|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
I think he died for me, she answered. A vague terror seized Gabriel at this answer, as if, at that hour when he had hoped to triumph, some impalpable and vindictive being was coming against him, gathering forces against him in its vague world. But he shook himself free of it with an effort of reason and continued to caress her hand. He did not question her again, for he felt that she would tell him of herself. Her hand was warm and moist: it did not respond to his touch, but he continued to caress it just as he had caressed her first letter to him that spring morning. It was in the winter, she said, about the beginning of the winter when I was going to leave my grandmothers and come up here to the convent. And he was ill at the time in his lodgings in Galway and wouldnt be let out, and his people in Oughterard were written to. He was in decline, they said, or something like that. I never knew rightly. She paused for a moment and sighed. Poor fellow, she said. He was very fond of me and he was such a gentle boy. We used to go out together, walking, you know, Gabriel, like the way they do in the country. He was going to study singing only for his health. He had a very good voice, poor Michael Furey. Well; and then? asked Gabriel. And then when it came to the time for me to leave Galway and come up to the convent he was much worse and I wouldnt be let see him, so I wrote him a letter saying I was going up to Dublin and would be back in the summer, and hoping he would be better then. She paused for a moment to get her voice under control, and then went on: Then the night before I left, I was in my grandmothers house in Nuns Island, packing up, and I heard gravel thrown up against the window. The window was so wet I couldnt see, so I ran downstairs as I was and slipped out the back into the garden and there was the poor fellow at the end of the garden, shivering. And did you not tell him to go back? asked Gabriel. I implored of him to go home at once and told him he would get his death in the rain. But he said he did not want to live. I can see his eyes as well as well! He was standing at the end of the wall where there was a tree. And did he go home? asked Gabriel. Yes, he went home. And when I was only a week in the convent he died and he was buried in Oughterard, where his people came from. O, the day I heard that, that he was dead! She stopped, choking with sobs, and, overcome by emotion, flung herself face downward on the bed, sobbing in the quilt. Gabriel held her hand for a moment longer, irresolutely, and then, shy of intruding on her grief, let it fall gently and walked quietly to the window. She was fast asleep. Gabriel, leaning on his elbow, looked for a few moments unresentfully on her tangled hair and half-open mouth, listening to her deep-drawn breath. So she had had that romance in her life: a man had died for her sake. It hardly pained him now to think how poor a part he, her husband, had played in her life. He watched her while she slept, as though he and she had never lived together as man and wife. His curious eyes rested long upon her face and on her hair: and, as he thought of what she must have been then, in that time of her first girlish beauty, a strange, friendly pity for her entered his soul. He did not |
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
| Copyright: All texts on Bibliomania are © Bibliomania.com Ltd, and may not be reproduced in any form without our written permission. See our FAQ for more details. | ||||||||