Murad the Unlucky and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 174 pages of information about Murad the Unlucky and Other Tales.

Murad the Unlucky and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 174 pages of information about Murad the Unlucky and Other Tales.

There is a strange mixture of virtue and vice in the minds of the lower class of Irish:  or rather, a strange confusion in their ideas of right and wrong, from want of proper education.  As soon as poor Paddy found out that his spirited action of pulling down the rick of bark was likely to be the ruin of his countryman, he resolved to make all the amends in his power for his folly—­he went to collect his fellow haymakers, and persuaded them to assist him this night in rebuilding what they had pulled down.

They went to this work when everybody except themselves, as they thought, was asleep in Hereford.  They had just completed the stack, and were all going away except Paddy, who was seated at the very top, finishing the pile, when they heard a loud voice cry out, “Here they are!  Watch!  Watch!”

Immediately all the haymakers who could, ran off as fast as possible.  It was the watch who had been sitting up at the cathedral who gave the alarm.  Paddy was taken from the top of the rick and lodged in the watch-house till morning.  “Since I’m to be rewarded this way for doing a good action, sorrow take me,” said he, “if they catch me doing another the longest day ever I live.”

Happy they who have in their neighbourhood such a magistrate as Mr. Marshal!  He was a man who, to an exact knowledge of the duties of his office, joined the power of discovering truth from the midst of contradictory evidence, and the happy art of soothing or laughing the angry passions into good-humour.  It was a common saying in Hereford that no one ever came out of Justice Marshal’s house as angry as he went into it.

Mr. Marshal had scarcely breakfasted when he was informed that Mr. Hill, the verger, wanted to speak to him on business of the utmost importance.  Mr. Hill, the verger, was ushered in; and, with gloomy solemnity, took a seat opposite to Mr. Marshal.

“Sad doings in Hereford, Mr. Marshal!  Sad doings, sir.”

“Sad doings?  Why, I was told we had merry doings in Hereford.  A ball the night before last, as I heard.”

“So much the worse, Mr. Marshal—­so much the worse:  as those think with reason that see as far into things as I do.”

“So much the better, Mr. Hill,” said Mr. Marshal, laughing, “so much the better:  as those think with reason that see no farther into things than I do.”

“But, sir,” said the verger, still more solemnly, “this is no laughing matter, nor time for laughing, begging your pardon.  Why, sir, the night of that there diabolical ball our Hereford Cathedral, sir, would have been blown up—­blown up from the foundation, if it had not been for me, sir!”

“Indeed, Mr. Verger!  And pray how, and by whom, was the cathedral to be blown up? and what was there diabolical in this ball?”

Here Mr. Hill let Mr. Marshal into the whole history of his early dislike to O’Neill, and his shrewd suspicions of him the first moment he saw him in Hereford:  related in the most prolix manner all that the reader knows already, and concluded by saying that, as he was now certain of his facts, he was come to swear examinations against this villanous Irishman, who, he hoped, would be speedily brought to justice, as he deserved.

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Murad the Unlucky and Other Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.