Part 3 (1/2)
Mrs. O'Neil smiled her happiest smile. She loved to hear her country praised.
”Ah! Ireland was a great place once,” she cried. ”But times have changed, and many of the days have been sad ones since the rule of our own kings. Did ye ever hear tell of the famine?” she asked.
”Yes, indeed,” said one of the gentlemen, as Mrs. O'Neil bustled about the table. ”I shall never forget a story I read at the time. I was a little boy in school. It was about a family who were suffering terribly from the famine. Their supply of potatoes had come to an end and the new crop was killed by the blight. There was no money to pay the rent, and the poor little children with their parents were turned out of their home by the hard-hearted landlord.
”But at this dreadful moment, help came from a kind friend in America, and they were saved from further suffering.”
When he had finished speaking, Mrs. O'Neil told of the suffering people who became homeless and starving, and who died before help reached them.
Norah crept close to her mother's side as she listened to the story. Her big blue eyes were full of tears.
This dreadful famine happened before Mrs. O'Neil was born, for Norah's grandmother was herself a child at the time.
The potato crop had been poor for several years, and many were the families who were obliged to beg from those who were a little better off than themselves. But at last there came a season when all the crops failed. It was the dreadful year of 1847, when the blight fell upon every part of Ireland.
Stop for a minute and think of the thousands of little children who lived almost entirely on potatoes up to this time. Some of them, it is true, had bread every day, and meat once or twice a week.
But there were many many homes where the only food of the family was potatoes. Then you can picture what happened when there were no more potatoes.
The smiles soon gave place to tears. The roses faded away from the cheeks. The bright eyes grew dull and heavy.
Poor little children of Ireland! Think what became of them when the last piece of furniture had been sold to buy bread!
Alas! many of them were soon without even shelter. For they were driven with their parents out of their small homes, because there was no possible way of paying the rent.
Then what? Fever and sickness travelled from place to place. Death followed in their pathway. There were many days of cruel suffering before the rest of the world waked up and sent help to the sick and the starving in Ireland.
America showed herself a kind friend in that sad time. It was some of the very food she sent to Ireland that saved the life of Norah's grandmother. She and her brothers were nearly starving when the help came. They lived on the seash.o.r.e and had been trying to keep themselves alive by eating seaweed and moss. Those were dreadful times, indeed.
Mrs. O'Neil stopped to pat Norah's head, which was in her ap.r.o.n. The child was crying softly.
”There, there, those hard days are over now, my child,” said her mother, tenderly. ”The sky is brighter for Ireland than it has been these many years. You must not let this fine lady see you cry. Enough water has fallen outside to-day without our adding to the shower.”
[Ill.u.s.tration: NORAH'S HOME.]
Norah began to laugh, while she wiped away the tears with her mother's ap.r.o.n.
The visitors once more rose to go. At the same time one of the gentlemen stepped to Mrs. O'Neil's side and said in a low tone, ”We would not think of offering pay for your kindness to us this afternoon, but it will give me a great deal of pleasure if you will take this and buy a little kid with it for Norah.”
He pressed some money into the good woman's hands.
”But we have one goat now, as you must have seen,” she said.
”Two goats will give the children twice as much milk as one,” he answered, with a laugh. ”And, besides, I want Norah to have the new goat for her very own.”
Mrs. O'Neil could not refuse such a kind offer. ”Thank ye entirely, and may Hiven send its blessing on ye all.”
By this time the driver had brought the horse and the jaunting-car from the little shed, and the party drove off in the direction of Killarney.