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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14511 ***
+
+IRELAND UNDER COERCION
+
+THE DIARY OF AN AMERICAN
+
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM HENRY HURLBERT
+
+
+VOL. II.
+
+_SECOND EDITION._
+
+1888
+
+
+"Upon the future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire."
+CARDINAL MANNING TO EARL GREY, 1868
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+ Rossbehy, Feb. 21, 1
+ The latest eviction at Glenbehy, 1
+ Trafalgar Square, 1, 2
+ Father Little, 3
+ Mr. Frost, 3, 4
+ Priest and landlord, 3
+ Savings Banks' deposits at Six-mile Bridge, 5
+ Drive through Limerick, 5
+ Population and trade, 5, 6
+ Boycotting and commerce, 6, 7
+ Shores of the Atlantic, 7
+ Tralee, 7
+ Killorglin, 8
+ Hostelry in the hills, 8
+ Facts of the eviction, 9-13
+ Glenbehy Eviction Fund (see Note G2), 12
+ A walk on Washington's birthday, 13
+ A tenant at Glenbehy offers £13 in two instalments
+ in full for £240 arrears, 13
+ English and Irish members, 14
+ "Winn's Folly," 15
+ Acreage and rental of the Glenbehy estate, 16
+ Work of eviction begun, 17
+ Patience of officers, 17
+ American and Irish evictions contrasted, 17
+ "Oh, he's quite familiar," 18
+ A modest Poor Law Guardian, 18, 19
+ Moonlighters' swords, 20
+ Father Quilter and the "poor slaves," his people, 21,22
+ Beauty of Lough Caragh, 23
+ Difficulty of getting evidence, 25
+ Effects of terrorism in Kerry, 25
+ Singular identification of a murderer, 26
+ Local administration in Tralee, 28
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+ Cork, Feb. 23, 30
+ Press accounts of Glenbehy evictions astonish an eye-witness, 30
+ Castle Island, 31
+ Mr. Roche and Mr. Gladstone, 31
+ Opinions of a railway traveller, 31, 32
+ Misrepresentations of evictions, 32
+ Cork, past and present, 34
+ Mr. Gladstone and the Dean, 35
+ League Courts in Kerry, 36
+ Local Law Lords, 36
+ Mr. Colomb and the Fenian rising in 1867, 37
+ Remarkable letter of an M.P., 38
+ Irish Constabulary, _morale_ of the force, 40
+ The clergy and the Plan of Campaign, 41
+ Municipal history, 43
+ Increase of public burdens, 44
+ Tralee Board of Guardians, 46
+ Labourers and tenants, 46
+ Feb. 25, 47
+ Boycotting, 47-49
+ Land law and freedom of contract, 49
+ Rivalry between Limerick and Cork, 50
+ Henry VIII. and the Irish harp, 50
+ Municipal Parliamentary franchise, 51
+ Environs of Cork, 52
+ Churches and chapels, 53
+ Attractive home at Belmullet, 54
+ Lord Carnarvon and the Priest, 55
+ Feb. 26, 56
+ Blarney Castle, 56, 57
+ St. Anne's Hill, 56, 57
+ An evicted woman on "the Plan," 59
+ The Ponsonby estate, 59
+ Feb. 27--A day at Youghal, 60
+ Father Keller, 61-76
+ On emigration and migration, 66
+ Protestants and Catholics (see Note G3), 68
+ Meath as a field for peasant proprietors, 69
+ Ghost of British protection, 70
+ A farmer evicted from a tenancy of 200 years, 71
+ Sir Walter Raleigh's house and garden, 71-73
+ Churches of St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway, 73
+ Monument and churchyard, 73, 74
+ An Elizabethan candidate for canonisation, 75
+ Drive to Lismore, 76
+ Driver's opinions on the Ponsonby estates, 77
+ Dromaneen Castle and the Countess of Desmond, 78
+ Trappist Monastery at Cappoquin, 78
+ Lismore, 78, 79
+ Castle grounds and cathedral, 79, 80
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+ Feb. 28, 82
+ Portumna, Galway, 82
+ Run through Cork, Limerick, Tipperary,
+ Queen's and King's County to Parsonstown, 82
+ A Canadian priest on the situation, 83
+ His reply to M. de Mandat Grancey, 83
+ Relations of priests with the League, 83-85
+ Parsonstown and Lord Rosse, 86
+ Drive to Portumna, 87
+ An abandoned railway, 88
+ American storms, grain, and beasts, 88, 89
+ Portumna Castle, 90, 91
+ Lord Clanricarde's estate, 92
+ Mr. Tener, 92-128
+ Plan of Campaign, 94-99
+ Ability of tenants to pay their rents, 95
+ Mr. Dillon in 1886, 96
+ Mr. Parnell in 1885, 97
+ Tenants in greater danger than landlords and agents, 100
+ Feb. 29, 100
+ Conference between evicted tenants and agent, 100-106
+ Castle and park, 107
+ The League shopkeeper and tenant, 108
+ Under police escort, 109
+ Cost of 'knocking' a man, 109
+ What constitutes a group, 110
+ Favourite spots for administering a League oath, 110
+ Disbursing treasurers, 111
+ Change of venue, 111
+ Bishop of Clonfert, 112-115
+ Bector of Portumna, 115
+ Father Coen, 116
+ Coercion on the part of the League, 118-121
+ Deposits in banks, 120
+ Should landlords and shopkeepers be placed on one footing? 121
+ New Castle of Portumna, 122
+ Portumna Union, 123, 124
+ Troubles of resident landlords, 125-127
+ Effects of the agitation on the people, 124
+ War against property and private rights, 127
+ Mr. Tener's experiences in Cavan, 127-130
+ Similar cases in Leitrim, 130-132
+ Sale of rents and value of tenant-right, 133, 134
+
+CHAPTER X.
+ Dublin, March 1, 135
+ Portumna to Woodford, 135
+ Evictions of October 1887, 135
+ Capture of Cloondadauv Castle, 137-141
+ A tenant and a priest, 141-144
+ Workmen's wages in Massachusetts compared with
+ the profits of a tenant farmer in Ireland, 146
+ Loughrea, 148, 149
+ Murder of Finlay, 150, 151
+ The chrysoprase Lake of Loughrea, 154
+ Lord Clanricarde's estate office, acreage, and rental, 155
+ Woodford acreage and rental, 155,156
+ Drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn, 156-160
+ A Galway "jarvey" on the situation, 156-159
+ Woodlawn and the Ashtown property, 160
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+ Borris, March 2, 161
+ Mr. Kavanagh, 161-163
+ Borris House, 163-167
+ A living Banshee, 165, 166
+ Land Corporation--its mode of working, 167
+ Meeting in Dublin, 1885, 168
+ Rev. Mr. Cantwell, 168
+ Lord Lansdowne's property at Luggacurren, 169
+ Mr. Kavanagh's career, 170
+ Books and papers at Borris, 171
+ Strongbow, 172
+ "The five bloods," 172, 173
+ Genealogy of M'Morroghs and Kavanaghs, 173
+ March 4, 174
+ Protestant service read every morning, 174
+ A Catholic gentleman's views, 175
+ Relation of tenants to village despots, 176
+ Would America make a State of Ireland? 177
+ Land Acts since 1870, 178
+ The O'Grady of Kilballyowen and his rental, 179
+ Dispute with his tenants: its cause and effect, 180
+ His circular to his tenantry, 181-186
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+ Grenane House, March 5, 187
+ Visit to Mr. Seigne, 187
+ Beautiful situation of Grenane, 189
+ A lady of the country, 189
+ Mr. Seigne's experience of the tenants, 191-194
+ The beauty of Woodstock, 194-198
+ The watch of Waterloo, 197-200
+ Curious discovery of stolen property, 200
+ Dublin, March 6, 200
+ State of deposits in the Savings Banks, 200-201
+ Interest on "Plan of Campaign" funds, 202
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+ Dublin, March 8, 203
+ Inch and the Coolgreany evictions, 203
+ Sweet vale of Avoca, 204
+ Dr. Dillon of Arklow, 204
+ Fathers O'Neill and Dunphy, 205, 206
+ Mr. Davitt watching the evictions, 207
+ Lazy and thriftless tenants better off than before, 209
+ A self-made committee, 211
+ The Brooke estate, 212
+ Sir Thomas Esmonde's house, 213
+ An Arklow dinner, 214
+ Dr. Dillon in his study, 215-217
+ Visit to Glenart Castle, 217
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+ Dublin, March 9, 219
+ Athy, 219
+ A political jarvey, 220-225
+ "Who is Mr. Gilhooly?" 221
+ Lord Lansdowne's offer refused through pressure of the League, 226
+ Mr. Kilbride, M.P., and Mr. Dunne, 226-228
+ Lord Lansdowne's estate in Kerry, 228-231
+ Plan of Campaign at Luggacurren, 231-236
+ Interview with Father Maher, 236-239
+ A "jarvey" on a J.P., 240
+ "Railway amenities," 241
+ Dublin, March 10, 242
+ Mr. Brooke, 242-248
+ Unreasonable tenants, 243, 244
+ Size and rental of estate, 246
+ Sub-commissioner's reduction reversed, 246, 247
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+ Maryborough, 249
+ Archbishop Croke, 249
+ Interviews with labourers, 251-253
+ Views of a successful country teacher, 254, 255
+ A veteran of the '48, 256-260
+ Amount of wages to men, 261
+ The farmers and labourers and lawyers, 264, 265
+ Dublin, June 23, 268
+ Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, 268-270
+ From Attanagh to Ballyragget, 270
+ Case of "a little-good-for tenant," 271, 272
+ Mr. Kough and his tenants, 273-277
+ Mr. Richardson of Castle Comer, 277
+ Position of the tenants, 282
+ £70 a year for whisky, 282
+ Kilkenny Castle, 282
+ Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, 283-292
+ John O'Leary, 285-292
+ Boycotting private opinion, 292
+ The League as now conducted, 295
+ Poems and Ballads of "Young Ireland," 296
+ Law Courts and Trinity College, 297
+ American Civil War, 299-302
+ Dublin, June 24, 302
+ A dinner with officials, 303-306
+ A priest earns over £20,000, 305, 306
+ "Crowner's Quest Law," 309-311
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+ Belfast, June 25, 313
+ Ulster in Irish history, 313
+ Moira, 315
+ Views of an Ulsterman, 315, 316
+ Beauty of Belfast, 317, 318
+ Its buildings, 319-321
+ Dr. Hanna, 322-324
+ Dr. Kane, 325
+ June 26, 326
+ Sir John Preston, 326-328
+ Mr. Cameron, of Royal Irish Constabulary, 328
+ Police parade, 328
+ Belfast steamers, 329
+ Scotland and America at work on Ireland, 330
+
+EPILOGUE, p. 333-349
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ NOTES--
+
+ F. The Moonlighters and Home Rule (pp. 10, 38), 351
+ G. The Ponsonby Property (pp. 59-66), 353
+ G2 The Glenbehy Eviction Fund (p. 12), 360
+ G3 Home Rule and Protestantism (p. 68), 362
+ H. Tully and the Woodford Evictions (p. 149), 364
+ H2. Boycotting the Dead (p. 151), 370
+ I. The Savings Banks (P.O.) (vol. i. p. 39, vol. ii. pp. 5 and 200), 371
+ K. The Coolgreany Evictions (p. 216), 372
+ L. A Ducal Supper in 1711 (p. 283), 374
+ M. Letter from Mr. O'Leary (p. 291), 375
+ N. Boycotting Private Opinion (p. 293), 377
+ O. Boycotting by Crowner's Quest Law (p. 312), 382
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+ROSSBEHY,[1] _Feb. 21._--We are here on the eve of battle! An "eviction"
+is to be made to-morrow on the Glenbehy[1] estate of Mr. Winn, an uncle
+of Lord Headley, so upon the invitation of Colonel Turner, who has come
+to see that all is done decently and in order, I left Ennis with him at
+7.40 A.M. for Limerick; the "city of the Liberator" for "the city of the
+Broken Treaty." There we breakfasted at the Artillery Barracks.
+
+The officers showed us there the new twelve-pounder gun with its
+elaborately scientific machinery, its Scotch sight, and its four-mile
+range. I compared notes about the Trafalgar Square riots of February
+1886 with an Irish officer who happened to have been on the opposite
+side of Pall Mall from me at the moment when the mob, getting out of the
+hand of my socialistic friend Mr. Hyndman, and advancing towards St.
+James' Street and Piccadilly was broken by a skilful and very spirited
+charge of the police. He gave a most humorous account of his own
+sensations when he first came into contact with the multitude after
+emerging from St. Paul's, where, as he put it, he had left the people
+"all singing away like devils." But I found he quite agreed with me in
+thinking that there was a visible nucleus of something like military
+organisation in the mob of that day, which was overborne and, as it
+were, smothered by the mere mob element before it came to trying
+conclusions with the police.
+
+On our way to Limerick, Colonel Turner caught sight, at a station, of
+Father Little, the parish priest of Six Mile Bridge, in County Clare,
+and jumping out of the carriage invited him to get in and pursue his
+journey with us, which he very politely did. Father Little is a tall
+fine-looking man of a Saxon rather than a Celtic type, and I daresay
+comes of the Cromwellian stock. He is a staunch and outspoken
+Nationalist, and has been made rather prominent of late by his
+championship of certain of his parishioners in their contest with their
+landlord, Mr. H.V. D'Esterre, who lives chiefly at Bournemouth in
+England, but owns 2833 acres in County Clare at Rosmanagher, valued at
+£1625 a year. More than a year ago one of Father Little's parishioners,
+Mr. Frost, successfully resisted a large force of the constabulary bent
+on executing a process of ejectment against him obtained by Mr.
+D'Esterre.
+
+Frost's holding was of 33 Irish, or, in round numbers, about 50 English,
+acres, at a rental of £117, 10s., on which he had asked but had not
+obtained an abatement. The Poor-Law valuation of the holding was £78,
+and Frost estimated the value of his and his father's improvements,
+including the homestead and the offices, or in other words his
+tenant-right, at £400. The authorities sent a stronger body of
+constables and ejected Frost. But as soon as they had left the place
+Frost came back with his family, on the 28th Jan. 1887, and reoccupied
+it. Of course proceedings were taken against him immediately, and a
+small war was waged over the Frost farm until the 5th of September last,
+when an expedition was sent against it, and it was finally captured, and
+Frost evicted with his family. Upon this last occasion Father Little
+(who gave me a very temperate but vigorous account of the whole affair)
+distinguished himself by a most ingenious and original attempt to "hold
+the fort." He chained himself to the main doorway, and stretching the
+chains right and left secured them to two other doors. It was of this
+refreshing touch of humour that I heard the other day at Abbeyleix as
+happening not in Clare but in Kerry.
+
+Since his eviction Frost has been living, Father Little tells me, in a
+wooden hut put up for him on the lands of a kinsman of the same name,
+who is also a tenant of Mr. D'Esterre, and who has since been served by
+his landlord with a notice of ejectment for arrears, although he had
+paid up six months' dues two months only before the service. Father
+Little charged the landlord in this case with prevarication and other
+evasive proceedings in the course of his negotiations with the tenants;
+and Colonel Turner did not contest the statements made by him in support
+of his contention that the Rosmanagher difficulty might have been
+avoided had the tenants been more fairly and more considerately dealt
+with. It is strong presumptive evidence against the landlord that a
+kinsman, Mr. Robert D'Esterre, is one of the subscribers to a fund
+raised by Father Little in aid of the evicted man Frost. On the other
+hand, as illustrating the condition of the tenants, it is noteworthy
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank's deposits at Six-Mile Bridge rose
+from £382, 17s. 10d. in 1880 to £934, 13s. 4d. in 1887.
+
+After breakfast we took a car and drove rapidly about the city for an
+hour. With its noble river flowing through the very heart of the place,
+and broadening soon into an estuary of the Atlantic, Limerick ought long
+ago to have taken its place in the front rank of British ports dealing
+with the New World. In the seventeenth century it was the fourth city of
+Ireland, Boate putting it then next after Dublin, Galway, and Waterford.
+Belfast at that time, he describes as a place hardly comparable "to a
+small market-town in England." To-day Limerick has a population of some
+forty thousand, and Belfast a population of more than two hundred
+thousand souls. This change cannot be attributed solely, if at all, to
+the "Protestant ascendency," nor yet to the alleged superiority of the
+Northern over the Southern Irish in energy and thrift, For in the
+seventeenth century Limerick was more important than Cork, whereas it
+had so far fallen behind its Southern competitor in the eighteenth
+century that it contained in 1781 but 3859 houses, while Cork contained
+5295. To-day its population is about half as large as that of Cork. It
+is a very well built city, its main thoroughfare, George Street, being
+at least a mile in length, and a picturesque city also, thanks to the
+island site of its most ancient quarter, the English Town, and to the
+hills of Clare and Killaloe, which close the prospect of the surrounding
+country. But the streets, though many of them are handsome, have a
+neglected look, as have also the quays and bridges. One of my
+companions, to whom I spoke of this, replied, "if they look neglected,
+it's because they are neglected. Politics are the death of the place,
+and the life of its publics."[2]
+
+As we approached the shores of the Atlantic from Limerick, the scenery
+became very grand and beautiful. On the right of the railway the country
+rolled and undulated away towards the Stacks, amid the spurs and slopes
+of which, in the wood of Clonlish, Sanders, the Nuncio sent over to
+organise Catholic Ireland against Elizabeth, miserably perished of want
+and disease six years before the advent of the great Armada. To the
+south-west rose the grand outlines of the Macgillicuddy's Reeks, the
+highest points, I believe, in the South of Ireland. We established
+ourselves at the County Kerry Club on our arrival in Tralee, which I
+found to be a brisk prosperous-looking town, and quite well built. A
+Nationalist member once gave me a gloomy notion of Tralee, by telling
+me, when I asked him whether he looked forward with longing to a seat in
+the Parliament of Ireland, that "when he was in Dublin now he always
+thought of London, just as when he used to be in Tralee he always
+thought of Dublin." But he did less than justice to the town upon the
+Lee. We left it at half-past four in the train for Killorglin. The
+little station there was full of policemen and soldiers, and knots of
+country people stood about the platform discussing the morrow. There had
+been some notion that the car-drivers at Killorglin might "boycott" the
+authorities. But they were only anxious to turn an honest penny by
+bringing us on to this lonely but extremely neat and comfortable
+hostelry in the hills.
+
+We left the Sheriff and the escort to find their way as best they could
+after us.
+
+Mrs. Shee, the landlady here, ushered us into a very pretty room hung
+with little landscapes of the country, and made cheery by a roaring
+fire. Two or three officers of the soldiers sent on here to prevent any
+serious uproar to-morrow dined with us.
+
+The constabulary are in force, but in great good humour. They have no
+belief that there will be any trouble, though all sorts of wild tales
+were flying about Tralee before we left, of English members of
+Parliament coming down to denounce the "Coercion" law, and of risings in
+the hills, and I know not what besides. The agent of the Winn property,
+or of Mr. Head of Reigate in Surrey, the mortgagee of the estate, who
+holds a power of attorney from Mr. Winn, is here, a quiet, intelligent
+young man, who has given me the case in a nut-shell.
+
+The tenant to be evicted, James Griffin, is the son and heir of one Mrs.
+Griffin, who on the 5th of April 1854 took a lease of the lands known as
+West Lettur from the then Lord Headley and the Hon. R. Winn, at the
+annual rent of £32, 10s. This rent has since been reduced by a judicial
+process to £26. In 1883 James Griffin, who was then, as he is now, an
+active member of the local branch of the National League, and who was
+imprisoned under Mr. Gladstone's Act of 1881 as a "suspect," was
+evicted, being then several years in arrears. He re-entered unlawfully
+immediately afterwards, and has remained in West Lettur unlawfully ever
+since, actively deterring and discouraging other tenants from paying
+their rents. He took a great part in promoting the refusal to pay which
+led to the famous evictions of last year. As to these, it seems the
+tenants had agreed, in 1886, to accept a proposition from Mr. Head,
+remitting four-fifths of all their arrears upon payment of one year's
+rent and costs. Mr. Sheehan, M.P., a hotel-keeper in Killarney,
+intervened, advising the tenants that the Dublin Parliament would soon
+be established, and would abolish "landlordism," whereupon they refused
+to keep their agreement.[3] Sir Redvers Buller, who then filled the post
+now held by Sir West Ridgway, seeing this alarming deadlock, urged Mr.
+Head to go further, and offer to take a half-year's rent and costs. If
+the tenants refused this Sir Redvers advised Mr. Head to destroy all
+houses occupied by mere trespassers, such as Griffin, who, if they could
+hold a place for twelve years, would acquire a title under the Statute
+of Limitations. A negotiation conducted by Sir Redvers and Father
+Quilter, P.P., followed, and Father Quilter, for the tenants, finally,
+in writing, accepted Mr. Head's offer, under which, by the payment of
+£865, they would be rid of a legal liability for £6177. The League again
+intervened with bribes and threats, and Father Quilter found himself
+obliged to write to Colonel Turner a letter in which he said, "Only
+seventeen of the seventy tenants have sent on their rents to Mr. Roe
+(the agent). Though promising that they would accept the terms, they
+have withdrawn at the last moment from fulfilment.... I shall never
+again during my time in Glenbehy interfere between a landlord and his
+tenants. I have poor slaves who will not keep their word. Now let Mr.
+Roe or any other agent in future deal with Glenbeighans as he likes."
+The farms lie at a distance even from this inn, and very far therefore
+from Killorglin, and the agent, knowing that the tenants would be
+encouraged by Griffin and by Mr. Harrington, M.P., and others, to come
+back into their holdings as soon as the officers withdrew, ordered the
+woodwork of several cottages to be burned in order to prevent this. This
+burning of the cottages, which were the lawful property of the
+mortgagee, made a great figure in the newspaper reports, and
+"scandalised the civilised world." The present agent thinks it was
+impolitic on that account, but he has no doubt it was a good thing
+financially for the evicted tenants. "You will see the shells of the
+cottages to-morrow," he said, "and you will judge for yourself what they
+were worth." But the sympathy excited by the illustrations of the cruel
+conflagration and the heartrending descriptions of the reporters,
+resulted in a very handsome subscription for the benefit of the tenants
+of Glenbehy. General Sir William Butler, whose name came so prominently
+before the public in connection with his failure to appear and give
+evidence in a recent _cause célèbre_, and whose brother is a Resident
+Magistrate in Kerry, was one of the subscribers. The fund thus raised
+has been since administered by two trustees, Father Quilter, P.P., and
+Mr. Shee, a son of our brisk little landlady here, who maintain out of
+it very comfortably the evicted tenants. Not long ago a man in Tralee
+tried to bribe the agent into having him evicted, that he might make a
+claim on this fund! At Killorglin the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits,
+which stood at £282, 15s. 9d. in 1880, rose in 1887 to £1299, 2s. 6d.
+James Griffin, despite, or because, of the two evictions through which
+he has passed, is very well off. He owns a very good horse and cart, and
+seven or eight head of cattle. His arrears now amount to about £240, and
+on being urged yesterday to make a proposition which might avoid an
+eviction, he gravely offered to pay £8 of the current half-year's rent
+in cash, and the remaining £5 in June, the landlord taking on himself
+all the costs and giving him a clean receipt! This liberal proposition
+was declined. The zeal of her son in behalf of the evicted tenants does
+not seem to affect the amiable anxiety of our trim and energetic hostess
+to make things agreeable here to the minions of the alien despotism. The
+officers both of the police and of the military appear to be on the best
+of terms with the whole household, and everything is going as merrily as
+marriage bells on this eve of an eviction.
+
+TRALEE, _Wednesday evening, Feb. 22._--We rose early at Mrs. Shee's,
+made a good breakfast, and set out for the scene of the day's work. It
+was a glorious morning for Washington's birthday, and I could not help
+imagining the amazement with which that stern old Virginian landlord
+would have regarded the elaborate preparations thought necessary here in
+Ireland in the year of our Lord 1888, to eject a tenant who owes two
+hundred and forty pounds of arrears on a holding at twenty-six pounds a
+year, and offers to settle the little unpleasantness by paying thirteen
+pounds in two instalments!
+
+We had a five miles' march of it through a singularly wild and
+picturesque region, the hills which lead up to the Macgillicuddy's Reeks
+on our left, and on the right the lower hills trending to the salt water
+of Dingle Bay. Our start had been delayed by the non-appearance of the
+Sheriff, in aid of whom all this parade of power was made; but it turned
+out afterwards that he had gone on without stopping to let Colonel
+Turner know it.
+
+The air was so bracing and the scenery so fine that we walked most of
+the way. Two or three cars drove past us, the police and the troops
+making way for them very civilly, though some of the officers thought
+they were taking some Nationalist leaders and some English
+"sympathisers" to Glenbehy. One of the officers, when I commented upon
+this, told me they never had much trouble with the Irish members. "Some
+of them," he said, "talk more than is necessary, and flourish about; but
+they have sense enough to let us go about our work without foolishly
+trying to bother us. The English are not always like that." And he then
+told me a story of a scene in which an English M.P., we will call Mr.
+Gargoyle, was a conspicuous actor. Mr. Gargoyle being present either at
+an eviction or a prohibited meeting, I didn't note which, with two or
+three Irish members, all of them were politely requested to step on one
+side and let the police march past. The Irish members touched their hats
+in return to the salute of the officer, and drew to one side of the
+road. But Mr. Gargoyle defiantly planted himself in the middle of the
+road. The police, marching four abreast, hesitated for a moment, and
+then suddenly dividing into two columns marched on. The right-hand man
+of the first double file, as he went by, just touched the M.P. with his
+shoulder, and thereby sent him up against the left-hand man of the
+corresponding double file, who promptly returned the attention. And in
+this manner the distinguished visitor went gyrating through the whole
+length of the column, to emerge at the end of it breathless, hatless,
+and bewildered, to the intense and ill-suppressed delight of his Irish
+colleagues.
+
+Our hostess's son, the trustee of the Eviction Fund, was on one of the
+cars which passed us, with two or three companions, who proved to be
+"gentlemen of the Press." We passed a number of cottages and some larger
+houses on the way, the inmates of which seemed to be minding their own
+business and taking but a slight interest in the great event of the day.
+We made a little detour at one of the finest points on the road to visit
+"Winn's Folly," a modern mediæval castle of considerable size, upon a
+most enchanting site, with noble views on every side, quite impossible
+to be seen through its narrow loopholed and latticed windows. The castle
+is extremely well built, of a fine stone from the neighbourhood, and
+with a very small expenditure might be made immediately habitable. But
+no one has ever lived in it. It has only been occupied as a temporary
+barrack by the police when sent here, and the largest rooms are now
+littered with straw for the use of the force. At the beginning of the
+century, and for many years afterwards, Lord and Lady Headley lived on
+the estate, and kept a liberal house. Their residence was on a fine
+point running out into the bay, but, I am told, the sea has now invaded
+it, and eaten it away. In 1809 the acreage of this Glenbehy property was
+8915 Irish acres or 14,442 English acres, set down under Bath's
+valuation at £2299, 17s. 6d. Between 1830 and 1860 the rental averaged
+£5000 a year, and between these years £17,898, 14s. 5d. were expended by
+the landlord in improvements upon the property. This castle, which we
+visited, must have involved since then an outlay of at least £10,000 in
+the place.
+
+The present Lord Headley, only a year or two ago, went through the
+Bankruptcy Court, and the Hon. Rowland Winn, his uncle, the titular
+owner of Glenbehy, is set down among the Irish landlords as owning
+13,932 Irish acres at a rental of £1382.
+
+After we passed the castle we began to hear the blowing of rude horns
+from time to time on the distant hills. These were signals to the people
+of our approach, and gave quite the air of an invasion to our
+expedition. We passed the burned cottages of last year just before
+reaching Mr. Griffin's house at West Lettur. They were certainly not
+large cottages, and I saw but three of them. We found the Sheriff at
+West Lettur. The police and the soldiers drew a cordon around the place,
+within which no admittance was to be had except on business; and the
+myrmidons of the law going into the house with the agent held a final
+conference with the tenant, of which nothing came but a renewal of his
+previous offer. Then the work of eviction began. There was no attempt at
+a resistance, and but for the martial aspect of the forces, and an
+occasional blast of a horn from the hills, or the curious noises made
+from time to time by a small concourse of people, chiefly women,
+assembled on the slope of an adjoining tenancy, the proceedings were as
+dull as a parish meeting. What most struck me about the affair was the
+patience and good-nature of the officers. In the two hours and a half
+which we spent at West Lettur a New York Sheriff's deputies would have
+put fifty tenants with all their bags and baggage out of as many houses
+into the street. In fact it is very likely that at least that number of
+New York tenants were actually so ousted from their houses during this
+very time.
+
+The evicted Mr. Griffin was a stout, stalwart man of middle age,
+comfortably dressed, with the air rather of a citizen than of a farmer,
+who took the whole thing most coolly, as did also his women-kind. All of
+them were well dressed, and they superintended the removal and piling up
+of their household goods as composedly as if they were simply moving out
+of one house into another. The house itself was a large comfortable
+house of the country, and it was amply furnished.
+
+I commented on Griffin's indifference to the bailiff, a quiet,
+good-natured man.
+
+"Oh, he's quite familiar," was the reply; "it's the third time he's been
+evicted! I believe's going to America."
+
+"Oh! he will do very well," said a gentleman who had joined the
+expedition like myself to see the scene. "He is a shrewd chap, and not
+troubled by bashfulness. He sat on a Board of Guardians with a man I
+knew four years ago, and one day he read out his own name, 'James
+Griffin,' among a list of applicants for relief at Cahirciveen. The
+chairman looked up, and said, 'Surely that is not your name you are
+reading, is it?' 'It is, indeed,' replied Griffin, 'and I am as much in
+need of relief as any one!' Perhaps you'll be surprised to hear he
+didn't get it. This is a good holding he had, and he used to do pretty
+well with it--not in his mother's time only of the flush prices, but in
+his own. It was the going to Kilmainham that spoiled him."
+
+"How did that spoil him?"
+
+"Oh, it made a great man of him, being locked up. He was too well
+treated there. He got a liking for sherry and bitters, and he's never
+been able to make his dinner since without a nip of them. Mrs. Shee
+knows that well."
+
+To make an eviction complete and legal here, everything belonging to the
+tenant, and every live creature must be taken out of the house. A cat
+may save a house as a cat may save a derelict ship. Then the Sheriff
+must "walk" over the whole holding. All this takes time. There was an
+unobtrusive search for arms too going on all the time. Three ramrods
+were found hidden in a straw-bed--two of which showed signs of recent
+use. But the guns had vanished. An officer told me that not long ago two
+revolvers were found in a corner of the thatch of a house; but the
+cartridges for them were only some time afterwards discovered neatly
+packed away in the top of a bedroom wall. It is not the ownership of
+these arms, it is the careful concealment of them which indicates
+sinister intent. One of the constables brought out three "Moonlighters'
+swords" found hidden away in the house. One of these Colonel Turner
+showed me. It was a reversal of the Scriptural injunction, being a
+ploughshare beaten into a weapon, and a very nasty weapon of offence,
+one end of it sharpened for an ugly thrust, the other fashioned into
+quite a fair grip. While I was examining this trophy there was a stir,
+and presently two of the gentlemen who had passed us on Mr. Shee's car
+came rather suddenly out of the house in company with two or three
+constables.
+
+They were representatives, they said, of the Press, and as such desired
+to be allowed to remain. Colonel Turner replied that this could not be,
+and, in fact, no one had been suffered to enter the house except the
+law-officers, the agent, and the constables. So the representatives of
+the Press were obliged to pass outside of the lines, one of the
+constables declaring that they had got into the house through a hole in
+the back wall!
+
+Shortly after this incident there arose a considerable noise of groaning
+and shouting from the hill-side beyond the highway, and presently a
+number of people, women and children predominating, appeared coming down
+towards the precincts of the house. They were following a person in a
+clerical dress, who proved to be Father Quilter, the parish priest, who
+had denounced his people to Colonel Turner as "poor slaves" of the
+League! A colloquy followed between Father Quilter and the policemen of
+the cordon. This was brought to a close by Mr. Roche, the resident
+magistrate, who went forward, and finding that Father Quilter wished to
+pass the cordon, politely but firmly informed him that this could not be
+done. "Not if I am the bearer of a telegram for the lawyer?" asked
+Father Quilter, in a loud and not entirely amiable tone. "Not on any
+terms whatever," responded the magistrate. Father Quilter still
+maintaining his ground, the women crowded in around and behind him, the
+men bringing up the rear at a respectable distance, and the small boys
+shouting loudly. For a moment faint hopes arose within me that I was
+about to witness one of the .exciting scenes of which I have more than
+once read. But only for a moment. The magistrate ordered the police to
+advance. As they drew near the wall with an evident intention of going
+over it into the highway, Father Quilter and the women fell back, the
+boys and men retreated up the opposite hill, and the brief battle of
+Glenbehy was over.
+
+A small messenger bearing a telegram then emerged from the crowd, and
+showing his telegram, was permitted to pass. Father Quilter, in a loud
+voice, commented upon this, crying out, "See now your consistency! You
+said no one should pass, and you let the messenger come in!" To this
+sally no reply was returned. After a little the priest, followed by most
+of the people, went up the hill to the holding of another tenant, and
+there, as the police came in and reported, held a meeting. From time to
+time cries were heard in the distance, and ever and anon the blast of a
+horn came from some outlying hill.
+
+But no notice was taken of these things by the police, and when the
+tedious formalities of the law had all been gone through with, a squad
+of men were put in charge of the house and the holding, the rest of the
+army re-formed for the march back, our cars came up, and we left West
+Lettur. Seeing a number of men come down the hill, as the column
+prepared to move, Mr. Roche, making his voice tremendous, after the
+fashion of a Greek chorus, commanded the police to arrest and handcuff
+any riotous person making provocative noises. This had the desired
+effect, and the march back began in silence. When the column was fairly
+in the road, "boos" and groans went up from knots of men higher up the
+hill, but no heed was taken of these, and no further incident occurred.
+I shall be curious to see whether the story of this affair can possibly
+be worked up into a thrilling narrative.
+
+We lunched at Mrs. Shee's, where no sort of curiosity was manifested
+about the proceedings at West Lettur, and I came back here with Colonel
+Turner by another road, which led us past one of the loveliest lakes I
+have ever seen--Lough Caragh. Less known to fame than the much larger
+Lake of Killarney, it is in its way quite worthy of comparison with any
+of the lesser lakes of Europe. It is not indeed set in a coronal of
+mountains like Orta, but its shores are well wooded, picturesque, and
+enlivened by charming seats--now, for the most part, alas!--abandoned by
+their owners. We had a pleasant club dinner here this evening, after
+which came in to see me Mr. Hussey, to whom I had sent a letter from Mr.
+Froude. Few men, I imagine, know this whole region better than Mr.
+Hussey. Some gentlemen of the country joined in the conversation, and
+curious stories were told of the difficulty of getting evidence in
+criminal cases. What Froude says of the effect of the prohibitive and
+protection policy in Ireland upon the morals of the people as to
+smuggling must be said, I fear, of the effect of the Penal Laws against
+Catholics upon their morals as to perjury. It is not surprising that the
+peasants should have been educated into the state of mind of the
+Irishman in the old American story, who, being solicited to promise his
+vote when he landed in New York, asked whether the party which sought it
+was for the Government or against it. Against it, he was told, "Then
+begorra you shall have my vote, for I'm agin the Government whatever it
+is." One shocking case was told of a notorious and terrible murder here
+in Kerry. An old man and his son, so poor that they lay naked in their
+beds, were taken out and shot by a party of Moonlighters for breaking a
+boycott. They were left for dead, and their bodies thrown upon a
+dunghill. The boy, however, was still alive when they were found, and it
+was thought he might recover. The magistrates questioned him as to his
+knowledge of the murderers. The boy's mother stood behind the
+magistrate, and when the question was put, held up her finger in a
+warning manner at the poor lad. She didn't wish him to "peach," as, if
+he lived, the friends of the murderers would make it impossible for them
+to keep their holding and live on it. The lad lied, and died with the
+lie on his lips. Who shall sit in judgment on that wretched mother and
+her son? But what rule can possibly be too stern to crush out the
+terrorism which makes such things possible?
+
+And what right have Englishmen to expect their dominion to stand in
+Ireland when their party leaders for party ends shake hands with men who
+wink at and use this terrorism? It has so wrought upon the population
+here, that in another case, in which the truth needed by justice and the
+fears of a poor family trembling for their substance and their lives
+came thus into collision, an Irish Judge did not hesitate to warn the
+jury against allowing themselves to be influenced by "the usual family
+lie"!
+
+A magistrate told us a curious story, which recalls a case noted by Sir
+Walter Scott, about the detection of a murderer, who lay long in wait
+for a certain police sergeant, obnoxious to the "Moonlighters," and
+finally shot him dead in the public street of Loughrea, after dark on a
+rainy night, as he was returning from the Post-Office on one side of the
+street to the Police Barracks on the other. The town and the
+neighbouring country were all agog about the matter, but no trace could
+be got until the Dublin detectives came down three days after the
+murder. It had rained more or less every one of these days, and the
+pools of water were still standing in the street, as on the night of the
+murder. One of the Dublin officers closely examining the highway saw a
+heavy footprint in the coarse mud at the bottom of one of these pools.
