To the lonely house in the
pine wood people sometimes came for advice on subjects too
recondite for even those extremes of elucidation, the parish priest
and the tavern. These people were always well received, and their
perplexities were attended to instantly, for the Philosophers liked
being wise and they were not ashamed to put their learning to the
proof, nor were they, as so many wise people are, fearful lest they
should become poor or less respected by giving away their
knowledge. These were favourite maxims with them:
You must be fit to give before
you can be fit to receive.
Knowledge becomes lumber in a
week, therefore, get rid of it.
The box must be emptied before it
can be refilled.
Refilling is progress.
A sword, a spade, and a thought
should never be allowed to rust.
The Grey Woman and the Thin
Woman, however, held opinions quite contrary to these, and their
maxims also were different:
A secret is a weapon and a
friend.
Man is God’s secret, Power is
man’s secret, Sex is woman’s secret.
By having much you are fitted to
have more.
There is always room in the
box.
The art of packing is the last
lecture of wisdom.
The scalp of your enemy is
progress.
Holding these opposed views it
seemed likely that visitors seeking for advice from the
Philosophers might be astonished and captured by their wives; but
the women were true to their own doctrines and refused to part with
information to any persons saving only those of high rank, such as
policemen, gombeen men, and district and county councillors; but
even to these they charged high prices for their information, and a
bonus on any gains which accrued through the following of their
advices. It is unnecessary to state that their following was small
when compared with those who sought the assistance of their
husbands, for scarcely a week passed but some person came through
the pine wood with his brows in a tangle of perplexity.
In these people the children were
deeply interested. They used to go apart afterwards and talk about
them, and would try to remember what they looked like, how they
talked, and their manner of walking or taking snuff. After a time
they became interested in the problems which these people submitted
to their parents and the replies or instructions wherewith the
latter relieved them. Long training had made the children able to
sit perfectly quiet, so that when the talk came to the interesting
part they were entirely forgotten, and ideas which might otherwise
have been spared their youth became the commonplaces of their
conversation.
When the children were ten years
of age one of the Philosophers died. He called the household
together and announced that the time had come when he must bid them
all good-bye, and that his intention was to die as quickly as might
be. It was, he continued, an unfortunate thing that his health was
at the moment more robust than it had been for a long time, but
that, of course, was no obstacle to his resolution, for death did
not depend upon ill-health but upon a multitude of other factors
with the details whereof he would not trouble them.
His wife, the Grey Woman of Dun
Gortin, applauded this resolution and added as an amendment that it
was high time he did something, that the life he had been leading
was an arid and unprofitable one, that he had stolen her fourteen
hundred maledictions for which he had no use and presented her with
a child for which she had none, and that, all things concerned, the
sooner he did die and stop talking the sooner everybody concerned
would be made happy.
The other Philosopher replied
mildly as he lit his pipe: “Brother, the greatest of all virtues is
curiosity, and the end of all desire is wisdom; tell us, therefore,
by what steps you have arrived at this commendable
resolution.”
To this the Philosopher replied:
“I have attained to all the wisdom which I am fitted to bear. In
the space of one week no new truth has come to me. All that I have
read lately I knew before; all that I have thought has been but a
recapitulation of old and wearisome ideas. There is no longer an
horizon before my eves. Space has narrowed to the petty dimensions
of my thumb. Time is the tick of a clock. Good and evil are two
peas in the one pod. My wife’s face is the same for ever. I want to
play with the children, and yet I do not want to. Your conversation
with me, brother, is like the droning of a bee in a dark cell. The
pine trees take root and grow and die.—It’s all bosh.
Good-bye.”
His friend replied:
“Brother, these are weighty
reflections, and I do clearly perceive that the time has come for
you to stop. I might observe, not in order to combat your views,
but merely to continue an interesting conversation, that there are
still some knowledges which you have not assimilated—you do not yet
know how to play the tambourine, nor how to be nice to your wife,
nor how to get up first in the morning and cook the breakfast. Have
you learned how to smoke strong tobacco as I do? or can you dance
in the moonlight with a woman of the Shee? To understand the theory
which underlies all things is not sufficient. It has occurred to
me, brother, that wisdom may not be the end of everything. Goodness
and kindliness are, perhaps, beyond wisdom. Is it not possible that
the ultimate end is gaiety and music and a dance of joy? Wisdom is
the oldest of all things. Wisdom is all head and no heart. Behold,
brother, you are being crushed under the weight of your head. You
are dying of old age while you are yet a child.”
