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Unknown Immortals
in
UNKNOWN
IMMORTALS
In the Northern City of Success
By Herbert Moore
Author of
"
The Pessimist"
S-c.
Dublin
The Talbot
Press Ltd.
London
Fisher
Unwin
191?
Ltd,
Pirn
Co
tfje
EL ermine of
affeftton anti
atinuration
fl^arr
Contents
The Willick Woman
The Rent Man
The Rag, Bone, and Balloon Man
The Fish Man
The Soul of Smithfield
That which
is
called
Johnston
Page
10
13
17
22
32
38
68
Julius
83
The
74
Wisest of All
89
PREFACE,
FROM childhood
had a special
have
because
would be
And
I
could
knew
quite
useless
So
own.
describing them.
manner
as
a method of
them in a
treated
It is not idealism; it
of my
as the reader will see, something more
than idealism. Yet I claim that they are
is,
remember,
Lunacy
lunacy, The
handed it to a
medical authority; and he pronounced it
After
my
first
sketch
of
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
He
exactly correct from his standpoint.
mental
said I had caught the exact
processes
of a lunatic.
The amount
the
making
imagined.
of
of this
It
suffices
to
say
that
PREFACE.
He
astonishing.
gives his listener the impression that what
he has made his life study is the one
performance
essential to
cultured.
all
the
more
and said I
amazing eyes lighted up.
Using
this
simple
the
Gas
Corporation
Office;
and
proved myself
worthy, by immediately opening it and
reading out the address which I desired to
obtain.
In
Monsieur
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
of
committee
of
eighth in
already
The Irishman;
stated,
in
the seventh, as
the Irish Ecclesiastical
affair,
time.
retro-
to
the
is
for artists to
mend
their philolo-
It
HERBERT MOORE
Dunmurry.
"
PIM.
company
who
Of
secret
is
shadow
women
of venerable
all
Custom House
or near the
periwinkle
That
is
is
superlative because
power
of sight.
half so blind
if
it
believes
has the
it
not be
could be taught that it
cannot see.
About
when
many empty
women
And
shells.
upon
these,
it
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
feels
purchase.
a fact?
that
it is
But
the
who can
refuse
of
some
believe so plain
be deceived.
One
think
is
Woman
is
man
great
to
prey upon
whispered
'
to
'
great
stones
clear
of
periwinkles.
a song
him, as
appears always strange
it
in
Then
he
had
heard
a
dream.
though
when the sun is risen, the over-grown son
of the Willick Woman comes home with
that
his breath
to
two great gleaming cans, full of the shellbound mystery of the sea.
At the door his mother receives him and
;
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
is permitted him to sleep a heavy
well
earned, or he may go forth to
sleep,
loiter upon the great streets or sell what
then
it
But he
men believe to be printed truth.
must not remain at home to watch the
He cannot be a Willick Man,
mysteries.
Willick Women
for there is none such.
are always old, and that is because when a
Willick
Woman
in
is
fear of death
When
who
she
tends her
is
Woman
pours a stream
asleep, the Willick
of the shellfish into a steaming black pot;
and then, motionless, she watches while
countless activities are ended, and the white
may be
god
who
cannot
of the
West.
But those
bow down
upon
shells,
which
thoughtless.
no task
truly gives
that is
And
which
calls
wisdom
to
the
because there
for
so
is
much
is nowhere to be found
such a compound character.
In reality he is the mildest and
most engaging of creatures
but once he has slung his
bullion bag over his shoulder, he becomes
charged with that quality which is expressed
"
in the word
bounce."
:
an eyelash.
clothing he resembles a sporting
undertaker, because he inclines towards the
more solemn serges, cases his calves in
leggings, wears a bookie's cash-bag, and
flutter of
In
11
by a drop-scene moustache.
As an authority on black eyes, Hinde's
curlers, half -open doors, and the actual
state of the family finance, he is without a
rival; yet he looks upon these phenomena
with cold,
He
disdain.
scientific
can avoid
collision with
young
cats,
to
sweet to his
the
law,
command;
threatening
ready
to
and
his
people
life
is
who know
Curbstone
materialise
children
and power.
gaze up
at
his
spent in
exact
the
at
this
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
12
There
is
a time
The
at
any
Rent
rate,
become
Man
has
motionless.
unequalled
cast-off clothes
bottles
He
is
and very
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
14
and
up
another,
until
they
find
perhaps he
noise he
It
makes
is
15
is
from the
suspect what they really are. And those
who have watched him will recollect that
he sometimes varies his methods by
bringing no balloons at all, probably
through sheer cleverness or because he has
gaze
And on
distance
giant
Each
generation
accepts
these
democracy
unfailing test
be proved
for centuries.
