for the end.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Starvation, though she had plenty of nourishment,
+and was able to eat. A disease as strange and inexplicable
+to the spectator as perplexing to a doctor; a
+disease for which there was no cure but death, no
+palliation but patience; in which there was no stay, no
+pause—which picked the flesh off her bones, and
+pinched her cheeks, and exhausted her strength, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>tried her temper—which it was hard to bear alone in
+that solitary cottage by the sea-shore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Her son could not stay with her all the day. He
+had to be away from early in the morning till six
+o’clock in the evening, at the marble quarries, where
+he was a kind of overseer, and both mother and son
+consequently felt very grateful when Jenny Bourke
+took her needlework in her hand, and went to pass a
+few hours at Duranmore Cottage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She was quiet and sad enough in these days, it is
+true; but she seemed none the less sweet and loveable
+for that. She would sing her plaintive songs, and talk
+to the old lady about her ailments, and lead her out
+in the sunshine round by Eversbeg Head, or up towards
+the mountains where the marble quarries were;
+and poor Mrs. Connor took kindly to the girl, and
+prayed her when she was gone to try and love Dennis,
+and become in due time his wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But Jenny only shook her head.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a few days after Maxwell’s night ride home
+from Cragantlet that Jenny and Mrs. Connor climbed
+to the top of Eversbeg Head—no great ascent after
+all—and sat them down there.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The summer’s sun was shining over the scene—over
+the wide Atlantic, over Duranmore and Eversbeg
+Bays, over the old Abbey, and over the Headlands,
+towards which Jenny’s eyes turned longingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She had not seen Maxwell for some time, and she
+loved him. How much? More than Dennis Connor
+loved her; more than Jenny could ever love any one
+again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The two women sat side by side, each busy with
+her own thoughts. Mrs. Connor was gazing over the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>fair earth, upon which she should so soon have to close
+her eyes. Jenny was looking at Maxwell’s home and
+wishing she could see him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Jenny was a good little soul, and she had a kind
+heart beating in her breast; and she was very sorry for
+Mrs. Connor, and very glad to help her to while away
+the time; but, yet, Jenny was not quite disinterested.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Duranmore Cottage was not a great distance from
+Headlands, and she could sometimes catch a glimpse
+of Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She caught a glimpse of him on the day in question
+when he came with a new horse Lady Emmeline
+had sent him along the avenue from his house.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The drive was rough and the horse intractable.
+So Maxwell led him up to the main road, accompanied
+on his way so far by a couple of his men, who were
+curious to see the animal in harness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The creature had been used to the saddle, and rebelled
+against the indignity of a vehicle. He had been
+used likewise to jib, but a pair of spurs prevented
+much harm coming of that habit, so long as he had a
+rider on his back. With a conveyance behind him,
+however, the case was different; and the moment Maxwell
+jumped into his tax-cart and touched the animal
+with his whip the brute began to back.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>All this Jenny, from her seat among the grass and
+the heather, was able to see, and she could see also
+Maxwell shouting and gesticulating, although she could
+not hear what he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Take his head, Lynch, and lead him on a bit,”
+Mr. Drewitt ordered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But leading him on proved a matter beyond Lynch’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>capability, for which reason Maxwell began flogging the
+creature unmercifully.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A jibbing horse being one of those circumstances
+which tries a man’s temper too much, is, I think, one
+of those struggles which a woman ought never to see;
+but Jenny, being on the height above the Headlands,
+could not help seeing, and neither could Mrs. Connor,
+for that matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What a wretch—what a brute!” exclaimed the
+old lady indignantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If the horse won’t go on, what is he to do?” demanded
+Jenny, ready to do battle for Maxwell, though
+she could have run down the hill and prayed him to
+cease beating the creature for her sake.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For all the good flogging did, Maxwell might as
+well have flogged one of the granite pillars against
+which Lady Emmeline’s present had backed the tax-cart,
+and after he had lashed the thong off his whip
+the young man sprang with a curse to the ground, and,
+taking the reins short in his hand, tugged and tore at
+the horse’s mouth like a madman. And the more he
+tore the bit the higher the brute lifted his head, while
+he lowered his hind quarters and backed as well as he
+was able.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a trial of brute strength now. There was
+no skill, no horsemanship, no science in the matter;
+it was whose will should be fiercest, whose power
+greatest.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As I have said before, a man is not to be judged
+by his conduct towards a jibbing horse; but yet to the
+outsider—to the spectator whose temper is not tried,
+whose blood is not up, whose strength is not defied—the
+struggle between an unreasoning animal with a bit
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>in his mouth, with harness on his back, with a conveyance
+behind him, and a man free to go, free to
+think, free to act, always seems cowardly and terrible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>With her breath coming thick and short, Jenny
+watched the combat. A woman cannot bear these kind
+of struggles, perhaps because she knows that in the
+hands of man she is oftentimes but as a creature having
+a bit in her mouth herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Which would win? Maxwell turned his whip in
+his hand and struck the horse with the butt-end again
+and again, with such force that Jenny could hear the
+blows, and feel each stroke go through her own tender
+heart.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He sent for a heavy cart-whip and showered blows
+on the animal with that. His men took each a wheel
+and shoved, while he kicked and damned and flogged.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That man is a perfect devil!” said Mrs. Connor,
+solemnly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Let us go, oh, let us go!” cried Jenny, rising;
+but still fascinated, she stood still and watched.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then she saw that which through all her after life
+it made her turn sick and faint to remember—Maxwell
+stoop and scoop up a handful of gravel off the
+road.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Get up,” he said to one of the men, and the man
+jumped in and took the reins.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Lash him on,” continued Maxwell, and he handed
+the fellow the whip.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then Maxwell thrust the gravel up the animal’s
+nostrils, rubbing the small sharp stones into the quivering
+flesh; and while the creature, mad with pain, sprang
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>forward, he leaped to his seat, and taking both reins
+and whip, kept flogging the horse far as Jenny’s eyes
+could follow him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I think, Mrs. Connor, I will go home,” she said,
+when she had walked in silence back to Duranmore
+Cottage, and helped Mrs. Connor off with her shawl
+and settled her in her chair by the window. “I think
+that horse has made me feel a little ill.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mrs. Connor looked into the girl’s face as she said
+this, and saw there what she never told to Dennis, or
+Jenny, or any human being; only she sat for a long
+time after Jenny left her, crying all alone.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Meanwhile Jenny walked back to Duranmore, heartsick,
+faint, and weary, and when she was near her own
+door she was met by Mrs. Sheen, the doctor’s wife—for
+among other changes, Dr. Sheen had taken unto
+himself a wife—who said:</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How pale you look, Miss Bourke! What is wrong
+with you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have walked too far in the heat, Mrs. Sheen,”
+answered Jenny. “I sat out in the sun with poor Mrs.
+Connor, and it has made me feel faint.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is no wonder Mr. Connor is fond of you,”
+replied Mrs. Sheen, with a knowing look; “but you
+must not overdo the thing, my dear. Even for his
+sake you must not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do not know what you mean at all,” answered
+Jenny; but she blushed up to the roots of her hair,
+nevertheless.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I did not mean anything, of course,” explained
+Mrs. Sheen; “and talking of marriages—have you
+heard the news?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>“News! I did not know there was ever any news
+in Duranmore,” said Jenny.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is news now, at any rate,” was the reply.
+“Mr. Maxwell Drewitt is going to be married to Lady
+Emmeline Vervensoe.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The houses danced up and down before Jenny’s
+eyes, and the street went round and round.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will you tell me all about it to-morrow?” she
+asked, while she felt blindly about for the wall, and
+held on by a window-sill. “I feel so sick and faint
+now, Mrs. Sheen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Had not I better bid the Doctor come round and
+see you?” said the lady; but Jenny answered:</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is only the heat. I shall be well to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then she walked into the house and ran up the
+staircase, and locked herself into her own room, where
+she fell on the floor in a dead swoon.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI.<br> <span class='c011'>Poor Jenny.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was on a Monday that Maxwell Drewitt proposed
+to Lady Emmeline, and on the following Friday
+he was coming along the road leading from Eversbeg
+to Duranmore, when he met a palefaced, large-eyed
+girl, who told him she wanted to speak to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not now, Jenny,” he said. “I am going up to a
+party at Kincorth. Wait for a day or two.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I wait any longer I shall die,” she answered.
+“I must speak to you. Timothy is away, and I have
+been watching for you all the afternoon. Let me ask
+you something now, and then go to your party if you
+like.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We cannot stand talking on the road here, Jenny,”
+he answered, “but I tell you what,” he added, seeing
+the look of despair in her poor tearful eyes: “meet
+me at twelve, in the summer-house at the top of the
+fall (you know the summer-house). I will be there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Upon your honour?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Upon my soul,” he replied, and the pair parted.
+She walked forward to Mrs. Connor’s, and he went on
+to Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a quiet party, given in honour of Maxwell’s
+engagement. The Drewitts did not think well of the
+match, and for that reason they were, perhaps, a little
+over-anxious to be cordial to Lady Emmeline.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a good thing for Maxwell, Mr. and Mrs.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>Drewitt agreed; and yet Mrs. Drewitt knew a younger
+woman would have appeared to her better.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Such a union was likely to give Maxwell all he
+had lost through his father’s unlucky marriage, but
+still it seemed unnatural to see so young a man selling
+himself for money.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Nevertheless, the Drewitts were bound to be pleased:
+the head of the family was expected to hold out the
+right hand of fellowship to Lady Emmeline, and Mr.
+and Mrs. Drewitt had accordingly driven over to
+Cragantlet and invited the widow to a very quiet party
+in honour of the event.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On account of Lady Emmeline’s bereavement dancing
+would have been improper, but, looking towards her
+impending marriage, music was permissible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a musical party therefore—that is, dinner
+and music. Only very intimate friends on both sides
+were invited, such as the Munks and Marsdens and
+Hickmans and Dolf Vervensoe, who began at once to
+pay marked attentions to Laura Munks, which attentions
+caused the heart of her honourable mother to
+leap for joy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Miss Macpherson came with the Munks. Mrs. Drewitt
+had asked her to come, greatly on account of her musical
+attainments, which would, that poor lady hoped, cause
+the evening to go off all the more pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Lady Emmeline was in great force: she put on her
+deepest mourning, and flourished her widest hem-stitched
+pocket-handkerchief. She kissed Mrs. Drewitt and Wilhelmina,
+and Master Brian and Miss Geraldine, and
+pressed Mr. Drewitt’s hand with emotion.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And Mr. Drewitt pressed Lady Emmeline’s, and
+the pair had a little private conversation in the embrasure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>of one of the drawing-room windows; and Mr.
+Drewitt wept, and Lady Emmeline wept, and the two
+exchanged sentiments of regard and vows of eternal
+friendship.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>To do the poetess justice, she did not care one
+straw about money. Give her Maxwell, and she was
+indifferent to filthy lucre. Had he owned Kincorth
+fifty times over she could not have been fonder of
+him. It is pitiful to think how far good looks go
+with women: how much better she liked this handsome
+young fellow than she had ever cared for her far-honester
+husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Well-a-day, well-a-day! so the world goes, and so
+the world will go till the Millennium.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Of all the company, Maxwell himself was, I think,
+the most uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A man takes kindly enough to having honours thrust
+upon him, but he feels awkward when a select party is
+invited to see the process.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Besides, though he loved money he hated marriage;
+and, above all, was there not a poor soft-hearted little
+girl crying her eyes out for his sake?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Poor child! poor Jenny! She was in his memory
+all that evening. He could not see Lady Emmeline
+for thinking of her when the widow spoke; and as for
+Miss Macpherson, there were some people whom Maxwell
+always detested, and Miss Macpherson was one
+of them; for this was part of the song that terrible
+Scotchwoman elected to sing with a pathos utterly indescribable,
+while Maxwell Drewitt stood beside his
+aunt, digging his nails into his flesh, and cursing the
+poet who wrote the words and the woman who sung
+them with all his heart and soul and strength.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>Was ever a more mournful song penned, reader,
+than that from which Miss Macpherson selected four
+sorrowful verses? Four verses, sorrowful and beautiful.
+Here they are:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“My head is like to rend, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>My heart is like to break;</div>
+ <div class='line'>I’m wearin’ aff my feet, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>I’m dyin’ for your sake:</div>
+ <div class='line'>Oh! lay your cheek to mine, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Your hand upon my head;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Oh! say ye’ll think on me, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>When I am cold and dead.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“It’s vain to comfort me, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Sair grief maun hae its will;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But let me rest upon your breast,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>To sab and greet my fill;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let me sit on your knee, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Let me shed by your hair,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And look into the face, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>I never may see mair.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“I’m weary o’ this warld, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And sick wi’ all I see;</div>
+ <div class='line'>I canna live as I hae lived,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Or be as I should be;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But fauld into your heart, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>The heart that still is thine,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And kiss ance mair the white, white cheek</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Ye said was red lang syne.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“The lav’rock in the lift, Willie,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>That lilts far ower our heid,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Will sing the morn as merrilie</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Aboun the clay cauld deid;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And this green turf we’re sittin’ on,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>Wi’ dewdrops shimmerin’ sheen,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Will hap the heart that luvit thee</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>As warld has seldom seen.”<a id='rA'></a><a href='#fA' class='c015'><sup>[A]</sup></a></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote' id='fA'>
+<p class='c013'><a href='#rA'>A</a>. The whole of this ballad is to be found in a curious collection of
+Scotch songs entitled “Whistle Binkie.” The book is somewhat rare, and
+I do not chance to have it by me at the moment; but I believe the verses
+quoted above were written by Motherwell; and I know that they, as well
+as the “King’s Ride,” referred to on page 215 (the name of the author of
+which I am unable to learn), have recently been most charmingly set to
+music by Miss Elizabeth Philp.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>After the manner of all Scotch poems, the original
+was of great length. If Maxwell had heard the whole
+of it I think he would have sacrificed Miss Macpherson
+in his uncle’s drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>How long that evening seemed! How unendurable!