+He had the water drawn off, and made out clearly, from the print in the
+mud, that the brogan worn by the foot which made it had a broken
+sole-piece turned over under the foot. By this the murderer was
+eventually traced, captured, tried, and found guilty.
+
+Mr. Morphy, I find, is coming down from Dublin to conduct the
+prosecution in the case of the Crown against the murderers of
+Fitzmaurice, the old man, so brutally slain the other day near Lixnaw,
+in the presence of his daughter, for taking and farming a farm given up
+by his thriftless brother. "He will find," said one of the company,
+"the mischief done in this instance also by prematurely pressing for
+evidence. The girl Honora, who saw her father murdered, never ought to
+have been subjected to any inquiry at first by any one, least of all by
+the local priest. Her first thought inevitably was that if she intimated
+who the men were, they would be screened, and she would suffer. Now she
+is recovering her self-possession and coming round, and she will tell
+the truth."
+
+"Meanwhile," said a magistrate, "the girl and her family are all
+'boycotted,' and that, mark you, by the priest, as well as by the
+people. The girl's life would be in peril were not these scoundrels
+cowards as well as bullies. Two staunch policemen--Irishmen and
+Catholics both of them--are in constant attendance, with orders to
+prevent any one from trying to intimidate or to tamper with her. A
+police hut is putting up close to the Fitzmaurice house. The Nationalist
+papers haven't a word to say for this poor girl or her murdered father.
+But they are always putting in some sly word in behalf of Moriarty and
+Hayes, the men accused of the murder."
+
+"Furthermore," said another guest, "these two men are regularly supplied
+while in prison with special meals by Mrs. Tangney. Who foots the bills?
+That is what she won't tell, nor has the Head-Constable so far been able
+accurately to ascertain. All we know is that the friends of the
+prisoners haven't the money to do it."
+
+Late in the evening came in a tall fine-looking Kerry squire, who told
+us, _à propos_ of the Fitzmaurice murder, that only a day or two ago a
+very decent tenant of his, who had taken over a holding from a
+disreputable kinsman, intending to manage it for the benefit of this
+kinsman's family, came to him and said he must give it up, as the
+Moonlighters had threatened him if he continued to hold it.
+
+A man of substance in Tralee gave me some startling facts as to the
+local administration here. In Tralee Union, he said, there were in 1879
+eighty-seven persons receiving outdoor relief, at a cost to the Union of
+£30, 17s. 11d., being an average per head of 7s. 1d., and 1879 was a
+very bad year, the worst since the great famine year, 1847. A
+Nationalist Board was elected in 1880, and a Nationalist chairman in
+1884. 1884 was a very good year, but in that year no fewer than 3434
+persons received outdoor relief, at a cost of £2534, 13s. 10d., making
+an average per head of 14s. 9d.! And at the present time £5000 nominal
+worth of dishonoured cheques of the authorities were flying all over the
+county!
+
+"On whom," I asked, "does the burden fall of these levies and
+extravagances?"
+
+"On the landlords, not on the tenants," he promptly replied. "The
+landlord pays the whole of the rates on all holdings of less than £4 a
+year, and on all land which is either really or technically in his own
+possession. He also pays one-half of the rates on all the rest of his
+property."
+
+"Then, in a case like that of Griffin's, evicted at Glenbehy, with
+arrears going back to 1883, who would pay the rates?"
+
+"The landlord of course!"[4]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+CORK, _Thursday, Feb. 23d._--We left Tralee this morning. It was
+difficult to recognise the events yesterday witnessed by us at Glenbehy
+in the accounts which we read of them to-day when we got the newspapers.
+
+As these accounts are obviously intended to be read, not in Ireland,
+where nobody seems to take the least interest in Irish affairs beyond
+his own bailiwick, but in England and America, it is only natural, I
+suppose, that they should be coloured to suit the taste of the market
+for which they are destined. It is astonishing how little interest the
+people generally show in the newspapers. The Irish make good journalists
+as they make good soldiers; but most of the journalists who now
+represent Irish constituencies at Westminster find their chief field of
+activity, I am told, not in Irish but in British or in American
+journals. Mr. Roche, R.M., who travelled with us as far as Castle
+Island, where we left him, was much less moved by the grotesque accounts
+given in the local journals of his conduct yesterday than by Mr.
+Gladstone's "retractation" of the extraordinary attack which he made the
+other day upon Mr. Roche himself, and four other magistrates by name.
+
+"The retractation aggravates the attack," he said.
+
+When one sees what a magistrate now represents in Ireland, it certainly
+is not easy to reconcile an inconsiderate attack upon the character and
+conduct of such an officer with the most elementary ideas of good
+citizenship.
+
+After Mr. Roche left us, a gentleman in the carriage, who is interested
+in some Castle Island property, told us that nothing could be worse than
+the state of that region. Open defiance of the moral authority of the
+clergy is as rife there, he says, as open defiance of the civil
+authorities. The church was not long ago broken into, and the sacred
+vestments were defiled; and, but the other day, a young girl of the
+place came to a magistrate and asked him to give her a summons against
+the parish priest "for assaulting her." The magistrate, a Protestant,
+but a personal friend of the priest, esteeming him for his fidelity to
+his duties, asked the girl what on earth she meant. She proceeded with
+perfect coolness to say that the priest had impertinently interfered
+with her, "assaulted her," and told her to "go home," when he found her
+sitting in a lonely part of the road with her young man, rather late at
+night! For this, the girl, professing to be a Catholic, actually wanted
+the Protestant magistrate to have her parish priest brought into his
+court! He told the girl plainly what he thought of her conduct,
+whereupon she went away, very angry, and vowing vengeance both against
+the priest and against him.
+
+This same gentleman said that at the Bodyke evictions, of which so much
+has been heard, the girls and women swarmed about the police using
+language so revoltingly obscene that the policemen blushed--such
+language, he said, as was never heard from decent Irishwomen in the days
+of his youth.
+
+Of this business of evictions, he said, the greatest imaginable
+misrepresentations are made in the press and by public speakers. "You
+have just seen one eviction yourself," he said, "and you can judge for
+yourself whether that can be truly described in Mr. Gladstone's language
+as a 'sentence of death.' The people that were put out of these burned
+houses you saw, houses that never would have needed to be burned, had
+Harrington and the other Leaguers allowed the people to keep their
+pledges given Sir Redvers Buller, those very people are better off now
+than they were before they were evicted, in so far as this, that they
+get their food and drink and shelter without working for it, and I'm
+sorry to say that the Government and the League, between them, have been
+soliciting half of Ireland for the last six or eight years to think that
+sort of thing a heaven upon earth. An eviction in Ireland in these days
+generally means just this, that the fight between a landlord and the
+League has come to a head. If the tenant wants to be rid of his holding,
+or if he is more afraid of the League than of the law, why, out he goes,
+and then he is a victim of heartless oppression; but if he is
+well-to-do, and if he thinks he will be protected, he takes the eviction
+proceedings just for a notice to stop palavering and make a settlement,
+and a settlement is made. The ordinary Irish tenant don't think anything
+more of an eviction than Irish gentlemen used to think of a duel; but
+you can never get English people to understand the one any more than the
+other!"
+
+The fine broad streets which Cork owes to the filling up and bridging
+over of the canals which in the last century made her a kind of Irish
+Venice, give the city a comely and even stately aspect. But they are not
+much better kept and looked after than the streets of New York. And they
+are certainly less busy and animated than when I last was here, five
+years ago. All the canals, however, are not filled up or bridged over.
+From my windows, in a neat comfortable little private hotel on
+Morrison's Quay, I look down upon the deck of a small barque, moored
+well up among the houses. The hospitable and dignified County Club is
+within two minutes' walk of my hostelry, and the equally hospitable and
+more bustling City Club, but a little farther off, at the end of the
+South Mall. At luncheon to-day a gentleman who was at Kilkenny with Mr.
+Gladstone on the occasion of his visit to that city told me a story too
+good to be lost. The party were eight in number, and on their return to
+Abbeyleix they naturally looked out for an empty railway carriage. The
+train was rather full, but in one compartment my informant descried a
+dignitary, whom he knew, of the Protestant Church of Ireland, its only
+occupant. He went up and saluted the Dean, and, pointing to his
+companions, asked if he would object to changing his place in the train,
+which would give them a compartment to themselves. The Dean courteously,
+and indeed briskly, assented, when he saw that Mr. Gladstone was one of
+the party.
+
+After the train moved off, Mr. Gladstone said, "Was not that gentleman
+who so kindly vacated his place for us a clergyman?"
+
+"Yes." "I hope he won't think I have disestablished him again!"
+
+At the next station, my informant getting out for a moment to thank the
+Dean again for his civility, and chat with him, repeated Mr. Gladstone's
+remark.
+
+"Oh!" said the Dean; "you may tell him I don't mind his disestablishing
+me again; for he didn't disendow me; he didn't confiscate my ticket!"
+
+With this gentleman was another from Kerry, who tells me there is a
+distinct change for the better already visible in that county, which he
+attributes to the steady action of the Dublin authorities in enforcing
+the law.
+
+"The League Courts," he said, "are ceasing to be the terror they used to
+be."
+
+I asked what he meant by the "League Courts," when he expressed his
+astonishment at my not knowing that it was the practice of the League to
+hold regular Courts, before which the tenants are summoned, as if by a
+process of the law, to explain their conduct, when they are charged with
+paying their rents without the permission of the Local League. In his
+part of Kerry, he tells me, these Courts used not very long ago to sit
+regularly every Sunday. The idea, he says, is as old as the time of the
+United Irishmen, who used to terrorise the country just in the same way.
+A man whom he named, a blacksmith, acted as a kind of "Law Lord," and to
+him the chairmen of the different local "Courts" used to refer cases
+heard before them![5]
+
+All this was testified to openly two years ago, before Lord Cowper's
+Commission, but no decisive action has ever been taken by the Government
+to put a stop to the scandal, and relieve the tenants from this open
+tyranny. These Courts enforced, and still enforce, their decrees by
+various forms of outrage, ranging "from the boycott," in its simplest
+forms up to direct outrages upon property and the person.
+
+"This dual Government business," he said, "can only end in a duel
+between the two Governments, and it must be a duel to the death of one
+or the other."
+
+To-night at dinner I had a most interesting conversation with Mr.
+Colomb, Assistant Inspector-General of the Constabulary, who is here
+engaged with Mr. Cameron of Belfast, and Colonel Turner, in
+investigating the affair at Mitchelstown. Mr. Colomb was at Killarney at
+the time of the Fenian rising under "General O'Connor" in 1867--a rising
+which was undoubtedly an indirect consequence of our own Civil War in
+America. Warning came to two magistrates, of impending trouble from
+Cahirciveen. Upon this Mr. Colomb immediately ordered the arrest of all
+passengers to arrive that day at Killarney by the "stage-car" from that
+place. When the car came in at night, it brought only one person--"an
+awful-looking ruffian he was," said Mr. Colomb, "whom, by his
+square-toed shoes, we knew to be just arrived from your side of the
+water."
+
+He was examined, and said he was a commercial traveller, and that he had
+only one letter about him, a business letter, addressed to "J. D.
+Sheehan."
+
+"Have you any objection to show us that letter?"
+
+"Certainly not," he replied very coolly, and, taking it out of his
+pocket, he walked toward a table on which stood a candle, as if to read
+it. A gentleman who was closely watching him, caught him by the wrist,
+just as he was putting the letter to the flame, and saved it. It was
+addressed to J. D. Sheehan, Esq., Killarney [Present], and ran as
+follows:
+
+ "_Feb. 12th, Morning_.
+
+ "MY DEAR SHEEHAN,--I have the honour to introduce to you Captain
+ Mortimer Moriarty. He will be of great assistance to you, and I
+ have told him all that is to be done until I get to your place. The
+ Private _Spys_ are very active this morning. Unless they smell a
+ rat all will be done without any trouble.
+
+ "Success to you. Hoping to meet soon,--Yours as ever.
+
+ "(Signed) JOHN J. O'CONNOR."[6]
+
+Despatches were at once sent off to the authorities at different points.
+They were all transmitted, except to Cahirciveen, the wires to which
+place were found to have been cut. Mr. Colomb--who had a force of but
+seventeen men in the town of Killarney--saw the uselessness of trying to
+communicate with the officer at Cahirciveen, but was so strongly urged
+by the magistrates that he unwillingly consented to endeavour to do so,
+and a mounted orderly was sent. Just after this unfortunate officer had
+passed Glenbehy (the scene of the eviction I have just witnessed) he was
+shot by some of O'Connor's party, whom he tried to pass in the dark, and
+who were marching on Killarney, and fell from his horse, which galloped
+off. He managed to crawl to a neighbouring cottage, where he was not
+long after found by "General O'Connor" and some of his followers. The
+wounded man was kindly treated by O'Connor, who had him examined for
+despatches, but prevented one of his men from shooting him dead, as he
+lay on the ground, and had his wounds as well attended to as was
+possible. There was no response in the country to the Kerry rising, such
+as it was, because the intended seizure of Chester Castle by the Fenians
+failed, but O'Connor was not captured, though great efforts were made to
+seize him. How he escaped is not known to this day.
+
+At that time, as always in emergencies, Mr. Colomh says the Constabulary
+behaved with exemplary coolness, courage, and fidelity. His position
+gives him a very thorough knowledge of the force, which is almost
+entirely recruited from the body of the Irish people. Of late years not
+a few men of family, reduced in fortune, have taken service in it. Among
+these has been mentioned to me a young Irishman of title, and of an
+ancient race, who is a sergeant in the force, and who recently declined
+to accept a commission, as his increased expenses would make it harder
+for him to support his two sisters. Another constable in the ranks
+represents a family illustrious in the annals of England four centuries
+ago.
+
+As to the _morale_ of the force, he cites one eloquent fact. Out of a
+total of more than 13,000 men, the cases of drunkenness, proved or
+admitted, average no more than fourteen a week! On many days absolutely
+no such cases occur. This is really amazing when one thinks how many of
+the men are isolated on lonely posts all over the island, exposed to all
+sorts of weather, and cut off from the ordinary resources and amusements
+of social life.
+
+CORK, _Friday, Feb. 24th._--This morning after breakfast I met in the
+South Mall a charming ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance I made in Rome
+while I was attending the great celebration there in 1867 of St. Peter's
+Day. Father Burke introduced me to him after the Pontifical Mass at San
+Paolo fuori le Mure; and we had a delightful symposium that afternoon. I
+walked with him to his lodgings, talking over those "days long
+vanished," and the friend whose genius made them, like the suppers of
+Plato, "a joy for ever." He is sorely troubled now by the attitude of a
+portion of the clergy in his part of Ireland, which is one almost of
+open hostility, he says, to the moral authority of the Church, and
+indicates the development of a class of priests moving in the direction
+of the "conventional priests," by whom the Church was disgraced during
+the darkest days of the French Revolution of 1793.
+
+Almost more mischievous than these men, he thinks, who must eventually
+go the way of their kind in times past, are the timid priests, for the
+most part parish priests, who go in fear of their violent curates, and
+of the politicians who tyrannise their flocks. He showed me a letter
+written to him last week by one of these, whose parish is just now in a
+tempest over the Plan of Campaign. Certainly a most remarkable letter.
+In it the writer frankly says, "There is no justification for the Plan
+of Campaign on this property.
+
+"I assented to putting it in force here," he goes on, "because I did not
+at the time know the facts of the case, and took them on trust from
+persons who, I find, have practised upon my confidence. What am I to do?
+I am made to appear as a consenting party now, and, indeed, an assisting
+agent in action, which I certainly was led to believe right and
+necessary, but which upon the facts I now see involves much injustice
+to ---- (naming the landlord), and I fear positive ruin to worthy men and
+families of my people. I shall be grateful and glad of your counsel in
+these most distressing circumstances."
+
+"What can any one do to help such a man?" said my friend. "The
+rebellious and unruly in the Church, be they priests or laymen, can only
+in the end damage themselves. _Tu es Petrus_; and revolt, like schism,
+is a devil which only carries away those of whom it gets possession out
+of the Church and into the sea. But a weak sentinel on the wall or at
+the gate who drops his musket to wipe his eyes, that is a thing for
+tears!"
+
+He asked me to come and see him if possible in his own county, and he
+has promised to send me letters to-day for priests who will he glad to
+tell me what they know only too well of the pressure put upon the better
+sort of the people by the organised idlers and mischief-makers in Clare
+and Kerry.
+
+To-day at the City Club, I made the acquaintance of the Town-Clerk of
+Cork, Mr. Alexander M'Carthy, a staunch Nationalist and Home Ruler, who
+holds his office almost by a sort of hereditary tenure, having been
+appointed to it in 1859 in succession to his father. He gave me many
+interesting particulars as to the municipal history and administration
+of Cork, and showed me some of the responses he is receiving to a kind
+of circular letter sent by the municipality to the town governments of
+England, touching the recent proceedings against the Mayor. So far these
+responses have not been very sympathetic. He invited me to lunch here
+with him to-morrow, and visit some of the most interesting points in and
+around the city. Here, too, I met Colonel Spaight, Inspector of the
+Local Government Board, who gives me a startling account of the increase
+of the public burdens. Twenty years ago there were no persons whatever
+seeking outdoor relief in Cork. This year, out of a total population of
+145,216, there are 3775 persons here receiving indoor relief, and 4337
+receiving outdoor relief, making in all 8112, or nearly 6 per cent. of
+the inhabitants. This proportion is swelled by the influx of people from
+other regions seeking occupation here, which they do not find, or simply
+coming here because they are sure of relief. This state of things
+illustrates not so much the decay of industry in Cork as the development
+of a spirit of mendicancy throughout Ireland. In the opinion of many
+thoughtful people, this began with the Duchess of Marlborough's Fund,
+and with the Mansion House Fund. Colonel Spaight remembers that in
+Strokestown Union, Roscommon, when the guardians there received a supply
+of one hundred tons of seed potatoes, they distributed eighty tons, and
+were then completely at a loss what to do with the remaining twenty
+tons. Mr. Parnell and Mr. O'Kelly, however, came to Roscommon, and the
+latter made a speech out of the hotel window to the people, advising
+them to apply for more, and take all they could get. "With a stroke of a
+pen," he said, "we'll wipe out the seed rate!" Whereupon the
+applications for seed rose to six hundred tons!
+
+The Labourers Act, passed by the British Parliament for the benefit of
+the Irish labourers, who get but scant recognition of their wants and
+wishes from the tenant farmers, is not producing the good results
+expected from it, mainly because it is perverted to all sorts of
+jobbery. Only last week Colonel Spaight had to hand in to the Local
+Government Board a report on certain schemes of expenditure under this
+Act, prepared by the Board of Guardians of Tralee. These schemes
+contemplated the erection of 196 cottages in 135 electoral divisions of
+the Union. This meant, of course, so much money of the ratepayers to be
+turned over to local contractors. Colonel Spaight on inspection found
+that of the 196 proposed cottages, the erection of 61 had been forbidden
+by the sanitary authorities, the notices for the erection of 23 had been
+wrongly served, 20 were proposed to be erected on sites not adjoining a
+public road, and no necessity had been shown for erecting 40 of the
+others. He accordingly recommended that only 32 be allowed to be
+erected! For a small town like Tralee this proposition to put up 196
+buildings at the public expense where only 32 were needed is not bad. It
+has the right old Tammany Ring smack, and would have commanded, I am
+sure, the patronising approval of the late Mr. Tweed.
+
+I mentioned it to-night at the County Club, when a gentleman said that
+this morning at Macroom a serious "row" had occurred between the local
+Board of Guardians there and a great crowd of labourers. The labourers
+thronged the Board-room, demanding the half-acre plots of land which had
+been promised them. The Guardians put them off, promising to attend to
+them when the regular business of the meeting was over. So the poor
+fellows were kept waiting for three mortal hours, at the end of which
+time they espied the elected Nationalist members of the Board subtly
+filing out of the place. This angered them. They stopped the fugitives,
+blockaded the Board-room, and forced the Guardians to appoint a
+committee to act upon their demands.
+
+It is certainly a curious fact that, so far, in Ireland I have seen no
+decent cottages for labourers, excepting those put up at their own
+expense on their own property by landlords.
+
+I dined to-night at the County Club with Captain Plunkett, a most
+energetic, spirited, and well-informed resident magistrate, a brother of
+the late Lord Louth,--still remembered, I dare say, at the New York
+Hotel as the only Briton who ever really mastered the mystery of
+concocting a "cocktail,"--and an uncle of the present peer. We had a
+very cheery dinner, and a very clever lawyer, Mr. Shannon, gave us an
+irresistible reproduction of a charge delivered by an Irish judge famous
+for shooting over the heads of juries, who sent twelve worthy citizens
+of Galway out of their minds by bidding them remember, in a case of
+larceny, that they could not find the prisoner guilty unless they were
+quite sure "as to the _animus furandi_ and the _asportavit_."
+
+_Saturday, Feb. 25._--I had an interesting talk this morning at the
+County Club with a gentleman from Limerick on the subject of
+"boycotting." I told him what I had seen at Edenvale of the practice as
+applied to a forlorn and helpless old woman, for the crime of standing
+by her "boycotted" son. "You think this an extreme case," he said, "but
+you are quite mistaken. It is a typical case certainly, but it gives you
+only an inadequate idea of the scope given to this infernal machinery.
+The 'boycott' is now used in Ireland as the Inquisition was used in
+Spain,--to stifle freedom of thought and action. It is to-day the chief
+reliance of the National League for keeping up its membership, and
+squeezing subscriptions out of the people. If you want proof of this,"
+he added, "ask any Nationalist you know whether members of the League in
+the country allow farmers who are not members to associate with them in
+any way. I can cite you a case at Ballingarry, in my county, where last
+summer a resolution of the League was published and put on the Chapel
+door, that members of the National League were thenceforth to have no
+dealings or communication with any person not a member. This I saw with
+my own eyes, and it was matter of public notoriety."
+
+I lunched at the City Club with Mr. M'Carthy. Sir Daniel O'Sullivan,
+formerly Mayor of Cork, whose views of Home Rule seem to differ widely
+from those of his successor, now incarcerated here, was one of the
+company. In the course of an animated but perfectly good-natured
+discussion of the Land Law question between two other gentlemen present,
+one of them, a strong Nationalist, smote his Unionist opponent very
+neatly under the fifth rib. The latter contending that it was monstrous
+to interfere by law with the principle of freedom of contract, the
+Nationalist responded, "That cannot be; it must be right and legitimate
+to do it, for the Imperial Parliament has done it four times within
+seventeen years!"
+
+I walked with Mr. M'Carthy to his apartments, where he showed me many
+curious papers and volumes bearing on municipal law and municipal
+history in Ireland. Among these, two most elaborate and interesting
+volumes, being the Council Books of Cork, Youghal, and Kinsale, from
+1610 to 1659, 1666 to 1687, and 1690 to 1800. The records for the years
+not enumerated have perished, that is, for the first five or six years
+after the Restoration, and for the years just preceding and just
+following the fall of James II. These volumes take one back to the
+condition of Southern Ireland immediately after English greed and
+intrigue had sapped the foundations of the peace which followed the
+submission of the great Earl of Tyrone, and brought about the flight to
+the Continent of that chieftain, and of his friend and ally, the Earl of
+Tyrconnell.
+
+They give us no picture, unfortunately, of the closing years of
+Elizabeth's long struggle to establish the English power, or of the
+occupation of Kinsale by the Spanish in the name of the Pope. But there
+is abundant evidence in them of the theological hatred which so
+embittered the conflict of races in Ireland during the seventeenth
+century.
+
+It was a relief to turn from these to a solemn controversy waged in our
+own times between Cork and Limerick over a question of municipal
+precedence, in which Mr. M'Carthy did battle for the City of the Galley
+and the Towers[7] against the City of the Gateway and Cathedral dome.
+The truth seems to be that King John gave charters to both cities, but
+to Cork twelve years earlier than to Limerick. Speaking of this contest,
+by the way, with a loyalist of Cork to-night, I observed that it was
+almost as odd to find such a question hotly disputed between two
+Nationalist cities as to see the champions of Irish independence
+marching under the banner of the harp, which was invented for Ireland by
+Henry VIII.
+
+"I don't know why you call Cork a Nationalist city," he replied, "for
+Parnell and Maurice Healy were returned for it by a clear minority of
+the voters. If all the voters had gone to the polls, they would both
+have been beaten."
+
+A curious statement certainly, and worth looking into. Mr. M'Carthy gave
+me also much information as to the working of the municipal system here,
+and a copy of the rules which govern the debates of the Town Council.
+One of these might be adopted with advantage in other assemblies, to
+wit, "that no member be permitted to occupy the time of the Council for
+more than ten minutes."
+
+There is an important difference between the parliamentary and the
+municipal constituencies of Cork. The former constituency comprises all
+residents within the borough boundaries occupying premises of the
+rateable value of £10 a year. The municipal constituency consists of no
+more than 1800 voters, divided among the seven wards which make up the
+city under the "3d and 4th Victoria," and which contain about 13,000 of
+the 15,116 Parliamentary voters of the borough. The same thing is true
+in the main of nine out of the eleven municipal boroughs of Ireland
+including Dublin. The 3d and 4th Victoria was amended for Dublin in
+1849, so as to give that city the municipal franchise then existing in
+England, but no move in that direction was made for Cork, Waterford,
+Limerick, or any other municipal borough. The Nationalists have taken no
+interest in the question. Perhaps they have good reason for this, as in
+Belfast, where the municipal franchise has been widely extended since
+the present Government came into power, the democratic electorate has
+put the whole municipal government into the hands of the Unionists. The
+day being cool, though fine, Mr. M'Carthy got an "inside car," and we
+went off for a drive about the city. The environs of Cork are very
+attractive. We visited the new cemetery grounds which are very neatly
+and tastefully laid out. There was a conflict over them, the owners of
+family vaults staunchly standing out against the "levelling" tendency of
+a harmonious city of the dead. But all is well that ends well, and now
+two handsome stone chapels, one Catholic and one Protestant, keep watch
+and ward over the silent sleepers, standing face to face near the grand
+entrance, and exactly alike in their architecture. A very pretty drive
+took us to the water-works, which are extensive, well planned, and
+exceedingly well kept. They are awaiting now the arrival from America of
+some great turbine wheels, but the engines are of English make. In the
+city we visited the new Protestant cathedral of St. Finbar, a very fine
+church, which advantageously replaces a "spacious structure of the Doric
+order," built here in the reign of George II., with the proceeds of a
+parliamentary tax on coals. Despite his name, I imagine that admirable
+prelate, Dr. England, the first Catholic bishop of my native city in
+America, must have been a Corkonian, for he it was, I believe, who put
+the cathedral of Charleston under the invocation of St. Finbar, the
+first bishop of Cork. The church stands charmingly amid fine trees on a
+southern branch of the river Lea. We visited also two fine Catholic
+churches, one of St. Vincent de Paul, and the other the Church of St.
+Peter and St. Paul, a grandly proportioned and imposing edifice.
+
+It was at vespers that we entered it, and found it filled with the
+kneeling people. This noble church is rather ignobly hidden away behind
+crowded houses and shops, and the contrast was very striking when we
+emerged from its dim religious space and silence into the thronged and
+rather noisy streets. There is a statue here of Father Mathew; but what
+I have seen to-night makes me doubt whether the present generation of
+Corkonians would have erected it.
+
+At dinner a gentleman gave us a most interesting account of the
+picturesque home which a man of taste, and a lover of natural history,
+has made for himself at the remote seaside village of Belmullet, in
+Mayo, the seat of the Mayo quarries, in which Mr. Davitt takes so much
+interest. The sea brings in there all sorts of wreckage, and the house
+is beautifully finished with mahogany and other rare woods, just as I
+remember finding in a noble mansion in South Wales, near a dangerous
+head-land, some magnificent doors and wainscotings made of that most
+beautiful of the Central American woods, nogarote, which I never saw in
+the United States, excepting in a superb specimen of it sent home by
+myself from Corinto. This colonist of Mayo employs all the people he can
+get in the fisheries there, which are very rich; and the ducks and wild
+geese are so numerous that he sometimes sends as far as to Wicklow for
+men to capture and sell them for him. He was once fortunate enough to
+trap a pair of the snow geese of the Arctic region, but Belmullet, in
+other respects a primeval paradise, is cursed with the small boy of
+civilisation; and one of these pests of society slew the goose with a
+stone. The widowed gander consoled himself by contracting family ties
+with the common domestic goose of the parish, and all his progeny, in
+other particulars indistinguishable from that familiar bird, bear the
+black marks distinctive of the Arctic tribe.
+
+Belmullet, this gentleman tells me, boasts a very good little inn, kept
+by a Mrs. Deehan, which was honoured by a visit from Lord Carnarvon with
+his wife and daughters during the Earl's Viceroyalty. This was in the
+course of a private and personal, not official tour, during which, Lord
+Carnarvon says, he was everywhere received with the greatest courtesy by
+all sorts and conditions of the people. It is an interesting
+illustration of the temper in which certain priests in Ireland deal with
+matters of State, that when Lord Carnarvon politely invited the parish
+priest of Belmullet to come to see him, that functionary declined to do
+so. Upon this the placable Viceroy sent to know whether the priest would
+receive the visit he refused to pay. The priest replied that he never
+declined to receive any gentleman who wished to see him; and the Viceroy
+accordingly called upon him, to the edification of the people, who
+afterwards listened very respectfully to a little speech which His
+Excellency made to them from a car. It is rather surprising that these
+incidents have never been adduced in proof of Lord Carnarvon's
+determination to take the Home Rule wind out of the sails of the
+Liberals!
+
+
+CORK, _Sunday, Feb. 26._--I went out to-day with Mr. Cameron to see
+Blarney Castle and St. Anne's Hill. Nothing can be lovelier than the
+country around Cork and the valley of the Lea. A "light railway," of the
+sort authorised by the Act of 1883, takes you out quickly enough to
+Blarney, and the train was well filled. The construction of these
+railways is found fault with as aggravating instead of relieving those
+defects in the organisation and management of the Irish railways, which
+are so thoroughly and intelligently exposed in the Public Works Report
+of Sir James Allport and his fellow-commissioners. A morning paper
+to-day points this out sharply.
+
+In the days of King William III. Blarney Castle must have been a
+magnificent stronghold. It stands very finely on a well-wooded height,
+and dominates the land for miles around. But it held out against the
+victor of the Boyne so long that, when he captured it, he thought it
+best, in the expressive phrase of the Commonwealth, to "slight" it,
+little now remaining of it but the gigantic keep, the walls of which are
+some six yards thick, and a range of ruined outworks stretching along
+and above a line of caverns, probably the work of the quarrymen who got
+out the stone for the Castle ages ago. The legend of the Blarney Stone
+does not seem to be a hundred years old, but the stone itself is one of
+the front battlements of the grand old tower, which has more than once
+fallen to the ground from the giddy height at which it was originally
+set. It is now made fast there by iron clamps, in such a position that
+to kiss it one should be a Japanese acrobat, or a volunteer rifleman
+shooting for the championship of the world. There are many and very fine
+trees in the grounds about the Castle, and there is a charming garden,
+now closed against the casual tourist, as it has been leased with the
+modern house to a tenant who lives here. In the leafy summer the place
+must be a dream of beauty. An avenue of stately trees quite overarching
+the highway leads from Blarney to St. Anne's Hill, the site of which, at
+least, is that of an ideal sanatorium. We walked thither over hill and
+dale. The panorama commanded by the buildings of the sanatorium is one
+of the widest and finest imaginable, worthy to be compared with the
+prospect from the Star and Garter at Richmond, or with that from the
+terrace at St. Germain.
+
+Several handsome lodges or cottages have been built about the extensive
+grounds. These are comfortably furnished and leased to people who prefer
+to bring their households here rather than take up their abode in the
+hotel, which, however, seems to be a very well kept and comfortable sort
+of place, with billiard and music rooms, a small theatre, and all kinds
+of contrivances for making the country almost as tedious as the town.
+The establishment is directed now by a German resident physician, but
+belongs to an Irish gentleman, Mr. Barter, who lives here himself, and
+here manages what I am told is one of the finest dairy farms and dairies
+in Ireland. Our return trip to Cork on the "light railway," with a warm
+red sunset lighting up the river Lea, and throwing its glamour over the
+varied and picturesque scenery through which we ran, was not the least
+delightful part of a very delightful excursion.
+
+After we got back I spent half-an-hour with a gentleman who knows the
+country about Youghal, which I propose to visit to-morrow, and who saw
+something of the recent troubles there arising out of the Plan of
+Campaign, as put into effect on the Ponsonby property.
+
+He is of the opinion that the Nationalists were misled into this contest
+by bad information as to Mr. Ponsonby's resources and relations. They
+expected to drive him to the wall, but they will fail to do this, and
+failing to do this they will be left in the vocative. He showed me a
+curious souvenir of the day of the evictions, in the shape of a
+quatrain, written by the young wife of an evicted tenant. This young
+woman, Mrs. Mahoney, was observed by one of the officers, as the
+eviction went on, to go apart to a window, where she stood for a while
+apparently writing something on a wooden panel of the shutter. After the
+eviction was over the officer remembered this, and going up to the
+window found these lines pencilled upon the panel:--
+
+ "We are evicted from this house,
+ Me and my loving man;
+ We're homeless now upon the world!
+ May the divil take 'the Plan'!"
+
+CORK, _Monday, Feb. 27._--A most interesting day. I left alone and early
+by the train for Youghal, having sent before me a letter of introduction
+to Canon Keller, the parish priest, who has recently become a
+conspicuous person through his refusal to give evidence about matters,
+his knowledge of which he conceives to be "privileged," as acquired in
+his capacity as a priest.
+
+I had many fine views of the shore and the sea as we ran along, and the
+site of Youghal itself is very fine. It is an old seaport town, and once
+was a place of considerable trade, especially in wool.
+
+Oliver dwelt here for a while, and from Youghal he embarked on his
+victorious return to England. He seems to have done his work while he
+was here "not negligently," like Harrison at Naseby Field, for when he
+departed he left Youghal a citadel of Protestant intolerance. Even under
+Charles II they maintained an ordinance forbidding "any Papist to buy or
+barter anything in the public markets," which may be taken as a piece of
+cold-blooded and statutory "boycotting." Then there was no parish priest
+in Youghal; now it may almost be said there is nobody in Youghal but the
+parish priest! So does "the whirligig of time bring in his revenges"!
+
+At Youghal station a very civil young man came up, calling me by name,
+and said Father Keller had sent him with a car to meet me. We drove up
+past some beautiful grounds into the main street. A picturesque
+waterside town, little lanes and narrow streets leading out of the main
+artery down to the bay, and a savour of the sea in the place, grateful
+doubtless to the souls of Raleigh and the west country folk he brought
+over here when he became lord of the land, just three hundred years ago.
+Edmund Spenser came here in those days to see him, and talk over the
+events of that senseless rising of the Desmonds, which gave the poet of
+the "Faerie Queen" his awful pictures of the desolation of Ireland, and
+made the planter of Virginia master of more than forty thousand acres of
+Irish land.
+
+We turned suddenly into a little narrow wynd, and pulled up, the driver
+saying, "There is the Father, yer honour!" In a moment up came a tall,
+very fine-looking ecclesiastic, quite the best dressed and most
+distinguished-looking priest I have yet seen in Ireland, with features
+of a fine Teutonic type, and the erect bearing of a soldier. I jumped
+down to greet him, and he proposed that we should walk together to his
+house near by. An extremely good house I found it to be, well placed in
+the most interesting quarter of the town. Having it in my mind to drive
+on from Youghal to Lismore, there to make an early dinner, see the
+castle of the Duke of Devonshire, and return to Cork by an evening
+train, I had to decline Father Keller's cordial hospitalities, but he
+gave me a most interesting hour with him in his comfortable study.
+Father Keller stands firmly by the position which earned for him a
+sentence of imprisonment last year, when he refused to testify before a
+court of justice in a bankruptcy case, on the ground that it might
+"drift him into answers which would disclose secrets he was bound in
+honour not to disclose." He does not accept the view taken of his
+conduct, however, by Lord Selborne, that, in the circumstances, his
+refusal is to be regarded as the act of his ecclesiastical superiors
+rather than his own. He maintains it as his own view of the sworn duty
+of a priest, and not unnaturally therefore he looks upon his sentence as
+a blow levelled at the clergy; nor, as I understood him, has he
+abandoned his original contention, that the Court had no right to summon
+him as a witness. It was impossible to listen to him on this subject,
+and doubt his entire good faith, nor do I see that he ought to be held
+responsible for the interpretation put by Mr. Lane, M.P., and others
+upon his attitude as a priest, in a sense going to make him merely a
+"martyr" of Home Rule. I did not gather from what he said that, in his
+mind, the question of his relations with the Nationalists or the Plan of
+Campaign entered into that affair at all, but simply that he believed
+the right and the duty of a priest to protect, no matter at what cost to
+himself, secrets confided to him as a priest, was really involved in his
+consent or refusal to answer, when he was asked whether he was or was
+not on a certain day at the "Mall House" in Youghal. Of course from the
+connection of this refusal in this particular case with the Nationalist
+movement, Nationalists would easily glide into the idea that he refused
+to testify in order to serve their cause.
+
+As to the troubles on the Ponsonby estate, Father Keller spoke very
+freely. He divided the responsibility for them between the
+untractableness of the agent, and the absenteeism of the owner. It was
+only since the troubles began, he said, that he had ever seen Mr.
