THE TWISTING OF THE ROPE

'What was the dead cat that put me in this place,And all the pretty young girls I left after me?I came into the house where was the bright love of my heart,And the old hag put me out by the Twisting of the Rope.'If you are mine, be mine by day and by night;If you are mine, be mine before the world;If you are mine, be mine with every inch of your heart;It is my grief you are not with me as a wife this evening.'It is down in Sligo I got knowledge of my love;It is up in Galway I drank my fill with her.By the strength of my hands, if they do not leave me as I am,I will do a trick will set these women walking.'

'What was the dead cat that put me in this place,And all the pretty young girls I left after me?I came into the house where was the bright love of my heart,And the old hag put me out by the Twisting of the Rope.

'If you are mine, be mine by day and by night;If you are mine, be mine before the world;If you are mine, be mine with every inch of your heart;It is my grief you are not with me as a wife this evening.

'It is down in Sligo I got knowledge of my love;It is up in Galway I drank my fill with her.By the strength of my hands, if they do not leave me as I am,I will do a trick will set these women walking.'

Mr. Yeats made Red Hanrahan the hero of this song in a story in 'The Secret Rose'; and it is Hanrahan Douglas Hyde has kept in the play, with his passion, his exaggerations, his wheedling tongue, his roving heart, that all but coax the girl from her mother and her sweetheart; but that fail after all in their attack on the settled order of things, and leave their owner homeless and restless, and angry and chiding, like the stormy west wind outside the door.

'The Marriage' is founded on the story of Raftery at the poor wedding at Cappaghtagle. It was acted in Galway, at theFeis, last summer. There had been some delay or misunderstanding in the giving of parts; and on the morning of theFeis, it was announced that the play would not be given. But the disappointment was so great, that we all beggedAn Craoibhinto take the chief part himself, as he had done in 'The Twisting of the Rope'; and when his kindness made him agree to this, we went in search of the other players. They were all at work in shops or stores, one wheeling sacks on a barrow; and it was a busy market-day, and it was hard for them to get away for a rehearsal. But, for all that, the play was given in the evening; in the very town where some still remember Raftery, and where he and Death had their first talk together.

It will be hard to forget the blind poet, as he was represented on the stage by the living poet, so full of kindly humour, of humorous malice, of dignity under his poor clothing, or the wistful, ghostly sigh with which he went out of the door at the end. 'Is fear marḃ do ḃi ann]'—'It is a dead man was in it.'

It has been acted in Dublin since then; and many places are asking for the loan of the one manuscript in which it exists; but I am glad Connacht had it first.

'The Lost Saint' was written last summer.An Craoibhinwas staying with us at Coole; and one morning I went for a long drive to the sea, leavinghim with a bundle of blank paper before him. When I came back at evening, I was told that Dr. Hyde had finished his play, and was out shooting wild duck. The hymn, however, was not quite ready, and was put into rhyme next day, while he was again watching for wild duck beside Inchy marsh.

When he read it to us in the evening, we were all left with a feeling as if some beautiful white blossom had suddenly fallen at our feet.

It was acted the other day at Ballaghaderreen; and, at the end, a very little girl, who wanted to let the author know how much she had liked his play, put out her hand, and put a piece of toffee into his.

The 'Nativity' did not appear in time for Christmas acting; but Ireland, which now and then finds herself possessed of some accidental freedom, has no censor; and a play so beautiful and reverent, and so much in the tradition of the people, is sure to be acted and received reverently.

An Craoibhinhas written other plays besides these—a pastoral play which has been acted in Dublin and Belfast, a match-making comedy, a satire on Trinity College.

Other Irish plays have been acted here and there through the country during the last year or two, some written by priests; the last I saw in manuscript was by a workhouse schoolmaster; and all have had their share of success. But it is to the poet-scholar who has become actor-dramatist that we must still, as Raftery would put it, 'give the branch.

Hanrahan.A wandering poet.

Sheamus O'Heran.Engaged toOona.

Maurya.The woman of the house.

Sheela.A neighbour.

Oona.Maurya's daughter.

Neighbours and a piper who have come to Maurya's house for a dance.

Scene.A farmer's house in Munster a hundred years ago. Men and women moving about and standing round the walls as if they had just finished a dance.Hanrahan,in the foreground, talking toOona.