+How intolerable it was to listen to the chitter-chatter
+of a dozen female tongues! How plainly he could see
+the rouge on Lady Emmeline’s cheeks! How he hated
+the affectation of her manners! How sick the little
+flutter she pretended to feel made him! How he wished
+to heaven he could break Dolf Vervensoe’s head for his
+sly allusions, for his meaning looks!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Miss Macpherson sang, and Mrs. Drewitt sang, and
+Laura Munks sang, and Lady Emmeline was induced
+to “join in.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then they had tea handed round, and the card-tables
+were brought out, and the old stagers played
+whist, while the young people flirted, and Lady Emmeline
+sat talking demurely to Mr. Drewitt, and Maxwell
+walked from window to window looking forth at
+the view on which the moon was just rising. It must
+be getting on for twelve he knew by that, and thinking
+of Jenny, he went across to Lady Emmeline, and after
+leaning over the back of her chair and whispering a
+few compliments in her ear, reminded her how late it
+was getting.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will come with me as far as Eversbeg,” she
+suggested; but Maxwell told her he thought of remaining
+at Kincorth for the night, upon which she
+rose to go.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Time has passed so pleasantly, Mrs. Drewitt,”
+said Lady Emmeline, “that I had not the least idea
+of the hour.” And the widow, after a tender farewell
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>of the Drewitt family, swept down to her carriage, attended
+by Maxwell and his uncle.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Her departure was the signal for the remainder of
+the party to disperse; and accordingly, with a great
+clattering of horses’ hoofs, and banging to of carriage
+doors, and putting up of carriage steps, the guests
+drove off, and left Kincorth quiet and lonely in the
+moonlight.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then Maxwell bade Mrs. Drewitt good-night, and
+took his hat, spite of Mr. Drewitt’s entreaties for him
+to stay.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Thank you, no,” answered Maxwell, “I cannot
+remain. I told Lady Emmeline I thought I should,
+but I forgot then that a man said he would come to
+me to-morrow morning at seven about some stock, and
+I should not care to have to walk over from here so
+early as all that comes to. Good-night, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Good-night, Maxwell, and I wish you every
+happiness. I think you have made a most prudent
+choice,” finished Mr. Drewitt, wringing his nephew’s
+hand; which piece of commendation elicited the remark,
+“D—n my choice and your thoughts too,” from
+Maxwell, as he walked down the drive.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>When he had got well among the trees he left the
+gravelled walk, and made his way through the plantations
+to the glen mentioned in an early chapter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Many a time he and Jenny had met in that glen
+during the last two years, for it was a lonely place
+where strangers were sure never to intrude, and where
+the family rarely penetrated. At the very top of the
+glen stood the ruined summer-house, going fast to
+wreck and decay. The roof let in the wet, the floor
+was damp and grass-grown, the seats were broken and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>crazy. It was nearly a mile away from the mansion,
+and as solitary and deserted a spot for a meeting of
+the kind as can well be imagined.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As he climbed up the steep path which led to it
+from the glen, Maxwell, looking at the summer-house
+perched on the very top of the waterfall, saw a woman
+leaning against the rustic pillars that formed the
+entrance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are late,” she said; “I thought you were not
+going to come;” and she dropped back the shawl she
+had put over her head, and the white sad face was
+lifted appealingly to his in the moonlight.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have I ever disappointed you, Jenny?” he asked,
+and he kissed her cold lips while the girl clung to him
+in a kind of passionate despair.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They told me you were going to be married,”
+she whispered; “it is not true? tell me it is not
+true.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If there had been any use in telling her a lie he
+would have done it; but he knew it must come to this
+sooner or later, and so he held his peace, and turned
+aside his head.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why don’t you look at me?” she cried; “why
+don’t you answer?” And then, in her extremity, she
+fell on her knees before him, and prayed him say it
+was false, it was not true.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He lifted her from the ground, and took her in his
+arms, and held her to his heart, and kissed her over
+and over again; but still he said nothing, while she
+kept moaning out—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s not true! You never could be so fond of me,
+and marry another woman.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I were married to twenty women I could never
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>be so fond of one of them as I am of you,” he answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you are not going to be married? Say it
+was an untruth they told me—say so, for God’s sake!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What can it matter, Jenny?” he replied. “I will
+never love any one as I love you. I swear that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you promised to marry <i>me</i>!” Jenny broke
+out, tearing herself from his embrace, and facing him
+as he stood silent and pale in the moonlight. “You
+swore that to me. You said whenever you had money
+enough you would marry me, and that then, when we
+were married, Timothy would soon come round. You
+did, you know you did! and if it was a lie, God pardon
+you, Maxwell Drewitt, and God help me!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She sank to the earth once more, not kneeling this
+time, but crouching, with her hands covering her face,
+with her head bent forward on her lap, crying—crying,
+oh! so terribly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And the moonlight lay on tree and ocean and field—on
+Duranmore down by the shore, on the great
+mountains, and the smaller hills.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will marry me, Maxwell?” she sobbed at
+last, and she seized his hands in hers, and covered
+them with tears and kisses. “You cannot mean to
+desert me after all. You cannot leave me to face the
+world’s scorn. I would do my best to please you. I
+would never ask to go out with you to any place, or
+to be your equal, or to know your concerns. Only
+marry me, for the love of God!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I told you before,” he answered huskily, “that I
+can never love any woman but you; and as long as I
+love you, what does it matter whether I am married
+or single?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>“Maybe it does not matter to you,” she said; “but
+to me—to me——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will marry somebody else, Jenny, and look
+back upon all this as a foolish dream—a foolish happy
+dream.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s a dream that’s mighty like reality,” she answered.
+“I wish it was a dream!” went on the girl,
+passionately. “I wish that I could wake now and
+know that all that has passed was only a dream! If I
+could go back to what I was when I first met you, I’d
+die happy. I wouldn’t care that this was my last night
+on earth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Jenny—Jenny!” he remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’m thinking that the water down by there looks
+mighty quiet,” she continued, looking with her great
+sorrowful eyes away to the sea. “If I could get anybody
+to row me out far enough that I’d never come
+ashore, I’d drown myself. Timothy would be sorry,
+but he would not be half as sorry as he will be if I
+don’t do it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell could not bear this. He made her get
+up, and drew her back to the firmest of the seats, and
+sat down beside her, and laid the poor tired head on
+his breast and tried to comfort her. There had been
+a time when his lightest caress made Jenny’s heart
+leap with joy; but nothing he could say or do would
+comfort her now. “Marry me, marry me!” she kept
+crying, and she twined her arms round his neck and
+told him how their sin had found them out; how it
+was because she knew she could keep their secret
+no longer that she wanted him to save her from
+shame.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a minute, Maxwell sat stunned; a sickening
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>remorse came over him. Her child!—and she was
+little more than a child when he first met her. Her
+child!—Maxwell knew now the reason of her pale
+thin cheeks, of her unusual importunity, of her longing
+look towards the quiet sea.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh! Jenny, Jenny, I wish we had never seen one
+another,” he cried out at last; “I wish I had never
+looked at your pretty face, my darling!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And it’s I that wish I had never seen you!” she
+answered, “or that I had died before this ever came
+to pass; before I ever was the bad girl I have been,
+and brought trouble and disgrace on the one that knew
+you better than I did. What are you going to do
+now?” she demanded, with a sudden access of indignation.
+“Are you going to marry me or leave me?—going
+to desert me or shelter me from the storm? You
+will marry me, Maxwell, won’t you? Now that you
+know all, you will not forsake me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And she put her “cheek against his cheek,” and
+took his hand and held it upon her heart, while she
+begged him to have mercy, while she craved him to
+have pity, in tones that Maxwell Drewitt remembered
+at his dying hour.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But she did not know with whom she had to deal.
+The very reason she assigned would have been powerful
+enough to prevent Maxwell fulfilling his promise.
+Should the finger of scorn be pointed at him?—should
+the purity of his wife be questioned? He would
+as soon have thought of marrying the vilest of women
+as of mating with Jenny now. And he had brought
+her to this, with his lying words, with his false tongue,
+with his fair promises! He had found her young and
+guileless and loving, and she was sitting now with the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>moonlight streaming on her pale face, ruined and betrayed.
+That was a pleasant memory for him when
+“the door of the house came to be shut,” when the
+noise of the outer world sounded no longer in his ears,
+when there was no future of life stretching out before
+him—but only silence, and sickness, and recollection
+in the darkened chamber, in the lonely room.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Would he marry her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>No. But Maxwell was at immense pains to explain
+why he could not do so: how he was very, very poor;
+how he was only marrying Lady Emmeline for her
+money; how he would always spare enough for Jenny;
+how, though another woman might own his name, no
+one but Jenny should own his heart. He tried to work
+upon her feelings; he tried to get her to be self-sacrificing
+for the sake of the love she bore him. “You
+would not like to see me struggling for bread all my
+days?” he finished: “you would not like to ruin me
+and keep me poor till the end of my life?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You ought to have thought about that before you
+ruined me,” she answered. “You talk to me as if
+money could give me back what I have lost, when I
+would cheerfully beg my bread from door to door if
+only I could be what I once was; if I only could!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But, Jenny,” he answered, “why should you be
+ruined at all? There’s a man who would marry you
+to-morrow—Connor. Marry him, and then——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He stopped in his sentence, for the girl rose up at
+his words and looked him in the face. She unwound
+his arm from about her, she put his hand away from
+her face, she lifted her head from his shoulder and
+stood in the moonlight staring at the man she loved
+with an incredulous surprise.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>“And it’s that you want me to do?” she said.
+“And it’s your child you would have me pass off on
+him as his?—and that’s the way you think you’ll get
+rid of me? But you’re mistaken; you’re wrong this
+time. I’ll tell Timothy; I’ll tell Lady Emmeline; I’ll
+tell your uncle, and I’ll see if there isn’t one of them
+will have me righted. Marry Dennis! Oh! Father of
+Heaven, what is this at all, at all?” and she rushed
+out of the summer-house and down the glen, sobbing
+as she went.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He picked up her shawl and followed her. It did
+not take much pleading on his part to make her promise
+that she would not fulfil her threat—that she would
+not go and blazon her wrongs about.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>She blazed up into a passion one moment, but was
+calm the next.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will do well for you, Maxwell,” she said, “though
+you have done ill for me. I will keep your secret, if
+it kill me. I will be faithful to you, though you have
+been false to me. I won’t have any money; but I
+won’t drown myself: I promise you, and I don’t break
+my word. Let me pass you. Don’t kiss me again—don’t;
+you belong to another woman now, and I hope—I
+do hope she will make you as happy as I would
+have tried to do!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot let you go, Jenny,” he said. “I love
+you, and you only, still.” And he kissed her as he
+never kissed another on earth, with passionate tenderness,
+with a hungry affection, with a despairing remorse—kissed
+her while the tears ran down her white
+cheeks, and the stream trickled at their feet, and the
+roar of the waterfall sounded in their ears, and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>trees stirred their branches in the light wind which went
+rustling and murmuring among the trees.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then he wrapped the shawl which she wore for
+disguise, like the country people, gently about her, and
+pulled it over her head. And thus they parted, so far
+as meeting and loving and trusting was concerned, for
+ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It is not in all cases parting to be separated from
+those we love by absence or death, by distance or the
+grave.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There are worse partings than those on the deck
+of the outward-bound ship, or by the dying beds of the
+dear ones we have walked with through years—worse
+partings, between two who may yet hear each other’s
+voices, and touch each other’s hands, and look in each
+other’s faces, day after day.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVII.<br> <span class='c011'>Master Harold.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>There was little change in Connemara—in the
+general aspect of the country I mean—and yet the
+suns of sixteen summers had risen and set upon the
+mountains since Maxwell Drewitt rode home from
+Cragantlet under the moonlight—since, under the
+moonlight also, Jenny Bourke accepted the sorrow that
+was inevitable, and went away through the night, crying
+silently.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There were the mountains, grand and stern and
+rugged as ever; there were the desolate lakes, the
+dreary bogs, the huge boulders, the endless bays, the
+rocky headlands, the grassy promontories washed by
+the wide ocean.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>To look at the country, any one might have thought
+only a new day had dawned upon the earth; and it
+was a new day indeed, but one twenty years after that
+summer afternoon when you, reader, first looked into
+the parlour of Inchnagawn Cottage, and heard Maxwell
+Drewitt and Timothy Ryan talking about the new mistress
+who was coming home to Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>What are twenty years, when all is said and done,
+but as an hour in the life of the great hills? Twenty
+years! Man frets and troubles himself through the
+third portion of almost his longest day, and the hills
+look on silently. Twenty years! Others come and go,
+are born and die, marry and have children, strive and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>plan, harass themselves, laugh and weep, rejoice and
+mourn, while the hills remain unchanged.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Twenty years! The mountains and the lakes and
+the ocean were the same—but the people! Ah! dear
+reader, no one but God in Heaven may ever know what
+the Irish suffered between the summer’s day on which
+this story opened and the summer’s day on which I
+take up my pen once more.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a lovely afternoon, towards the latter end
+of June. There had been rain in the early morning,
+but towards twelve o’clock the clouds dispersed, the
+sun broke out, and now, as the mail-coach, bound to
+arrive at Duranmore at five o’clock, stopped to change
+horses at Calgillan, ten miles distant, the traveller
+could not have desired a more beautiful day for his
+journey, or a finer country for his eyes to wander over.
+Fine, not with cultivation, but by nature. Grand with
+hills—well-wooded here and there too—with waterfalls
+dashing down the mountain-sides, with rapid rivers
+pursuing their course onward to the sea. The road
+leading from Calgillan to Duranmore was far the most
+picturesque approach to the little town which could
+have been selected, and it was because of its beauty
+that two English gentlemen chose it for their route.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The younger of these two men had never visited
+Ireland before; the elder had been in Connemara
+twenty years previously, when he stood for Duranmore
+and lost the day. Henry Pryor was coming back,
+after all those years, to look at a property which was
+for sale near Duranmore, and if he liked, to buy it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Whilst he remained in Connemara he was going to
+be the guest of Maxwell Drewitt, Esq., of the Headlands;
+and Maxwell Drewitt, Esq., had kindly offered
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>to extend his hospitality to Mr. Francis Gyton, whose
+father was principal in the great firm of Gyton, Lark,
+Munday, Hatfield and Company, Austinfriars, London.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Gyton, senior, was a millionaire—Mr. Gyton,
+junior, was rather a fast young man, who went down
+to the City and “looked in” at the office as seldom as
+he could help, whose health required continual absences
+from town, and who, consequently, the moment
+he heard his uncle intended visiting Ireland, offered to
+accompany him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Calgillan was not a town, merely a straggling
+village lying among the hills, and Mr. Gyton employed
+himself during the time that was occupied in taking
+the tired horses out and putting the fresh horses to in
+making depreciating remarks concerning the country
+and its inhabitants generally. He saw nothing picturesque
+except the short petticoats of the women.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Like ballet girls, by Jove!” finished Mr. Gyton,
+who pronounced Jove Jauve, and surveyed Irish society
+through an eyeglass.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You never saw a ballet girl half so pretty,” answered
+a young lad who had travelled with them for
+the last thirty miles, and who now stood with his hands
+in his pockets leaning against the wall of Joyce’s
+Hotel.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And how do you know anything about the matter?”
+asked Mr. Gyton, laughing, for he had been tormenting
+and chaffing the boy all the way, “you never saw a
+ballet girl in your life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I don’t want to see one,” retorted the other, sulkily;
+“but I know our women are prettier than the
+English women for all that, and our country is finer
+than England. You have no mountains like those
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>where you came from;” and he pointed away towards
+the “Twelve Pins,” which are the Alps of Connemara.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; our mountains are twenty times higher,” said
+Mr. Gyton, laughing again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I could take you to a place where you might
+count a hundred lakes below you,” went on the boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Mill-ponds,” observed the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And you have no such fish in England as we have
+at our very doors.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ah! you never tasted whitebait, my boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We’re ready now, gentlemen, if you please,” said
+the guard at this juncture, and all the passengers
+clambered up into their seats.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There’s a team!” Mr. Gyton leaned back from
+the box to whisper to the young Irish lad; “why,
+there’s not a coachman in England would sit behind
+four such sorry nags.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You never saw such a turn-out, at any rate,” answered
+the boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He’s right, sir,” interposed the driver. “Master
+Harold’s right. You might travel England and Ireland
+through, and never meet with such a turn-out again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The horses are as thin as whipping-posts, and
+the harness is falling to pieces; but I should have
+thought that no such uncommon sight on this side the
+channel,” replied Mr. Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But we know—we know better, don’t we,
+Master Harold?” chuckled the coachman, bringing his
+whip down cleverly on the off leader’s flank as he
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, Doyle, we know,” answered the boy, and the
+pair laughed in chorus.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>“What is remarkable about the turn-out?” asked
+Mr. Pryor, who had for some time been watching
+Master Harold with considerable interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is nothing remarkable; they’re trying to
+humbug us, that is all,” said his nephew.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Bet you five to one,” retorted the boy, sharply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Done. Who is to hold the stakes?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He may,” agreed Master Harold, pointing to Mr.
+Pryor, “and he shall be umpire.” And with that the
+lad pulled out five shillings, and placed them in Mr.
+Pryor’s hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Gyton laughed till he almost fell off the coach,
+while he laid down his stake.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Now go ahead,” he said; “what is there so remarkable
+about Pharaoh’s lean kine?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why, there are four horses—you see them; and
+here is Billy Doyle who drives them—you see him;
+and the five have only one eye among them, and that
+is Billy’s. Did you ever see anything like that in
+England?—did you now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Fairly beaten, Frank,” said his uncle.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Done, by Jupiter!” exclaimed the young man
+about town. “Here, sir, take your money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Give it to Bill—I don’t want it,” said the lad,
+contemptuously; and he folded his hands tightly together,
+and looked away towards the “Twelve Pins”
+with as lordly an expression as though he owned them
+and the hundred lakes he had spoken of into the
+bargain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But they can’t go,” began Mr. Gyton, who considered
+Master Harold far too good fun to be left in
+peace. “Poor things! they seem as if they hadn’t one
+leg among them—as if they were lame as well as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>blind. They are tired already. Do you call such
+animals horses in this part of the country?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I was sitting where you are,” retorted the lad,
+“I would show you whether they could go or not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Perhaps you will take the box seat,” suggested
+Mr. Gyton, with a delighted chuckle.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will if you’ll let me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t, Frank, do not,” entreated Mr. Pryor. “You
+are carrying the joke too far,” he added, in a lower
+tone; “you do not understand the Irish. Remain
+where you are.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But Mr. Gyton would not take his uncle’s advice.
