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WHY THE
LITTLE FRENCHMAN
WEARS HIS HAND IN
A SLING.
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IT'S
on my Wisiting cards sure enough (and it's them
that's all o'
pink
satin paper) that inny gintleman that plases may behould the
intheristhin
words, "Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt, 39 Southampton Row,
Russell
Square, Parrish o' Bloomsbury." And shud ye be wantin' to diskiver who
is the pink of purliteness quite, and the laider of the hot tun in the
houl city o' Lonon — why it's jist mesilf. And fait that same is no
wonder
at all at all, (so be plased to stop curlin your nose,) for every inch
o'
the six wakes that I've been a gintleman, and left aff wid the
bog-throthing
to take up wid the Barronissy, i'ts Pathrick that's been living like a
houly imperor, and gitting the iddication and the graces. Och! and
would'nt
it be a blessed thing for your sperrits if ye cud lay your two peepers
jist, upon Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt, when he is all riddy
drissed
for the hopperer, or stipping into the Brisky for the drive into the
Hyde
Park. — But it's the iligant big figgur that I ave, for the rason o'
which
all the ladies fall in love wid me. Isn't it my own swate silf now
that'll
missure the six fut, and the three inches more nor that, in me
stockings,
and that am excadingly will proportioned all over to match? And it is
ralelly
more than three fut and a bit that there is, inny how, of the little
ould
furrener Frinchman that lives jist over the way, and that's a oggling
and
a goggling the houl day, (and bad luck to him,) at the purty widdy
Misthress
Tracle that's my own nixt door neighbor, (God bliss her) and a most
particuller
frind and [page 474:] acquaintance? You percave the little
spalpeen is summat down
in the mouth, and wears his lift hand in a sling; and it's for that
same
thing, by yur lave, that I'm going to give you the good rason.
The truth of the houl matter is jist
simple enough; for
the very
first
day that I com'd from Connaught, and showd my swate little silf in the
strait to the widdy, who was looking through the windy, it was a gone
case
althegither wid the heart o' the purty Misthress Tracle. I percaved
it,
ye see, all at once, and no mistake, and that's God's thruth. First of
all
it was up wid the windy in a jiffy, and thin she threw open her two
peepers
to the itmost, and thin it was a little gould spy-glass that she
clapped
tight to one o' them, and divil may burn me if it did'nt spake to me as
plain as a peeper cud spake, and says it, through the spy-glass, "Och!
the tip o' the mornin to ye, Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt,
mavourneen;
and it's a nate gintleman that ye are, sure enough, and it's mesilf and
me forten jist that'll be at yur sarvice, dear, inny time o' day at all
at all for the asking." And it's not mesilf ye wud have to be bate in
the
purliteness; so I made her a bow that wud ha broken yur heart
althegither
to behould, and thin I pulled aff me hat with a flourish, and thin I
winked
at her hard wid both eyes, as much as to say, "Thrue for you, yer a
swate
little crature, Mrs. Tracle, me darlint, and I wish I may be drownthed
dead in a bog, if it's not mesilf, Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt,
that'll make a houl bushel o' love to yur leddy-ship, in the twinkling
o'
the eye of a Londonderry purraty."
And it was the nixt mornin, sure,
jist as I was making
up me mind
whither
it wouldn't be the purlite thing to sind a bit o' writin to the widdy
by way of a love-litter, when up cum'd the delivery servant wid an
illigant
card, and he tould me that the name on it (for I niver cud rade the
copper-plate
printin on account of being lift handed) was all about Mounseer, the
Count,
A Goose, Look-aisy, Maiter-di-dauns, and that the houl of the
divilish
lingo was the spalpeeny long name of the little ould furrener Frinchman
as lived over the way.
And jist wid that in cum'd the little
willian himself,
and thin he
made
me a broth of a bow, and thin he said he had ounly taken the liberty of
doing me the honor of the giving me a call, and thin [page 475:]
he went on to
palaver
at a great rate, and divil the bit did I comprehind what he wud be
afther
the tilling me at all at all, excipting and saving that he said "pully
wou, woolly wou," and tould me, among a bushel o' lies, bad luck to
him,
that he was mad for the love o' my widdy Misthress Tracle, and that my
widdy Mrs. Tracle had a puncheon for him.