+Ponsonby, who lived in Hampshire, and was therefore out of touch with
+the condition and the feelings of the people here. In a personal
+interview with him he had found Mr. Ponsonby a kindly disposed
+Englishman, but the estate is heavily encumbered, and the agent who has
+had complete control of it forced the tenants, by his hard and fast
+refusal of a reasonable reduction more than two years ago, into an
+initial combination to defend themselves by "clubbing" their rents. That
+was before Mr. Dillon announced the Plan of Campaign at all.
+
+"It was not till the autumn of 1886," said Father Keller, "that any
+question arose of the Plan of Campaign here,[8] and it was by the
+tenants themselves that the determination was taken to adopt it. My part
+has been that of a peace-maker throughout, and we should have had peace
+if Mr. Ponsonby would have listened to me; we should have had peace, and
+he would have received a reasonable rental for his property. Instead of
+this, look at the law costs arising out of bankruptcy proceedings and
+sheriff's sales and writs and processes, and the whole district thrown
+into disorder and confusion, and the industrious people now put out of
+their holdings, and forced into idleness."
+
+As to the recent evictions which had taken place, Father Keller said
+they had taken him as well as the people by surprise, and had thus led
+to greater agitation and excitement. "But the unfortunate incident of
+the loss of Hanlon's life," he said, "would never have occurred had I
+been duly apprised of what was going on in the town. I had come home
+into my house, having quieted the people, and left all in order, as I
+thought, when that charge of the police, for which there was no
+occasion, and which led to the killing of Hanlon, was ordered. I made my
+way rapidly to the people, and when I appeared they were brought to
+patience and to good order with astonishing ease, despite all that had
+occurred."
+
+As to the present outlook, it was his opinion that Mr. Ponsonby, even
+with the Cork Defence Union behind him, could not hold out. "The Land
+Corporation were taking over some parts of the estate, and putting
+Emergency men on them--a set of desperate men, a kind of _enfants
+perdus_," he said, "to work and manage the land;" but he did not believe
+the operation could be successfully carried out. Meanwhile he
+confidently counted upon seeing "the present Tory Government give way,
+and go out, when it would become necessary for the landlords to do
+justice to the rack-rented people. Pray understand," said Father Keller,
+"that I do not say all landlords stand at all where Mr. Ponsonby has
+been put by his agent, for that is not the case; but the action of many
+landlords in the county Cork in sustaining Mr. Ponsonby, whose estate is
+and has been as badly rack-rented an estate as can be found, is, in my
+judgment, most unwise, and threatening to the peace and happiness of
+Ireland."[9]
+
+I asked whether, in his opinion, it would be possible for the Ponsonby
+tenants to live and prosper here on this estate, could they become
+peasant proprietors of it under Lord Ashbourne's Act, provided they
+increased in numbers, as in that event might be expected. This he
+thought very doubtful so far as a few of the tenants are concerned.
+
+"Would you seek a remedy, then," I asked, "in emigration?"
+
+"No, not in emigration," he replied, "but in migration."
+
+I begged him to explain the difference.
+
+"What I mean," he said, "is, that the people should migrate, not out of
+Ireland, but from those parts of Ireland which cannot support them into
+parts of Ireland which can support them. There is room in Meath, for
+example, for the people of many congested districts."
+
+"You would, then, turn the great cattle farms of Meath," I said, "into
+peasant holdings?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"But would not that involve the expropriation of many people now
+established in Meath, and the disturbance or destruction of a great
+cattle industry for which Ireland has especial advantages?"
+
+To this Father Keller replied that he did not wish to see Ireland
+exporting her cattle, any more than to see Ireland exporting her sons
+and daughters. "I mean," he said, quite earnestly, "when they are forced
+to export them to pay exorbitant rents, and thus deprive themselves of
+their capital or of a fair share of the comforts of life. I should be
+glad to see the Irish people sufficient to themselves by the domestic
+exchange of their own industries and products." At the same time he
+begged me to understand that he had no wish to see this development
+attended by any estrangement or hostile feeling between Ireland and
+Great Britain. "On the contrary," he said, "I have seen with the
+greatest satisfaction the growth of such good feeling towards England as
+I never expected to witness, as the result of the visits here of English
+public men, sympathising with the Irish tenants. I believe their visits
+are opening the way to a real union of the Democracies of the two
+countries, and to an alliance between them against the aristocratic
+classes which depress both peoples." This alliance Father Keller
+believed would be a sufficient guarantee against any religious contest
+between the Catholics of Ireland and the Protestants of Great Britain.
+
+"I was much astounded," he said, "the other day, to hear from an English
+gentleman that he had met a Protestant clergyman who told him he really
+believed that a persecution of the Protestants would follow the
+establishment of Home Rule in Ireland. I begged him to consider that Mr.
+Parnell was a Protestant, and I assured him Protestants would have
+absolutely nothing to fear from Home Rule."
+
+Reverting to his idea of re-distributing the Irish population through
+Ireland, under changed conditions, social and economical, I asked him
+how in Meath, for example, he would meet the difficulty of stocking with
+cattle the peasant holdings of a new set of proprietors not owning
+stock. He thought it would be easily met by advances of money from the
+Treasury to the peasant proprietors, these advances to be repaid, with
+interest, as in the case of Lady Burdett Coutts, and the advances made
+by her to the fishermen now under the direction of Father Davis at
+Baltimore.
+
+I was struck by the resemblance of these views to the Irish policy
+sketched for me by my Nationalist fellow-traveller of the other night
+from London. "The evil that men do lives after them"--and when one
+remembers how only a hundred years ago, and just after the establishment
+of American Independence ought to have taught England a lesson, the
+Irish House of Commons had to deal with the persistent determination of
+the English manufacturers to fight the bogey of Irish competition by
+protective duties in England against imports from Ireland, it is not
+surprising that Irishmen who allow sentiment to get the upper hand of
+sense should now think of playing a return game. England went in fear
+then not only of Irish beasts and Irish butter, but of Irish woollens,
+Irish cottons, Irish leather, Irish glass. Nay, absurd as it may now
+seem, English ironmasters no longer ago than in 1785 testified before a
+Parliamentary Committee that unless a duty was clapped on Irish
+manufactures of iron, the Irish ironmasters had such advantages through
+cheaper labour and through the discrimination in their favour under the
+then existing relations with the new Republic of the United States that
+they would "ruin the ironmasters of England."
+
+In Ireland, as in America, the benign spirit of Free Trade is thwarted
+and intercepted at every turn by the abominable ghost of British
+Protection. What a blessing it would have been if the meddlesome
+palaverers of the Cobden Club, American as well as English, could ever
+have been made to understand the essentially insular character of
+Protection and the essentially continental character of Free Trade!
+
+It should never be forgotten, and it is almost never remembered, that
+when the Treaty of Versailles was making in 1783 the American
+Commissioners offered complete free trade between the United States and
+all parts of the British Dominions save the territories of the East
+India Company. The British Commissioner, David Hartley, saw the value of
+this proposition, and submitted it at London. But King George III. would
+not entertain it.
+
+When I rose to leave him Father Keller courteously insisted on showing
+me the "lions" of Youghal. A most accomplished cicerone he proved to be.
+As we left his house we met in the street two or three of the "evicted"
+tenants, whom he introduced to me. One of these, Mr. Loughlin, was the
+holder of farms representing a rental of £94. A stalwart, hearty,
+rotund, and rubicund farmer he was, and in reply to my query how long
+the holdings he had lost had been in his family, he answered, "not far
+from two hundred years." Certainly some one must have blundered as badly
+as at Balaklava to make it necessary for a tenant with such a past
+behind him to go out of his holdings on arrears of a twelvemonth. Father
+Keller gave me, as we left Mr. Loughlin and his friend, a leaflet in
+which he has printed the story of "the struggle for life on the Ponsonby
+estate," as he understands it.
+
+A minute's walk brought us to Sir Walter Raleigh's house, now the
+property of Sir John Pope Hennessey. It was probably built by Sir Walter
+while he lived here in 1588-89, during the time of the great Armada; for
+it is a typical Elizabethan house, quaintly gabled, with charming Tudor
+windows, and delightfully wainscoted with richly carved black oak. A
+chimney-piece in the library where Sir John's aged mother received us
+most kindly and hospitably is a marvel of Elizabethan woodwork. The
+shelves are filled with a quaint and miscellaneous collection of old and
+rare books. I opened at random one fine old quarto, and found it to
+contain, among other curious tracts, models of typography, a Latin
+critical disquisition by Raphael Regini on the first edition of
+Plutarch's Life of Cicero, "_nuper inventâ diu desideraiâ _"--a
+disquisition quite aglow with the cinquecento delight in discovery and
+adventure. In the grounds of this charming house stand four very fine
+Irish yews forming a little hollow square, within which, according to a
+local legend, Sir Walter sat enjoying the first pipe of tobacco ever
+lighted in Ireland, when his terrified serving-maid espying the smoke
+that curled about her master's head hastily ran up and emptied a pail of
+water over him. In the garden here, too, we are told, was first planted
+the esculent which better deserves to be called the Curse of Ireland
+than does the Nine of Diamonds to be known as the Curse of Scotland. The
+Irish yew must have been indigenous here, for the name of Youghal,
+Father Keller tells me, in Irish signifies "the wood of yew-trees." A
+subterranean passage is said to lead from Sir Walter's dining-room into
+the church, but we preferred the light of day.
+
+The precincts of the church adjoin the grounds and garden, and with
+these make up a most fascinating poem in architecture. The churches of
+St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway have always been cited to
+me as the two most interesting churches in Ireland. Certainly this
+church of St. Mary, as now restored, is worth a journey to see. Its
+massive tower, with walls eight feet thick, its battlemented chancel,
+the pointed arches of its nave and aisles, a curious and, so far as I
+know, unique arch in the north transept, drawn at an obtuse angle and
+demarcating a quaint little side-chapel, and the interesting monuments
+it contains, all were pointed out to me with as much zest and
+intelligent delight by Father Keller as if the edifice were still
+dedicated to the faith which originally called it into existence. It
+contains a fine Jacobean tomb of Richard, the "great Earl of Cork," who
+died here in September 1643. On this monument, which is in admirable
+condition, the effigy of the earl appears between those of his two
+wives, while below them kneel his five sons and seven daughters, their
+names and those of their partners in marriage inscribed upon the marble.
+It was of this earl that Oliver said: "Had there been an Earl of Cork in
+every province, there had been no rebellion in Ireland." Several Earls
+of Desmond are also buried here, including the founder of the church,
+and under a monumental effigy in one of the transepts lies the wonderful
+old Countess of Desmond, who having danced in her youth with Richard
+III. lived through the Tudor dynasty "to the age of a hundred and ten,"
+and, as the old distich tells us, "died by a fall from a cherry-tree
+then."
+
+In the churchyard is a hillock, bare of grass, about a tomb. There lies
+buried, according to tradition, a public functionary who attested a
+statement by exclaiming, "If I speak falsely, may grass never grow on my
+grave." One of his descendants is doubtless now an M.P. Mr. Cameron had
+kindly written from Cork to the officer in charge of the constabulary
+here asking him to get me a good car for Lismore. So Father Keller very
+kindly walked with me through the town to the "Devonshire Arms," a very
+neat and considerable hotel, in quest of him. On the way he pointed out
+to me what remains of a house which is supposed to have served as the
+headquarters of Cromwell while he was here, and a small chapel also in
+which the Protector worshipped after his sort. Off the main street is a
+lane called Windmill Lane, where probably stood the windmill from which
+in 1580 a Franciscan friar, Father David O'Neilan, was hung by the feet
+and shot to death by the soldiers of Elizabeth because he refused to
+acknowledge the spiritual supremacy of the Queen. He had been dragged
+through the main street at the tail of a horse to the place of
+execution. His name is one of many names of confessors of that time
+about to be submitted at Rome for canonisation. We could not find the
+officer I sought at the hotel, but Father Keller took me to a livery-man
+in the main street, who very promptly got out a car with "his best
+horse," and a jarvey who would "surely take me over to Lismore inside of
+two hours and a half." He was as good as his master's word, and a
+delightful drive it was, following the course of Spenser's river, the
+Awniduffe, "which by the Englishman is called Blackwater." Nobody now
+calls it anything else. The view of Youghal Harbour, as we made a great
+circuit by the bridge on leaving the town, was exceedingly fine. Lying
+as it does within easy reach of Cork, this might be made a very pleasant
+summer halting-place for Americans landing at Queenstown, who now go
+further and probably fare worse. One Western wanderer, with his family,
+Father Keller told me, did last year establish himself here, a Catholic
+from Boston, to whom a son was born, and who begged the Father to give
+the lad a local name in baptism, "the oldest he could think of."
+
+I should have thought St. Declan would have been "old" enough, or St.
+Nessan of "Ireland's Eye," or Saint Cartagh, who made Lismore a holy
+city, "into the half of which no woman durst enter," sufficiently
+"local," but Father Keller found in the Calendar a more satisfactory
+saint still in St. Goran or "Curran," known also as St. Mochicaroen _de
+Nona_, from a change he made in the recitation of that part of the Holy
+Office.
+
+The drive from Youghal to Lismore along the Blackwater, begins,
+continues, and ends in beauty. In the summer a steamer makes the trip by
+the river, and it must be as charming in its way as the ascent of the
+Dart from Dartmouth to Totness, or of the Eance from Dinard to St.
+Suliac. My jarvey was rather a taciturn fellow, but by no means
+insensible to the charms of his native region. About the Ponsonby estate
+and its troubles he said very little, but that little was not entirely
+in keeping with what I had heard at Youghal. "It was an old place, and
+there was no grand house on it. But the landlord was a kind-man."
+"Father Keller was a good man too. It was a great pity the people
+couldn't be on their farms; and there was land that was taken on the
+hills. It was a great pity. The people came from all parts to see the
+Blackwater and Lismore; and there was money going." "Yes, he would be
+glad to see it all quiet again. Ah yes! that was a most beautiful place
+there just running out into the Blackwater. It was a gentleman owned it;
+he lived there a good deal, and he fished. Ah! there's no such river in
+the whole world for salmon as the Blackwater; indeed, there is not!
+Everything was better when he was a lad. There was more money going, and
+less talking. Father Keller was a very good man; but he was a new man,
+and came to Youghal from Queenstown."
+
+We passed on our way the ruins of Dromaneen Castle, the birthplace of
+the lively old Countess of Desmond, who lies buried at Youghal. Here,
+too, according to a local tradition, she met her death, having climbed
+too high into a famous cherry-tree at Affane, near Dromaneen, planted
+there by Sir Walter Raleigh, who first introduced this fruit, as well as
+the tobacco plant and the potato, into Ireland. At Cappoquin, which
+stands beautifully on the river, I should have been glad to halt for the
+night, in order to visit the Trappist Monastery there, an offshoot of La
+Meilleraye, planted, I think, by some monks from Santa Susanna, of
+Lulworth, after Charles X. took refuge in the secluded and beautiful
+home of the Welds. The schools of this monastery have been a benediction
+to all this part of Ireland for more than half a century.
+
+Lismore has nothing now to show of its ancient importance save its
+castle and its cathedral, both of them absolutely modern! A hundred
+years ago the castle was simply a ruin overhanging the river. It then
+belonged to the fifth Duke of Devonshire, who had inherited it from his
+mother, the only child and heiress of the friend of Pope, Richard,
+fourth Earl of Cork, and third Earl of Burlington. It had come into the
+hands of the Boyles by purchase from Sir Walter Ealeigh, to whom
+Elizabeth had granted it, with all its appendages and appurtenances. The
+fifth Duke of Devonshire, who was the husband of Coleridge's "lady
+nursed in pomp and pleasure," did little or nothing, I believe, to
+restore the vanished glories of Lismore; and the castle, as it now
+exists, is the creation of his son, the artistic bachelor Duke, to whom
+England owes the Crystal Palace and all the other outcomes of Sir Joseph
+Paxton's industry and enterprise. His kinsman and successor, the present
+Duke, used to visit Lismore regularly down to the time of the atrocious
+murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish, and many of the beautiful walks and
+groves which make the place lovely are due, I believe, to his taste and
+his appreciation of the natural charms of Lismore. I dismissed my car at
+the "Devonshire Arms," an admirable little hotel near the river, and
+having ordered my dinner there, walked down to the castle, almost within
+the grounds of which the hotel stands. It is impossible to imagine a
+more picturesque site for a great inland mansion. The views up and down
+the Blackwater from the drawing-room windows are simply the perfection
+of river landscape. The grounds are beautifully laid out, one secluded
+garden-walk, in particular, taking you back to the inimitable Italian
+garden-walks of the seventeenth century. In the vestibule is the sword
+of state of the Corporation of Youghal, a carved wooden cradle for which
+still stands in the church at that place, and over the great gateway are
+the arms of the great Earl of Cork, but these are almost the only
+outward and visible signs of the historic past about the castle. Seen
+from the graceful stone bridge which spans the river, its grey towers
+and turrets quite excuse the youthful enthusiasm with which the Duke of
+Connaught, who made a visit here when he was Prince Arthur, is said to
+have written to his mother, that Lismore was "a beautiful place, very
+like Windsor Castle, only much finer."
+
+Lismore Cathedral was almost entirely rebuilt by the second Earl of Cork
+three or four years after the Restoration, and has a handsome marble
+spire, but there is little in it to recall the Catholic times in which
+Lismore was a city of churches and a centre of Irish devotion.
+
+The hostess of the "Devonshire Arms" gave me some excellent salmon,
+fresh from the river, and a very good dinner. She bewailed the evil days
+on which she has fallen, and the loss to Lismore of all that the Castle
+used to mean to the people. Lady Edward Cavendish had spent a short time
+here some little time ago, she said, and the people were delighted to
+have her come there. "It would be a great thing for the country if all
+the uproar and quarrelling could be put an end to. It did nobody any
+good, least of all the poor people."
+
+From Lismore I came back by the railway through Fermoy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+PORTUMNA, GALWAY, _Feb. 28._--I left Cork by an early train to-day, and
+passing through the counties of Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen's, and
+King's, reached this place after dark on a car from Parsonstown. The day
+was delightfully cool and bright. I had the carriage to myself almost
+all the way, and gave up all the time I could snatch from the constantly
+varying and often very beautiful scenery to reading a curious pamphlet
+which I picked up in Dublin entitled _Pour I'Irlande._ It purports to
+have been written by a "Canadian priest" living at Lurgan in Ireland,
+and to be a reply to M. de Mandat Grancey's volume, _Chez Paddy._ It is
+adorned with a frontispiece representing a monster of the Cerberus type
+on a monument, with three heads and three collars labelled respectively
+"Flattery," "Famine," and "Coercion." On the pedestal is the
+inscription--"1800 to 1887. Erected by the grateful Irish to the English
+Government." The text is in keeping with the frontispiece. In a passage
+devoted to the "atrocious evictions" of Glenbehy in 1887, the agent of
+the property is represented as "setting fire with petroleum" to the
+houses of two helpless men, and turning out "eighteen human beings into
+the highway in the depth of winter." Not a word is said of the agent's
+flat denial of these charges, nor a word of the advice given to the
+agent by Sir Redvers Buller that the mortgagee ought to level the
+cottages occupied by trespassers, nor a word about Father Quilter's
+letter to Colonel Turner, branding his flock as "poor slaves" of the
+League, and turning them over to "Mr. Roe or any other agent" to do as
+he liked with them, since they could not, or would not, keep their
+plighted faith given through their own priest.
+
+This sort of ostrich fury is common enough among the regular drumbeaters
+of the Irish agitation. But it is not creditable to a "Canadian priest."
+Still less creditable is his direct arraignment of M. de Mandat
+Grancey's good faith and veracity upon the strength of what he describes
+as M. de Mandat Grancey's amplification and distortion of a story told
+by himself. This was a tale of a priest called out to confess one of his
+parishioners. The penitent accused himself of killing one man, and
+trying to kill several others. The priest, as the dreadful tale went on,
+made a tally on his sleeve, with chalk, of the crimes recited. "Good
+heavens! my son," he cried at last, "what had all these men done to you
+that you tried to send them all into eternity? Who were they?"
+
+"Oh, Father, they were all bailiffs or tax-collectors!"
+
+"You idiot!" exclaimed the confessor, angrily rubbing at his sleeve,
+"why didn't ye tell me that before instead of letting me spoil my best
+cassock?"
+
+As I happened to have the book of M. de Mandat Grancey in my
+despatch-box, I compared it with the attack made upon it. The results
+were edifying. In the first place, M. de Mandat Grancey does not
+indicate the Canadian priest as his authority. He says that he heard the
+story, apparently at a dinner-table in France, from a _curé Irlandais_,
+who was endeavouring to impress upon his hearers "the sympathy of the
+clergy with the Land League." The "Canadian priest" now comes forward
+and makes it a count in his indictment against M. de Mandat Grancey that
+he is described as an "Irish curate," when he is in fact neither an
+Irishman nor a curate. What was more natural than that an ecclesiastic,
+claiming to live in Ireland, and telling stories in France about the
+sympathy of the Irish clergy with the Land League, should be taken by
+one of his auditors to be an Irish _curé_, particularly as the French
+_curé_ is, I believe, the equivalent of the Irish "parish priest"?
+
+In the next place, the "Canadian priest" declares that the story "is as
+old as the Round Towers of Ireland," and that M. de Mandat Grancey
+represents him as making himself the hero of the tale. As a matter of
+fact, M. de Mandat Grancey does nothing of the kind. On the contrary, he
+expressly says that the _curé Irlandais_, who told the story, gave it to
+his hearers as having occurred not to himself at all, but "to one of his
+colleagues." Furthermore he is at the pains to add (_Chez Paddy_, p. 43)
+that the story, which was not to the taste of some of the French
+ecclesiastics who heard it, was related "as a simple pleasantry."
+"But," he adds, and this I suspect is the sting which has so exasperated
+the "Canadian priest," "he gave us to understand at the same time that
+this pleasantry struck the keynote of the state of mind of many Irish
+priests, and, he said, that he was himself the President of the League
+in his district."
+
+In connection with Colonel Turner's statements as to the conduct of
+Father White at Milltown Malbay, and with the accounts given me of the
+conduct of Father Sheehan at Lixnaw, this side-light upon the relations
+of a certain class of the Irish clergy with the most violent henchmen of
+the League, is certainly noteworthy. I happen to have had some
+correspondence with friends of mine in Paris, who are friends also of M.
+de Mandat Grarncey, about his visit to Ireland before he made it, and I
+am quite certain that he went there, to put the case mildly, with no
+prejudices in favour of the English Government or against the
+Nationalists. Perhaps the extreme bitterness shown in the pamphlet of
+the "Canadian priest" may have been born of his disgust at finding that
+the sympathy of French Catholics with Catholic Ireland draws the line at
+priests who regard the assassination of "bailiffs and tax-collectors" as
+a pardonable, if not positively amusing, excess of patriotic zeal.
+
+It was late when I reached Parsonstown, known of old in Irish story as
+Birr, from St. Brendan's Abbey of Biorra, and now a clean prosperous
+place, carefully looked after by the chief landlord of the region, the
+Earl of Rosse, who, while he inherits the astronomical tastes and the
+mathematical ability of his father, is not so absorbed in star-gazing as
+to be indifferent to his terrestrial duties and obligations. I have
+heard nothing but good of him, and of his management of his estates,
+from men of the most diverse political views. But I think it more
+important to get a look at the Clanricarde property, about which I have
+heard little but evil from anybody. The strongest point I have heard
+made in favour of the owner is, that he is habitually described by that
+dumb organ of a down-trodden people, _United Ireland_, as "the most vile
+Clanricarde."
+
+I found a good car at the railway station, and set off at once for
+Portumna. Parsonstown was called by Sir William Petty, in his _Survey of
+Ireland_, the _umbilicus Hiberniæ_. It is the centre of Ireland, as a
+point near Newnham Paddox is of England, and the famous or infamous "Bog
+of Allan" stretches hence to Athlone. Our way fortunately took us
+westward. A light railway was laid down some years ago from Parsonstown
+to Portumna, but it did not pay, and it has now been abandoned.
+
+"What has become of the road?" I asked my jarvey.
+
+"Oh! they just take up the rails when they like, the people do."
+
+"And what do they do with them?"
+
+"Is it what they do with them? Oh; they make fences of them for the
+beasts."
+
+He was a dry, shrewd old fellow, not very amiably disposed, I was sorry
+to find, towards my own country.
+
+"Ah! it's America, sorr, that's been the ruin of us entirely."
+
+"Pray, how is that?"
+
+"It's the storms they send; and then the grain; and now they tell me
+it's the American beasts that's spoiling the market altogether for
+Ireland."
+
+"Is that what your member tells you?"
+
+"The member, sorr? which member?"
+
+"The member of Parliament for your district, I mean. What is his name?"
+
+"His name? Well, I'm not sure; and I don't know that I know the man at
+all. But I believe his name is Mulloy."
+
+"Does he live in Portumna?"
+
+"Oh no, not at all. I don't know at all where he lives, but I believe
+it's in Tullamore. But what would he know about America? Sure, any one
+can see it's the storms and the grain that is the death of us in
+Ireland."
+
+"But I thought it was the landlords and the rents?"
+
+"Oh, that's in Woodford and Loughrea; not here at all. There'll be no
+good till we get a war."
+
+"Get a war? with whom? What do you want a war for?"
+
+"Ah! it was the good time when we had the Crimean war--with the wheat
+all about Portumna. I'll show you the great store there was built. It's
+no use now. But we'll have a war. My son, he's a soldier now. He went
+out to America. But he didn't like it."
+
+"Why not?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, he didn't like it. He could get no work, but to be a porter, and it
+was too hard. So he came back in three months' time, and then he 'listed
+for a soldier. He's over in England now. He likes it very well. He's
+getting very good pay. They pay the soldiers well. There's a troop of
+Hussars here now. They bring a power of money to the place."
+
+"What do they do with the wheat lands now?"
+
+"Oh, they're for sheep; they do very well. Were you ever in Australia,
+sorr?" pointing to a place we were passing. "There was a man came here
+from Australia with a pot of money, and he bought that place; but he
+thought he was a bigger man than he was, and now he's found himself out.
+I think he would have done as well to stay in Australia where he was."
+
+In quite a different vein he spoke of the landlord of another large
+seat, and of the way in which the people, some of them, had
+misbehaved--breaking open the graves of the family on the place, "and
+tossing the coffins and the bones about, and all for what?"
+
+The view as we crossed the long and very fine bridge over the Shannon
+after dusk was very striking. It was not too dark to make out the course
+of the broad gleaming river, and the lights of the town made it seem
+larger, I daresay, than it really is. As we drove up the main street I
+told my jarvey to take me to the Castle.
+
+"To the Castle, is it?" he replied, looking around at me with an
+astonished air.
+
+"Yes," I said, "I am going to see Mr. Tener, the agent, who lives there,
+doesn't he?"
+
+"Oh, the new agent? Oh yes; I believe he's a very good man."
+
+"You don't expect to be 'boycotted' for going to the Castle, do you?"
+
+"And why should I be? But I haven't been inside of the Castle gates for
+twenty years. And--here they are!" he cried out suddenly, pulling up his
+horse just in time to avoid driving him up against a pair of iron gates
+inhospitably closed. It was by this time pitch dark. Not a light could
+we see within the enclosure. But presently a couple of shadowy forms
+appeared behind the iron gates; the iron gates creaked on their hinges,
+a masculine voice bade us drive in, and a policeman with a lantern
+advanced from a thicket of trees. All this had a fine martial and
+adventurous aspect, and my jarvey seemed to enjoy it as much as I.
+
+We got directions from the friendly policeman as to the roads and the
+landmarks, and after once nearly running into a clump of trees found
+ourselves at last in an open courtyard, where men appeared and took
+charge of the car, the horse, and my luggage. We were in a quadrangle of
+the out-buildings attached to the old residence of the Clanricardes,
+which had escaped the fire of 1826. The late Marquis for a long time
+hesitated whether to reconstruct the castle on the old site (the walls
+are still standing), or to build an entirely new house on another site.
+He finally chose the latter alternative, chiefly, I am told, under the
+advice of his oldest son, the late Lord Dunkellin, one of the most
+charming and deservedly popular men of his time. He was a great friend
+and admirer of Father Burke, whom he used to claim as a Galway cousin,
+and with whom I met him in Rome not long before his death in the summer
+of 1867. His brother, the present Marquis, I have never met, but Mr.
+Tener, his present agent here, who passed some time in America several
+years ago, learning from him that I wished to see this place, very
+courteously wrote to me asking me to make his house my headquarters. I
+found my way through queer passages to a cheery little hall where my
+host met me, and taking me into a pleasant little parlour, enlivened by
+flowers, and a merrily blazing fire, presented me to Mrs. Tener.
+
+Mr. Tener is an Ulster man from the County Cavan. He went with his wife
+on their bridal trip to America, and what he there saw of the peremptory
+fashion in which the authorities deal with conspiracies to resist the
+law seems not unnaturally to have made him a little impatient of the
+dilatory, not to say dawdling, processes of the law in his own country.
+He gave me a very interesting account after dinner this evening of the
+situation in which he found affairs on this property, an account very
+different from those which I have seen in print. He is himself the owner
+of a small landed property in Cavan, and he has had a good deal of
+experience as an agent for other properties. "I have a very simple
+rule," he said to me, "in dealing with Irish tenants, and that is
+neither to do an injustice nor to submit to one." It was only, he said,
+after convincing himself that the Clanricarde tenants had no legitimate
+ground of complaint against the management of the estate, not removable
+upon a fair and candid discussion of all the issues involved between
+them and himself, that he consented to take charge of the property. That
+to do this was to run a certain personal risk, in the present state of
+the country, he was quite aware.
+
+But he takes this part of the contract very coolly, telling me that the
+only real danger, he thinks, is incurred when he makes a journey of
+which he has to send a notice by telegraph--a remark which recalled to
+me the curious advice given me in Dublin to seal my letters, as a
+protection against "the Nationalist clerks in the post-offices." The
+park of Portumua Castle, which is very extensive, is patrolled by armed
+policemen, and whenever Mr. Tener drives out he is followed by a police
+car carrying two armed men.
+
+"Against whom are all these precautions necessary?" I asked. "Against
+the evicted tenants, or against the local agents of the League?"
+
+"Not at all against the tenants," he replied, "as you can satisfy
+yourself by talking with them. The trouble comes not from the tenants at
+all, nor from the people here at Portumna, but from mischievous and
+dangerous persons at Loughrea and Woodford. Woodford, mind you, not
+being Lord Clanricarde's place at all, though all the country has been
+roused about the cruel Clanricarde and his wicked Woodford evictions.
+Woodford was simply the headquarters of the agitation against Lord
+Clanricarde and my predecessor, Mr. Joyce, and it has got the name of
+the 'cockpit of Ireland,' because it was there that Mr. Dillon, in
+October 1886, opened the 'war against the landlords' with the 'Plan of
+Campaign.' It is an odd circumstance, by the way, worth noting, that
+when these apostles of Irish agitation went to Lord Clanricarde's
+property nearer the city of Gralway, and tried to stir the people up,
+they failed dismally, because the people there could understand no
+English, and the Irish agitators could speak no Irish! Nobody has ever
+had the face to pretend that the Clanricarde estates were 'rack-rented.'
+There have been many personal attacks made upon Mr. Joyce and upon Lord
+Clanricarde, and Mr. Joyce has brought that well-known action against
+the Marquis for libel, and all this answers with the general public as
+an argument to show that the tenants on the Clanricarde property must
+have had great grievances, and must have been cruelly ground down and
+unable to pay their way. I will introduce you, if you will allow me, to
+the Catholic Bishop here, and to the resident Protestant clergyman, and
+to the manager of the bank, and they can help you to form your own
+judgment as to the state of the tenants. You will find that whatever
+quarrels they may have had with their landlord or his agent, they are
+now, and always have been, quite able to pay their rents, and I need not
+tell you that it is no longer in the power of a landlord or an agent to
+say what these rents shall be."[10]
+
+"Mr. Dillon in that speech of his at Woodford (I have it here as
+published in _United Ireland_), you will see, openly advised, or rather
+ordered, the tenants here to club their rents, or, in plain English, the
+money due to their landlord, with the deliberate intent to confiscate to
+their own use, or, in their own jargon, 'grab,' the money of any one of
+their number who, after going into this dishonest combination, might
+find it working badly and wish to get out of it. Here is his own
+language:"--
+
+I took the speech as reported in the _United Ireland_ of October 23rd,
+1886, and therein found Mr. Dillon, M.P., using these words:--"If you
+mean to fight really, you must put the money aside for two
+reasons--first of all because you want the means to support the men who
+are hit first; and, secondly, because you want to prohibit traitors
+going behind your back. There is no way to deal with a traitor except to
+get his money under lock and key, and if you find that he pays his rent,
+and betrays the organisation, what will you do with him? I will tell you
+what to do with him. _Close upon his money, and use it for the
+organisation_. I have always opposed outrages. _This is a legal plan,
+and it is ten times more effective_."
+
+Not a word here as to the morality of the proceeding thus recommended;
+but almost in the same breath in which he bade his ignorant hearers
+regard his plan as "legal," Mr. Dillon said to them, "_this must be done
+privately, and you must not inform the public where the money is
+placed_!"
+
+Why not, if the plan was "legal"? Mr. Dillon, I believe, is not a
+lawyer, but he can hardly have deluded himself into thinking his plan of
+campaign "legal" in the face of the particular pains taken by his
+leader, Mr. Parnell, to disclaim all participation in any such plans. A
+year before Mr. Dillon made this curious speech, Mr. Parnell, I
+remember, on the 11th of October 1885, speaking at Kildare, declared
+that he had "in no case during the last few years advised any
+combination among tenants against even rack-rents," and insisted that
+any combination of the sort which might exist should be regarded as an
+"isolated" combination, "confined to the tenants of individual estates,
+who, of their own accord, without any incitement from us, on the
+contrary, kept back by us, without any urging on our part, without any
+advice on our part, but stung by necessity, and the terrible realities
+of their position, may have formed such a combination among themselves
+to secure such a reduction of rent as will enable them to live in their
+own homes." From this language of Mr. Parnell in October 1885 to Mr.
+Dillon's speech in October 1886, urging and advising the tenants to
+organise, exact contributions from every member of the organisation, and
+put these contributions under the control of third parties determined to
+confiscate the money subscribed by any member who might not find the
+organisation working to his advantage, is a rather long step! It covers
+all the distance between a cunning defensive evasion of the law, and an
+open aggressive violation of the law--not of the land only, but of
+common honesty. One of two things is clear: either these combinations
+are voluntary and "isolated," and intended, as Mr. Parnell asserts, to
+secure such a reduction of rents as will enable the tenants, and each of
+them, to live peacefully and comfortably at home, and in that case any
+member of the combination who finds that he can attain his object better
+by leaving it has an absolute right to do this, and to demand the return
+of his money; or they are part of a system imposed upon the tenants by a
+moral coercion inconsistent with the most elementary ideas of private
+right and personal freedom. This makes the importance of Mr. Dillon's
+speech, that by his denunciation of any member who wishes to withdraw
+from this "voluntary" combination as a "traitor," and by his order to
+"close upon the money" of any such member, "and use it for the
+organisation," he brands the "organisation" as a subterranean despotism
+of a very cheap and nasty kind. The Government which tolerates the
+creation of such a Houndsditch tyranny as this within its dominions
+richly deserves to be overthrown. As for the people who submit
+themselves to it, I do not wonder that in his more lucid moments a
+Catholic priest like Father Quilter feels himself moved to denounce them
+as "poor slaves." Of course with a benevolent neutral like myself, the
+question always recurs, Who trained them to submit to this sort of
+thing? But I really am at a loss to see why a parcel of conspirators
+should be encouraged in the nineteenth century to bully Irish farmers
+out of their manhood and their money, because in the seventeenth century
+it pleased the stupid rulers of England, as the great Duke of Ormond
+indignantly said, to "put so general a discountenance upon the
+improvement of Ireland, as if it were resolved that to keep it low is to
+keep it safe."
+
+On going back to the little drawing-room after dinner we found Mrs.
+Tener among her flowers, busy with some literary work. It is not a gay
+life here, she admits, her nearest visiting acquaintance living some
+seven or eight miles away--but she takes long walks with a couple of
+stalwart dogs in her company, and has little fear of being molested.
+"The tenants are in more danger," she thinks, "than the landlords or the
+agents"--nor do I see any reason to doubt this, remembering the Connells
+whom I saw at Edenvale, and the story of the "boycotted" Fitzmaurice
+brutally murdered in the presence of his daughter at Lixnaw on the 31st
+of January, as if by way of welcome to Lord Ripon and Mr. Morley on
+their arrival at Dublin.
+
+
+PORTUMNA, _Feb. 29th._--Early this morning two of the "evicted" tenants,
+and an ex-bailiff of the property here, came by appointment to discuss
+the situation with Mr. Tener. He asked me to attend the conference, and
+upon learning that I was an American, they expressed their perfect
+willingness that I should do so. The tenants were quiet, sturdy,
+intelligent-looking men. I asked one of them if he objected to telling
+me whether he thought the rent he had refused to pay excessive, or
+whether he was simply unable to pay it.
+
+"I had the money, sir, to pay the rent," he replied, "and I wanted to
+pay the rent--only I wouldn't be let."
+
+"Who wouldn't let you?" I asked.
+
+"The people that were in with the League."
+
+"Was your holding worth anything to you?" I asked.
+
+"It was indeed. Two or three years ago I could have sold my right for a
+matter of three hundred pounds."
