Page:Daniel O'Rourke's wonderful voyage to the moon (1).pdf/4

This page has been validated.

4

never find out how I got into it; and my heart grew cold with fear, for sure and certain I was that it would be my berrin place. So I sat down upon a stone which, as good luck would have it was close by me, and I began to scratch my head and sing the Ullagon—when all of a sudden the moon grew black, and I looked up, and saw something for all the world as if it was moving down between me and it, and I could not tell what it was. Down it came with a pounce, and looked at me full in the face; and what was it but an eagle? as fine a one as ever flew from the kingdom of Kerry. So he looked at me in the face, and says he to me, 'Daniel O’Rourke,' says he, 'how do you do?' 'Very well, I thank you,' say I: 'I hope you’re well;' wondering out of my senses all the time how an eagle came to speak like a Christian. 'What brings you here, Dan?' says he. 'Nothing at all, sir,' says I: only I wish I was safe home again.' 'Is it out of the island you want to go, Dan?' says he. '’Tis, sir,’ says I: so I up and told him how I had taken a drop too much, and fell into the water; how I swam to the island; and how I got into the bog and did not know my way out of it. 'Dan,' says he, after a minute’s thought, 'though it is very improper for you to get drunk on Lady-day, yet as you are a decent sober man, who ’tends mass well, and never flings stones at me or mine, nor eries out after us in the fields—my life for yours,’ says he 'so get up on my back, and grip me well, for fear you’d fall off, and I’ll fly you out of the bog.’—'I am afraid,' says I, 'your honour’s making game of me; for who ever heard of riding a horseback on an eagle before?' 'Pon the honour of a gentleman,’ says he, putting his right foot on his breast 'I am quite in earnest: and so now either take my