Dubliners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Dubliners.

Dubliners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Dubliners.

Mrs. Mooney’s young men paid fifteen shillings a week for board and lodgings (beer or stout at dinner excluded).  They shared in common tastes and occupations and for this reason they were very chummy with one another.  They discussed with one another the chances of favourites and outsiders.  Jack Mooney, the Madam’s son, who was clerk to a commission agent in Fleet Street, had the reputation of being a hard case.  He was fond of using soldiers’ obscenities:  usually he came home in the small hours.  When he met his friends he had always a good one to tell them and he was always sure to be on to a good thing-that is to say, a likely horse or a likely artiste.  He was also handy with the mits and sang comic songs.  On Sunday nights there would often be a reunion in Mrs. Mooney’s front drawing-room.  The music-hall artistes would oblige; and Sheridan played waltzes and polkas and vamped accompaniments.  Polly Mooney, the Madam’s daughter, would also sing.  She sang: 

I’m a ... naughty girl. 
You needn’t sham: 
You know I am.

Polly was a slim girl of nineteen; she had light soft hair and a small full mouth.  Her eyes, which were grey with a shade of green through them, had a habit of glancing upwards when she spoke with anyone, which made her look like a little perverse madonna.  Mrs. Mooney had first sent her daughter to be a typist in a corn-factor’s office but, as a disreputable sheriff’s man used to come every other day to the office, asking to be allowed to say a word to his daughter, she had taken her daughter home again and set her to do housework.  As Polly was very lively the intention was to give her the run of the young men.  Besides young men like to feel that there is a young woman not very far away.  Polly, of course, flirted with the young men but Mrs. Mooney, who was a shrewd judge, knew that the young men were only passing the time away:  none of them meant business.  Things went on so for a long time and Mrs. Mooney began to think of sending Polly back to typewriting when she noticed that something was going on between Polly and one of the young men.  She watched the pair and kept her own counsel.

Polly knew that she was being watched, but still her mother’s persistent silence could not be misunderstood.  There had been no open complicity between mother and daughter, no open understanding but, though people in the house began to talk of the affair, still Mrs. Mooney did not intervene.  Polly began to grow a little strange in her manner and the young man was evidently perturbed.  At last, when she judged it to be the right moment, Mrs. Mooney intervened.  She dealt with moral problems as a cleaver deals with meat:  and in this case she had made up her mind.

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Dubliners from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.