There is an
by which their antiquity can
any institution that inspires
16
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
secret affection
hills.
And
the
is
man.
THE
HERE
FISH
is
MAN.
because
he
makes
such
And
as he goes he carries a
little
world
him.
alive !"
Like
all
best understood
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
18
He
There is a
is wonderful for them.
doubt about his origin, and there is a
No one
greater doubt about his destiny.
who
He
will
"
little
fish-man
come
"
is
for
calls of herrings;
"
a sort of hobgoblin
them
if they cry.
but half his truth
slips
the
when he
says
19
just of the
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
20
and woven
The
frightened children,
great
human
tears
when
sorrow
of
was
that
into his
mind
the secret he
And
that there
might be no mistake.
they told
him was
just
And what
what he
felt
sure
entirely
a cruel and
those
who
THE
FISH MAN.
21
iev,"
which
unspoiled."
of course
He
means
*'
Happiness
seldom walked in the
passed
among
commercial success
something that has
this city of
there
lies
is
We
successful.
remained
have a treasure in our midst,
which, in the battle of bricks,
unprotected and ready to be ruined.
Though
built like
a gridiron,
is
it
no
relic
here has
of municipal torturer's activity
been no crackling of creed-cases. But it
has come to us from the past, delicate and
:
full of dust.
How much
Smithfield
owes
the
to
aesthetic
value
of
An
ancient,
low-built
market.
when
One
of
the few
it.
remaining
present
23
is
The
a peculiar people.
the
ways.
world
The
is
transformed.
modern
"
Maria Monk
"
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
24
manner
in this
by
lest,
their falling
open,
In Smithfield
all
those
3
The
An
Smithfield.
The
kind
known
at
a safe
stalls.
penny.
"
music
that
the
"
man who
has
started
it
usually
looks
very
My own
questioned
is
its
25
place
again.
Key
the
of
upon
Here whoso follows
Ingersoll
find
himself
for
set
democracy
may
his inclinations
the
throne
triple
of
the capitalist.
Once
had
there
been
was a migration.
stolen
from
for
cunningly
displayed
Smithfield smiled for
it
who
are to
must come
make
faded
bundled upon a
sale.
knew
And
before
And
10
that those
home
this smile
the
cart, like so
were
sky
willingly.
scarcely
Birds that
the
birds
much
had
were
fluttering
piping
9
Smithfield
is
religious views
10
About
But
do not seem
eight years
to clash.
in birds to
proved a
set
ll
set
failure,
H The owner
birds in
gilt
of the automatic
when a penny
is
put in the
stuffed
slot.
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
26
12
a glorious goblin,
like some undertaker shrouding souls as
well as corpses, who emerges from licensed
caverns and spreads out before him a
In Smithfield there
He
splendid spoil.
is
is
Smithfield's
king;
and
soiled
exquisitely
who
rise
splattered,
glorious
while
gnomes,
13
presently seize
desire,
grow
l*The
smaller.
soiled
clothes
leisure in public-houses.
auctioneer,
city,
He
face,
13
Stout old
Smithfield,
retail
soiled
clothes
stalls
in
27
and
14
Patiently
retreats.
is cunning and subtle; for it
a face to the world that speaks of
Smithfield
sets
filled,
and
rich
simmering
Behind the
joys are given to the good.
barrier there sits the Sphinx.
Even the
deceiving surface reveals the
spirit
which
it
covers.
In Smithfield
it
is
there
came
!*The second-hand
15
and now
little
its
furniture dealers.
is
to all
appearances a row of
low-built shops.
1s
coffee
stand
under
the
management
is
sold.
of
the
Irish
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
28
that
all
17
of
sprawling with
Smithfield,
when
how
inside,
splendid
how
it is
is
great
the gain;
and
upon
upon every
hand.
One of
it new
is
that
18
barrels are
things are made :
built, tools turned, saws sharpened until
they feel young again, all but the Celestial
in
Keys are
cut,
decided
false
and
19
that
which
for here
Law
is
and
upon a
true
sits
is
the Sphinx.
