The Drunkard

by

Frank O’Connor

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on The Drunkard makes teaching easy.

Mick Delaney Character Analysis

Mick is the father of the story’s narrator, Larry. A hard-drinking laborer with a tendency to squander his family’s money on alcohol, Mick is in a period of sobriety at the beginning of the story. This threatens to crumble after his friend Mr. Dooley dies and Mick insists on going to the funeral—an event that his wife, Mrs. Delaney, knows will inspire him to drink. Mrs. Delaney sends Larry with Mick, thinking that the presence of his young son will stop Mick from drinking; Mick, however, is vain and irresponsible and he can’t resist going to the bar to hold forth in front of the other mourners, mingling with Mr. Dooley’s high-status friends and telling stories that make himself seem knowledgeable and important. While trying to impress this crowd, Mick neglects Larry, who gets bored and drinks his father’s pint before Mick can even taste it. When Mick realizes that Larry is falling-down drunk, he’s humiliated and furious that Larry has brought an end to his fun, and he drags Larry home along the road, where all the neighbors stand outside laughing and gossiping about this spectacle. Throughout the story, Mick is shown to be reckless and even cruel with Larry: he scolds Larry for drinking (even though it’s his own fault), refuses to help when Larry is vomiting (lest it spoil his good suit), and pities himself relentlessly for the public humiliation of Larry’s drunkenness, unwilling to take responsibility for his role in the matter. Mick is depicted as a man of poor character who is always at risk of spiraling into drunkenness, prone to blaming his own defects on others, and cruel to his wife and son. While Larry successfully spares his father from lapsing into drunkenness this time, the story is pessimistic about Mick’s future: this shocking episode does not inspire Mick to reflect on his behavior, which suggests that his self-destructive tendencies have not changed, and he has initiated young Larry into drinking at far too young an age, demonstrating Mick’s terrible influence.

Mick Delaney Quotes in The Drunkard

The The Drunkard quotes below are all either spoken by Mick Delaney or refer to Mick Delaney. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Familial Influence Theme Icon
).
The Drunkard Quotes

Between business acquaintances and clerical contacts, there was very little [Mr. Dooley] didn’t know about what went on in town, and evening after evening he crossed the road to our gate to explain to Father the news behind the news. He had a low, palavering voice and a knowing smile, and Father would listen in astonishment, giving him a conversational lead now and again, and then stump triumphantly in to Mother with his face aglow and ask: “Do you know what Mr. Dooley is after telling me?”

Related Characters: Mick Delaney (speaker), Larry Delaney (speaker), Mrs. Delaney, Mr. Dooley
Page Number: 191
Explanation and Analysis:

Drink, you see, was Father’s great weakness. He could keep steady for months, even for years, at a stretch, and while he did he was as good as gold. […] He laughed at the folly of men who, week in week out, left their hard-earned money with the publicans; and sometimes, to pass an idle hour, he took pencil and paper and calculated precisely how much he saved each week through being a teetotaller. […] Sooner or later, [his] spiritual pride grew till it called for some form of celebration. Then he took a drink […]. That was the end of Father. […] Next day he stayed in from work with a sick head while Mother went off to make his excuses at the works, and inside a forthnight he was poor and savage and despondent again. Once he began he drank steadily through everything down to the kitchen clock. Mother and I knew all the phases and dreaded all the dangers.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney, Mrs. Delaney
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

He had long months of abstinence behind him and an eternity of pleasure before. He took out his pipe, blew through it, filled it, and then lit it with loud pops, his eyes bulging above it. After that he deliberately turned his back on the pint, leaned one elbow on the counter in the attitude of a man who did not know there was a pint behind him, and deliberately brushed the tobacco from his palms. He had settled down for the evening. He was steadily working through all the important funerals he had ever attended.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:

I knew Father was quite capable of lingering [at the pub] till nightfall. I knew I might have to bring him home, blind drunk, down Blarney Lane, with all the old women at their doors, saying: “Mick Delaney is on it again.” I knew that my mother would be half crazy with anxiety; that next day Father wouldn’t go out to work; and before the end of the week she would be running down to the pawn with the clock under her shawl.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney, Mrs. Delaney
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:

I saw plain enough that, coaxed by the sunlight, every woman old and young in Blarney Lane was leaning over her half-door or sitting on her doorstep. They all stopped gabbling to gape at the strange spectacle of two sober, middle-aged men bringing home a drunken small boy with a cut over his eye. Father, torn between the shamefast desire to get me home as quick as he could, and the neighbourly need to explain that it wasn’t his fault, finally halted outside Mrs. Roche’s.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Page Number: 197
Explanation and Analysis:

“Twill be all over the road,” whimpered Father. “Never again, never again, not if I lived to be a thousand!” To this day I don’t know whether he was forswearing me or the drink.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Related Symbols: The Road
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:

“But I gave him no drink,” he shouted, aghast at the horrifying interpretation the neighbours had chosen to give his misfortune. “He took it while my back was turned. What the hell do you think I am?” “Ah,” she replied bitterly, “everyone knows what you are now. God forgive you, wasting our hard-earned few ha’pence on drink, and bringing up your child to be a drunken corner-boy like yourself.”