“Brother,” replied the other
Philosopher, “your voice is like the droning of a bee in a dark
cell. If in my latter days I am reduced to playing on the
tambourine and running after a hag in the moonlight, and cooking
your breakfast in the grey morning, then it is indeed time that I
should die. Good-bye, brother.”
So saying, the Philosopher arose
and removed all the furniture to the sides of the room so that
there was a clear space left in the centre. He then took off his
boots and his coat, and standing on his toes he commenced to gyrate
with extraordinary rapidity. In a few moments his movements became
steady and swift, and a sound came from him like the humming of a
swift saw; this sound grew deeper and deeper, and at last
continuous, so that the room was filled with a thrilling noise. In
a quarter of an hour the movement began to noticeably slacken. In
another three minutes it was quite slow. In two more minutes he
grew visible again as a body, and then he wobbled to and fro, and
at last dropped in a heap on the floor. He was quite dead, and on
his face was an expression of serene beatitude.
“God be with you, brother,” said
the remaining Philosopher, and he lit his pipe, focused his vision
on the extreme tip of his nose, and began to meditate profoundly on
the aphorism whether the good is the all or the all is the good. In
another moment he would have become oblivious of the room, the
company, and the corpse, but the Grey Woman of Dun Gortin shattered
his meditation by a demand for advice as to what should next be
done. The Philosopher, with an effort, detached his eyes from his
nose and his mind from his maxim.
“Chaos,” said he, “is the first
condition. Order is the first law. Continuity is the first
reflection. Quietude is the first happiness. Our brother is
dead—bury him.” So saying, he returned his eyes to his nose, and
his mind to his maxim, and lapsed to a profound reflection wherein
nothing sat perched on insubstantiality, and the Spirit of Artifice
goggled at the puzzle.
The Grey Woman of Dun Gortin took
a pinch of snuff from her box and raised the keen over her
husband:
“You were my husband and you are
dead.
It is wisdom that has killed
you.
If you had listened to my wisdom
instead of to your own you would still be a trouble to me and I
would still be happy.
Women are stronger than men—they
do not die of wisdom.
They are better than men because
they do not seek wisdom.
They are wiser than men because
they know less and understand more.
I had fourteen hundred
maledictions, my little store, and by a trick you stole them and
left me empty.
You stole my wisdom and it has
broken your neck.
I lost my knowledge and I am yet
alive raising the keen over your body, but it was too heavy for
you, my little knowledge.
You will never go out into the
pine wood in the morning, or wander abroad on a night of
stars.
You will not sit in the
chimney-corner on the hard nights, or go to bed, or rise again, or
do anything at all from this day out.
Who will gather pine cones now
when the fire is going down, or call my name in the empty house, or
be angry when the kettle is not boiling?
Now I am desolate indeed. I have
no knowledge, I have no husband, I have no more to say.”
“If I had anything better you
should have it,” said she politely to the Thin Woman of Inis
Magrath.
“Thank you,” said the Thin Woman,
“it was very nice. Shall I begin now? My husband is meditating and
we may be able to annoy him.”
“Don’t trouble yourself,” replied
the other, “I am past enjoyment and am, moreover, a respectable
woman.”
“That is no more than the truth,
indeed.”
“I have always done the right
thing at the right time.”
“I’d be the last body in the
world to deny that,” was the warm response.
“Very well, then,” said the Grey
Woman, and she commenced to take off her boots. She stood in the
centre of the room and balanced herself on her toe.
“You are a decent, respectable
lady,” said the Thin Woman of Inis Magrath, and then the Grey Woman
began to gyrate rapidly and more rapidly until she was a very
fervour of motion, and in three-quarters of an hour (for she was
very tough) she began to slacken, grew visible, wobbled, and fell
beside her dead husband, and on her face was a beatitude almost
surpassing his.
The Thin Woman of Inis Magrath
smacked the children and put them to bed, next she buried the two
bodies under the hearthstone, and then, with some trouble, detached
her husband from his meditations. When he became capable of
ordinary occurrences she detailed all that had happened, and said
that he alone was to blame for the sad bereavement. He
replied:
“The toxin generates the
anti-toxin. The end lies concealed in the beginning. All bodies
grow around a skeleton. Life is a petticoat about death. I will not
go to bed.”