+They were at the very foot of a hill which rose up
+before them steep and straight like the wall of a house.
+“I mean to walk up here,” he said, “and if you like
+at the top to take my place and the ribbons, you are
+welcome to both.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I did not see you offer to drive,” remarked the
+boy. “Are you not used to it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not to driving such cattle as the creatures you
+call horses. A good English thoroughbred now, or
+something of that kind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, indeed!” said Harold, and they walked on
+in silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Coachman, I say, coachman,” exclaimed Mr. Gyton,
+when they reached the top of the hill, “this young
+gentleman is going to take my place and the reins,
+and means to break all our necks. Keep your one
+eye on him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I won’t need, sir. Master Harold is as good a
+whip as ye’d find betwixt this and the Shannon; ay,
+and faith an’ there’s not a leap a horse could take that
+it’s himself couldn’t go over with him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>“I’d like to see him on the back of an English
+hunter,” laughed Mr. Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And damn me if I would not like to put <i>you</i> on
+the back of my father’s chestnut Madcap; you’d be
+precious soon off, I’m thinking,” Harold turned round
+to answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Take care, Frank, take care,” urged Mr. Pryor,
+but his nephew was incorrigible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is the chestnut anything like our blind team,
+which you are driving so beautifully?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, she is not; but our team could go faster than
+perhaps you would like to travel,” retorted the boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Try me,” was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t, for Heaven’s sake!” entreated Mr. Pryor;
+but, before the words were well out of his lips, Harold
+had knotted up the reins, flung them on the horses’
+necks, and, with an hoorah and a whoop, lashed them
+forward down the hill.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Now for Hell or Duranmore,” gasped the coachman,
+while the insides screamed, and every outside
+passenger held on for his life.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Can Irish horses go now?” hissed out the boy,
+turning round to his tormentor, as the coach went
+swaying and rocking down the hill.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Every moment the pace increased. Doyle seized
+the whip, but he could not stop Harold shouting and
+hallooing, and as the horses felt the vehicle gaining
+on them they galloped, blind though they were, faster
+and faster still.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The collars tightened, and the haime chains were
+strained to their utmost, as the creatures drew further
+away from one another in their frantic endeavours to
+get loose.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>From side to side—bumping, tossing, rolling—the
+coach went flying down the incline. If one of the
+horses had fallen it would have been all over with the
+passengers; but hot iron had never touched the hoofs
+of those four blind steeds, and they were sure-footed
+as goats.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Down the hill they went; the mountains seemed to
+be spinning along with them. Duranmore and the
+Bay were now up, now down—now in the depths
+of the earth, now on the top of Eversbeg Head—but
+at last the level was safely reached, and the bays,
+after galloping along for a while, stopped of their own
+accord.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s not your fault, Master Harold, that there’s
+one of us left alive. If the craythurs had not been
+blind it is hard to say when we would have pulled
+up,” remarked Doyle, as he descended from his perch
+and unfastened the reins, and soothed and patted the
+frightened and panting animals, that stood with their
+nostrils quivering, with their flanks white with foam.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is it your misfortune, Bill?” asked the lad,
+swinging himself to the ground. “I’ll send for the
+kit;” and then he looked coolly up to Mr. Gyton, and
+hoped he had enjoyed his drive. “It was not the
+distance, I suppose, so much as the pace?” he suggested,
+and lifting his cap to the two gentlemen, he
+turned along the road leading towards Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Who is that—that lunatic?” asked Mr. Gyton,
+when the coachman resumed his seat on the box.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That, sir,” answered the man, whose cheeks and
+nose were blanched as white as though whiskey had
+never reddened them, “is Masther Harold Drewitt;
+and I am free to say that a bigger divil niver run.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>“Any relation to Mr. Drewitt, of Kincorth?” inquired
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“His youngest son,” was the reply; and uncle and
+nephew exchanged glances.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They sent him to school to quiet him down a bit;
+but faith I think he’s come back worse than he went.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Send a goose to Dover, and a goose will come
+over,” remarked Mr. Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A goose!” repeated the coachman. “It’s not much
+of a goose there is about Masther Harold. It’s more
+of the cloven foot than the web that’s inside his boots;
+an’ it’s a pity, for a kinder-hearted, more spirity, freer-spoken
+young gentleman there’s not in Connemara.
+But they tell me it’s the mother has spoiled him entirely;
+an’ a nice lady she is, too, and homely-like in
+her ways, for a foreigner.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Foreigner!” echoed Mr. Pryor, in surprise.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, English then, like yourself, sir; shure it’s
+all one. The masther married her in London, I think
+it was—and well spoken of she is by rich and poor.
+Only they do say it’s she spoils Masther Harold:
+though some think he would not have been so wild a
+divil if he had not been so much at the Headlands:
+that’s his cousin’s place, sir, Mr. Maxwell Drewitt, and
+a clever gintleman he is. He’s made a sight of money,
+and gives plenty of employment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We are going to the Headlands,” remarked Mr.
+Gyton, demurely.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“See that now!—well, as I was saying, you are
+going to see a clever gintleman. What he has in his
+head nobody would credit; and as for land, I could not
+tell all he bought up in the Estates Court. All that
+fine farm, that lies down in the hollow after we passed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>Calgillan, is his; and he has a great property, they tell
+me, beyond Cragantlet; that is behind the hill there
+facing you: and then he has the place that used to be
+Mr. Munks’, on the other side of Laddenwell Lake;
+and never chick nor child to leave all to. Many a
+time I think about that when I see the childer swarming
+in and out of the cottages of his labourers. They
+say he’d give Cherryfield, the place he bought from
+Mr. Munks, to have a son. It seems queer, sir, the
+way them things go. I suppose it’s by favour, like kisses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It will be a deucedly lucky thing for that boy if
+he never have any children,” observed Mr. Gyton,
+thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So Mr. Drewitt thinks, people do say,” answered
+the driver. “Maybe, gentlemen,” he went on after a
+pause, “ye wouldn’t mind saying nothing to Mr. Maxwell
+about Masther Harold’s tricks. It might get him
+into thrubble. An’ the lad intended no harm; it’s just
+divilment and contrariness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, we will do the young fellow no harm,” said
+Mr. Gyton, “though, as you remarked, it was not his
+fault that our necks were not broken; and if you take
+my advice you will not trust him with the ribbons
+again. What <i>are</i> you considering, uncle?” he added.
+“You look as grave as if you had been retained for a
+bad case and got an adverse verdict.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I was thinking about that Master Harold,” replied
+Mr. Pryor, who had neither wife nor child himself.
+“I was thinking about that Master Harold. He
+is the very image of what Maxwell Drewitt was twenty
+years ago, though there is not much resemblance now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They tell me Mr. Maxwell never favoured him,
+sir,” dissented the driver; “that there’s a kindly look
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>in Master Harold’s eyes, and a soft winning way with
+him, that nobody ever remembered in Mr. Maxwell;
+but I ask your pardon, sir, for making so free, and
+Mr. Maxwell a friend of your own too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have only seen him twice in the last twenty
+years,” replied Mr. Pryor, “but I can remember very
+well what he was the first day we ever met, and that
+boy is like him. I could not think who he reminded
+me of all the way. Of course,” he added, speaking to
+his nephew, “Maxwell Drewitt was a man when I first
+saw him, somewhere about my own age at that time,
+and this Harold is but a boy; still, the turn of the
+head, the tone of the voice, the features, and something
+in the expression, are the same. How it carries one
+back!” he finished, with a sigh; “how it carries one
+back! But here we are at Duranmore, and there is Mr.
+Maxwell Drewitt himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Welcome once more to Connemara,” said that
+gentleman, shaking Mr. Pryor’s hand as though he
+wanted to shake it off. “See to the luggage, Dickson,”
+he added, turning to his servant, and then he asked his
+guests which they would choose—to walk or drive.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Walk, if you please,” answered Mr. Gyton. “I
+shall be glad to stretch my legs after so much coaching.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And you?” inquired Maxwell, turning to Mr.
+Pryor, with a smile at the younger man’s lead.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Should like the walk also,” laughed Mr. Pryor.
+“Do you remember all the walks we had along the
+bay, twenty years ago?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Twenty years this month,” answered Maxwell
+Drewitt. “They have not been long in passing.”
+And the trio sauntered down the street together, while
+Doyle said to Dickson—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>“Whose’s them gentlemen, Barney, do ye know?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“One of them is some Mr. Pryor,” said Dickson,
+“that stood for Duranmore the time of the great election.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You don’t mane that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you think I’m a liar then?” asked Dickson,
+who was of a taciturn disposition and easily annoyed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I don’t think much of the young chap, but if
+that’s Mr. Pryor, I wish I was dhriving him ivery day,
+and was getting his blissing in silver too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ay, faith, I believe ye. That’s the only blissing
+or crossing aither you ever thrubble yerself about.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Which remark being disagreeably true, caused Mr.
+Doyle to retire into the “Marsden Arms,” where he
+wet Mr. Pryor’s gift with whiskey immediately.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Meanwhile Harold, after parting with his travelling
+companions, proceeded along the road which led round
+the north side of Duranmore Bay, and wended his way
+towards home—now running, now loitering, now
+pegging stones at the birds in the trees by the wayside,
+now cutting a stick, now decapitating the dandelions
+and benweeds, which were plentiful and in
+splendid bloom. He was full of life and youth and
+strength and spirit. He did not seem to know what
+to do with himself for very happiness, and so he would
+jump backwards and forward over the ditches and swing
+himself up to the first branch of a tree, and then drop
+lightly to the ground, in order to let off the superfluous
+steam.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A fine lad truly—straight and tall and well-made—with
+black hair, dark eyes, white teeth, good
+features, and a fine open expression of face. He was
+like Maxwell Drewitt, and yet he was unlike. He had
+Maxwell’s figure and Maxwell’s face, but he had not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>Maxwell’s impassiveness of muscle, his command of
+countenance, his steely self-possession.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A fine lad—one whom his mother idolised and
+his father adored. No other autocrat had come to
+reign after him; and the love and thought and devotion
+bestowed on Harold as a baby were bestowed on Harold
+likewise when he was a boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Brother and sister and servants were all alike—all
+yielded their wills to Harold. It was an understood
+thing in the household that Master Harold could
+think no wrong, that Master Harold was not to be
+crossed, that whatever Master Harold desired was to
+be done for him immediately.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Brian had for so long a time given place to Harold
+that no person remembered the time when Brian was
+anybody. The eldest born was to have Kincorth, and
+the younger was to reign over all hearts in consequence.
+No one ever seemed to think such an arrangement
+harsh or unjust until the boys grew up,
+but then people began to remark that Mrs. Drewitt’s
+entreaty—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do, Brian. Now cannot you let him have it? remember
+he is the youngest,” was heard too often for
+much good to come of such training.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>The best horse in the stable, the best fishing-rod,
+the best gun, had to be relinquished in Harold’s favour
+without a murmur; and, perhaps, I cannot say more in
+praise of Brian Drewitt than that he never murmured
+at this favouritism; that he accepted his lower seat
+without a word.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>At the gate of Kincorth the brothers ran up against
+each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I was coming to meet you, Haro,” said Brian,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>passing his arm through his brother’s. “I meant to
+have been at the cross-roads in good time. Is the
+coach early, or am I late?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Both, I should say,” answered Harold. “The
+coach was early, for I drove; and you are late, for
+some reason best known to yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I had to fetch Doctor Sheen to see papa,” was
+the reply. “He’s often ill now. I sometimes think
+Sheen does not know what is the matter with him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Sheen is a fool!” remarked Master Harold. “Why
+don’t you have old Barnes? But doctors are no use,
+are they now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I don’t know,” sighed Brian; “but I wish somebody
+would do him some good.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What ails him?” asked Harold; “is it the same
+old pain?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I believe so,” answered Brian, and the pair
+walked on a little way in silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I tell you what,” at last broke out the younger
+brother; “if I were mamma I’d take him to Dublin;
+I would not stand Sheen’s duffing about any longer.
+The fellows there could soon find out all about him,
+and he’d be ready for the hunting if they set him up
+at once.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Harold——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, Brian.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Sometimes I am afraid that nothing will set
+him up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you mean, you think he is going to die?”
+Harold asked, with a gradual crescendo.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I hope not—but——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are as bad as old Sheen,” retorted Harold.
+“Die—why should he die? he is ten years younger
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>than Sheen himself, and he’s twenty years younger
+than old Mrs. Waller—Waller’s grandmother I mean.
+Why you might as well talk about you or me dying
+as of him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Don’t say anything to mamma.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“<i>I</i> would be ashamed to repeat such folly,” answered
+Harold, with a swagger; “but I shall tell her
+to take him to Dublin, and to have done with Sheen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish she could. She was wishing herself she had
+money to pay some eminent physician for coming down.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Money—there you go again—money! It is
+all nonsense our being short of money. Haven’t we
+this, and haven’t we that, and haven’t we hundreds and
+thousands and millions of acres beside?” asked Harold.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What is the use of acres if they are all mortgaged?”
+demanded Brian. “What is the use of land
+if we can make nothing out of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I declare, Brian, if you go on like that I will
+turn straight back to school; you are the most confounded
+old croak I ever heard; and I have got such
+a lark I want to tell you about. I galloped the horses
+down Calgillan Pass, and nearly frightened the wits
+out of two English fellows, who thought Doyle’s team
+had no blood in them. They shouted for me to stop:
+the younger fellow prayed and cursed alternately: the
+insides were screeching like pigs a-killing. Old Doyle
+could not get the reins, for I had pitched them on the
+horses’ necks, and I gave it to them with the whip as
+long as he left it with me. Didn’t I, just? and didn’t
+they go? We came down the hill with never a drag
+on, at the rate of about forty miles an hour; and then
+I hoped they had enjoyed their drive. Serve them
+right!—teach them to abuse Ireland again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>“You’ll get your neck broken some day to a certainty,
+Harold,” said Brian, gravely.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, it can only be broken once, that is a comfort,”
+answered Harold.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And did the harness hold?—did no accident
+happen?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Devil an accident.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What did Doyle say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He was frightened to death—thought we were
+all going to hell, I believe—old humbug! He was
+trembling for his half-crowns I suspect. I hope they
+won’t give him a halfpenny! Shall I tell mamma?
+Yes, I will, for it would put her all of a shake. No,
+I won’t, because she would send word to Doyle never
+to let me drive again. There she is at the hall-door
+waiting for us;” and both sons started off to reach
+her.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Beaten, Brian,” said Harold, disengaging himself
+from his mother’s arms, and wiping her kisses away
+with his coat-sleeve. He could not bear her to kiss
+him. He did not think it looked manly; he was afraid
+of anybody calling him a “Molly Coddle,” and he
+considered the correct thing would have been for Mrs.
+Drewitt to shake hands with him and say, “How are
+you, Harold?” instead of “hugging and kissing,” as
+the young gentleman put it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A natural enough sentiment for his age and disposition;
+and yet, do not be quite so energetic about
+the matter, Harold. Let the twining arms hold you,
+and the loving kisses remain, for those arms cannot
+clasp you always—those kisses cannot be given
+twice.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There is no need to be ashamed of a mother’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>love, boy; no need to wonder if any one be looking
+at that clinging paroxysm of affection.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Do not turn your eyes from her to see if the
+servants have beheld your meeting; for you will never
+find another on the wide earth to love you like her.
