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A Memoir
by Frank McCourt
I'd sit on that deck chair and look into my head to see myself cycling around
Limerick City and out into the country delivering telegrams. I'd see myself
early in the morning riding along country roads with the mist rising in the
fields and cows giving me the odd moo and dogs coming at me till I drove them
away with rocks. I'd hear babies in farmhouses crying for their mothers and
farmers whacking cows back to the fields after the milking.
And I'd start crying to myself on that deck chair with the gorgeous Atlantic
all around me, New York ahead, city of my dreams where I'd have the golden tan,
the dazzling white teeth. I'd wonder what in God's name was wrong with me that I
should be missing Limerick already, city of gray miseries, the place where I
dreamed of escape to New York. I'd hear my mother's warning, The devil you know
is better than the devil you don't know.
There were to be fourteen passengers on the ship but one canceled and we had
to sail with an unlucky number. The first night out the captain stood up at
dinner and welcomed us. He laughed and said he wasn't superstitious over the
number of passengers but since there was a priest among us wouldn't it be lovely
if His Reverence would say a prayer to come between us and all harm. The priest
was a plump little man, born in Ireland, but so long in his Los Angeles parish
he had no trace of an Irish accent. When he got up to say a prayer and blessed
himself four passengers kept their hands in their laps and that told me they
were Protestants. My mother used to say you could spot Protestants a mile away
by their reserved manner. The priest asked Our Lord to look down on us with pity
and love, that whatever happened on these stormy seas we were ready to be
enfolded forever in His Divine Bosom. An old Protestant reached for his wife's
hand. She smiled and shook her head back at him and he smiled, too, as if to
say, Don't worry.
The priest sat next to me at the dinner table. He whispered that those two
old Protestants were very rich from raising Thoroughbred racehorses in Kentucky
and if I had any sense I'd be nice to them, you never know.
I wanted to ask what was the proper way to be nice to rich Protestants who
raise racehorses but I couldn't for fear the priest might think I was a fool. I
heard the Protestants say the Irish people were so charming and their children
so adorable you hardly noticed how poor they were. I knew that if I ever talked
to the rich Protestants I'd have to smile and show my destroyed teeth and that
would be the end of it. The minute I made some money in America I'd have to rush
to a dentist to have my smile mended. You could see from the magazines and the
films how the smile opened doors and brought girls running and if I didn't have
the smile I might as well go back to Limerick and get a job sorting letters in a
dark back room at the post office where they wouldn't care if you hadn't a tooth
in your head.
Before bedtime the steward served tea and biscuits in the lounge. The priest
said, I'll have a double Scotch, forget the tea, Michael, the whiskey helps me
sleep. He drank his whiskey and whispered to me again, Did you talk to the rich
people from Kentucky?
I didn't.
Dammit. What's the matter with you? Don't you want to get ahead in the world?
I do.
Well, why don't you talk to the rich people from Kentucky? They might take a
fancy to you and give you a job as stable boy or something and you could rise in
the ranks instead of going to New York which is one big occasion of sin, a sink
of depravity where a Catholic has to fight day and night to keep the faith. So,
why can't you talk to the nice people from Kentucky and make something of
yourself?
Whenever he brought up the rich people from Kentucky he whispered and I
didn't know what to say. If my brother Malachy were here he'd march right up to
the rich people and charm them and they'd probably adopt him and leave him their
millions along with stables, racehorses, a big house, and maids to clean it. I
never talked to rich people in my life except to say, Telegram, ma'am, and then
I'd be told go round to the servants' entrance, this is the front door and don't
you know any better.
Copyright © 1999 by Frank McCourt
Beliefs are what divide people. Doubt unites them
Click Here to find out who said this, as well as discovering other famous literary quotes!
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