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In these days he would walk down frequently to the meadows and see the work which the men were doing. He had greatly enlarged them, having borrowed money for the purpose from the Government Land Commissioners, and was once again allowing new hopes to spring in his heart. Though he was a man so silent, and appearing to be so apathetic, he was intent enough on his own purposes when they became clear before his eyes. From his first coming into this country his purport had been to do good, as far as the radius of his circle went, to all whom it included. The necessity of living was no doubt the same with him as with others,--and of living well. He must do something for himself and his children. But together with this was the desire, nearly equally strong, of being a benefactor to those around him. He had declared to himself when he bought the property that with this object would he settle himself down upon it, and he had not departed from it. He had brought up his children with this purpose; and they had learned to feel, one and all, that it was among the pleasures and the duties of their life. Then had come Pat Carroll, and everything had been embittered for him. All Ballintubber and all Morony had seemed to turn against him. When he found that Pat Carroll was disposed to be hostile to him, he made the man a liberal offer to take himself off to America. But Mr. Jones, in those days, had heard nothing of Lax, and was unaware that Lax was a dominant spirit under whom he was doomed to suffer.
"I did not know you so well then," said Captain Clayton to Mr. Jones, now some weeks hence, "or I could have told you that Pat Carroll is n.o.body. Pat Carroll is considered n.o.body, because he has not been to New York. Mr. Lax has travelled, and Mr. Lax is somebody. Mr. Lax settled himself in County Mayo, and thus he allowed his influence to spread itself among us over here in County Galway. Mr. Lax is a great man, but I rather think that he will have to be hanged in Galway jail before a month has pa.s.sed over his head."
Mr. Jones usually took his son with him when he walked about among the meadows, and he again expressed his wishes to him as though Frank hereafter were to have the management of everything. But on one occasion, towards the latter half of the afternoon, he went alone.
There were different wooden barriers, having sluice gates pa.s.sing between them, over which he would walk, and at present there were sheep on the upper meadows, on which the luxuriant gra.s.s had begun to grow in the early summer. He was looking at his sheep now, and thinking to himself that he could find a market for them in spite of all that the boycotters could do to prevent him. But in one corner, where the meadows ceased, and Pat Carroll's land began, he met an old man whom he had known well in former years, named Con Heffernan. It was absolutely the case that he, the landlord, did not at the present moment know who occupied Pat Carroll's land, though he did know that he had received no rent for the last three years. And he knew also that Con Heffernan was a friend of Carroll's, or, as he believed, a distant cousin. And he knew also that Con was supposed to have been one of those who had a.s.sisted at the destruction of the sluice gates.
"Well, Con; how are you?" he said.
"Why thin, yer honour, I'm only puirly. It's bad times as is on us now, indeed and indeed."
"Whose fault is that?" said the squire.
"Not yer honour's. I will allys say that for your honour. You never did nothing to none of us."
"You had land on the estate till some twelve months since, and then you were evicted for five gales of rent."
"That's thrue, too, yer honour."
"You ought to be a rich man now, seeing that you have got two-and-a-half years' rent in your pocket, and I ought to be poor, seeing that I've got none of it."
"Is it puir for yer honour, and is it rich for the like of me?"
"What have you done with the money, Con,--the five gales of rent?"
"'Deed, yer honour, and I don't be just knowing anything about it."
"I suppose the Landleaguers have had some of it."
"I suppose they have, thin; the black divil run away with them for Laaguers!"
"Have you quarrelled with the League, Con?"
"I have quarrelled with a'most of the things which is a-going at the present moment."
"I'm sorry for that, as quarrels with old friends are always bad."
"The Laague, then, isn't any such old friend of mine. I niver heerd of the Laague, not till nigh three years ago. What with Faynians, and moonlighters, and Home-Rulers, and now with thim Laaguers, they don't lave a por boy any pace."
POSTSCRIPT.
In a preliminary note to the first volume I stated why this last-written novel of my father's was never completed. He had intended that Yorke Clayton should marry Edith Jones, that Frank Jones should marry Rachel O'Mahony, and that Lax should be hanged for the murder of Florian Jones; but no other coming incident, or further unravelling of the story, is known.
H. M. T.
THE END.
Charles d.i.c.kens And Evans, Crystal Palace Press.