The piper is beginning a preparatory drone for another dance, butSheamusbrings him a drink and he stops. A man has come and holds out his hand toOona,as if to lead her out, but she pushes him away.

Oona.Don't be bothering me now; don't you see I'm listening to what he is saying? (ToHanrahan) Go on with what you were saying just now.

Hanrahan.What did that fellow want of you?

Oona.He wanted the next dance with me, but I wouldn't give it to him.

Hanrahan.And why would you give it to him? Do you think I'd let you dance with anyone but myself, and I here? I had no comfort or satisfaction this long time until I came here to-night, and till I saw yourself.

Oona.What comfort am I to you?

Hanrahan.When a stick is half burned in the fire, does it not get comfort when water is poured on it?

Oona.But, sure, you are not half burned.

Hanrahan.I am; and three-quarters of my heart is burned, and scorched and consumed, struggling with the world, and the world struggling with me.

Oona.You don't look that bad.

Hanrahan.O, Oona ni Regaun, you have not knowledge of the life of a poor bard, without house or home or havings, but he going and ever going a drifting through the wide world, without a person with him but himself. There is not a morning in the week when I rise up that I do not say to myself that it would be better to be in the grave than to be wandering. There is nothing standing to me but the gift I got from God, my share of songs; when I begin upon them, my grief and my trouble go from me; I forget my persecution and my ill luck; and now since I saw you, Oona, I see there is something that is better even than the songs.

Oona.Poetry is a wonderful gift from God; andas long as you have that, you are richer than the people of stock and store, the people of cows and cattle.

Hanrahan.Ah, Oona, it is a great blessing, but it is a great curse as well for a man, he to be a poet. Look at me: have I a friend in this world? Is there a man alive that has a wish for me? is there the love of anyone at all on me? I am going like a poor lonely barnacle goose throughout the world; like Oisin after the Fenians; every person hates me: you do not hate me, Oona?

Oona.Do not say a thing like that; it is impossible that anyone would hate you.

Hanrahan.Come and we will sit in the corner of the room together; and I will tell you the little song I made for you; it is for you I made it. (They go to a corner and sit down together.Sheelacomes in at the door.)

Sheela.I came to you as quick as I could.

Maurya.And a hundred welcomes to you.

Sheela.What have you going on now?

Maurya.Beginning we are; we had one jig, and now the piper is drinking a glass. They'll begin dancing again in a minute when the piper is ready.

Sheela.There are a good many people gathering in to you to-night. We will have a fine dance.

Maurya.Maybe so, Sheela; but there's a man of them there, and I'd sooner him out than in.

Sheela.It's about the long red man you are talking, isn't it—the man that is in close talk withOona in the corner? Where is he from, and who is he himself?

Maurya.That's the greatest vagabond ever came into Ireland; Tumaus Hanrahan they call him; but it's Hanrahan the rogue he ought to have been christened by right. Aurah, wasn't there the misfortune on me, him to come in to us at all to-night?

Sheela.What sort of a person is he? Isn't he a man that makes songs, out of Connacht? I heard talk of him before; and they say there is not another dancer in Ireland so good as him. I would like to see him dance.

Maurya.Bad luck to the vagabond! It is well I know what sort he is; because there was a kind of friendship between himself and the first husband I had; and it is often I heard from poor Diarmuid—the Lord have mercy on him!—what sort of person he was. He was a schoolmaster down in Connacht; but he used to have every trick worse than another; ever making songs he used to be, and drinking whiskey and setting quarrels afoot among the neighbours with his share of talk. They say there isn't a woman in the five provinces that he wouldn't deceive. He is worse than Donal na Greina long ago. But the end of the story is that the priest routed him out of the parish altogether; he got another place then, and followed on at the same tricks until he was routed out again, and another again with it. Now he has neither place nor house nor anything, but he to be going the country, making songs and getting a night's lodgingfrom the people; nobody will refuse him, because they are afraid of him. He's a great poet, and maybe he'd make a rann on you that would stick to you for ever, if you were to anger him.

Sheela.God preserve us; but what brought him in to-night?

Maurya.He was travelling the country and he heard there was to be a dance here, and he came in because he knew us; he was rather great with my first husband. It is wonderful how he is making out his way of life at all, and he with nothing but his share of songs. They say there is no place that he'll go to, that the women don't love him, and that the men don't hate him.