+No one hereafter will lie awake at nights wondering
+how it is faring with you: no one will ever think of
+you in the days to come as she does now: no one in
+that vague future stretching away before you will ever
+feel her entire world bound up and centered in you.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Do not thrust her love aside, boy; you will stand
+in grievous want of it yet: do not wipe her kisses
+off your lips; the day is coming when you will lay
+your head on her breast and pray for another—and
+another yet.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Her love may be foolish, but it is foolish only
+because she thinks too much of you.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As man is born of woman, so man in his bitterest
+extremity turns back to woman; and ere many years
+passed over, Harold asked to listen to no voice beside
+his mother’s, to look in no other face save hers, to
+hold no hand except that which had so often caressed
+him in vain.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He found comfort in the love which was unselfish
+in its selfishness; he sought shelter in a heart he had
+well-nigh broken; while she, poor soul! while she——?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>If Mrs. Drewitt loved him too much, she was
+punished; if she were unjust, justice was done; if she
+sowed the wind, she reaped the whirlwind; if she made
+an idol of him, he showed her his feet of clay; if she
+spoiled him, she repented her of it; if she mourned,
+the Lord God, in his own good time, brought consolation
+to her!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVIII.<br> <span class='c011'>A little Political Economy.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>The breakfast-room at Headlands faced the east,
+and from the large bay-window you could see, over
+the trees which grew down to the sea, Eversbeg
+Abbey and Eversbeg House, the mountains where the
+marble was quarried, and the Twelve Pins far away
+in the distance.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Lovely! exquisite!—perfectly enchanting!” exclaimed
+Mr. Pryor, looking for the twentieth time
+away from his tea and toast, from his ham and eggs,
+to the view before him. “It is not reality, Mr. Drewitt;
+we must be in fairyland!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Never saw anything more charming put on the
+stage,” capped Mr. Gyton; at which remark his host
+laughed a little scornfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Frank and I do not generally agree in our
+opinions,” observed Mr. Pryor; “but on the present
+occasion I confess I think he is right. I never saw
+anything more charming on the stage nor in a picture,
+which is about the same thing. On the stage, as in a
+picture, the best part of a scene is given to us, and all
+the worst is excluded. What we get is perfect of its
+kind, without blemish, without spot; and this scene is
+perfect; we could wish nothing more, we could do with
+nothing less.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“An unconscious plagiarism from Moore,” remarked
+Lady Emmeline from behind the tea-urn, with an engaging
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>titter. She had had a pleasant life of it during
+the fifteen years of her second experiment in matrimony;
+but experience had not made her any more
+sensible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Indeed!” said Mr. Pryor; “I was not aware.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Of course not—I am sure not,” replied Lady
+Emmeline, who prided herself on the extent of her
+reading. “So few people know the little poem to
+which I refer, It begins”—and Mr. Drewitt’s wife
+coughed affectedly and tapped with her fingers on the
+table-cloth, and said, “Oh dear! how does it begin?
+‘To kneel—’ no; ‘To keep—’ no—how is this?—‘To
+weep—’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“To damn,” suggested her husband, and Mr. Gyton
+grew quite red in the face with his efforts to keep
+from laughing.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘To sigh, yet feel no pain,’” said Lady Emmeline,
+with a swan-like movement of her lean neck; “‘to
+weep, yet scarce know why’—the lines I referred to
+are towards the end—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in4'>“To feel that we adore with such refined excess,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That though the heart would burst with more, it could not live with less.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“This is love,” and Lady Emmeline shut her eyes and
+repeated the remainder of the poem to herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, it may be,” remarked Mr. Drewitt; “I confess
+I am no judge; but it sounds to me much more
+like folly. What is your opinion, Mr. Gyton?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Mine?” exclaimed that young gentleman. “I
+know nothing about it. The fact is, love is not in my
+way. Ask my uncle; he’s a shocking flirt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Oh, fie!” said Lady Emmeline, looking immensely
+pleased for all that. “Defend yourself, Mr.
+Pryor, from such a frightful accusation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>“Conscious innocence——” murmured Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Needs no advocate,” finished his nephew. “What
+a compliment to your clients!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have come here, Frank, to forget my clients,”
+answered the other. “Let me enjoy my holiday; let
+me imagine I am in Paradise without a serpent
+near me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If the garden of Eden had been in Ireland,” said
+Lady Emmeline, “poor Eve would never have been
+beguiled into eating the apple.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My experience of Eves would lead me to a different
+opinion,” remarked Mr. Pryor. “I do not think
+the absence of serpents would have secured the safety
+of the fruit.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How terribly ungallant!” observed his hostess.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How terribly true!” added her husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And besides,” finished Mr. Gyton, “St. Patrick
+was not born for a few years after Eve’s petty larceny.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is a sad thing,” said Mr. Pryor, addressing his
+host, “that so fine a country should not be more prosperous.
+I cannot understand the reason why Ireland
+is so far behind England at the present day. You
+have soil, climate, labour, fuel, canals, navigable rivers.
+It is a perfect puzzle to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are wrong in some of your premises,” answered
+Maxwell Drewitt; “we have not soil, nor
+climate, nor efficient labour. Of course a soil can be
+made, and bogs can be drained; but these things require
+capital, and Ireland has no capital. If we had
+your climate and your capital we could do anything.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But there must be money in Ireland,” Mr. Pryor
+persisted.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is money in the North, I suppose,” answered
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>Maxwell, indifferently; “though even there I
+should say great capitalists are almost unknown; and
+there may be a few pound-notes in Dublin; but, as a
+whole, there is no money in Ireland, for this reason—that
+all the money made in Ireland is spent out of it;
+that rents are not returned to the soil, but squandered
+in England and on the Continent. We never had
+many resident gentry, and there are fewer resident
+gentry now than ever. Since the famine, this part of
+the country, at any rate, has been like the Deserted
+Village. People have purchased in the Encumbered
+Estates Court who have never seen their properties,
+and are never likely to see them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Surely, however, the Encumbered Estates Court
+has done good?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I ought to say nothing against it, at any rate,”
+answered Maxwell, with a smile, “for I have bought
+to great advantage in it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am sure I thought at one time he was going to
+buy all Connaught,” said Lady Emmeline, languidly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Things will be better now, though,” remarked Mr.
+Pryor, after acknowledging Lady Emmeline’s observation.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will they? What makes you think so?” asked
+his host.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The famine must have taught the Irish not to
+depend on potatoes,” interrupted Mr. Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Would a murrain teach the English not to depend
+on beef and mutton?” demanded Mr. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Certainly not; but beef and mutton are not potatoes,
+are they?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Potatoes were beef and mutton to the Irish,” answered
+the owner of the Headlands.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>“And, good heavens! how can you expect a country
+to prosper whose people are satisfied with that cursed
+root, as Cobbett called the potato?” asked Mr. Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The people here are not at all averse to butchers’
+meat,” Maxwell replied, coolly; “only it is sometimes
+true philosophy to be satisfied with what one
+can get.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“<i>Quand on n’a pas</i>——” began Lady Emmeline,
+but her husband cut ruthlessly across her little observation.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is no man living,” he went on, “can tell
+what the cause of Ireland’s misery may be, or where
+the best remedy for that misery is to be found. I
+thought at one time I had got to the bottom of the
+matter. After twenty years’ consideration I have arrived
+at the conclusion that I know nothing about it.
+Every fact in the country is contradicted by some other
+fact.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But surely the reduction of the superabundant
+population——” began Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My dear sir, as you came through the country,
+did you see any traces of there ever having been a
+superabundant population in Connemara?” broke in
+Mr. Drewitt. “I hear a great deal of talk about the
+blessings of the potato blight, and the good done by
+emigration, but I confess I cannot trace the blessing or
+see the good.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Potatoes could not, however, be a desirable article
+to form the sole diet of an entire population,” persisted
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“They were quite as good as yellow meal,” retorted
+Maxwell Drewitt, “and a precious sight more
+palatable. I really should like to have some clear
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>explanation of the benefits this blight has showered
+down upon us,” he continued; “for, so far as I can
+see, it has only reduced our population a couple of
+millions and brought Indian corn to our doors. Is
+yellow meal beef and mutton? is yellow meal bread
+and butter? is Indian-meal porridge a richer diet than
+potatoes and salt?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But wages must be higher,” argued Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Possibly they may be a little,” answered the other;
+“But certainly provisions are higher also. Potatoes
+are dearer, oaten meal is dearer, all the necessaries of
+life to the mass of the population are much dearer. It
+is not the potato blight or emigration that has, in my
+opinion, caused the slight rise in wages, but simply
+that money is not of the same value as formerly. No
+terrible calamity has fallen on the whole of England
+during the last few centuries, and yet an ox used to
+be sold for fewer shillings than it now fetches in
+pounds. I repeat what I said at first: plague, pestilence,
+and famine have done Ireland no good. What will
+do Ireland good remains yet to be seen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You have mounted him on his hobby now, Mr.
+Pryor,” said Lady Emmeline, “and if you do not take
+him out he will not get down to-day;” which hint
+being sufficiently intelligible, Mr. Pryor asked his host
+to show him his improvements, and Mr. Gyton gladly
+accepted an invitation from Lady Emmeline to accompany
+her over to Kincorth.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Gyton thought her Ladyship “awful value,”
+as he told Harold confidentially, while he considered
+her husband confoundedly slow.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A demmed blue-book,” was Mr. Gyton’s irreverent
+conclusion; “a perfect table of confounded statistics.”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>And Harold laughed and vowed he would tell his
+cousin what Mr. Gyton said; while Mr. Gyton was inwardly
+thinking he had never seen, in all his life, a
+prettier girl than Geraldine Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Meanwhile Mr. Pryor and Maxwell Drewitt walked
+by the shore, conversing as they loitered along.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I should like to understand why this country
+cannot be made to prosper,” repeated Mr. Pryor,
+pausing at last and looking with thoughtful eyes across
+the bay. “We in England imagined Ireland’s difficulties
+were over; but now, when I come back here, I
+see no change. I see the same dress, the same
+wretched cabins, the same dunghills, the same weeds.
+Excepting your place, I see no improvement anywhere.
+Tell me what your idea is of the matter? as a thinking
+man you must have formed some opinion on the
+subject.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not,” was Maxwell’s reply. “I am as far
+at sea as ever. If you told me that unless I could
+give a clear account of the cause of Ireland’s misery,
+and suggest some means of bettering her condition, I
+should be hung to-morrow morning—I must either
+string together a parcel of lies, or go to the gallows.
+I know no more than an infant where the evil lies,
+though I know where it does not lie. Ireland has nothing
+to complain of from England now. The English
+helped us nobly through the famine, though only about
+a quarter of that help reached the poor. We are
+fairly taxed, fairly governed. The unprosperous man
+never likes the prosperous. If Ireland does not like
+England, it is only because England is the rich lady,
+and Ireland the poor. Grievances are all rubbish:
+very well on the hustings, perhaps, or in a newspaper
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>leader, but absurd when one talks sober, sorrowful
+earnest. I am sorry to see my country limping along,
+but I cannot see where the shoe pinches for all that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are satisfied, then, the population was not
+excessive?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It was not excessive for the country, though it
+probably is still excessive for the capital in the country.
+A dozen servants may not be too much for one house;
+but if there be no money to feed and pay them, what
+then?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is precisely what political economists say!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I beg your pardon, political economists say there
+were too many people for the soil. You have only to
+use your eyes to see that view is erroneous, at any
+rate. The population of London, which is about half
+that of the whole of Ireland, is not too great for
+London, because you can employ your population and
+pay them. Here we could employ our population, but
+not pay them. Do you see what I mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, you want capital; but if capital comes to
+Ireland, you shoot its bodily representative.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not been shot.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you are Irish, and you are popular.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No,” said Maxwell Drewitt, slowly. “No, I am
+not popular, but I have been cautious. I loved my
+life, and I took care of it. I have tried to be just. I
+have made no distinction between Catholic and Protestant.
+I have never evicted a tenant. I have given
+employment. I have assisted the poor. I have fed the
+starving. And yet,” he added, “I am not popular.
+Explain it how you will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Pryor thought about what the coachman had
+said, but wisely held his peace.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>“There is my uncle,” proceeded Maxwell, “who
+has mortgaged and wasted, beggared his tenantry and
+himself, ruined his tradespeople and encouraged pauperism,
+been a furious bigot and an intolerant Tory.
+He is liked better than I am. People would rather
+run a mile for a word from him than go across the
+street for a shilling from me. I cannot be blind, Mr.
+Pryor; these are the facts which puzzle me about
+Ireland—which I shall go to my grave and never
+understand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How is your uncle?” asked Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But middling,” was the reply. “Middling in mind,
+body, and estate. As for the latter, it is going to the
+dogs. Nothing can save Kincorth. If he lives long
+enough he will have to leave it, and God help the man
+who has it after him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why?” inquired Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because an angel from heaven would not give
+satisfaction there now. If you bring a new mistress
+home to a disorderly household, what is the consequence?
+That the household hates the new mistress
+who wishes to put things to rights a little. For the
+same reason, Kincorth would hate a new master.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But tenants are surely not like servants? They
+stand in a different position to their landlord to what
+a servant does to his master, and a good landlord must
+be felt by them to be a blessing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“True—but there you come round the screw in
+the Irish character: they like to be benefited, it is true,
+but they must be benefited in their own way. They
+love to have their rents remitted, rents lowered; but
+they cannot endure a man who wants them to improve
+their land and take more out of it; who wishes them
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>to help him and themselves at the same time. I have
+made my money, not by my tenants, but by my labourers.
+There is not a man who pays me rent that
+has bettered himself or me to the value of sixpence.
+If I had to begin again I would not buy an estate
+that had tenants on it; because if you evict them you
+are likely to get a bullet through your head, and if
+you let them stay it is endless worry and trouble.
+Besides, there is a something very shocking—look at
+the matter how you will—in sending a whole colony
+adrift. A man used to a farm of his own will not
+become a labourer; and over and above that, the Irish
+attachment for place is strong to a degree inconceivable
+to an English mind. If you took a small house from
+an Englishman and gave him a better he would be
+contented I suppose?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He would be a great idiot if he were not,”
+answered Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, an Irishman would not be contented. Where
+he is planted he grows: he is like a cat; he loves the
+walls he has been accustomed to. If you take the roof
+off he will still kindle his fire on the old hearthstone,
+and sit there with nothing but the sky above him,
+cursing the men who have, as he calls it, brought him
+and his ‘to the world.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But what are people to do?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Let the tenants stay, as I have done; or, better
+still, buy the waste land and reclaim it. I would turn
+no man out in this country, because it is better for him
+to live poorly off his own labour rather than live poorly
+by begging. The thing is this—if you turn a man
+out he will not work, and he will neither let you or
+anybody else till his land; therefore the land is useless,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>and he is a burden. That is the state of the country
+at present; but if capital were introduced into Ireland,
+if our waste ground were ploughed, if our cattle were
+properly fattened, if the people were taught to eat beef
+and mutton, if they could be made to love luxury, if
+they could be induced to wear shoes and stockings,
+and to live in any house better than a pig-stye—if,
+in one word, they could be civilised, I think in another
+hundred years things might be better. I only think,
+remember, because Ireland is a hopeless problem to me
+at present. Had I had English tenants to deal with,
+had I had to work with any class of human beings
+that wanted to rise in the world, I could have money
+in handfuls. I declare to you, Mr. Pryor, I could.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“As it is you have not done amiss, I think,” said
+the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have done nothing to what I might have done,”
+was the reply; “nothing. I might have owned the
+whole tract of country that lies between here and
+Bennebeola. Land was to be had in this neighbourhood
+at one time almost for the asking; and if I could
+have got hands to farm it, and a market for my produce,
+I should have been as rich as Rothschild. With me
+it was not the want of capital so much as the want
+of immediate return for capital and the perfect impossibility
+of obtaining labour. Even starvation could
+not induce men who had owned little patches of land
+to do a fair day’s work for a fair day’s pay. They
+tired of it; tired of having my bailiffs after them, of
+being compelled to turn up the ground in earnest.
+My ways were contrary to their ways, my determination
+to their prejudices. They could not bear improvement:
+they saw in it just what the North American
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>Indians saw in civilisation, the downfall of their dynasty
+of dirt, laziness, and letting things alone.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And so you had to give up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So I had to draw in my hand. I had stretched
+my arm out further almost than I could draw it back;
+and I do not mind telling you that there was a time
+when, what with poor’s rates and beggars, and capital
+bringing back no return, I was almost ruined. Look
+here, Mr. Pryor,” he added; “at that very time I could
+have found work for every able-bodied man in this
+part of the country. I could not get labourers enough.
+It was then I tried Ireland: then all my old ideas
+were overset: then I <i>began</i> to understand that the
+English were right about us—‘that the fault was in
+ourselves.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And you think so still?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do. I cannot tell you where the fault lies, or
+what the fault is, but it is in us. I have heard Englishmen
+talking about friends of theirs—capital
+fellows, honest, clever, and so forth, who yet could not
+get on, and wondering what the reason might be.
