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Having tired himself, and considerably rubbed down the toe of his boot with his gentlemanly exercise, O'Grady dragged the trumpeter to the ditch, and rolled him into it, there to cool the fever which burned in his seat of honour.
O'Grady then re-entered the carriage with Scatterbrain, and the party proceeded; but the clarionet-player could not blow a note; the fifer was not in good playing condition, and tootled with some difficulty; the drummer was obliged now and then to relax his efforts in making a noise that he might lift his right arm to his nose, which had got damaged in the fray, and the process of wiping his face with his cuff changed the white facings of his jacket to red. The negro cymbal-player was the only one whose damages were not to be ascertained, as a black eye would not tell on him, and his lips could not be more swollen than nature had made them. On the procession went, however; but the rival mob, the Eganites, profiting by the delay caused by the row, got ahead, and entered the town first, with their pipers and fiddlers, hurrahing their way in good humour down the street, and occupying the best places in the court-house before the arrival of the opposite party, whose band, instead of being a source of triumph, was only a thing of jeering merriment to the Eganites, who received them with mockery and laughter.
All this by no means sweetened O'Grady's temper, who looked thunder as he entered the court-house with his candidate, who was, though a good-humoured fellow, a little put out by the accidents of the morning; and Furlong looked more sheepish than ever, as he followed his leaders.
The business of the day was opened by the high-sheriff, and Major Dawson lost no time in rising to propose, that Edward Egan, Esquire, of Merryvale, was a fit and proper person to represent the county in parliament.
The proposition was received with cheers by "the boys" in the body of the court-house; the Major proceeded, full sail, in his speech--his course aided by being on the popular current, and the "sweet voices" of the mult.i.tude blowing in his favour. On concluding (as "the boys"
thought) his address, which was straightforward and to the point, a voice in the crowd proposed "Three cheers for the owld Major." Three deafening peals followed the hint.
"And now," said the Major, "I will read a few extracts here from some doc.u.ments, in support of what I have had the honour of addressing to you." And he pulled out a bundle of papers as he spoke, and laid them down before him.
The movement was not favoured by "the boys," as it indicated a tedious reference to facts by no means to their taste, and the same voice that suggested the three cheers, now sung out--
"Never mind, Major--sure we'll take your word for it!"
Cries of "Order!" and "Silence!" ensued; and were followed by murmurs, coughs, and sneezes, in the crowd, with a considerable shuffling of hobnailed shoes on the pavement.
"Order!" cried a voice in authority.
"Order anything you plaze, sir!" said the voice in the crowd.
"Whisky!" cried one.
"Porther!" cried another.
"Tabakky!" roared a third.
"I must insist on silence!" cried the sheriff, in a very husky voice.
"Silence!--or I'll have the court-house cleared."
"'Faith, if you cleared your own throat it would be better," said the wag in the crowd.
A laugh followed. The sheriff felt the hit, and was silent.
The Major all this time had been adjusting his spectacles on his nose, unconscious, poor old gentleman, that d.i.c.k, according to promise, had abstracted the gla.s.ses from them that morning. He took up his doc.u.ments to read, made sundry wry faces, turned the papers up to the light,--now on this side, and now on that,--but could make out nothing; while d.i.c.k gave a knowing wink at Murphy. The old gentleman took off his spectacles to wipe the gla.s.ses.
The voice in the crowd cried, "Thank you, Major."
The Major pulled out his handkerchief, and his fingers met where he expected to find a lens:--he looked very angry, cast a suspicious glance at d.i.c.k, who met it with the composure of an anchorite, and quietly asked what was the matter.
"I shall not trouble you, gentlemen, with the extracts," said the Major.
"Hear, hear," responded the genteel part of the auditory.
"I tould you we'd take your word, Major," cried the voice in the crowd.
Egan's seconder followed the Major, and the crowd shouted again. O'Grady now came forward to propose the Honourable Sackville Scatterbrain, as a fit and proper person to represent the county in parliament. He was received by his own set of vagabonds with uproarious cheers, and "O'Grady for ever!" made the walls ring. "Egan for ever!" and hurras, were returned from the Merryvalians. O'Grady thus commenced his address:--
"In coming forward to support my honourable friend, the Honourable Sackville Scatterbrain, it is from the conviction--the conviction----"
"Who got the conviction agen the potteen last sis.h.i.+n?" said the voice in the crowd.
Loud groans followed this allusion to the prosecution of a few little private stills, in which O'Grady had shown some unnecessary severity that made him unpopular. Cries of "Order!" and "Silence!" ensued.
"I say the conviction," repeated O'Grady fiercely, looking towards the quarter whence the interruption took place,--"and if there is any blackguard here who dares to interrupt me, I'll order him to be taken out by the ears. I say, I propose my honourable friend, the Honourable Sackville Scatterbrain, from the conviction that there is a necessity in this county----"
"'Faith, there is plenty of necessity," said the tormentor in the crowd.
"Take that man out," said the sheriff.
"Don't hurry yourself, sir," returned the delinquent, amidst the laughter of "the boys," in proportion to whose merriment rose O'Grady's ill-humour.
"I say there is a necessity for a vigorous member to represent this county in parliament, and support the laws, the const.i.tution, the crown, and the--the--interests of the county!"
"Who made the new road?" was a question that now arose from the crowd--a laugh followed--and some groans at this allusion to a bit of jobbing on the part of O'Grady, who got a grand jury presentment to make a road which served n.o.body's interest but his own.
"The frequent interruptions I meet here from the lawless and disaffected show too plainly that we stand in need of men who will support the arm of the law in purging the country."
"Who killed the 'pothecary?" said a fellow, in a voice so deep as seemed fit only to issue from the jaws of death.
The question, and the extraordinary voice in which it was uttered, produced one of those roars of laughter which sometimes shake public meetings in Ireland; and O'Grady grew furious.
"If I knew who that gentleman was, I'd pay him!" said he.
"You'd better pay _them you know_," was the answer; and this allusion to O'Grady's notorious character of a bad payer, was relished by the crowd, and again raised the laugh against him.
"Sir," said O'Grady, addressing the sheriff, "I hold this ruffianism in contempt. I treat it, and the authors of it, those who no doubt have instructed them, with contempt." He looked over to where Egan and his friends stood, as he spoke of the crowd having had instruction to interrupt him.
"If you mean, sir," said Egan, "that I have given any such instructions, I deny, in the most unqualified terms, the truth of such an a.s.sertion."
"Keep yourself cool, Ned," said d.i.c.k Dawson, close to his ear.
"Never fear me," said Egan; "but I won't let him bully."
The two former friends now exchanged rather fierce looks at each other.
"Then why am I interrupted?" asked O'Grady.
"It is no business of mine to answer that," replied Egan; "but I repeat the unqualified denial of your a.s.sertion."
The crowd ceased its noise when the two Squires were seen engaged in exchanging smart words, in the hopes of catching what they said.
"It is a disgraceful uproar," said the sheriff.
"Then it is your business, Mister Sheriff," returned Egan, "to suppress it--not mine; they are quiet enough now."
"Yes, but they'll make a wow again," said Furlong, "when Miste' O'Gwady begins."