Sheela(catchingMauryaby the shoulder). Turn your head, Maurya; look at him now, himself and your daughter, and their heads together; he's whispering in her ear; he's after making a poem for her and he's whispering it in her ear. Oh, the villain, he'll be putting his spells on her now.

Maurya.Ohone, go deo! isn't it a misfortune that he came? He's talking every moment with Oona since he came in three hours ago. I did my best to separate them from one another, but it failed me. Poor Oona is given up to every sort of old songs and old made-up stories; and she thinks it sweet to be listening to him. The marriage is settled between herself and Sheamus O'Herin there, a quarter from to-day. Look at poor Sheamus at the door, and he watching them. There is grief andhanging of the head on him; it's easy to see that he'd like to choke the vagabond this minute. I am greatly afraid that the head will be turned on Oona with his share of blathering. As sure as I am alive there will come evil out of this night.

Sheela.And couldn't you put him out?

Maurya.I could. There's no person here to help him unless there would be a woman or two; but he is a great poet, and he has a curse that would split the trees, and that would burst the stones. They say the seed will rot in the ground and the milk go from the cows when a poet like him makes a curse, if a person routed him out of the house; but if he was once out, I'll go bail I wouldn't let him in again.

Sheela.If himself were to go out willingly, there would be no virtue in his curse then.

Maurya.There would not, but he will not go out willingly, and I cannot rout him out myself for fear of his curse.

Sheela.Look at poor Sheamus. He is going over to her. (Sheamusgets up and goes over to her.)

Sheamus.Will you dance this reel with me, Oona, as soon as the piper is ready?

Hanrahan(rising up). I am Tumaus Hanrahan, and I am speaking now to Oona ni Regaun; and as she is willing to be talking to me, I will allow no living person to come between us.

Sheamus(without heedingHanrahan). Will you not dance with me, Oona?

Hanrahan(savagely). Didn't I tell you now thatit was to me Oona ni Regaun was talking? Leave that on the spot, you clown, and do not raise a disturbance here.

Sheamus.Oona——

Hanrahan(shouting). Leave that! (Sheamusgoes away, and comes over to the two old women.)

Sheamus.Maurya Regaun, I am asking leave of you to throw that ill-mannerly, drunken vagabond out of the house. Myself and my two brothers will put him out if you will allow us; and when he's outside I'll settle with him.

Maurya.Sheamus, do not; I am afraid of him. That man has a curse they say that would split the trees.

Sheamus.I don't care if he had a curse that would overthrow the heavens; it is on me it will fall, and I defy him! If he were to kill me on the moment, I will not allow him to put his spells on Oona. Give me leave, Maurya.

Sheela.Do not, Sheamus. I have a better advice than that.

Sheamus.What advice is that?

Sheela.I have a way in my head to put him out. If you follow my advice, he will go out himself as quiet as a lamb; and when you get him out, slap the door on him, and never let him in again.

Maurya.Luck from God on you, Sheela, and tell us what's in your head.

Sheela.We will do it as nice and easy as you ever saw. We will put him to twist a hay-rope till he is outside, and then we will shut the door on him.

Sheamus.It's easy to say, but not easy to do. He will say to you, "Make a hay-rope yourself."

Sheela.We will say then that no one ever saw a hay-rope made, that there is no one at all in the house to make the beginning of it.

Sheamus.But willhebelieve that we never saw a hay-rope?

Sheela.He believe it, is it? He'd believe anything; he'd believe that himself is king over Ireland when he has a glass taken, as he has now.

Sheamus.But what excuse can we make for saying we want a hay-rope?

Maurya.Can't you think of something yourself, Sheamus?

Sheamus.Sure, I can say the wind is rising, and I must bind the thatch, or it will be off the house.

Sheela.But he'll know the wind is not rising if he does but listen at the door. You must think of some other excuse, Sheamus.

Sheamus.Wait, I have a good idea now; say there is a coach upset at the bottom of the hill, and that they are asking for a hay-rope to mend it with. He can't see as far as that from the door, and he won't know it's not true it is.

