Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray (robert munsch read aloud txt) ๐
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- Author: William Makepeace Thackeray
Read book online ยซBarry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray (robert munsch read aloud txt) ๐ยป. Author - William Makepeace Thackeray
I had no money, as I said, and was sitting very disconsolately over a platter of rancid bacon and mouldy biscuit, which was served to us at mess, when it came to my turn to be helped to drink, and I was served, like the rest, with a dirty tin noggin, containing somewhat more than half a pint of rum-and-water. The beaker was so greasy and filthy that I could not help turning round to the messman and saying, โFellow, get me a glass!โ At which all the wretches round about me burst into a roar of laughter, the very loudest among them being, of course, Mr. Toole. โGet the gentleman a towel for his hands, and serve him a basin of turtle-soup,โ roared the monster, who was sitting, or rather squatting, on the deck opposite me; and as he spoke he suddenly seized my beaker of grog and emptied it, in the midst of another burst of applause.
โIf you want to vex him, ax him about his wife the washerwoman, who BATES him,โ here whispered in my ear another worthy, a retired link-boy, who, disgusted with his profession, had adopted the military life.
โIs it a towel of your wifeโs washing, Mr. Toole?โ said I. โIโm told she wiped your face often with one.โ
โAx him why he wouldnโt see her yesterday, when she came to the ship,โ continued the link-boy. And so I put to him some other foolish jokes about soapsuds, henpecking, and flat-irons, which set the man into a fury, and succeeded in raising a quarrel between us. We should have fallen to at once, but a couple of grinning marines, who kept watch at the door, for fear we should repent of our bargain and have a fancy to escape, came forward and interposed between us with fixed bayonets; but the sergeant coming down the ladder, and hearing the dispute, condescended to say that we might fight it out like men with FISTES if we chose, and that the fore-deck should be free to us for that purpose. But the use of fistes, as the Englishman called them, was not then general in Ireland, and it was agreed that we should have a pair of cudgels; with one of which weapons I finished the fellow in four minutes, giving him a thump across his stupid sconce which laid him lifeless on the deck, and not receiving myself a single hurt of consequence.
This victory over the cock of the vile dunghill obtained me respect among the wretches of whom I formed part, and served to set up my spirits, which otherwise were flagging; and my position was speedily made more bearable by the arrival on board our ship of an old friend. This was no other than my second in the fatal duel which had sent me thus early out into the world, Captain Fagan. There was a young nobleman who had a company in our regiment (Galeโs foot), and who, preferring the delights of the Mall and the clubs to the dangers of a rough campaign, had given Fagan the opportunity of an exchange; which, as the latter had no fortune but his sword, he was glad to make. The sergeant was putting us through our exercise on deck (the seamen and officers of the transport looking grinning on) when a boat came from the shore bringing our captain to the ship; and though I started and blushed red as he recognised meโa descendant of the Barrysโin this degrading posture, I promise you that the sight of Faganโs face was most welcome to me, for it assured me that a friend was near me. Before that I was so melancholy that I would certainly have deserted had I found the means, and had not the inevitable marines kept a watch to prevent any such escapes. Fagan gave me a wink of recognition, but offered no public token of acquaintance; it was not until two days afterwards, and when we had bidden adieu to old Ireland and were standing out to sea, that he called me into his cabin, and then, shaking hands with me cordially, gave me news, which I much wanted, of my family. โI had news of you in Dublin,โ he said. โโFaith youโve begun early, like your fatherโs son; and I think you could not do better than as you have done. But why did you not write home to your poor mother? She has sent a half-dozen letters to you at Dublin.โ
I said I had asked for letters at the post-office, but there were none for Mr. Redmond. I did not like to add that I had been ashamed, after the first week, to write to my mother.
โWe must write to her by the pilot,โ said he, โwho will leave us in two hours; and you can tell her that you are safe, and married to Brown Bess.โ I sighed when he talked about being married; on which he said with a laugh, โI see you are thinking of a certain young lady at Bradyโs Town.โ
โIs Miss Brady well?โ said I; and indeed, could hardly utter it, for I certainly WAS thinking about her: for, though I had forgotten her in the gaieties of Dublin, I have always found adversity makes man very affectionate.
โThereโs only seven Miss Bradys now,โ answered Fagan, in a solemn voice. โPoor Noraโโ
โGood heavens! what of her?โ I thought grief had killed her.
โShe took on so at your going away that she was obliged to console herself with a husband. Sheโs now Mrs. John Quin.โ
โMrs. John Quin! Was there ANOTHER Mr. John Quin?โ asked I, quite wonder-stricken.
โNo; the very same one, my boy. He recovered from his wound. The ball you hit him with was not likely to hurt him. It was only made of tow. Do you think the Bradys would let you kill fifteen hundred a year out of the family?โ And then Fagan further told me that, in order to get me out of the wayโfor the cowardly Englishman could never be brought to marry from fear of meโthe plan of the duel had been arranged. โBut hit him you certainly did, Redmond, and with a fine thick plugget of tow; and the fellow was so frightened, that he was an hour in coming to. We told your mother the story afterwards, and a pretty scene she made; she despatched a half-score of letters to Dublin after you, but I suppose addressed them to you in your real name, by which you never thought to ask for them.โ
โThe coward!โ said I (though, I confess, my mind was considerably relieved at the thoughts of not having killed him). โAnd did the Bradys of Castle Brady consent to admit a poltroon like that into one of the most ancient and honourable families in the world?โ
โHe has paid off your uncleโs mortgage,โ said Fagan; โhe gives Nora a coach-and-six; he is to sell out, and Lieutenant Ulick Brady of the Militia is to purchase his company. That coward of a fellow has been the making of your uncleโs family. โFaith! the business was well done.โ And then, laughing, he told me how Mick and Ulick had never let him out of their sight, although he was for deserting to England, until the marriage was completed and the happy couple off on their road to Dublin. โAre you in want of cash, my boy?โ continued the good-natured Captain. โYou may draw upon me, for I got a couple of hundred out of Master Quin for my share, and while they last you shall never want.โ
And so he bade me sit down and write a letter to my mother, which I did forthwith in very sincere and repentant terms, stating that I had been guilty of extravagances, that I had not known until that moment under what a fatal error I had been labouring, and that I had embarked for Germany as
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