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The whole a.s.semblage of people, and it was immense, then proceeded to the spot where it was decided the t.i.the was to be interred, as the most fitting place to receive such a deposit, and this place was called by what they considered the very appropriate name of "The Devil's Bit."[7]
In a range of hills, in the neighbourhood where this singular occurrence took place, there is a sudden gap occurs in the outline of the ridge, which is stated to have been formed by his sable majesty taking a bite out of the mountain; whether it was spite or hunger that had made him do so, is not ascertained, but he evidently did not consider it a very savoury morsel; for it is said, he spat it out again, and the rejected morceau forms the rock of Cashel. Such is the wild legend of this wild spot; and here was the interment of the t.i.the to be achieved, as an appropriate addition to the "Devil's Bit."
The procession now moved onward, and, as it proceeded, its numbers were considerably augmented. Its approach was looked for by a scout on every successive hill it came within sight of, and a wild halloo, or the winding of a cow's horn immediately succeeded, which called forth scores of fresh attendants upon "the berrin." Thus, their numbers were increased every quarter of a mile they went, until, on their arriving at the foot of the hill which they were to ascend, to reach their final destination, the mult.i.tude a.s.sembled presented a most imposing appearance. In the course of their march, the great point of attraction for the young men and women was the cart that bore the piper and fiddler, and the road was rather danced than walked over in this quarter. The other distinguished portion of the train was where the two t.i.the proctors played their parts of chief mourners. They were the delight of all the little ragged urchins in the country; the half-naked young vagabonds hung on their flanks, plucked at their vestments, made wry faces at them, called them by many ridiculous names, and an occasional lump of clay was slily flung at their mitres, which were too tempting a "c.o.c.k shot" to be resisted. The mult.i.tude now wound up the hill, and the mingling of laughter, of singing, and shouting, produced a wild compound of sound, that rang far and wide. As they doubled an angle in the road, which opened the Devil's Bit full upon their view, they saw another crowd a.s.sembled there, which consisted of persons from the other side of the hills, who could not be present at the breakfast, nor join the procession, but who attended upon the spot where the interment was to take place. As soon as the approach of the funeral train was perceived from the top of the hill, the ma.s.s of people there sent forth a shout of welcome, which was returned by those from below.
Short s.p.a.ce now served to bring both parties together, and the digging of a grave did not take long with such a plenty of able hands for the purpose. "Come, boys," said Larry Lanigan to two or three of his companions, "while they are digging the grave here, we'll go cut some sods to put over it when the thievin' t.i.the is buried; not for any respect I have for it in particlar, but that we may have the place smooth and clane to dance over aftherwards; and may I never shuffle the brogue again, if myself and Honor O'Hara won't be the first pair that'll set you a patthern."
All was soon ready for the interment; the t.i.the coffin was lowered into the pit, and the shouting that rent the air was terrific.
As they were about to fill up the grave with earth their wild hurra, that had rung out so loudly, was answered by a fierce shout at some distance, and all eyes were turned towards the quarter whence it arose, to see from whom it proceeded, for it was, evidently, a solitary voice that had thus arrested their attention.
Toiling up the hill, supporting himself with a staff, and bearing a heavy load in a wallet slung over his shoulders, appeared an elderly man whose dress proclaimed him at once to be a person who depended on eleemosynary contributions for his subsistence: and many, when they caught the first glimpse of him, proclaimed, at once, that it was "Tatther the Road" was coming.
"Tatther the Road" wae the very descriptive name that had been applied to this poor creature, for he was always travelling about the highways; he never rested even at nights in any of the houses of the peasants, who would have afforded him shelter, but seemed to be possessed by a restless spirit, that urged him to constant motion. Of course the poor creature sometimes slept, but it must have been under such shelter as a hedge, or cave, or gravel pit might afford, for in the habitation of man he was never seen to sleep; and, indeed, I never knew any one who bad seen this strange being in the act of sleep. This fact attached a sort of mysterious character to the wanderer, and many would tell you that "he wasn't right," and firmly believed that he never slept at all.
His mind was unsettled, and though he never became offensive in any degree from his mental aberration, yet the nature of his distemper often induced him to do very extraordinary things, and whenever the gift of speech was upon him, (for he was habitually taciturn), he would make an outpouring of some rhapsody, in which occasional bursts of very powerful language and striking imagery would occur. Indeed the peasants said that "sometimes 't would make hair stand on end to hear Tatther the Road make a noration."
This poor man's history, as far as I could learn, was a very melancholy one. In the rebellion of '98 his cabin had been burned over his head by the yeomanry, after every violation that could disgrace his hearth had been committed. He and his son, then little more than a boy, had attempted to defend their hut, and they were both left for dead. His wife and his daughter, a girl of sixteen, were also murdered. The wretched father, unfortunately, recovered his life, but his reason was gone for ever. Even in the midst of his poverty and madness, there was a sort of respect attached to this singular man. Though depending on charity for his meat and drink, he could not well be called a beggar, for he never asked for any thing--even on the road, when some pa.s.senger, ignorant of his wild history, saw the poor wanderer, a piece of money was often bestowed to the silent appeal of his rags, his haggard features, and his grizly hair and beard.
Thus eternally up and down the country was he moving about, and hence his name of "Tatther the Road."
It was not long until the old man gained the summit of the hill, but while he was approaching, many were the "wonders" what in the name of fortune could have brought Tatther the Road there.--"And by dad," said one, "he's pullin' fut[8] at a great rate, and it's wondherful how an owld c.o.c.k like him can clamber up the hill so fast."