+
+"Yes!" interrupted the other tenant, "and a bit before that for six
+hundred pounds."
+
+"Is it not worth three hundred pounds to you now?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Tener, "for he has lost it by refusing the settlement I
+offered to make, and driving us into proceedings against him, and
+allowing his six months' equity of redemption to lapse."
+
+"And sure, if we had it, no one would be let to buy it now, sir," said
+the tenant. "But it's we that hope Mr. Tener here will let us come back
+on the holdings--that is, if we'd be protected coming back."
+
+"Now, do you see," said Mr. Tener, "what it is you ask me to do? You ask
+me to make you a present outright of the property you chose foolishly to
+throw away, and to do this after you have put the estate to endless
+trouble and expense; don't you think that is asking me to do a good
+deal?"
+
+The tenants looked at one another, at Mr. Tener, and at me, and the
+ex-bailiff smiled.
+
+"You must see this," said Mr. Tener, "but I am perfectly willing now to
+say to you, in the presence of this gentleman, that in spite of all, I
+am quite willing to do what you ask, and to let you come back into the
+titles you have forfeited, for I would rather have you back on the
+property than strangers--"
+
+"And, indeed, we're sure you would."
+
+"But understand, you must pay down a year's rent and the costs you have
+put us to."
+
+"Ah! sure you wouldn't have us to pay the costs?"
+
+"But indeed I will," responded Mr. Tener; "you mustn't for a moment
+suppose I will have any question about that. You brought all this
+trouble on yourselves, and on us; and while I am ready and willing to
+deal more than fairly, to deal liberally with you about the arrears--and
+to give you time--the costs you must pay."
+
+"And what would they be, the costs?" queried one of the tenants
+anxiously.
+
+"Oh, that I can't tell you, for I don't know," said Mr. Tener, "but they
+shall not be anything beyond the strict necessary costs."
+
+"And if we come back would we be protected?"
+
+"Of course you will have protection. But why do you want protection?
+Here you are, a couple of strong grown men, with men-folk of your
+families. See here! why don't you go to such an one, and such an one,"
+naming other tenants; "you know them well. Go to them quietly and sound
+them to see if they will come back on the same terms with you; form a
+combination to be honest and to stand by your rights, and defy and break
+up the other dishonest combination you go in fear of! Is it not a shame
+for men like you to lie down and let those fellows walk over you, and
+drive you out of your livelihood and your homes?"
+
+The tenants looked at each other, and at the rest of us. "I think," said
+one of them at last, "I think ---- and ----," naming two men, "would come
+with us. Of course," turning to Mr. Tener, "you wouldn't discover on us,
+sir."
+
+"Discover on you! Certainly not," said Mr. Tener. "But why don't you
+make up your minds to be men, and 'discover' on yourselves, and defy
+these fellows?"
+
+"And the cattle, sir? would we get protection for the cattle? They'd be
+murdered else entirely."
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Tener, "the police would endeavour to protect the
+cattle."
+
+Then, turning to me, he said, "That is a very reasonable question. These
+scoundrels, when they are afraid to tackle the men put under their ban,
+go about at night, and mutilate and torture and kill the poor beasts. I
+remember a case," he went on, "in Roscommon, where several head of
+cattle mysteriously disappeared. They could be found nowhere. No trace
+of them could be got. But long weeks after they vanished, some lads in a
+field several miles away saw numbers of crows hovering over a particular
+point. They went there, and there at the bottom of an abandoned
+coal-shaft lay the shattered remains of these lost cattle. The poor
+beasts had been driven blindfold over the fields and down into this pit,
+where, with broken limbs, and maimed, they all miserably died of
+hunger."
+
+"Yes," said one of the tenants, "and our cattle'd be driven into the
+Shannon, and drownded, and washed away."
+
+"You must understand," interposed Mr. Tener "that when cattle are thus
+maliciously destroyed the owners can recover nothing unless the remains
+of the poor beasts are found and identified within three days."
+
+The disgust which I felt and expressed at these revelations seemed to
+encourage the tenants. One of them said that before the evictions came
+off certain of the National Leaguers visited him, and told him he must
+resist the officers. "I consulted my sister," he said, "and she said,
+'Don't you be such a fool as to be doing that; we'll all be ruined
+entirely by those rascals and rogues of the League.' And I didn't
+resist. But only the other day I went to a priest in the trouble we are
+in, and what do you think he said to me? He said, 'Why didn't you do as
+you were bid? then you would be helped,' and he would do nothing for us!
+Would you think that right, sir, in your country?"
+
+"I should think in my country," I replied, "that a priest who behaved in
+that way ought to be unfrocked."
+
+"Did you pay over all your rent into the hands of the trustees of the
+League?" I asked of one of these tenants.
+
+"I paid over money to them, sir," he replied.
+
+"Yes," I said, "but did you pay over all the amount of the rent, or how
+much of it?"
+
+"Oh! I paid as much as I thought they would think I ought to pay!" he
+responded, with that sly twinkle of the peasant's eye one sees so often
+in rural France.
+
+"Oh! I understand," I said, laughing. "But if you come to terms now with
+Mr. Tener here, will you get that money back again?"
+
+"Divil a penny of it!" he replied, with much emphasis.
+
+Finally they got up together to take their leave, after a long whispered
+conversation together.
+
+"And if we made it half the costs?"
+
+"No!" said Mr. Tener good-naturedly but firmly; "not a penny off the
+costs."
+
+"Well, we'll see the men, sir, just quietly, and we'll let you know what
+can be done"; and with that they wished us, most civilly, good-morning,
+and went their way.
+
+We walked in the park for some time, and a wild, beautiful park it is,
+not the less beautiful for being given up, as it is, very much to the
+Dryads to deal with it as they list. It is as unlike a trim English park
+as possible; but it contains many very fine trees, and grand open sweeps
+of landscape. In a tangled copse are the ruins of an ancient Franciscan
+abbey, in one corner of which lie buried together, under a monumental
+mound of brickwork, the late Marquis of Clanricarde and his wife. The
+walls of the Castle, burned in 1826, are still standing, and so perfect
+that the building might easily enough have been restored. A keen-eyed,
+wiry old household servant, still here, told us the house was burned in
+the afternoon of January 6, 1826. There were three women-servants in the
+house--"Anna and Mary Meehan, and Mrs. Underwood, the housekeeper"; and
+they were getting the Castle ready for his Lordship's arrival, so little
+of an "absentee" was the late Lord Clanricarde, then only one year
+married to the daughter of George Canning. The fires were laid on in the
+upper rooms, and Mrs. Underwood went off upon an errand. When she came
+back all was in flames.
+
+The deer-park is full of deer, now become quite wild. We heard them
+crashing through the undergrowth on all sides. There must be capital
+fishing, too, in the lake, and in the river of which it is an expansion.
+
+While they were getting the cars ready for a drive, came up another son
+of the soil. This man I found had only a small interest in the battle on
+the Clanricarde estates, holding his homestead of another landlord. But
+he admitted he had gone in a manner into the "combination," in that he
+had paid a certain, not very large, sum, which he named, to the
+trustees, "just for peace and quiet." He considered it gone, past
+recovery; and he named another man with a small holding, but doing a
+considerable business in other ways, who had "paid £10 or more just not
+to be bothered." Upon this Mr. Tener told me of a shopkeeper at Loughrea
+in a large way of business, a man with seven or eight thousand pounds,
+who, finding his goods about to be seized after the agent had turned a
+sharp strategic corner on him, and unexpectedly got into his shop, was
+about to own up to his defeat, and make a fair settlement, when the
+secretary of the League appeared, and requested a private talk with him.
+In a quarter of an hour the tradesman reappeared looking rather sullen
+and crestfallen. He said he couldn't pay, and must let the goods be
+taken. So taken they were, and duly put up under the process and sold.
+He bought them in himself, paying all the costs.
+
+Presently two cars appeared. We got upon one, Mr. Tener driving a
+spirited nag, and taking on the seat with him a loaded carbine-rifle.
+Two armed policeman followed us upon the other, keeping at such a
+distance as would enable them easily to cover any one approaching from
+either side of the roadway. It quite took me back to the delightful days
+of 1866 in Mexico, when we used to ride out to picnics at the Rincon at
+Orizaba armed to the teeth, and ready at a moment's notice to throw the
+four-in-hand mule-wagons into a hollow square, and prepare to receive
+cavalry. As it seems to be perfectly well understood that the regular
+price paid for shooting a designated person (they call it "knocking" him
+in these parts) is the ridiculously small sum of four pounds, and that
+two persons who divide this sum are always detailed by the organisers of
+outrage to "knock" an objectionable individual, it is obvious that too
+much care can hardly be taken by prudent people in coming and going
+through such a country. Fortunately for the people most directly
+concerned to avoid these unpleasantnesses a systematic leakage seems to
+exist in the machinery of mischief. The places where the oaths of this
+local "Mafia" are administered, for instance, are well known. A roadside
+near a chapel is frequently selected--and this for two or three obvious
+reasons. The sanctity of the spot may be supposed to impress the
+neophyte; and if the police or any other undesirable people should
+suddenly come upon the officiating adepts and the expectant acolyte, a
+group on the roadside is not necessarily a criminal gathering--though I
+do not see why, in such times, our old American college definition of a
+"group" as a gathering of "three or more persons" should not be adopted
+by the authorities, and held to make such a gathering liable to
+dispersion by the police, as our "groups" used to be subject to
+proctorial punishment. Mills are another favourite resort of the
+law-breakers. Mr. Tener tells me that a large mill between this place
+and Loughrea is a great centre of trouble, not wholly to the
+disadvantage of the astute miller, who finds it not only brings grist to
+his mill, but takes away grist from another mill belonging to a couple
+of worthy ladies, and once quite prosperous. It is no uncommon thing, it
+appears, for the same person to be put through the ceremony of swearing
+fidelity more than once, and at more than one place, with the not
+unnatural result, however, of diminishing the pressure of the oath upon
+his conscience or his fears, and also of alienating his affections, as
+he is expected to pay down two shillings on each occasion. Once a
+member, he contributes a penny a week to the general fund. It seems also
+to be an open secret who the disbursing treasurers are of this fund,
+from whom the members, detailed to do the dark bidding of the
+"organisation," receive their wage. "A stout gentleman with sandy hair
+and wearing glasses" was the description given to me of one such
+functionary. When so much is known of the methods and the men, why is it
+that so many crimes are committed with virtual impunity? For two
+sufficient reasons. Witnesses cannot be got to testify, or trusted, if
+they do testify, to speak the truth; and it is idle to expect juries of
+the vicinage in nine cases out of ten will do their duty. Political
+cowardice having made it impossible to transfer the venue in cases of
+Irish crime, as to which all the authorities were agreed about these
+points, from Ireland into Great Britain, it is found that even to
+transfer the trial of "Moonlighters" from Clare or Kerry into Wicklow,
+for example, has a most instructive effect, opening the eyes of the
+people of Wicklow to a state of things in their own island, of which
+happily for themselves they were previously as ignorant as the people of
+Surrey or of Middlesex. This explains the indignant wish expressed to me
+some time ago in a letter from a priest in another part of Ireland, that
+"martial law" might be proclaimed in Clare and Kerry to "stamp out the
+Moonlighters, those pests of society." That in Clare and Kerry priests
+should be found not only disposed to wink at and condone the proceedings
+of these "pests of society," but openly to co-operate with them under
+the pretext of a "national" movement, is surely a thing equally
+intolerable by the Church and dangerous to the cause of Irish autonomy.
+This I am glad to say is strongly felt, and has been on more than one
+occasion very vigorously stated by one of the most eminent and estimable
+of Irish ecclesiastics, the Bishop-Coadjutor of Clonfert, upon whom I
+called this morning. Dr. Healy, who is a senator of the Royal University
+of Ireland, and a member of the Royal Irish Academy, presides over that
+part of the diocese of Clonfort which includes Portumna and Woodford. He
+lives in a handsome and commodious, but simple and unpretentious house,
+set in ample grounds well-planted, and commanding a wide view of a most
+agreeable country. We were ushered into a well-furnished study, and the
+bishop came in at once to greet us with the most cordial courtesy. He is
+a frank, dignified, unaffected man, and in his becoming episcopal
+purple, with the gold chain and cross, looked every inch a bishop. I was
+particularly anxious to see Dr. Healy, as a type of the high-minded and
+courageous ecclesiastics who, in Ireland, have resolutely refused to
+subordinate their duties and their authority as ecclesiastics to the
+convenience and the policy of an organisation absolutely controlled by
+Mr. Parnell, who not only is not a Catholic, but who is an open ally and
+associate of the bitterest enemies of the Catholic Church in France and
+in England. Protestant historians affirm that Pope Innocent was one of
+the financial backers of William of Orange when he set sail from Holland
+to crush the Catholic faith in Great Britain and Ireland, and drive the
+Catholic house of Stuart into exile. But it was reserved for the
+nineteenth century to witness the strange spectacle of men, calling
+themselves Irishmen and Catholics, deliberately slandering and assailing
+in concord with a non-Catholic political leader the consecrated pastors
+and masters of the Church in Ireland. When in order to explain what they
+themselves concede to be "the absence from the popular ranks of the best
+of the priesthood," Nationalist writers find it necessary to denounce
+Cardinal Cullen and Cardinal M'Cabe as "anti-Irish "; and to sneer at
+men like Dr. Healy as "Castle Bishops," it is impossible not to be
+reminded of the three "patriotic" tailors of Tooley Street.
+
+Bishop Healy looks upon the systematic development of a substantial
+peasant proprietary throughout Ireland as the economic hope of the
+country, and he regards therefore the actual "campaigning" of the
+self-styled "Nationalists" as essentially anti-national, inasmuch as its
+methods are demoralising the people of Ireland, and destroying that
+respect for law and for private rights which lies at the foundation of
+civil order and of property. In his opinion, "Home Rule," to the people
+in general, means simply ownership of the land which they are to live
+on, and to live by. How that ownership shall be brought about peaceably,
+fairly, and without wrong or outrage to any man or class of men is a
+problem of politics to be worked out by politicians, and by public men.
+That men, calling themselves Catholics, should be led on to attempt to
+bring this or any other object about by immoral and criminal means is
+quite another matter, and a matter falling within the domain, not of the
+State primarily, but of the Church.
+
+As to this, Bishop Healy, who was in Rome not very long ago, and who,
+while in Rome, had more than one audience of His Holiness by command,
+has no doubt whatever that the Vatican will insist upon the abandonment
+and repudiation by Catholics of boycotting, and "plans of campaign," and
+all such devices of evil. Nor has the Bishop any doubt that whenever the
+Holy Father speaks the priests and the people of Ireland will obey.
+
+To say this, of course, is only to say that the Bishop believes the
+priests of Ireland to be honest priests, and the people of Ireland to be
+good Catholics.
+
+If he is mistaken in this it will be a doleful thing, not for the
+Church, but for the Irish priests, and for the Irish people. No Irishman
+who witnessed the magnificent display made at Rome this year, of the
+scope and power of the Catholic Church, can labour under any delusions
+on that point.
+
+From the Bishop's residence we went to call upon the Protestant rector
+of Portumna, Mr. Crawford. The handsome Anglican church stands within an
+angle of the park, and the parsonage is a very substantial mansion. Mr.
+Crawford, the present rector, who is a man of substance, holds a fine
+farm of the Clanricarde estate, at a peppercorn rent, and he is tenant
+also of another holding at £118 a year, as to which he has brought the
+agent into Court, with the object, as he avers, of setting an example to
+the other tenants, and inducing them, like himself, to fight under the
+law instead of against it. He is not, however, in arrears, and in that
+respect sets a better example, I am sorry to say, than the Catholic
+priest, Father Coen, who made himself so conspicuous here on the
+occasion of the much bewritten Woodford evictions. The case of Father
+Coen is most instructive, and most unpleasant. He occupies an excellent
+house on a holding of twenty-three acres of good laud, with a garden--in
+short, a handsome country residence, which was provided by the late Lord
+Clanricarde, expressly for the accommodation of whoever might be the
+Catholic priest in that part of his estate. For all this the rent is
+fixed at the absurd and nominal sum of two guineas a year! Yet Father
+Coen, who now enjoys the mansion, and has a substantial income from the
+parish, is actually two years and a half in arrears with this rent! This
+fact Mr. Tener mentioned to the Bishop, whose countenance naturally
+darkened. "What am I to do in such a case, my lord?" asked Mr. Tener.
+"Do?" said the Bishop, "do your plain duty, and proceed against him
+according to law." But suppose he were proceeded against and evicted, as
+in America he certainly would be, who can doubt that he would instantly
+be paraded, before the world, on both sides of the Atlantic as a
+"martyr," suffering for the holy cause of an oppressed and down-trodden
+people, at the hands of a "most vile" Marquis, and of a remorse-less and
+blood-thirsty agent?[11] Mr. Crawford, a tall, fine-looking man, talked
+very fully and freely about the situation here. He came to Portumna
+about eight years ago; one of his reasons for accepting the position
+here offered him being that he wished to take over a piece of property
+near Woodford from his brother-in-law, who found he could not manage it.
+As a practical farmer, and a straightforward capable man of business, he
+has gradually acquired the general confidence of the tenants here. That
+they are, as a rule, quite able to pay the rents which they have been
+"coerced" into refusing to pay, he fully believes. He told me of cases
+in which Catholic tenants of Lord Clanricarde came to him when the
+agitation began about the Plan of Campaign, and begged him privately to
+take the money for their rents, and hold it for them till the time
+should come for a settlement.
+
+The reason for this was that they did not wish to be obliged to give
+over the money into the "Trust" created by the Campaigners, and wanted
+it to be safely put beyond the reach of these obliging "friends." One
+very shrewd tenant came to him and begged him to buy some beasts, in
+order that he might pay his rent out of the proceeds. The man owed £15
+to the Clanricarde property. Mr. Crawford did not particularly want to
+buy his beasts, but eventually agreed to do so, and gave him £50 for
+them. The man went off with the money, but he never paid the rent! Mr.
+Crawford discovering this called him to account, and refused to grant
+him some further favour which he asked. The result is that the
+"distressed tenant" now cuts Mr. Crawford when he meets him, and is the
+prosperous owner of quite a small herd of cattle.
+
+Mr. Crawford's opinion of the mischief done by the methods and spirit of
+the National League in this place is quite in accord with the opinions
+of the Bishop-Coadjutor. Power without responsibility, which made the
+Cæesars madmen, easily turns the heads of village tyrants, and there is
+something positively grotesque in the excesses of this subterranean
+"Home Rule." Mr. Crawford told me of a case here, in which a tenant
+farmer, whom he named, came to him in great wrath, not unmingled with
+terror, to say that the League had ordered him, on pain of being
+boycotted, to give up his holding to the heirs of a woman from whom,
+twenty years ago, he had bought, for £100 in cash, the tenant-right of
+her deceased husband! There was no question of refunding the £100. He
+was merely to consider himself a "land-grabber," and evict himself for
+the benefit of those heirs who had never done a stroke of work on the
+property for twenty years, and who had no shadow of a legal or moral
+claim on it, except that the oldest of them was an active member of the
+local League!
+
+Nor was this unique.
+
+In another case, the children of a tenant, who died forty years ago,
+came forward and called upon the League to boycott an old man who had
+been in possession of the holding during nearly half a century. In a
+third case, a tenant-farmer, some ten years ago, had in his employ as
+herd a man who fell ill and died. He put into the vacant place an
+honest, capable young fellow, who still holds it, and has faithfully and
+efficiently served him. Only the other day this tenant-farmer was warned
+by the League to expect trouble, unless he dismissed this herd, and put
+into his place the son, now grown to man's estate, of the herd who died
+ten years ago!
+
+It is amusing, if not instructive, to find the hereditary principle,
+just now threatened in its application to the British Senate, cropping
+out afresh as an element in the regeneration of Irish agriculture and
+the land tenure of Ireland!
+
+On our way back to the Castle we called on Mr. Place, the manager of the
+Portumna Branch of the Hibernian Bank, who lives in the town. He was
+amusing himself, after the labour of the day in the bank, with some
+amateur work as a carpenter, but received us very cordially. He said
+there was no doubt that the deposits in the bank had increased
+considerably since the adoption of the Plan of Campaign on the
+Clanricarde property. Money was paid into the bank continually by
+persons who wished the fact of their payments kept secret; and he knew
+of more than one case in which tenants, whose stock had been seized by
+the agent for the rents, were much delighted at the seizure, since it
+had paid off their rents, and so enabled them to retain their holdings
+and keep out of the grasp of the League, even though to do this they had
+undergone a forced sale and been muleted in costs.
+
+It was his opinion that the tenants on the Clanricarde property, who are
+not in arrears, would gladly accept a twenty-five per cent. reduction,
+and do very well by accepting it. But they are constrained into a
+hostile attitude by the tenants who are in arrears, some of them for
+several years (as, for example, Father Coen), although I find, to my
+astonishment, that in Ireland the landlord has no power to distrain for
+more than a twelvemonth's rent, no matter how far back the arrears may
+run.
+
+Mr. Place seems to think it would be well to put all the creditors of
+the tenants on one footing with the landlords. The shopkeepers and other
+creditors, he thinks, in that event would see many things in quite a new
+light.
+
+What is called the new Castle of Portumna is a large and handsome
+building of the Mansard type, standing on an eminence in the park, at
+some distance from the original seat. The building was finished not long
+before the death of his father, the late Marquis. It has never been
+occupied, save by a large force of police quartered in it not very long
+ago by Mr. Tener in readiness for an expedition against the Castle of
+Cloondadauv, to the scene of which he promises to drive me to-morrow on
+my way back to Dublin. It is thoroughly well built, and might easily be
+made a most delightful residence. The views which it commands of the
+Shannon are magnificent, and there are many fine trees about it.
+
+The old man who has charge of it is a typical Galway retainer of the old
+school. The "boys," he says, once tried to "boycott" him because he was
+the pound-master; but he showed fight, and they let him alone. He
+pointed out to me from the top of the house, in the distance, the
+residences of Colonel Hickie, and of the young Lord Avonmore, who lately
+succeeded on the death of his brother in the recent Egyptian expedition.
+The place is now shut up, and the owners live in France.
+
+We visited too the Portumna Union before driving home. The buildings of
+this Union are extensive for the place, and well built, and it seems to
+be well-ordered and neatly kept--thanks, in no small degree, I suspect,
+to the influence of the Sisters who have charge of the hospital, but
+whose benign spirit shows itself not only in the flower-garden which
+they have called into being, but in many details of the administration
+beyond their special control.
+
+The contrast was very striking between the atmosphere of this
+unpretending refuge of the helpless and that of certain of the
+"laicised" hospitals of France, which I not long ago visited, from which
+the devoted nuns have been expelled to make way for hired nurses. I made
+a remark to this effect to the clerk of the Union, Mr. Lavan, whom we
+found in his office.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said, "I have no doubt of that. We owe more than I can say
+to the Sisters, but I don't know how long we should have them here if
+the local guardians could have their way."
+
+In explanation of this, he went on to tell me that these local
+guardians, who are elected, are hostile to the whole administration,
+because of its relations with the Local Government Board at Dublin,
+which controls their generous tendency to expend the money of the
+ratepayers. By way of expressing their feelings, therefore, they have
+been trying to cut down, not only the salary of the clerk, but that of
+the Catholic chaplain of the Union; and as there is a good deal of
+irreligious feeling among the agitators here, it is his impression that
+they would make things disagreeable for the Sisters also were they in
+any way to get the management into their own hands. That there cannot be
+much real distress in this neighbourhood appears from two facts. There
+are now but 130 inmates of this Union, out of a population of 12,900,
+and the outlay for out-of-door relief averages between eight and ten
+pounds a week.
+
+In the quiet, neat chapel two or three of the inmates were kneeling at
+prayers; and others whom we saw in the kitchen and about the offices had
+nothing of the "workhouse" look which is so painful in the ordinary
+inmates of an English or American almshouse.
+
+"The trouble with the place," said Mr. Lavan, "is that they like it too
+well. It takes an eviction almost to get them out of it."
+
+We sat down with Mr. Lavan in his office, and had an interesting talk
+with him.
+
+He is the agent of Mr. Mathews, who lives between Woodford and Portumna.
+Mr. Mathews is a resident landlord, he says, who has constantly employed
+and has lived on friendly terms with his tenants, numbering twenty, who
+hold now under judicial rents. On these judicial rents two years ago
+they were allowed a further reduction of 15 per cent. Last year they
+were allowed 20 per cent. This year he offered them a reduction of 25
+per cent., which they rejected, demanding 35 per cent.
+
+This demand Mr. Lavan considers to be unreasonable in the extreme, and
+he attributes it to the influence of the National Leaguers here, whose
+representatives among the local guardians constantly vote away the money
+of the ratepayers in "relief to evicted tenants who have ample means and
+can in no respect be called destitute." In his opinion the effect of the
+Nationalist agitation here has been to upset all ideas of right and
+wrong in the minds of the people where any question arises between
+tenants and landlords. He told a story, confirmed by Mr. Tener, of a
+bailiff, whom he named, on the Clanricarde property here, who was
+compelled two years ago to resign his place in order to prevent the
+"boycotting" of his mother who keeps a shop on the farm. He was
+familiar, too, with the details of a story told me by one of the
+Clanricarde tenants, a farmer near Loughrea who holds a farm at £90 a
+year. This man was forced to subscribe to the Plan of Campaign. The
+agent proceeded against him for the rent due, and he incurred costs of
+£10. His sheep and crop were then seized.
+
+He begged the local leaders to "permit" him to pay his rent, as he was
+able to do it _without drawing out the funds in their hands_! They
+refused, and so compelled him to allow his property to be publicly sold,
+and to incur further costs of £10. "His farm lies so near the town that
+he did not dare to risk the vengeance of the local ruffians."
+
+Mr. Lavan gave me the name also of another man who is now actually under
+a "boycott," because he has ventured to resist the modest demand made by
+the son of a man whose tenant-right he bought, paying him £100 for it,
+twenty years ago, that he shall give up his farm without being
+reimbursed for his outlay made to purchase it! In other words, after
+twenty years' peaceable possession of a piece of property, bought and
+paid for, this tenant-farmer is treated as a "land-grabber" by the
+self-installed "Nationalist" government of Ireland, because he will not
+submit to be robbed both of the money which he paid for his
+tenant-right, and of his tenant-right!
+
+Obviously in such a case as this the "war against landlordism" is simply
+a war against property and against private rights. Priests of the
+Catholic Church who not only countenance but aid and abet such
+proceedings certainly go even beyond Dr. M'Glynn. Dr. M'Glynn, so far as
+I know, stops at the confiscation of all private property in rent by the
+State for the State. But here is simply a confiscation of the property
+of A for the benefit of B, such as might happen if B, being armed and
+meeting A unarmed in a forest, should confiscate the watch and chain of
+A, bought by A of B's lamented but unthrifty father twenty years before!
+
+After dinner to-night Mr. Tener gave me some interesting and edifying
+accounts of his experience in other parts of Ireland.
+
+Some time ago, before the Plan of Campaign was adopted, one of his
+tenants in Cavan came to him with a doleful story of the bad times and
+the low prices, and wound up by saying he could pay no more than half a
+year's rent.
+
+"Now his rent had been reduced under the Land Act," said Mr, Tener, "and
+I had voluntarily thrown off a lot of arrears, so I looked at him
+quietly and said, 'Mickey, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have
+been very well treated, and you can perfectly well pay your rent. Your
+wife would be ashamed of you if she knew you were trying to get out of
+it.'"
+
+"Ah no, your honour!" he briskly replied; "indade she would approve it.
+If you won't discover on me, I'll tell you the truth. It was the wife
+herself, she's a great schollard, and reads the papers, that tould me
+not to pay you more than half the rent--for she says there's a new Act
+coming to wipe it all out. Will you take the half-year?"
+
+"No, I will not. Don't be afraid of your wife, but pay what you owe,
+like a man. You've got the money there in your pocket."
+
+This was a good shot. Mickey couldn't resist it, and his countenance
+broke into a broad smile.
+
+"Ah no! I've got it in two pockets. Begorra, it was the wife herself
+made up the money in two parcels, and she put one into each pocket, to
+be sure--and I wasn't to give your honour but one, if you would take it.
+But there's the money, and I daresay it's all for the best."
+
+On another occasion, when he was collecting the rents of a property in
+the county of Longford, one tenant came forward as the spokesman of the
+rest, admitted that the rents had been accepted fairly after a reduction
+under the Land Act, expressed the general wish of the tenants to meet
+their obligations, and wound up by asking a further abatement, "the
+times were so bad, and the money couldn't be got, it couldn't indeed!"
+
+Mr. Tener listened patiently--to listen patiently is the most essential
+quality of an agent in Ireland--and finally said:--
+
+"Very well, if you haven't got the money to pay in full, pay
+three-quarters of it, and I'll give you time for the rest."
+
+"Thank your honour!" said Pat, "and that'll be thirty pounds--and here
+it is in one pound notes, and hard enough to get they are, these times!"
+
+So Mr. Tener took the money, counted the notes twice over, and then,
+writing out a receipt, handed it to the tenant.
+
+"All right, Pat, there's your receipt for thirty-nine pounds, and I'm
+glad to see ten-pound notes going about the country in these hard
+times!"
+
+By mistake the "distressful" orator had put one ten-pound note into his
+parcel! He took his receipt, and went off without a word. But the
+combination to get an "abatement" broke down then and there, and the
+other tenants came forward and put down their money.
+
+These incidents occurred to Mr. Tener himself. Not less amusing and
+instructive was a similar mistake on a larger scale made by an
+over-crafty tenant in dealing with one of Mr. Tener's friends a few
+years ago in the county of Leitrim. This tenant, whom we will call
+Denis, was the fugleman also of a combination. He was a cattle dealer as
+well as a farmer, and having spent a couple of hours in idly eloquent
+attempts to bring about a general abatement of the rents, he lost his
+patience.
+
+"Ah, well, your honour!" he said, "I can't stay here all day talking
+like these men, I must go to the fair at Boyle. Will you take a
+deposit-receipt of the bank for ten pounds and give me the pound change?
+that'll just be the nine pounds for the half-year's rent. But all the
+same, yer honour, those men are all farmers, and it's not out of the
+farm at all I made the ten pounds, it's out of the dealing!"
+
+"But you couldn't deal without a farm, Denis, for the stock," said the
+agent, as he glanced at the receipt. He hastily turned it over, and went
+on, "Just indorse the receipt, and I'll consider your proposition."
+
+The receipt was indorsed, and at once taken off by the agent's clerk to
+the bank to bring back pound-notes for it, while the agent quietly
+proceeded to fill out the regular form of receipt for a full year's
+rent, eighteen pounds. Denis noted what he supposed of course to be the
+agent's blunder, but like an astute person held his peace. The clerk
+came back with the notes. Denis took up his receipt, and the agent
+quietly began handing him note after note across the table.
+
+"But, your honour!" exclaimed Denis, "what on earth are ye giving me all
+this money for?"
+
+"It's your change," said the agent, quite imperturbably. "You gave me a
+bank receipt for one hundred pounds. I have given you a receipt for your
+full year's rent, and here are eighty-two pounds in notes, and with it
+eighteen shillings in silver--that's five per cent. reduction. I would
+have made it ten per cent., only you were so very sharp, first about not
+having the money, and then about the full receipt!"
+
+In an instant all eyes were fastened upon Denis. Ichabod! the glory had
+departed. The chorus went up from his disenchanted followers:--
+
+"Ah, glory be to God, you were not bright enough for the agent, Denis!"
+
+And so that day the agent made a very full and handsome collection--and
+there was a slight reduction in the deposit-accounts of the local bank!
+
+In the evening Mr. Tener gave me the details of some cases of direct
+intimidation with the names of the tenants concerned. One man, whose
+farm he visited, told him he had paid his rent not long before to the
+previous agent. "Well," said Mr. Tener, "show me your receipt!" On this
+the tenant said that he dare not keep the receipt about him, nor even in
+the house, lest it should be demanded by the emissaries of the League,
+who went round to keep the tenants up to the "Plan of Campaign," and
+that it was hidden in his stable. And he went out to the stable and
+brought it in.
+
+This, he had reason to believe, was not an uncommon case.[12] The same
+man, wishing to take a grass farm which the people hoped the agent would
+consent to have "cut up" was asked to give two names on a
+promissory-note to pay the rent. He demurred to this, and after a parley
+said, "Would a certificate do?" upon which he pulled out an old
+tobacco-box, and carefully unfolded from it a bank certificate of
+deposit for a hundred pounds sterling! This tenant held eleven Irish, or
+more than seventeen English, acres, and his yearly rent was £11, 16s.
+6d.
+
+The people before this agitation began were generally quiet, thrifty,
+and industrious. They were great sheep-raisers. An old law of the Irish
+Parliament had exempted sheep, but not cattle or crops, from distraint,
+with an eye to encouraging the woollen interest in Ireland.
+
+As to the sale of tenant-right in Ireland, he told me a curious story.
+One woman, a widow, whom he named, owed two year' rent on a holding in
+Ulster at £4 a year. She was abundantly able to pay, but for her own
+reasons preferred to be evicted, and, finally, by an understanding with
+him, offered her tenant-right for sale. A man who had made money in
+iron-mines in the County of Durham was a bidder, and finally offered
+£240 for the holding. It was knocked down to him. He then saw the agent,
+who told him he had paid too much. The woman was then appealed to, and
+she admitted that the agent was right. But it was shown that others had
+offered £200, and the woman finally agreed to take, and received, that
+amount in gold, being fifty years' purchase!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Thursday, March 1._--This has been a crowded day. I left
+Portumna very early on a car with Mr. Tener, intending to visit the
+scene of his latest collision with the "National" government of Ireland,
+on my way to Loughrea. It was a bright spring morning, more like April
+in Italy than like March in America, and the country is full of natural
+beauty. We made our first halt at the derelict house of Martin Kenny,
+one of the "victims" of the famous "Woodford evictions," so called, as I
+have said, because Woodford is the nearest town.[13] The eviction here
+took place October 21st, 1887. The house has been dismantled by the
+neighbours since that time, each man carrying off a door, or a shutter,
+or whatever best suited him. One of the constables who followed us as
+Mr. Tener's body-guard had been present at the eviction. He came into
+the house with us, and very graphically described the performance. The
+house was still full of heavy stones taken into it, partly to block the
+entrances, and partly as ammunition; and trunks of trees used as
+_chevaux defrise_ still protruded through the door and the window. These
+trees had been cut down by the garrison in the woodlands here and there
+all over the property. I asked if the law in Ireland punished
+depredations of this sort, and was informed that trees planted by
+tenants, if registered by them within a certain time, are the property
+of the tenants. This would astonish our landlords in America, where the
+tenant who sticks so much as a sunflower into his garden-patch makes a
+present of it to his landlord.[14]
+
+I asked if the place made a long defence. Mr. Tener and the constable
+both laughed, and the former told me that when the storming party
+arrived shortly after daybreak, they found the house garrisoned only by
+some small boys, who had been left there to keep watch. The men were
+fast asleep at some other place. The small boys ran away as fast as
+possible to give the alarm, but the police went in, and in a jiffey
+pulled to pieces the elaborate defences prepared to repel them. Father
+Coen, the constable said, got to Kenny's house an hour after it was all
+over, with a mob of people howling and groaning. But the work had been
+done, and other work also at the Castle of Cloondadauv, to which we next
+drove.
+
+This place takes its truly awe-inspiring name from a ruined Norman tower
+standing on a picturesque promontory of no great height, which juts out
+into the lovely lake here made by the Shannon. At no great expense this
+tower might be so restored as to make an ideal fishing-box. It now
+simply adorns the holding formerly occupied by Mr. John Stanislaus
+Burke, a former tenant of Lord Clanricarde. The story of its capture on
+the 17th of September is worth telling.
+
+Some days before the evictions were to come off, a meeting was held at
+Woodford or Loughrea, at which one of the speakers, the patriotic Dr.
+Tully, rather incautiously and exultingly told his hearers that the
+defence in 1886 of the tenant's house known as "Fort Saunders" had been
+a grand and gallant affair indeed, but that next time "the exterminators
+would have to storm a castle"!
+
+This put Mr. Tener at once on the alert, and as Mr. Burke of Cloondadauv
+was set down for eviction, it didn't require much cogitation to fix upon
+the fortress destined to be "stormed." So he set about the campaign. The
+County Inspector of the constabulary, who had made a secret
+reconnaissance, reported that he found the place too strong to be taken
+if defended, except "by artillery." So it was determined to take it by
+surprise.
+
+When the previous evictions were made, the agent and the public forces
+had marched from Portumna by the highway to Woodford, so that, of
+course, their advent was announced by the scouts and sentinels of the
+League from hill to hill long before they reached the scene of action,
+and abundant time was given to the agitators for organising a
+"reception." Mr. Tener profited by the experience of his predecessors.
+He contrived to get his force of constabulary through the town of
+Portumna without attracting any popular attention. And as early rising
+is not a popular virtue here, he resolved to steal a march on the
+defenders of Cloondadauv.
+
+He had brought up certain large boats to Portumna, and put them on the
+lake. Rousing his men before dawn, he soon had them all embarked, and on
+their way swiftly and silently by the river and the lake to Cloondadauv.
+They reached the promontory by daybreak, and as soon as the hour of
+legal action had arrived they were landed, and surrounded the "castle."
