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<h2> CHAPTER XVII—A LITTLE ABOUT IRISH SNOBS </h2>
<p>You do not, to be sure, imagine that there are no other Snobs in Ireland
than those of the amiable party who wish to make pikes of iron railroads
(it's a fine Irish economy), and to cut the throats of the Saxon invaders.
These are of the venomous sort; and had they been invented in his time,
St. Patrick would have banished them out of the kingdom along with the
other dangerous reptiles.</p>
<p>I think it is the Four Masters, or else it's Olaus Magnus, or else it's
certainly O'Neill Daunt, in the 'Catechism of Irish History,' who relates
that when Richard the Second came to Ireland, and the Irish chiefs did
homage to him, going down on their knees—the poor simple creatures!—and
worshipping and wondering before the English king and the dandies of his
court, my lords the English noblemen mocked and jeered at their uncouth
Irish admirers, mimicked their talk and gestures, pulled their poor old
beards, and laughed at the strange fashion of their garments.</p>
<p>The English Snob rampant always does this to the present day. There is no
Snob in existence, perhaps, that has such an indomitable belief in
himself: that sneers you down all the rest of the world besides, and has
such an insufferable, admirable, stupid contempt for all people but his
own—nay, for all sets but his own. 'Gwacious Gad' what stories about
'the Iwish' these young dandies accompanying King Richard must have had to
tell, when they returned to Pall Mall, and smoked their cigars upon the
steps of 'White's.'</p>
<p>The Irish snobbishness developes itself not in pride so much as in
servility and mean admirations, and trumpery imitations of their
neighbours. And I wonder De Tocqueville and De Beaumont, and THE TIMES'
Commissioner, did not explain the Snobbishness of Ireland as contrasted
with our own. Ours is that of Richard's Norman Knights,—haughty,
brutal stupid, and perfectly self-confident;—theirs, of the poor,
wondering, kneeling, simple chieftains. They are on their knees still
before English fashion—these simple, wild people; and indeed it is
hard not to grin at some of their NAIVE exhibitions.</p>
<p>Some years since, when a certain great orator was Lord Mayor of Dublin, he
used to wear a red gown and a cocked hat, the splendour of which delighted
him as much as a new curtain-ring in her nose or a string of glass-beads
round her neck charms Queen Quasheeneboo. He used to pay visits to people
in this dress; to appear at meetings hundreds of miles off, in the red
velvet gown. And to hear the people crying 'Yes, me Lard!' and 'No, me
Lard!' and to read the prodigious accounts of his Lordship in the papers:
it seemed as if the people and he liked to be taken in by this twopenny
splendour. Twopenny magnificence, indeed, exists all over Ireland, and may
be considered as the great characteristic of the Snobbishness of that
country.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Mulholligan, the grocer's lady, retires to Kingstown, she has
Mulholliganville' painted over the gate of her villa; and receives you at
a door that won't shut or gazes at you out of a window that is glazed with
an old petticoat.</p>
<p>Be it ever so shabby and dismal, nobody ever owns to keeping a shop. A
fellow whose stock in trade is a penny roll or a tumbler of lollipops,
calls his cabin the 'American Flour Stores,' or the 'Depository for
Colonial Produce,' or some such name.</p>
<p>As for Inns, there are none in the country; Hotels abound as well
furnished as Mulholliganville; but again there are no such people as
landlords and land-ladies; the landlord is out with the hounds, and my
lady in the parlour talking with the Captain or playing the piano.</p>
<p>If a gentleman has a hundred a year to leave to his family they all become
gentlemen, all keep a nag, ride to hounds, and swagger about in the
'Phaynix,' and grow tufts to their chins like so many real aristocrats.</p>
<p>A friend of mine has taken to be a painter, and lives out of Ireland,
where he is considered to have disgraced the family by choosing such a
profession. His father is a wine-merchant; and his elder brother an
apothecary.</p>
<p>The number of men one meets in London and on the Continent who have a
pretty little property of five-and-twenty hundred a year in Ireland is
prodigious: those who WILL have nine thousand a year in land when somebody
dies are still more numerous. I myself have met as many descendants from
Irish kings as would form a brigade.</p>
<p>And who has not met the Irishman who apes the Englishman, and who forgets
his country and tries to forget his accent, or to smother the taste of it,
as it were? 'Come, dine with me, my boy,' says O'Dowd, of O'Dowdstown:
'you'll FIND US ALL ENGLISH THERE;' which he tells you with a brogue as
broad as from here to Kingstown Pier. And did you never hear Mrs. Captain
Macmanus talk about 'I-ah-land,' and her account of her 'fawther's
esteet?' Very few men have rubbed through the world without hearing and
witnessing some of these Hibernian phenomena—these twopenny
splendours.</p>
<p>And what say you to the summit of society—the Castle—with a
sham king, and sham lords-in-waiting, and sham loyalty, and a sham Haroun
Alraschid, to go about in a sham disguise, making believe to be affable
and splendid? That Castle is the pink and pride of Snobbishness. A COURT
CIRCULAR is bad enough, with two columns of print about a little baby
that's christened—but think of people liking a sham COURT CIRCULAR!</p>
<p>I think the shams of Ireland are more outrageous than those of any
country. A fellow shows you a hill and says, 'That's the highest mountain
in all Ireland;' a gentleman tells you he is descended from Brian Boroo
and has his five-and-thirty hundred a year; or Mrs. Macmanus describes her
fawther's esteet; or ould Dan rises and says the Irish women are the
loveliest, the Irish men the bravest, the Irish land the most fertile in
the world: and nobody believes anybody—the latter does not believe
his story nor the hearer:—but they make-believe to believe, and
solemnly do honour to humbug.</p>
<p>O Ireland! O my country! (for I make little doubt I am descended from
Brian Boroo too) when will you acknowledge that two and two make four, and
call a pikestaff a pikestaff?—that is the very best use you can make
of the latter. Irish snobs will dwindle away then and we shall never hear
tell of Hereditary bondsmen.</p>
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