In the meantime, Bill broke cover, and took to the country at large; wrought a little journeywork wherever he could get it, and in this way went from one place to another, till in the course of a month, he walked back very coolly into his own forge, to see how things went on in his absence. There he found Satan in a rage, the perspiration pouring from him in torrents, hammering with might and main upon the naked anvil. Bill calmly leaned his back against the wall, placed his hat upon the side of his head, put his hands into his breeches pockets, and began to whistle Shawn Gow’s hornpipe. At length he says in a very quiet and good-humored way:
“Morrow, Nick.”
“Oh!” says Nick, still hammering away. “Oh! you double-distilled villain (hech!), may the most refined, ornamental (hech!), double-rectified, superextra, and original (hech!) collection of curses that ever was gathered (hech!) into a single nosegay of ill fortune (hech!) shine in the buttonhole of your conscience (hech!) while your name is Bill Duffy! I denounce you (hech!) as a double-milled villain, a finished, hot-pressed knave (hech!), in comparison of whom all the other knaves I ever knew (hech!), attorneys included, are honest men. I brand you (hech!) as the pearl of cheats, a tiptop take-in (hech!). I denounce you, I say again, for the villainous treatment (hech!) I have received at your hands in this most untoward (hech!) and unfortunate transaction between us; for (hech!) unfortunate in every sense, is he that has any thing to do with (hech!) such a prime and finished imposter.”
“You’re very warm, Nicky,” says Bill. “What puts you into a passion, you old sinner? Sure if it’s your own will and pleasure to take exercise at my anvil, I’m not to be abused for it. Upon my credit, Nicky, you ought to blush for using such blackguard language, so unbecoming your grave character. You cannot say that it was I set you a-hammering at the empty anvil, you profligate. However, as you are so industrious, I simply say it would be a thousand pities to take you from it. Nick, I love industry in my heart, and I always encourage it; so, work away. It’s not often you spend your time so creditably. I’m afraid if you weren’t at that you’d be worse employed.”
“Bill, have bowels,” said the operative. “You wouldn’t go to lay more weight on a falling man, you know. You wouldn’t disgrace your character by such a piece of iniquity as keeping an inoffensive gentleman, advanced in years, at such an unbecoming and rascally job as this. Generosity’s your top virtue, Bill; not but that you have many other excellent ones, as well as that, among which, as you say yourself, I reckon industry. But still it is in generosity you shine. Come, Bill, honor bright, and release me.”
“Name the terms, you profligate.”
“You’re above terms, William. A generous fellow like you never thinks of terms.”
“Goodbye, old gentleman,” said Bill, very coolly. “I’ll drop in to see you once a month.”
“No, no, Bill, you infern—a—a—you excellent, worthy, delightful fellow, not so fast. Not so fast. Come, name your terms, you sland—my dear Bill, name your terms.”
“Seven years more.”
“I agree, but—”
“And the same supply of cash as before, down on the nail here.”
“Very good; very good. You’re rather simple, Bill, rather soft, I must confess. Well, no matter. I shall yet turn the tab—a—hem? You are an exceedingly simple fellow, Bill. Still, there will come a day, my dear Bill—there will come—”
“Do you grumble, you vagrant? Another word, and I double the terms.”
“Mum, William—mum; tace is Latin for a candle.”
“Seven years more of grace, and the same measure of the needful that I got before. Aye or no?”
“Of grace, Bill! Aye! aye! aye! There’s the cash. I accept the terms. O blood! The rascal—of grace! Bill!”
“Well, now drop the hammer, and vanish,” says Billy. “But what would you think to take this sledge, while you stay, and give me a—eh, why in such a hurry?” he added, seeing that Satan withdrew in double-quick time.
“Hollo, Nicholas!” he shouted, “come back. You forgot something.” And when the old gentleman looked behind him, Billy shook the hammer at him, on which he vanished altogether.
Billy now got into his old courses. And what shows the kind of people the world is made of, he also took up with his old company. When they saw that he had the money once more, and was sowing it about him in all directions, they immediately began to find excuses for his former extravagance.
