The Well of the Saints [10]
penny at all.
MARTIN DOUL -- [lays down hooks and looks at him steadily.] -- Molly'll be saying great praises now to the Almighty God and He giving her a fine, stout, hardy man the like of you.
TIMMY -- [uneasily.] -- And why wouldn't she, if she's a fine woman itself?
MARTIN DOUL -- [looking up right.] -- Why wouldn't she, indeed, Timmy? . . . . The Almighty God's made a fine match in the two of you, for if you went marrying a woman was the like of yourself you'd be having the fearfullest little children, I'm thinking, was ever seen in the world.
TIMMY -- [seriously offended.] -- God forgive you! if you're an ugly man to be looking at, I'm thinking your tongue's worse than your view.
MARTIN DOUL -- [hurt also.] -- Isn't it destroyed with the cold I am, and if I'm ugly itself I never seen anyone the like of you for dreepiness this day, Timmy the smith, and I'm thinking now herself's coming above you'd have a right to step up into your old shanty, and give a rub to your face, and not be sitting there with your bleary eyes, and your big nose, the like of an old scarecrow stuck down upon the road.
TIMMY -- [looking up the road uneasily.] She's no call to mind what way I look, and I after building a house with four rooms in it above on the hill. (He stands up.) But it's a queer thing the way yourself and Mary Doul are after setting every person in this place, and up beyond to Rathvanna, talking of nothing, and thinking of nothing, but the way they do be looking in the face. (Going towards forge.) It's the devil's work you're after doing with your talk of fine looks, and I'd do right, maybe, to step in and wash the blackness from my eyes.
[He goes into forge. Martin Doul rubs his face furtively with the tail of his coat. Molly Byrne comes on right with a water-can, and begins to fill it at the well.]
MARTIN DOUL. God save you, Molly Byrne.
MOLLY BYRNE -- [indifferently.] -- God save you.
MARTIN DOUL. That's a dark, gloomy day, and the Lord have mercy on us all.
MOLLY BYRNE. Middling dark.
MARTIN DOUL. It's a power of dirty days, and dark mornings, and shabby-looking fellows (he makes a gesture over his shoulder) we do have to be looking on when we have our sight, God help us, but there's one fine thing we have, to be looking on a grand, white, handsome girl, the like of you . . . . and every time I set my eyes on you I do be blessing the saints, and the holy water, and the power of the Lord Almighty in the heavens above.
MOLLY BYRNE. I've heard the priests say it isn't looking on a young girl would teach many to be saying their prayers. [Bailing water into her can with a cup.]
MARTIN DOUL. It isn't many have been the way I was, hearing your voice speaking, and not seeing you at all.
MOLLY BYRNE. That should have been a queer time for an old, wicked, coaxing fool to be sitting there with your eyes shut, and not seeing a sight of girl or woman passing the road.
MARTIN DOUL. If it was a queer time itself it was great joy and pride I had the time I'd hear your voice speaking and you passing to Grianan (beginning to speak with plaintive intensity), for it's of many a fine thing your voice would put a poor dark fellow in mind, and the day I'd hear it it's of little else at all I would be thinking.
MOLLY BYRNE. I'll tell your wife if you talk to me the like of that. . . . You've heard, maybe, she's below picking nettles for the widow O'Flinn, who took great pity on her when she seen the two of you fighting, and yourself putting shame on her at the crossing of the roads.
MARTIN DOUL -- [impatiently.] -- Is there no living person can speak a score of words to me, or say "God speed you," itself, without putting me in mind of the old woman, or that day either at Grianan?
MOLLY BYRNE -- [maliciously.] -- I was thinking it should be a fine thing to put you in mind of the day you called the grand day of your life.
MARTIN DOUL. Grand day, is it? (Plaintively again, throwing aside his work, and leaning towards her.) Or a bad black day when I was roused up and found
MARTIN DOUL -- [lays down hooks and looks at him steadily.] -- Molly'll be saying great praises now to the Almighty God and He giving her a fine, stout, hardy man the like of you.
TIMMY -- [uneasily.] -- And why wouldn't she, if she's a fine woman itself?
MARTIN DOUL -- [looking up right.] -- Why wouldn't she, indeed, Timmy? . . . . The Almighty God's made a fine match in the two of you, for if you went marrying a woman was the like of yourself you'd be having the fearfullest little children, I'm thinking, was ever seen in the world.
TIMMY -- [seriously offended.] -- God forgive you! if you're an ugly man to be looking at, I'm thinking your tongue's worse than your view.
MARTIN DOUL -- [hurt also.] -- Isn't it destroyed with the cold I am, and if I'm ugly itself I never seen anyone the like of you for dreepiness this day, Timmy the smith, and I'm thinking now herself's coming above you'd have a right to step up into your old shanty, and give a rub to your face, and not be sitting there with your bleary eyes, and your big nose, the like of an old scarecrow stuck down upon the road.
TIMMY -- [looking up the road uneasily.] She's no call to mind what way I look, and I after building a house with four rooms in it above on the hill. (He stands up.) But it's a queer thing the way yourself and Mary Doul are after setting every person in this place, and up beyond to Rathvanna, talking of nothing, and thinking of nothing, but the way they do be looking in the face. (Going towards forge.) It's the devil's work you're after doing with your talk of fine looks, and I'd do right, maybe, to step in and wash the blackness from my eyes.
[He goes into forge. Martin Doul rubs his face furtively with the tail of his coat. Molly Byrne comes on right with a water-can, and begins to fill it at the well.]
MARTIN DOUL. God save you, Molly Byrne.
MOLLY BYRNE -- [indifferently.] -- God save you.
MARTIN DOUL. That's a dark, gloomy day, and the Lord have mercy on us all.
MOLLY BYRNE. Middling dark.
MARTIN DOUL. It's a power of dirty days, and dark mornings, and shabby-looking fellows (he makes a gesture over his shoulder) we do have to be looking on when we have our sight, God help us, but there's one fine thing we have, to be looking on a grand, white, handsome girl, the like of you . . . . and every time I set my eyes on you I do be blessing the saints, and the holy water, and the power of the Lord Almighty in the heavens above.
MOLLY BYRNE. I've heard the priests say it isn't looking on a young girl would teach many to be saying their prayers. [Bailing water into her can with a cup.]
MARTIN DOUL. It isn't many have been the way I was, hearing your voice speaking, and not seeing you at all.
MOLLY BYRNE. That should have been a queer time for an old, wicked, coaxing fool to be sitting there with your eyes shut, and not seeing a sight of girl or woman passing the road.
MARTIN DOUL. If it was a queer time itself it was great joy and pride I had the time I'd hear your voice speaking and you passing to Grianan (beginning to speak with plaintive intensity), for it's of many a fine thing your voice would put a poor dark fellow in mind, and the day I'd hear it it's of little else at all I would be thinking.
MOLLY BYRNE. I'll tell your wife if you talk to me the like of that. . . . You've heard, maybe, she's below picking nettles for the widow O'Flinn, who took great pity on her when she seen the two of you fighting, and yourself putting shame on her at the crossing of the roads.
MARTIN DOUL -- [impatiently.] -- Is there no living person can speak a score of words to me, or say "God speed you," itself, without putting me in mind of the old woman, or that day either at Grianan?
MOLLY BYRNE -- [maliciously.] -- I was thinking it should be a fine thing to put you in mind of the day you called the grand day of your life.
MARTIN DOUL. Grand day, is it? (Plaintively again, throwing aside his work, and leaning towards her.) Or a bad black day when I was roused up and found