The Black Prophet: A Tale Of Irish Famine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 553 pages of information about The Black Prophet.

The Black Prophet: A Tale Of Irish Famine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 553 pages of information about The Black Prophet.

Mave looked about the desolate shed, and to her delight spied a tin porringer, which Sarah’s unhappy predecessors had left behind them; seizing this, she flew to a little stream that ran by the place, and filling the vessel, returned and placed it to Sarah’s lips.  She drank it eagerly, and looking piteously and painfully up into Mave’s face, she laid back her head, and appeared to breathe more freely.  Mave hoped that the drink of cold water would have cooled her fever and assuaged her thirst, so as to have brought her to a rational state—­such a state as would have enabled the poor girl to give some account of the extraordinary situation in which she found herself, and of the circumstances which occasioned her to take shelter in such a place.  In this, however, she was disappointed.  Sarah having drank the cold water, once more shut her eyes, and fell into that broken and oppressive slumber which characterizes the terrible malady which had stricken her down.  For some time she waited with this benign expectation, but seeing there was no likelihood of her restoration, to consciousness, she again filled the tin vessel, and placing it upon a stone by her bedside, composed the poor girl’s dress about her, and turned her steps toward a scene in which she expected to find equal misery.

It is not our intention, however, to dwell upon it.  It is sufficient to say, that she found the Daltons—­who, by the way, had a pretty long visit from the pedlar—­as her brother had said, beginning to recover, and so far this was consolatory; but there was not within the walls of the house, earthly comfort, or food or nourishment of any kind.  Poor Mary was literally gasping for want of sustenance, and a few hours more might have been fatal to them all.  There was no fire—­no gruel, milk or anything that could in the slightest possible degree afford them relief.  Her brother Denny, however, who had been desired by her to fetch his purchases directly to their cabin, soon returned, and almost at a moment that might be called the crisis, not of their malady, for that had passed, but of their fate itself, his voice was heard, shouting from a distance that he had discharged his commission; for we may observe that no possible inducement could tempt him to enter that or any other house where fever was at work.  Mave lost little time in administering to their wants and their weaknesses.  With busy and affectionate hands she did all that could be done for them at that particular juncture.  She prepared food for Mary, made whey and gruel, and left as much of her little purse as she thought could be spared from the wants of Sarah M’Gowan.

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The Black Prophet: A Tale Of Irish Famine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.