Maurya.That's the story, Sheela. Now, Sheamus, go among the people and tell them the secret. Tell them what they have to say, that no one at all in this country ever saw a hay-rope, and put a good skin on the lie yourself. (Sheamusgoes from person to person whispering to them, and some of them begin laughing.The piper has begun playing. Three or four couples rise up.)

Hanrahan(after looking at them for a couple of minutes). Whisht! Let ye sit down! Do ye call that dragging, dancing? You are tramping the floor like so many cattle. You are as heavy as bullocks, as awkward as asses. May my throat be choked if I would not sooner be looking at as many lame ducks hopping on one leg through the house. Leave the floor to Oona ni Regaun and to me.

One of the men going to dance.And for what would we leave the floor to you?

Hanrahan.The swan of the brink of the waves, the royal ph[oe]nix, the pearl of the white breast, the Venus amongst the women, Oona ni Regaun, is standing up with me, and any place she rises up, the sun and the moon bow to her, and so shall ye yet. She is too handsome, too sky-like for any other woman to be near her. But wait a while! Before I'll show you how the Connacht boy can dance, I will give you the poem I made on the star of the province of Munster, on Oona ni Regaun. Get up, O sun among women, and we will sing the song together, verse about, and then we'll show them what right dancing is! (Oonarises.)

Hanrahan.

She is white Oona of the yellow hair,The Coolin that was destroying my heart inside me;She is my secret love and my lasting affection;I care not for ever for any woman but her.

She is white Oona of the yellow hair,The Coolin that was destroying my heart inside me;She is my secret love and my lasting affection;I care not for ever for any woman but her.

Oona.

O bard of the black eye, it is youWho have found victory in the world and fame;I call on yourself and I praise your mouth;You have set my heart in my breast astray.

O bard of the black eye, it is youWho have found victory in the world and fame;I call on yourself and I praise your mouth;You have set my heart in my breast astray.

Hanrahan.

O fair Oona of the golden hair,My desire, my affection, my love and my store,Herself will go with her bard afar;She has hurt his heart in his breast greatly.

O fair Oona of the golden hair,My desire, my affection, my love and my store,Herself will go with her bard afar;She has hurt his heart in his breast greatly.

Oona.

I would not think the night long nor the day,Listening to your fine discourse;More melodious is your mouth than the singing of the birds;From my heart in my breast you have found love.

I would not think the night long nor the day,Listening to your fine discourse;More melodious is your mouth than the singing of the birds;From my heart in my breast you have found love.

Hanrahan.

I walked myself the entire world,England, Ireland, France, and Spain;I never saw at home or afarAny girl under the sun like fair Oona.

I walked myself the entire world,England, Ireland, France, and Spain;I never saw at home or afarAny girl under the sun like fair Oona.

Oona.

I have heard the melodious harpOn the streets of Cork playing to us;More melodious by far I thought your voice,More melodious by far your mouth than that.

I have heard the melodious harpOn the streets of Cork playing to us;More melodious by far I thought your voice,More melodious by far your mouth than that.

Hanrahan.

I was myself one time a poor barnacle goose;The night was not plain to me more than the dayTill I got sight of her; she is the love of my heartThat banished from me my grief and my misery.

I was myself one time a poor barnacle goose;The night was not plain to me more than the dayTill I got sight of her; she is the love of my heartThat banished from me my grief and my misery.

Oona.

I was myself on the morning of yesterdayWalking beside the wood at the break of day;There was a bird there was singing sweetly,How I love love, and is it not beautiful?

I was myself on the morning of yesterdayWalking beside the wood at the break of day;There was a bird there was singing sweetly,How I love love, and is it not beautiful?

(A shout and a noise, andSheamus O'Heranrushes in.)

Sheamus.Ububu! Ohone-y-o, go deo! The big coach is overthrown at the foot of the hill! The bag in which the letters of the country are is bursted; and there is neither tie, nor cord, nor rope, nor anything to bind it up. They are calling out now for a hay sugaun—whatever kind of thing that is; the letters and the coach will be lost for want of a hay sugaun to bind them.

Hanrahan.Do not be bothering us; we have our poem done, and we are going to dance. The coach does not come this way at all.

Sheamus.The coach does come this way now; but sure you're a stranger, and you don't know. Doesn't the coach come over the hill now, neighbours?

