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A good deal of the people got inside, and shut the doors, the way the hairy
fellow wouldn't pin them; but Tom kept playing, and the outsiders kept dancing
and shouting, and the wolf kept dancing and roaring with the pain his legs were
giving him; and all the time he had his eyes on Redhead, who was shut out along
with the rest. Wherever Redhead went, the wolf followed, and kept one eye on
him and the other on Tom, to see if he would give him leave to eat him. But Tom
shook his head, and never stopped the tune, and Redhead never stopped dancing
and bawling, and the wolf dancing and roaring, one leg up and the other down,
and he ready to drop out of his standing from fair tiresomeness.
When the princess seen that there was no fear of any one being kilt, she was
so divarted by the stew that Redhead was in, that she gave another great laugh
; and well become Tom, out he cried, "King of Dublin, I have two halves of
your daughter."
"Oh, halves or alls," says the king, "put away that divel of
a wolf, and we'll see about it."
So Tom put his flute in his pocket, and says he to the baste that was
sittin' on his currabingo ready to faint, "Walk off to your mountain, my
fine fellow, and live like a respectable baste ; and if ever I find you come
within seven miles of any town, I'll - "
He said no more, but spit in his fist, and gave a flourish of his club. It
was all the poor divel of a wolf wanted: he put his tail between his legs, and
took to his pumps without looking at man or mortal, and neither sun, moon, or
stars ever saw him in sight of Dublin again.
At dinner every one laughed but the foxy fellow ; and sure enough he was
laying out how he'd settle poor Tom next day.
"Well, to be sure!" says he, " King of Dublin, you are in
luck. There's the Danes moidhering us to no end. Deuce run to Lusk wid 'em !
and if any one can save us from 'em, it is this gentleman with the goat-skin.
There is a flail hangin' on the collarbeam in hell, and neither Dane nor devil
can stand before it."
"So," says Tom to the king, ''will you let me have the other half
of the princess if I bring you the flail?"
"No, no," says the princess ; " I'd rather never be your wife
than see you in that danger."
But Redhead whispered and nudged Tom about how shabby it would look to
reneague the adventure. So he asked which way he was to go, and Redhead
directed him.
Well, he travelled and travelled, till he came in sight of the wails of
hell; and, bedad, before he knocked at the gates, he rubbed himself over with
the greenish ointment. When he knocked, a hundred little imps popped their
heads out through the bars, and axed him what he wanted.
"I want to speak to the big divel of all," says Tom : "open
the gate."
It wasn't long till the gate was thrune open, and the Ould Boy received Tom
with bows and scrapes, and axed his business.
My business isn't much," says Tom. "I only came for the loan of
that flail that I see hanging on the collarbeam, for the King of Dublin to give
a thrashing to the Danes."
"Well," says the other, "the Danes is much better customers
to me ; but since you walked so far I won't refuse. Hand that flail," says
he to a young imp; and he winked the far-off eye at the same time. So, while
some were barring the gates, the young devil climbed up, and took down the
flail that had the handstaff and booltheen both made out of red-hot iron. The
little vagabond was grinning to think how it would burn the hands o' Tom, but
the dickens a burn it made on him, no more nor if it was a good oak sapling.
"Thankee," says Tom. "Now would you open the gate for a body,
and I'll give you no more trouble."
"Oh, tramp !" says Ould Nick ; "is that the way? It is easier
getting inside them gates than getting out again. Take that tool from him, and
give him a dose of the oil of stirrup."
So one fellow put out his claws to seize on the flail, but Tom gave him such
a welt of it on the side of the head that he broke off one of his horns, and
made him roar like a devil as he was. Well, they rushed at Tom, but he gave
them, little and big, such a thrashing as they didn't forget for a while. At
last says the ould thief of all, rubbing his elbow, "Let the fool out; and
woe to whoever lets him in again, great or small."
So out marched Tom, and away with him, without minding the shouting and
cursing they kept up at him from the tops of the walls; and when he got home to
the big bawn of the palace, there never was such running and racing as to see
himself and the flail. When he had his story told, he laid down the flail on
the stone steps, and bid no one for their lives to touch it. If the king, and
queen, and princess, made much of him before, they made ten times more of him
now; but Redhead, the mean scruffhound, stole over, and thought to catch hold
of the flail to make an end of him. His fingers hardly touched it, when he let
a roar out of him as if heaven and earth were coming together, and kept
flinging his arms about and dancing, that it was pitiful to look at him. Tom
run at him as soon as he could rise, caught his hands in his own two, and
rubbed them this way and that, and the burning pain left them before you could
reckon one. Well the poor fellow, between the pain that was only just gone, and
the comfort he was in, had the comicalest face that you ever see, it was such a
mixtherum-gatherum of laughing and crying. Everybody burst out a laughing-the
princess could not stop no more than the rest; and then says Tom, " Now,
ma'am, if there were fifty halves of you, I hope you'll give me them all."
Well, the princess looked at her father, and by my word, she came over to
Tom, and put her two delicate hands into his two rough ones, and I wish it was
myself was in his shoes that day !
Tom would not bring the flail into the palace. You may be sure no other body
went near it ; and when the early risers were passing next morning, they found
two long clefts in the stone, where it was after burning itself an opening
downwards, nobody could tell how far. But a messenger came in at noon, and said
that the Danes were so frightened when they heard of the flail coming into
Dublin, that they got into their ships, and sailed away.
Well, I suppose, before they were married, Tom got some man, like Pat Mara
of Tomenine, to learn him the "principles of politeness," fluxions,
gunnery and fortification, decimal fractions, practice, and the rule of three
direct, the way he'd be able to keep up a conversation with the royal family.
Whether he ever lost his time learning them sciences, I'm not sure, but it's as
sure as fate that his mother never more saw any want till the end of her days.
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