+The ancient portal was found to be blocked with heavy stones and trunks
+of trees, nor did any adit appear to be available, till a young
+gentleman who had accompanied the party as a volunteer, discovered in
+one wall of the tower, at some little height from the ground, the vent
+of one of those conduits not infrequently found running down through the
+walls of old castles, which were used sometimes as waste-ways for
+rubbish from above, and sometimes to receive water-pipes from below.
+Looking up into this vent, he saw a rope hanging free within it. Upon
+this he hauled resolutely, and finding it firmly attached above, came to
+the conclusion that it must have been fixed there by the garrison as a
+means of access to the interior.
+
+Like an adventurous young tar, he bade his comrades stand by, and nimbly
+"swarmed" up the rope, without thought or care of what might await him
+at the top. In a few moments his shouts from above proclaimed the
+capture of the stronghold. It was absolutely deserted; the garrison,
+confident that no attack would that day be made, had gone off to the
+nearest village. The interior of the castle was found filled with
+munitions of war, in the shape of huge beams and piles of stones
+laboriously carried up the winding stairs, and heaped on all the
+landing-places in readiness for use. On the flat roof of the castle was
+established a sort of furnace for heating water or oil, to be poured
+down upon the besiegers; and crowbars lay there in readiness to loosen
+out and dislodge the battlements, and topple them over upon the
+assailants.
+
+The officers soon made their way all over the building, and thence
+proceeded to the residence of Mr. Burke near by, a large and very
+commodious house. All the formalities were gone through with, a
+detachment of policemen was put in charge, and the rest of the forces
+set out on their return to Portumna, before the organised "defenders" of
+Cloondadauv, hastily called out of their comfortable beds or from their
+breakfast-tables had realised the situation, and got the populace into
+motion. A mass meeting was held in the neighbourhood, and many speeches
+were made. But the castle and the farm-house and the holding all remain
+in the hands of a cool, quiet, determined-looking young Ulsterman, who
+tells me that he is getting on very well, and feels quite able with his
+police-guard to protect himself. "Once in a while," he said, "they come
+here from Loughrea with English Parliament-men, and stand outside of the
+gate, and call me 'Clanricarde's dog,' and make like speeches at me; but
+I don't mind them, and they see it, and go away again."
+
+Of Mr. Burke, the evicted tenant here, Mr. Crawford, the Protestant
+clergyman at Portumna, told me that he was abundantly able to pay his
+rent. The whole debt for which Burke was evicted was £115; and Mr.
+Crawford said he had himself offered Burke £300 for the holding. Burke
+would have gladly taken this, but "the League wouldn't let him." When
+his right was put up for sale at Galway for £5, he did not dare to buy
+it in, and he is now living with his wife and children on the League
+funds. Lord Clanricarde's agent offered to take him back and restore his
+right if he would pay what he owed; but he dared not accept. This farm
+comprises over one hundred and ten English acres, which Burke held at a
+rent--fixed by the Land Court--of £77, the valuation for taxes being
+£83.
+
+To call the eviction of such a tenant in such circumstances from such a
+holding a "sentence of death," is making ducks and drakes of the English
+language. Mr. Crawford's opinion, founded upon a thorough personal
+knowledge of the region, is that there is no exceptional distress in
+this part of Ireland, and that over-renting has nothing to do with such
+distress as does exist here. The case of a man named Egan, one of the
+"victims" of the Woodford evictions of 1886, certainly bears out this
+view of the matter. Egan, who was a tenant, not at all of Lord
+Clanricarde, but of a certain Mrs. Lewis, had occupied for twenty years
+a holding of about sixteen Irish acres, or more than twenty English
+acres. This he held at a yearly rental of £8, 15s., being 9d. over the
+valuation.
+
+In August 1886 he was evicted for refusing to pay one year's rent then
+due. At that time the crops standing on the land were valued by him at
+£60, 13s. He also owned six beasts. In other words, this man, when he
+was called upon to pay a debt of £8, 15s. had in his own possession,
+beside the valuable tenant-right of his holding, more than a hundred
+pounds sterling of merchantable assets. He refused to pay, and he was
+evicted.
+
+This was in August 1886. But such are the ideas now current in Ireland
+as to the relations of landlord and tenant, that immediately after his
+eviction Egan sent his daughter to gather some cabbages off the farm as
+if nothing had happened. The Emergency men in charge actually objected,
+and sent the damsel away. Thereupon Egan, on the 6th of September,
+served a legal notice on Mrs. Lewis, his landlady, requiring her either
+to let him take all the crops on the farm, or to pay him their value,
+estimated by him, as I have said, at £60, 13s. Two days after this, on
+the 8th of September, more than a hundred men came to the place by night
+and removed the greater portion of the crops. Not wishing a return of
+these visitors, Mrs. Lewis, on the 16th of September, sent word to Egan
+to come and take away what was left of the crops; one of the horses
+employed in the nocturnal harvest of September 8th having been seized by
+the police and identified as belonging to Egan. Egan did not respond;
+but in July 1887 he brought an action against his landlady to recover
+£100 sterling for her "detention of his goods," and her "conversion of
+the same to her own use "!
+
+The case was heard by the Recorder at Kilmainham, and the facts which I
+have briefly recited were established by the evidence. The daughter of
+this extraordinary "victim" Egan appeared as a witness, so "fashionably
+dressed" as to attract a remark on the subject from the defendant's
+counsel. To this she replied that "her brothers in America sent her
+money."
+
+"If your brothers in America sent you money for such purposes," not
+unnaturally observed the Recorder, "why did they allow your father to
+sacrifice crops worth £60 for the non-payment of £8, 15s.?"
+
+"They were tired of that," said the young lady airily; "the land wasn't
+worth the rent!"
+
+That is to say, a farm which yielded a crop of £60, and pastured several
+head of cattle, was not worth £8, 15s. a year. Certainly it was not
+worth £8, 15s. a year if the tenant under the operation of the existing
+or the impending laws of Great Britain in Ireland could get, or hope to
+get it for the half of that rent, or for no rent at all.
+
+But this being thus, on what grounds are the rest of mankind invited to
+regard this excellent man as a "victim" worthy of sympathy and of
+material aid? How had he come to be in arrears of a year in August 1886?
+The proceedings at Kilmainham tell us this.
+
+In November 1885 he had demanded, with other tenants of Mrs. Lewis, a
+reduction of 50 per cent. This would have given him his holding at a
+rental of £4, 7s. 6d. Mrs. Lewis refused the concession, and a month
+afterwards an attempt was made to blow up her son's house with dynamite.
+Between that time and August 1886, all the efforts of her son, who was
+also her agent, to collect her dues by seizing beasts, were defeated by
+the driving away of the cattle, so that no remedy but an eviction was
+left to her. I take it for granted that Mrs. Lewis had a family to
+maintain, and debts of one sort and another to pay, as well as Mr.
+Egan--but I observe this material difference between her position and
+his during the whole of this period of "strained relations" between
+herself and her tenant, that whereas she lay completely out of the
+enjoyment of the rent due her, being the interest on her capital,
+represented in her title to the land, Mr. Egan remained in the complete
+enjoyment and use of the land. Clearly the tenant was in a better
+position than the landlord, and as we are dealing not with the history
+of Ireland in the past, but with the condition of Ireland at present, it
+appears to me to be quite beside the purpose to ask my sympathies for
+Mr. Egan on the ground that a century or half a century ago the
+ancestors of Mr. Egan may have been at the mercy of the ancestors of
+Mrs. Lewis. However that may have been, Mr. Egan seems to me now to have
+had legally much the advantage of Mrs. Lewis. Not only this. Both
+legally and materially Mr. Egan, the tenant-farmer at Woodford, seems to
+me to have had much the advantage of thousands of his countrymen living
+and earning their livelihood by their daily labour in such a typical
+American commonwealth, for example, as Massachusetts. I have here with
+me the Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of
+Massachusetts. From this I learn that in 1876 the average yearly wages
+earned by workmen in Massachusetts were $482.72, or in round numbers
+something over £96. Out of this amount the Massachusetts workman had to
+feed, clothe, and house himself, and those dependent on him.
+
+His outlay for rent alone was on the average $109.07, or in round
+numbers rather less than £22, making 22-1/2 per cent, of his earnings.
+
+How was it with Mr. Egan? Out of his labour on his holding he got
+merchantable crops worth £60 sterling, or in round numbers $300, besides
+producing in the shape of vegetables and dairy stuff, pigs and poultry,
+certainly a very large proportion of the food necessary for his
+household, and raising and fattening beasts, worth at a low estimate £20
+or $100 more. And while thus engaged, his outlay for rent, which
+included not only the house in which he lived, but the land out of which
+he got the returns of his labour expended upon it, was £8, 15s., or
+considerably less than one-half the outlay of the Massachusetts workman
+upon the rent of nothing more than a roof to shelter himself and his
+family. Furthermore, the money thus paid out by the Massachusetts
+workman for rent was simply a tribute paid for accommodation had and
+enjoyed, while out of every pound sterling paid as rent by the Irish
+tenant there reverted to his credit, so long as he continued to fulfil
+his legal obligations, a certain proportion, calculable, valuable, and
+saleable, in the form of his tenant-right.
+
+I am not surprised to learn that the Recorder dismissed the suit brought
+by Mr. Egan, and gave costs against him. But the mere fact that in such
+circumstances it was possible for Egan to bring such a suit, and get a
+hearing for it, makes it quite clear that Americans of a sympathetic
+turn of mind can very easily find much more meritorious objects of
+sympathy than the Irish tenant-farmers of Galway without crossing the
+Atlantic in quest of them.
+
+From Cloondadauv to Loughrea we had a long but very interesting drive,
+passing on the way, and at no great distance from each other, Father
+Coen's neat, prosperous-looking presbytery of Ballinakill, and the shop
+and house of a local boat-builder named Tully, who is pleasantly known
+in the neighbourhood as "Dr. Tully," by reason of his recommendation of
+a very particular sort of "pills for landlords." The presbytery is now
+occupied by Father Coen, who finds it becoming his position as the moral
+teacher and guide of his people to be in arrears of two and a half years
+with the rent of his holding, and who is said to have entertained Mr.
+Blunt and other sympathising statesmen very handsomely on their visit to
+Loughrea and Woodford,[15] "Dr." Tully being one of the guests invited
+to meet them.[16] Not far from this presbytery, Mr. Tener showed me the
+scene of one of the most cowardly murders which have disgraced this
+region. Of Loughrea, the objective of our drive this morning, Sir George
+Trevelyan, I am told, during his brief rule in Ireland, found it
+necessary to say that murder had there become an institution. Woodford,
+previously a dull and law-abiding spot, was illuminated by a lurid light
+of modern progress about three years ago, upon the transfer thither in
+the summer of 1885 of a priest from Loughrea, familiarly known as "the
+firebrand priest."
+
+In November of that year, as I have already related, Mr. Egan and other
+tenants of Mrs. Lewis of Woodford made their demand for a 50 per cent.
+reduction of their rents, upon the refusal of which an attempt was made
+with dynamite on the 18th December to blow up the house of Mrs. Lewis's
+son and agent. All the bailiffs in the region round about were warned to
+give up serving processes, and many of them were cowed into doing so.
+One man, however, was not cowed. This was a gallant Irish soldier,
+discharged with honour after the Crimean war, and known in the country
+as "Balaklava," because he was one of the "noble six hundred," who there
+rode "into the jaws of death, into the valley of hell." His name was
+Finlay, and he was a Catholic. At a meeting in Woodford, Father Coen
+(the priest now in arrears), it is said, looked significantly at Finlay,
+and said, "no process-server will be got to serve processes for Sir
+Henry Burke of Marble Hill." The words and the look were thrown away on
+the veteran who had faced the roar and the crash of the Russian guns,
+and later on, in December 1885, Finlay did his duty, and served the
+processes given to him. From that moment he and his wife were
+"boycotted." His own kinsfolk dared not speak to him. His house was
+attacked by night. He was a doomed man. On the 3d March 1886, about 2
+o'clock P.M., he left his house--which Mr. Tener pointed out to me--to
+cut fuel in a wood belonging to Sir Henry Burke, at no great distance.
+Twice he made the journey between his house and the wood. The third time
+he went and returned no more. His wife growing uneasy at his prolonged
+absence went out to look for him. She found his body riddled with
+bullets lying lifeless in the highway. The police who went into Woodford
+with the tale report the people as laughing and jeering at the agony of
+the widowed woman. She was with them, and, maddened by the savage
+conduct of these wretched creatures, she knelt down over-against the
+house of Father Egan, and called down the curse of God upon him.
+
+On the next day things were worse. No one could be found to supply a
+coffin for the murdered man.[17] When the police called upon the priests
+to exert their influence and enforce some semblance at least of
+Christian and Catholic decency upon the people confided to their charge,
+the priests not only refused to do their duty, but floutingly referred
+the police to Lady Mary Burke. "He did her work," they said, "let her
+send a hearse now to bury him." The lady thus insolently spoken of is
+one of the best of the Catholic women of Ireland. At her summons Father
+Burke, a few years only before his death, I remember, made a long winter
+journey, though in very bad health, from Dublin to Marble Hill to soothe
+the last hours and attend the death-bed of her husband.
+
+No one who knew and loved him can wish him to have lived to hear from
+her lips such a tale of the degradation of Catholic priests in his own
+land of Galway.
+
+Mr. Tener pointed out to me, at another place on the road, near
+Ballinagar, the deserted burying-ground in which, after much trouble, a
+grave was found for the brave old soldier who had escaped the Russian
+cannon-balls to be so foully done to death by felons of his own race.
+There the last rites were performed by Father Callaghy, a priest who was
+himself "boycotted" for resigning the presidency of the League in his
+parish, and for the still graver offence of paying his rent. For weeks
+it was necessary to guard the grave![18]
+
+From that day to this no one has been brought to justice for this crime,
+committed in broad daylight, and within sight of the highway. Mr. Place,
+whom I saw at Portumna, told me that he believed the police had no moral
+doubt as to the murderer of Finlay, but that it was useless to think of
+getting legal evidence to convict him.
+
+Mr. Tener tells me that when Mr. Wilfrid Blunt came to Woodford he went
+with Father Egan, and accompanied by the police, to see the widow of
+this murdered man, heard from her own lips the sickening story, and took
+notes of it. But when Mr. Rowlands, M.P., an English "friend of Home
+Rule," was examined the other day during the trial of Mr. Blunt, he was
+obliged to confess that though he had visited Woodford more than once,
+and conversed freely with Mr. Blunt about it, he had "never heard of the
+murder of Finlay."
+
+Such an incident is apparently of little interest to politicians at
+Westminster. Fortunately for Ireland, it is of a nature to command more
+attention at the Vatican.
+
+Nature has sketched the scenery of this part of Ireland with a free,
+bold hand. It is not so grand or so wild as the scenery of Western
+Donegal, but it has both a wildness and a grandeur of its own. Sir Henry
+Burke's seat of Marble Hill, as seen in the distance from the road,
+stands superbly, high up on a lofty range of wooded hills, from which it
+commands the country for miles. And no town I have seen in Ireland is
+more picturesquely placed than Loughrea. It has an almost Italian aspect
+as you approach it from Woodford. But no lake in Lombardy or Piedmont is
+so peculiarly and exquisitely tinted as the lough on which it stands.
+The delicate grey-green of the sparkling waters reminded me of the
+singular and well-defined belts and stretches of chrysoprase upon which
+you sometimes come in sailing through the dark azure of the Southern
+Seas. I have never before seen precisely such a hue in any body of fresh
+water. The lake is incorrectly described, Mr. Tener tells me, in the
+guide-books, as being one of the many curious developments of the Lower
+Shannon. It is fed by springs, but if, like the river-lakes, it was
+formed by a solution of the limestone, this fact may have some chemical
+relation with its very peculiar colour. It contains three picturesque
+islands. No stream flows into it, but two streams issue from it. The
+town of Loughrea is an ancient holding of the De Burghs, and the
+estate-office of Lord Clanricarde is here in one wing of a great
+barrack, standing, as I understood Mr. Tener to say, on the site of a
+former fortress of the family. Lord Clanricarde's property here is put
+down by Mr. Hussey de Burgh at 49,025 acres in County Galway, valued at
+£19,634, and at 3576 acres in the county of the City of Galway, valued
+at £1202. These, I believe, are statute acres, and in estimating the
+relation of Irish rentals to Irish land this fact must be always
+ascertained. Of the so-called "Woodford" property the present rental is
+no more than £1900, payable by 260 tenants. The Poor-Law valuation for
+taxes is £2400. There was a revision of the whole Galway property made
+by the father of the present Marquis. Of the 260 Woodford holdings only
+twelve were increased, in no case more than 6-1/4 per cent, over the
+valuation. In 1882 six of these twelve tenants applied to the Land
+Court. The rents were in no case restored to the figures before 1872,
+but about 7 per cent. was taken off the increased rental. The assertion
+repeatedly made that in 1882 rents were reduced by the Land Court 50 per
+cent. on the Clanricarde estates, Mr. Tener tells me, is absolutely
+false. In the first year of the Court no reduction went beyond 10 per
+cent., and in later years, even under the panic of low prices, the
+average has not exceeded 20 per cent.
+
+After making arrangements for a car to take me on to Woodlawn, where I
+was to catch the Dublin train, I went out with Mr. Tener to look at the
+town.
+
+My drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn was delightful. It took me over a
+long stretch of the best hunting country of Galway, and my jarvey was a
+Galwegian of the type dear to the heart of Lever. He was a "Nationalist"
+after his fashion, but he did not hesitate to come rattling up through
+the town to the Estate Office to take me up; and after we got fairly off
+upon the highway, he spoke with more freedom than respect of all sorts
+and conditions of men in and about Loughrea.
+
+"He's a sharp little man, that Mr. Tener," he said, "and he gave the
+boys a most beautiful beating at Burke's place."
+
+This was said with genuine gusto, and not at all in the querulous spirit
+of the delightful member of Parliament who complained at Westminster
+with unconscious humour that the agent and the police in that case had
+"dishonourably" stolen a march on the defenders of Cloondadauv!
+
+"But we've beaten them entirely," he said, with equal zest, "at Marble
+Hill. Sir Henry has agreed to pay all the costs, and the living expenses
+too, of the poor men that were put out.[19] I didn't ever think we'd get
+that; but ye see the truth is," he added confidentially, "he must have
+the money, Sir Henry--he's lying out of a deal, and then there's heavy
+charges on the property. A fine property it is indeed!"
+
+"In fact," I said, "you put Sir Henry to the wall. Is that it?"
+
+"Well, it's like that. But we shan't get that out of Clanricarde, I'm
+thinking. He's got a power o' money they tell me; and he's that of the
+ould Burke blood, he won't mind fighting just as long as you like!"
+
+As we drove along, he pointed out to me several fine stretches of
+hunting country, and, to my surprise, informed me that only the other
+day "there was as fine a meet as ever you saw, more than a hundred
+ladies and gentlemen--a grand sight it was."
+
+I asked if the hunting had not been "put down by the League."
+
+"Oh, now then, sir, who'd be wanting to put down the hunting here in
+Galway?--and Ballinasloe? Were you ever at Ballinasloe? just the
+grandest horse fair there is in the whole wide world!"
+
+I insisted that I had always heard a great deal about the opposition of
+the League to hunting.
+
+"Oh, that'll be some little lawyer fellow," he replied, "like that
+Healy, that can't sit on a horse! It's the grandest country in all the
+world for riding over. What for wouldn't they ride over it?"
+
+"Were there many went out to America from about Loughrea?"
+
+"Oh, yes; they were always coming and going. But as many came back."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Oh, they didn't like the country. It wasn't as good a country, was it,
+as old Ireland? And they had to work too hard; and then some of them got
+money, and they'd like to spend it in the old place."
+
+The country about Woodlawn is very picturesque and well wooded, and for
+a long distance we followed the neatly-kept stone walls of the large and
+handsome park of Lord Ashtown.
+
+"The most beautiful and biggest trees in all Ireland, sorr," said the
+jarvey, "and it's a great pity, it is, ye can't stay to let me drive you
+all over it, for the finest part of the park is just what you can't see
+from this road. Oh, her ladyship would never object to any gentleman
+driving about to see the beauties of the place. She is a very good
+woman, is her ladyship. She gave work the last Christmas to thirty-two
+men, and there wasn't another house in the country there that had work
+for more than ten or twelve. A very good woman she is, indeed."
+
+"Yes, that is a very handsome church, it is indeed. It is the Protestant
+Church. Lord Ashtown built it; he was a very good man too, and did a
+power of good--building and making roads, and giving work to the people.
+He was buried there in that Castle, over the station--Trench's Castle,
+they called it."
+
+"All that lumber there by the station?"
+
+"That came out of the Ashtown woods. They were always cutting down the
+trees; there was so many of them you might be cutting for years--you
+would never get to the end of them."
+
+Woodlawn Station is one of the neatest and prettiest railway stations I
+have seen in Ireland--more like a picturesque stone cottage, green and
+gay with flowers, than like a station. The station-master's family of
+cheery well-dressed lads and lasses went and came about the bright fire
+in the waiting-room in a friendly unobtrusive fashion, chatting with the
+policeman and the porter and the passengers. It was hard to believe
+one's-self within an easy drive of the "cockpit of Ireland."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+BORRIS, _Friday, March 2d._--This is the land of the Kavanaghs, and a
+lovely, picturesque, richly-wooded land it is. I left Dublin with Mr.
+Gyles by an afternoon train; the weather almost like June. We ran from
+the County of Dublin into Kildare, and from Kildare into Carlow, through
+hills; rural scenery quite unlike anything I have hitherto seen in
+Ireland. At Bagnalstown, a very pretty place, with a spire which takes
+the eye, our host joined us, and came on with us to this still more
+attractive spot. Borris has been the seat of his family for many
+centuries. The MacMorroghs of Leinster, whom the Kavanaghs lineally
+represent, dwelt here long before Dermot MacMorrogh, finding his
+elective throne in Leinster too hot to hold him, went off into
+Aquitaine, to get that famous "letter of marque" from Henry II. of
+England, with the help of which this king without a kingdom induced
+Richard de Clare, an earl without an earldom, to lend him a hand and
+bring the Normans into Ireland. Many of this race lie buried in the
+ruins of St. Mullen's Abbey, on the Barrow, in this county. But none of
+them, I opine, ever did such credit to the name as its present
+representative, Arthur MacMorrogh Kavanagh.
+
+I had some correspondence with Mr. Kavanagh several years ago, when he
+sent me, through my correspondent for publication in New York, a very
+striking statement of his views on the then condition of Irish
+affairs--views since abundantly vindicated; and like most people who
+have paid any attention to the recent history of Ireland, I knew how
+wonderful an illustration his whole career has been of what philosophers
+call the superiority of man to his accidents, and plain people the power
+of the will. But I knew this only imperfectly. His servant brought him
+up to the carriage and placed him in it. This it was impossible not to
+see. But I had not talked with him for five minutes before it quite
+passed out of my mind. Never was there such a justification of the
+paradoxical title which Wilkinson gave to his once famous book, _The
+Human Body, and its Connexion with Man_,--never such a living refutation
+of the theory that it is the thumb which differentiates man from the
+lower animals. Twenty times this evening I have been reminded of the
+retort I heard made the other day at Cork by a lawyer, who knows Mr.
+Kavanagh well, to a priest of "Nationalist" proclivities, who knows him
+not at all. Some allusion having been made to Borris, the lawyer said to
+me, "You will see at Borris the best and ablest Irishman alive." On this
+the priest testily and tartly broke in, "Do you mean the man without
+hands or feet?"
+
+"I mean," replied the lawyer, very quietly, "the man in whom all that
+has gone in you or me to arms and legs has gone to heart and head!"
+
+Borris House stands high in the heart of an extensive and nobly wooded
+park, and commands one of the finest landscapes I have seen in Ireland.
+As we stood and gazed upon it from the hall door, the distant hills were
+touched with a soft purple light such as transfigures the Apennines at
+sunset.
+
+"You should see this view in June," said Mrs, Kavanagh, "we are all
+brown and bare now."
+
+Brown and bare, like most other terms, are relative. To the eye of an
+American this whole region now seems a sea of verdure, less clear and
+fresh, I can easily suppose, than it may be in the early summer, but
+verdure still. And one must get into the Adirondacks, or up among the
+mountains of Western Virginia, to find on our Atlantic slope such trees
+as I have this evening seen. One grand ilex near the house could hardly
+be matched in the Villa d'Este.
+
+The house is stately and commodious, and more ancient than it appears to
+be,--so many additions have been made to it at different times. It has
+passed through more than one siege, and in the '98 Mr. Kavanagh tells me
+the townspeople of Borris came up here and sought refuge. There are vast
+caverns under the house and grounds, doubtless made by taking out from
+the hill the stone used in building this house, and the fortresses which
+stood here before it. In these all sorts of stores were kept, and many
+of the people found shelter.
+
+I need not say that there is a banshee at Borris--though no living
+witness, I believe, has heard its warning wail. But as we sat in the
+beautiful library, and watched the dying light of day, a lady present
+told us a tale more gruesome than many of those in which the "psychical"
+inquirers delight. She was sitting, she said, in an upper room of an
+ancient mansion here in Carlow, in which she lives, when, from the lawn
+below, there came up to her a low, sad, shrill cry--the croon of a
+woman, such as one hears from the mourners sitting among the turbaned
+tombstones of the hill of Eyoub at Constantinople. It startled her, and
+she held her breath and listened. She was alone, as she knew, in that
+part of the house, and the hall door below was unlocked, as is the
+fashion still in Ireland, despite all the troubles and turmoils. Again
+the sound came, and this time nearer to the house. Could it be the
+banshee? Again and again it rose and died away, each time nearer and
+nearer. Then, as she listened, all her nerves strung to the keenest
+sensibility, it came again, and now, beyond a doubt, within the hall
+below.
+
+With an effort she rose from her chair, opened a door leading into a
+corridor running aside from the main stairway, and fled at full speed
+towards the wing in which she knew that she would find some of the
+maids. As she sped along she heard the cry again and again far behind
+her, as from a creature slowly and steadily mounting the grand stairway
+towards the room which she had just quitted.
+
+She found the maids, who fell into a terrible fright when she told her
+story and dared not budge. So the bells were violently rung till the
+butler and footman appeared. To the first she said simply, "There is a
+mad woman in this house--go and find her!"
+
+"The man looked at me," she said, "as I spoke with a curious expression
+in his face as of one who thought, 'yes, there is a mad woman in the
+house, and she is not far to seek!'"
+
+But the lady insisted, and the men finally went off on their quest. In
+the course of half an hour it was rewarded. The mad woman--a dangerous
+creature--who had wandered away from an asylum in the neighbourhood, was
+found curled up and fast asleep in the lady's own bed!
+
+Fancy a delicate woman going alone into her bedroom at midnight to be
+suddenly confronted by an apparition of that sort!
+
+
+BORRIS, _March 3d._--After a stroll on the lawn this morning, the wide
+and glorious prospect bathed in the light of a really soft spring day, I
+had a conversation with Mr. Kavanagh about the Land Corporation, of
+which he is the guiding spirit. This is a defensive organisation of the
+Irish landlords against the Land League. When a landlord has been driven
+into evicting his tenants, the next step, in the "war against
+landlordism," is to prevent other tenants from taking the vacated lands
+and cultivating them. This is accomplished by "boycotting" any man who
+does this as a "land-grabber."
+
+The ultimate sanction of the "boycott" being "murder," derelict farms
+increased under this system very rapidly; and the Eleventh Commandment
+of the League, "Thou shalt not pay the rent which thy neighbour hath
+refused to pay," was in a fair way to dethrone the Ten Commandments of
+Sinai throughout Ireland, even before the formal adoption in 1886 of the
+"Plan of Campaign."
+
+Mr. Gladstone would perhaps have hit the facts more accurately, if,
+instead of calling an eviction in Ireland a "sentence of death," he had
+called the taking of a tenancy a sentence of death. Mr. Hussey at Lixnaw
+had two tenants, Edmond and James Fitzmaurice. Edmond Fitzmaurice was
+"evicted" in May 1887; but he was taken into the house of a neighbour,
+made very comfortable, and still lives. James Fitzmaurice took, for the
+sake of the family, the land from which Edmond was evicted, and for this
+he was denounced as a "land-grabber," boycotted, and finally shot dead
+in the presence of his daughter.
+
+At a meeting in Dublin in the autumn of 1885, a parish priest, the Rev.
+Mr. Cantwell, described it as a "cardinal virtue" that "no one should
+take a farm from which another had been evicted," and called upon the
+people who heard him to "pass any such man by unnoticed, and treat him
+as an enemy in their midst." Public opinion and the law, if not the
+authorities of his church would make short work of any priest who talked
+in this fashion in New York. But in Ireland, and under the British
+Government, it seems they order things differently. So it occurred one
+day to the landlords thus assailed, as it did to the sea-lions of the
+Cape of Good Hope when the French sailors attacked them, that they might
+defend themselves.
+
+To this end the Land Corporation was instituted, with a considerable
+capital at its back, and Mr. Kavanagh at its head. The "plan of
+campaign" of this Corporation is to take over from the landlords
+derelict lands and cultivate them, stocking them where that is
+necessary.
+
+It is in this way that the derelict lands on the Ponsonby property at
+Youghal are now worked. But Mr. Kavanagh tells me that the men employed
+by the Corporation, of whom Father Keller spoke as a set of desperadoes
+or "_enfants perdus_," are really a body of resolute and capable working
+men farmers. Many, but by no means all of them, are Protestants and
+Ulstermen; and that they are up to their work would seem to be shown by
+the fact stated to me, that in no case so far have any of them been
+deterred and driven off from the holdings confided to them. A great part
+of the Luggacurren property of Lord Lansdowne is now worked by the
+Corporation; and Mr. Kavanagh was kind enough to let me see the
+accounts, which indicate a good business result for the current year on
+that property. This is all very interesting. But what a picture it
+presents of social demoralisation! And what is to be the end of it all?
+Can a country be called civilised in which a farmer with a family to
+maintain, having the capital and the experience necessary to manage
+successfully a small farm, is absolutely forbidden, on pain of social
+ostracism, and eventually on pain of death, by a conspiracy of his
+neighbours, to take that farm of its lawful owner at what he considers
+to be a fair rent? And how long can any civilisation of our complex
+modern type endure in a country in which such a state of things
+tolerated by the alleged Government of that country has to be met, and
+more or less partially mitigated, by deviating to the cultivation of
+farms rendered in this way derelict large amounts of capital which might
+be, and ought to be, far more profitably employed in other ways?
+
+Mr. Kavanagh, after serving the office of High Sheriff thirty years ago,
+first for Kilkenny, and then for Carlow, sat in Parliament for fourteen
+years, from 1866 to 1880, as an Irish county member. He has a very large
+property here in Carlow, and property also in Wexford, and in Kilkenny,
+and was sworn into the Privy Council two years ago. If the personal
+interests and the family traditions of any man alive can be said to be
+rooted in the Irish soil, this is certainly true of his interests and
+his traditions. How can the peace and prosperity of Ireland be served by
+a state of things which condemns an Irishman of such ties and such
+training to expend his energies and his ability in defending the
+elementary right of Paddy O'Rourke to take stock and work a ten-acre
+farm on terms that suit himself and his landlord?
+
+In the afternoon we took a delightful walk through the woods, Mr.
+Kavanagh going with us on horseback. Every hill and clump of trees on
+this large domain he knows, and he led us like a master of woodcraft
+through all manner of leafy byways to the finest points of view. The
+Barrow flows past Borris, making pictures at every turn, and the banks
+on both sides are densely and beautifully wooded. We came in one place
+upon a sawmill at work in the forest, and Mr. Kavanagh showed us with
+pride the piles of excellent timber which he turns out here. But he took
+a greater pride in a group, sacred from the axe, of really magnificent
+Scotch firs, such as I had certainly not expected to find in Ireland.
+Nearer the mansion are some remarkable Irish yews. The gardens are of
+all sorts and very extensive, but we found the head-gardener bitterly
+lamenting the destruction by a fire in one of the conservatories of more
+than six thousand plants just prepared for setting out.
+
+There are many curious old books and papers here, and a student of early
+Irish history might find matter to keep him well employed for a long
+time in this region. It was from this region and the race which ruled
+it, of which race Mr. Kavanagh is the actual representative, that the
+initiative came of the first Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. Strongbow
+made what, from the Anglo-Norman point of view, was a perfectly
+legitimate bargain, with a dispossessed prince to help him to the
+recovery of his rights on the understanding that these rights, when
+recovered, should pass in succession to himself through the only
+daughter of the prince, whom he proposed to marry. It does not appear
+that Strongbow knew, or that Dermot MacMorrogh cared to tell him, how
+utterly unlike the rights of an Anglo-Norman prince were those of the
+elective life-tenant of an Irish principality. FitzStephen, the son by
+her second marriage of Nesta, the Welsh royal mistress of Henry
+Beauclerk, and his cousin, Maurice Fitzgerald, the leaders into Ireland
+of the Geraldines, were no more clear in their minds about this than
+Strongbow, and it is to the original muddle thus created that Professor
+Richey doubtless rightly refers the worst and most troublesome
+complications of the land question in Ireland. The distinction between
+the King's lieges and the "mere Irish," for example, is unquestionably a
+legal distinction, though it is continually and most mischievously used
+as if it were a proof of the race-hatred borne by the Normans and Saxons
+in Ireland from the first against the Celts. The O'Briens, the O'Neills,
+the O'Mullaghlins, the O'Connors, and the M'Morroghs, "the five bloods,"
+as they are called, were certainly Celts, but whether in virtue of their
+being, or claiming to be, the royal races respectively of Minister, of
+Ulster, of Meath, of Connaught, and of Leinster, or from whatever other
+reason, these races were "within the king's law," and were never "mere
+Irish" from the first planting of the Anglo-Norman power in Ireland. The
+case of a priest, Shan O'Kerry, "an Irish enemy of the king," presented
+"contrary to the form of statute" to the vicarage of Lusk, in the reign
+of Edward IV. (1465), illustrates this. An Act of Parliament was passed
+to declare the aforesaid "Shan O'Kerry," or "John of Kevernon," to be
+"English born, and of English nation," and that he might "hold and enjoy
+the said benefice."
+
+There is a genealogy here of the M'Morroghs and Kavanaghs, most
+gorgeously and elaborately gotten up many years ago for Mr. Kavanagh's
+grandfather, which shows how soon the Norman and the native strains of
+blood become commingled. When one remembers how much Norman blood must
+have gone even into far-off Connaught when King John, in the early part
+of the thirteenth century, coolly gave away that realm of the O'Connors
+to the De Burgos, and how continually the English of the Pale fled from
+the exactions inflicted upon them by their own people, and sought refuge
+"among the savage and mere Irish," one cannot help thinking that the"
+Race Question" has been "worked for at least all it is worth" by
+philosophers bent on unravelling the 'snarl' of Irish affairs. If this
+genealogy may be trusted, there was little to choose between the ages
+which immediately preceded and the ages which followed the Anglo-Norman
+invasion in the matter of respect for human life. Celtic chiefs and
+Norman knights "died in their boots" as regularly as frontiersmen in
+Texas. One personage is designated in the genealogy as "the murderer,"
+for the truly Hibernian reason, so far as appears, that he was himself
+murdered while quite a youth, and before he had had a chance to murder
+more than three or four of his immediate relatives. It was as if the son
+of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Lady Constance should be branded in
+history as "Arthur, the Assassin."
+
+
+BORRIS, _March 4th._--This is a staunch Protestant house, and Mr.
+Kavanagh himself reads a Protestant service every morning. But there is
+little or nothing apparently in this part of Ireland of the bitter
+feeling about and against the Catholics which exists in the North. A
+very lively and pleasant Catholic gentleman came in to-day informally
+and joined the house party at luncheon. We all walked out over the
+property afterwards, visiting quite a different region from that which
+we saw yesterday--different but equally beautiful and striking, and this
+Catholic gentleman cited several cases which had fallen within his own
+knowledge of priests who begin to feel their moral control of the people
+slipping away from them through the operation of the "Plan of Campaign."
+I told him what I had heard in regard to one such priest from my
+ecclesiastical friend in Cork. "It does not surprise me at all," he
+said, "and, indeed, I not very long ago read precisely such another
+letter from a priest in a somewhat similar position. I read it with pain
+and shame as a Catholic," he continued, "for it was simply a complete
+admission that the priest, although entirely convinced that his
+parishioners were making most unfair demands upon their landlord to whom
+the letter was addressed, felt himself entirely powerless to bring them
+to a sense of their misconduct." "Had this priest given in his adhesion
+to the Plan of Campaign?" I asked. "Yes," was the reply, "and it was
+this fact which had broken his hold on the people when he tried to bring
+them to abandon their attitude under the Plan. His letter was really
+nothing more nor less than an appeal to the landlord, and that landlord
+a Protestant, to help him to get out of the hole into which he had put
+himself."
+
+Of the tenants and their relation to the village despots who administer
+the Plan of Campaign, this gentleman had many stories also to tell of
+the same tenor with all that I have hitherto heard on this subject.
+Everywhere it is the same thing. The well-to-do and well-disposed
+tenants are coerced by the thriftless and shiftless. "I have the
+agencies of several properties," he said, "and in some of the best parts
+of Ireland. I have had little or no trouble on any of them, for I have
+one uniform method. I treat every tenant as if he were the only man I
+had to deal with, study his personal ways and character, humour him, and
+get him on my side against himself. You can always do this with an
+Irishman if you will take the trouble to do it. Within the past years I
+have had tenants come and tell me they were in fear the Plan of Campaign
+would be brought upon them, just as if it were a kind of potato disease,
+and beg me to agree to take the rent from them in that case, and just
+not discover on them that they had paid it before it was due!"