At the hearin of this, ye may swear,
though, I was as
mad as a
grasshopper,
but I remimbered that I was Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt, and
that
it wasn't althegither gentaal to lit the anger git the upper hand o'
the
purliteness, so I made light o' the matter and kipt dark, and got quite
sociable wid the little chap, and afther a while what did he do but ask
me to go wid him to the widdy's, saying he wud give me the feshionable
inthroduction to her leddyship.
"Is it there ye are?" said I thin to
mesilf, "and it's
thrue for
you,
Pathrick, that ye're the fortunnittest mortal in life. We'll soon see
now
whither it's your swate silf, or whither its [[it's]] little Mounseer
Maiter-di-dauns,
that Misthress Tracle is head and ears in the love wid."
Wid that we wint aff to the widdy's,
next door, and ye
may well say
it was an illigant place; so it was. There was a carpet all over the
floor,
and in one corner there was a forty-pinny and a jews-harp and the
divil
knows what ilse, and in another corner was a sofy, the beautifullest
thing
in all natur, and sitting on the sofy, sure enough, there was the swate
little angel, Misthress Tracle.
"The tip o' the morning to ye," says
I, "Mrs. Tracle,"
and thin I
made
sich an illigant obaysance that it wud ha quite althegither bewildered
the brain o' ye.
"Wully woo, pully woo, plump in the
mud," says the
little furrenner
Frinchman, "and sure Mrs. Tracle," says he, that he did, "isn't this
gintleman
here jist his reverence Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt, and isn't
he althegither and entirely the most particular frind and acquintance
that I have in the houl world?"
And wid that the widdy, she gits up
from the sofy, and
makes the
swatest
curtchy nor iver was seen; and thin down she sits like an angel; and
thin,
by the powers, it was that little spalpeen Mounseer Maiter-di-dauns
that
plumped his silf right down by the [page 476:] right side of
her. Och hon! I
ixpicted
the two eyes o' me wud ha cum'd out of my head on the spot, I was so
dispirate
mad! Howiver, "Bait who!" says I, after a while. "Is it there ye are,
Mounseer
Maiter-di-dauns?" and so down I plumped on the lift side of her
leddyship,
to be aven wid the willain. Botheration! it wud ha done your heart
good
to percave the illigant double wink that I gived her jist thin right in
the face wid both eyes.
But the little ould Frinchman he
niver beginned to
suspict me at all
at all, and disperate hard it was he made the love to her leddyship.
"Woully
wou," says he, "Pully wou," says he, "Plump in the mud," says he.
"That's all to no use, Mounseer Frog,
mavourneen,"
thinks I; and I
talked
as hard and as fast as I could all the while, and throth it was mesilf
jist that divarted her leddyship complately and intirely, by rason of
the
illigant conversation that I kipt up wid her all about the dear bogs of
Connaught. And by and by she gived me such a swate smile, from one ind
of her mouth to the ither, that it made me as bould as a pig, and I
jist
took hould of the ind of her little finger in the most dillikittest
manner
in natur, looking at her all the while out o' the whites of my eyes.
And then ounly percave the cuteness
of the swate angel,
for no
sooner
did she obsarve that I was afther the squazing of her flipper, than she
up wid it in a jiffy, and put it away behind her back, jist as much as
to say, "Now thin, Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, there's a bitther chance
for
ye, mavourneen, for it's not altogether the gentaal thing to be afther
the squazing of my flipper right full in the sight of that little
furrenner
Frinchman, Mounseer Maiter-di-dauns."
