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Strangers at Lisconnel, by Barlow Jane
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Title: Strangers at Lisconnel
Author: Barlow Jane
Release Date: July 31, 2006 [EBook #18957]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STRANGERS AT LISCONNEL ***
Produced by Melissa Er-Raqabi, Ted Garvin and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
STRANGERS AT LISCONNEL
A SECOND SERIES OF IRISH IDYLLS
BY
JANE BARLOW
NEW YORK DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY 1895
Copyright, 1895,
by
Dodd, Mead and Company.
TO
M. L. B.
[Gaelic: Is fada mé beo do dhiaigh.]
CONTENTS
PAGE
CHAPTER I.
OUT OF THE WAY 1
CHAPTER II.
JERRY DUNNE'S BASKET 14
CHAPTER III.
MRS. KILFOYLE'S CLOAK 31
CHAPTER IV.
A GOOD TURN 53
CHAPTER V.
FORECASTS 80
CHAPTER VI.
A FAIRING 112
CHAPTER VII.
MR. POLYMATHERS 139
CHAPTER VIII.
HONORIS CAUSA 168
CHAPTER IX.
BOYS' WAGES 211
CHAPTER X.
CON THE QUARE ONE 235
CHAPTER XI.
MAD BELL 271
CHAPTER XII.
A FLITTING 303
CHAPTER XIII.
A RETURN 324
CHAPTER XIV.
GOOD LUCK 340
CHAPTER I
OUT OF THE WAY
To Lisconnel, our very small hamlet in the middle of a wide bogland, the days that break over the dim blue hill-line, faint and far off, seldom bring a stranger's face; but then they seldom take a familiar one away, beyond reach, at any rate of return before nightfall. In fact, there are few places amid this mortal change to which we may come back after any reasonable interval with more confidence of finding things just as we left them, due allowance being made for the inevitable fingering of Time. We shall find some old people who have aged under it, and some who, as certain philosophers would hold, have grown younger again. The latter may be seen just beginning, perhaps, to sit up stiff on a woman's arm, or starting for a trial crawl over mother earth; and of them we remark that there is another little Ryan or Quigley; while the former stay sunning themselves so inertly, or totter about so shakily, that we notice at once how much old Sheridan, or the Widow Joyce, has failed since last year. These babies and grandparents often associate a good deal with one another at the stage when the old body is still capable of "keepin' an eye on the child," and the child still resorts to all fours if it wants to get up its highest speed. But this companionship does not last long in any given case. Very soon the expanding and the contracting sphere cease to touch closely. On the one hand, the world widens into more spacious tracts for nimbler and bolder ranging over with all manner of remarkable things growing and living upon it, to be gathered and captured, or at least sought and chased, among pools, and hillocks and swampy places. On the other, it shrinks to within the limits of a few dwindling furlongs and perches, traversed ever more feebly, until at length even the nearest stone, on which the warm rays can be basked in, seems to have moved too far off, and the flicker-haunted nook by the hearth-fire becomes the end of the whole day's journey.
Thus the generations, as they succeed one another, wave-like preserve a well-marked rhythm in their coming and going--play, work, rest--not to be interrupted by anything less peremptory than death or disablement. This wag-by-the-wall swings and swings its bobbed pendulum without pause, but one swing is much like the other, and their background never varies. Little Pat out stravading of a fine morning on the great brown-wigged bog, and, it may be hoped, enjoying himself thoroughly, is taking the same first steps in life as young Pat his father, now busy cutting turf-sods, and old Pat, his grandfather, idly watching them burn, with a pipe, if in luck, to keep alight. And the Lisconnel folk, therefore, because the changes wrought by human agency come to them in unimposing forms, are strongly impressed by the vast natural vicissitudes of things which rule their destinies. The melting of season into season, and year into year, the leaf-like withering and drifting away of the old from among the fresh springing growths, are ever before their eyes, and the contemplation steeps them in a sense of the transitoriness of things good and bad. Even the black soil they tread on may next year flutter up into a vanishing blue column through a smoke-hole in somebody's thatch. They carry this sense with a light and heavy heart. In like manner they make the very most of all unusual events. They find materials for half-an-hour's talk in the passage by their doors of one of those rarely coming strangers, who do appear from time to time, as frequently, indeed, as anybody would expect, having surveyed the thoroughfare that
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