+Well, Ireland is as great an enigma; she cannot get
+on. If her sons and daughters go to England or
+America they can push their way up, but they will
+not push here. We are alike in all ranks. There is
+my uncle at Kincorth, and there is his poorest tenant:
+they cling together, and love one another, because
+their ways are the same, their ideas are identical.
+They are both thoroughly Irish: they do not see the
+use of ‘taking so much trouble,’ of ‘being so particular.’
+What their ancestors did is surely good enough for
+them; and so where the rushes grew a hundred years
+ago, they are growing still: where the dungheap was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>piled in their grandfather’s time, it stands fouling the
+air to this present day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you have done so much! I cannot understand
+<i>your</i> talking in this manner.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have done much; but mark you, if I were dead
+to-morrow, and an Irish gentleman took this place, in
+twelve month’s time the lawn would be turned into
+grazing, and the weeds would be growing beside the
+drive. I go to England and I see velvet lawns, and
+clean, well-rolled walks. I come back here and I pay
+a visit to any house in the neighbourhood—to Lord
+Marsden’s, or your cousin’s, or any gentleman’s residence—and
+up to their very hall-doors the grass is
+half-a-foot long, and the gravel cuts my boots, and the
+weeds grow lank and luxuriant. If the gentry kept
+their places in the same order as the English, our
+labourers would find employment about our gardens
+and pleasure-grounds alone. But we are all alike,”
+finished Maxwell, bitterly; “all—all alike.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are all alike in one thing, at any rate,”
+answered Mr. Pryor; “in your detestation of trade: you
+do not consider buying and selling cattle and farm
+produce trading; but you hate mills, factories, shopkeepers,
+and merchants.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Till they are rich enough,” replied Maxwell;
+“wherein I think we only follow your English lead.
+You do not recognize traders as equals till they are
+millionaires.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Fairly hit,” laughed his guest.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And as the Irish think more of caste than of comfort,
+they would rather, as a rule, live on a little, and
+be gentlemen, than earn much, and sink in the social
+scale.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>“But as money goes on depreciating in value; as
+small incomes, I mean, buy less and less each year;
+as birth becomes of less importance, and money, and
+what money can buy—education—of more, that
+prejudice will vanish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It may—but it will take a long time first,” was
+the answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“To me,” went on Mr. Pryor, “love of pleasure
+and indifference to luxuries seem the curse of the
+country. To do as little work, to live on as little
+money as possible, appears to be the aim and object
+of every man, woman, and child I meet. It makes it
+a pleasant country to travel in; but I should not care
+to live in it all the year round.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you remember,” asked Maxwell, with a cold
+smile, “how you were going to right all Ireland’s
+wrongs when you stood for Duranmore? Do you think,
+if you had got in, you could have done any good for
+us?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No,” answered Mr. Pryor, “I do not; and I know
+it was a capital thing for me, being beaten. I lost
+nearly all my money after I got back to London; and
+what I should have done, had I been returned, I really
+cannot imagine. As it was, I turned to my profession
+with a will; and I have made nearly as good a thing
+of law as you have of farming.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“For which reason—and because you are too rich,
+too prosperous, too happy—you want to come to Ireland
+to be shot?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I hope not! If I buy Durrow Park, I shall take
+your advice and not evict a solitary tenant. I will regard
+the parents as so many encumbrances, but endeavour
+to teach the children better ways.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>“You had better not present them with shoes and
+stockings,” counselled Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why? would that be interfering with the liberty
+of the subject?” asked Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And there is a Holy Well in Durrow Park, to
+which, whenever there is a ‘station’ appointed, about
+ten thousand people will flock: you had best not meddle
+with that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Anything else?” inquired Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, yes; there are a number of fishermen living
+under Durrow Cliff who claim the sea-weed as theirs:
+it would not be wise for you to have any dispute with
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What more?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is a right of way across what is called the
+ten-acre field, and the inhabitants of Durrow village
+take their donkeys through the grounds at all hours of
+the day and night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Any other advantages?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Durrow Cliff is full of caves: you must never explore
+them; and should you hear suspicious sounds
+round the coast in the calmest night, you must conclude
+it is the Atlantic breaking on the rocks. If you
+are wise, you will be kept in brandy free. Many a
+keg is left outside the dining-room window at the
+Headlands; and as for potheen, I know a place up
+among the hills where some of the natives gather
+mountain dew in such quantities that I could almost
+set up a public-house with the presents that find their
+way to me. The constabulary officer sometimes says
+my whiskey tastes wonderfully like potheen; but I always
+assure them it is sent to me by a friend in the
+North.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>“‘Bushmills?’ suggests Captain Ford, mixing himself
+another tumbler.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Somewhere thereabouts,’ I answer; and between
+us we empty the decanter. There is a still on the
+Durrow property, and if you see any smoke rising
+without apparent reason, you had better attribute it to
+a volcano.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have you exhausted your catalogue of drawbacks?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No,” replied Maxwell; “there was a fellow ejected
+by the late proprietor, who has vowed to burn the
+house down over the head of the first man who gets
+his lot.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What do you mean by a lot?” interrupted Mr.
+Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“A lot,” answered Maxwell, “is so much land let
+by the piece instead of by the acre; perhaps a tract of
+waste ground containing one hundred acres of morass,
+rock, granite and brambles, will let for, say five pounds
+a year. Molloy’s case was a hard one, if his story is
+to be believed. Three years running he reared three
+pigs to pay his rent, and three years running his pigs
+died; only one out of the nine lived to be killed, and
+the price of that one he offered to Mr. Carford, who
+refused to take it.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘All or none,’ he said, and Molloy was ejected.
+Now, if you buy Durrow, take my advice and give
+Molloy back his house. He is living there on the
+hearthstone, like hundreds of others in Ireland. Roof
+his house for him, and give him a potato-garden, and
+an acre or two of common land for his pigs to run
+over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But would not that look as if I were afraid?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>“If you had turned him out it would; as you did
+not turn him out, it will only make things pleasant for
+your agent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“On the whole, I think I shall not care about buying
+Durrow. I tell you a place I should like, if it
+were in the market—Kincorth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell’s face changed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Kincorth will not be for sale, I fancy,” he remarked.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I thought you said Mr. Drewitt would have to
+leave it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So he will; but the mortgagees are likely to take
+possession.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then he is mortgaged?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Mortgaged?” repeated Maxwell. “Swamped would
+be a better word, Mr. Pryor. He has never paid a
+shilling of interest these four years, and there were
+arrears then.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The place could not have been mortgaged for
+anything like its value,” remarked the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I believe it was not, in the first instance,” answered
+Maxwell; and Mr. Pryor looked him straight in
+the face.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I suppose I must not guess who will ultimately
+take possession of Kincorth,” said Mr. Pryor, a little
+significantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You can if you like,” answered Maxwell. “Most
+probably I shall. I bought up the mortgages long
+ago.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is a pity!” exclaimed the other, “for your uncle
+was a thorough gentleman, and his wife a charming
+creature.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>“Of course, if I am obliged to foreclose, I shall not
+require them to leave Kincorth,” said Maxwell, loftily.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will do the same by them as you have done
+by your other tenants, I suppose,” remarked Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If they allow me,” was the reply; and the two
+walked on for a minute or two in silence, while Mr.
+Pryor thought that perhaps none of the tenants had
+found Mr. Maxwell Drewitt very pleasant to deal with,
+spite of his worldly wisdom.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will, I am sure, consider our conversation as
+confidential,” said Maxwell, after a pause.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Most assuredly. I have no right to speak about
+your business at all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not that it matters much,” thought Maxwell, “for
+the pear is nearly ripe.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIX.<br> <span class='c011'>Durrow.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Mr. Pryor had said he should not care for Durrow
+Park, but when he rode over there, accompanied by
+Maxwell Drewitt, his nephew, and Mr. Waller, he
+altered his opinion, and thought that, despite its drawbacks,
+Durrow would be a very pleasant residence for
+a couple of months in the year. “Non-resident again,”
+remarked Maxwell, laughing, while Mr. Gyton inquired—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How the deuce he could expect a man to stay
+away from London any longer?</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“More especially in such a hole as this, with only
+one post a day; with no railway-station within fifty
+miles; with no telegram nearer than fifty miles, also;
+with no books, no newspapers, no society. And a
+bachelor, too,” finished Mr. Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is his own fault, I suppose,” remarked Maxwell
+Drewitt, “if it be a fault; but I should rather call
+it a virtue.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well said,” cried Mr. Waller, who was terribly
+under the influence of petticoat government at home.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“For my part, I consider a bachelor one of the
+most enviable beings under the sun,” went on Maxwell:
+“he can go as he likes, come as he likes. He
+is free as air, and yet knows that he can settle down
+whenever he pleases into husbandhood.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is not so easy to settle down—at least, not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>to find any one to settle down with at my age,” answered
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why, you cannot be more than a year or two my
+senior; and if I were single to-morrow I could have
+my pick of a dozen—ay, and pretty girls, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish you would introduce me to some of them,”
+remarked Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am too much your friend,” replied Maxwell;
+“far be it from me to lead you up to the trap and
+help you to snap the spring on yourself. Wedlock is
+a padlock,” added the owner of the Headlands. “Not
+that I ought to speak against it, for my marriage made
+me; and my wife never had a will of her own, so far
+as I heard of; but for an independent man to marry—for
+a man like yourself, for instance—it is folly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Drewitt is going to turn preacher, and expound
+the Gospel according to St. Paul,” said Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I shall hold you up as an example of a sinner’s
+end then,” retorted Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Hang it, man, you need not be so confoundedly
+personal!” observed Mr. Waller, whose domestic discomforts
+were too well known for him to attempt concealment.
+“It is not everybody knows how to marry
+so well, or manage a wife so well when he is married,
+as yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell looked away from his companions over
+the ocean, and a thought came across his mind that he
+had not married so very well after all.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had given his youth—his liberty—all chances
+of happy love, for money; and now he could not get
+rid of his wife—could not get rid of that old, rouged,
+affected, ugly woman, who was jealous of every look
+he cast in the direction of those who were younger and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>prettier than herself; who had no homely graces, no
+fireside virtues; whom he could not even love like a
+mother and value as a friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Forty-three and sixty—seventeen years on the
+wrong side. It was of this Maxwell thought while he
+stood in front of Durrow House, and looked over the
+Atlantic which lay like a lake below.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They were four fine-looking men. Maxwell was
+much the same in figure as when we first saw him,
+but his face was more set and hardened; the lines
+were deeper, the look in his eyes was darker. He was
+getting a little bald, that is, the once-luxuriant hair
+was thinner, more especially about his temples, and his
+whiskers were turning grey. He was the oldest-looking
+man of the party, though Mr. Pryor was a year his
+senior; but then Mr. Pryor’s life had not been so hard
+a one, and his heart was younger too.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Pryor’s face was one that his sister said “it
+rested her to look at,” so calm, so trustworthy, so
+good. Maxwell Drewitt had lived twice as fast as this
+London barrister, and would be old twice as soon.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Some idea of this kind came into Mr. Waller’s
+mind, apparently, for he said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wish I looked as young as you do, Geoffry. I
+wish you could give me the secret of wearing so well
+and keeping so handsome:” at which remark Maxwell
+Drewitt turned round and laughed.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I know what you are laughing at,” went on Mr.
+Waller; “you are thinking that one must be handsome
+before one can keep handsome. That is the worst of
+being clever, Drewitt; it makes a man so devilishly
+sharp and disagreeable: but, now, do look at Pryor;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>there was not so much difference between us twenty
+years ago, and yet——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is all the difference now—is that what
+you would say?” asked Maxwell. “If it be, perhaps
+there has been all the difference in the twenty years
+too; in how the twenty years has been passed. You
+have drunk hard, I have worked hard, while he has
+been addressing an attentive court or lounging in an
+easy-chair. It is the pace that kills, Waller, more than
+years.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“As for pace,” muttered Mr. Waller, but a dangerous
+look in Maxwell’s face stopped him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We can but live,” said the latter, hastily; “if we
+grow old soon, we have lived much, that is all any
+one can make of the question; and yet,” he went on,
+“I think it must be a fine thing for a man in middle
+age to find himself free to begin the whole drama of
+existence over again. Free to settle, free to choose,
+free to reside in a great town; and yet, also, free to
+buy a place like this and keep it for a kind of dessert
+to the dinner of the year. You will buy it?” he added,
+turning to Mr. Pryor. “Can you resist?—can you
+look upon Durrow and yet flee from such temptation?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot,” answered Mr. Pryor: “spite of right of
+way, and private stills and smugglers, and evicted
+tenants, and holy wells, I must have Durrow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And we will get a jolly lot of fellows together,
+and come over and have such capital sport,” finished
+Mr. Gyton, who had kept silence for an unusual time.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Thank you, Frank, you are very kind,” replied
+his uncle.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And you might get my mother to matronize halfa-dozen
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>girls; it would be such a lark,” went on Mr.
+Gyton; “dancing and boating, and riding and driving.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No fear of the rents of Durrow being spent off
+the soil,” said Mr. Pryor, “if Frank’s programme were
+carried out. I should spend as much in a couple of
+months as Durrow would return in a year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“First-rate for Connemara,” answered Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will write to my mother to-night,” persisted
+Mr. Gyton, “and give her a description of Durrow. It
+is the very place she would delight in. Let me see,
+how can I describe it? Help my imagination, Mr.
+Drewitt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Your imagination!” repeated Maxwell; “gracious
+heaven! there is no imagination about the matter; it
+is all fact, from beginning to end. There are the
+rocks, and the Atlantic, and the islands; and Durrow
+stands, say a hundred feet above the sea, and the
+ground is level from the house to the very edge of the
+cliff, which goes sheer down to the shore. There are
+no trees to speak of, no shrubs, no fields; it is all rock
+and mountain, and bog and morass. It is a place to
+make your teeth chatter in the winter-time; but in the
+summer—you see for yourself, young gentleman, what
+it is like now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Cannot you buy the place at once, and let us all
+spend August here?” asked Mr. Gyton, with enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am afraid not,” said Mr. Pryor, with a smile;
+“but I dare say I can have it all ready for your
+mother by the spring.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And if you want a good fellow to manage your
+property and to reside in the house while you are
+away, let me recommend you a deserving man. His
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>name is Connor; and he has been overseer at the
+marble quarries for sixteen or seventeen years past.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What—Ryan’s brother-in-law!” exclaimed Mr.
+Waller, with some surprise.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Even so; do you know anything against Connor?”
+demanded Maxwell, facing sharp round on the last
+speaker.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; only you remember that you thought—that
+is—that Ryan himself—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ryan himself is not Connor,” interrupted Maxwell;
+“and Mrs. Connor is a very worthy person.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And pretty too,” added Mr. Waller “though she
+is not so young as she used to be. By Gad! Geoffry,
+that was a girl! If she had been more thoroughbred
+she might have married a duke. Faith, I thought she
+stayed single so long waiting for some travelling prince
+to pick her up and carry her off with him. She must
+have been thirty before she took on with Connor; eh
+Drewitt?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am not the parish clerk, sir,” answered Maxwell,
+hotly. “I do not keep a register of births in my
+head;” and with this civil speech the owner of the
+Headlands marched off to the edge of the cliff, where
+he flung himself down on the grass, and with one
+hand supporting his head, looked away and away over
+the sea across which white sails were glancing in the
+sunshine.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What a damnable temper Drewitt has!” remarked
+Mr. Waller. “I am sure it is just wearing his body
+out,” and the trio turned into the house and walked
+through the empty rooms, and looked at all possible
+views, from all possible windows, discussing furniture
+and papers, and carpets and window-curtains the while.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>After a time Mr. Pryor made his escape, and rejoined
+his host, and the two lay on the grass, near the
+edge of the cliff, talking about Duranmore, and Kincorth
+and Durrow, and Ireland and England, for nearly
+an hour.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is another thing,” said Maxwell, at last;
+“the last proprietor, Mr. Carford, was a Roman Catholic,
+and almost supported the priest of Durrow, besides
+paying tithes. Will you follow suit? I know
+that to English ears such advice must sound absurd;
+but, after all, the few things I have mentioned will not
+amount to a hundred a-year, and you will have five
+hundred a-year back in comfort. You cannot civilize
+a country in a day. You must give savages beads,
+and rum, and looking-glasses, if you take their land
+from them. They cannot understand the substance,
+so you must let them have the sham. I should like to
+come back to life in a hundred years’ time, say about
+1950, and see Ireland then. Will there be butchers’
+shops in a place like Duranmore, where the poor people
+will buy scraps for their Sunday’s dinner, as the Londoners
+do on Saturday night? Will yellow meal be a
+tradition, and the cup of tea an institution? Will the
+people wash themselves, and the women wear their
+flannel petticoats under their dresses instead of round
+their necks? Will the bare feet be covered? Will
+the children drop off their rags some night, and put
+on clean cotton frocks, like English children, when
+they get up in the morning? Will they comb their
+hair, and scrub their faces, and eat with a knife and
+fork? Will the men who drive the sheep into Ballinasloe
+fair ever know by experience what number of
+joints there are in one? Will they ever have wooden
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>floors? and if they have, will they keep them clean?
