that is, not cruel. The old woman had seen the
Irish giant, and “though he was a fine man,”
he was nothing to this woman, “for he was round,
and could not have stepped out so soldierly”;
“she was like Mrs.-----” a stately lady
of the neighbourhood, “but she had no stomach
on her, and was slight and broad in the shoulders,
and was handsomer than any one you ever saw; she looked
about thirty.” The old woman covered her
eyes with her hands, and when she uncovered them the
apparition had vanished. The neighbours were “wild
with her,” she told me, because she did not
wait to find out if there was a message, for they
were sure it was Queen Maive, who often shows herself
to the pilots. I asked the old woman if she had
seen others like Queen Maive, and she said, “Some
of them have their hair down, but they look quite
different, like the sleepy-looking ladies one sees
in the papers. Those with their hair up are like
this one. The others have long white dresses,
but those with their hair up have short dresses, so
that you can see their legs right up to the calf.”
After some careful questioning I found that they wore
what might very well be a kind of buskin; she went
on, “They are fine and dashing looking, like
the men one sees riding their horses in twos and threes
on the slopes of the mountains with their swords swinging.”
She repeated over and over, “There is no such
race living now, none so finely proportioned,”
or the like, and then said, “The present Queen[FN#7]
is a nice, pleasant-looking woman, but she is not
like her. What makes me think so little of the
ladies is that I see none as they be,” meaning
as the spirits. “When I think of her and
of the ladies now, they are like little children running
about without knowing how to put their clothes on
right. Is it the ladies? Why, I would not
call them women at all.” The other day
a friend of mine questioned an old woman in a Galway
workhouse about Queen Maive, and was told that “Queen
Maive was handsome, and overcame all her enemies with
a bawl stick, for the hazel is blessed, and the best
weapon that can be got. You might walk the world
with it,” but she grew “very disagreeable
in the end—oh very disagreeable. Best
not to be talking about it. Best leave it between
the book and the hearer.” My friend thought
the old woman had got some scandal about Fergus son
of Roy and Maive in her head.
[FN#7] Queen Victoria.
And I myself met once with a young man in the Burren Hills who remembered an old poet who made his poems in Irish and had met when he was young, the young man said, one who called herself Maive, and said she was a queen “among them,” and asked him if he would have money or pleasure. He said he would have pleasure, and she gave him her love for a time, and then went from him, and ever after he was very mournful. The young man had often heard him sing the poem of lamentation that he made, but could only remember that it was “very mournful,” and that he called her “beauty of all beauties.”