And we
that that which seems
world
17
which
the
this
M The
Smithfield
21
it has
skirmishers;
it is as a walled city
sentinels
its
full of
its
slumbers,
and
fires;
it
virtue
its
remain inviolate.
And to
Curfew chimes the closing of
and
29
its
the extinction of
2fl
this
its
and
may
day the
gates and
then, dark
To assist them
who strut behind
are commanded by
sentinels
these
24
guard,
25
are
23
;
the
and
20
there
the stalls
of Smithfield are
all.
They
patrol
clothes.
22
morning
for the
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
30
and blandishments.
Smithfield
the
is
supplied;
well
One
there
is
in Smithfield
who
and
corset- busts,
sewing-machines
and
gathers
crutches
teapots,
Salvation
Army
and
whet-
zithers
tambourines,
stones,
turbines
and
weigh-bridges
and Zulu-shields.
are strange old
tyres
and
tubes.
26
and
38
from
chest;
have
them they
lie
31
even as
we
look into
who
remain
like
it
majestic
we have
loss of
maxim,
"
still
abroad
does the
it
29
Man know
thyself,"
a storehouse of splendours, for the
this
city of success.
27
There
were,
some
sixty
years
ago,
three
theatres
in
repulsive
semi-medical
in
Smithfield,
it
THAT WHICH
IS
CALLED
JOHNSTON.
N
fearful
When
it is
more
the
the hands
grasp
For
are
almost
raised
to
heaven
in
car,
by one
in white;
IS
CALLED JOHNSTON.
33
blind;
this
Salvationists,
and
fish
And
that
34
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
lips
nothing remained.
the
theology
was
lured
by him
to
eat
of
world
is
blind.
which
little
little
Johnston
is
CALLED JOHNSTON.
IS
35
They know
is
the greatest
in
this
mysteries
city of success.
wise,
Let him
who
confess;
is
that
greater,
Johnston
understandable, than they.
One
there
is
who
sells
Men who
all
Woman
the Willick
and
of
Johnston
think
less
yea,
him whether
will
themselves
answer
wise
away
will
those
who would be
Johnston
is
"
is
dead
"
stone
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
36
And
Chichester?
Who
is
this
that
spreadeth
of salvation?
He
oracle?
Who
is this
that refuseth
is
satisfied.
He
useth
'.he
sheets of salvation
CALLED JOHNSTON.
IS
come
shalt them
37
hither again?"
And none
for that is his riddle.
Who
that
watch
number
remain
over
And
until the
him?
lest
his
Who
are they
Cats
without
should
secret
to
name him.
He cometh
the
PYRAMID
in
of the Desert.
Note.
Among
that
is
"
possibly incomprehensible in
Monsieur
"
Mushrooms
the
will
puzzled will
"
"
Mushrooms
the small and picturesque sixpenny volume,
by
Somervilie
this
book that
F.R.C.S.,
Hastings,
Cray, of Glasgow,
will
in the various
reproduced, and
symbol of eternity, the circle, is written plainly upon
our meadows by this extraordinary plant.
feature of
every
the
that the
The mushroom
family
is
by
we find on jam,
and the remarkable Tubina Cylindrica, which is neither a pure
vegetable or an animal, but seems to be a little of both; while
it
the
human
brain
is
the
by
reproduced
exactly
Caryne
sarcoides.
To
maintain
footnotes
The
of
this
the
book,
"
accompanied "Monsieur
Ecclesiastical Record for May,
Irish
But those
omitted.
lightly
format
the
which
as
thinker
who
are
inclined
would do well
to
to
very
in
elaborate
pages of
have been
the
1915,
"
treat
consult
Monsieur
the
"
original
article.
I.
iONSIEUR was an
active
little
extremely
man,
feature,
whose
be of no
activity appeared
value whatever.
His nose,
which was his most striking
seemed by its shape to suggest that
to
39
His
surprise
inwards.
he possessed ideas
'
We should
As
to dress,
own.
and never obtrude,"
"
of his
reflect,
garments
40
on
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
some
suitable
the
domain
between the
and finally enter
spot,
macadam and
the grass,
of green as
verdant as the
sky,
there
the
Had
And
was destined
to
41
And
as, for
Monsieur,
all
things in nature,
So
it
was
that
among
mushrooms
the
in
tending
that
desired.
mushroom.