All.It does, it does, surely.

Hanrahan.I don't care whether it does comeor whether it doesn't. I would sooner twenty coaches to be overthrown on the road than the pearl of the white breast to be stopped from dancing to us. Tell the coachman to twist a rope for himself.

Sheamus.Oh! murder! he can't. There's that much vigour, and fire, and activity, and courage in the horses, that my poor coachman must take them by the heads; it's on the pinch of his life he's able to control them; he's afraid of his soul they'll go from him of a rout. They are neighing like anything; you never saw the like of them for wild horses.

Hanrahan.Are there no other people in the coach that will make a rope, if the coachman has to be at the horses' heads? Leave that, and let us dance.

Sheamus.There are three others in it; but as to one of them, he is one-handed, and another man of them, he's shaking and trembling with the fright he got; it's not in him now to stand up on his two feet with the fear that's on him; and as for the third man, there isn't a person in this country would speak to him about a rope at all, for his own father was hanged with a rope last year for stealing sheep.

Hanrahan.Then let one of yourselves twist a rope so, and leave the floor to us. (ToOona.) Now, O star of women, show me how Juno goes among the gods, or Helen for whom Troy was destroyed. By my word, since Deirdre died, for whom Naoise son of Usnech, was put to death, her heir is not in Ireland to-day but yourself. Let us begin.

Sheamus.Do not begin until we have a rope; we are not able to twist a rope; there's nobody here can twist a rope.

Hanrahan.There's nobody here is able to twist a rope?

All.Nobody at all.

Sheela.And that's true; nobody in this place ever made a hay sugaun. I don't believe there's a person in this house who ever saw one itself but me. It's well I remember when I was a little girsha that I saw one of them on a goat that my grandfather brought with him out of Connacht. All the people used to be saying: "Aurah, what sort of a thing is that at all?" And he said that it was a sugaun that was in it; and that people used to make the like of that down in Connacht. He said that one man would go holding the hay, and another man twisting it. I'll hold the hay now; and you'll go twisting it.

Sheamus.I'll bring in a lock of hay. (He goes out.)

Hanrahan.

I will make a dispraising of the province of MunsterThey do not leave the floor to us;It isn't in them to twist even a sugaun;The province of Munster without nicety, without prosperity.Disgust for ever on the province of Munster,That they do not leave us the floor;The province of Munster of the foul clumsy people.They cannot even twist a sugaun!

I will make a dispraising of the province of MunsterThey do not leave the floor to us;It isn't in them to twist even a sugaun;The province of Munster without nicety, without prosperity.

Disgust for ever on the province of Munster,That they do not leave us the floor;The province of Munster of the foul clumsy people.They cannot even twist a sugaun!

Sheamus(coming back). Here's the hay now.

Hanrahan.Give it here to me; I'll show ye what the well-learned, hardy, honest, clever, sensible Connachtman will do, that has activity and full deftness in his hands, and sense in his head, and courage in his heart; but that the misfortune and the great trouble of the world directed him among thelebidinsof the province of Munster, without honour, without nobility, without knowledge of the swan beyond the duck, or of the gold beyond the brass, or of the lily beyond the thistle, or of the star of young women, and the pearl of the white breast, beyond their own share of sluts and slatterns. Give me a kippeen. (A man hands him a stick; he puts a wisp of hay round it, and begins twisting it; andSheelagiving him out the hay.)

Hanrahan.

There is a pearl of a woman giving light to us;She is my love; she is my desire;She is fair Oona, the gentle queen-woman.And the Munstermen do not understand half her courtesy.These Munstermen are blinded by God;They do not recognise the swan beyond the grey duck;But she will come with me, my fine Helen,Where her person and her beauty shall be praised for ever.

There is a pearl of a woman giving light to us;She is my love; she is my desire;She is fair Oona, the gentle queen-woman.And the Munstermen do not understand half her courtesy.

These Munstermen are blinded by God;They do not recognise the swan beyond the grey duck;But she will come with me, my fine Helen,Where her person and her beauty shall be praised for ever.

Arrah, wisha, wisha, wisha! isn't this the fine village? isn't this the exceeding village? The village where there be that many rogues hanged that the people have no want of ropes with all the ropes that they steal from the hangman!

