Part 15 (1/2)
”I did, plaise your reverence,” replied the huge servant.
”What did she say,” asked the other, ”when you slipped it to her?”
”She said nothing, sir, for a minute or so, but dropped on her knees, and the tears came from her eyes in such a way that I couldn't help letting down one or two myself. 'G.o.d spare him,' she then said, 'for his piety and charity makes him a blessin' to the parish.' Throth, I couldn't help lettin' down a tear or two myself.”
”You couldn't now.” exclaimed the simple-hearted priest; ”why, then, I forgive you the pigs, you great, good-natured bosthoon.”
The stranger now thought that he might claim some notice from his reverence.
”I fear, sir,” said he--
”And whisper, Mat,” proceeded the priest--paying not the slightest attention to him, ”did you bring the creel of turf to poor Barney Farrell and his family, as I desired you?”
”I did, your reverence, and put a good heap on it for the creatures.”
”Well, I forgive you the pigs!” exclaimed the benevolent priest, satisfied that his pious injunctions had been duly observed, and extending a portion of his good feeling to the instrument; ”and as for the appet.i.te I spoke of, sure, you good-natured giant you, haven't you health, exercise, and a most destructive set of grinders? and, indeed, the wonder would be if you didn't make the sorrow's havoc at a square of bacon; so for heaping the creel I forgive you the digestion and the pigs both.”
”Will you permit me.” interposed the stranger, a third time.
”But listen again,” proceeded his reverence, ”did you bring the bread and broth to the poor Caseys, the creatures?”
”No, sir,” replied Mat, licking his lips, as the stranger thought, ”it was Kitty Kavanagh brought that; you know you never trust me wid the vittles--ever since--”
”Yes, I ought to have remembered that notorious fact. There's where your weakness is strongest, but, indeed, it is only one of them; for he that would trust you with the carriage of a bottle of whiskey might be said to commit a great oversight of judgment. With regard to the victuals, I once put my trust in G.o.d, and dispatched you, after a full meal, with some small relief to a poor family, in the shape of corned beef and greens, and you know the sequel, that's enough. Be off now, and get the rings made as I desired you.”
He then turned to the stranger, whom he scanned closely; and we need hardly a.s.sure our reader that the other, in his turn, marked the worthy priest's bearing, manner, and conversation with more than usual curiosity. The harmless pa.s.sion in which he found him--his simple but touching benevolence, added to the genuine benignity with which he relaxed his anger against Mat Euly, the gigantic servant, because he told him that he had put a heap upon the creel of turf which he brought to poor Barney Farrell and his family, not omitting the tears he represented himself to have shed from Christian sympathy with Widow Magowran, both of which acts were inventions of the purest water, resorted to in order to soften the kind-hearted priest; all this, we say, added to what he had heard from Birney, deeply interested the stranger in the character of Father Peter. Nor was he less struck by his appearance. Father MacMahon was a round, tight, rosy-faced little man, with laughing eyes, full of good nature, and a countenance which altogether might be termed a t.i.tle-page to benevolence. His lips were finely cut, and his well-formed mouth, though full of sweetness, was utterly free from every indication of sensuality or pa.s.sion. Indeed, it was at all times highly expressive of a disposition the most kind and placable, and not unfrequently of a comical spirit, that blended with his benevolence to a degree that rendered the whole cast of his features, as they varied with and responded to the kindly and natural impulses of his heart, a perfect treat to look upon. That his heart and soul were genuinely Irish, might easily be perceived by the light of humor which beamed with such significant contagion from every feature of his face, as well as by the tear which misery and dest.i.tution and sorrow never failed to bring to his cheek, thus overshadowing for a time, if we may say so, the whole sunny horizon of his countenance. But this was not all; you might read there a spirit of kindly sarcasm that was in complete keeping with a disposition always generous and affectionate, mostly blunt and occasionally caustic. Nothing could exceed the extreme neatness with which he attended to his dress and person. In this point he was scrupulously exact and careful; but this attention to the minor morals was the result of anything but personal pride, for we are bound to say, that, with all his amiable eccentricities, more unaffected humility never dwelt in the heart of a Christian minister.
He had, in fact, paid little or no attention to the stranger until Mat Ruly went out; when, on glancing at him with more attention, he perceived at once that he was evidently a person of no ordinary condition in life.
”I have to ask your pardon, sir,” said he, ”for seeming to neglect you as I did, but the truth is, I was in a white heat of pa.s.sion with that great good-natured colossus of mine, Mat Ruly, for, indeed, he is good-natured, and that I can tell you makes me overlook many a thing in him that I would not otherwise pa.s.s by. Ah, then, sir, did you observe,”
he added, ”how he confessed to heaping the creel of turf for the Farrells, and crying with poor Widow Magowran?”
The stranger could have told him that, if he had seen the comical wink which the aforesaid Mat had given to one of the servant-maids, as he reported his own sympathy and benevolence to his master, he might probably have somewhat restricted his encomium upon him.
”I can't say, sir,” he replied, ”that I paid particular attention to the dialogue between you.”
”Bless me,” exclaimed Father Peter, ”what am I about? Walk into the parlor, sir. Why should I have kept you standing here so long? Pray, take a seat, sir. You must think me very rude and forgetful of the attention due to a gentleman of your appearance.”
”Not at all, sir,” replied the other, seating himself--”I rather think you were better engaged and in higher duties than any that are likely to arise from my communication with you.”
”Well, sir,” replied the priest, smiling, ”that you know is yet to be determined on; but in the mane time I'll be happy to hear your business, whatever it is; and, indeed, from your looks, although the Lord knows they're often treacherous, I tell you that if I can stretch a point to sarve you I will; provided always that I can do so with a good conscience, and provided also that I find your character and conduct ent.i.tle you to it. So, then, I say, let us have at the business you spake of, and to follow up this proposition with suitable energy, what's your name and occupation? for there's nothing like knowing the ground a man stands on. I know you're a stranger in this neighborhood, for I a.s.sure you there is not a face in the parish but I am as well acquainted with as my own, and indeed a great deal betther, in regard that I never shave with a looking-gla.s.s. I tried it once or twice and was near committing suicide in the attempt.”
There was something so kind, frank, yet withal so eccentric, and, as it would seem, so unconsciously humorous in the worthy father's manner, that the stranger, whilst he felt embarra.s.sed by the good-natured bluntness of his interrogations, could not help experiencing a sensation that was equally novel and delightful, arising as it did from the candor and honesty of purpose that were so evident in all the worthy man did and said.
”I should never have supposed, from the remarkable taste of your dress and your general appearance,” he replied, ”that you make your toilet without a looking-gla.s.s.”
”It's a fact, though; neither I nor my worthy father before me ever troubled one; we left them to the girshas and the women; habit is everything, and for that reason I could shave as well at midnight as at the hour of noon. However, let us pa.s.s that by, thank G.o.d I can go out with as clane a face, and I trust with as clear a conscience, always barring the pa.s.sions that Mat Euly puts me into, as some of my neighbors; yet, G.o.d forgive me, why should I boast? for I know and feel that I fall far short of my duty in every sense, especially when I reflect how much of poverty and dest.i.tution are scattered through this apparently wealthy parish. G.o.d forgive me, then, for the boast I made, for it was both wrong and sinful!”
A touch of feeling which it would be difficult to describe, but which raised him still more highly in the estimation of the stranger, here pa.s.sed over his handsome and benevolent features, but after it had pa.s.sed away he returned at once to the object of the stranger's visit.