Read Ebook: A Gray Eye or So. In Three Volumes—Volume I by Moore Frank Frankfort
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A GRAY EYE OR SO
In Three Volumes--Volume I
Sixth Edition
London: Hutchinson & Co., 34 Paternoster Row
A GRAY EYE OR SO
I WAS talking about woman in the abstract," said Harold.
The other, whose name was Edmund--his worst enemies had never abbreviated it--smiled, lifted his eyes unto the hills as if in search of something, frowned as if he failed to find it, smiled a cat's-paw of a smile--a momentary crinkle in the region of the eyes--twice his lips parted as if he were about to speak; then he gave a laugh--the laugh of a man who finds that for which he has been searching.
"Woman in the abstract?" said he. "Woman in the abstract? My dear Harold, there is no such thing as woman in the abstract. When you talk about Woman enthusiastically, you are talking about the woman you love; when you talk about Woman cynically, you are talking about the woman who won't love you."
"Maybe your honours never heard tell of Larry O'Leary?" said the Third--for there was a Third, and his name was Brian; his duty was to row the boat, and this duty he interpreted by making now and again an elaborate pretence of rowing, which deceived no one.
"That sounds well," said Harold; "but do you want it to be applied? Do you want a test case of the operation of your epigram--if it is an epigram?"
"A test case?"
"Yes; I have heard you talk cynically about woman upon occasions. Does that mean that you have been unloved by many?"
Again the man called Edmund looked inquiringly up the purple slope of the hill.
"You're a wonderful clever gentleman," said Brian, as if communing with himself, "a wonderful gentleman entirely! Isn't he after casting his eyes at the very spot where old Larry kept his still?"
"No," said Edmund; "I have never spoken cynically of women. To do so would be to speak against my convictions. I have great hope of Woman."
"Yes; our mothers and sisters are women," said Harold. "That makes us hopeful of women. Now we are back in the wholesome regions of the abstract once more, so that we have talked in a circle and are precisely where we started, only that I have heard for the first time that you are hopeful of Woman."
"That's enough for one day," said Edmund.
"Quite," said Harold.
"You must know that in the old days the Excise police looked after the potheen--the Royal Irish does it now," said the Third. "Well, as I say, in the old days there was a reward of five pounds given by the Excisemen for the discovery of a private still. Now Larry had been a regular hero at transforming the innocent smiling pratie into the drink that's the curse of the country, God bless it! But he was too wary a lad for the police, and he rolled keg after keg down the side of Slieve Gorm. At last the worm of his still got worn out--they do wear out after a dozen years or so of stiff work--and people noticed that Larry was wearing out too, just through thinking of where he'd get the three pound ten to buy the new machinery. They tried to cheer him up, and the decent boys was so anxious to give him heart that there wasn't such a thing as a sober man to be found in all the country side. But though the brave fellows did what they could for him, it was no use. He never got within three pound five of the three pound ten that he needed. But just as things was at their worst, they mended. Larry was his old self again, and the word went round that the boys might get sober by degrees.
"Now what did our friend Larry do, if you please, but take his old worn-out still and hide it among the heather of the hill fornenst us--Slieve Glas is its name--and then he goes the same night to the Excise officer, in the queer secret way.
"'I'm in a bad way for money, or it's not me that would be after turning informer,' says he, when he had told the officer that he knew where the still was concealed.
"'That's the worst of you all,' says the officer. 'You'll not inform on principle, but only because you're in need of money.'
"'More's the pity, sir,' says Larry.
"'Where's the still?' says the officer.
"'If I bring you to it,' says Larry, 'it must be kept a dead secret, for the owner is the best friend I have in the world.'
"'You're a nice chap to inform on your best friend,' says the officer.
"'I'll never be able to look at him straight in the face after, and that's the truth,' says Larry.
"So I judge," said the man called Edmund, with an unaffected laugh--he had studied the art of being unaffected. "But you see, it was not of the Man but of the Woman we were talking."
"That's why I thought that the change would be good for your honours," remarked Brian. "When gentlemen that I've out in this boat with me, begin to talk together in a way that has got no sense in it at all, I know that they're talking about a woman, and I tell them the story of Larry O'Leary."
