The Deemster
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
Thorkell Mylrea had waited long for a dead man's shoes, but he was wearing them at length. He was forty years of age; his black hair was thin on the crown and streaked with gray about the temples; the crow's-feet were thick under his small eyes, and the backs of his lean hands were coated with a reddish down. But he had life in every vein, and restless energy in every limb.
His father, Ewan Mylrea, had lived long, and mourned much, and died in sorrow. The good man had been a patriarch among his people, and never a serener saint had trod the ways of men. He was already an old man when his wife died. Over her open grave he tried to say, The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed— But his voice faltered and broke. Though he lived ten years longer, he held up his head no more. Little by little he relinquished all active interest in material affairs. The world had lost its light for him, and he was traveling in the dusk.
On his sons, Thorkell, the elder, Gilcrist, the younger, with nearly five years between them, the conduct of his estate devolved. Never were brothers more unlike. Gilcrist, resembling his father, was of a simple and tranquil soul; Thorkell's nature was fiery, impetuous, and crafty. The end was the inevitable one; the heel of Thorkell was too soon on the neck of Gilcrist.
Gilcrist's placid spirit overcame its first vexation, and he seemed content to let his interests slip from his hands. Before he was out Thorkell Mylrea was in effect the master of Ballamona; his younger brother was nightly immersed in astronomy and the Fathers, and the old man was sitting daily, in his slippers, in the high-backed armchair by the ingle, over which these words were cut in the black oak: God's Providence is mine inheritance.
They were strange effects that followed. People said they had never understood the extraordinary fortunes of Ballamona. Again and again the rents were raised throughout the estate, until the farmers cried in the grip of their poverty that they would neither go nor starve. Then the wagons of Thorkell Mylrea, followed close at their tail-boards by the carts of the clergy, drove into the cornfields when the corn was cut, and picked up the stooks and bore them away amid the deep curses of the bare-armed reapers, who looked on in their impotent rage.
Sir Hall Caine
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THE SHADOW OF A CRIME
THE DEEMSTER
CONTENTS
THE DEEMSTER
THE DEATH OF OLD EWAN
A MAN CHILD IS BORN
THE CHRISTENING OF YOUNG EWAN
THE DEEMSTER OF MAN
THE MANXMAN'S BISHOP
THE COZY NEST AT BISHOP'S COURT
DANNY THE MADCAP
PASSING THE LOVE OF WOMEN
THE SERVICE ON THE SHORE
THE FIRST NIGHT WITH THE HERRINGS
THE HERRING BREAKFAST
DAN'S PENANCE
HOW EWAN MOURNED FOR HIS WIFE
WRESTLING WITH FATE
THE LIE THAT EWAN TOLD
THE PLOWING MATCH
THE WRONG WAY WITH DAN
THE BLIND WOMAN'S SECOND SIGHT
HOW EWAN FOUND DAN
BLIND PASSION AND PAIN
THE VOICE IN THE NIGHT
ALONE, ALONE—ALL, ALL ALONE!
ALONE ON A WIDE, WIDE SEA
"THERE'S GOLD ON THE CUSHAGS YET."
A RESURRECTION INDEED
HOW EWAN CAME TO CHURCH
HOW THE NEWS CAME TO THE BISHOP
THE CHILD GHOST IN THE HOUSE
THE DEEMSTER'S INQUEST
FATHER AND SON
DIVINATION
KIDNAPPED
A RUDE TRIBUNAL
THE COURT OF GENERAL JAIL DELIVERY
CUT OFF FROM THE PEOPLE
WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
OF HIS OUTCAST STATE
OF HIS WAY OF LIFE
OF THE GHOSTLY HAND UPON HIM
OF HIS GREAT LONELINESS
OF HOW HE KEPT HIS MANHOOD
OF THE BREAKING OF THE CURSE
OF HIS GREAT RESOLVE
His Last Words
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
"OUR FATHER, WHICH ART IN HEAVEN"