+I wonder, Mr. Pryor, I wonder! And yet,” added
+Maxwell, “if that day ever do come, Ireland will he
+Ireland no longer, but only a more picturesque England—a
+Cumberland, in fact, across the channel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“On the whole, perhaps, you would not care to
+come back after the hundred years,” suggested Mr.
+Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, I should. I should like to have my land
+then, and to be able to sell it at the 1950 market
+price. A hundred years!—where shall we be then?
+where shall we be?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Certainly not on the top of Durrow Cliff, talking
+about Ireland,” answered Mr. Pryor, gravely. There
+was something about the fierce tone of Maxwell’s
+question which quivered through every nerve in his
+body.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is he afraid of death?” marvelled the barrister,
+and even while he was marvelling, Maxwell spoke
+again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I can remember,” he said, “when I was a boy
+coming across here with my father, and walking over
+the very spot where we are now talking, hand in hand
+with him. It was just such another day as this, warm
+and bright and clear; there were vessels coming and
+going; the sea was blue and calm; the fishermen were
+drying their nets in the sun. Well, the years have
+passed since then—passed like days. I have been
+lying here thinking how short a day life is after all,
+and wishing that we could endure through the centuries
+like the mountains, or the ocean yonder.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It would be very sad if we could, I think,” answered
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>“Do you really mean what you say? But we are
+so differently constituted that one man’s meat is literally
+another man’s poison. To me it has always
+seemed that life is so short, while there is so much to
+be done in the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ay! but by successive gangs of labourers,” replied
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Shall we go?” asked Mr. Maxwell Drewitt, hastily
+springing to his feet. “Have you seen enough of
+Burrow? Shall we call at Kincorth as we return, and
+ask how my uncle is to-day?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I should like to call on Mr. Drewitt,” said the
+other. “The last time I saw him he was lying on
+Doctor Sheen’s bed, with his pretty young wife nursing
+him. I suppose twenty years has changed them both.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It has changed everybody excepting you, Geoffry,”
+exclaimed Mr. Waller, who heard the last words. “I
+think you must be one of the immortals.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It has changed me, Harry,” was the reply,
+spoken sadly, though with a smile. “Twenty years
+lie behind instead of before me; that is all the difference;
+but, after all, that difference is considerable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was a long way from Durrow to Kincorth—ten
+Irish miles to ride, though probably not more
+than four, had the road followed the flight of the
+crow.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But what road in Connemara ever did follow the
+flight of the crow?” demanded Mr. Waller; whereupon
+Maxwell asked what engineer could bridge the bays,
+and make a way through the rocks and precipices.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Besides,” added Mr. Gyton, “to a man not pressed
+for time, the windings in and out are pretty and picturesque:
+but only fancy, uncle,” he said, turning to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>Mr. Pryor, “how one would curse these curves and
+turnings if one were riding for one’s life, or for a
+doctor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Maxwell Drewitt seemed impressed with this idea.
+“I never thought of that before,” he observed; “but
+then, I suppose, no man ever did ride for his life
+through Connemara. It would be all foot-work over
+the hills.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And yet when they rounded the base of another
+mountain, as they turned another corner sharply, Maxwell
+pulled up.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I cannot get that notion of yours out of my
+head,” he said, noticing that the others pulled up also.
+“Riding for one’s life—what a strange fancy!”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I tell you what is a strange fancy to my mind,
+Drewitt—going to a sick man’s house with six horses
+and two servants, like a troop of dragoons,” exclaimed
+Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We need not ride up to the hall-door,” answered
+Maxwell; while Mr. Pryor said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well thought of, Waller; we might have had
+enough sense for that ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But we had not, you see,” summed up Mr. Gyton,
+and the four rode on abreast.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I never pass that old ruin,” said Mr. Waller,
+pointing to a tower and some walls belonging to an
+ancient castle lying back among the hills, “but I think
+of Murphy. You remember Murphy, don’t you,
+Drewitt, that used to be with Sheen?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I remember some fellow of that name, but what
+the devil had he to do with Castle Cronach?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why, there was a squireen lived at that house in
+the hollow, where the honeysuckles are growing, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>he had a wife who used to drink tremendously—spent
+every farthing on whiskey, and sold everything
+she could lay her hands on to get more. The poor
+fellow was almost at his wits’ end what to do about it
+(she did drive him to America in the long run), and
+so he went to Murphy for advice in the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Could the doctor give him nothing?’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Is it poison you need?’ said Murphy; ‘because if
+it is, say so like a man.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Of course it was not poison he wanted, but only
+some trifle to cure her of drinking. Could Mr. Murphy
+not mix her up something?’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘If we could mix up anything to cure that disorder,’
+says Murphy, ‘we should be made men: but I
+tell you what, take home a gallon of whiskey, and let
+her drink as much as she likes, and I will be round
+with you before night.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It was in the summer-time, but not moonlight,
+and when the woman was thoroughly drunk, Murphy
+and the husband carried her down into the vaults of
+that old castle and laid her down on some boards till
+she should come to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I suppose she never ‘came to?’” suggested Mr.
+Gyton.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Didn’t she, though? but she had a good sleep
+first, and when she woke about twelve o’clock she began
+calling out and asking where she was.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Well, you are in the vaults underneath Eversbeg
+Abbey, ma’am,’ Murphy says.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘And how long have I been here?’ she inquired.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘A matter of ten or twelve months,’ he answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Then I’m dead, in course?’ she says.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘As a doornail,’ wound up Murphy.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>“‘And are you dead too?’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Yes, ma’am.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘And how long have you been here?’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Somewhere about five years,’ he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Then we are all dead?’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘Yes.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“She sat down on the floor and thought the matter
+out a bit. Murphy said he could not imagine what
+she would say next, and was just trying to fancy,
+when she began—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘You must know the ways of his country a good
+deal better than me. Where can you get a drop of
+good whiskey now, reasonable?’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘That floored me,’ Murphy finished. ‘Squire,’
+said he, ‘you’d better take your wife home; if she
+thinks there are whiskey-shops in Hades, it is of no
+use trying to frighten her with death. Take her home
+and let her live.’</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And he let her live; but she ruined him and died
+a beggar in Spanish Place, in Galway.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wonder what has become of Murphy?” said
+Maxwell, while they rode, with loose bridles, at a
+slinging trot over the hard Connemara roads, neck and
+neck together, hoofs keeping time, all four abreast; the
+Irishmen with their feet well in their stirrups, riding
+only on the snaffle, bending a little over their horses’
+manes; the Englishmen sitting more stiffly and more
+erect in their saddles, with only their toes in the irons,
+holding both bridles equally in their hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There is not much in these things perhaps, but
+there is something, and the grooms riding behind remarked
+the difference, as all Irish people do.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Murphy is, I hear, doing very well indeed, in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>London,” answered Mr. Waller. “He was a clever
+fellow, a man who loved you for your ailments, who
+adored a complicated case, who—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Murphy!” repeated Mr. Gyton; “Murphy! a Mr.
+Murphy was telegraphed for once when my father met
+with an accident at Tunbridge Wells—an awful
+curiosity—he attended him afterwards in London. I
+remember the man perfectly. A long, loose fellow,
+with rusty hair and greenish-grey eyes, and an astonishing
+brogue. Is it likely to have been the same?” he
+asked, turning towards Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Had he tremendous legs and no body to speak
+of, arms like flails, and a habit of turning his side to
+you when he spoke?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes; and there was no one place where his clothes
+seemed to fit him. He was all joints, too, and he used
+to turn up his coat-cuffs and the wristbands of his shirt
+before he felt my father’s pulse. I remember tooling
+him over to the station one morning, and he kept me
+in screams all the way. He used to take people’s legs
+off ‘In the name of God.’ We never ceased laughing
+from the time he came into the house till he went out
+of it. He told us lots of stories about the notions of
+the Irish concerning physic—how they considered
+doctors liked red-haired men the best for ‘cutting up’—how
+they thought rhubarb was a decoction of dead
+bodies—how they believed fever came up the road
+in a ‘swirl’ of dust, and entered the house where it
+was destined to prove fatal like a visible simoom—how
+they believed in ‘possessions’—how he was told
+of a spirit who threw a bad man down stairs and broke
+his arm, and then called out to him, ‘I have not done
+with you yet.’ ‘And they went on to recount,’ added
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>Mr. Murphy, ‘how the spirit twisted his head round on
+his shoulders, and how, for the future, whenever he
+walked forward, the back of his head came first. That
+was a case I should like to have attended,’ he finished.
+‘I candidly confess I should.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It must have been our Murphy,” said Mr. Waller;
+“there could not be two of the same kind of the same
+name.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“This man was born in Roscommon, wherever that
+may be; for I remember him telling me the morning
+I went over with him to the station, that when the
+examiners were asking him for a certificate of baptism,
+he said—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“‘And, my God, gentlemen, do you know so little
+about Ireland in England as to ask a man from the
+County Roscommon for a certificate of his birth? I
+have heard my mother, and a decent old woman she
+was too as ever brought up a family on potatoes and
+buttermilk, say I was born the day Widow O’Flynn’s
+cow was lost in the bog, and that is all the information
+I can give you on the subject.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What is he, surgeon, or physician, or what?” inquired
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Surgeon,” answered Mr. Gyton. “My mother
+asked him something about it, and he said, ‘If you
+want a leg or an arm taken off I shall be most happy
+to oblige you, ma’am; but pills and potions are out of
+my line altogether.’ I had enough of physic in Connaught
+to last me my lifetime, and I prescribe for
+nobody. Operative surgery, ma’am, is enough for me;
+“<i>Satis supraque;</i>” which being freely translated, for I
+won’t insult a lady of your position by supposing you
+understand Latin, means, ‘Lashins and Lavins.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>“How the devil,” demanded Maxwell Drewitt, “does
+such a fellow contrive to make his way into any respectable
+house?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Gyton looked at him in surprise.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is nothing to prevent Mr. Murphy entering
+any house in England,” he answered, a little stiffly.
+“Perhaps the Irish are more exclusive. He stands
+very well in his profession; has a very good house in
+one of the West-end squares; and though he is eccentric,
+he is not more eccentric than many of our
+first-rate men have been.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“John Hunter, for instance, was not merely eccentric,
+but vulgar,” chimed in Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, Murphy was never vulgar,” said Mr. Gyton.
+“He never said a word to which you could have taken
+exception, and then he always brought such a cheerful
+face with him that he was half the cure himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Was that the person who was Dr. Sheen’s assistant
+at the time of the Duranmore election?” asked
+Mr. Pryor, looking towards Maxwell Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The same; a fellow without a second coat to his
+back, and possessed of no one single talent except impudence,”
+was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He must have put out his capital to great advantage,
+then,” said the barrister dryly, “for it to have
+produced such results.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He married well,” explained Mr. Gyton; “he married
+a rich old maid, who was, I believe, the first
+paying patient he ever had in London, and that gave
+him a lift. Anyhow,” added Mr. Gyton, “he is a
+rising man now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They had been walking their horses up a steep
+hill during the latter part of this conversation, but as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>the young Englishman concluded his sentence they
+reached the top and saw Duranmore lying in the hollow
+below them. Duranmore and the road branching off
+to Kincorth!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I wonder how we shall find my uncle to-day,”
+said Maxwell, looking at the woods in which the house
+lay sheltered; “perhaps if Mr. Murphy were here now
+he could cure him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is Doctor Sheen not able to do so then?” inquired
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It would seem not,” was the answer, “for he
+grows worse rather than better,” and Maxwell Drewitt,
+after they got to the foot of the hill, gave his bridle a
+shake, and the rest taking the hint touched their horses
+lightly with whip and spur, and followed him at a hand
+gallop along the shore road to the entrance-gates of
+Kincorth.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XX.<br> <span class='c011'>A Little Leap.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>A man may be very nearly ruined and yet make
+few signs: Mr. Drewitt was close on the edge of the
+precipice, but still he uttered no cry. To have ridden
+through the gates, to have passed the porter’s lodge,
+to have reined in your horse and alighted at the beginning
+of the avenue, and to have walked beneath
+those over-arching trees up to the house, no person
+could have imagined the end so nigh at hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And yet Kincorth had virtually passed away from
+Archibald Drewitt and his family. He was only now
+waiting for the end—only—ah, me!</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was growing old, his health was broken, his
+hopes were gone, but still at times the cheery buoyant
+spirit of old would return to inspire him with fresh
+courage.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“When the boys grow up they will see to things,”
+he would mutter to himself. “Brian will be a great
+man yet, and Harold, God bless the boy, he may rise
+to anything he likes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>So with ruin only waiting without to enter, involved
+beyond all hope of extrication, swamped with
+debt, harassed with duns, Archibald Drewitt still clung
+to the delusion that Kincorth would never pass away
+from him—that something would still turn up, that
+his creditors would give him time, that his sons would
+save the property, and do as well for themselves as
+Maxwell Drewitt had done for himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>“You must make haste and be a man, Harold,”
+he was wont to say to his youngest born, and Harold
+would reply—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am a man now, father, what would you have
+me do?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Over the broad avenue the trees bent their long
+branches; across the drive their arms met and intertwined.
+The place was lovelier than ever, for the
+timber had grown and grown during the twenty years,
+and the sunbeams had to steal their way through closer
+tracery of leaf and twig and bough to the grass
+beneath. The shrubs grew luxuriantly, the flowers
+were bright under the summer sky; the house itself
+looked gay and cheerful, with every window reflecting
+back the afternoon sunshine, and Maxwell Drewitt, as
+he walked up the ascent, felt already the pride of a
+possessor, and pointed out the beauties of Kincorth
+with a certain triumph which was intelligible enough,
+and sad enough, to Geoffry Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will be merciful, I hope,” he said in a low
+tone aside to Maxwell Drewitt, “in the hour of your
+strength.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have I not said?” was the reply, and they all
+passed on together.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In an arm-chair placed on the lawn before the
+house, an old grey-haired man was seated so busily
+engaged in reading the newspaper that he took no
+heed of the approaching strangers.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is that your uncle, Mr. Drewitt?” inquired Mr.
+Pryor. “Can that be he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“That is he,” Maxwell answered. “Twenty years
+have done their work with him, have they not?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Had they not indeed? Feeble, bent, emaciated,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>but still with the same old grace of manner, with the
+same frank heartiness as had won his young wife’s
+heart and kept her love through all those years fresh
+and green as ever, Archibald Drewitt rose to meet his
+visitors.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will scarcely recollect me, sir,” said Geoffry
+Pryor, holding out his hand, which the old man took
+cordially.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I do not recollect you,” he answered, “but you
+are welcome, whoever you may be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is Mr. Pryor, uncle,” said Maxwell, “Mr.
+Pryor, who stood for Duranmore long ago; don’t you
+remember?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, yes,” exclaimed Mr. Drewitt. “Yes, yes,
+you are coming over to buy Durrow, I hear: but have
+a care, sir, have a care. Ireland is not what it used
+to be. The old families are ruined, and the fresh
+owners are not gentlemen, and the people have acquired
+new-fangled notions, and the breed of horses is deteriorating,
+and our best tenants are gone to America.
