The Lieutenant and Commander eBook

Basil Hall
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 383 pages of information about The Lieutenant and Commander.

The Lieutenant and Commander eBook

Basil Hall
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 383 pages of information about The Lieutenant and Commander.

FOOTNOTES: 

[1] All gone since our author wrote.  Now it looks for Osbornes, Maclures, and other names as trustworthy.

CHAPTER II.

A sailor on shore.

It is a far easier thing to get into a house in Ireland than to get out of it again; for there is an attractive and retentive witchery about the hospitality of the natives of that country, which has no match, as far as I have seen, in the wide world.  In other places the people are hospitable or kind to a stranger; but in Ireland the affair is reduced to a sort of science, and a web of attentions is flung round the visitor before he well knows where he is:  so that if he be not a very cold-blooded or a very temperate man, it will cost him sundry headaches—­and mayhap some touches of the heartache—­before he wins his way back again to his wonted tranquillity.

I had not a single acquaintance in Ireland when first I visited that most interesting of countries:  before leaving it, however, after about a year and a-half’s cruising off and on their coasts, I was on pretty intimate terms with one family at least for every dozen miles, from Downpatrick on the east, to the Bloody Foreland on the west, a range of more than a hundred and twenty miles.

The way in which this was brought about is sufficiently characteristic of the country.  I had inherited a taste for geology; and as the north of Ireland affords a fine field for the exercise of the hammer, I soon made myself acquainted with the Giant’s Causeway, and the other wonders of that singular district.  While engaged in these pursuits, I fell in with an eminent medical practitioner resident in that part of the country, a gentleman well known to the scientific world:  he was still better known on the spot as the most benevolent and kindest of men.  In no part of the globe have I made a more agreeable or useful acquaintance.  During a residence of a week under the roof of this delightful person, he frequently urged me to make acquaintance with some friends of his, living also in the north of Ireland, but at the opposite angle.  He was, in particular, desirous that I should see a family with whom he described himself as being very intimate, and who were then on a visit far in the west.

Influenced by the extreme earnestness of my worthy friend, who, indeed, would hardly let me stir from his house until I had promised to deliver, with my own hands, a letter of introduction to a lady alluded to, who, he assured me, would introduce me to the family with whom she was then living as a guest.  I thought it rather an odd arrangement that a mere guest should introduce a stranger to another person’s house:  but I had already seen enough of the hearty hospitality of Ireland not to wonder at anything having a kind purpose in view.  I therefore promised that, if at any time I could obtain leave of absence for a few days, the introductory letter should be delivered.

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The Lieutenant and Commander from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.