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.

Still, although the Tinkers’ name has become a byword among us through a long series of petty offenses rather than any one flagrant crime, there is a notable misdeed on record against them, which has never been forgotten in the lapse of many years.  It was perpetrated soon after the death of Mrs. Kilfoyle’s mother, the Widow Joyce, an event which is but dimly recollected now at Lisconnel, as nearly half a century has gone by.  She did not very long survive her husband, and he had left his roots behind in his little place at Clonmena, where, as we know, he had farmed not wisely but too well, and had been put out of it for his pains to expend his energy upon our oozy black sods and stark-white bowlders.  But instead he moped about, fretting for his fair green fields, and few proudly cherished beasts,—­especially the little old Kerry cow.  And at his funeral the neighbors said, “Ah, bedad, poor man, God help him, he niver held up his head agin from that good day to this.”

When Mrs. Joyce felt that it behooved her to settle her affairs, she found that the most important possession she had to dispose of was her large cloak.  She had acquired it at the prosperous time of her marriage, and it was a very superior specimen of its kind, in dark-blue cloth being superfine, and its ample capes and capacious hood being double-lined and quilted and stitched in a way which I cannot pretend to describe, but which made it a most substantial and handsome garment.  If Mrs. Joyce had been left entirely to her own choice in the matter, I think she would have bequeathed it to her younger daughter Theresa, notwithstanding that custom clearly designated Bessy Kilfoyle, the eldest of the family, as the heiress.  For she said to herself that poor Bessy had her husband and childer to consowl her, any way, but little Theresa, the crathur, had ne’er such a thing at all, and wouldn’t have, not she, God love her.  “And the back of me hand to some I could name.”  It seemed to her that to leave the child the cloak would be almost like keeping a warm wing spread over her in the cold wide world; and there was no fear that Bessy would take it amiss.

But Theresa herself protested strongly against such a disposition, urging for one thing that sure she’d be lost in it entirely if ever she put it on; a not unfounded objection, as Theresa was several sizes smaller than Bessy, and even she fell far short of her mother in stature and portliness.  Theresa also said confidently with a sinking heart, “But sure, anyhow, mother jewel, what matter about it?  ’Twill be all gone to houles and flitters and thraneens, and so it will, plase goodness, afore there’s any talk of anybody else wearin’ it except your own ould self.”  And she expressed much the same conviction one day to her next-door neighbor, old Biddy Ryan, to whom she had run in for the loan of a sup of sour milk, which Mrs. Joyce fancied.  To Biddy’s sincere regret she could offer Theresa barely a skimpy noggin of milk, and only a meagre shred of encouragement; and by way of eking out the latter with its sorry substitute, consolation, she said as she tilted the jug perpendicularly to extract its last drop:—­

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