I don’t ask you, Pat, whether you remember Maen,
who was born dumb, and had for his tutors Ferkelne
the bard and Crafting the harper, at pleasant Dinree:
he was grandson of Leary Lore who was basely murdered
by his brother Cova, and Cova spared the dumb boy,
thinking a man without a tongue harmless, as fools
do: being one of their savings-bank tricks, to
be repaid them, their heirs, executors, administrators,
and assigns at compound interest, have no fear.
So one day Maen had an insult put on him; and ’twas
this for certain: a ruffian fellow of the Court
swore he couldn’t mention the name of his father;
and in a thundering fury Maen burst his tongue-tie,
and the Court shouted Lavra Maen: and he had to
go into exile, where he married in the middle of delicious
love-adventures the beautiful Moira through the cunning
of Craftine the harper. There’s been no
harper in my instance but plenty of ruffians to swear
I’m too comfortable to think of my country.’
The captain holloaed. ’Do they hear that?
Lord! but wouldn’t our old Celtic fill the world
with poetry if only we were a free people to give
our minds to ’t, instead of to the itch on our
backs from the Saxon horsehair shirt we’re forced
to wear. For, Pat, as you know, we’re a
loving people, we’re a loyal people, we burn
to be enthusiastic, but when our skins are eternally
irritated, how can we sing? In a freer Erin I’d
be the bard of the land, never doubt it. What
am I here but a discontented idle lout crooning over
the empty glories of our isle of Saints! You
feel them, Pat. Phil’s all for his British
army, his capabilities of British light cavalry.
Write me the history of the Enniskillens. I’ll
read it. Aha, my boy, when they ’re off
at the charge! And you’ll oblige me with
the tale of Fontenoy. Why, Phil has an opportunity
stretching forth a hand to him now more than halfway
that comes to a young Irishman but once in a century:
backed by the entire body of the priesthood of Ireland
too! and if only he was a quarter as full of the old
country as you and I, his hair would stand up in fire
for the splendid gallop at our head that’s proposed
to him. His country’s gathered up like
a crested billow to roll him into Parliament; and
I say, let him be there, he ’s the very man to
hurl his gauntlet, and tell ’m, Parliament,
so long as you are parliamentary, which means the
speaking of our minds, but if you won’t have
it, then-and it ’s on your heads before Europe
and the two Americas. We’re dying like a
nun that ’d be out of her cloister, we’re
panting like the wife who hears of her husband coming
home to her from the field of honour, for that young
man. And there he is; or there he seems to be;
but he’s dead: and the fisherman off the
west coast after dreaming of a magical haul, gets more
fish than disappointment in comparison with us when
we cast the net for Philip. Bring tears of vexation
at the emptiness we pull back for our pains.
Oh, Phil! and to think of your youth! We had you