Strangers at Lisconnel
STRANGERS AT LISCONNEL _A SECOND SERIES OF IRISH IDYLLS_ BY JANE BARLOW NEW YORK DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY 1895 _Copyright, 1895_, by
'It is very hard!' said the Jackal.
'Who can have set him against me?' asked the Bull.
'Being so, it cannot be bettered,' replied the Jackal, 'whoever did it--
'As a bracelet of crystal, once broke, is not mended;
So the favor of princes, once altered, is ended.'
'Yes,' said the Bull, 'and a king incensed is terrible--
'Wrath of kings, and rage of lightning--both be very full of dread;
But one falls on one man only--one strikes many victims dead,'
Still, I can but die--and I will die fighting! When death is certain,
and no hope left but in battle, that is the time for war,'
'It is so,' said the Jackal.
'Having weighed all this, Lusty-life inquired of the Jackal by what
signs he might conclude the King's hostile intentions.
'If he glowers upon thee,' answered Damanaka, 'and awaits thee with ears
pricked, tail stiffened, paw upraised, and muzzle agape, then thou
mayest get thee to thy weapons like a Bull of spirit, for
STRANGERS AT LISCONNEL _A SECOND SERIES OF IRISH IDYLLS_ BY JANE BARLOW NEW YORK DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY 1895 _Copyright, 1895_, by