登陆注册
5451500000033

第33章

'Where spreads the beautiful water to gay or cloudy skies, And the purple peaks of Killarney from ancient woods arise.'

William Allingham.

Mrs. Mullarkey cannot spoil this paradise for us. When I wake in the morning, the fuchsia-tree outside my window is such a glorious mass of colour that it distracts my eyes from the unwashed glass.

The air is still; the mountains in the far distance are clear purple; everything is fresh washed and purified for the new day.

Francesca and I leave the house sleeping, and make our way to the bogs. We love to sit under a blossoming sloe-bush and see the silver pools glistening here and there in the turf cuttings, and watch the transparent vapour rising from the red-brown of the purple-shadowed bog fields. Dinnis Rooney, half awake, leisurely, silent, is moving among the stacks with his creel. How the missel thrushes sing in the woods, and the plaintive note of the curlew gives the last touch of mysterious tenderness to the scene. There is a moist, rich fragrance of meadowsweet and bog myrtle in the air; and how fresh and wild and verdant it is!

'For there's plenty to mind, sure, if on'y ye look to the grass at your feet, For 'tis thick wid the tussocks of heather, an' blossoms and herbs that smell sweet If ye tread thim; an' maybe the white o' the bog-cotton waves in the win', Like the wool ye might shear off a night-moth, an' set an ould fairy to spin;

Or wee frauns, each wan stuck 'twixt two leaves on a grand little stem of its own, Lettin' on 'twas a plum on a tree.'*

*Jane Barlow.

As for Lough Lein itself, who could speak its loveliness, lying like a crystal mirror beneath the black Reeks of the McGillicuddy, where, in the mountain fastnesses, lie spell-bound the sleeping warriors who, with their bridles and broadswords in hand, await but the word to give Erin her own! When we glide along the surface of the lakes, on some bright day after a heavy rain; when we look down through the clear water on tiny submerged islets, with their grasses and drowned daisies glancing up at us from the blue; when we moor the boat and climb the hillsides, we are dazzled by the luxuriant beauty of it all. It hardly seems real--it is too green, too perfect, to be believed; and one thinks of some fairy drop-scene, painted by cunning-fingered elves and sprites, who might have a wee folk's way of mixing roses and rainbows, dew-drenched greens and sun-warmed yellows; showing the picture to you first all burnished, glittering and radiant, then 'veiled in mist and diamonded with showers.' We climb, climb, up, up, into the heart of the leafy loveliness; peering down into dewy dingles, stopping now and again to watch one of the countless streams as it tinkles and gurgles down an emerald ravine to join the lakes. The way is strewn with lichens and mosses; rich green hollies and arbutus surround us on every side; the ivy hangs in sweet disorder from the rocks; and when we reach the innermost recess of the glen we can find moist green jungles of ferns and bracken, a very bending, curling forest of fronds:--'The fairy's tall palm-tree, the heath bird's fresh nest, And the couch the red deer deems the sweetest and best.'

Carrantual rears its crested head high above the other mountains, and on its summit Shon the Outlaw, footsore, weary, slept; sighing, "For once, thank God, I am above all my enemies."

You must go to sweet Innisfallen, too, and you must not be prosaic or incredulous at the boatman's stories, or turn the 'bodthered ear to them.' These are no ordinary hillsides: not only do the wee folk troop through the frond forests nightly, but great heroic figures of romance have stalked majestically along these mountain summits. Every waterfall foaming and dashing from its rocky bed in the glen has a legend in the toss and swirl of the water.

Can't you see the O'Sullivan, famous for fleetness of foot and prowess in the chase, starting forth in the cool o' the morn to hunt the red deer? His dogs sniff the heather; a splendid stag bounds across the path; swift as lightning the dogs follow the scent across moors and glens. Throughout the long day the chieftain chases the stag, until at nightfall, weary and thirsty, he loses the scent, and blows a blast on his horn to call the dogs homeward.

And then he hears a voice: "O'Sullivan, turn back!"

He looks over his shoulder to behold the great Finn McCool, central figure in centuries of romance.

"Why do you dare chase my stag?" he asks.

"Because it is the finest man ever saw," answers the chieftain composedly.

"You are a valiant man," says the hero, pleased with the reply;

"and as you thirst from the long chase, I will give you to drink."

So he crunches his giant heel into the rock, and forth burst the waters, seething and roaring as they do to this day; "and may the divil fly away wid me if I've spoke an unthrue word, ma'am!"

Come to Lough Lein as did we, too early for the crowd of sightseers; but when the 'long light shakes across the lakes,' the blackest arts of the tourist (and they are as black as they are many) cannot break the spell. Sitting on one of these hillsides, we heard a bugle-call taken up and repeated in delicate, ethereal echoes,--sweet enough, indeed, to be worthy of the fairy buglers who are supposed to pass the sound along their lines from crag to crag, until it faints and dies in silence. And then came the 'Lament for Owen Roe O'Neil.'