Wid that I giv'd her a big wink jist
to say, "lit Sir
Pathrick alone
for the likes o' them thricks," and thin I wint aisy to work, and you'd
have died wid the divarsion to behould how cliverly I slipped my right
arm betwane the back o' the sofy, and the back of her leddyship, and
there,
sure enough, I found a swate little flipper all a waiting to say, "the
tip o' the mornin to ye, Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt." And
wasn't
it mesilf, sure, that jist giv'd it the laste little bit of a squaze in
the world, all in the way of a commincement, and not to be too rough
wid
her leddyship? and och, botheration, wasn't it the gentaalest and
dilikittest
of all the little squazes that I got in return? "Blood and thunder, Sir
[page 477:] Pathrick, mavourneen," thinks I to
mesilf, "fait it's jist the mother's
son of you, and nobody else at all at all, that's the handsomest and
the
fortunittest young bogthrotter that ever cum'd out of Connaught!" And
wid that I giv'd the flipper a big squaze, and a big squaze it was, by
the powers, that her leddyship giv'd to me back. But it would ha split
the seven sides of you wid the laffin to behould, jist then all at
once,
the consated behavior of Mounseer Maiter-di-dauns. The likes o' sich a
jabbering, and a smirking, and a parley-wouing as he begin'd wid her
leddyship,
niver was known before upon arth; and divil may burn me if it wasn't me
own very two peepers that cotch'd him tipping her the wink out of one
eye.
Och, hon? if it wasn't mesilf thin that was mad as a Kilkenny cat I
shud
like to be tould who it was!
"Let me infarm you, Mounseer
Maiter-di-dauns," said I,
as purlite as
iver ye seed, "that it's not the gintaal thing at all at all, and not
for
the likes o' you inny how, to be afther the oggling and a goggling at
her
leddyship in that fashion," and jist wid that such another squaze as it
was I giv'd her flipper, all as much as to say, "isn't it Sir Pathrick
now, my jewel, that'll be able to the protecting o' you, my darlint?"
and
then there cum'd another squaze back, all by way of the answer. "Thrue
for you, Sir Pathrick," it said as plain as iver a squaze said in the
world,
"Thrue for you, Sir Pathrick, mavourneen, and it's a proper nate
gintleman
ye are — that God's truth," and wid that she opened her two
beautiful
peepers till I belaved they wud ha com'd out of her hid althegither
and
intirely, and she looked first as mad as a cat at Mounseer Frog, and
thin
as smiling as all out o' doors at mesilf.
"Thin," says he, the willian, "Och
hon! and a wolly-wou,
pully-wou,"
and then wid that he shoved up his two shoulders till the divil the bit
of his hid was to be diskivered, and then he let down the two corners
of
his purraty-trap, and thin not a haporth more of the satisfaction could
I git out o' the spalpeen.
Belave me, my jewel, it was Sir
Pathrick that was
unrasonable mad
thin,
and the more by token that the Frinchman kept [[kipt]] an wid his
winking at the
widdy; and the widdy she kipt an wid the squazing of my flipper, as
much
as to say, "At him again [[,]] Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, mavourneen;"
so I
just
ripped out wid a big oath, and says I, [page 478:]
"Ye little spalpeeny frog of a
bog-throtting son of a
bloody-noun!" — and jist thin what d'ye think it was that her leddyship
did? Troth
she
jumped up from the sofy as if she was bit, and made off through the
door,
while I turned my head round afther her, in a complete bewilderment and
botheration, and followed her wid me two peepers. You percave I had a
reason
of my own for knowing that she could'nt git down the stares althegither
and entirely; for I knew very well that I had hould of her hand, for
the
divil the bit had I iver lit it go. And says I,
"Isn't it the laste
little
bit of a mistake in the world that ye've been afther the making, yer
leddyship?
Come back now, that's a darlint, and I'll give ye yur flipper." But aff
she wint down the stairs like a shot, and then [[thin]] I turned round
to the
little
Frinch furrenner. Och hon! if it wasn't his spalpeeny little paw that I
had hould of in my own — why thin — thin it was'nt — that's all.
"And maybe it wasn't mesilf that jist
died then outright
wid the
laffin,
to behold the little chap when he found out that it wasn't the widdy at
all at all that he had had hould of all the time, but only Sir Pathrick
O'Grandison. The ould divil himself niver behild sich a long face as he
pet an! As for Sir Pathrick O'Grandison, Barronitt, it wasn't for the
likes
of his riverence to be afther the minding of a thrifle of a mistake. Ye
may jist say, though (for it's God's thruth) that afore I left hould
of
the flipper of the spalpeen, (which was not till afther her leddyship's
futman had kicked us both down the stairs,) I gived it such a nate
little
broth of a squaze as made it all up into raspberry jam.
"Wouly-wou," says he, "pully-wou,"
says he — "Cot
tam!"
And that's jist the thruth of the
rason why he wears his
left hand
in
a sling.
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