told you what a quiet, sedate fellow Terence has become, and
here is proof of it. Let us see what more he says." Jack read on:--
"I confess, however, that the sooner I am away and afloat again, the
better for the rest of the family. How they all manage to exist is to me a
puzzle. To be sure there are fish in the streams and neighbouring lakes,
and game in abundance, which we retain the right of shooting; and
sheep on the hills, which, as my father does not attempt any
new-fangled plans for improving the condition of the people, are
allowed to exist; and there are praties in the fields, and fruit and
vegetables in the garden; but there is a scarcity of flour and groceries,
and instead of the claret which, in the good old days, flowed freely at
table, we are reduced to drink whisky, of which the excise has not
always had an opportunity of taking due cognisance. My father does
not quite see the matter in the light I do, and was inclined to be
offended when I ordered down a cask of the cratur from Dublin, as a
salve to my conscience, and a few dozen of claret, as a remembrance of
days gone by; but as the latter went in about as many evenings, we
shall have to stick to the whisky in future. However, if the house holds
together till the Plantagenet is paid off, I can promise you plenty of
amusement of one sort or another, and the enjoyment of magnificent
scenery, if you, my dear Jack, will pay a visit to Ballymacree. You may
depend, too, on as hearty a welcome as I am sure I should have
received by your family had I been able to avail myself of your
invitation. To be sure we muster somewhat stronger than you do, I
suspect, and, might possibly exhibit, what with your sedate English
ideas you would consider an exuberance of spirits, and I am almost
afraid that you would think my five fair young sisters rather hoydenish
young ladies, compared to your own. One of them, Kathleen, is looking
over my shoulder and exclaims, `Arrah, now Terence, don't be after
saying that same, or Leeftenant Rogers will be thinking us a set of wild
Irish girls, with no more civilisation than a family of gipsies;' but I tell
her I won't scratch out what I have written, but I'll add that she's not the
ugliest of the lot; so, dear Jack, when you do come, you can form your
own opinion; I only wish that I had the chance of making some
prize-money for their sakes. By-the-bye, the eldest of them, Nora, who,
at sixteen, married Gerald Desmond, has got a son called after his
father, who has taken it into his head to go to sea, and as nothing I can
say will make him alter his mind, I suppose he must have his way. I
have written to our cousin, Lord Derrynane, and asked him to try and
get Gerald appointed to the Plantagenet, as I should like him to be
under Hemming and you. He is a `broth of a boy,' as we say here, and I
know for my sake, Jack, that you will look after him. They say that he
is very like me, which won't be in his disfavour in your eyes-- though I
don't think I ever was such a wild youngster as he is; not that there's a
grain of harm in him. Mind that, and he'll soon get tamed down in the
navy. I don't think I ever wrote so long a letter in my life, and so as it's
high time to bring it to an end, farewell, Jack, till we meet, and may
that be soon, is the sincere wish of,
"Yours ever faithful and true,
"TERENCE ADAIR."
"Of course I will look after his nephew, as I would my own brother. I'll
write and tell him so, though he knows it," exclaimed Jack; "and now,
Lucy, what do you think of my old shipmate?"
"I cannot exactly say that I admire the style of his epistle, but I have no
doubt that he is as kind-hearted and brave as you describe him,"
answered Lucy.
"I don't mean to say that he is much of a letter-writer," said Jack; "but
at all events he writes as he feels and speaks, in the belief that no eye
but mine would read what he had written. His mind is like a glass--it
can be seen through at a glance; and he has no idea of concealing a
single thought from those he trusts, though he is close enough with the
world in general; and I can tell you that he is
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