<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XX. </h2>
<p>Early next day the sleeping morning was awakened by the sound of a horn.
It began somewhere in the village, wandered down the glen, crossed the
bridge, plodded over the fields, and finally coiled round the house of the
bride in thickening groans of discord. This restless spirit in the grey
light was meant as herald of the approaching wedding. It came from the
husky lungs of Mr. Jonaique Jelly.</p>
<p>Before daylight "The Manx Fairy" was already astir. Somewhere in the early
reaches of the dawn the house had its last dusting down at the hands of
Nancy Joe. Then Grannie finished, on hearth and griddle, the baking of her
cakes. After that, some of the neighbours came and carried off to their
own fires the beef, mutton, chickens, and ducks intended for the day's
dinner. It was woman's work that was to the fore, and all idle men were
hustled out of the way.</p>
<p>Towards nine o'clock breakfast was swallowed standing. Then everybody
began to think of dressing. In this matter the men had to be finished off
before the women could begin. Already they were heard bellowing for help
from unseen regions upstairs. Grannie took C�sar in hand. Pete was in
charge of Nancy Joe.</p>
<p>It was found at the last moment that Pete had forgotten to provide himself
with a white shirt. He had nothing to be married in except the flannel one
in which he came home from Africa. This would never do. It wasn't proper,
it wasn't respectable. There was no choice but to borrow a shirt of
C�sar's. C�sar's shirt was of ancient pattern, and Pete was shy of taking
it. "Take it, or you'll have none," said Nancy, and she pushed him back
into his room. When he emerged from it he walked with a stiff neck down
the stairs in a collar that reached to his ears at either side, and stood
out at his cheeks like the wings of a white bat, with two long sharp
points on the level of his eyes, which he seemed to be watching warily to
avoid the stab of their ironed starch. At the same moment C�sar appeared
in duck trousers, a flowered waistcoat, a swallow-tail coat, and a tall
hat of rough black beaver.</p>
<p>The kitchen was full of men and women by this time, and groups of young
fellows were gathered on the road outside, some with horses, saddled and
bridled for the bride's race home after the ceremony; others with guns
ready loaded for firing as the procession appeared; and others again with
lines of print handkerchiefs, which, as substitutes for flags, they were
hanging from tree to tree.</p>
<p>At every moment the crowd became greater outside, and the company inside
more dense. John the Clerk called on his way to church, and whispered Pete
that everything was ready, and they were going to sing a beautiful psalm.</p>
<p>"It isn't many a man's wedding I would be taking the same trouble with,"
said John. "When you are coming down the alley give a sight up, sir, and
you'll see me."</p>
<p>"He's only a poor thing," said Mr. Jelly in Pete's ear as John the Clerk
went off. "No more music in the man than my ould sow. Did you hear the
horn this morning, sir? Never got up so early for a wedding before. I'll
be giving you 'the Black and the Grey' going into the church."</p>
<p>Grannie came down in a gigantic bonnet like a half-moon, with her white
cap visible beneath it; and Nancy Joe appeared behind her, be-ribboned out
of all recognition, and taller by many inches for the turret of feathers
and flowers on the head that was usually bare.</p>
<p>Then the church bells began to peal, and C�sar made a prolonged A—hm!
and said in a large way, "Has the carriage arrived?"</p>
<p>"It's coming over by the bridge now," said somebody at the door, and at
the next moment a covered wagonette drew up at the porch.</p>
<p>"All ready?" asked C�sar.</p>
<p>"Stop, sir," said Pete, and then, turning to Nancy Joe, "Is it glad a man
should be on his wedding-day, Nancy?"</p>
<p>"Why, of coorse, you goose. What else?" she answered.</p>
<p>"Well, no man can be glad in a shirt like this," said Pete; "I'm going
back to take it off."</p>
<p>Two minutes afterwards he reappeared in his flannel one, under his suit of
blue pilot, looking simple and natural, and a man every inch of him.</p>
<p>"Now call the bride," said C�sar.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />