The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

“Tell the lord,” he cried, “that a woman is here in child-birth, and until she’s delivered the doctor cannot come to him.”

“But I’ve brought a horse, and the doctor is to go back with me.”

“Give the lord my message and say it is Daniel O’Neill who sends it.”

“But his lordship is dying and unless the doctor is there to tap him, he may not live till morning.”

“Unless the doctor is here to deliver my wife, my child may be dead before midnight.”

“What is the birth of your child to the death of his lordship?” cried the man; but, before the words were well out of his mouth, my father, in his great strength, had laid hold of the reins and swung both horse and rider round about.

“Get yourself to the other side of my gate, or I’ll fling you into the road,” he cried; and then, returning to the porch, he re-entered the house and clashed the door behind him.

Father Dan used to say that for some moments more the groom from Castle Raa could be heard shouting the name of the doctor to the lighted windows of my mother’s room.  But his voice was swirled away in the whistling of the wind, and after a while the hoofs of his horses went champing over the gravel in the direction of the gate.

When my father returned to his room, shaking the rain from his hair and beard, he was fuming with indignation.  Perhaps a memory of forty years ago was seething in his excited brain.

“The old scoundrel,” he said.  “He’d like it, wouldn’t he?  They’d all like it!  Which of them wants a son of mine amongst them?”

The roaring night outside became yet more terrible.  So loud was the noise from the shore that it was almost as if a wild beast were trying to liberate itself from the womb of the sea.  At one moment Aunt Bridget came downstairs to say that the storm was frightening my mother.  All the servants of the house were gathered in the hall, full of fear, and telling each other superstitious stories.

Suddenly there came a lull.  Rain and wind seemed to cease in an instant.  The clamour of the sea became less and the tolling of the bell on St. Mary’s Rock died away in the distance.  It was almost as if the world, which had been whirling through space, suddenly stood still.

In that moment of silence a deeper moan than usual came from the room overhead.  My father dropped into a chair, clasped his hands and closed his eyes.  Father Dan rattled his pearl beads and moved his lips, but uttered no sound.

Then a faint sound came from the room overhead.  My father opened his eyes and listened.  Father Dan held his breath.  The sound was repeated, but louder, clearer, shriller than before.  There could be no mistaking it now.  It was Nature’s eternal signal that out of the womb of silence a living soul had been born into the world.

“It’s over,” said my father.

“Glory be to God and all the Saints!” said Father Dan.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Woman Thou Gavest Me from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.