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    Part II - Page 2

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    by some little presents I had bought
    them--a pair of folding scissors for the old woman, a strop for her
    husband, and some other trifles.

    Then the youngest son, Columb, who is still at home, went into the
    inner room and brought out the alarm clock I sent them last year
    when I went away.

    'I am very fond of this clock,' he said, patting it on the back; 'it
    will ring for me any morning when I want to go out fishing. Bedad,
    there are no two clocks in the island that would be equal to it.'

    I had some photographs to show them that I took here last year, and
    while I was sitting on a little stool near the door of the kitchen,
    showing them to the family, a beautiful young woman I had spoken to
    a few times last year slipped in, and after a wonderfully simple and
    cordial speech of welcome, she sat down on the floor beside me to
    look on also.

    The complete absence of shyness or self-consciousness in most of
    these people gives them a peculiar charm, and when this young and
    beautiful woman leaned across my knees to look nearer at some
    photograph that pleased her, I felt more than ever the strange
    simplicity of the island life.

    Last year when I came here everything was new, and the people were a
    little strange with me, but now I am familiar with them and their
    way of life, so that their qualities strike me more forcibly than
    before.

    When my photographs of this island had been examined with immense
    delight, and every person in them had been identified--even those
    who only showed a hand or a leg--I brought out some I had taken in
    County Wicklow. Most of them were fragments, showing fairs in
    Rathdrum or Aughrim, men cutting turf on the hills, or other scenes
    of inland life, yet they gave the greatest delight to these people
    who are wearied of the sea.

    This year I see a darker side of life in the islands. The sun seldom
    shines, and day after day a cold south-western wind blows over the
    cliffs, bringing up showers of hail and dense masses of cloud.

    The sons who are at home stay out fishing whenever it is tolerably
    calm, from about three in the morning till after nightfall, yet they
    earn little, as fish are not plentiful.

    The old man fishes also with a long rod and ground-bait, but as a
    rule has even smaller success.


    When the weather breaks completely, fishing is abandoned, and they
    both go down and dig potatoes in the rain. The women sometimes help
    them, but their usual work is to look after the calves and do their
    spinning in the house.

    There is a vague depression over the family this year, because of
    the two sons who have gone away, Michael to the mainland, and
    another son, who was working in Kilronan last year, to the United
    States.
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