Authors: Jim Tully
M
Y
grandfather's nature was often serene and beautiful as heather in the sun. It could instantly become hard as a horse's hoof.
In long and far wandering I recall no other men who more definitely saw with their own eyes and followed their own instincts than my father and his sardonic witty sire. It never occurred to them to apologize for any failings which others thought they had. They walked as unconcernedly down their chaotic roads of life as two lions through a moonlit jungle.
Uncouth, even barbaric, their intelligence was never satisfied, always were they alert to life. They seem to me, even yet, like spectators drinking at a bar between the acts of a comedy.
At times my grandfather would swear slightly at the obscurity of his life and the narrowness of his sphere. His tantrum at fate would pass in an instant.
There was, at the back of his huge head, the feeling that he was a great politician who never had a chance.
He was always at the cross-roads of gayety and sadness. He never took the sad road so long as a drink was at hand.
If the hours hung heavy, as they often did in a small town, he would sit tilted back in his chair against the wall of a saloon, and hum a weird tune, which he often chanted with that strange gift of the Irishâthe blending of tears with hilarity. But now he had the abstract manner of a man whose mind was far away.
The words, like the memory of old Hughie Tully, are still with meâ
“I'm very happy where I am
,
Far across the say
,
I'm very happy far from home
,
In North Amerikay
.
“It's lovely in the night when Pat
Is sleepin' by my side
,
I lie awake, and no one knows
The big tears that I've cried;”
As if hiding tenderness, the old man would look sternly about the saloon.
“For a little voice still called me back
To my far, far counthrie
,
And nobody can hear it spake
,
Oh! nobody but me
.
“There is a little spot of ground
Behind the chapel wall
,
It's nothing but a tiny mound
,
Without a stone at all;
“It rises like my heart jist now
,
It makes a little hill;
It's from below the voice comes out
,
I cannot kape it still
.
“Oh! little voice; ye call me back
To my far, far counthrie
,
And nobody can hear ye spake
,
Oh! nobody but me.”
“Ho, ho, ho!” he once ejaculated, with a look of contempt when he had finished the wordsâ“the likes ov a big man like me chantin' sich rubbishâit's like staylin' a baby's candy on Christmas mornin'!”
“When did you learn it, Grandaddy?” I asked him.
“I picked it up in a dhrunken moment frim yere grandmitherâshe's full ov sich swate-mates.”
I had never defended my grandmother before. To me she had always been tender, her voice ever a croon.
“I like grandmotherâ” I said impulsivelyâ“I think she's smarter'nâ,” I stopped with my grandfather's steel eyes narrowed at me.
“Yis, yis, smarter then meâniver sthopâsay yere sayâspake it out,” he said tersely.
He paused. His eyes went softer.
“Yere grandmitherâbut no one should talk about a good womanâit's the other kind that make the good storiesâan' I'm an ould man.”
He became more pensive.
His fingers drummed on his knee.
“I wondher where John Crasby isâall day I've not seen his long shadow.”
He half smiled and hummedâ
“I came from Alabama
Wid my banjo on my knee;
I' gwine to Louisiana
,
My true love for to see
.
It rained all night the day I left
,
The weather it was dry
,
The sun so hot I froze to death:
Susanna, don't you cry
.
“O! Susanna, O! don't you cry for me;
I've come from Alabama
Wid my banjo on my knee
.
“So ye sthick up for yere grandmither,” he said sternlyâand stopped. “Well it's right ye shouldâit's nayther human nor crayture did she iver harmâI seen her nurse a wild rabbit in Irelandâan' close its eyes in the ind as if it were St. Pathrick.
“There's more in a woman's heart, me boy, then the Holy Mither Church kin iver git out.
“Yere grandmither is pure Irishâan' not like usâcrossed wit' wind-rovin' Danesâan' there's a lot o' sins the Danes must answer forâthe Irish were goin' along paceful sometimes wit' their own good dhrinksâan' then the Danes came an' taught 'em to make beer out ov heatherâit tashted like rain water an' soap in a canâbut the Irishâthim ov the weak minds would git dhrunk on the stuffâ”
He paused, his face wrinkled in disgust.
“Ireland had a big navyâit was so big the admirals were common sailorsâthey could ate Inglind for breakfast before the Danes got thim to dhrinkin' beerâthin came the indâit wasn't long before they begin rubbin' their hands an' bowin' whin the King passed by to kape a date wit' a bawdy womanâ
“âWhat strange payple,' said the king, âthey bow an' they scrape before me who am not ov their bloodâ'
“âAh, don't you understhand,' says a fierce lookin' Daneâwit' hair longer an' redder then yere mither'sââYere scarlet Majesty,' says heââwe give them beer to dhrink'â
“An' the king's royal fat sides wint thin with laughin'.
“âWhat a joke to phlay on sthrong min,' says heââit's like fadin' crame to tigars and makin' em purrâ. I ain't had sich a good laugh since the time I killed me royal father' says heâthin he rose to his four feet fourâan' scratched the sores on his royal face.
“âBring the man before me who invinted givin' the Irish beer,” commands he.