Neither the man called Edmund, nor the man called Harold, talked any more that day upon Woman as a topic.
I THINK you remarked that you had great hope of Woman," said Harold, the next day. The boat had drifted once again into the centre of the same scene, and there seemed to be a likelihood of at least two of the boat's company drifting back to the topic of the previous afternoon.
"Yes, you certainly admitted that you had great hope of Woman."
"And so I have. Woman felt, long ago; she is beginning to feel again."
"You don't think that feeling is being educated out of her? I certainly have occasional suspicions that this process is going on. Why, just think of the Stafford girl. She can tell you at a moment's notice the exact difference between an atheist, an infidel, an agnostic, a freethinker, and the Honest Doubter."
"She has been reading modern fiction--that's all. No, I don't think that what is called education makes much difference to a woman. After all, what does this thing called education mean? It simply means that a girl can read all the objectionable passages of the ancient poets without the need of a translation. I have hope of Woman because she is frequently so intensely feminine."
"Maybe you never heard tell of how the Widdy MacDermott's cabin came to be a ruin," said the Third.
"Feeling and femininity will, shall I say, transform woman into our ideal?" said Harold.
"Transform is too strong a word," said Edmund. "And as for our ideal, well, every woman is the ideal of some man for a time."
"And that truth shows not only how lowly is the ideal of some men, but also how unwise it is to attempt to speak of woman in the abstract. I begin to think that what you said yesterday had a grain of truth in it, though it was an epigram."
"The Widdy MacDermott--oh, the Widdy Mac-Dermott," said the Third, as though repeating the burden of a ballad. "They made a pome about her in Irish, that was near as full of nonsense as if it had been in the English. You see when Tim, her husband, went to glory he left the cow behind him, taking thought for the need of his widdy, though she hadn't been a widdy when he was acquainted with her. Well, your honours, the byre was a trifle too near the edge of the bog hole, so that when one end fell out, there wasn't much of the mud walls that stood. Then one blessed morning the childer came running into the cabin to tell their mother that the cow was sitting among the ruins of its home."
"A Marius of the farmyard," remarked Edmund.
"Likely enough, sir. Anyhow, there she sat as melancholy as if she was a Christian. Of course, as the winter was well for'ard it wouldn't do to risk her life by leaving her to wander about the bogs, so they drove her into the cabin--it was a tight fit for her, passing through the door--she could just get in and nothing to spare; but when she was inside it was warm and comfortable that the same cow made the cabin, and the childer were wondering at the end of a month how they could have been such fools as to shiver through the winter while the cow was outside.
"In another month some fine spring days came, and the cabin was a bit close and stuffy with the cow inside, and the widdy herself turned the animal's head to the door and went to drive her out for exercise and ventilation. But the way the beast had been fed and petted told upon her, and by the Powers, if she didn't stick fast in the doorway.
"They leathered her in the cabin and they coaxed her from outside, but it was all of no use. The craythur stood jammed in the door, while the childer crawled in and out of the cabin among her hind legs--the fore legs was half a cow's length outside. That was the situation in the middle of the day, and all the neighbours was standing round giving advice, and calling in to the widdy herself--who, of course, was a prisoner in the cabin--not to lose heart.
"'It's not heart I'm afeard of losing--it's the cow,' says she.
"Well, your honours, the evening was coming on, but no change in the situation of affairs took place, and the people of the country-side was getting used to the appearance of the half cow projecting beyond the door of the cabin, and to think that maybe, after all, it was nothing outside the ordinary course of events, when Barney M'Bratney, who does the carpentering at the Castle, came up the road.
"'The cabin by all means,' says she.
"'You're right, my good woman,' says he. 'Come outside with you.'
"Well, your honours, the kindly neighbours hauled the widdy outside over the back of the cow, and then with a crowbar Barney attacked the walls on both sides of the door. In ten minutes the cow was free, but the cabin was a wreck.
"Of course his lardship built it up again stronger than it ever was, but as he wouldn't make the door wide enough to accommodate the cow--he offered to build a byre for her, but that wasn't the same--he has never been so respected as he was before in the neighbourhood of Ballyboreen."
"That's all very well as a story," said Edmund; "but you see we were talking on the subject of the advantages of the higher education of woman."
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