"Aye," said another, "and with the weight he's carrying too."
"Sure enough," said a third. "Faix he's got a fine lob in his wallet to-day."
"Whisht!" said O'Hara.--"Here he comes, and his ears are as sharp as needles."
"And his eyes too," said a woman. "Lord be good to me, did you ever see poor Tatther's eyes look so terrible bright afore?"
And indeed this remark was not uncalled for, for the eyes of the old man almost gleamed from under the s.h.a.ggy brows that were darkly bent over them, as, with long strides, he approached the crowd which opened before him, and he stalked up to the side of the grave and threw down the ponderous wallet, which fell to the ground with a heavy crash.
"You were going to close the grave too soon," were the first words he uttered.
"Sure when the t.i.the is wanst buried, what more have we to do?" said one of the by-standers.
"Aye, you have put the t.i.the in the grave--but will it stay there?"
"Why indeed," said Larry Lanigan, "I think he'd be a bowld resurrection man that would come to rise it."
"I have brought you something here to lie heavy on it, and 't will never rise more," said the maniac, striking forth his arm fiercely, and clenching his hand firmly.
"And what have you brought us, Agrah?" said O'Hara kindly to him.
"Look here," said the other, unfolding his wallet and displaying five or six large stones.
Some were tempted to laugh, but a mysterious dread of the wild being before them, prevented any outbreak of mirth.
"G.o.d help the craythur!" said a woman, so loud as to be heard. "He has brought a bag full o' stones to throw a top o' the t.i.thes to keep them down--O wisha! wisha! poor craythur!"
"Aye--stones!"--said the maniac; "but do you know; what stones these are? Look woman--" and his manner became intensely impressive from the excitement even of madness, under which he was acting.--"Look, I say--there's not a stone there that's not a curse--aye a curse so heavy that nothing can ever rise that falls under it."
"Oh I don't want to say aginst it, dear," said the woman.
The maniac did not seem to notice her submissive answer, but pursuing his train of madness, continued his address in his native tongue, whose figurative and poetical construction was heightened in its effect, by a manner and action almost theatrically descriptive.
"You all remember the Widow Dempsy. The first choice of her bosom was long gone, but the son she loved was left to her, and her heart was not quite lonely. And at the widow's hearth there was still a welcome for the stranger--and the son of her heart made his choice, like the father before him, and the joy of the widow's house was increased, for the son of her heart was happy.--And in due time the widow welcomed the fair-haired child of her son to the world, and a dream of her youth came over her, as she saw the joy of her son and her daughter, when they kissed the fair-haired child--But the hand of G.o.d was heavy in the land, and the fever fell hard upon the poor--and the widow was again bereft,--for the son of her heart was taken, and the wife of his bosom also--and the fair-haired child was left an orphan. And the widow would have laid down her bones and died, but for the fair-haired child that had none to look to but her. And the widow blessed G.o.d's name and bent her head to the blow--and the orphan that was left to her was the pulse of her heart, and often she looked on his pale face with a fearful eye, for health was not on the cheek of the boy--but she cherished him tenderly.
"But the ways of the world grew crooked to the lone woman, when the son, that was the staff of her age, was gone, and one trouble followed another, but still the widow was not quite dest.i.tute.--And what was it brought the heavy stroke of distress and disgrace to the widow's door?--The t.i.the! The widow's cow was driven and sold to pay a few s.h.i.+llings; the drop of milk was no longer in the widow's house, and the tender child that needed the nourishment, wasted away before the widow's eyes, like snow from the ditch, and died: and fast the widow followed the son of her heart and his fair-haired boy.
"And now, the home of an honest race is a heap of rubbish; and the bleak wind whistles over the hearth where the warm welcome was ever found; and the cold frog crouches under the ruins.
"These stones are from that desolate place, and the curse of G.o.d that follows oppression is on them.--And let them be cast into the grave, and they will lie with the weight of a mountain on the monster that is buried for ever."
So saying, he lifted stone after stone, and flung them fiercely into the pits then, after a moment's pause upon its verge, he suddenly strode away with the same noiseless step that he had approached, and left the scene in silence.
[1] The _cabhien_ was an ancient head-dress of gorgeous material, and the name is applied in derision to a shabby hat.
[2] The crop being often valued in a _green state_ in Ireland, the appraiser becomes a very obnoxious person.
[3] Botany Bay.
[4] The stump of pipe.
[5] Excepting.
[6] Keeners are persons who sing the Ulican, or death wail, round the coffin of the deceased, and repeat the good deeds of the departed.
[7] I think Ware mentions an ancient crown being dug up at the "The Devil's Bit."
[8] _Pull foot_ is a figurative expression to express making haste.
THE KNIGHTSBRIDGE MYSTERY
By CHARLES READE
I
In Charles the Second's day the "Swan" was denounced by the dramatists as a house where unfaithful wives and mistresses met their gallants.
But in the next century, when John Clarke was the Freeholder, no special imputation of that sort rested on it: it was a country inn with large stables, horsed the Brentford coach, and entertained man and beast on journeys long or short. It had also permanent visitors, especially in summer; for it was near London, and yet a rural retreat; meadows on each side, Hyde Park at back, Knightsbridge Green in front.
Amongst the permanent lodgers was Mr. Gardiner, a substantial man; and Captain Cowen, a retired officer of moderate means, had lately taken two rooms for himself and his son. Mr. Gardiner often joined the company in the public room, but the Cowens kept to themselves up-stairs.