“Say what you will,” said one, “Bill Duffy’s a spirited fellow, and bleeds like a prince.”
“He’s as hospitable a man in his own house, or out of it, as ever lived,” said another.
“His only fault is,” observed a third, “that he is, if anything, too generous, and doesn’t know the value of money. His fault’s on the right side, however.”
“He has the spunk in him,” said a fourth, “keeps a capital table, prime wines, and a standing welcome for his friends.”
“Why,” said a fifth, “if he doesn’t enjoy his money while he lives, he won’t when he’s dead. So more power to him, and a wider throat to his purse.”
Indeed, the very persons who were cramming themselves at his expense despised him at heart. They knew very well, however, how to take him on the weak side. Praise his generosity, and he would do anything. Call him a man of spirit, and you might fleece him to his face. Sometimes he would toss a purse of guineas to this knave, another to that flatterer, a third to a bully, and a fourth to some broken-down rake—and all to convince them that he was a sterling friend—a man of mettle and liberality. But never was he known to help a virtuous and struggling family—to assist the widow or the fatherless, or to do any other act that was truly useful. It is to be supposed the reason of this was, that as he spent it, as most of the world do, in the service of the Devil, by whose aid he got it, he was prevented from turning it to a good account. Between you and me, dear reader, there are more persons acting after Bill’s fashion in the same world than you dream about.
When his money was out again, his friends served him the same rascally game once more. No sooner did his poverty become plain, than the knaves began to be troubled with small fits of modesty, such as an unwillingness to come to his place when there was no longer anything to be got there. A kind of virgin bashfulness prevented them from speaking to him when they saw him getting out on the wrong side of his clothes. Many of them would turn away from him in the prettiest and most delicate manner when they thought he wanted to borrow money from them—all for fear of putting him to the blush by asking it. Others again, when they saw him coming towards their houses about dinner hour, would become so confused, from mere gratitude, as to think themselves in another place, and their servants, seized, as it were, with the same feeling, would tell Bill that their masters were “not at home.”
At length, after traveling the same villainous round as before, Bill was forced to betake himself, as a last remedy, to the forge. In other words, he found that there is, after all, nothing in this world that a man can rely on so firmly and surely as his own industry. Bill, however, wanted the organ of common sense, for his experience—and it was sharp enough to leave an impression—ran off him like water off a duck.
He took to his employment sorely against his grain. But he had now no choice. He must either work or starve, and starvation is like a great doctor, nobody tries it till every other remedy fails them. Bill had been twice rich, twice a gentleman among blackguards, but always a blackguard among gentlemen; for no wealth or acquaintance with decent society could rub the rust of his native vulgarity off him. He was now a common blinking sot in his forge; a drunken bully in the taproom, cursing and browbeating everyone as well as his wife; boasting of how much money he had spent in his day; swaggering about the high doings he carried on; telling stories about himself and Lord This at the Curragh; the dinners he gave—how much they cost him, and attempting to extort credit upon the strength of his former wealth. He was too ignorant, however, to know that he was publishing his own disgr
ace, and that it was a mean-spirited thing to be proud of what ought to make him blush through a deal board nine inches thick.
He was one morning industriously engaged in a quarrel with his wife, who, with a three-legged stool in her hand, appeared to mistake his head for his own anvil. He, in the meantime, paid his addresses to her with his leather apron, when who steps in to jog his memory about the little agreement that was between them, but Old Nick. The wife, it seems, in spite of all her exertions to the contrary, was getting the worst of it, and Sir Nicholas, willing to appear a gentleman of great gallantry, thought he could not do less than take up the lady’s quarrel, particularly as Bill had laid her in a sleeping posture. Now Satan thought this too bad, and as he felt himself under many obligations to the sex, he determined to defend one of them on the present occasion. So as Judy rose, he turned upon the husband, and floored him by a clever facer.
