Valentine M'Clutchy, The Irish Agent eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 786 pages of information about Valentine M'Clutchy, The Irish Agent.

Valentine M'Clutchy, The Irish Agent eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 786 pages of information about Valentine M'Clutchy, The Irish Agent.

“Very well, my good, fine, pious convart; I’ll keep my eye on you.  I understand your piety.”

“And I can tell you, my good, meek, pious priest, I’ll keep mine on you; and now pass on, if you’re wise—­and so bannath lath.”

Each then passed on, pursuing his respective destination.  They had not gone far, however, when both chanced to look back at the same moment—­M’Cabe shook his whip, with a frown, at Darby, who, on the other side, significantly touched the pocket in which he carried his fire-arms, and nodded his head in return.

Now, it is an undeniable fact, that characters similar to that of Darby, were too common in the country; and, indeed, it is to be regretted that they were employed at all, inasmuch as the insolence of their conduct, on the one hand, did nearly as much harm as the neglect of the hard-hearted landlord himself, on the other.  Be this as it may, however, we are bound to say that Darby deserved much more at M’Cabe’s hands than either that Rev. gentleman was aware of then, or our readers now.  The truth was, that no sooner had M’Slime’s paragraph touching Darby’s conversion gone abroad, than he became highly unpopular among the Catholics of the parish.  Father M’Cabe, in consequence of Darby’s conduct, and taking him as a specimen, uttered some lively prophecies, touching’ the ultimate fate of the new Reformation.  He even admonished his flock against Darby:—­

“I have warned you all now,” he said, “and if after this I hear of a single perversion, woe be unto that pervert, for it is better for his miserable soul that he had never been born.  Is there a man here base enough to sell his birthright for a mess of Mr. Lucre’s pottage?  Is there a man here, who is not too strongly imbued with a hatred of heresy, to laugh to scorn their bribes and their Bibles.  Not a man, or, if there is, let him go out from amongst us, in order that we may know him—­that we may avoid his outgoings and his incomings—­that we may flee from him as a pestilence—­a plague—­a famine.  No, there is none here so base and unprincipled as all that—­and I here prophesy that from this day forth, this Reformation has got its death-blow—­and that time will prove it.  Now, remember, I warn you against their arts, their bribes, and their temptations—­and if, as I said, any one of this flock shall prove so wicked as to join them—­then, I say again, better for his unfortunate soul that he had never come into existence, than to come in contact with this leprous and polluted heresy.”

Darby having heard—­for he never went to mass—­that he was denounced by the priest, and feeling that his carrying into execution the heartless and oppressive proceedings of M’Clutchy had, taken together, certainly made him as unpopular a man as any individual of his contemptible standing in life could be, resolved, in the first place, to carry arms for his own protection, and, in the next, to take a step which he knew would vex the curate

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Valentine M'Clutchy, The Irish Agent from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.