Indeed,
that
in
itself
was
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
42
these
of
silence
chambers
underground
noise and
of
in
its
isolation ?
it was that Monsieur learned how
mushroom might be persuaded to grow
and here it was that for many days he
Here
the
active days
retains something,
And
so
it
came
arose a respectful
"
How
if
it
that, in
company
great, indeed,"
*'
exclaim,
is
the
of believers.
Monsieur would
mushroom
its
It
has
habitation
There
silence."
was
considered.
the world
For presently
itself
it
put
to
its
be
claw
its
own
43
and
an
of
a commodity
commercial value.
appreciation
And
Monsieur,
its
dragged
into
daylight,
infuriated at
at
atmosphere
that
particular
happy
How
set
aside in strong
most
disciples
enough
to
were assembled
Monsieur arraigned as an
quickly,
and
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
44
emigre,
"
traitor
to
the
by setting up a
standard of intelligence which depended for
its rectitude merely upon the vigour of his
universal consciousness
expostulation.
And who
can
forget
the
genial
and
Who could
powerful exception
Just so.
doubt it? But for such as believed in it
!
there
provision.
The
make
progress in
He was
my
'*
shall
investigation?"
well again.
"But
"
In
you may be
in
harmony with
majority."
'
Why,
then," he demanded,
"
shall
43
the
we
And
expounding
It is he who is extra
toy, is nowhere.
muros !"
So that being said, the company of
learned and serious ones was scattered, and
Monsieur introduced to a state of life with
which he was unfamiliar.
Bedlam;
who saw
gold of
46
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
the
highway
of his soul.
how
sieur.
No
rich
longer
in
contact
for
Mon-
with
the
47
when it pleased him. For with his knowledge of the mushroom he was all-powerful.
Behind the material which witnessed to a
supremely strong exception, there was the
energy of mind that drove and guided,
swept aside and conquered. And in the
mushroom
contact.
indeed of
this
was
was
all
living things.
And
yet all
all
this
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
48
was not
a pursuer?
How
man
poor a thing
appeared, after
' '
the dead.
How
To
was in no wise
be left alone.
He, being a novelty,
must be acquired; books must be born of
him; reputations raised, or at least sustained and to that end it became necessary
that he should reveal all that was in his
heart.
Monsieur had certainly spoken
before the learned and serious ones who
had sat in judgment upon him; therefore
he would talk to those who should come to
grow wiser by watching him.
potions and cures, Monsieur
to
any who
he said
"
It
questioned him.
Unless
It
you.
silent,
49
is
am
left
alone,
now my
shall leave
pleasure to remain.
of these
he would inquire
'
learn nobility."
Still
who lowered
chamber, in the
speaking-pipes
into
his
Wherefore do you
before
It
set
your superiors
me?"
came
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
50
in
his
should
conversation
nor express
he proceed
to expound
surprise
Borne astonishing or enlightening truth.
To
the
satisfaction
of
the
Governor a
was
dis-
was
and
thither
Monsieur
once conducted.
which
51
At
the sight of
it,
it
Afterwards, upon
knees, he contemwhich
he
realised
was to deliver
that
plated
him from bondage. But the time was not
his
him
cures.
He had been
"
told to
"
take every
"
capable of yielding
much
valuable data";
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
52
and,
of
course,
it
was
"
of
the
utmost
"
"maintain the traditions
of the institution which, as one of the com"
occupied an undisputed
pounders said,
"
importance"
to
trouble
would
The Governor,
like
man.
"
redound
to
his
credit."
therefore,
The
replaced the flowers in his vases.
literature of mushrooms was strewn over
Pictures of mushrooms had been
and were even now taking the
place of the more homely engravings on
his walls.
Nothing was left undone,
because the Governor had been advised to
"
spare no expense." Most of the parlour
chairs were removed in order that Monsieur
might have space to examine the wonders
which had been prepared for his admiraAn ancient piano-stool, with one
tion.
leg, had been covered with white holland
cloth, drawn hastily together with threads
below the seat; in fact all had been done
his table.
framed,
madness which made his case so attracWhen all was ready, and Monsieur
tive.
53
as being himself,
him
also.