“You unmanly villain,” said he, “is this the way you treat your wife? ’Pon honor, Bill, I’ll chastise you on the spot, I could not stand by a spectator of such ungentlemanly conduct without giving up all claim to gallant—”
Whack. The word was divided in his mouth by the blow of a churn-staff from Judy, who no sooner saw Bill struck, than she nailed Satan, who “fell” once more.
“What, you villain! That’s for striking my husband like a murderer behind his back,” said Judy, and she suited the action to the word. “That’s for interfering between man and wife. Would you murder the poor man before my face? eh? If he beats me, you shabby dog you, who has a better right? I’m sure it’s nothing out of your pocket. Must you have your finger in every pie?”
This was anything but idle talk; for at every word she gave him a remembrance hot and heavy. Nicholas backed, danced, and hopped. She advanced, still drubbing him with great perseverance, till at length he fell into the redoubtable armchair, which stood exactly behind him. Bill, who had been putting in two blows for Judy’s one, seeing that his enemy was safe, now got between the Devil and his wife, a situation that few will be disposed to envy him.
“Tenderness, Judy,” said the husband. “I hate cruelty. Go put the tongs in the fire, and make them red-hot. Nicholas, you have a nose,” said he.
Satan began to rise, but was rather surprised to find that he could not budge.
“Nicholas,” says Bill, “how is your pulse? you don’t look well; that is to say, you look worse than usual.”
The other attempted to rise, but found it a mistake.
“I’ll thank you to come along,” said Bill. “I have a fancy to travel under your guidance, and we’ll take the Low Countries in our way, won’t we? Get to your legs, you sinner; you know a bargain’s a bargain between two honest men, Nicholas; meaning yourself and me. Judy, are the tongs hot?”
Satan’s face was worth looking at, as he turned his eyes from the husband to the wife, and then fastened them on the tongs, now nearly at a furnace heat in the fire, conscious at the same time that he could not move out of the chair.
“Billy,” said he, “you won’t forget that I rewarded your generosity the last time I saw you in the way of business.”
“Faith, Nicholas, it fails me to remember any generosity I ever showed you. Don’t be womanish. I simply want to see what kind of stuff your nose is made of, and whether it will stretch like a rogue’s conscience. If it does, we will flatter it up the chimley with the red-hot tongs, and when this old hat is fixed on the top of it, let us alone for a weathercock.”
“Have a fellow-feeling, Mr. Duffy. You know we ought not to dispute. Drop the matter, and I give you the next seven years.”
“We know all that,” says Billy, opening the red-hot tongs very coolly.
“Mr. Duffy,” said Satan, “if you cannot remember my friendship to yourself, don’t forget how often I stood your father’s friend, your grandfather’s friend, and the friend of all your relations up to the tenth generation. I intended also to stand by your children after you, so long as the name of Duffy, and a respectable one it is, might last.”
“Don’t be blushing, Nick,” says Bill, “you’re too modest; that was ever your failing. Hold up your head, there’s money bid for you. I’ll give you such a nose, my good friend, that you will have to keep an outrider before you, to carry the end of it on his shoulder.”
“Mr. Duffy, I pledge my honor to raise your children in the world as high as they can go; no matter whether they desire it or not.”
“That’s very kind of you,” says the other, “and I’ll do as much for your nose.”
He gripped it as he spoke, and the old boy immediately sung out. Bill pulled, and the nose went with him like a piece of warm wax. He then transferred the tongs to Judy, got a ladder, resumed the tongs, ascended the chimney, and tugged stoutly at the nose until he got it five feet above the roof. He then fixed the hat upon the top of it, and came down.
“There’s a weathercock,” said Billy. “I defy Ireland to show such beauty. Faith, Nick, it would make the prettiest steeple for a church in all Europe, and the old hat fits it to a shaving.”
In this state, with his nose twisted up the chimney, Satan sat for some time, experiencing the novelty of what might be termed a peculiar sensation. At last the worthy husband and wife began to relent.
“I think,” said Bill, “that we have made the most of the nose, as well as the joke. I believe, Judy, it’s long enough.”
“What is?” said Judy.
