Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 724 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4.

Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 724 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4.

She did not neglect, however, to keep calling to him every half-minute, until at last Mr. Jeremiah Mulcahy strode into the kitchen:  a tall, ill-contrived figure, that had once been well fitted out, but that now wore its old skin, like its old clothes, very loosely; and those old clothes were a discolored, threadbare, half-polished kerseymere pair of trousers, and aged superfine black coat, the last relics of his former Sunday finery,—­to which had recently and incongruously been added a calfskin vest, a pair of coarse sky-blue peasant’s stockings, and a pair of brogues.  His hanging cheeks and lips told, together, his present bad living and domestic subjection; and an eye that had been blinded by the smallpox wore neither patch nor band, although in better days it used to be genteelly hidden from remark,—­an assumption of consequence now deemed incompatible with his altered condition in society.

“O Cauth! oh, I had such a dhrame,” he said, as he made his appearance.

“An’ I’ll go bail you had,” answered Cauth, “an’ when do you ever go asleep without having one dhrame or another, that pesters me off o’ my legs the livelong day, till the night falls again to let you have another?  Musha, Jer, don’t be ever an’ always such a fool; an’ never mind the dhrame now, but lend a hand to help me in the work o’ the house.  See the pewther there:  haive it up, man alive, an’ take it out into the garden, and sit on the big stone in the sun, an’ make it look as well as you can, afther the ill usage it got last night; come, hurry, Jer—­go an’ do what I bid you.”

He retired in silence to “the garden,” a little patch of ground luxuriant in potatoes and a few cabbages.  Mrs. Mulcahy pursued her work till her own sensations warned her that it was time to prepare her husband’s morning or rather day meal; for by the height of the sun it should now be many hours past noon.  So she put down her pot of potatoes; and when they were boiled, took out a wooden trencher full of them, and a mug of sour milk, to Jer, determined not to summon him from his useful occupation of restoring the pints and quarts to something of their former shape.

Stepping through the back door, and getting him in view, she stopped short in silent anger.  His back was turned to her, because of the sun; and while the vessels, huddled about in confusion, seemed little the better of his latent skill and industry, there he sat on his favorite round stone, studiously perusing, half aloud to himself, some idle volume which doubtless he had smuggled into the garden in his pocket.  Laying down her trencher and her mug, Mrs. Mulcahy stole forward on tiptoe, gained his shoulder without being heard, snatched the imperfect bundle of soiled pages out of his hand, and hurled it into a neighbor’s cabbage-bed.

Jeremiah complained, in his usual half-crying tone, declaring that “she never could let him alone, so she couldn’t, and he would rather list for a soger than lade such a life, from year’s end to year’s end, so he would.”

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Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.