the resolutions which are the immediate excuse for oratory, that public meetings are absolutely necessary preliminaries to any enterprise. This is the case in all f
em, with drums and full dress speechifying, even if he were organising a secret society and arranging for a rebellion. H
o understood that in order to make a success of a public meeting in Connacht and therefore to further the enterprise on hand, it is
t man and therefore good-natured, did not want to refuse Doyle. But Father McCormack was not a free agent. Behind him, somewhere, was a bishop, reputed to be austere, certainly domineerin
ot, it might have been supposed, a good man to advise a priest on a delicate question of ecclesiastical etiquette. But the Major was eminently respectable, and his outlook upon life
r at this meeting the doctor's getting up or not. I'm not sure, I say. Can you t
I'm bound to say he looks like a Protestant. I don't k
hat I'm not a bigoted man. It wouldn't stop me taking the chair if he was a Protestant. It wouldn't stop me if he was a Presbyterian, and I can't say more than that. You k
the Major. "He's been here three da
er McCormack. "There's many a man gets drunk when he
said the Major, "for that's all I kno
ng, mind you; only there it is. But sure, if no one in the place has anything to say against the American gent
n Regan," sa
I never heard tel
ter of that,
as he
that. He's the only man who prof
e," said Father McCormack, "I woul
e," said the Major
hat I'm afraid of is that this fellow might be worse. For let me tell you, Major, there's worse thin
did not enable him to give any inf
e about him," he said we
se French atheists, or if he had any hand in hunting the nuns out of Portugal, the bishop
Dr. O'Grady. It's
nd I won't ask you another question.
a
g sixpence by going to a meeting he'd go, if it was held for the purpose of breaking the windows of the Presbytery. That's the sort of man Doyle is. And I wouldn't mind Thady Gallagher. Thady is a kind-hearted poor fellow, though he's a bit foolish at times; but he's n
lt it wrong to leave Father McCormack under the impression that he was go
at I wouldn't go near the m
ing against tha
etest all public meetings, and I wouldn't go to
of it? A man needn't go to
"I must; any man must, if
hat I've been keeping out of the doctor's way ever since Doyle asked me. I
He had just received answers to his letters from four of the most eminent Irish Members of Parliament He had asked them all to attend a meeting at
we are paying these fellows £400 a year each, and when we ask for a perfectly simple speech-- Oh, I beg your
e," said the Major, "to as
t all?" said
Born in Ballymoy. Rose to great eminence in Boli
said the Major, "that he was some
a ha'porth about him. All I said was that if he turned out to be that kind of a ma
eard or read a single word against his character as a religious man. He may have been a little--" Dr. O'Grady winked slowly. "You know the kind of thing I mean, Father
dn't," said
of course it's worse on active service. Come now, Major,
't," said the
rmack is listening to you anyhow. And you may take my word for it that the old
r McCormack. "I wouldn't mind that
were-and he had faults, of course-he wasn't that kind of man. So you needn't hesitate about taking the chair at the meeting, Fat
r that," said Father Mc
money, but I'll pay down £50 to any man who proves anything bad
you," said Fat
lating immoral literature-Sunday papers, for instance-or wanting
you," said Fat
or I've had a man looking up all that's known about G