同类推荐
  • 题灞西骆隐士

    题灞西骆隐士

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玉井樵唱

    玉井樵唱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Patrol of the Sun Dance Trail

    The Patrol of the Sun Dance Trail

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大唐故三藏玄奘法师行状

    大唐故三藏玄奘法师行状

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杂事

    杂事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 红尘过往

    红尘过往

    这些成为历史的人物,照亮过夜空,温暖过岁月,让世人仰望……只是,上帝总是喜欢捉弄人间的才女,在感情的道路上,不会让她们一帆风顺,如愿以偿。总是折磨得遍体鳞伤,心力交瘁,比如石评梅,比如张爱玲,比如三毛,比如萧红,比如卓文君……她们如流星一样划过历史的星空,留下那粉红色的梦!
  • 为什么每一世都有他

    为什么每一世都有他

    因为一场意外,她被系统选中。本来毫无交集的两个人阴差阳错在一起了。第一世:她为师,他为徒,她的任务是救天道之子——何某,然后救错人了,救了一个炮灰。任务失败,进入下一世。第二世:她为姐,他为弟。她第一眼就认出他,见他可怜又救了他,然后,他是反派,她的敌人。她于心不忍,打算养大再为敌。然后她死了。任务失败。第三世:她又认出他,她又心软救了他。最后,任务失败。……为什么每一世都有他!!能不能让她好好做个任务!
  • 商战斥候
  • 天地劫

    天地劫

    世事何须辨浊清;天地不仁,善恶一念,神魔只在转瞬间。上古时期,人神共居,引起三界大乱。怫、神、仙、道、人、鬼都想独霸三界,到底谁才是霸者?谁才是英雄?神魔只在一念,杀神弑佛,是正是邪,自有众人评论。书中将一些神器、道术、武术混为一体,成为最早的修真方法,是不是所有的修真都可以长生?是不是所有的善都带着恶?谁正谁邪,公道自在人心。
  • 我的分身是只鬼

    我的分身是只鬼

    大梦谁先觉,平生我自知。一觉醒来,苏木惊愕的发现她有了一只鬼怪分身,而且还是聊斋中的女鬼。一时间,各种灵异事件仰面而来!
  • 执宰大宋

    执宰大宋

    未央觉得登州太穷,于是登州成为天下第一富庶府州。未央觉得皇帝太仁慈,于是赵祯横刀立马,操刀来到了前线。未央觉得辽国太欠,于是辽国被狄汉臣帅大宋铁骑灭了。未央觉得西夏太嚣张,李谅祚立刻去除国号,俯首称臣。不一样的宋时明月,不一样的晓风残月。新书《唐司命》,请大家收藏一下。
  • 双界之缘

    双界之缘

    这是两个世界的故事。一代星神的陨落,打破了天星和地球间的壁障。北山崖边,四王一帝在审判他的同时,也留下了一线生机。肉身尽毁,化而为桥;灵魂出体,尚存一息。他,白风,已作为地球人而活,可天星依旧需要他。于是,他重返天星。且看他如何在两个世界中,闯出一片属于自己的天地。PS1:本书采取双位面流,先从地球上写起,之后会转入天星的位面PS2:书友群:1153173021,欢迎加入
  • 太初

    太初

    一树生的万朵花,天下道门是一家。法术千般变化,人心却亘古不变
  • 重生逆袭:男神,别跑!

    重生逆袭:男神,别跑!

    初三亲眼目睹父母车祸,痛失双亲。自强不息,努力活着却得到初恋意外身亡的消息。拼命工作麻痹自己,却遭亲叔叔一家迫害坠楼,成为没有自主行动能力的植物人。期间亲耳听到原来从小到大所遭受一切悲剧都是堂姐一家布局多年一手策划。未能报仇又遭堂姐谋害身亡。本以为再也没有报仇的机会,一睁眼却重回初三毕业那年,父母的悲剧不能重演,初恋的命运也要改变,若不逆运改命,枉她重来一遭!不过,重来一回,和初恋的交集怎么越来越多?这位男神,明明是我暗恋的你啊?!你这么主动,我的人设很难立住的啊。
  • 仅凭一首诗:霍达谢维奇诗选

    仅凭一首诗:霍达谢维奇诗选

    本书收录俄罗斯白银时代著名诗人霍达谢维奇的诗歌160余首。霍达谢维奇是俄罗斯第一次侨民文学浪潮的标杆型诗人。高尔基称其为“白银时代”最好的诗人,毫不讳言从其诗作中汲取过文学营养,纳博科夫则自称因霍达谢维奇的诗而走出江郎才尽之窘境,别雷、布罗茨基等都对他非同寻常的诗思与诗艺做过非常高的评价。霍达谢维奇的诗尤以心理描写见长,同时不乏哲理与伦理因素。