+
+This gentleman is a pessimist as to the future. "I am a youngish man
+still," he said, "and a single man, and I am glad of it. I don't believe
+the English will ever learn how to govern this country, and I am sure it
+can never govern itself. Would your people make a State of it?"
+
+To this I replied that with Cuba and Canada and Mexico, all still to be
+digested and assimilated, I thought the deglutition of Ireland by the
+great Republic must be remitted to a future much too remote to interest
+either of us.
+
+"I suppose so," he said in a humorously despondent tone; "and so I see
+nothing for people who think as I do, but Australia or New Zealand!"
+
+Mr. Kavanagh sees the future, I think, in colouring not quite so dark.
+As a public man, familiar for years with the method and ways of British
+Parliaments, he seems to regard the possible future legislation of
+Westminster with more anxiety and alarm than the past or present
+agitations in Ireland. The business of banishing political economy to
+Jupiter and Saturn, however delightful it may be to the people who make
+laws, is a dangerous one to the people for whom the laws are made. While
+he has very positive opinions as to the wisdom of the concession made in
+the successive Land Acts for Ireland, which have been passed since 1870,
+he is much less disquieted, I think, by those concessions, than by the
+spirit by which the legislation granting them has been guided. He thinks
+great good has been already done by Mr. Balfour, and that much more good
+will be done by him if the Irish people are made to feel that clamorous
+resistance to the law will no longer be regarded at Westminster as a
+sufficient reason for changing the law. That is as much as to say that
+party spirit in Great Britain is the chief peril of Ireland to-day. And
+how can any Irishman, no matter what his state in his own country may
+be, or his knowledge of Irish affairs, or his patriotic earnestness and
+desire for Irish prosperity, hope to control the tides of party spirit
+in England or Scotland?
+
+Of the influence upon the people in Ireland of the spirit of recent
+legislation for Ireland, the story of the troubles on the O'Grady
+estate, as Mr. Kavanagh tells it to me, is a most striking illustration.
+"The O'Grady of Kilballyowen," as his title shows, is the direct
+representative, not of any Norman invader, but of an ancient Irish race.
+The O'Gradys were the heads of a sept of the "mere Irish"; and if there
+be such a thing--past, present, or future--as an "Irish nation," the
+place of the O'Gradys in that nation ought to be assumed. Mr. Thomas De
+Courcy O'Grady, who now wears the historic designation, owns and lives
+on an estate of a little more than 1000 acres, in the Golden Vein of
+Ireland, at Killmallock, in the county of Limerick. The land is
+excellent, and for the last half-century certainly it has been let to
+the tenants at rents which must be considered fair, since they have
+never been raised. In 1845, two years before the great famine, the
+rental was £2142. This rental was paid throughout the famine years
+without difficulty; and in 1881 the rental stood at £2108.
+
+There has never been an eviction on the estate until last year, when six
+tenants were evicted. All of these lived in good comfortable houses, and
+were prosperous dairy-farmers. Why were they evicted?
+
+In October 1886, during the candidacy at New York of the Land Reformer,
+Mr. George, Mr. Dillon, M.P., propounded the "Plan of Campaign" at
+Portumna in Galway. The March rents being then due on the estate of The
+O'Grady in Limerick, his agent, Mr. Shine, was directed to continue the
+abatements of 15 per cent, on the judicial rents, and of 25 per cent, on
+all other rents, which had been cheerfully accepted in 1885. But there
+was a priest at Kilballyowen, Father Ryan, who wrought upon the tenants
+until they demanded a general abatement of 40 per cent. This being
+refused, they asked for 30 per cent. on the judicial rents, and 40 per
+cent. on the others. This also being refused, Father Ryan had his way,
+and the "Plan of Campaign" was adopted. The O'Grady's writs issued
+against several of the tenants were met by a "Plan of Campaign" auction
+of cattle at Herbertstown in December 1886, the returns of which were
+paid into "the Fund." For this, one of the tenants, Thomas Moroney, who
+held, besides a a farm of 37 Irish acres, a "public," and five small
+houses, at Herbertstown, and the right to the tolls on cattle at the
+Herbertstown farm, valued at from £50 to £60 a year, and who held all
+these at a yearly rent of £85, was proceeded against. Judge Boyd
+pronounced him a bankrupt.
+
+In the spring of 1887, after The O'Grady had been put to great costs and
+trouble, the tenants made a move. They offered to accept a general
+abatement of 17-1/2 per cent., "The O'Grady to pay all the costs."
+
+Here is the same story again of the small solicitors behind the "Plan of
+Campaign" promoting the strife, and counting on the landlords to defray
+the charges of battle!
+
+The O'Grady responded with the following circular:--
+
+ KlLLBALLYOWEN, BRUFF, CO. LlMERICK,
+
+ _13th August 1877_.
+
+ To my Tenants on Kilballyowen and Herbertstown Estate, Co.
+ Limerick.
+
+ MY FRIENDS,--Pending the evictions by the Sheriff on my estate,
+ caused by your refusal to pay judicial rents on offers of liberal
+ abatements, I desire to remind you of the following facts:--
+
+ I am a resident landlord; my ancestors have dwelt amongst you for
+ over 400 years; every tenant is personally known to me, and the
+ most friendly relations have always existed between us.
+
+ I am not aware of there ever having been an eviction by the Sheriff
+ on my estate.
+
+ Farming myself over 400 acres, and my late agent (Mr. Shine), a
+ tenant farmer living within four miles of my property, I have every
+ opportunity of realising and knowing your wants.
+
+ On the passing of the Land Act of 1881, I desired you to have any
+ benefit it could afford you, and as you nearly all held under
+ lease--which precluded you from going into court--I intimated to
+ you my wish, and offered you to allow your lands to be valued at my
+ expense, or to let you go into court and get your rents fixed by
+ the sub-commissioners.
+
+ You elected to have a valuation made, and Mr. Edmond Moroney was
+ agreed on as a land-valuer, possessing the confidence of tenants
+ and landlord.
+
+ I may mention, up to then I had not known Mr. Moroney personally.
+
+ In 1883 Mr. Moroney valued your holdings, and, as a result, his
+ valuation was accepted (except in three or four cases), and
+ judicial agreements signed by you, at rents ascertained by Mr.
+ Moroney's valuation.
+
+ The late Patrick Hogan objected to Mr. Moroney's valuation of his
+ farm, and went into court, and had his rent fixed by the County
+ Court Judge.
+
+ Thomas Moroney would not allow Mr. Edmond Moroney to value his
+ holding, nor would he go into court, his reason no doubt being he
+ should disclose the receipts of the amount of the tolls of the
+ fairs.
+
+ The rents were subsequently paid on Mr. Moroney's valuation with
+ punctuality.
+
+ In 1885, recognising the fall in prices of stock and produce, and
+ at the request of my late agent, Mr. Shine, I directed him to allow
+ you 15 per cent. on all judicial rents, or rents abated on Mr.
+ Moroney's valuation, and 25 per cent. on all other rents, when you
+ paid punctually and with thanks.
+
+ In October last, when calling in the March 1886 rents, at the
+ instance of Mr. Shine, I agreed to continue the abatement of 15 per
+ cent, and 25 per cent., which, when intimated to you, were refused,
+ and a meeting held, demanding an all-round abatement of 40 per
+ cent.
+
+ This I considered unreasonable and unjust, and I refused to give
+ it.
+
+ The Plan of Campaign was then most unjustly adopted on the estate,
+ and you refused to pay your rents.
+
+ Thomas Moroney was elected as a test case to try the legality of
+ the sale and removal of your property to avoid payment of your
+ rent. His tenancy was a mixed holding of house property in the
+ village of Herbertstown, the tolls of the fairs, and 37 acres of
+ land, at a rent of £85, and a Poor-Law valuation of £73, 5s., made
+ as follows:--
+
+ Land valued at £42 5 0
+ Tolls of fair at 17 0 0
+ Public house and yard at 11 0 0
+ Five small houses and forge at 3 0 0
+ --------
+ £73 5 0
+
+ I always was led to believe the tolls of the fair averaged from £50
+ to £60 a year, there being four fairs in the year; and I believe
+ his reason for refusing to allow Mr. E. Moroney to value his
+ holding, or to go into court, was that he should disclose the
+ amount of the tolls, and in consequence I never considered he was
+ entitled to any abatement; but still I gave it to him, and was
+ prepared to do so. The result of his case was that his conduct in
+ making away with his property was unjustifiable, and his farm and
+ holding was sold out for the benefit of his creditors, and he is no
+ longer a tenant on the estate.
+
+ I subsequently took proceedings against six other tenants, who
+ refused payment of rent, and removed their cattle off the land to
+ avoid payment, and having got judgment against them, the Sheriff
+ sold out four of their farms, and writs of possession on the title
+ were taken out against them, and are now lodged with the Sheriff
+ for execution. I have also got judgments for possession against two
+ other tenants for non-payment of rent, also lodged with the
+ Sheriff. One the widow of Patrick Hogan, who got his rent fixed in
+ the County Court, and the other Mrs. Denis Ryan, whose farm on her
+ marriage I assented to be put in settlement for her protection, Mr.
+ Shine, my agent, consenting to act as one of her trustees, whose
+ name, with his co-trustee, Mr. Thomas FitzGerald, appear as
+ defendants, they having signed her judicial agreement.
+
+ The following are the names of the above tenants, the extent of
+ their holdings, the rent, the Poor-Law valuation, and the average
+ rent per Irish acre:--
+
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | Acreage in | Judicial | Rent | |
+ | TENANT. | Irish | Rent Less 20| per | Poor Law |
+ | | Measure. | per cent. | acre[A]| Valuation |
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | A. R. P. | £ s. d. | | £ s. d. |
+ |John Carroll, | 87 3 38 | 132 4 0 | 30/- | 127 10 0 |
+ |Honora Crimmins, | 35 0 27 | 64 5 6 | 36/6 | 52 15 0 |
+ |James Baggott, | 18 0 0 | 37 16 10 | 42/- | 22 5 0 |
+ |Margaret Moloney, | 23 2 9 | 46 2 8 | 39/2 | 44 15 0 |
+ |Mrs. Denis Ryan, | 66 2 3 | 93 2 5 | 28/- | 96 0 0 |
+ |Maryanne Hogan, | 53 2 33 | 112 0 0 | 41/8 | 117 15 0 |
+ | +------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | 294 3 30 | 485 11 5 | ... | 461 0 0 |
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+
+ [A] Rent per Irish acre after abatement of 20 per cent.
+
+ This represents an average of 34s. the Irish acre, for some of the
+ best land in Ireland, and shows a difference of only £24, 11s. 5d.
+ between the rent, less 20 per cent. now offered, and Poor-Law
+ valuation.
+
+ After putting me to the cost of these proceedings, and giving me
+ every opposition and annoyance, amongst such, compelling my agent
+ (by threats of boycotting) to resign, boycotting myself and
+ household, preventing my servants from attending chapel, and
+ driving my labourers away, negotiations for a settlement were
+ opened, and you offered to accept an all-round abatement of 17-1/2
+ per cent. and to pay up one year's rent, provided I paid all costs,
+ including the costs in Moroney's case; this of course I refused,
+ but with a desire to aid you in coming to a settlement, and to
+ prevent the loss to the tenants of the farms under eviction on the
+ Title, I offered to allow the 17-1/2 per cent. all round on payment
+ of one year's rent and costs, and to give time for payment of the
+ costs as stated in my Solicitor's letter of the 2d June 1887 to
+ Canon Scully.
+
+ This offer was refused, and the writs for possession have been
+ lodged with the Sheriff.
+
+ I never commenced these proceedings in a vindictive spirit, or with
+ any desire to punish any of you for your ungracious conduct, but
+ simply to protect my property from unjust and unreasonable demands.
+
+ You will owe two years' rent next month (September), and I now
+ write you this circular letter to point out to each, individually,
+ the position of the tenants under eviction, and even at this late
+ hour to give them an opportunity of saving their holdings, to
+ enable them to do so, and with a view to settlement, I am now
+ prepared to allow 20 per cent. all round, on payment of a year's
+ rent and costs.
+
+ Under no circumstance will I forego payment of costs, as they must
+ be paid in full.
+
+ If this money be paid forthwith, I will arrange with my brother,
+ the purchaser, to restore the four holdings purchased by him at
+ sheriff's sale to the late tenants.
+
+ After this offer I disclaim any responsibility for the result of
+ the evictions, and the loss attendant thereon, as it now remains
+ with you to avert same.
+
+
+All the evictions have since been carried out, and the Land Corporation
+men are at work upon the estate! Whom has all this advantaged? The
+tenants?--Certainly not. The O'Grady?--Certainly not. The peace and
+order of Ireland?--Certainly not. But it has given the National League
+another appeal to the intelligent "sympathies" of England and America.
+It has strengthened the revolutionary element in Irish society. It has
+"driven another nail into the coffin" of Irish landlordism and of the
+private ownership of land throughout Great Britain.
+
+
+Such at least is the opinion of Mr. Kavanagh. If I were an Englishman or
+a Scotchman, I should be strongly inclined to take very serious account
+of this opinion in forecasting the future of landed property in England
+or Scotland.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+GREENANE HOUSE, THOMASTOWN, _March 5th._--The breakfast-room at Borris
+this morning was gay with pink coats. A meet was to come off at a place
+between Borris and Thomastown, and bidding fare-well to my cordial host
+and hostess, I set out at 11 o'clock for a flying visit to this quaint
+and charming house of Mr. Seigne, one of the best known and most highly
+esteemed agents in this part of Ireland.
+
+My jarvey from Borris had an unusually neat and well-balanced car. When
+I praised it he told me it was "built by an American," not an Irish
+American, I understood him to say, but a genuine Yankee, who, for some
+mysterious reason, has established himself in this region, where he has
+prospered as a cart and car builder ever since. "Just the best cars in
+all Ireland he builds, your honour!" Why don't he naturalise them in
+America?
+
+All the way was charming, the day very bright, and even warm, and the
+hill scenery picturesque at every turn. We looked out sharply for the
+hunt, but in vain. My jarvey, who knew the whole country, said they must
+have broken cover somewhere on the upper road, and we should miss them
+entirely. And so we did.
+
+The silting up of the river Nore has reduced Thomastown or
+Ballymacanton, which was its Irish name, from its former importance as
+an emporium for the country about Kilkenny. The river now is not
+navigable above Inistiogue. But two martial square towers, one at either
+end of a fine bridge which spans the stream here, speak of the good old
+times when the masters of Thomastown took toll and tribute of traders
+and travellers. The lands about the place then belonged to the great
+monastery of Jerpoint, the ruins of which are still the most interesting
+of their kind in this part of Ireland. They have long made a part of the
+estate of the Butlers. We rattled rapidly through the quiet little town,
+and whisking out of a small public square into a sort of wynd between
+two houses, suddenly found ourselves in the precincts of Grenane House.
+The house takes its name from the old castle of Grenane, an Irish
+fortress established here by some native despot long before Thomas
+Fitz-Anthony the Norman came into the land. The ruins of this castle
+still stand some half a mile away. "We call the place Candahar," said
+Mr. Seigne, as he came up with two ladies from the meadows below the
+house, "because you come into it so suddenly, just as you do into that
+Oriental town." But what a charming occidental place it is! It stands
+well above the river, the slope adorned with many fine old trees, some
+of which grow, and grow prosperously, in the queerest and most
+improbable forms, bent double, twisted, but still most green and
+vigorous. They have no business under any known theory of arboriculture
+to be beautiful, but beautiful they are. The views of the bridge, of the
+towers, and of the river, from this slope would make the fortune of the
+place in a land of peace and order.
+
+A most original and delightful lady of the country lunched with
+us,--such a character as Miss Edgeworth or Miss Austen might have drawn.
+Shrewd, humorous, sensible, fearless, and ready with impartial hand to
+box the ears alike of Trojan and of Tyrian. She not only sees both sides
+of the question in Ireland as between the landlords and the tenants, but
+takes both sides of the question. She holds lands by inheritance, which
+make her keenly alive to the wrongs of the landlords, and she holds
+farms as a tenant, which make her implacably critical as to their
+claims. She mercilessly demolished in one capacity whatever she advanced
+in the other, and all with the most perfect nonchalance and good faith.
+This curiously dual attitude reminded me of the confederate General,
+Braxton Bragg, of whom his comrades in the old army of the United States
+used to say that he once had a very sharp official correspondence with
+himself. He happened to hold a staff appointment, being also a line
+officer. So in his quality of a staff officer, he found fault with
+himself in his capacity as a line officer, reprimanded himself sharply,
+replied defiantly to the reprimand, and eventually reported himself to
+himself for discipline at head-quarters. She told an excellent story of
+a near kinsman of hers who, holding a very good living in the Protestant
+Irish Church, came rather unexpectedly by inheritance into a baronetcy,
+upon which his women-folk insisted that it would be derogatory to a
+baronet to be a parson. "Would you believe it, the poor man was silly
+enough to listen to their cackle, and resign seven hundred a year!"
+
+"That didn't clear him," I said, "of the cloth, did it?"
+
+"Not a bit, of course, poor foolish man. He was just as much a parson as
+ever, only without a parsonage. Men are fools enough of themselves,
+don't you think, without needing to listen to women?"
+
+Mr. Seigne comes of a French Protestant stock long ago planted in
+Ireland, and his Gallic blood doubtless helps him to handle the
+practical problems daily submitted in these days to an Irish
+land-agent--problems very different, as he thinks, from those with which
+an Irish agent had to deal in the days before 1870. The Irish tenant has
+a vantage-ground now in his relations with his landlord which he never
+had in the olden time, and this makes it more important than it ever was
+that the agent should have what may be called a diplomatic taste for
+treating with individuals, finding out the bent of mind of this man and
+of that, and negotiating over particulars, instead of insisting, in the
+English fashion, on general rules, without regard to special cases. I
+have met no one who has seemed to me so cool and precise as Mr. Seigne
+in his study of the phenomena of the present situation. I asked him
+whether he could now say, as Mr. Senior did a quarter of century ago,
+that the Irish tenants were less improvident, and more averse from
+running into debt than the English.
+
+"I think not," he replied; "on the contrary, in some parts of Ireland
+now the shopkeepers are kept on the verge of bankruptcy by the
+recklessness with which the tenants incurred debts immediately after the
+passing of the Land Act of 1870--a time when shopkeepers, and bankers
+also, almost forced credit upon the farmers, and made thereby 'bad
+debts' innumerable. Farmers rarely keep anything like an account of
+their receipts and expenses. I know only one tenant-farmer in this
+neighbourhood who keeps what can be called an account, showing what he
+takes from his labour and spends on his living."[20] "They save a great
+deal of money often," he says, "but almost never in any systematic way.
+They spend much less on clothes and furniture, and the outward show of
+things, than English people of the same condition do, and they do not
+stint themselves in meat and drink as the French peasants do. In fact,
+under the operation of existing circumstances, they are getting into the
+way of improving their condition, not so much by sacrifices and savings,
+as by an insistence on rent being fixed low enough to leave full margin
+for improved living."
+
+"I had a very frank statement on this point," said Mr. Seigne, "not long
+ago from a Tipperary man. When I tried to show him that his father had
+paid a good many years ago the very same rent which he declares himself
+unable to pay now, he admitted this at once. But it was a confession and
+avoidance. 'My father could pay the rent, and did pay the rent,' he
+said, 'because he was content to live so that he could pay it. He sat on
+a boss of straw, and ate out of a bowl. He lived in a way in which I
+don't intend to live, and so he could pay the rent. Now, I must have,
+and I mean to have, out of the land, before I pay the rent, the means of
+living as I wish to live; and if I can't have it, I'll sell out and go
+away; but I'll be--if I don't fight before I do that same!'"
+
+"What could you reply to that?" I asked.
+
+"Oh," I said, "'that's square and straightforward. Only just let me know
+the point at which you mean to fight, and then we'll see if we can agree
+about something.'"
+
+"The truth is," said Mr. Seigne, "that there is a pressure upward now
+from below. The labourers don't want to live any longer as the farmers
+have always made them live; and so the farmers, having to consider the
+growing demands of the labourers, and meaning to live better themselves,
+push up against the landlord, and insist that the means of the
+improvement shall come out of him."
+
+He then told me an instructive story of his calling upon a
+tenant-farmer, at whose place he found the labourers sitting about their
+meal of pork and green vegetables. The farmer asked him into another
+room, where he saw the farmer's family making their meal of stirabout
+and milk and potatoes.
+
+"I asked you in here," said the farmer, "because we keep in here to
+ourselves. I don't want those fellows to see that we can't afford to
+give ourselves what we have to give them,"--this with strong language
+indicating that he must himself be given a way to advance equally with
+the progressive labourer, or he would know the reason why!
+
+This afternoon Mr. Seigne drove me over through a beautiful country to
+Woodstock, near Inistiogue, the seat of the late Colonel Tighe, the head
+of the family of which the authoress of "Psyche" was an ornament.
+
+It is the finest place in this part of Ireland, and one of the finest I
+have seen in the three kingdoms, a much more picturesque and more nobly
+planted place indeed than its namesake in England. The mansion has no
+architectural pretensions, being simply a very large and, I should
+think, extremely comfortable house of the beginning of this century. The
+library is very rich, and there are some good pictures, as well as
+certain statues in the vestibule, which would have no interest for the
+Weissnichtwo professor of _Sartor Resartus_, but are regarded with some
+awe by the good people of Inistiogue.
+
+The park would do no discredit to a palace, and if the vague project of
+establishing a royal residence in Ireland for one of the British Princes
+should ever take shape, it would not be easy, I should say, to find a
+demesne more befitting the home of a prince than this of the Tighes. At
+present it serves the State at least as usefully, being the "pleasaunce"
+of the people for miles around, who come here freely to walk and drive.
+
+It stretches for miles along the Nore, and is crowned by a gloriously
+wooded hill nearly a thousand feet in height. The late Colonel Tighe, a
+most accomplished man, and a passionate lover of trees, made it a kind
+of private Kew Gardens. He planted long avenues of the rarest and finest
+trees, araucarias, Scotch firs, oaks, beeches, cedars of Lebanon; laid
+out miles of the most varied and delightful drives, and built the most
+extensive conservatories in Ireland.
+
+The turfed and terraced walks among those conservatories are
+indescribably lovely, and the whole place to-day was vocal with
+innumerable birds. Picturesque little cottages and arbours are to be
+found in unexpected nooks all through the woodlands, each commanding
+some green vista of forest aisles, or some wide view of hill and
+champaign, enlivened by the winding river. From one of those to-day we
+looked out over a landscape to which Turner alone or Claude could have
+done justice, the river, spanned by a fine bridge, in the middle
+distance, and all the region wooded as in the days of which Edmund
+Spenser sings, when Ireland
+
+ "Flourished in fame,
+ Of wealth and goodnesse far above the rest
+ Of all that bears the British Islands' name."
+
+Over the whole place broods an indefinable charm. You feel that this was
+the home at once and the work of a refined and thoughtful spirit. And so
+indeed it was. Here for the greater part of the current century the
+owner lived, making the development of the estate and of this demesne
+his constant care and chief pleasure. And here still lives his widow,
+with whom we took tea in a stately quiet drawing-room. Lady Louisa Tighe
+was in Brussels with her mother, the Duchess of Richmond, on the eve of
+Waterloo. She was a child then of ten years old, and her mother bade
+them bring her down into the historic ball-room before the Duke of
+Wellington left it. The duke took up his sword. "Let Louisa buckle it
+for you," said her mother, and when the little girl had girded it on,
+the great captain stooped, took her up in his arms, and kissed her. "One
+never knows what may happen, child," he said good-naturedly; and taking
+his small gold watch out of his fob, he bade her keep it for him.
+
+She keeps it still. For more than sixty years it has measured out in
+this beautiful Irish home the hours of a life given to good works and
+gracious usefulness. To-day, with all the vivacity of interest in the
+people and the place which one might look for in a woman of twenty, this
+charming old lady of eighty-three, showing barely threescore years in
+her carriage, her countenance, and her voice, entertained us with minute
+and most interesting accounts of the local industries which flourish
+here mainly through her sympathetic and intelligent supervision. We
+seemed to be in another world from the Ireland of Chicago or
+Westminster!
+
+Mr. Seigne drove me back here by a most picturesque road leading along
+the banks of the Nore, quite overhung with trees, which in places dip
+their branches almost into the swift deep stream. "This is the favourite
+drive of all the lovers hereabouts," he said, "and there is a spice of
+danger in it which makes it more romantic. Once, not very long ago, a
+couple of young people, too absorbed in their love-making to watch their
+horse, drove off the bank. Luckily for them they fell into the branches
+of one of these overhanging trees, while the horse and car went plunging
+into the water. There they swung, holding each other hand in hand,
+making a pretty and pathetic tableau, till their cries brought some
+anglers in a boat on the river to the rescue."
+
+We spoke of Lady Louisa, and of the watch of Waterloo. "That watch had a
+wonderful escape a few years ago," said Mr. Seigne.
+
+Lady Louisa, it seems, had a confidential butler whom she most
+implicitly trusted. One day it was found that a burglary had apparently
+been committed at Woodstock, and that with a quantity of jewelry the
+priceless watch had vanished. The butler was very active about the
+matter, and as no trace could be found leading out of the house, he
+intimated a suspicion that the affair might possibly have some
+connection with a guest not long before at the house. This angered Lady
+Louisa, who thereupon consulted the agent, who employed a capable
+detective from Dublin. The detective came down to Inistiogue as a
+commercial traveller, wandered about, made the acquaintance of Lady
+Louisa's maid, of the butler, and of other people about the house, and
+formed his own conclusions. Two or three days after his arrival he
+walked into the shop of a small jeweller in a neighbouring town, and
+affecting a confidential manner, told the jeweller he wanted to buy
+"some of those things from Woodstock." The man was taken by surprise,
+and going into a backshop produced one very fine diamond, and a number
+of pieces of silver plate, of the disappearance of which the butler had
+said nothing to his mistress. This led to the arrest of the butler, and
+to the discovery that for a long time he had been purloining property
+from the house and selling it. Many cases of excellent claret had found
+their way in this fashion to a public-house which had acquired quite a
+reputation for its Bordeaux with the officers quartered in its
+neighbourhood. The wine-bins at Woodstock were found full of bottles of
+water. Much of the capital port left by Colonel Tighe had gone--but the
+hock was untouched. "Probably the butler didn't care for hock," said Mr.
+Seigne. The Waterloo watch was recovered from a very decent fellow, a
+travelling dealer, to whom it had been sold: and many pieces of jewelry
+were traced up to London. But Lady Louisa could not be induced to go up
+to London to identify them or testify.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Tuesday, March 6._--It is a curious fact, which I learned
+to-day from the Registrar-General, that the deposits in the Post-office
+Savings Banks have never diminished in Ireland since these banks were
+established.[21] These deposits are chiefly made, I understand, by the
+small tenants, who are less represented by the deposits in the General
+Savings Banks than are the shopkeepers and the cattle-drovers. In the
+General Savings Banks the deposit line fluctuates more; though on the
+whole there has been a steady increase in these deposits also throughout
+Ireland.
+
+Of the details of the dealings of the private banks it is very hard to
+get an accurate account. One gentleman, the manager of a branch of one
+important bank, tells me that a great deal of money is made by usurers
+out of the tenants, by backing their small bills. This practice goes
+back to the first establishment of banks in Ireland. Formerly it was not
+an uncommon thing for a landlord to offer his tenants a reduction, say,
+of twenty per cent., on condition of their paying the rent when it fell
+due. Such were the relations then between landlord and tenants, and so
+little was punctuality expected in such payments that this might be
+regarded as a sort of discount arrangement. The tenant who wished to
+avail himself of such an offer would go to some friendly local usurer
+and ask for a loan that he might avail himself of it. "One of these
+usurers, whom I knew very well," said the manager, "told me long ago
+that he found these operations very profitable. His method of procedure
+was to agree to advance the rent to the tenant at ten per cent., payable
+at a near and certain date. This would reduce the landlord's reduction
+at once, of course, for the tenant, to ten per cent., but that was not
+to be disdained; and so the bargain would be struck. If the money was
+repaid at the fixed date, it was not a bad thing for the usurer. But it
+was almost never so repaid; and with repeated renewals the usurer, by
+his own showing, used to receive eventually twenty, fifty, and, in some
+cases, nearly a hundred per cent, for his loan."
+
+It is the opinion of this gentleman that, under the "Plan of Campaign,"
+a good deal of money-making is done in a quiet way by some of the
+"trustees," who turn over at good interest, with the help of friendly
+financiers, the funds lodged with them, being held to account to the
+tenants only for the principal. "Of course," he said, "all this is
+doubtless at least as legitimate as any other part of the 'Plan,' and I
+daresay it all goes for 'the good of the cause.' But neither the tenants
+nor the landlords get much by it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Thursday, March 8._--At eight o'clock this morning I left the
+Harcourt Street station for Inch, to take a look at the scene of the
+Coolgreany evictions of last summer. These evictions came of the
+adoption of the Plan of Campaign, under the direction of Mr. Dillon,
+M.P., on the Wexford property of Mr. George Brooke of Dublin. The agent
+of Mr. Brooke's estate, Captain Hamilton, is the honorary director of
+the Property Defence Association, so that we have here obviously a
+grapple between the National League doing the work, consciously or
+unconsciously, of the agrarian revolutionists, and a combination of
+landed proprietors fighting for the rights of property as they
+understand them.
+
+We ran through a beautiful country for the greater part of the way. At
+Bray, which is a favourite Irish watering-place, the sea broke upon us
+bright and full of life; and the station itself was more like a
+considerable English station than any I have seen. Thence we passed into
+a richly-wooded region, with neat, well-kept hedges, as far as Rathdrum
+and the "Sweet Vale of Avoca." The hills about Shillelagh are
+particularly well forested, though, as the name suggests, they must have
+been cut for cudgels pretty extensively for now a great many years. We
+came again on the sea at the fishing port of Arklow, where the stone
+walls about the station were populous with small ragamuffins, and at the
+station of Inch I found a car waiting for me with Mr. Holmes, a young
+English Catholic officer, who had most obligingly offered to show me the
+place and the people. We had hardly got into the roadway when we
+overtook a most intelligent-looking, energetic young priest, walking
+briskly on in the direction of our course. This was Dr. Dillon, the
+curate of Arklow. We pulled up at once, and Mr. Holmes, introducing me
+to him, we begged him to take a seat with us. He excused himself as
+having to join another priest with whom he was going to a function at
+Inch; but he was good enough to walk a little way with us, and gave me
+an appointment for 2 P.M. at his own town of Arklow, where I could catch
+the train back to Dublin. We drove on rapidly and called on Father
+O'Neill, the parish priest. We found him in full canonicals, as he was
+to officiate at the function this morning, and with him were Father
+Dunphy, the parish priest of Arklow, and two or three more robed
+priests.
+
+Father O'Neill, whose face and manner are those of the higher order of
+the continental clergy, briefly set forth to me his view of the
+transactions at Coolgreany. He said that before the Plan of Campaign was
+adopted by the tenants, Mr. William O'Brien, M.P., had written to him
+explaining what the effect of the Plan would be, and urging him to take
+whatever steps he could to obviate the necessity of adopting it, as it
+might eventually result to the disadvantage of the tenants. "To that
+end," said Father O'Neill, "I called upon Captain Hamilton, the agent,
+with Dr. Dillon of Arklow, but he positively refused to listen to us,
+and in fact ordered us, not very civilly, to leave his office."
+
+It was after this he said that he felt bound to let the tenants take
+their own way. Eighty of them joined in the "Plan of Campaign" and paid
+the amount of the rent due, less a reduction of 30 per cent., which they
+demanded of the agent, into the hands of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., Sir
+Thomas being a resident in the country, and Mr. Mayne, M.P. Writs of
+ejectment were obtained against them afterwards, and in July last
+sixty-seven of them were evicted, who are now living in "Laud League
+huts," put up on the holdings of three small tenants who were exempted
+from the Plan of Campaign, and allowed to pay their rents subject to a
+smaller reduction made by the agent, in order that they might retain
+their land as a refuge for the rest.
+
+All this Father O'Neill told us very quietly, in a gentle,
+undemonstrative way, but he was much interested when I told him I had
+recently come from Rome, where these proceedings, I was sure, were
+exciting a good deal of serious attention. "Yes," he said, "and Father
+Dunphy who is here in the other room, has just got back from Rome, where
+he had two audiences of the Holy Father."
+
+"Doubtless, then," I said, "he will have given his Holiness full
+particulars of all that took place here."
+
+"No doubt," responded Father O'Neill, "and he tells me the Holy Father
+listened with great attention to all he had to say--though of course, he
+expressed no opinion about it to Father Dunphy."
+
+As the time fixed for the function was at hand, we were obliged to leave
+without seeing Father Dunphy.
+
+From the Presbytery we drove to the scene of the evictions. These
+evictions were in July. Mr. Holmes witnessed them, and gave me a lively
+account of the affair. The "battle" was not a very tough one. Mr.
+Davitt, who was present, stood under a tree very quietly watching it
+all. "He looked very picturesque," said Mr. Holmes, "in a light grey
+suit, with a broad white beaver shading his dark Spanish face; and
+smoked his cigar very composedly." After it was over, Dr. Dillon brought
+up one of the tenants, and presented him to Mr. Davitt as "the man who
+had resisted this unjust eviction." Mr. Davitt took his cigar from his
+lips, and in the hearing of all who stood about sarcastically said,
+"Well, if he couldn't make a better resistance than that he ought to go
+up for six months!" The first house we came upon was derelict--all
+battered and despoiled, the people in the neighbourhood here, as
+elsewhere, regarding such houses as free spoil, and carrying off from
+time to time whatever they happen to fancy. Near this house we met an
+emergency man, named Bolton, an alert, energetic-looking native of
+Wicklow. He has four brothers; and is now at work on one of the
+"evicted" holdings.
+
+I asked if he was "boycotted," and what his relations were with the
+people.
+
+He laughed in a shrewd, good-natured way. "Oh, I'm boycotted, of
+course," he said; "but I don't care a button for any of these people,
+and I'd rather they wouldn't speak to me. They know I can take care of
+myself, and they give me a good wide berth. All I have to object to is
+that they set fire to an outhouse of mine, and cut the ears of one of my
+heifers, and for that I want damages. Otherwise I'm getting on very
+well; and I think this will be a good year, if the law is enforced, and
+these fellows are made to behave themselves."
+
+Near Bolton's farm we passed the holding of a tenant named Kavanagh, one
+of the three who were "allowed" to pay their rents. Several Land League
+huts are on his place, and the evicted people who occupy them put their
+cattle with his. He is a quiet, cautious man, and very reticent. But it
+seemed to me that he was not entirely satisfied with the "squatters" who
+have been quartered upon him. And it appears that he has taken another
+holding in Carlow. From his place we drove to Ballyfad, where a large
+house, at the end of a good avenue of trees, once the mansion of a
+squire, but now much dilapidated, is occupied as headquarters by the
+police. Here we found Mr. George Freeman, the bailiff of the Coolgreany
+property, a strong, sturdy man, much disgusted at finding it necessary
+to go about protected by two policemen. That this was necessary,
+however, he admitted, pointing out to us the place where one Kinsella
+was killed not very long ago. The son of this man Kinsella was formerly
+one of Mr. Brooke's gamekeepers, and is now, Mr. Freeman thinks, in
+concert with another man named Ryan, the chief stay of the League in
+keeping up its dominion over the evicted tenants.
+
+Many of these tenants, he believes, would gladly pay their rents now,
+and come back if they dared.
+
+"Every man, sir," he said, "that has anything to lose, would be glad to
+come back next Monday if he thought his life would be safe. But all the
+lazy and thriftless ones are better off now than they ever were; they
+get from £4 to £6 a month, with nothing to do, and so they're in clover,
+and they naturally don't like to have the industrious, well-to-do
+tenants spoil their fun by making a general settlement."
+
+"Besides that," he added, "that man Kinsella and his comrade Ryan are
+the terror of the whole of them. Kinsella always was a curious, silent,
+moody fellow. He knows every inch of the country, going over it all the
+time by night and day as a gamekeeper, and I am quite sure the
+Parnellite men and the Land Leaguers are just as much afraid of him and
+Ryan as the tenants are. He don't care a bit for them; and they've no
+control of him at all."
+
+Mr. Freeman said he remembered very well the occasion referred to by
+Father O'Neill, when Captain Hamilton refused to confer with Dr. Dillon
+and himself.
+
+"Did Father O'Neill tell you, sir," he said, "that Captain Hamilton was
+quite willing to talk with him and Father O'Donel, the parish priests,
+and with the Coolgreany people, but he would have nothing to say to any
+one who was not their priest, and had no business to be meddling with
+the matter at all?"
+
+"No; he did not tell me that."
+
+"Ah! well, sir, that made all the difference. Father Dunphy, who was
+there, is a high-tempered man, and he said he had just as much right to
+represent the tenants as Captain Hamilton to represent the landlord, and
+that Captain Hamilton wouldn't allow. It was the outside people made all
+the trouble. In June of last year there was a conference at my house,
+and all that time there was a Committee sitting at Coolgreany, and the
+tenants would not be allowed to do anything without the Committee."