Related Characters: Mick Delaney (speaker), Larry Delaney (speaker), Mrs. Delaney (speaker)
Page Number: 199
Explanation and Analysis:

“My brave little man!” she said with her eyes shining. “It was God did it you were there. You were his guardian angel.”

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mrs. Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Page Number: 199
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire The Drunkard LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Drunkard PDF

Mick Delaney Quotes in The Drunkard

The The Drunkard quotes below are all either spoken by Mick Delaney or refer to Mick Delaney. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Familial Influence Theme Icon
).
The Drunkard Quotes

Between business acquaintances and clerical contacts, there was very little [Mr. Dooley] didn’t know about what went on in town, and evening after evening he crossed the road to our gate to explain to Father the news behind the news. He had a low, palavering voice and a knowing smile, and Father would listen in astonishment, giving him a conversational lead now and again, and then stump triumphantly in to Mother with his face aglow and ask: “Do you know what Mr. Dooley is after telling me?”

Related Characters: Mick Delaney (speaker), Larry Delaney (speaker), Mrs. Delaney, Mr. Dooley
Page Number: 191
Explanation and Analysis:

Drink, you see, was Father’s great weakness. He could keep steady for months, even for years, at a stretch, and while he did he was as good as gold. […] He laughed at the folly of men who, week in week out, left their hard-earned money with the publicans; and sometimes, to pass an idle hour, he took pencil and paper and calculated precisely how much he saved each week through being a teetotaller. […] Sooner or later, [his] spiritual pride grew till it called for some form of celebration. Then he took a drink […]. That was the end of Father. […] Next day he stayed in from work with a sick head while Mother went off to make his excuses at the works, and inside a forthnight he was poor and savage and despondent again. Once he began he drank steadily through everything down to the kitchen clock. Mother and I knew all the phases and dreaded all the dangers.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney, Mrs. Delaney
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

He had long months of abstinence behind him and an eternity of pleasure before. He took out his pipe, blew through it, filled it, and then lit it with loud pops, his eyes bulging above it. After that he deliberately turned his back on the pint, leaned one elbow on the counter in the attitude of a man who did not know there was a pint behind him, and deliberately brushed the tobacco from his palms. He had settled down for the evening. He was steadily working through all the important funerals he had ever attended.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:

I knew Father was quite capable of lingering [at the pub] till nightfall. I knew I might have to bring him home, blind drunk, down Blarney Lane, with all the old women at their doors, saying: “Mick Delaney is on it again.” I knew that my mother would be half crazy with anxiety; that next day Father wouldn’t go out to work; and before the end of the week she would be running down to the pawn with the clock under her shawl.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney, Mrs. Delaney
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:

I saw plain enough that, coaxed by the sunlight, every woman old and young in Blarney Lane was leaning over her half-door or sitting on her doorstep. They all stopped gabbling to gape at the strange spectacle of two sober, middle-aged men bringing home a drunken small boy with a cut over his eye. Father, torn between the shamefast desire to get me home as quick as he could, and the neighbourly need to explain that it wasn’t his fault, finally halted outside Mrs. Roche’s.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Page Number: 197
Explanation and Analysis:

“Twill be all over the road,” whimpered Father. “Never again, never again, not if I lived to be a thousand!” To this day I don’t know whether he was forswearing me or the drink.

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Related Symbols: The Road
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:

“But I gave him no drink,” he shouted, aghast at the horrifying interpretation the neighbours had chosen to give his misfortune. “He took it while my back was turned. What the hell do you think I am?” “Ah,” she replied bitterly, “everyone knows what you are now. God forgive you, wasting our hard-earned few ha’pence on drink, and bringing up your child to be a drunken corner-boy like yourself.”

Related Characters: Mick Delaney (speaker), Larry Delaney (speaker), Mrs. Delaney (speaker)
Page Number: 199
Explanation and Analysis:

“My brave little man!” she said with her eyes shining. “It was God did it you were there. You were his guardian angel.”

Related Characters: Larry Delaney (speaker), Mrs. Delaney (speaker), Mick Delaney
Page Number: 199
Explanation and Analysis: