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Except that they were both members of the viceregal household, and English by birth, there was scarcely a tie between these very dissimilar natures; but somehow the accidents of daily life, stronger than the traits of disposition, threw them into intimacy, and they agreed it would be a good thing 'to see something of Ireland'; and with this wise resolve they had set out on that half-fishing excursion, which, having taken them over the Westmeath lakes, now was directing them to the Shannon, but with an infirmity of purpose to which lack of sport and disastrous weather were contributing powerfully at the moment we have presented them to our reader.
To employ the phrase which it is possible each might have used, they 'liked each other well enough'--that is, each found something in the other he 'could get on with'; but there was no stronger tie of regard or friendship between them, and each thought he perceived some flaw of pretension, or affected wisdom, or selfishness, or vanity, in the other, and actually believed he amused himself by its display. In natures, tastes, and dispositions, they were miles asunder, and disagreement between them would have been unceasing on every subject, had they not been gentlemen. It was this alone--this gentleman element--made their companionship possible, and, in the long run, not unpleasant. So much more has good-breeding to do in the common working of daily life than the more valuable qualities of mind and temperament.
Though much younger than his companion, Walpole took the lead in all the arrangements of the journey, determined where and how long they should halt, and decided on the route next to be taken; the other showing a real or affected indifference on all these matters, and making of his town-bred apathy a very serviceable quality in the midst of Irish barbarism and desolation. On politics, too--if that be the name for such light convictions as they entertained--they differed: the soldier's ideas being formed on what he fancied would be the late Duke of Wellington's opinion, and consisted in what he called 'putting down.' Walpole was a promising Whig; that is, one who coquets with Radical notions, but fastidiously avoids contact with the mob; and who, fervently believing that all popular concessions are spurious if not stamped with Whig approval, would like to treat the democratic leaders as forgers and knaves.
If, then, there was not much of similarity between these two men to attach them to each other, there was what served for a bond of union: they belonged to the same cla.s.s in life, and used pretty nigh the same forms for their expression of like and dislike; and as in traffic it contributes wonderfully to the facilities of business to use the same money, so in the common intercourse of life will the habit to estimate things at the same value conduce to very easy relations, and something almost like friendship.
While they sat over the fire awaiting their supper, each had lighted a cigar, busying himself from time to time in endeavouring to dry some drenched article of dress, or extracting from damp and dripping pockets their several contents.
'This, then,' said the younger man--'this is the picturesque Ireland our tourist writers tell us of; and the land where the _Times_ says the traveller will find more to interest him than in the Tyrol or the Oberland.'
'What about the climate?' said the other, in a deep ba.s.s voice.
'Mild and moist, I believe, are the epithets; that is, it makes you damp, and it keeps you so.'
'And the inns?'
'The inns, it is admitted, might be better; but the traveller is admonished against fastidiousness, and told that the prompt spirit of obligeance, the genial cordiality, he will meet with, are more than enough to repay him for the want of more polished habits and mere details of comfort and convenience.'
'Rotten humbug! _I_ don't want cordiality from my innkeeper.'
'I should think not! As, for instance, a bit of carpet in this room would be worth more than all the courtesy that showed us in.'
'What was that lake called--the first place I mean?' asked Lockwood.
'Lough Brin. I shouldn't say but with better weather it might be pretty.'
A half-grunt of dissent was all the reply, and Walpole went on--
It's no use painting a landscape when it is to be smudged all over with Indian ink. There are no tints in mountains swathed in mist, no colour in trees swamped with moisture; everything seems so imbued with damp, one fancies it would take two years in the tropics to dry Ireland.'
'I asked that fellow who showed us the way here, why he didn't pitch off those wet rags he wore, and walk away in all the dignity of nakedness.'
A large dish of rashers and eggs, and a mess of Irish stew, which the landlord now placed on the table, with a foaming jug of malt, seemed to rally them out of their ill-temper; and for some time they talked away in a more cheerful tone.
'Better than I hoped for,' said Walpole.
'Fair!'
'And that ale, too--I suppose it is called ale--is very tolerable.'
'It's downright good. Let us have some more of it.' And he shouted, 'Master!' at the top of his voice. 'More of this,' said Lockwood, touching the measure. 'Beer or ale, which is it?'
'Castle Bellingham, sir,' replied the landlord; 'beats all the Ba.s.s and Allsopp that ever was brewed.'
'You think so, eh?'
'I'm sure of it, sir. The club that sits here had a debate on it one night, and put it to the vote, and there wasn't one man for the English liquor. My lord there,' said he, pointing to the portrait, 'sent an account of it all to _Saunders_' newspaper.'
While he left the room to fetch the ale, the travellers both fixed their eyes on the picture, and Walpole, rising, read out the inscription--'Viscount Kilgobbin.'
'There's no such t.i.tle,' said the other bluntly.
'Lord Kilgobbin--Kilgobbin? Where did I hear that name before?'
'In a dream, perhaps.'
'No, no. I _have_ heard it, if I could only remember where and how! I say, landlord, where does his lordship live?' and he pointed to the portrait.
'Beyond, at the castle, sir. You can see it from the door without when the weather's fine.'
'That must mean on a very rare occasion!' said Lockwood gravely.
'No indeed, sir. It didn't begin to rain on Tuesday last till after three o'clock.'
'Magnificent climate!' exclaimed Walpole enthusiastically.
'It is indeed, sir. Glory be to G.o.d!' said the landlord, with an honest gravity that set them both off laughing.
'How about this club--does it meet often?'
'It used, sir, to meet every Thursday evening, and my lord never missed a night, but quite lately he took it in his head not to come out in the evenings. Some say it was the rheumatism, and more says it's the unsettled state of the country; though, the Lord be praised for it, there wasn't a man fired at in the neighbourhood since Easter, and _he_ was a peeler.'
'One of the constabulary?'
'Yes, sir; a dirty, mean chap, that was looking after a poor boy that set fire to Mr. Hagin's ricks, and that was over a year ago.'
'And naturally forgotten by this time?'
'By coorse it was forgotten. Ould Mat Hagin got a presentment for the damage out of the grand-jury, and n.o.body was the worse for it at all.'
'And so the club is smashed, eh?'
'As good as smashed, sir; for whenever any of them comes now of an evening, he just goes into the bar and takes his gla.s.s there.'
He sighed heavily as he said this, and seemed overcome with sadness.
'I'm trying to remember why the name is so familiar to me. I know I have heard of Lord Kilgobbin before,' said Walpole.
'Maybe so,' said the landlord respectfully. 'You may have read in books how it was at Kilgobbin Castle King James came to stop after the Boyne; that he held a "coort" there in the big drawing-room--they call it the "throne-room" ever since--and slept two nights at the castle afterwards?'
'That's something to see, Walpole,' said Lockwood.
'So it is. How is that to be managed, landlord? Does his lordship permit strangers to visit the castle?'
'Nothing easier than that, sir,' said the host, who gladly embraced a project that should detain his guests at the inn. 'My lord went through the town this morning on his way to Loughrea fair; but the young ladies is at home; and you've only to send over a message, and say you'd like to see the place, and they'll be proud to show it to you.'
'Let us send our cards, with a line in pencil,' said Walpole, in a whisper to his friend.