"
more
Who
is
there to
deny
that
what
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
54
Here
is
that
Hirer of spies
Betrayer
poured
from Monsieur's mouth. And after that,
still spluttering with disgust, he was led
!
gently away.
II.
It
was upon
to the
those
who
believed in him.
of
He was upon
mushroom
to
the plantation of
5b
single
dary-wall.
What
inscribed a message
*
We
Having found
this,
you."
Monsieur, with reverence and care,
examined this mushroom in masquerade.
It was indeed a gauntlet flung up to nature
And where the root should have been there
!
was a weighted
spike; so that
if
this
cun-
How much
evidence
energy.
of
instructed
venient moment,
flung
it
into
the outer
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
56
While
world.
the
was yet
messenger
clothed in
The season
near and
;
suaded
to
And
tered.
which
my
of my departure shall be
time of detention must be per-
to
have
reached maturity."
A bag was
be seen
which was
to
if
brought to him.
there
to deliver
was
It
remained
sufficient of
that
him.
upon
57
ing,
The Chairman
of
and
that
great importance in
the plantation of
puff-balls.
that,
him
were made
to
spiritual.
Could
Monsieur,
then,
explain
the
inscription.
After consideration,
Monsieur declared
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
58
which the
inscription might
have
him
for
The
signified.
in
much
"Night"
suggested
and
day
together, and
in a circle about the earth.
night
them
bound
How
man
to his
Remove
company
"
"
and
from the world, and
would be broken; cheques
would remain uncrossed; and a chasm
would open, upon either side of which
the marriage-tie
39
all
"
this
and
"
was
the
extraordinary
might be made
"
that
fact
to illustrate
"
a great
and
bound together,
philosophic truth
without touching the things which it joined
and was not this the glorious principle
:
tion
It
should express
was intimated
itself
unseen.
politely
to
Monsieur
60
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
The
why
this
intrusion
of
the
mushroom?
him
' '
from crowning
who desired to quesstatement had studied the subject as deeply as he himself had done.
Monsieur's introduction of the mushroom
criticism until those
tion
was
his
perfectly
legitimate.
The
Chair-
to
guous reference
to the
61
deceased king.
And
the
Chairman had
at
some time
or other
himself to
suppress the direct and hackneyed reference; and if unable to refrain, simply to
put forth some pleasing though inclusive
expression of the thought.
The
Chairman
with
extraordinary
gravity, which contrasted curiously with
laughter of his colleagues, informed
Monsieur that he could afford to ignore
any analysis from so prejudiced and quesa
tionable
Monsieur
must
quarter.
attend to the matter in hand.
Did he, or
did he not, know the meaning of the words
"
Night and day "?
After
some consideration, Monsieur
declared that, speaking as a Philologist
Amid much noise and laughter Monsieur was informed that the Committee
had no occasion to be instructed in Philology, nor had it any desire to be instructed
The
at that exact moment by Monsieur.
the
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
62
was
question
simple.
It
remained
to
be
answered.
that
the
question
proposed
That was it
Exactly to the point
Committee unanimously congratulated Monsieur on his discernment and the
!
The
lucidity
At
of
this
tressed.
his
expression.
was
painful
earnest seekers after truth.
to
dis-
disappoint
But how, he
to
in
them, how,
fairness, could
appealed
him
to
attach
a meaning to
they expect
words inscribed upon a mushroom in mas-
63
Monsieur would
in a field?
mu
in the genuine
^room.
And
there the
now, Monsieur
asked,
own
his
feelings
At
this there
silence
became
appealed
to the
what he had
possibility
Committee
Monsieur
to call to
mind
weakness.
Had
reference to
they
heard
similar
Certainly not.
"But," Monsieur pleaded, "you canknow with what subtlety he may have
not
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
64
tactless
treatment
Chairman was
for
his
quite possibly
continued detention.
of
the
responsible
The Chair-
taste
for
the
the
inquisition, and
that before
suppose
allowed
him
himself
there
stood
to
It
and persecuted philosopher.
should be clear, therefore, that if Monsieur had been satisfied to accept as all
wise men accept the meaning clearly
the
for
intended
actually
meaning
patient
man
released.
reason to understand
never so exquisitely acid as
when it comes to be delivered from the
dock. And Monsieur obtained at least a
prize to console him when he gained the
knowledge that it is never safe to joke at
that ridicule
is
6>
The worm," he
said
to
one
of
his
The picture, as we see it, is sad Monsieur so near to liberty, yet not released.