“They brought before the king a shrivelled up Dane from whose hands dript blood. They looked like claws.
“A man behind him whisperedââThey got that way your precious Majesty from chokin' Irish babies for Cromwell.'
“âShut up,' growled the kingââIt is beer an' not blood of which we talk.'
“The beer invinter only had one eye an' it was at the ind ov his noseâthere were siven strakes ov blood across itâan' it nary movedâlike the eye ov a dead fishâit was his lip hung low, an' was heavy like liver.
“âWhat a bea-utiful lip,' says the kingââan' what a nice sad eye he hasâ'
“âEye ever faithful to the service of any king,' says the beer invinter.
“âA Dane who should be Irish,' says the kingââhe'll serve anybody.'
“âAnybody,'
says the beer invinter with the bloody strames across his eyesââI've been in Ireland long enough to learn obaydience.'
“âOf sich is the kingdom of kings,' says the kingâmay God in His divine wisdom kape yere heart pure,' says he.
“The king scratched his royal sores, an' looked at the invinter ov beer.
“âWhat a handsome man you are,' says heââhow ilegantâan' what beutiful hands you have wit' their fine red colorâit's like the sun glimmerin' on me palace wallsâ
“âEven without a cint in yere pocket ye should climb far on the ladder ov glory,' says the kingââyere hands are bint so as to hold the ropesâ
“âI'll make ye the Right Rivrind Royal Climber,' says his royaltyââan' ye kin test the ropes ov the doomed that are brave enough to bethray meâye shall soak the ropes in beer that the odor ov thim may help to kill traitorsâ'
“He kissed the man above the eyeâ
“âBlissed be anither Royal Knight,' says heââRope Tester and Beer Taster to the Kingâin all his terrible dominions.' He pinned a lot ov badges on the monster Daneâan' he slunk from the sight of men wit' 'em rattlin' on his breast.”
Old Hughie rubbed his forehead.
“But all that has nothin' to do wit' yere grandmither.”
His voice became lighter.
“If I do be tellin' yeâshe was beautiful as the moon over Killarney when the sthars are dim. Her father wasâSquire Byrneâhe was considerable of a manâhe wasâbut it's not who yere father wasâexcept that if the father's a woman the daughter will be aven lessâ
“A man smashed out of rock he wasâsilent as the bogâan' sthrong as the wind on the oceanâhe was like me own fatherâno pain iver bint himâBoth of thim wint to the meadow ov the dead suddenâthey're taythe still sthrong enough to ate the bones ov the dead.”
He looked about the saloon as if fearful that someone would hear.
“Yere grandmither is like him. The yares have come on her soft as the dew on grass. She's phroud as Lucifer on Sunday morning.
“Some people grow old like a withered quinceâan' others like a big ripe apple in the sunâyere grandmither's like that. An' let no one tell ye, me boy, that yere grandmither has no nerve. One time, whin yere father was a baby he was about to die ov the closin ov the lungs. An' the doctor came into the room an says, âI'm sorryâbut it's only a few hours nowâat the most. Is the baby baptized,' he says. âThat'll keep it outta limboâan' its only right that sich a baby should not be forever in sich a dark placeâbut see the face of God.' Yere grandmither looked at yere poor father thin a few months old, an' she says to the doctorââBe gone with ye, sir, over the road through the bog, 'tis no man from the big college who kin tell me a baby's dead before it isn't.' She took onions and fried 'em in grease from the pet goose, an' she wrapped yere father up in it.” The old man chuckled. “An' she saved ye're father's lifeâan' played a joke on ye, my boy.”
“No heart-bitter wound would she iver showâaven if it killed herâ
“She scholded me often for the dhrinkâand has these fifty gone yearsâas she shouldâan' knowin' love as I do to be a paradise for fools that niver kin beâI'd marry her agin tomorrowâif she were brave enough to face the long throuble aginâ”
He sighed deeplyâ
“It's no wonder she wrote jinglesâlivin' wit' the likes ov meâ
“Wit' a heart bolder then murdher, her duty made her swate like a childâ
“Poor Kath-u-rine!!”
R
HEUMATISM
crawled like a torpid river toward Old Hughie Tully's heart.
“Indade,” he would clutch his breast, “the rist o' me's good, but here I am playin' tag wit' the grave.”
A crucifix hung above his bed. Upon it was a plaster Christ with one arm and a broken foot. Old Hughie looked at the broken Christ.
“Oh, wellâhe died too,” he turned his heavy face away.
“But he come to life aginâso they say.”
Grandmother walked in and out of the room, as silent as a broken shadow on a grave.
She was bent nearly double in the vise of age. She held a corn cob pipe between thin tight lips and toothless gums.
Half her aged life was spent in keeping her pipe lit. On and on she would chatter in a ceaseless mirage of Irish nothings. She would then relight her pipe.
Now her pipe remained unlit.
Her lips seldom opened.
A once heavy woman, she had shrivelled to less than eighty pounds. Freckles dotted the edges of her deep wrinkles. Her heart had grown sweet in grief. Her soul remained strong with the years.
