Nora. And what time would a man take, and he floating? [Cathleen opens the bundle and takes out a bit of a stocking. They look at them eagerly.]
Cathleen [in a low voice]. The Lord spare us, Nora! isn't it a queer hard thing to say if it's his they are surely?
Nora. I'll get his shirt off the hook the way we can put the one flannel on the other. [She looks through some clothes hanging in the corner.] It's not with them, Cathleen, and where will it be?
Cathleen. I'm thinking Bartley put it on him in the morning, for his own shirt was heavy with the salt in it. [Pointing to the corner.] There's a bit of a sleeve was of the same stuff. Give me that and it will do. [Nora brings it to her and they compare the flannel.]
Cathleen. It's the same stuff, Nora; but if it is itself aren't there great rolls of it in the shops of Galway, and isn't it many another man may have a shirt of it as well as Michael himself?
Nora [who has taken up the stocking and counted the stitches, crying out]. It's Michael, Cathleen, it's Michael; God spare his soul, and what will herself say when she hears this story, and Bartley on the sea?
Cathleen [taking the stocking]. It's a plain stocking.
Nora. It's the second one of the third pair I knitted, and I put up three score stitches, and I dropped four of them.
Cathleen [counts the stitches]. It's that number is in it. [Crying out.] Ah, Nora, isn't it a bitter thing to think of him floating that way to the far north, and no one to keen him but the black hags that do be flying on the sea?
Nora [swinging herself round, and throwing out her arms on the clothes]. And isn't it a pitiful thing when there is nothing left of a man who was a great rower and fisher, but a bit of an old shirt and a plain stocking?