Luttrell Of Arran
ce in the maxim when applied to certain remote and little-visited districts in these islands, where
erved for the studies of philosophers and sages, these poor creatures drag on an existence rather beneath than above the habits of savage life. Their dwellings, their food, th
verty and barbarism. Some circular mud hovels, shaped like beehives, and with a central aperture for the escape of the smoke, are the dwellings of an almost naked, famine-stricken people, whose looks, language, and gestures mark them out for foreigners if they chan
ich, whether meant for defence or some religious object, was, during its construction, a much-debated question by the people. The intention to resume a sovereignty which had lain so long in abeyance would have been a bold measure in such a spot if it had not been preceded by the assurance that the chief meant to disturb nothing, dispute nothing of vested interests. They were told that he who was coming was a man weary of the world and its ways, who desired simply a spot of earth where he might live in peace, and where, dying, he might leave his bones with the Luttrells, whose graves for generations back thronged the narrow aisle of the church. These facts, and that he had a sickly wife and one child, a boy of a
handsome, but her wasted figure and incessant cough showed she was in the last stage of consumption. The child was a picture of infantile beauty, and that daring boldness which sits so gracefully on childhood. If he was dressed in the very chea
ep curiosity alive. All that they knew of Luttrell was to meet him in his walks, and receive the short, not over-courteous nod with which he acknowledged their salutations. Of his wife, they only saw the wasted form that half lay, half sat at a window; so that all their thoughts were centred in the child-the Prince-who came familiarly amongst them, uncared for and unheeded by his own, and free to pass his days with the other children as they heaped wood upon the kelp f
at seemed to augment this terror. His days were passed in search of relics and antiquarian objects, of which the Abbey possessed a rich store, and to their simple intelligence these things smacked of magic. To hear the clink of his spade within the walls of the ol
w him to her heart, and as she pressed his golden locks close to her, her tears would fall fast upon them, but dreading lest her sorrow should throw a shade over his sunny happines
e on either side of the fireplace, over which, on a bracket, was an enormous human skull, an inscription being attached to it, with the reasons for believing its size to be gigantic rather than the consequences of diseased growth. Strange-shaped bones, and arrow-heads, and stone spears and javelins decorated the walls, withd discoloured by time. The window was open, and offered a wide view over the sea, on which a faint moonl
, and then resumed his reading; but it was easy to see that the pages did not engage
and opened it. It was the woman-servant who formed his
d he, in so
is come," sai
, as though to
t he says he hopes that you'll come over to Belmull
rose to a key of passionate eagerness
at you'll tel
n Luttrell, angrily. "I'm not
r the blessed Sacrament!
leaned his head on the chimney-piece; and then, without raising i
ome in!" cried Luttrell, and there entered a short, slightly-made man, middle-aged and active-looking, with
. She's in glory!"
ain?" aske
he last. Indeed, her last words were to re
in Luttrell, impatientl
hardily. "When you had the courage to make a peasant girl you
was brought up a Catholic; I never interfered with her convictions. If I never spoke to her on the subject of her faith, it was no small concession from a man who felt on the matter as I did. I
e you to do it. There was no stain on your wife'
you, Father Lowrie?" asked Luttr
good friend to me and mine before ruin overtoo
your debtor, Sir, a
hat has just gone, begged and prayed me with her last breath to look after
pe for success for such a scheme, take a likelier moment, father; this
y opportunity to see and ta
d early," said Luttrell. "Your own good feeling
these last words were spoken, t
oman, as he passed out, "wi
how, Molly," sai
the third day. A messenger had been despatched to his late wife's relatives, who lived about seventy miles off, down the coast of Mayo, and to invite them to attend. Of her immediate family none remained. Her father was in banishment, the commutation of a sentence of death. Of her two brothers, one
on of the cottier; but they were, as a family, a determined, resolute, hard-headed race, not a little dreaded in the neighbourhood where
d no recollection of him. Nothing short of an absolute necessity-for as such he felt it-would have induced him to send for them now; but he knew well how rigid were popular prejudi
those melancholy festivities which the lower Irish adhere to with a devotion that
l see them when they come, and take leave of them when they go; but they are not to expe
with her apron-"what's to be done with him? 'Tis two
rrow, and will soo
said she, tenderly-"it's kil
mile, "that neither sorrow nor shame ever killed. Leav
her horror at such a sentiment, and
everything, Molly?" a
ty-nine, if Mr. Rafter comes; but we don't expect him-and Fat
this-this feast
he funeral, by coor
leave this the ne
he, no less offended at the doubt than at
he, with a sigh. "I hav
"that they'll expect your Honour will go in for a minute
ad in dissent,
, Sir," said she, eagerly, "and if they though
her memory than these ignorant peasants. Let there be no more of this;" and he closed the door afte