“Why, the joke,” said the husband.
“Faith, and I think so is the nose,” said Judy.
“What do you say yourself, Satan?” said Bill.
“Nothing at all, William,” said the other. “But that—ha! ha!—it’s a good joke—an excellent joke, and a goodly nose, too, as it stands. You were always a gentlemanly man, Bill, and did things with a grace; still, if I might give an opinion on such a trifle—”
“It’s no trifle at all,” says Bill, “if you speak of the nose.”
“Very well, it is not,” says the other. “Still, I am decidedly of opinion, that if you could shorten both the joke and the nose without further violence, you would lay me under very heavy obligations, which I shall be ready to acknowledge and repay as I ought.”
“Come,” said Bill, “shell out once more, and be off for seven years. As much as you came down with the last time, and vanish.”
The words were scarcely spoken, when the money was at his feet, and Satan invisible. Nothing could surpass the mirth of Bill and his wife, at the result of this adventure. They laughed till they fell down on the floor.
It is useless to go over the same ground again. Bill was still incorrigible. The money went as the Devil’s money always goes. Bill caroused and squandered, but could never turn a penny of it to a good purpose. In this way, year after year went, till the seventh was closed, and Bill’s hour come. He was now, and had been for some time past, as miserable a knave as ever. Not a shilling had he, nor a shilling’s worth, with the exception of his forge, his cabin, and a few articles of crazy furniture. In this state he was standing in his forge as before, straining his ingenuity how to make out a breakfast, when Satan came to look after him.
The old gentleman was sorely puzzled how to get at him. He kept skulking and sneaking about the forge for some time, till he saw that Bill hadn’t a cross to bless himself with. He immediately changed himself into a guinea, and lay in an open place where he knew Bill would see him.
“If,” said he, “I get once into his possession, I can manage him.”
The honest smith took the bait, for it was well gilded. He clutched the guinea, put it into his purse, and closed it up.
“Ho! ho!” shouted the Devil out of the purse. “You’re caught, Bill. I’ve secured you at last, you knave you. Why don’t you despair, you villain, when you think of what’s before you?”
“Why you unlucky old dog,” said Bill. “Is it there you are? Will you always drive your head into every loophole that’s set for you? Faith, Nick achora, I never had you bagged ti
ll now.”
Satan then began to swell and tug and struggle with a view of getting out of the purse, but in vain. He found himself fast, and perceived that he was once more in Bill’s power.
“Mr. Duffy,” said he, “we understand each other. I’ll give the seven years additional, and the cash on the nail.”
“Be easy, Nicholas. You know the weight of the hammer, that’s enough. It’s not a whipping with feathers you’re going to get, anyhow. Just be easy.”
“Mr. Duffy, I grant I’m not your match. Release me, and I double the cash. I was merely trying your temper when I took the shape of a guinea.”
“Faith and I’ll try yours before you leave it, I’ve a notion.”
He immediately commenced with the sledge, and Satan sang out with a considerable want of firmness.
“Am I heavy enough?” said Bill.
“Lighter, lighter, William, if you love me. I haven’t been well, latterly, Mr. Duffy. I have been delicate. My health, in short, is in a very precarious state, Mr. Duffy.”
“I can believe that,” said Bill, “and it will be more so before I have done with you. Am I doing it right?”
“Beautifully, William. But a little of the heaviest; strike me light, Bill, my head’s tender. Oh!”
“Heads or tails, my old boy,” exclaimed the other. “I don’t care which. It’s all the same to me what side of you is up—but here goes to help the impression—hech!”
“Bill,” said Nicholas, “is this gentlemanly treatment in your own respectable shop? Do you think, if you dropped into my little place, that I’d act this rascally part towards you? Have you no compunction?”
“I know,” replied Bill, sledging away with vehemence, “that you’re notorious for giving your friends a warm welcome. Divil an old youth more so. But you must be dealing in bad coin, must you? However, good or bad, you’re in for a sweat now, you sinner. Am I doing it pretty?”
Irish Folk Tales Page 38