+
+"And who made the Committee?"
+
+"Oh, they made themselves, I suppose, sir. There was Sir Thomas
+Esmonde--he was a convert, you know, of Father O'Neill--and Mr. Mayne
+and Mr. John Dillon. And Dr. Dillon of Arklow, he was as busy as he
+could be till the evictions were made in July. And then he was in
+retreat. And I believe, sir, it is quite true that he wanted the Bishop
+to let him come out of the retreat just to have a hand in the business."
+
+The police sergeant, a very cool, sensible man, quite agreed with the
+bailiff as to the influence upon the present situation of the
+ex-gamekeeper Kinsella, and his friend Eyan. "If they were two
+Invincibles, sir," he said, "these member fellows of the League couldn't
+be in greater fear of them than they are. They say nothing, and do just
+as they please. That Kinsella, when Mr. John Dillon was down here, just
+told him before a lot of people that he 'wanted no words and no advice
+from him,' and he's just in that surly way with all the people about."
+
+As to the Brooke estate, I am told here it was bought more than twenty
+years ago with a Landed Estates Court title from Colonel Forde, by the
+grandfather of Mr. Brooke. He paid about £75,000 sterling for it. His
+son died young, and the present owner came into it as a child, Mr. Vesey
+being then the agent, who, during the minority, spent a great deal on
+improving the property. Captain Hamilton came in as agent only a few
+years ago. While the Act of 1881 was impending, an abatement was granted
+of more than twenty per cent. In 1882 the tenants all paid except
+eleven, who went into Court and got their rents cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners. There were appeals; and in 1885, after Court
+valuations, the rents cut down by the Sub-Commissioners were restored in
+several cases. There never was any rack-renting on the estate at all.
+There are upon it in all more than a hundred tenants, twelve of whom are
+Protestants, holding a little less in all than one-fourth of the
+property.
+
+There are fifteen judicial tenants, twenty-one lease-holders, and
+seventy-seven hold from year to year.
+
+The gross rental is a little over £2000 a year of which one-half goes to
+Mr. Brooke's mother. Mr. Brooke himself is a wealthy man, at the head of
+the most important firm of wine-merchants in Ireland, and he has
+repeatedly spent on the property more than he took out of it.
+
+The house of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., was pointed out to me from the
+road. "Sir Thomas is to marry an heiress, sir, isn't he, in America?"
+asked an ingenuous inquirer. I avowed my ignorance on this point. "Oh,
+well, they say so, for anyway the old house is being put in order for
+now the first time in forty years."
+
+We reached Arklow in time for luncheon, and drove to the large police
+barracks there. These were formerly the quarters of the troops. Arklow
+was one of the earliest settlements of the Anglo-Normans in Ireland
+under Henry II., and once rejoiced in a castle and a monastery both now
+obliterated; though a bit of an old tower here is said to have been
+erected in his time. The town lives by fishing, and by shipping copper
+and lead ore to South Wales. The houses are rather neat and well kept;
+but the street was full of little ragged, merry mendicants.
+
+We went into a small branch of the Bank of Ireland, and asked where we
+should find the hotel. We were very civilly directed to "The Register's
+Office over the way." This seemed odd enough. But reaching it we were
+further puzzled to see the sign over the doorway of a "coach-builder"!
+However, we rang the bell, and presently a maid-servant appeared, who
+assured us that this was really the hotel, and that we could have
+"whatever we liked" for luncheon. We liked what we found we could
+get--chops, potatoes, and parsnips; and without too much delay these
+were neatly served to us in a most remarkable room, ablaze with mural
+ornaments and decorations, upon which every imaginable pigment of the
+modern palette seemed to have been lavished, from a Nile-water-green
+dado to a scarlet and silver frieze. There were five times as many
+potatoes served to us as two men could possibly eat, and not one of them
+was half-boiled. But otherwise the meal was well enough, and the service
+excellent. Beer could be got for us, but the house had no licence, Lord
+Carysfort, the owner of the property, thinking, so our hostess said,
+that "there were too many licences in the town already." Lord Carysfort
+is probably right; but it is not every owner of a house, or even of a
+lease in Ireland, I fear, who would take such a view and act on it to
+the detriment of his own property.
+
+Dr. Dillon lives in the main square of Arklow in a very neat house. He
+was absent at a funeral in the handsome Catholic church near by when we
+called, but we were shown into his study, and he presently came in.
+
+His study was that of a man of letters and of politics. Blue-books and
+statistical works lay about in all directions, and on the table were the
+March numbers of the _Nineteenth Century_, and the _Contemporary
+Review_.
+
+"You are abreast of the times, I see," I said to him, pointing to these
+periodicals.
+
+"Yes," he replied, "they have just come in; and there is a capital paper
+by Mr. John Morley in this _Nineteenth Century_."
+
+Nothing could be livelier than Dr. Dillon's interest in all that is
+going on on both sides of the Atlantic, more positive than his opinions,
+or more terse and clear than his way of putting them. He agreed entirely
+with Father O'Neill as to the pressure put upon the Coolgreany tenants,
+not so much by Mr. Brooke as by the agent, Captain Hamilton; but he
+thought Mr. Brooke also to blame for his treatment of them.
+
+"Two of the most respectable of them," said Dr. Dillon, "went to see Mr.
+Brooke in Dublin, and he wouldn't listen to them. On the contrary, he
+absolutely put them out of his office without hearing a word they had to
+say."[22]
+
+I found Dr. Dillon a strong disciple of Mr. Henry George, and a firm
+believer in the doctrine of the "nationalisation of the land." "It is
+certain to come," he said, "as certain to come in Great Britain as in
+Ireland, and the sooner the better. The movement about the sewerage
+rates in London," he added, "is the first symptom of the land war in
+London. It is the thin edge of the wedge to break down landlordism in
+the British metropolis."
+
+He is watching American politics, too, very closely, and inclines to
+sympathise with President Cleveland. Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia, he
+tells me, in his passage through Ireland the other day, did not hesitate
+to express his conviction that President Cleveland would be re-elected.
+
+Dr. Dillon was so earnest and so interesting that the time slipped by
+very fast, until a casual glance at my watch showed me that we must make
+great haste to catch the Dublin train.
+
+We left therefore rather hurriedly, but before reaching the station we
+saw the Dublin train go careering by, its white pennon of smoke and
+vapour curling away along the valley.
+
+I made the best of it, however, and letting Mr. Holmes depart by a train
+which took him home, I found a smart jarvey with a car, and drove out to
+Glenart Castle, the beautiful house of the Earl of Carysfort. This is a
+very handsome modern house, built in a castellated style of a very good
+whitish grey marble, with extensive and extremely well-kept terraced
+gardens and conservatories.
+
+It stands very well on one high bank of the river, a residence of the
+Earl of Wicklow occupying the other bank. My jarvey called my attention
+to the excellence of the roads, on which he said Lord Carysfort has
+spent "a deal of money," as well as upon the gardens of the new Castle.
+The head-gardener, an Englishman, told me he found the native labourers
+very intelligent and willing both to learn and to work. Evidently here
+is another centre of useful and civilising influences, not managed by an
+"absentee."[23]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Friday, March 9th._--At 7.40 this morning I took the train for
+Athy to visit the Luggacurren estates of Lord Lansdowne. Mr. Lynch, a
+resident magistrate here, some time ago kindly offered to show me over
+the place, but I thought it as well to take my chance with the people of
+Athy who are reported to have been very hot over the whole matter here,
+and so wrote to Mr. Lynch that I would find him at the Lodge, which is
+the headquarters of the property.
+
+Athy is a neat, well-built little town, famous of old as a frontier
+fortress of Kildare. An embattled tower, flanked by small square
+turrets, guards a picturesque old bridge here over the Barrow, the
+bridge being known in the country as "Crom-a-boo," from the old war-cry
+of the Fitz-Geralds. It is a busy place now; and there was quite a
+bustle at the very pretty little station. I asked a friendly old porter
+which was the best hotel in the town. "The best? Ah! there's only one,
+and it's not the best--but there are worse--and it's Kavanagh's." I
+found it easily enough, and was ushered by a civil man, who emerged from
+the shop which occupies part of it, into a sort of reading-room with a
+green table. A rather slatternly but very active girl soon converted
+this into a neat breakfast-table, and gave me an excellent breakfast.
+The landlord found me a good car, and off I set for the residence of
+Father Maher, the curate of whom I had heard as one of the most fiery
+and intractable of the National League priests in this part of Ireland.
+
+
+My jarvey was rather taciturn at first, but turned out to be something
+of a politician. He wanted Home Rule, one of his reasons being that then
+they "wouldn't let the Americans come and ruin them altogether, driving
+out the grain from the markets." About this he was very clear and
+positive. "Oh, it doesn't matter now whether the land is good or bad,
+America has just ruined the farmers entirely."
+
+I told him I had always heard this achievement attributed to England.
+"Oh! that was quite a mistake! What the English did was to punish the
+men that stood up for Ireland. There was Mr. O'Brien. But for him there
+wasn't a man of Lord Lansdowne's people would have had the heart to
+stand up. He did it all; and now, what were they doing to him? They were
+putting him on a cold plank-bed on a stone floor in a damp cell!"
+
+"But the English put all their prisoners in those cells, don't they?" I
+asked.
+
+"And what of it, sir?" he retorted. "They're good enough for most of
+them, but not for a gentleman like Mr. O'Brien, that would spill the
+last drop of his heart's blood for Ireland!"
+
+"But," I said, "they're doing just the same thing with Mr. Gilhooly, I
+hear."
+
+"And who is Mr. Gilhooly, now? And it's not for the likes of him to
+complain and be putting on airs as if he was Mr. O'Brien!"
+
+"Yes, it is a fine country for hunting!"
+
+"Was it ever put down here, the hunting?"
+
+"No, indeed! Sure, the people wouldn't let it be!"
+
+"Not if Mr. O'Brien told them they must?" I queried.
+
+"Mr. O'Brien; ah, he wouldn't think of such a thing! It brings money all
+the time to Athy, and sells the horses."
+
+As to the troubles at Luggacurren, he was not very clear. "It was a
+beautiful place, Mr. Dunne's; we'd see it presently. And Mr. Dunne, he
+was a good one for sport. It was that, your honour, that got him into
+the trouble"--
+
+"And Mr. Kilbride?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Kilbride's place was a very good place too, but not like Mr.
+Dunne's. And he was doing very well, Mr. Kilbride. He was getting a good
+living from the League, and he was a Member of Parliament. Oh, yes, he
+wasn't the only one of the tenants that was doing good to himself. There
+was more of them that was getting more than ever they made out of the
+land."[24]
+
+"Was the land so bad, then?" I asked.
+
+"No, there was as good land at Luggacurren as any there was in all
+Ireland; but," and here he pointed off to the crests of the hills in the
+distance, "there was a deal of land there of the estate on the hills,
+and it was very poor land, but the tenants had to pay as much for that
+as for the good property of Dunne and Kilbride."
+
+"Do you know Mr. Lynch, the magistrate?" I asked. "If you do, look out
+for him, as he has promised to join me and show me the place."
+
+"Oh no, sorr!" the jarvey exclaimed at once; "don't mind about him. Hell
+have his own car, and your honour won't want to take him on ours."
+
+"Why not?" I persisted, "there's plenty of room."
+
+"Oh! but indeed, sir, if it wasn't that you were going to the priest's,
+Father Maher, you wouldn't get a car at Athy--no, not under ten pounds!"
+
+"Not under ten pounds," I replied. "Would I get one then for ten
+pounds?"
+
+"It's a deal of money, ten pounds, sorr, and you wouldn't have a poor
+man throw away ten pounds?"
+
+"Certainly not, nor ten shillings either. Is it a question of principle,
+or a question of price?"
+
+The man looked around at me with a droll glimmer in his eye: "Ah, to be
+sure, your honour's a great lawyer; but he'll come pounding along with
+his big horse in his own car, Mr. Lynch; and sure it'll be quicker for
+your honour just driving to Father Maher's."
+
+There was no resisting this, so I laughed and bade him drive on.
+
+"Whose house is that?" I asked, as we passed a house surrounded with
+trees.
+
+"Oh! that's the priest, Father Keogh--a very good man, but not so much
+for the people as Father Maher, who has everything to look after about
+them."
+
+We came presently within sight of a handsome residence, Lansdowne Lodge,
+the headquarters of the estate. Many fine cattle were grazing in the
+fields about it.
+
+"They are Lord Lansdowne's beasts," said my jarvey; "and it's the
+emergency men are looking after them."
+
+Nearly opposite were the Land League huts erected on the holding of an
+unevicted tenant--a small village of neat wooden "shanties." On the
+roadway in front of these half-a-dozen men were lounging about. They
+watched us with much curiosity as we drove up, and whispered eagerly
+together.
+
+"They're some of the evicted men, your honour," said my jarvey, with a
+twinkle in his eye; and then under his breath, "They'll be thinking your
+honour's came down to arrange it all. They think everybody that comes is
+come about an arrangement."
+
+"Oh, then, they all want it arranged!"
+
+"No; not all, but many of them do. Some of them like it well enough
+going about like gentlemen with nothing to do, only their hands in their
+pockets."
+
+We turned out of the highway here and passed some very pretty cottages.
+
+"No, they're not for labourers, your honour," said my jarvey; "the
+estate built them for mechanics. It's the tenants look after the
+labourers, and little it is they do for them."
+
+Then, pointing to a ridge of hills beyond us, he said: "It was
+Kilbride's father, sir, evicted seventeen tenants on these hills--poor
+labouring men, with their families, many years ago,--and now he's
+evicted himself, and a Member of Parliament!"
+
+Father Maher's house stands well off from the highway. He was not at
+home, being "away at a service in the hills," but would be back before
+two o'clock. I left my name for him, with a memorandum of my purpose in
+calling, and we drove on to see the bailiff of the estate, Mr. Hind. On
+the way we met Father Norris, a curate of the parish, in a smart trap
+with a good horse, and had a brief colloquy with him. Mr. Hind we found
+busy afield; a quiet, staunch sort of man. He spoke of the situation
+very coolly and dispassionately. "The tenants in the main were a good
+set of men--as they had reason to be, Lord Lansdowne having been not
+only a fair landlord, but a liberal and enterprising promoter of local
+improvements." I had been told in Dublin that Lord Lansdowne had offered
+a subscription of £200 towards establishing creameries, and providing
+high-class bulls for this estate. Similar offers had been cordially met
+by Lord Lansdowne's tenants in Kerry, and with excellent results. But
+here they were rejected almost scornfully, though accompanied by offers
+of abatement on the rents, which, in the case of Mr. Kilbride, for
+example, amounted to 20 per cent.
+
+"How did this happen, the tenants being good men as you say?" I asked of
+Mr. Hind.
+
+"Because they were unable to resist the pressure put on them by the two
+chief tenants, Kilbride and Dunne, with the help of the League. Kilbride
+and Dunne both lived very well." My information at Dublin was that Mr.
+Kilbride had a fine house built by Lord Lansdowne, and a farm of seven
+hundred acres, at a rent of £760, 10s. Mr. Dunne, who co-operated with
+him, held four town lands comprising 1304 acres, at a yearly rent of
+£1348, 15s. Upon this property Lord Lansdowne had expended in drainage
+and works £1993, 11s. 9d., and in buildings £631, 15s. 4d., or in all
+very nearly two years' rental. On Mr. Kilbride's holdings Lord Lansdowne
+had expended in drainage works £1931, 6s. 3d., and in buildings £1247,
+19s. 5d., or in all more than four years' rental. Mr. Kilbride held his
+lands on life leases. Mr. Dunne held his smallest holding of 84 acres on
+a yearly tenure; his two largest holdings, one on a lease for 31 years
+from 1874, and the other on a life lease, and his fourth holding of 172
+acres on a life lease.
+
+Where does the hardship appear in all this to Mr. Dunne or Mr. Kilbride?
+
+On Mr. Kilbride's holdings, for instance, Lord Lansdowne expended over
+£3000, for which he added to the rent £130 a year, or about 4 per cent.,
+while he himself stood to pay 6-1/2 per cent, on the loans he made from
+the Board of Works for the expenditure. In the same way it was with Mr.
+Dunne's farms. They were mostly in grass, and Lord Lansdowne laid out
+more than £2500 on them, borrowed at the same rate from the Board, for
+which he added to the rent only £66 a year, or about 2-1/2 per cent. Mr.
+Kilbride was a Poor-Law Guardian, and Mr. Dunne a Justice of the Peace.
+The leases in both of these cases, and in those of other large tenants,
+seem to have been made at the instance of the tenants themselves, and
+afforded security against any advance in the rental during a time of
+high agricultural prices. And it would appear that for the last quarter
+of a century there has been no important advance in the rental. In 1887
+the rental was only £300 higher than in 1862, though during the interval
+the landlord had laid out £20,000 on improvements in the shape of
+drainage, roads, labourers' cottages, and other permanent works.
+Moreover, in fifteen years only one tenant has been evicted for
+non-payment of rent.
+
+"Was there any ill-feeling towards the Marquis among the tenants?" I
+asked of Mr. Hind.
+
+"Certainly not, and no reason for any. They were a good set of men, and
+they would never have gone into this fight, only for a few who were in
+trouble, and I'm sure that to-day most of them would be thankful if they
+could settle and get back. The best of them had money enough, and didn't
+like the fight at all."
+
+All the trouble here seems to have originated with the adoption of the
+Plan of Campaign.
+
+Lord Lansdowne, besides this estate in Queen's County, owns property in
+a wild, mountainous part of the county of Kerry. On this property the
+tenants occupy, for the most part, small holdings, the average rental
+being about £10, and many of the rentals much lower. They are not
+capitalist farmers at all, and few of them are able to average the
+profits of their industry, setting the gains of a good, against the
+losses of a bad, season. In October 1886, while Mr. Dillon was
+organising his Plan of Campaign, Lord Lansdowne visited his Kerry
+property to look into the condition of the people. The local Bank had
+just failed, and the shopkeepers and money-lenders were refusing credit
+and calling in loans. The pressure they put upon these small farmers,
+together with the fall in the price of dairy produce and of young stock
+at that time, caused real distress, and Lord Lansdowne, after looking
+into the situation, offered, of his own motion, abatements varying from
+25 to 35 per cent, to all of them whose rents had not been judicially
+fixed under the Act of 1881, for a term of fifteen years.
+
+As to these, Lord Lansdowne wrote a letter on the 21st of October 1886
+(four days after the promulgation of the Plan of Campaign at Portumna on
+the Clanricarde property), to his agent, Mr. Townsend Trench. This
+letter was published. I have a copy of it given to me in Dublin, and it
+states the case as between the landlords and the tenants under judicial
+rents most clearly and temperately.
+
+"It might, I think," says the Marquis, "be very fairly argued, that the
+State having imposed the terms of a contract on landlord and tenant,
+that contract should not be interfered with except by the State.
+
+"The punctual payment of the 'judicial rent' was the one advantage to
+which the landlords were desired to look when, in 1881, they were
+deprived of many of the most valuable attributes of ownership.
+
+"It was distinctly stipulated that the enormous privileges which were
+suddenly and unexpectedly conferred upon the tenants were to be enjoyed
+by them conditionally upon the fulfilment on their part of the statutory
+obligations specified in the Act. Of those, by far the most important
+was the punctual payment of the rent fixed by the Court for the judicial
+term.
+
+"This obligation being unfulfilled, the landlord might reasonably claim
+that he should be free to exercise his own discretion in determining
+whether any given tenancy should or should not be perpetuated.
+
+"In many cases [such cases are probably not so numerous on my estate as
+upon many others] the resumption of the holding, and the consolidation
+of adjoining farms, would be clearly advantageous to the whole
+community. In the congested districts the consolidation of farms is the
+only solution that I have seen suggested for meeting a chronic
+difficulty.
+
+"I have no reason to believe that the Judicial Rents in force on my
+estate are such that, upon an average of the yield and prices of
+agricultural produce, my tenants would find it difficult to pay them."
+
+In spite of all these considerations Lord Lansdowne instructed Mr.
+Trench to grant to these tenants under judicial leases an abatement of
+20 per cent. on the November gale of 1886. This abatement, freely
+offered, was gladly accepted. There had been no outrages or disturbances
+on the Kerry properties, and the relations of the landlord with his
+tenants, before and after this visit of Lord Lansdowne to Kerry, and
+these reductions which followed it, had been, and continued to be,
+excellent.
+
+But the tale of Kerry reached Luggacurren; and certain of the tenants on
+the latter estate were moved by it to demand for the Queen's County
+property identical treatment with that accorded to the very differently
+situated property in Kerry.
+
+The leaders of the Luggacurren movement, I gather from Mr. Hind, never
+pretended inability to pay their rents. They simply demanded abatements
+of 35 per cent. on non-judicial, and 25 per cent. on judicial, rents as
+their due, on the ground that they should be treated like the tenants in
+Kerry: and the Plan of Campaign being by this time in full operation in
+more than one part of Ireland, they threatened to resort to it if their
+demand was refused. Lord Lansdowne at once declared that he would not
+repeat at Luggacurren his concession made in Kerry as to the rents
+judicially fixed; but he offered on a fair consideration of the
+non-judicial rents to make abatements on them ranging from 15 to 25 per
+cent.
+
+The offer was refused, and the war began. On the 23d of March 1887 Mr.
+Kilbride was evicted. One week afterwards, on the 29th of March, he got
+up in the rooms of the National League in Dublin, and openly declared
+that "the Luggacurren evictions differed from most other evictions in
+this, that they were able to pay the rent. It was a fight," he
+exultingly exclaimed, "of intelligence against intelligence; it was
+diamond cut diamond!" In other words, it was a struggle, not for
+justice, but for victory.
+
+On all these points, and others furnished to me at Dublin touching this
+estate, much light was thrown by the bailiff, who had not been concerned
+in the evictions. He told me what he knew, and then very obligingly
+offered to conduct me to the lodge, where we should find Mr. Hutchins,
+who has charge now of the properties taken up by Mr. Kavanagh's Land
+Corporation. My patriotic jarvey from Athy made no objection to my
+giving the bailiff a lift, and we drove off to the lodge. On the way the
+jarvey good-naturedly exclaimed, "Ah! there comes Mr. Lynch," and even
+offered to pull up that the magistrate might overtake us.
+
+We found Mr. Hutchins at home, a cool, quiet, energetic, northern man,
+who seems to be handling the difficult situation here with great
+firmness and prudence. Mrs. Hutchins, who has lived here now for nearly
+a year--a life not unlike that of the wife of an American officer on the
+Far Western frontier--very amicably asked me to lunch, and Mr. Hutchins
+offered to show me the holdings of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride. Mr. Lynch
+proposed that we should all go on my car, but I remembered the protest
+of the jarvey, and sending him to await me at Father Maher's, I drove
+off with Mr. Hutchins. As we drove along, he confirmed the jarvey's hint
+as to the difference between the views and conduct of the parish priest
+and the views and conduct of his more fiery curate. This is a very
+common state of affairs, I find, all over Ireland.
+
+The house of Mr. Dunne is that of a large gentleman farmer. It is very
+well fitted up, but it was plain that the tenants had done little or
+nothing to make or keep it a "house beautiful." The walls had never been
+papered, and the wood-work showed no recent traces of the brush. "He
+spent more money on horse-racing than on housekeeping," said a shrewd
+old man who was in the house. In fact, Mr. Dunne, I am told, entered a
+horse for the races at the Curragh after he had undergone what Mr.
+Gladstone calls "the sentence of death" of an eviction!
+
+Some of the doors bore marks of the crowbar but no great mischief had
+been done to them or to the large fine windows. The only serious damage
+done during the eviction was the cutting of a hole through the roof. An
+upper room had been provisioned to stand a siege, and so scientifically
+barricaded with logs and trunks of trees that after several vain
+attempts to break through the door the assailants climbed to the roof,
+and in twenty minutes cut their way in from without. The dining and
+drawing rooms were those of a gentleman's residence, and one of the
+party remembered attending here a social festivity got up with much
+display.
+
+A large cattle-yard has been established on this place, with an
+original, and, as I was assured, most successful weighing-machine by the
+Land Corporation. We found it full of very fine-looking cattle, and Mr.
+Hutchins seems to think the operation of managing the estate as a kind
+of "ranch" decidedly promising. "I am not a bit sorry for Mr. Dunne," he
+said, "but I am very sorry for other quiet, good tenants who have been
+deluded or driven into giving up valuable holdings to keep him and Mr.
+Kilbride company, and give colour to the vapourings of Mr. William
+O'Brien."
+
+The cases of some of these tenants were instructive. One poor man,
+Knowles, had gone out to America, and regularly sent home money to his
+family to pay the rent. They found other uses for it, and when the storm
+came he was two years and a half in arrears. In another instance, two
+brothers held contiguous holdings, and were in a manner partners. One
+was fonder of Athy than of agriculture; the other a steady husbandman.
+Four years' arrears had grown up against the one; only a half-year's
+gale against the other. Clearly this difference originated outside of
+the fall of prices! In a third case, a tenant wrote to Mr. Trench
+begging to have something done, as he had the money to pay, and wanted
+to pay, but "didn't dare."
+
+From Mr. Dunne's we drove to Mr. Kilbride's, another ample, very
+comfortable house--not so thoroughly well fitted up with bathroom and
+other modern appurtenances as Mr. Dunne's perhaps--but still a very good
+house. It stands on a large green knoll, rather bare of trees, and
+commands a fine sweep of landscape.
+
+Mr. Hutchins drove me to the little road which leads up past the "Land
+League village" to the house of Father Maher, and there set me down.
+
+I walked up and found the curate at home--a tall, slender, well-made
+young priest, with a keen, intelligent face. He received me very
+politely, and, when I showed him the card of an eminent dignitary of the
+Church, with cordiality.
+
+I found him full of sympathy with the people of his parish, but neither
+vehement nor unfair. He did not deny that there were tenants on Lord
+Lansdowne's estate who were amply able to pay their rents; but he did
+most emphatically assert that there were not a few of them who really
+could not pay their rents.
+
+"I assure you," he said, "there are some of them who cannot even pay
+their dues to their priest, and when I say that, you will know how
+pinched and driven they must indeed be." It was in view of these tenants
+that he seemed to justify the course of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride.
+"They must all stand or fall together." He had nothing to say to the
+discredit of Lord Lansdowne; but he spoke with some bitterness of the
+agent, Mr. Townsend Trench, as having protested against Lord Lansdowne's
+making reductions here while he had himself made the same reductions on
+the neighbouring estate of Mrs. Adair.
+
+"In truth," he said, "Mr. Trench has made all this trouble worse all
+along. He is too much of a Napoleon"--and with a humorous twinkle in his
+eye as he spoke--"too much of a Napoleon the Third.
+
+"I was just reading his father's book when you came in. Here it is," and
+he handed me a copy of Trench's _Realities of Irish Life_.
+
+"Did you ever read it? This Mr. Trench, the father, was a kind of
+Napoleon among agents in his own time, and the son, you see, thinks it
+ought to be understood that he is quite as great a man as his father.
+Did you never hear how he found a lot of his father's manuscripts once,
+and threw them all in the fire, calling out as he did so, 'There goes
+some more of my father's vanity?'"
+
+About his people, and with his people, Father Maher said he "felt most
+strongly." How could he help it? He was himself the son of an evicted
+father.
+
+"Of course, Father Maher," I said, "you will understand that I wish to
+get at both sides of this question and of all questions here. Pray tell
+me then, where I shall find the story of the Luggacurren property most
+fully and fairly set forth in print?"
+
+Without a moment's hesitation he replied, "By far the best and fairest
+account of the whole matter you will get in the Irish correspondence of
+the London _Times_."
+
+How the conflict would end he could not say. But he was at a loss to see
+how it could pay Lord Lansdowne to maintain it.
+
+He very civilly pressed me to stay and lunch with him, but when I told
+him I had already accepted an invitation from Mr. Hutchins, he very
+kindly bestirred himself to find my jarvey.
+
+I hastened back to the lodge, where I found a very pleasant little
+company. They were all rather astonished, I thought, by the few words I
+had to say of Father Maher, and especially by his frank and sensible
+recommendation of the reports in the London _Times_ as the best account
+I could find of the Luggacurren difficulty. To this they could not
+demur, but things have got, or are getting, in Ireland, I fear, to a
+point at which candour, on one side or the other of the burning
+questions here debated, is regarded with at least as much suspicion as
+the most deliberate misrepresentation. As to Mr. Town send Trench, what
+Father Maher failed to tell me, I was here told: That down to the time
+of the actual evictions he offered to take six months' rent from the
+tenants, give them a clean book, and pay all the costs. To refuse this
+certainly looks like a "war measure."
+
+But for the loneliness of her life here, Mrs. Hutchins tells me she
+would find it delightful. The country is exceedingly lovely in the
+summer and autumn months.
+
+When my car came out to take me back to Athy, I found my jarvey in
+excellent spirits, and quite friendly even with Mr. Hutchins himself. He
+kept up a running fire of lively commentaries upon the residents whose
+estates we passed.
+
+"Would you think now, your honour," he said, pointing with his whip to
+one large mansion standing well among good trees, "that that's the
+snuggest man there is about Athy? But he is; and it's no wonder! Would
+you believe it, he never buys a newspaper, but he walks all the way into
+Athy, and goes about from the bank to the shops till he finds one, and
+picks it up and reads it. He's mighty fond of the news, but he's fonder,
+you see, of a penny!
+
+"There now, your honour, just look at that house! It's a magistrate he
+is that lives there; and why? Why, just to be called 'your honour,' and
+have the people tip their hats to him. Oh! he delights in that, he does.
+Why, you might knock a man, or put him in the water, you might, indeed,
+but if you came before Mr.----, and you just called him 'your honour'
+often enough, and made up to him, you'd be all right! You've just to go
+up to him with your hat in your hand, looking up at him, and to say,
+'Ah! now, your honour'" (imitating the wheedling tone to perfection),
+"and indeed you'd get anything out of him--barring a sixpence, that is,
+or a penny!
+
+"Ah! he's a snug one, too!" And with that he launched a sharp thwack of
+the whip at the grey mare, and we went rattling on apace.
+
+At the very pretty station of Athy we parted the best of friends. "Wish
+you safe home, your honour." The kindly railway porter, also, who had
+recommended Kavanagh's Hotel, was anxious to know how I found it, and so
+busied himself to get me a good carriage when the train came in, that I
+feel bound to exempt Athy from the judgment passed by Sir James
+Allport's committee against the "amenities of railway travelling in
+Ireland."
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Saturday, March 10._--I called by appointment to-day upon Mr.
+Brooke, the owner of the Coolgreany estate, at his counting-house in
+Gardiner's Row. It is one of the spacious old last-century houses of
+Dublin; the counting-room is installed with dark, old-fashioned mahogany
+fittings, in what once was, and might easily again be made, a
+drawing-room. Pictures hang on the walls, and the atmosphere of the
+whole place is one of courtesy and culture rather than of mere modern
+commerce. One of the portraits here is that of Mr. Brooke's
+granduncle--a handsome, full-blooded, rather testy-looking old warrior,
+in the close-fitting scarlet uniform of the Prince Regent's time.
+
+"He ought to have been called Lord Baltimore," said Mr. Brooke
+good-naturedly; "for he fought against your people for that city at
+Bladensburg with Ross."
+
+"That was the battle," I said, "in which, according to a popular
+tradition in my country, the Americans took so little interest that they
+left the field almost as soon as it began."
+
+Another portrait is of a kinsman who was murdered in the highway here in
+Ireland many years ago, under peculiarly atrocious circumstances, and
+with no sort of provocation or excuse.
+
+Mr. Brooke confirmed Dr. Dillon's statement that he had ordered out of
+his counting-house two tenants who came into it with a peculiarly brazen
+proposition, of which I must presume Dr. Dillon was ignorant when he
+cited the fact as a count against the landlord of Coolgreany. I give the
+story as Mr Brooke tells it. "The Rent Audit," he says, "at which my
+tenants were idiots enough to join the Plan of Campaign occurred about
+the 12th December 1886, when, as you know, I refused to accept the terms
+which they proposed to me. I heard nothing more from them till about the
+middle of February 1887, when coming to my office one day I found two
+tenants waiting for me. One was Stephen Maher, a mountain man, and the
+other Patrick Kehoe. 'What do you want?' I asked. Whereupon they both
+arose, and Pat Kehoe pointed to Maher. Maher fumbled at his clothes, and
+rubbed himself softly for a bit, and then produced a scrap of paper.
+'It's a bit of paper from the tenants, sir,' he said. A queer bit of
+paper it was to look at--ruled paper, with a composition written upon it
+which might have been the work of a village schoolmaster. It was neither
+signed nor addressed! The pith of it was in these words,--'in
+consequence of the manner in which we have been harassed, our cattle
+driven throughout the country, and our crops not sown, we shall be
+unable to pay the half-year's rent due in March, in addition to the
+reduction already claimed!' I own I rather lost my temper at this!
+Remember I had already plainly refused to give 'the reduction already
+claimed,' and had told them not once, but twenty times, that I would
+never surrender to the 'Plan of Campaign'! I am afraid my language was
+Pagan rather than Parliamentary--but I told them plainly, at least, that
+if they did not break from the Plan of Campaign, and pay their debts,
+they might be sure I would turn the whole of them out! I gave them back
+their precious bit of paper and sent them packing.
+
+"One of them, I have told you, was a mountain man, Stephen Maher. He is
+commonly known among the people as 'the old fox of the mountain,' and he
+is very proud of it!
+
+"This old Stephen Maher," said Mr. Brooke, "is renowned in connection
+with a trial for murder, at which he was summoned as a witness. When he
+was cross-examined by Mr. Molloy, Q.C., he fenced and dodged about with
+that distinguished counsellor for a long time, until getting vexed by
+the lawyer's persistency, he exclaimed, 'Now thin, Mr. Molloy, I'd have
+ye to know that I had a cliverer man nor iver you was, Mr. Molloy, at
+me, and I had to shtan' up to him for three hours before the Crowner,
+an' he was onable to git the throoth out of me, so he was! so he was!'"
+
+
+Neither did Dr. Dillon mention the fact that one of the demands made of
+Captain Hamilton, Mr. Brooke's agent, in December 1886, was that a
+Protestant tenant named Webster should be evicted by Mr. Brooke from a
+farm for which he had paid his rent, to make room for the return thither
+of a Roman Catholic tenant named Lenahan, previously evicted for
+non-payment of his rent.
+
+When Mr. Brooke's grandfather bought the Coolgreany property in 1864, he
+adopted a system of betterments, which has been ever since kept up on
+the estate. Nearly every tenant's house on the property has been slated,
+and otherwise repaired by the landlord, nor has one penny ever been
+added on that account to the rents.
+
+In the village of Coolgreany all the houses on one side of the main
+street were built in this way by the landlord, and the same thing was
+done in the village of Croghan, where twenty tenants have a grazing
+right of three sheep for every acre held on the Croghan Mountain,
+pronounced by the valuers of the Land Court to be one of the best
+grazing mountains in Ireland.
+
+Captain Hamilton became the agent of the property in 1879, on the death
+of Mr. Vesey. One of his earliest acts was to advise Mr. Brooke to grant
+an abatement of 25 per cent. in June 1881, while the Land Act was
+passing. At the same time, he cautioned the tenants that this was only a
+temporary reduction, and advised them to get judicial rents fixed.
+
+The League advised them not to do this, but to demand 25 per cent.
+reduction again in December 1881. This demand was rejected, and forty
+writs were issued. The tenants thereupon in January 1882 came in and
+paid the full rent, with the costs.
+
+Eleven tenants after this went into Court, and in 1883 the
+Sub-Commissioners cut down their rents. In five cases Mr. Brooke
+appealed. What was the result before the Chief Commissioner? The rent of
+Mary Green, which had been £43, and had been cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners to £39, was restored to £43; the rent of Mr. Kavanagh,
+cut down from £57 to £52, was restored to £55; the rent of Pat Kehoe
+(one of the two tenants "ejected" from Mr. Brooke's office as already
+stated), cut down from £81 to £70, was restored to £81; the rent of
+Graham, cut down from £38 to £32, 10s., was restored to £38. Other
+reductions were maintained.
+
+This appears to be the record of "rack-renting" on the Coolgreany
+property.
+
+There are 114 tenants, of whom 15 hold under judicial rents; 22 are
+leaseholders, and 77 are non-judicial yearly tenants. There are 12
+Protestants holding in all a little more than 1200 acres. All the rest
+are Catholics, 14 of these being cottier tenants. The estate consists of
+5165 acres. The average is about £24, and the average rental about £26,
+10s. The gross rental is £2614, of which £1000 go to the jointure of Mr.
+Brooke's mother, and £800 are absorbed by the tithe charges, half
+poor-rates and other taxes. During the year 1886, in which this war was
+declared against him, Mr. Brooke spent £714 in improvements upon the
+property: so in that year his income from Coolgreany was practically
+_nil_.
+
+What in these circumstances would have been the position of this
+landlord had he not possessed ample means not invested in this
+particular estate? And what has been the result to the tenants of this
+conflict into which it seems clear that they were led, less to protect
+any direct interest of their own than to jeopardise their homes and
+their livelihood for the promotion of a general agrarian agitation? It
+is not clear that they are absolutely so far out of pocket, for I find
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Inch and Gorey rose from
+£3699, 5s. 4d. in 1880 to £5308, 13s. in 1887, showing an increase of
+£1609, 7s. 8d. But they are out of house and home and work, entered
+pupils in that school of idleness and iniquity which has been kept by
+one Preceptor from the beginning of time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.[25]
+
+
+* * * *--Mrs. Kavanagh was quite right when she told me at Borris in
+March that this country should be seen in June! The drive to this lovely
+place this morning was one long enchantment of verdure and hawthorn
+blossoms and fragrance.