She was older than my grandfather.
An unyielding woman, the passion of her life had been Old Hughie and my father.
With that pathetic scuttering away from reality which is too typical of America I was early told of my grandmother's high breeding.
She claimed that she could trail her ancestry to the Spanish Celts who colonized Ireland hundreds of years before the coming of Christ. Old Hughie, at heart, thought little of grandmother's lineage. “We all come from somebodyâand I came as far Kathurinâwhy it was one ov me own great grandfather's that dug the ditch that run through Rome.”
But the illusion of her great learning was ever with my father. “If ye inherited anything from anybody, Jim, it was from your grandmitherâshe was an educated woman.”
Always was she asking Old Hughie now, “can I do anything for ye Hughie?”
The kindly old despot would answer each time, “No Kath-u-rinâthanks be.”
She would look for a moment at the immense head of her master, buried in the pillow. Her mouth would contract and tremble at the edges. It would then become tight as she hobbled from the room.
“Poor Kath-u-rin,” murmured Hughie to John Crasby as he entered the room, “she'll kill me wit' kindness.”
The men looked at each other. Crasby's hand raised. “It's all right, Hughie.”
“Shureâan' it's all rightâwhy wouldn't it be . . indade an' I'll pour beer over the lilies on your grave.”
“Sure you will,” returned Crasby, “well I know it.”
He stood in the center of the room.
Old Hughie looked at him with narrow eyes.
“How's the wither out, John?”
“Very good Hughieâwe'll be takin' a walk tomorrow.”
“Not me Johnâniver no moreâ”
He looked up at the broken Christ.
“It's a ride I'll be takin.'” He pulled his arm from beneath the quilt, “To the cimetaryâGod help me⦔
“You mustn't talk like that Hughie,” Crasby's voice was whisky cracked and soft, “you're good for many the year yet.”
“But not here Johnâout in the grave.” He looked keenly at Crasby again. “An' ye'll be braggin' how ye put me thereâwhin ye know that no man kin do that.”
John Crasby moved closer to the bed. A one time dandy, tall, with a long red nose, and nearly hairless head, he rubbed his thin throat.
“I'll be goin' ahead of you, Hughie, I'm seventy-threeâno more signs to paintâno more work an' no more drinkin'ânothin'â”
Crasby looked around the room. “But I give you my word, HughieâI'll tell 'em up town it's the rheumatiz what's wrong with youâand I'll tell 'em all you said helloâ”
“Shureâan' do that, JohnâI'll not say it often any more.”
“An' I'll tell 'em you'll be up an' around by Sunday, Hughie,” Crasby added cheerfully.
“An' ye won't brag if I goâwill ye Johnâfor remimberâit's hard enough to laveâwithout thatâ” The last words fell into a whisper. “It's not much to ask ye, John,” he added slowly, “but ivery man has his pride.”
Crasby held out a long arm.
“Hughieâif I iver say a word you can ha'nt me. May I drink your ghost in ivery glass if I iver betray any wordâbut you're not goingâye old babyâwe'll both live to drink fifty one-legged men under the table.”
Old Hughie smiled at the memory.
Late that afternoon Old Hughie Tully died.
My father followed my grandmother into the room.
They looked at the shaggy old man for a long time.
Sorrow was never endured with greater dignity.
For more than fifty married years my grandmother had stood by Old Hughie. It was said by some that as a ten year old girl she had taught him to walk.
“Well, Hughie's gone,” she said at last to my father. Her pipe fell to the floor. “Blissed Jasus have mercy.”
My father said nothing. He took his mother from the room.
The one negro in the town attended his funeral.
The priest said a few commonplace words over him.
Jack Raley and John Crasby did not go into the church.
In Mahon's saloon all drinking was suspended for one minute.
“That's long enough to hold your drinks, menâHughie himself would have you hold them no longerâ” he lifted his glassâAll followed him. “It's bottoms up for Old Hughie.” Many voices chantedâ“Bottoms up for Old Hughie.”
He lay in his yellow oak coffin, his gnarled hands folded on his broad chest, his head tilted back as if for a drink.
Saloon keepers and bartenders looked out of front doors along Spring Street as the funeral passed.
John Crasby was the last to leave Mahon's saloon that night. The roosters crowed as he walked, bottle in pocket, toward the cemetery.
With unsteady gait he made his way to Old Hughie's grave. He seated himself upon the newly upturned earth. He took the bottle and a small glass from his coat pocket. He filled the glass and held it so the moon's rays slanted across the red liquor. He looked carefully at the grave.
“Your head would be about here, Hughieâthis'll soak down your throat.”
He poured the liquor on the ground.
“There's one for you, Hughie.”
He filled the glass and drained it.
“Here's one for me.”
“One more for you Hughie,” he poured again.
“Here's one for me.” He drank.
Glass after glass was emptied in this way. The bottle empty, he stood it upside down on the whisky-soaked earth.
For a long time he stared at the vastness of the midnight sky.
Rising unsteadily, he hiccoughed,
“G'byâHu-gh-ie,” and staggered home.