The sensible Connachtman makesA rope for himself;But the Munsterman steals itFrom the hangman;That I may see a fine rope,A rope of hemp yet,A stretching on the throatsOf every person here!

The sensible Connachtman makesA rope for himself;But the Munsterman steals itFrom the hangman;That I may see a fine rope,A rope of hemp yet,A stretching on the throatsOf every person here!

On account of one woman only the Greeks departed, and they never stopped, and they never greatly stayed, till they destroyed Troy; and on account of one woman only this village shall be damned;go deo, ma neoir, and to the womb of judgment, by God of the graces, eternally and everlastingly, because they did not understand that Oona ni Regaun is the second Helen, who was born in their midst, and that she overcame in beauty Deirdre and Venus, and all that came before or that will come after her!

But she will come with me, my pearl of a woman,To the province of Connacht of the fine people;She will receive feasts, wine, and meat,High dances, sport, and music!

But she will come with me, my pearl of a woman,To the province of Connacht of the fine people;She will receive feasts, wine, and meat,High dances, sport, and music!

Oh, wisha, wisha! that the sun may never rise upon this village; and that the stars may never shine onit and that——. (He is by this time outside the door. All the men make a rush at the door and shut it.Oonaruns towards the door, but the women seize her.Sheamusgoes over to her.)

Oona.Oh! oh! oh! do not put him out; let him back; that is Tumaus Hanrahan—he is a poet—he is a bard—he is a wonderful man. O, let him back; do not do that to him!

Sheamus.O Oonabán, acushla dílis, let him be; he is gone now, and his share of spells with him! He will be gone out of your head to-morrow; and you will be gone out of his head. Don't you know that I like you better than a hundred thousand Deirdres, and that you are my one pearl of a woman in the world?

Hanrahan(outside, beating on the door). Open, open, open; let me in! Oh, my seven hundred thousand curses on you—the curse of the weak and of the strong—the curse of the poets and of the bards upon you! The curse of the priests on you and the friars! The curse of the bishops upon you, and the Pope! The curse of the widows on you, and the children! Open! (He beats on the door again and again.)

Sheamus.I am thankful to ye, neighbours; and Oona will be thankful to ye to-morrow. Beat away, you vagabond! Do your dancing out there with yourself now! Isn't it a fine thing for a man to be listening to the storm outside, and himself quiet and easy beside the fire? Beat away, beat away! Where's Connacht now?

Martin,a young man.

Mary.His newly married wife.

A Blind Fiddler.

Neighbours.

Scene.—A cottage kitchen. A table poorly set out, with two cups, a jug of milk, and a cake of bread.MartinandMarysitting down to it.

Martin.This is a poor wedding dinner I have for you, Mary; and a poor house I brought you to. I wish it was seven thousand times better for your sake.

Mary.Only we have to part again, there wouldn't be in the world a pair happier than myself and yourself; but where's the good of fretting when there's no help for it?

Martin.If I had but a couple of pounds, I could buy a little ass and earn a share of money bringing turf to the big town; or I could job at the fairs. But, my grief, we haven't it, or ten shillings.

Mary.And if I could get but a few hens, and what would feed them, I could be selling the eggs orrearing chickens. But unless God would work a miracle for us, there's no chance of that itself. (She wipes her eyes with her apron.)

Martin.Don't be crying, Mary. You belong to me now; am I not rich so long as you belong to me? Whatever place I will go to I will know you are thinking of me.

Mary.That is a true word you say, Martin; I will never be poor so long as I know you to be thinking of me. No riches at all would be so good as that. There's a line my poor father used to be saying:—

'Cattle and gold, store and goods,They pass away like the high floods.'

'Cattle and gold, store and goods,They pass away like the high floods.'

It was Raftery, the blind man, said that. I never saw him; but my father used to be talking of him.

Martin.I don't care what he said. I wish we had goods and store. He said the exact contrary another time:—

'Brogues in the fashion, a good house,Are better than the bare sky over us.'

'Brogues in the fashion, a good house,Are better than the bare sky over us.'

Mary.Poor Raftery! he'd give us all that if he had the chance. He was always a good friend to the poor. I heard them saying the other day he was lying in his sickness at some place near Killeenan, and near his death. The Lord have mercy on him!