:
to
welcome him
it
martyrdom; for information as to the progress of the inquisition had been conveyed
at intervals to them by a servant of the
Asylum.
Monsieur, it appeared, had not suspected how near he had come to the
sweets of slavery; so, when he was led
from before the Committee, he returned
with haste to the plantation of puff-balls.
The unwearied
attentions
of
the
philo-
much powder;
until at length
he
66
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
had
digested the objective reality of this apparition, Monsieur was already almost out
of reach.
And when
to claim
his
feet
in
the outer
waving " an
are wont to
ring
the towels of triumph
1
have documents
regained
his
my
in
freedom.
He
and
lived
investigations
for
so
believer
the
wave
possession
conduct
Monsieur's
regarding
as
bag
empty
"
ritualists of the
67
in
the
doctrine
of
fluid,
to search parties
am
ship,
After that,
hold
I
of
which
have no
contained
mushroom-spore
reliable evidence.
ment
'
bricks.
In Merchgoldt's Diary,
I
At
lat.
140,
long.
20,
we
sighted
a small island,
which
THE BOILER OF
jHOSE whom
and
such
BONES.
whisper one to
another that a boiler of bones
the
from
hath
departed
Smithfield,
earth,
that
yea,
called Aunt,
is
Jane,
dead.
The world
is
blind,
whom
and
the
world
the world
to
ful
is
blind
woman
of
much
girth, that
dwelt in an
For
the
offered a
late,
struggled
to
live.
And
they
that
in
those
spirits,
and they
that
Aunt
Jane.
say:
'What
were
who were
athirst,
69
cast forth,
came unto
And
wilt
were eager
to escape.
"
is
own kin.
And many there were who
with their
declared that
UNKNOWN
70
IiMMORTALS.
her path
as
whom
71
stout
in
the
in
is
the
fair;
the Willick
daylight;
Woman
which
that
is
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
72
Yet
and
shall
the
scribe
naught them
set at
let
and
let that
known
that
athirst.
by her
Who
is
this
that boileth
bones
in
the
darkness
Who is this, sister of a parent,
she that orfereth curious sacrifice?
She
hath the hill of caves for a companion, and
keepeth her place as long as the rivers
endure.
That which the blind have
>
73
she liveth.
THE MADMAN.
E was a shabby
an
little
indescribable
about
man, with
air
of
him;
and
importance
he plied his trade with laudable determination.
The
faces
until
it
in the vicinity.
The
THE MADMAN.
of
75
woman,
seemed
One
to
fit
by man,
Keen Crot
him somehow.
the
men
is
in the
better for
five
minutes
past ten.
76
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
The
slowly indeed.
He
that.
found out
after
a couple of
them
however
good time
then he
wondered where Mr. Garrick had found
in time,
before
it
actually
fell.
all
in
And
THE MADMAN.
77
discovery.
And
near the first of the foundations.
then the spire must fall
And then, look
at the man
why, no person would think
But
he was guilty, at first sight of him.
!
Keen
stupidity.
made
Crot
he.
He had
one
of
the
gone so
far as to
walk up
to
the
Cathedral,
vergers
to
tell
him
the
dread
secret; but
intending
at the last moment he decided to postpone
in
78
Saint
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
A verger he enticed
Patrick's.
into
a corner.
"
I
want to tell you something of the
utmost importance," he said.
"And what is that?"
"
I am a hairdresser, and I shave people
in the morning," Keen Crot replied, with
assurance in his voice.
There is a man
who comes to me he has come to me for
'
the
twenty
past
and he,
years
his
in
"
me
told
He
told
me
that
he
beetle
at
the
side
of
the
that
his secret.
had buried a
Cathedral, and
it
have
you about
told
have
that I have
will
'
The
attention,
mean
should
it
long ago.
the foundations mended,
told
you?"
matter shall
sir,"
You
now
said
receive
the
immediate
verger,
with a
'
You know
that
eyes.
reliable than speech."
more
that's
it
in
really
THE MADMAN.
79
"So
I
have heard," said the verger.
I'm not a clever man like you.