+Ah! well, it was God’s will I suppose, and we ought
+not to grumble; but an old man finds such changes
+hard to bear. Won’t you come in, Mr. Pryor? Maxwell,
+show Mr. Pryor the way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But Geoffry Pryor declined Maxwell’s guidance, and
+remained behind with Mr. Drewitt, who walked feebly
+towards the house.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am not so young as I used to be,” he remarked,
+“and the famine was a terrible affliction to us owners
+of property as well as to the poor. I know it aged me
+a dozen years,” he said, taking Mr. Pryor’s proffered
+arm and leaning on it as he walked. “And so you
+are the young fellow who gave us so much trouble
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>twenty years ago? Ah! the last election was a tame
+affair—there are no elections now like what there
+used to be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>They were by this time in the drawing-room, and
+Mr. Pryor left his companion for a moment while he
+spoke to Mrs. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Would he have recognized her? Certainly not; and
+looking at her hair, which had threads of grey in it;
+at her eyes, which were not so bright as they had
+been; at her hands, which were plump no longer, but
+thin and worn; at her face, which was wrinkled and
+altered—Mr. Pryor turned coward for the moment,
+and wished he had never come back to Duranmore to
+see such changes as these.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But there were other changes, and not disagreeable
+ones either: there were the boys, unborn when he stood
+for Duranmore, tall, strong, and handsome; and there
+was Geraldine! I had better say at once that Mr.
+Pryor fell in love with the girl on the spot, and so save
+myself any lengthened description of his state of mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is not she pretty, uncle?” asked Mr. Gyton, the
+first opportunity he found of putting the question. “Is
+not she pretty?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Pretty!” echoed Mr. Pryor; “she is perfection.”
+And so I think Geraldine was; perfect in every womanly
+grace, in every womanly beauty, yet not so handsome
+as Harold, who never left Maxwell’s side for a moment,
+but stood beside his chair, talking to him, laughing
+with him, and evidently longing for the invitation
+which his cousin at last gave.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will come back with us to dinner? You can
+ride Trumpeter, and Dickson shall walk.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have got my own horse, thank you,” returned
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>the young king, with a grand air of proprietorship.
+“I can have the saddle put on Madcap in five minutes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What!” exclaimed Mr. Maxwell Drewitt; “do you
+ride Madcap now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, my father says he is never likely to want
+her again. I say Max,” and here the boy lowered
+his voice to a whisper, “do you think he is so very bad?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not a bit of it. His life is good enough for
+twenty years yet. If you are coming with us,” he
+added in a louder tone, “you had better tell them to
+bring round your horse. We did not know how ill
+you might be, sir” (this to his uncle), “and so left our
+nags at the lodge.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am better to-day, thank God,” answered Mr.
+Drewitt, “much better. I have been ill, but it is
+nothing to signify, nothing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I think, Harold, you ought not to go down to
+the Headlands this evening,” said Mrs. Drewitt, gently,
+as the boy passed her on his way out to the stables,
+“and I hope you will not in any case ride that hunter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Pooh! Agnes,” exclaimed her husband, “what can
+that signify? Harold could ride any horse I ever saw,
+and the exercise will do him good.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But he will be out so late,” urged Mrs. Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You cannot get all boys to come home like young
+chickens at sundown,” said Maxwell, scornfully. “Go
+and get your horse, Harold. I am sure your mother
+is too wise a woman to wish to keep both her sons tied
+to her apron-strings.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>But still Harold hesitated.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There is no danger, my dear, indeed there is
+not,” said Mr. Drewitt; and then his wife added, “You
+may go, Harold,” but she spoke the words with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>“Are you not coming with us too?” asked Mr.
+Pryor, addressing the elder brother.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have not been asked,” was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But your cousin surely——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Does not want me,” interrupted Brian, and Mr.
+Pryor was silenced.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You will come and dine with us?” said Mr. Drewitt
+to his visitor, holding Mr. Pryor’s hand almost affectionately
+in his own. “Agnes, my dear, these gentlemen
+will fix a day. It had best be soon, before I
+have another attack. You will see to it, Maxwell; you
+will let us know?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, sir, I will let you know,” answered Maxwell;
+and then he muttered something about not thinking it
+had been so late, and that Lady Emmeline would be expecting
+them, as an excuse for hastening their departure.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will see you to your horses,” said Brian, gravely,
+taking up his hat; and while Harold went cantering
+off over the grass, the elder brother walked down the
+drive, talking to Mr. Pryor as he went.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>As a matter of habit he felt the horses’ girths, as
+a matter of habit also he patted the horses’ necks, as
+a matter of courtesy he waited till each man was in
+his saddle, till Harold had joined the party and was
+expatiating in the most boastful manner concerning the
+fine points of the young mare he was riding; then
+Brian laid his hand on Maxwell’s rein and detained
+him for a moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Well, Master Brian, and what can I do for you?”
+asked Maxwell, with a sneer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I want to know, sir,” and Brian’s hold of the rein
+grew tighter; “I want to know how you dare speak to
+my mother as you do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>“You are ruffling up your feathers early, young
+gentleman,” retorted his cousin.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Birds who have feathers have sometimes also spurs,”
+was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“When a bird’s spurs are too sharp to serve our
+purpose, we cut them,” answered Maxwell. “Let me
+pass, boy,” he added, angrily. “Let me rejoin my guests.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“One second,” said Brian; but Maxwell wrenched
+his hand off the bridle, and striking his horse with his
+heel, for he wore no spurs, galloped on to overtake
+his companions.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It does not matter now,” Brian said to himself, as
+he stood looking after his cousin; “I can wait.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And you had but to see Brian Drewitt to feel sure
+he could wait from boyhood to manhood—from youth
+to age, till the hour of his revenge came.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Meantime Harold was leading the way towards
+Eversbeg. He could scarcely hold the chesnut to any
+reasonable pace, and, even as it was, the brute went
+dancing and curvetting about the road like a mad
+thing; and as she danced and kicked and curvetted,
+Harold turned round in his saddle, and laughed back
+at his companions for very pride and happiness.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He rides splendidly,” said Mr. Gyton, whose
+equestrian performances were as nothing compared with
+those of this wild Irish lad.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So he may,” answered Maxwell; “he rode from
+the time he walked or thereabouts, I think. I can remember
+seeing Harold riding his father’s hunters barebacked
+round the field when he was so little, a man
+had to lift him up to his seat. The boy never knew
+fear. I have found him many a time among the horses’
+feet in the stable, hugging them, and they never put a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>hoof on him. That is what makes a man a rider. I’ll
+be bound now Harold could manage that devil just as
+well without saddle or stirrup, with nothing on her but
+a surcingle, and nothing in her mouth but a common
+bit. Harold!” he shouted, and Harold rode back, while
+the mare kicked her best and laid her ears flat on her
+neck because he would not give her her head and let
+her make for Kincorth as though she were running a race.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Would you take the mare over that hedge and
+fence at the Headlands barebacked?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>For a moment the boy looked grave. He held
+the reins in one hand while he put the other behind
+him on the saddle, and so leaned round towards his cousin.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It’s a stiff leap, Max,” he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I know that. Do you think she is able for it?
+I should like to show those gentlemen what an Irish
+horse can do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I should not like anything to happen to her, you
+know,” remarked Harold. “I only got her yesterday.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If anything happens to her you shall have Trumpeter,”
+said his cousin.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It is not that—it is not that,” the boy said
+hesitatingly; “but I think she can do it, Max, don’t
+you?” and he brightened up.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do it—of course she can; but will you do it
+barebacked?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If Madcap can go over it, I can,” was the answer;
+but Geoffry Pryor broke in—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would not see you do it for any money if it be
+that ditch and hedge beyond the gardens; don’t attempt
+it, Harold. I am sure you could stick on, and I am
+sure the mare could take the leap; but still—”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Still what?” demanded Harold.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>“Accidents will happen,” was the reply, and the
+pair looked at each other for a moment, Harold manifestly
+wavering.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“So they may riding along the Queen’s highway,”
+said Maxwell.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you really wish him to take such a leap?”
+Mr. Pryor inquired; and Maxwell answered coolly, “I
+do not like to see a boy a milksop.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I’m not a milksop, at any rate,” burst out Harold;
+“we’ll show them how we can take our fences, won’t
+we, old girl?” and the boy patted the mare’s neck,
+which she arched as consciously and proudly as though
+she knew what her rider said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Isn’t she a beauty—isn’t she, now?” Harold
+said, addressing Mr. Gyton. “My father was offered
+two hundred and fifty guineas for her the other day
+and would not take it. Think of that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Have you found a gold mine anywhere about
+Kincorth?” asked Maxwell, sharply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Not that I know of; why do you ask?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I thought you must have done, when your father
+could refuse a sum like that for a horse.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He said he would rather I had her,” answered
+the lad; but the colour came into his cheeks, and unless
+Geoffry Pryor were greatly mistaken, the tears into
+his eyes, as he pulled Madcap to one side, and let Maxwell
+get on in front.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I think the Irish are the strangest sort of people
+under the sun,” decided the lawyer; and he worked
+away at this puzzle of race and constitution and temperament
+till they arrived at the Headlands.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Are you not going to see the leap?” asked Maxwell
+Drewitt, noticing that he turned to enter the house.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>“Thank you, no,” he replied; “if anything happened
+to the boy, I could never look his mother in the
+face again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Nonsense!” retorted Maxwell, “nothing can or
+will happen; he was only afraid of the mare; and if
+she should make a mess of it, without saddle or stirrups
+he is safe enough. Come along; he will take the
+fence anyhow now, and you may as well be there to
+see fair play.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>In his heart Geoffry Pryor wanted to see that leap
+taken; he wished to know if the boy would flinch—if
+his heart would fail.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>This problem of weakness and strength, of timidity
+and courage, interested him immensely; and accordingly
+he suffered himself to be persuaded, and walked
+down with Maxwell to the field, where Harold was
+already cantering the mare up and down to quiet her
+for the leap.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>I wish I could bring that summer scene before you,
+my reader, as Geoffry Pryor often recalled it to himself
+when he was back in London hard at work among
+his briefs.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was the smooth, soft turf; there was the
+calm blue bay; there was the village of Eversbeg and
+the evening sun shining down upon it; there were the
+fast-growing trees Maxwell had planted, standing still
+and quiet in the rich, warm light; there was the house,
+covered with climbers and creepers, with ivy and
+honeysuckle, with roses and myrtles; there were the
+gardens, well sheltered from the north and east; and
+for foreground there was the hedge and ditch, over which
+Master Harold Drewitt purposed taking his new possession.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Had not you better think twice about it, Harold?”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>asked Mr. Pryor, laying his hand kindly on the boy’s
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We Irish,” said the lad, “leap twice before we
+think once,” and he flung himself out of the saddle
+and began to unbuckle the girths.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Bring a cloth,” Maxwell ordered; but Harold said,
+“No, I would rather have her without. Never mind,
+Dickson.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Then he took off his coat and waistcoat, and tossed
+his cap down beside them.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Give me a hand, Max,” he said, and next minute
+was on Madcap’s back.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Now, madam, show your breeding,” and he went
+at the leap full swing.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Anything more perfect than the boy’s riding Mr.
+Pryor had never seen. He sat that horse as though he
+were part of her, and yet there was no stiffness, no
+tightening of the bridle, no gripping of her sides with
+his knees: as easily as a bird on the wing goes
+through the air Harold flew past on Madcap; and as he
+neared the leap, Mr. Pryor involuntarily held his breath.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Damn her!” said Maxwell Drewitt, heartily, for
+the mare refused the fence.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Once again Harold put her at it, and once again
+she swerved.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Give me your whip, Max,” he cried, while Mr.
+Pryor implored him to give in.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“We see what you can do,” he went on, “and we
+will take what she can do for granted.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I must take her over now,” Harold answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why must you?” asked Mr. Pryor; but the boy
+was out of hearing.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>“Because she would never be worth a curse again
+if he let her master him once,” Maxwell explained.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>On they came for the third time, the sun shining
+on the chesnut’s glossy coat, and Harold’s black hair
+streaming in the wind caused by his own rapid passage
+through the air. On they came, the mare with her
+nostrils distended—with her eyes like fire—with
+her tail straight out behind her—with her hoofs, as
+she bounded along, scarcely touching the grass—the
+boy riding lightly and easily as ever, with his left
+hand low on her neck, with his right hand resting on
+his thigh, while he swept past the spectators. Then
+all in a moment he tightened his rein, struck her
+smartly with his feet, gave her one blow with the
+whip, and lifted her to the leap. The creature rose so
+high that Mr. Pryor thought she never could come
+down again; and as she rose she went, it seemed to
+him, straight through the air as though she were
+flying. Her forefeet were doubled under her, her hind
+quarters were stretched out almost on a level with her
+body, and she lighted on the grass on the other side
+the hedge as safely as though she had been a greyhound.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would not see that done again for fifty pounds,”
+exclaimed Mr. Pryor, while they walked into the next
+field, where Harold, dismounted already, was standing
+beside the mare.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Bravo!” said Maxwell, clapping the boy on the
+back; “but you took too much out of her, less height
+would have done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Just try to leap it yourself,” retorted the boy,
+and Mr. Pryor noticed that both horse and rider were
+reeking—that the mare was wet and trembling, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>that the perspiration was standing in beads on Harold’s
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will you take her back over it now?” asked
+Maxwell, but the lad answered—</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, thank you. I never felt afraid before, and
+I never want to feel afraid again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He slipped his arm through the bridle, and walked
+Madcap half a dozen yards from the hedge, when he
+tossed the reins towards Mr. Waller.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Take her quick,” he said, and before any one
+could reach him he threw up his hands in the air
+as if to steady himself, and fell all in a heap on the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He has more spirit than strength,” remarked
+Maxwell philosophically, but he knelt down, and, not
+without some show of tenderness, lifted the boy’s
+head and bade one of his men run in and get some
+whiskey.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He will never make old bones,” added the owner
+of the Headlands, and there was something in his
+words and the way he spoke them that astonished Mr.
+Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Is he fond of the lad?” thought the barrister,
+and he looked curiously at his host, who was still
+kneeling on the sward, and holding Harold’s head
+against his breast. “Is he really fond of the lad?”
+but there was nothing in Maxwell Drewitt’s expression
+to favour such a supposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He was looking out over the sea, as if he saw
+something of which Mr. Pryor knew nothing standing
+out against the horizon. And with his mind’s eye he
+did see something—Harold’s double—his own son.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXI.<br> <span class='c011'>Help.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>The negotiations for Durrow went on apace, and
+still Mr. Pryor remained at the Headlands, a welcome
+guest to Lady Emmeline—a guest not so welcome,
+perhaps, to her husband. For Mr. Maxwell Drewitt
+could not be blind to the fact that the barrister did in
+some matters join issue with him; that he belonged
+rather to the Kincorth party; that he rather affected
+the Kincorth interest. “It is Bryan and Geraldine
+together,” Maxwell decided, and Maxwell was right.
+Brian and Geraldine and Mr. Pryor’s own eyes caused
+the barrister to suspect that nature had forgotten an
+important item when she made Maxwell Drewitt.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My cousin is totally heartless,” Brian said one
+morning when he and Mr. Pryor were walking by a
+near cut across the hills from Kincorth to Durrow,
+“and for that reason I am quite in earnest concerning
+myself. I desire to get some employment; to be ready
+for the evil day when it comes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What makes you think an evil day is coming?”
+asked Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“There was a person told me,” answered Brian.
+“Four years ago, Mr. Pryor, when I was only fifteen.
+I got a warning. I was told to learn diligently; to be
+on my guard against bad company; to keep my eyes
+open and my mouth shut; for that Maxwell Drewitt
+had made up his mind to own Kincorth, and that I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>should have to turn out and earn my bread some day.
+I am not going to tell you who warned me,” added
+Brian; “but I took the advice. I have tried to learn.
+I have kept my eyes open, and I know Maxwell means
+to do us harm if he can.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why should he do you harm?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why? Because, as he says, we have been idle
+while he has worked; because we have sat with our
+hands folded while he has been toiling and struggling;
+because my grandfather willed Kincorth away from
+the elder brother and left it to his younger son; because
+my father married and had children; because he
+hates us,” finished Brian Drewitt, “as I hate him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Pryor turned and looked at the boy as he
+spoke these last words. There was a something more
+terrible than any passion could have been in the stern
+restraint of Brian’s manner; in the strong curb he
+seemed to put on himself—on his words, on his
+gestures. There was no fury—no outbreak of rage—no
+outburst of violent indignation. He spoke of
+hate—sullenly, calmly—without a change of colour;
+without a variation in his voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why do you hate him?” inquired Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because I do. That is not a very civil answer,
+you will say, and yet it is the best I can give you.