Martin.The Lord have mercy on him, indeed.Come now, Mary, eat the first bit in your own house. I'll take the eggs off the fire.

(He gets up and goes to the fire. There is a knock at the half-door, and an old ragged, patched fiddler puts in his head.)

Fiddler.God save all here!

Mary(standing up). Aurah, the poor man, bring him in.

Martin.Let there be sense on you, Mary; we have not anything at all to give him. I will tell him the way to the Brennans' house: there will be plenty to find there.

Mary.Indeed and surely I will not put him from this door. This is the first time I ever had a house of my own; and I will not send anyone at all from my own door this day.

Martin.Do as you think well yourself. (Marygoes to the door and opens it.) Come in, honest man, and sit down, and a hundred welcomes before you. (The old man comes in, feeling about him as if blind.)

Mary.O Martin, he is blind. May God preserve him!

Old Man.That is so, acushla; I am in my blindness; and it is a tired, vexed, blind man I am. I am going and ever going since morning, and I never found a bit to eat since I rose.

Mary.You did not find a bit to eat since morning! Are you starving?

Old Man.Oh, indeed, there was food to be got ifI would take it; but the bit that does not come from a willing heart, there would be no taste on it; and that is what I did not get since morning; but people putting a potato or a bit of bread out of the door to me, as if I was a dog, with the hope I would not stop, but would go away.

Mary.Oh, sit down with us now, and eat with us. Bring him to the table, Martin. (Martingives his hand to the old man, and gives him a chair, and puts him sitting at the table with themselves. He makes two halves of the cake, and gives a half to the blind man, and one of the eggs. The old man eats eagerly.)

Old Man.I leave my seven hundred thousand blessings on the people of this house. The blessing of God and Mary on them.

Mary.That it may be well with you. O Martin, that is the first blessing I got in my own house. That blessing is better to me than gold.

Old Man.Aurah, is it not beautiful for people to have a house of their own, and to have eyes to look about with?

Martin.May God preserve you, right man; it is likely it is a poor thing to be without sight.

Old Man.You do not understand, nor any person that has his sight, what it is to be blind and dark the way I am. Not to have before you and behind you but the night. Oh, darkness, darkness! No shape or form in anything; not to see the bird you hear singing in the tree over your head; nor the flower you smell on the bush, or the child, and he laughingin his mother's breast. The morning and the evening the day and the night, only the same thing to you Oh, it is a poor thing to be blind! (Martinputs over the other half of the cake and the egg toMary,and makes a sign to her to eat. She makes a sign to him to take a share of them. The blind man stretches his hand over the table to try for a crumb of bread, for he has eaten his own share; and he gets hold of the other half cake and takes it.)

Mary.Eat that, poor man, it is likely there is hunger on you. Here is another egg for you. (She puts the other egg in his hand.)

Blind Man.The blessing of the Only Son and of the Holy Mother on the hand that gives it. (Martinputs up his two hands as if dissatisfied; and he is going to say something whenMarytakes the words from his mouth, laughing at his gloomy face.)

Blind Man.Maisead, my blessing on the mouth that laughter came from, and my blessing on the light heart that let it out of the mouth.

Martin.A light heart, is it! There is not a light heart with Mary to-night, my grief!

Blind Man.Mary is your wife?

Martin.She is. I made her my wife three hours ago.

Blind Man.Three hours ago?

Martin(bitterly).—That is so. We were married to-day; and it is at our wedding dinner you are sitting.

Blind Man.Your wedding dinner! Do not be mocking me! There is no company here.

Mary.Oh, he is not mocking you; he would not do a thing like that. There is no company here; for we have nothing in the house to give them.

Blind Man.But you gave it to me! Is it the truth you are speaking? Am I the only person that was asked to your wedding?

Mary.You are. But that is to the honour of God; and we would never have told you that, but Martin let slip the word from his mouth.

Blind Man.Oh, and I eat your little feast on you, and without knowing it.

Mary.It is not without a welcome you eat it.

Martin.I am well pleased you came in; you were more in want of it than ourselves. If we have a bare house now, we might have a full house yet; and a good dinner on the table to share with those in need of it. I'd be better off now; but all the little money I had I laid it out on the house, and the little patch of land. I thought I was wise at the time; but now we have the house, and we haven't what will keep us alive in it. I have the potatoes set in the garden; but I haven't so much as a potato to eat. We are left bare, and I am guilty of it.

