[{"node":{"title":"Hanna229","Collections":"Part Three","Contributor":"Linen Hall Library","Coverage":"1951","Creator":"Linen Hall Library","Date":"Thursday, April 7, 2016","Format":"TIFF","Identifier":"Hanna229","Item Description":"Manuscript","Keywords":"Ogle, Queen's Bridge","Language":"English","Path":"https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/content/hanna229","Publisher":"Linen Hall Library","Relation":"Linen Hall Library","Rights":"Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA","Scanned image":{"src":"https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/sites/default/files/Hanna229_0.jpg","alt":""},"Source":"LHL Archive","Transcript":"\ufeff222\n\nBut hot even Petie could eke out life with the\nhelp of thirty pence a week. So Peter Ogle, a man of\n humanitymoved to pity perhaps by having seen old Petie\nworking round his cottage, or perhaps by some casual\nassociation of name, had cycled over a few days ago to\nask him to help with the cattle with a promise that there\nwould be a shilling or two in it, at the end of the day.\nAnyway, here were Petie and Kipper on their way to Belfast,\nthe lovely animal circling the cattle effortlessly at the\nmen\u2019s bidding, and Petie trotting from side to side,\nshouting, blattering rumps with his stick, his wizened\nface scarlet with excitement and pleasure.\n\nThe bullocks were loaded into the cattle wagons\nand the three men and the two dogs climbed into a third\nclass carriage. On the way to Belfast Hugh Ogle produced\na pack of broken cards and in front of Petie's staring\neyes proceeded to lose fifteen shillings to his brother.\n\"Made o\u2019 money, that\u2019s what ye are - made o' money,\u201d\nwhispered the old man gazing at the brothers in dismay\nand awe. Peter Ogle gave him a slap on the chest that\nsent him into hie corner. \"Tits, man!\" he shouted,\n\"sure its ell coming out o' one pocket!\" And the brothers\nlay back end roared with laughter.\n\nAt Belfast they got the cattle safely out of the\nstation and turned on Queen's Bridge for the Sand quay.\nAmong the thundering traffic of the city Petie's\nconfidence ebbed, and he kept close to the cattle, so\nclose indeed that sometimes he was walking between the\nsteaming flanks of the beasts, and his eyes were as\nwide and bewildered as those of the cattle he drove.\nBut the Ogles were experienced drovers and soon the\ncattle were trotting briskly down the Sand Quay, past\nthe church of St John's and into the cattle market,\nwhen there business was settled Peter, Petie and Hugh\n","Type":"Text"}}]