Well, good-day, sir. I'm sure I'm most
"
But
grateful to
you
your information."
for
superior smile.
attended
my
He
to.
is
a clever
his
mind, and
plans for
"
like
he does,
If
him
tell
When
should
no need
"
that
you have
to
arrange
punish
If we spoil his
verger.
him, that should be sufficient
is
man
know some-
him."
I
Crot.
him
again.
you?"
tell
*
The
foundations,
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
80
'
safe,"
the
said
The
verger.
beetle
is
That
is
who
'
That is
very important indeed.
good. Now what do you propose to do
felt
Mr. Garrick?"
"
It has been
decided to do nothing.
We think that it may be wiser to leave him
to
alone."
'*
As you
will.
said
Keen
Grot.
out
another
He
word,
and
walked
home
rapidly.
The two
entered
doleful boys
the
shop.
were
They
he
and
fighting as
stopped,
"
go
unpunished," remarked Keen Grot to himself, as he removed his coat in the little
"
room at the back of the shop.
Justice
is justice, however, and must be upheld;
and who is to uphold it save myself?"
The following morning, Mr. Garrick
entered the shop at five minutes past ten,
and looked at his watch, for he felt that
THE MADMAN.
8t
he could not
Then he remembered.
tell what.
Keen Crot had omitted to remark upon
the weather.
His smile also was absent.
there
"A
"
Keen
"
fine
morning,
He
Crot.
indeed,
sir,"
said
it
throat.
One
of the doleful
was a jug
There
by some-
boys fainted.
one.
"
explained
to
the
officer
at
the
police-
82
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS.
' *
station
and as the
authorities
of
the
felt it
Cathedral refused to punish him,
done."
to
see
justice
my duty
'Very wise indeed, sir; very wise
indeed," said a kind-looking doctor who
sat beside the officer.
I
JULIUS McCULLOUGH
LECKEY CRAIG,
N
this
city
of success there
is
who
one
he
is
much
singing.
He
is
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS
84
"
The sun
I
is
but
shinin
am standin'
"
thousand now."
"
"
you
And
poems.
JULIUS
McCULLOUGH CRAIG
85
Scotch.
pier
'
But
half-crown.
see
to
a penny
was quare
poem
goin*
an* pleased
half-a-
for
crown."
Then
'
My
love
"Man!
real stuff,"
'
that's a
scribe.
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS
86
ash-jalt,
polis
man;
'
Maguire,
Will ye let me light me owl' clay pipe
At your big boiler fire?'
There
"
My
is
love he
He
And
lives
the
heart
of
Julius
glad.
McCullough
As
a poet
would
like
JULIUS
Makes a livin*
McCULLOUGH CRAIG
sellin' bits of flowers.
87
Man
I've
And
him
been taken
to
men
is this
Who
is
as are
this that
He
88
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS
Smithfield,
known
the secret of
calleth Craig.
him
whom
the world
a poet of the
the world calleth
For Julius
is
unknown.
among
Yet
he be numbered
and dwell with them,
shall
the immortals,
is
simple of
THE LITTLE
CHILD,
THE
WISEST OF ALL
went
once
}HAMUS
by
off
He
corner
Mountains,
father,
and,
to
wood in a
the
Wicklow
enclosed
large
as
of
he used
to
tell
his
went
this
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS
90
stopped talking.
And
Shamus
thought
where
see
started
so
to
it
run
he
was
after
would
like
to
going,
so
he
it.
He
was
mouse,
watching
which kept just a few yards ahead of him,
that he didn't notice two strange old men
interested
who
in
the
when
the old
91
So without any
talk
whatever,
might imagine,
One
of the
to see
little
in the rock.
quite easily, just like a handle; and immediately a door opened in the rock, and the
little
underground.
old
men down
of steps leading
of the
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS
92
old
man
came
after
him.
the
Shamus.
The
men,
"
93
knows
Shamus was
and here
is
the key
this
time
It
was
all
quite delighted
by
and he
felt that
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS
94
Shamus threw
his three
sweetened cakes
this
danger
to
safely.
At
saw
the cat
and
its
rider
it
it
95
little
boy's
head.
And
over,
the
little
old
men
together.
The
something remarkable happened.
underground room melted quite away and
changed to a garden, in the centre of which
there was a life-like cat carved out of black
marble.
were
fifty
amber
And
sunlight,
96
UNKNOWN IMMORTALS