+Why I hate him I feel; but I could not explain what
+I feel, except that I know he wants to grind me under
+his foot as I grind this gravel,” and Brian stamped
+his heel upon the ground; “but he shall never have
+the chance, I swear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But for a young man of property——” argued
+Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am not a young man of property,” the youth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>replied. “Have you really no idea how we are actually
+situated? Do not mention it to my mother, because
+she thinks that Kincorth is clear, at any rate; but
+Kincorth is mortgaged, like everything else. We have
+not an acre of land that is not owned by strangers,
+and I am quite confident if anything were to happen
+to my father, and that the mortgagees sold the estates,
+Maxwell would buy them all, and then where should
+we be?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Where should you be whoever bought them?”
+asked his companion. “It would not matter whether
+he or Queen Victoria bought them so long as they
+were sold.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; only so far as this, that perhaps one could
+do something with other people, while one could not
+with him. For instance, I might be agent to anybody
+else, but I would not serve Maxwell. I wish, Mr.
+Pryor,” added the boy, for though he looked so manly,
+he was but nineteen after all; “I do wish I had known
+you were going to buy Durrow, for I would have asked
+you to give me the agency until I saw how it was going
+to be with my poor father.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I have promised it to Connor,” said Mr. Pryor,
+regretfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I know you have, and Maxwell recommended
+him to you. Mr. Waller told me that,” went on
+Bryan; “but I should have suspected it anyhow, for
+he knew I wanted something to do, and thought he
+would be beforehand with me; but I will make my
+way in spite of him, if he were ten times as rich as
+he is.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“May I ask you something, Brian; and will you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>answer my question honestly? Why is there such bad
+blood between you and your cousin?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I told you before I should never be able to make
+you understand,” was the reply. “We have never had
+a quarrel, and yet we have never been friends. He does
+not treat my mother as I like. He is trying to take
+Harold from us, and he is a bad man—a bad, heartless
+man, without a conscience.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“How do you make out that he is a bad man? I
+knew him before you were born. He was poor then;
+but he has worked hard since, and earned great possessions.
+Is there any crime in that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No; but there is harm in the way he has got rich.
+You do not like usurers in England. You do not like
+people who take advantage of their neighbours’ necessities.
+Well, Maxwell is a usurer. He has got a
+‘backer,’ I think you call it, in Liverpool or London,
+or some of those great towns, where you come from,
+who lets him have as much capital as he wants; and
+then when they make a good hit they share the spoil.
+Maxwell got lots of properties into his hands that way
+during the famine. Gentlemen were hard up and
+wanted an advance; then he let the interest drop behind,
+and wanted principal, and interest, and compound
+interest, just in a day. He never bought Mr. Munks’
+place, nor that enormous estate he has in the Joyce
+county. He foreclosed on both, or rather his agent
+did it for him. He has a man who does all his dirty
+work cheap—a lawyer, called Ryan.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Surely that is the name of Mrs. Connor’s brother?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes, he is Mrs. Connor’s brother; but that is
+nothing against either Connor or his wife, and you
+are safe enough in letting Maxwell’s <i>protégé</i> have the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>agency; for even if his man were not honest, my
+cousin would try no tricks with <i>you</i>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Go on—what were you saying about Ryan?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He has Ryan under his thumb somehow, and can
+make him do just what he pleases. It appears that at
+one time they were great friends: that at the time
+when you stood for Duranmore——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I remember a young lawyer who was always with
+your cousin—a clever, artful dog I thought him.
+Is that the Ryan you are talking about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“The very same. Ryan had Mr. Waller’s agency
+for a long time, until, in fact, he displeased Maxwell
+somehow or other, and then everything went wrong
+with him. He lost his agency and his clients, and
+finally went as clerk to a new attorney who came to
+Duranmore. Whatever happened then I cannot tell
+you; but he got into some trouble, either through
+drinking or want of money, which Maxwell saw him
+out of. From that time on, Ryan has been back in
+business on his own account, and is Maxwell’s factotum.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am afraid, Brian,” said Mr. Pryor, “that you
+are a sad gossip.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I am, it is only about one man,” was the answer;
+“and sometimes I fancy,” here the lad lowered
+his voice, “that it is really he who has got the mortgage
+over Kincorth, and if it be——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If it be—what then?” demanded Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Why the place will not be ours even during my
+father’s lifetime,” finished Brian; “let alone afterwards.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But supposing—even supposing he have lent
+money on the property, it would do him no good to
+turn you out; it surely would answer his purpose much
+better to let you all remain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>“As dependents on him! thank you, Mr. Pryor. No
+one belonging to me shall ever eat his bread, if I have
+any say in the matter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But would it not be wise to keep on good terms
+with him? Would it not be less galling to take an
+obligation from him than from a stranger? Your
+father provided for him. It would be a simple matter
+of justice if he were to provide for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Ay; but my father had the property, remember,
+that ought to have belonged to Maxwell’s father; that
+is the cause of all his ill-will towards us; and from
+what I can hear he had nothing but his keep out of
+the place, just as we have never had anything that
+with better management we ought to have had. He
+told my mother that he disliked her, not for herself,
+but for being the mother of the future owner of Kincorth.
+I can remember quite well, about ten years
+ago, Harold—he was a little fellow then—saying
+to him one day in a passion, ‘Go home, go home, this
+is not your home,’ and Maxwell made the remark,
+‘And it won’t be yours either, my boy, when I come
+back.’ No later than Friday last I spoke to him about
+letting Harold take that leap on Madcap, and he told
+me—I repeat his words, Mr. Pryor—‘to hold my
+blasted tongue, and not presume to speak to my betters.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“And you——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am waiting, Mr. Pryor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>There was a long pause while they stood together
+on the top of the hill resting. Everything on earth
+and in heaven looked peaceful and serene. There
+were no clouds in the sky, there were no billows on
+the ocean. You would have thought that for very
+sympathy, the heart of man would in such a place
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>have throbbed quietly through its allotted time, untroubled
+by jealousy, undisturbed by passion.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>And yet here, of all places in which he had ever
+set his foot, it seemed to Mr. Pryor that men’s passions
+were strongest—that their hate was fiercest.
+He had heard such stories of cruelty—of vengeance—of
+heartburnings—of envy—of unforgiveness,
+that had he not heard likewise histories of patience—of
+devotion—of constancy—of faithfulness—of
+endurance, and of love, he might have thought he was
+not on earth at all, but in hell; and now here, with
+the blue mountains looking calmly down upon them,
+with the great sea stretching away for thousands and
+thousands of miles at their feet, with the beauties of
+nature all around, and a great silence, an intense stillness,
+pervading the scene, was this boy nursing up
+his wrath likewise against a coming day.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am waiting,” and Brian’s face never changed,
+his eye never dropped under Mr. Pryor’s scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You are thinking,” said the youth, when his companion’s
+glance at last came back from the ocean and
+rested once again on his face, “that I am a fool; that
+if Maxwell does not do all I want him to do, it will
+be a short shrift and a long sleep with one or other
+of us; but you are mistaken. I would not hurt his
+body. I would not thrash him. I would not even put
+a bullet through him; but I would make him feel.
+There is an old epigram,” he proceeded, “that I read
+lately and learned by heart, because it put me in mind of
+Maxwell. I wonder if you know it,” and he repeated:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“Death threw his dart at Bindon’s heart,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>But how was he astounded,</div>
+ <div class='line'>When from the part, as with a start,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>The weapon quite rebounded:</div>
+ <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>‘Ho! ho!’ quoth Death, and drew his breath,</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>‘My slaughtering arm you mock at;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But here’s a blow shall lay you low,’</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And smote him through the pocket.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Then your idea is to injure him pecuniarily?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If he do not alter his manners to my mother; if
+he encourage Harold in drinking, gambling, and all
+kinds of folly, as he has done hitherto; and if he vents
+any more of his temper upon me—yes; because I
+know that Maxwell’s only vulnerable point is money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Brian,” began Mr. Pryor, and the lad looked
+surprised at the change in his companion’s tone—“Brian,
+you are laying up great trouble for yourself.
+You are preparing an awful curse for your future days.
+You are nourishing a viper and hugging it to your
+breast: when it comes to life, it will bite you worse
+than it will ever bite him. Put all these thoughts and
+fancies out of your head, boy. At your age the cup
+should be sweet, not bitter. Whatever your cousin
+may have done—whatever he may be, it is not to
+you he will have to answer for his misdeeds; but you
+will have to answer for yours, Brian; and for sins, too,
+if you do not crush this hate out of your heart and
+turn, before it is too late.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What can I do? What would you have me do?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would have you go on your way, and not ever
+cast your eyes on his——”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But he will not let me go on my own way.
+Look here.” And Brian pulled a couple of letters out
+of his pocket. “There is an old Quaker who has been
+very good to my father. I thought I would write and
+ask his advice, and tell him I wanted to work, as the
+properties were so much involved; and that if he could
+find anything to do I would work hard and try to be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>worth my salary. Here is his first letter. You see
+how kind—how encouraging. Here is his second.
+Just time enough between, you perceive, for him to
+write to Maxwell and get back his answer. You will
+say I do not know he wrote to Maxwell or that my
+cousin said anything about me; but I am as sure his
+fingers have spoiled my pie as that I am living.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“You did not reply to the first letter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No. I was waiting to see how my father would
+be after that last attack.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“It seems strange,” remarked Mr. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No, it does not seem strange to a person who
+knows Maxwell as I do,” and Brian folded up the
+letters again, and put them back in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“What makes you want so much to get to England?”
+asked the barrister, after a pause.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Because there is no way in which a man can make
+money here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Your cousin has made money here. Why not have
+a turn at some of your waste lands, and do as well as
+he has done?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“He never would have done so well but for his
+wife; and I would not marry an old woman. No, not
+if she was hung with diamonds. Besides, it is not
+often Connemara sees an heiress, even if I were inclined
+to try my luck.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But supposing, now, Kincorth were your own,
+could you not make a living out of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If it were clear of debt?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“No. Suppose it were mortgaged to close upon
+its present value, could you do no better for yourself
+than your father has done?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I would make a try to do better anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>“Would you work? Would you put your shoulder
+to the wheel, and cut down the expenses, and be brave,
+as your cousin was, disregarding appearances?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Whatever a man could do, that I would do,” was
+the answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“But you are not a man yet,” said Mr. Pryor, with
+a smile.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Am I not? I wonder when I shall be one then,”
+was the reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Mr. Pryor stood still—he was looking back
+through the years and trying to remember what he
+was at Brian’s age in the days before he came over in
+compliance with the wishes of a certain very wealthy
+and influential relative to contest Duranmore.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>He had not a care in the world at nineteen. Life
+was to him fairyland—to be young was to be happy.
+He had never had a sorrow in his life, save about his
+lessons at school or his examinations at college. He
+could look back and see himself as he was then. He
+could look back at himself, as though at another person.
+He could see the lad with his fair hair—with his
+happy, frank face—with his little airs of dandyism—with
+his cheerfulness, his hopefulness, his <i>insouciance</i>—and
+contrasting that picture with this, his heart
+bled for this poor lad, to whom the cares of life had
+come so soon, on whose shoulders the burden of
+existence was pressing already so heavily—who had
+to think for father, mother, sister, brother, and be
+tender and careful for all.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Brian’s face was still smooth as a girl’s, but he
+was a man for all that—and as a man, Mr. Pryor
+addressed him.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“My boy,” he said, “I will talk to you now as if
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>you were thirty-nine instead of nineteen. If you will
+do all you say, if you will be a good lad and give up
+the next ten years of your life to work, putting your
+cousin out of your thoughts, and making up your mind
+to pursue one certain course irrespective of him and
+his concerns, I will help you in this matter. Have
+you sufficient influence with your father to get him to
+give you the management of the estate?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I think so, if nobody puts it into his head that I
+am wanting to take the whole property from Harold.”
+And for the first time during the conversation, Brian’s
+lip trembled.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Do you mean to say any one has ever raised
+such a question?”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Yes: Maxwell told me once that probably my
+father would do like the rest of the Drewitts—cut
+me out for his favourite son; and he has tried to make
+Harold dissatisfied about my being the eldest. But
+Harold does not care who has the place as long as he
+rides the hunters. If he had been fond of money, or
+greedy, Maxwell would have made him hate me long ago.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Geoffry Pryor was a man who, as a rule, did not
+swear, but he could not help uttering an oath then.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I am that fellow’s guest,” he thought, “but hang
+me if it is fair or honest for me to eat his salt now!”
+And he made up his mind that he would get pressing
+letters from London, and return thither as soon as
+possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“Will you take the matter into consideration, and
+see if it be possible for you to assume the reins?” he said.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“If I promise you to drive, I will get the reins
+somehow,” was the reply; “only tell me how you
+mean to help me—only show me how I can save
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>Kincorth, and give my mother some ease, and keep
+my father free from anxiety, and I will work—never
+fear—I will work.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>“I will advance money to pay off the present
+mortgage, and be your creditor myself; and whatever
+sum, in moderation, you require to work the estate
+satisfactorily, you shall have.”</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Three times Brian Drewitt made an effort to speak,
+and three times the words would not come. Then he
+held out his hand to his benefactor, and the tears he
+could no longer keep back rolled down his cheeks,
+separately, singly, one by one.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>It was not weeping—it was not excitement, the
+barrister had never seen anything like it before, and
+he was never likely to see anything like it in the
+future; for in the hour of his blackest trouble—in
+the time of his worst agony—in the day of his deepest
+remorse—Mr. Pryor never saw Brian Drewitt’s eyes
+wet again.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>His kindness wrung tears out of them once, but
+grief could not open those fountains, which seemed
+thenceforth dried up for ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>Brian Drewitt’s wife may have seen him cover his
+face, and heard him sob aloud, but I, who can only
+follow his footsteps to a certain point, know no more
+than this, that the only sign of human feeling Geoffry
+Pryor ever saw him evince, was when he stood on the
+heights near Durrow, grasping his hand as though he
+held it in a vice, while the big tears fell from his
+young eyes, one by one.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='small'>END OF VOL. I.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='c016'><span class='small'>PRINTING OFFICE OF THE PUBLISHER.</span></div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c002'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>February 1887.</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>Tauchnitz Edition.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>Latest Volumes:</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c017'>Alicia Tennant. By Frances Mary Peard, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Living or Dead. By Hugh Conway, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>King Arthur: not a Love Story. By Mrs. Craik, Author of
+“John Halifax,” 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A Mental Struggle. By the Author of “Molly Bawn,” 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Transformed. By Florence Montgomery, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The Heir of the Ages. By James Payn, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A Country Gentleman and his Family. By Mrs. Oliphant,
+2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A Fallen Idol. By F. Anstey, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Court Royal. By the Author of “Mehalah,” 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Her Week’s Amusement. By the Author of “Molly Bawn,”
+1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Masollam. By Laurence Oliphant, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The Evil Genius. By Wilkie Collins, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A Playwright’s Daughter and Bertie Griffiths. By Mrs. Annie
+Edwardes, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>My Friend Jim. By W. E. Norris, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As in a Looking Glass. By F. C. Philips, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A House Party. By Ouida, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Doctor Cupid. By Rhoda Broughton, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>One Thing Needful. By Miss Braddon, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Jo’s Boys. A Sequel to “Little Men.” By L. M. Alcott, 1 v.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By Woman’s Wit. By Mrs. Alexander, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Children of Gibeon. By Walter Besant, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Oceana or England and her Colonies. By James Anthony
+Froude, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Cut by the County. By Miss Braddon, 1 vol.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Once Again. By Mrs. Forrester, 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>A complete Catalogue of the Tauchnitz
+Edition is attached to this work.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>Bernhard Tauchnitz, Leipzig.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c002'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c003'>
+ <li>Fixed typos; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78945 ***</div>
+</body>
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+[Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook [#78945](https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78945)