If he
did not sit on the hob, the seanachai always got a chair nearest the
fire, that's if the cat was not in the way. In my father's time visitors
who came céilíng to our house, always greeted those
present with the blessing (Go sabhalaigh Dia gach a bhfuil in láthair
ach an Cat') 'God save all here except the cat', for 'twas well known
that the divil was often in the cat, and if you listen to me carefully
I tell you how it was that the first cat was created. And no divil
at all in it.
One
day Mary and her Son were travelling the road, and they were heavy
and tired, and it chanced that they went past the door of a house
in which there was a lock of wheat being winnowed. The Blessed Virgin
went in, and she asked an alms of wheat, and the woman of the house
refused her."Go
in again to her" said the Son, " and ask her for it in the
name of God"She
went, and the women refused her again."Go
into her again" said He, " and ask her to give you leave
to put your hand into the pail of water, and to thrust it down into
the heap of wheat, and to take away with you all that shall cling
to your hand."She
went, and the woman gave her leave to do that.
When
she came out to our Saviour, He said to her, "Do not let one
grain of that go astray, for it is worth much and much." When
they had gone a bit from the house they looked back, and saw a flockof
demons coming towards the house, and the Virgin Mary was frightened
lestthey might do harm to the woman. "Let there be no anxiety
on you" said Jesus to her; "since it has chanced that she
has given you all that of alms, they shall get no victory over her"
They
travelled on, then, until they reached as far as a place where a man
named Martin had a mill. "Go in" said our Saviour to his
mother, " since it has chanced that the mill is working, and
ask them to grind that little grain-een for you"She
went. " O musha, it's not worth-while for me" said the boy
who was attending the querns, "to put that little lock-een a-grinding
for you." Martin heard them talking and said to the lout "Oh,
then do it for the creature, perhaps she wants it badly" said
he. He did it, and he gave her all the flour that came from it.
They
travelled on then, and they were not gone any distance until the mill
was full of flour as white as the snow. When Martin perceived this
great miracle he understood well that it was the son of God and His
Mother who chanced that way. He ran out and followed them, at his
best, and there was that much haste on him going through a scunce
(a thick-set double ditch) of hawthorns that a spike of the hawthorn
met his breast and wounded him greatly.
There
was that much zeal in him that he did not feel the pain, but clapt
his hand over it, and never stopped until he came up with them. When
our Saviour beheld the wound upon poor Martin He laid His hand upon
it, and it was closed, and healed upon the spot. He said to Martin
then that he was a fitting man in the presence of God, "and go
home now," said He, " and place a fistful of the flour under
a dish, and do not stir it until morning"When
Martin went home he did that, and he put the dish, mouth under, and
the fistful of flour beneath it.
The
servant girl was watching him, and thought that maybe it would be
a good thing if she were to set a dish for herself in the same way,
and signs on her, she set it.On
the morning of the next day Martin lifted his dish, and what should
run out from under it but a fine sow and a big litter of bonhams with
her. The girl lifted her own dish, and there ran a big mouse and a
clutch of mousheens with her. They ran here and there, and Martin
at once thought that they were not good, and he plucked a big mitten
off his hand and flung it at the young mice, but as soon as it touched
the ground it changed into a cat and the cat began to kill all the
young mice.
That
was the beginningof cats. Martin was a saint from that time forward,
but it was not known which of the saints he was of all the saints
who were called Martin.And
that happened.