Mary.If there is any fault, it is on me it is; coming maybe to be a drag on Martin, where I have no fortune at all. The little money I gained in service, I lost it all on my poor father, when he took sick. And I went back into service; and the mistress I had was a cross woman; and when Martin saw the way she was treating me, he wouldn't let mestop with her any more, but he made me his wife. And now I will have great courage, when I have to go out to service again.

Blind Man.Will you have to be parted again?

Martin.We will, indeed; I must go as aspailpin fanac, to reap and to dig the harvest in some other place. But Mary and myself have it settled we'll meet again at this house on a certain day, with the blessing of God. I'll have the key in my pocket; and we'll come in, with a better chance of stopping in it. You'll have your own cows yet, Mary; and your calves and your firkins of butter, with the help of God.

Mary.I think I hear carts on the road. (She gets up, and goes to the door.)

Martin.It's the people coming back from the fair. Shut the door, Mary; I wouldn't like them to see how bare the house is; and I'll put a smear of ashes on the window, the way they won't see we're here at all.

Blind Man(raising his head suddenly). Do not do that; but open the door wide, and let the blessing of God come in on you. (Maryopens the door again. He takes up his fiddle, and begins to play on it. A little boy puts in his head at the door; and then another head is seen, and another with that again.)

Blind Man.Who is that at the door?

Mary.Little boys that came to listen to you.

Blind Man.Come in, boys. (Three or four come inside.)

Blind Man.Boys, I am listening to the carts coming home from the fair. Let you go out, and stop the people; tell them they must come in: there is a wedding-dance here this evening.

Boy.The people are going home. They wouldn't stop for us.

Blind Man.Tell them to come in; and there will be as fine a dance as ever they saw. But they must all give a present to the man and woman that are newly married.

Another Boy.Why would they come in? They can have a dance of their own at any time. There is a piper in the big town.

Blind Man.Say to them thatI myselftell them to come in; and to bring every one a present to the newly-married woman.

Boy.And who are you yourself?

Blind Man.Tell them it is Raftery the poet is here, and that is calling to them.

(The boys run out, tumbling over one another.)

Martin.Are you Raftery, the great poet I heard talk of since I was born! (taking his hand). Seven hundred thousand welcomes before you; and it is a great honour to us you to be here.

Mary.Raftery the poet! Now there is luck on us! The first man that brought us his blessing, and that eat food in my own house, he to be Raftery the poet! And I hearing the other day you were sick and near your death. And I see no sign of sickness on you now.

Blind Man.I am well, I am well now, the Lord be praised for it.

Martin.I heard talk of you as often as there are fingers on my hands, and toes on my feet. But indeed I never thought to have the luck of seeing you.

Mary.And it is you that made 'County Mayo,' and the 'Repentance,' and 'The Weaver,' and the 'Shining Flower.' It is often I thought there should be no woman in the world so proud as Mary Hynes, with the way you praised her.

Blind Man.O my poor Mary Hynes, without luck! (They hear the wheels of a cart outside the house, and an old farmer comes in, a frieze coat on him.)

Old Farmer.God save you, Martin; and is this your wife? God be with you, woman of the house. And, O Raftery, seven hundred thousand welcomes before you to this country. I would sooner see you than King George. When they told me you were here, I said to myself I would not go past without seeing you, if I didn't get home till morning.

Blind Man.But didn't you get my message?

Old Farmer.What message is that?

Blind Man.Didn't they tell you to bring a present to the new-married woman and her husband. What have you got for them?

Old Farmer.Wait till I see; I have something in the cart. (He goes out.)

Martin.O Raftery, you see now what a great name you have here. (Old farmer comes in againwith a bag of meal on his shoulders. He throws it on the floor.)

Old Farmer.Four bags of meal I was bringing from the mill; and there is one of them for the woman of the house.

Mary.A thousand thanks to God and you. (Martincarries the bag to other side of table.)

Blind Man.Now don't forget the fiddler. (He takes a plate and holds it out.)

Old Farmer.I'll not break my word, Raftery, the first time you came to this country. There is two shillings for you in the plate. (He throws the money into it.)

Blind Man.


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