+
+I came over from London to bring to a head some inquiries which have too
+long delayed the publication of this diary. My intention had been to go
+directly to Thurles, but a telegram which I received from the Archbishop
+of Cashel just before I left telling me that he could not be at home for
+the last three days of the week, I came directly here. Nothing can be
+more utterly unlike the popular notions of Ireland and of Irish life
+than the aspect of this most smiling and beautiful region: nothing more
+thoroughly Irish than its people.
+
+* * * who is one of the most active and energetic of Irish landlords,
+lives part of the year abroad, but keeps up his Irish property with
+care, at the expense, I suspect, of his estates elsewhere.
+
+From a noble avenue of trees, making the highway like the main road of a
+private park, we turned into a literal paradise of gardens. The air was
+balmy with their wealth of odours. "Oh! yes, sir," said the coachman,
+with an air of sympathetic pride, "our lady is just the greatest lady in
+all this land for flowers!"
+
+And for ivy, he might have added. We drove between green walls of ivy up
+to a house which seemed itself to be built of ivy, like that wonderful
+old mansion of Castle Leod in Scotland. Here, plainly, is another centre
+of "sweetness and light," the abolition of which must make, not this
+region alone, but Ireland poorer in that precise form of wealth, which,
+as Laboulaye has shown in one of the best of his lectures, is absolutely
+identical with civilisation. It is such places as this, which, in the
+interest of the people, justify the exemption from redistribution and
+resettlement, made in one of a series of remarkable articles on Ireland
+recently published in the _Birmingham Post_, of lands, the "breaking up
+of which would interfere with the amenity of a residence."
+
+* * * relations with all classes of the people here are so cordial and
+straightforward that he has been easily able to give me to-day, what I
+have sought in vain elsewhere in Ireland, an opportunity of conversing
+frankly and freely with several labouring men. For obvious reasons these
+men, as a rule, shrink from any expression of their real feelings. Their
+position is apparently one of absolute dependence either upon the
+farmers or the landlords, there being no other local market for their
+labour, which is their only stock-in-trade. As one of them said to me
+to-day, "The farmers will work a man just as long as they can't help it,
+and then they throw him away."
+
+I asked if there were no regular farm-labourers hired at fixed rates by
+the year?
+
+"Oh! very few--less now than ever; and there'll be fewer before there'll
+be more. The farmers don't want to pay the labourers or to pay the
+landlords; they want the land and the work for nothing, sir,--they do
+indeed!"
+
+"What does a farm-hand get," I asked, "if he is hired for a long time?"
+
+"Well, permanent men, they'll get 6s. a week with breakfast and dinner,
+or 7s. maybe, with one meal; and a servant-boy, sir, he'll get 2s. a
+week or may be 3s. with his board; but it's seldom he gets it."
+
+"And what has he for his board?"
+
+"Oh, stirabout; and then twice a week coorse Russian or American meat,
+what they call the 'kitchen,' and they like it better than good meat,
+sir, because it feeds the pot more."
+
+By this I found he meant that the "coorse meat" gave out more
+"unctuosity" in the boiling--the meat being always served up boiled in a
+pot with vegetables, like the "bacon and greens" of the "crackers" in
+the South.
+
+"And nothing else?"
+
+"Yes; buttermilk and potatoes."
+
+"And these wages are the highest?"
+
+"Oh, I know a boy got 5s., but by living in his father's house, and
+working out it was he got it. And then they go over to England to work."
+
+"What wages do they get there?"
+
+"Oh, it differs, but they do well; 9s. a week, I think, and their board,
+and straw to sleep on in the stables."
+
+"But doesn't it cost them a good deal to go and come?"
+
+"Oh no; they get cheap rates. They send them from Galway to Dublin like
+cattle, at £2, 5s. a car, and that makes about 1s. 6d. a head; and then
+they are taken over on the steamers very cheap. Often the graziers that
+do large business with the companies, will have a right to send over a
+number of men free; and they stowaway too; and then on the railways in
+England they get passes free often from cattle-dealers, specially when
+they are coming back, and the dealers don't want their passes. They do
+very well. They'll bring back £7 and £10. I was on a boat once, and
+there was a man; he was drunk; he was from Galway somewhere, and they
+took away and kept for him £18, all in good golden sovereigns; that was
+the most I ever saw. And he was drunk, or who'd ever have known he had
+it?"
+
+"Do the farmers build houses for the labourers?"
+
+"Build houses, is it! Glory be to God! who ever heard of such a thing?
+The farmers are a poor proud lot. They'd let a labourer die in the
+ditch!"
+
+All that this poor man said was corroborated by another man of a higher
+class, very familiar with the conditions of life and labour here, and
+indeed one of the most interesting men I have met in Ireland. Born the
+son of a labouring man, he was educated by a priest and educated
+himself, till he fitted himself for the charge of a small school, which
+he kept to such good purpose that in eighteen years he saved £1100, with
+which capital he resolved to begin life as a small farmer and
+shopkeeper. He had studied all the agricultural works he could get, and
+before he went fairly into the business, he travelled on the Continent,
+looking carefully into the methods of culture and manner of life of the
+people, especially in Italy and in Belgium. The Belgian farming gave him
+new ideas of what might be done in Ireland, and those ideas he has put
+into practice, with the best results.
+
+"On the same land with my neighbours," he said, "I double their
+production. Where they get two tons of hay I get four or four and a
+half, where they get forty-five barrels of potatoes I get a hundred.
+Only the other day I got £20 for a bullock I had taken pains with to
+fatten him up scientifically. Of course I had a small capital to start
+with: but where did I get that? Not from the Government. I earned and
+saved it myself; and then I wasn't above learning how best to use it."
+
+He thinks the people here--though by no means what they might be with
+more thrift and knowledge--much better off than the same class in many
+other parts of Ireland. There are no "Gombeen men" here, he says, and no
+usurious shopkeepers. "The people back each other in a friendly way when
+they need help." Many of the labourers, he says, are in debt to him, but
+he never presses them, and they are very patient with each other. They
+would do much better if any pains were taken to teach them. It is his
+belief that agricultural schools and model farms would do more than
+almost any measure that could be devised for bringing up the standard of
+comfort and prosperity here, and making the country quiet.
+
+It is the opinion of this man that the people of this place have been
+led to regard the Papal Decree as a kind of attack on their liberties,
+and that they are quite as likely to resist as to obey it. For his own
+part, he thinks Ireland ought to have her own parliament, and make her
+own laws. He is not satisfied with the laws actually made, though he
+admits they are better than the older laws were. "The tenants get their
+own improvements now," he said, "and in old times the more a man
+improved the worse it was for him, the agent all the while putting up
+the rents."
+
+But he does not want Irish independence. "The people that talk that
+way," he said, "have never travelled. They don't see how idle it is for
+Ireland to talk about supporting herself. She just can't do it."
+
+Not less interesting was my talk to-day with quite a different person.
+This was a keen-eyed, hawk-billed, wiry veteran of the '48. As a youth
+he had been out with "Meagher of the Sword," and his eyes glowed when he
+found that I had known that champion of Erin. "I was out at Ballinagar,"
+he said; "there were five hundred men with guns, and five hundred
+pikemen." It struck me he would like to be going "out" again in the same
+fashion, but he had little respect for the "Nationalists."
+
+"There's too many lawyers among them," he said, "too many lawyers and
+too many dealers. The lawyers are doing well, thanks to the League. Oh
+yes!" with a knowing chuckle, and a light of mischief in his eye; "the
+lawyers are doing very well! There's one little bit of a solicitor not
+far from here was of no good at all four years ago, and now they tell me
+he's made four thousand pounds in three years' time, good money, and got
+it all in hand! And there's another, I hear, has made six thousand. The
+lawyers that call themselves Nationalists, they just keep mischief
+agoing to further themselves. What do they care for the labourers? Why,
+no more than the farmers do--and what would become of the poor men! * *
+* * here, he is making * * * * * * * and he keeps more poor men going
+than all the lawyers and all the farmers in the place a good part of the
+year."
+
+"Are the labourers," I asked, "Nationalists?"
+
+"They don't know what they are," he answered. "They hate the farmers,
+but they love Ireland, and they all stand together for the counthry!"
+
+"How is it with the Plan of Campaign and the Boycotting?"
+
+"Now what use have the labourers got for the Plan of Campaign? No more
+than for the moon! And for the Boycotting, I never liked it--but I was
+never afraid of it--and there's not been much of it here."
+
+"Will the Papal Decree put a stop to what there is of it?"
+
+"I wouldn't mind the Pope's Decree no more than that door!" he exclaimed
+indignantly. "Hasn't he enough, sure, to mind in Rome? Why didn't he
+defend his own country, not bothering about Ireland!"
+
+"Are you not a Catholic, then?" I asked.
+
+"Oh yes, I'm a Catholic, but I wouldn't mind the Decree. Only remember,"
+he added, after a pause, "just this: it don't trouble me, for I've
+nothing to do with the Plan of Campaign--only I don't want the Pope to
+be meddlin' in matters that don't concern him."
+
+"It's out of respect, then, for the Pope that you wouldn't mind the
+Decree?"
+
+"Just that, intirely! It was some of them Englishmen wheedled it out of
+him, you may be sure, sir."
+
+"I am told you went out to America once."
+
+"Yes, I went there in '48, and I came back in '51."
+
+"What made you go?" I asked.
+
+"Is it what made me go?" he replied, with a sudden fierceness in his
+voice. "It was the evictions made me go; that we was put out of the good
+holding my father had, and his father before him; and I can never
+forgive it, never! But I came back; and it was * * * father that was the
+good man to me and to mine, else where would I be?"
+
+I afterwards learned from * * * * that the evictions of which the old
+man spoke with so much bitterness were made in carrying out important
+improvements, and that it was quite true that his father had greatly
+befriended the emigrant when he got enough of the New World and came
+home.
+
+It was curious to see the old grudge fresh and fierce in the old man's
+heart, but side by side with it the lion lying down with the lamb--a
+warm and genuine recognition of the kindness and help bestowed on
+himself. His resentment against the landlord's action in one generation
+did not in the least interfere with his recognition of the landlord's
+usefulness and liberality in the next generation.
+
+"You didn't like America?" I said. "Where did you live there?"
+
+"I lived at North Brookfield in Massachusetts, a year or two," he
+replied, "with Governor Amasa Walker. Did you know him? He was a good
+man; he was fond of the people, but he thought too much of the nagurs."
+
+"Yes," I answered; "I know all about him, and he was, as you say, a very
+good man, even if he was an abolitionist. But why didn't you stay in
+North Brookfield?"
+
+"Oh, it was a poor country indeed! A blast of wind would blow all the
+ground away there was! It does no good to the people, going to America,"
+he said; "they come back worse than they went!"
+
+He is at work now in some quarries here.
+
+"The quarrymen get six shillings a week," he said, "with bread and tea
+and butter and meat three times a week. With nine shillings a week and
+board, a man'll make himself bigger than * * *!"
+
+"Was the country quiet now?"
+
+"This country here? Oh! it's very quiet; with potatoes at 3s. 6d. a
+barrel, it's a good year for the people. They're a very quiet
+people,"--in corroboration apparently of which statement he told me a
+story of a coroner's jury called to sit on the body of a man found on
+the highway shot through the head, which returned an unanimous verdict
+of "Died by the visitation of God."
+
+This country is dominated by the Rocky Hills climbing up to Cullenagh,
+which divides the Barrow valley from the Nore. We drove this afternoon
+to * a most lovely place. The mansion there is now shut up and
+dismantled, but the park and the grounds are very beautiful, with a
+beauty rather enhanced than diminished by the somewhat unkempt
+luxuriance of the vegetation. We passed a now well-grown tree planted by
+the Prince of Wales * * * * * * and drove over many miles of excellent
+road made by * * * * * * * * employs * * * * * * * * regularly, * * *
+men as labourers, cartmen and masons, to whom he pays out annually the
+sum of * * Mr. * * who, by the way, rather resented my asking him if he
+came of one of the Cromwellian English families so numerous here, and
+informed me that his people came over with Strongbow--assures me that
+but for these works of * * * * these men under him would be literally
+without occupation. In addition to these there are about a dozen more
+men employed * * as gamekeepers and plantation-men. At the * * places
+belonging to * * * * * * * * * * above eighty men find constant
+employment, and receive regular wages amounting to over £4000. Were * *
+* * dispossessed or driven out of Ireland, all this outlay would come to
+an end, and with what result to these working-men? As things now are,
+while * * * working-men receive a regular wage of five shillings, the
+same men, as farmers' labourers, would receive, now and then, five
+shillings a week, and that without food! I saw enough in the course of
+our afternoon's drive to satisfy me that my informant of the morning had
+probably not overstated matters when he told me that for at least
+seventy per cent. of the work done by the labourers here, from November
+to May, they have to look to the landlords. On the property of * * as
+well as on the neighbouring properties * * * * * * * the houses have
+been generally put up by the landlords. We called in the course of the
+afternoon upon a labouring man who lives with his wife in a very neat,
+cozy, and quite new house, built recently for him by * *. These good
+people have been living on this property for now nearly half a century.
+Their new house having been built for them, * * has had an agreement
+prepared, under which it may be secured to them. The terms have all been
+discussed and found satisfactory, but the old labourer now hesitates
+about signing the agreement. He gives, and can be got to give, no reason
+for this; but when we drove up he came out to greet us in the most
+friendly manner. We went in and found his wife, a shrewd, sharp-eyed,
+little old dame, with whom * * * * fell into a confabulation, while I
+went into the next room with the labourer himself. The house was neatly
+furnished--with little ornaments and photographs on the mantel-shelf,
+and nothing of the happy-go-lucky look so common about the houses of the
+working people in Ireland, as well as about the houses of the lesser
+squires.
+
+I paid him a compliment on the appearance of his house and grounds.
+"Yes, sir!" he answered: "it's a very good place it is, and * * * * has
+built it just to please us."
+
+"But I am told you want to leave it?"
+
+"Ah, no, that is not so, sir, indeed at all! We've three children you
+see, sir, in America--two girls and a boy we have."
+
+"And where are they?"
+
+"Ah, the girls they're not in any factory at all. They're like leddies,
+living out in a place they call * * in Massachusetts; and the lad, he
+was on a farm there. But we don't know where he is nor his sisters any
+more just now. And the wife, she thinks she would like to go out to
+America and see the children."
+
+"Do you hear from them regularly?"
+
+"Well, it's only a few pounds they send, but they're doing very well.
+Domestics they are, quite like leddies; there's their pictures on the
+shelf."
+
+"But what would you do there?"
+
+"Ah! we'd have lodgings, the wife says, sir. But I like the ould place
+myself."
+
+"I think you are quite right there," I replied. "And do you get work
+here from the farmers as the labourers do in my country?"
+
+"Work from the farmers, sir?" he answered, rather sharply. "What they
+can't help we get, but no more! If the farmers in America is like them,
+it's not I would be going there! The farmers! For the farmers, a
+labourer, sir, is not of the race of Adam! They think any place good
+enough for a labourer--any place and any food! Is the farmers that way
+in America?"
+
+"Well, I don't know that they are so very much more liberal than your
+farmers are," I replied; "but I think they'd have to treat you as being
+of the race of Adam! But are not the farmers here, or the Guardians,
+obliged to build houses for the labourers? I thought there was an Act of
+Parliament about that?"
+
+"And so there is but what's the good of it? It's just to get the
+labourers' votes, and then they fool the labourers, just making them
+quarrel about where the cottages shall be, what they call the 'sites';
+and then there's no cottages built at all, at all. It's the lawyers, you
+see, sir, gets in with the farmers--the strongest farmers--and then they
+just make fools of the labourers as if there was no Act of Parliament at
+all."
+
+"But if the labourers want to go away, to emigrate," I said, "as you
+want to do, to America, don't the farmers, or the Government, or the
+landlords, help them to get away and make a start?"
+
+"Not a bit of it, sir," he replied; "not a bit of it. I believe,
+though," he added after a moment; "I believe they do get some help to go
+to Australia. But they're mostly no good that goes that way. The best is
+them that go for themselves, or their friends help them. But there's not
+so many going this year."
+
+When we drove away I asked * * if he had made any progress towards a
+signature of the agreement with the labourer's wife.
+
+"No; she couldn't be got to say yes or no. I asked her," said * * "what
+reason they had for imagining that after all these years I would try to
+do them an injury? She protested they never thought of such a thing; but
+she couldn't be brought to say she wished her husband to sign the paper.
+It's very odd, indeed."
+
+I couldn't help suspecting that the _materfamilias_ was at the bottom of
+it all, and that she was bent upon going out to America to participate
+in the prosperity of her two daughters, who were living "like leddies"
+at * * in Massachusetts.
+
+The incident recalled to me something which happened years ago when I
+was returning with the Storys from Rome to Boston. Our Cunarder, in the
+middle of the night, off the Irish coast, ran down and instantly sank a
+small schooner.
+
+In a wonderfully short time we had come-to, and a boat's crew had
+succeeded in picking up and bringing all the poor people on board. Among
+them was a wizened old woman, upon whom all sorts of kind attentions
+were naturally lavished by the ship's company. She could not be
+persuaded to go into a cabin after she had recovered from the shock and
+the fright of the accident, but, comforted and clothed with new and dry
+garments, she took refuge under one of the companion-ways, and there,
+sitting huddled up, with her arms about her knees, she crooned and
+moaned to herself, "I was near being in a wetter and a warmer place; I
+was near being in a wetter and a warmer place!" by the half hour
+together. We found that the poor old soul had been to Liverpool to see
+her son off on a sailing ship as an emigrant to America. So a
+subscription was soon made up to send her on our arrival to New York
+there to await her son. We had some trouble in making her understand
+what was to be done with her, but when she finally got it fairly into
+her head, gleams of mingled surprise and delight came over her withered
+face, and she finally broke out, "Oh, then, glory be to God! it's a
+mercy that I was drownded! glory be to God! and it's the proud boy
+Terence will be when he gets out to America to find his poor ould mother
+waiting for him there that he left behind him in Liverpool, and quite
+the leddy with all this good gold money in her hand, glory be to God!"
+
+On our way back to * * we passed through * * a very neat
+prosperous-looking town, which * * tells me is growing up on the heels
+of * *. * * * was one of the few places at which the "no rent"
+manifesto, issued by Mr. Parnell and his colleagues from their prison in
+Kilmainham, during the confinement of Mr. Davitt at Portland, and
+without concert with him, was taken up by a village curate and commended
+to the people. He was arrested for it by Mr. Gladstone's Government, and
+locked up for six weeks.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Saturday, June 23d._--I left * * * yesterday morning early on
+an "outside car," with one of my fellow-guests in that "bower of
+beauty," who was bent on killing a salmon somewhere in the Nore * * We
+drove through a most varied and picturesque country, viewing on the way
+the seats of Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, both finely
+situated in well-wooded parks. Mr. Stubber was formerly master of the
+Queen's County hounds, a famous pack, which, as our jarvey put it,
+"brought a power of money into the county, and made it aisy for a poor
+man." But the local agitations wore out his patience, and he put the
+pack down some years ago. Not far from his house is an astonishing
+modern "tumulus," or mound of hewn and squared stones. These it seems
+were quarried and brought here by him, with the intention of building a
+new and handsome residence. This intention he abandoned under the same
+annoyance.
+
+"They call it Mr. Stubber's Cairn," said the jarvey; "and a sorrowful
+sight it is, to think of the work it would have given the people,
+building the big house that'll never be built now, I'm thinking." If Mr.
+Stubber should become an "absentee," he can hardly, I think, be blamed
+for it.
+
+His property marches with that of Mr. Robert Staples, who comes of a
+Gloucestershire family planted in Ireland under Charles I.
+
+"Mr. Staples is farming his own lands," said our jarvey, when I
+commented on the fine appearance of some fields as we drove by; "and
+he'll be doing very well this year. Ah! he comes and goes, but he's here
+a great deal, and he looks after everything himself; that's the reason
+the fields is good."
+
+This is a property of some 1500 statute acres. Only last March the
+landlord took over from one tenant, who was in arrears of two years and
+a half and owed him some £300, a farm of 90 acres, giving the man fifty
+pounds to boot, and bidding him go in peace. I wonder whether this
+proceeding would make the landlord a "land-grabber," and expose him to
+the pains and penalties of "boycotting"?
+
+On this place, too, it seems that Mr. Staples's grandfather put up many
+houses for the tenants; a thing worth noting, as one of not a few
+instances I have come upon to show that it will not do to accept without
+examination the sweeping statements so familiar to us in America, that
+improvements have never been made by the landlord upon Irish estates.
+
+My companion had meant to put me down at the railway station of
+Attanagh, there to catch a good train to Kilkenny.
+
+But we had a capital nag, and reached Attanagh so early that we
+determined to drive on to Ballyragget.
+
+From Attanagh to Ballyragget the road ran along a plateau which
+commanded the most beautiful views of the valley of the Nore and of the
+finely wooded country beyond. Ballyragget itself is a brisk little
+market town, the American influence showing itself here, as in so many
+other places, in such trifles as the signs on the shops which describe
+them as "stores." My salmon-fishing companion put me down at the station
+and went off to the river, which flows through the town, and is here a
+swift and not inconsiderable stream.
+
+An hour in the train took me to Kilkenny, where I met by appointment
+several persons whom I had been unable to see during my previous visit
+in March.
+
+These gentlemen, experienced agents, gave me a good deal of information
+as to the effect of the present state of things upon the "_moral_" of
+the tenantry in different parts of Ireland. On one estate, for example,
+in the county of Longford, a tenant has been doing battle for the cause
+of Ireland in the following extraordinary fashion.
+
+He held certain lands at a rental of £23, 4s. Being, to use the
+picturesque language of the agent, a "little good for tenant," he fell
+into arrears, and on the 1st of May 1885 owed nearly three years' rent,
+or £63, 12s., in addition to a sum of £150 which he had borrowed of his
+amiable landlord three or four years before to enable him to work his
+farm. Of this total sum of £213, 12s. he positively refused to pay one
+penny. Proceedings were accordingly taken against him, and he was
+evicted. By this eviction his title to the tenancy was broken. The
+landlord nevertheless, for the sake of peace and quiet, offered to allow
+him to sell, to a man who wished to take the place, any interest he
+might have had in the holding, and to forgive both the arrears of the
+rent and the £150 which had been borrowed by him. The ex-tenant flatly
+refused to accept this offer, became a weekly pensioner upon the
+National League, and declared war. The landlord was forced to get a
+caretaker for the place from the Property Defence Association at a cost
+of £1 per week, to provide a house for a police protection party, and to
+defray the expenses of that party upon fuel and lights. Nor was this
+all. The landlord found himself further obliged to employ men from the
+same Property Defence Association to cut and save the hay-crop on the
+land, and when this had been done no one could be found to buy the crop.
+The crop and the lands were "boycotted." It was only in May last that a
+purchaser could be found for the hay cut and saved two years ago--this
+purchaser being himself a "boycotted" man on an adjoining property. He
+bought the hay, paying for it a price which did not quite cover one-half
+the cost of sowing it!
+
+"No one denies for a moment," said the agent, "that the tenant in all
+this business has been more than fairly, even generously, treated by the
+estate; yet no one seems to think it anything but natural and reasonable
+that he should demand, as he now demands, to be put back into the
+possession of his forfeited tenancy at a certain rent fixed by himself,"
+which he will obligingly agree to pay, "provided that the hay cut and
+saved on the property two years ago is accounted for to him by the
+estate!"
+
+In another case an agent, Mr. Ivough, had to deal with a body of five
+hundred tenants on a considerable estate. Of these tenants, two hundred
+settled their rents with the landlord before the passing of the Land Act
+of 1881, and valuations made by the landlord's valuer, with their full
+assent. There was no business for the lawyers, so far as they were
+concerned, and no compulsion of any sort was put on them. Among them was
+a man who had married the daughter of an old tenant on the estate, and
+so came into a holding of 12 Irish, or more than 20 statute, acres, at a
+rental of £18 a year. The valuer reduced this to £14, 10s., which
+satisfied the tenant, and as the agent agreed to make this reduced
+valuation retroactive, all went as smoothly as possible for two years,
+when the tenant began to fall into arrears. When the Sub-Commissioners,
+between 1885 and 1887, took to making sweeping reductions, the tenants
+who had settled freely under the recent valuation grumbled bitterly. As
+one of them tersely put it to the agent, "We were a parcel of bloody
+fools, and you ought to have told us these Sub-Commissioners were
+coming!" Mr. Sweeney, the tenant by marriage already mentioned, was not
+content to express his particular dissatisfaction in idle words, but
+kept on going into arrears. In May 1888 things came to a crisis. The
+agent refused to accept a settlement which included the payment by him
+of the costs of the proceedings forced upon him by his tenant. "You have
+had a good holding," said the agent, "with plenty of water and good
+land. In this current year two acres of your wheat will pay the whole
+rent. You have broken up and sold bit by bit a mill that was on the
+place; and above all, when Mr. Gladstone made us accept the judicial
+rents, he told us we might be sure, if we did this, of punctual payment.
+That was the one consideration held out to us. And we are entitled to
+that!"
+
+The tenant being out of his holding, the agent wishes to put another
+tenant into it. But the holding is "boycotted." Several tenants are
+anxious for it, and would gladly take it, but they dare not The great
+evicted will neither sell any tenant-right he may have, nor pay his
+arrears and costs, nor give up the place to another tenant. To put
+Property Defence men on the holding would cost the landlord £2, 10s. a
+week, and do him no great good, as the evicted man "holds the fort,"
+being established in a house which he occupies on an adjoining property,
+and for which presumably he pays his rent. It seems as if Mr. Sweeney
+were inspired by the example of another tenant, named Barry, who, before
+the passing of the Land Act of 1881, gave up freely a holding of 20
+acres, on a property managed by Mr. Kough; but as he was on such good
+terms with the agent that he could borrow money of him, he begged the
+agent to let him retain at a low rent a piece of this surrendered land
+directly adjoining his house. He asked this in the name of his eight or
+nine children, and it was granted him. The agent afterwards found that
+the piece of land in question was by far the best of the surrendered
+holding. But that is a mere detail. This ingenious tenant Barry, living
+now on another estate just outside the grasp of the agent, has
+systematically "boycotted" for the last nine years the land which he
+gave up, feeding his own cattle upon it freely meanwhile, and keeping
+all would-be tenants at a distance! "He is now," said the agent, "quite
+a wealthy man in his way, jobbing cattle at all the great markets!"
+
+"When the eviction of Sweeney took place," said the agent, "I was
+present in person, as I thought I ought to be, and the result is that I
+have been held up to the execration of mankind as a monster for putting
+out a child in a cradle into a storm. As a matter of fact," he said,
+"there was a cradle in the way, which the sheriff-Officer gently took
+up, and by direction of the tenant's wife removed. I made no remark
+about it at all, but a local paper published a lying story, which the
+publisher had to retract, that I had said 'Throw out the child!'"
+
+"Two priests," he said, "came quite uninvited and certainly without
+provocation, to see me, and one of them shouted out, 'Ah! we know you'll
+be making another Coolgreany,' which was as much as to say there 'would
+be bloodshed.' This was the more intolerable," he added, "that, as I
+afterwards found, I had already done for the sake of the tenants
+precisely what these ecclesiastics professed that they had come to ask
+me to do!
+
+"For thirty years," said this gentleman, "I have lived in the midst of
+these people--and in all that time I have never had so much as a
+threatening letter. But after this story was published of my throwing
+out a cradle with a child in it, I was insulted in the street by a woman
+whom I had never seen before. Two girls, too, called out at the
+eviction, 'You've bad pluck; why didn't you tell us you were coming down
+the day?' and another woman made me laugh by crying after me, 'You've
+two good-looking daughters, but you're a bad man yourself.'"
+
+Quite as instructive is the story given me on this occasion of the
+Tyaquin estate in the county of Galway. This estate is managed by an
+agent, Mr. Eichardson of Castle Coiner, in this county of Kilkenny.
+
+The rents on this Galway estate, as Mr. Richardson assures me, have been
+unaltered for between thirty and forty years, and some of them for even
+a longer period. For the last twenty-five years certainty, during which
+Mr. Richardson has been the agent of the estate, and probably, he
+thinks, for many years previous, there has never been a case of the
+non-payment of rent, except in recent years when rents were withheld for
+a time for political reasons.
+
+Large sums of money have been laid out in various useful improvements.
+Constant occupation was given to those requiring it, until the agrarian
+agitation became fully developed. On the demesne and the home farms the
+best systems of reclaiming waste lands and the best systems of
+agriculture were practically exhibited, so that the estate was an
+agricultural free school for all who cared to learn.
+
+When the Land Act of 1881 was passed, almost all the tenants applied,
+and had judicial rents fixed, many of them by consent of the agent.
+
+In 1887 the tenants were called on as usual to pay these judicial rents.
+A large minority refused to do so except on certain terms, which were
+refused. The dispute continued for many months, but as the charges on
+the estate had to be met, the agent was obliged to give way, and allow
+an abatement of four shillings in the pound on these judicial rents.
+Some of these charges, to meet which the agent gave way, were for money
+borrowed from the Commissioners of Public Works to _improve the holdings
+of the tenants_. For these improvements thus thrown entirely upon the
+funds of the estate no increase of rent or charge of any kind had been
+laid upon the tenants.
+
+When a settlement was agreed on, those of the tenants who had adopted
+the Plan came in a body to pay their rents on 3d January 1888. They
+stated that they were unable to pay more than the rent due up to
+November 1886, and that they would never have adopted the Plan had they
+not been driven into it by _sheer distress_. After which they handed Mr.
+Richardson a cheque drawn by John T. Dillon, Esq., M.P., for the amount
+banked with the National League.
+
+An article appeared shortly afterwards in a League newspaper, loudly
+boasting of the great victory won by Mr. Dillon, M.P., for the starving
+and poverty-stricken tenants. Two of these tenants (brothers) were under
+a yearly rent of £7, 10s. They declared they could only pay £3, 15s., or
+a half-year's rent, and this only if they got an abatement of 15s. Yet
+these same tenants were then paying Mr. Richardson £50 a year for a
+grass farm, and about £12 for meadows, as well as £30 a year more for a
+grass farm to an adjoining landlord.
+
+Another tenant who held a farm at £13, 5s. a year declared he could only
+pay £6, 12s. 6d., or a half-year's rent, if he got an abatement of £1,
+6s. 6d. A very short time before, this tenant had taken a grass farm
+from an adjoining landlord, and he was so anxious to get it that he
+showed the landlord a bundle of large notes, amounting to rather more
+than £300 sterling, in order to prove his solvency! The same tenant has
+since written a letter to Mr. Richardson offering £50 a year for a grass
+farm!
+
+All these campaigners, Mr. Richardson says, "with one noble exception,
+the wife of a tenant who was ill, declined to pay a penny of rent beyond
+November 1st, 1886," stating that they were "absolutely unable" to do
+more. So they all left the May 1887 rent unpaid, and the hanging gale to
+November 1887, which, however, they were not even asked to pay.
+
+The morning after the settlement many of the tenants who, when they were
+all present in a body on the previous evening, had declared their
+"inability" to pay the half-year's rent due down to May 1887,
+individually came to Mr. Richardson unasked, and paid it, some saying
+they had "borrowed the money that night," but others frankly declaring
+that they dared not break the rule publicly, having been ordered by the
+League only to pay to November 1886, for fear of the consequences. These
+would have been injury to their cattle, or the burning of their hay, or
+possibly murder.
+
+Of the country about Kilkenny, I am told, as of the country about
+Carlow, that nearly or quite seventy per cent, of the labourers are
+dependent upon the landlords from November to May for such employment as
+they get.
+
+The shopkeepers, too, are in a bad way, being in many cases reduced to
+the condition of mere agents of the great wholesale houses elsewhere,
+and kept going by these houses mainly in the hope of recovering old
+debts. There is a severe pressure of usury, too, upon the farmers. "If a
+farmer," said one resident to me, "wants to borrow a small sum of the
+Loan Fund Bank, he must have two securities--one of them a substantial
+man good for the debt. These two indorsers must be 'treated' by the
+borrower whom they back; and he must pay them a weekly sum for the
+countenance they have given him, which not seldom amounts, before he
+gets through with the matter, to a hundred per cent, on the original
+loan."
+
+I am assured too that the consumption of spirits all through this region
+has greatly increased of late years. "The official reports will show
+you," said one gentleman, "that the annual outlay upon whisky in Ireland
+equals the sum saved to the tenants by the reductions in rent." This is
+a proposition so remarkable that I simply record it for future
+verification, as having been made by a very quiet, cool, and methodical
+person, whose information on other points I have found to be correct. He
+tells me too, as of his own knowledge, that in going over some financial
+matters with a small farmer in his neighbourhood, he ascertained, beyond
+a peradventure, that this farmer annually spent in whisky, for the use
+of his family, consisting of himself, his wife and three adult children,
+nearly, or quite, _seventy pounds a year_! "You won't believe this," he
+said to me; "and if you print the statement nobody else will believe it;
+but for all that it is the simple unexaggerated truth."
+
+Falstaff's reckoning at Dame Quickly's becomes a moderate score in
+comparison with this!
+
+I spent half an hour again in the muniment-room at Kilkenny Castle,
+where, in the Expense-Book of the second Duke of Ormond, I found a
+supper _menu_ worthy of record, as illustrating what people meant by
+"keeping open house" in the great families of the time of Queen
+Anne.[Note L.]
+
+Taking a train early in the afternoon, I came on here in time to dine
+last night with Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, an uncompromising Protestant
+"Home Ruler"--as Protestant and as uncompromising as John Mitchel--whose
+recent pamphlet on "Boycotting" has deservedly attracted so much
+attention on both sides of the Irish Sea.
+
+I was first led into a correspondence with Mr. Rolleston by a remarkable
+article of his published in the _Dublin University Review_ for February
+1886, on "The Archbishop in Politics." In that article, Mr. Rolleston,
+while avowing himself to be robust enough to digest without much
+difficulty the _ex officio_ franchise conferred upon the Catholic clergy
+by Mr. Parnell to secure the acceptance of his candidates at
+Parliamentary conventions, made a very firm and fearless protest against
+the attempt of the Archbishops of Dublin and Cashel to "boycott"
+Catholic criticism of the National League and its methods, by declaring
+such criticism to be "a public insult" offered, not to the Archbishops
+of Cashel and Dublin personally, or as political supporters of the
+National League, but to the Archbishops as dignitaries of the Catholic
+Church, and to their Archiepiscopal office. The "boycotting," by
+clerical machinery, of independent lay opinion in civil matters, is to
+the body politic of a Catholic country what the germ of cancer is to the
+physical body. And though Mr. Rolleston, in this article, avowed himself
+to be a hearty supporter of the "political programme of the National
+League," and went so far even as to maintain that the social boycotting,
+"which makes the League technically an illegal conspiracy against law
+and individual liberty," might be "in many cases justified by the
+magnitude of the legalised crime against which it was directed," it was
+obvious to me that he could not long remain blind to the true drift of
+things in an organisation condemned, by the conditions it has created
+for itself, to deal with the thinkers of Ireland as it deals with the
+tenants of Ireland. His recent pamphlet on "Boycotting" proves that I
+was right. What he said to me the other day in a letter about the
+pamphlet may be said as truly of the article. It was "a shaft sunk into
+the obscure depths of Irish opinion, to bring to light and turn to
+service whatever there may be in those depths of sound and healthy;" and
+one of my special objects in this present visit to Ireland was to get a
+personal touch of the intellectual movement which is throwing such
+thinkers as Mr. Rolleston to the front.
+
+We were five at table, Mr. Rolleston's other guests being Mr. John
+O'Leary, whose name is held in honour for his courage and honesty by all
+who know anything of the story of Ireland in our times, and who was sent
+a quarter of a century ago as a Fenian patriot--not into seclusion with
+sherry and bitters, at Kilmainham, like Mr. Gladstone's "suspects" of
+1881--but like Michael Davitt, into the stern reality of penal
+servitude; Dr. Sigerson, Dean of the Faculty of Science of the Boyal
+University, and an authority upon the complicated question of Irish Land
+Tenures; and Mr. John F. Taylor, a leading barrister of Dublin, an ally
+on the Land Question of Mr. Davitt, and an outspoken Repealer of the
+Union of 1800.
+
+I have long wished to meet Mr. O'Leary, who sent me, through a
+correspondent of mine, two years ago, one of the most thoughtful and
+well-considered papers I have ever read on the possibilities and
+impossibilities of Home Rule for Ireland; and it was a great pleasure to
+find in the man the elevation of tone, the breadth of view, and the
+refined philosophic perception of the strong and weak points in the
+Irish case, which had charmed me in. the paper. Now that "Conservative"
+Englishmen have come to treat the main points of Chartism almost as
+commonplaces in politics, it is surely time for them to recognise the
+honesty and integrity of the spirit which revolted in the Ireland of
+1848 against the then seemingly hopeless condition of that country. Of
+that spirit Mr. O'Leary is a living, earnest, and most interesting
+incarnation. He strikes one at once as a much younger man in all that
+makes the youth of the intellect and the emotions than any Nationalist
+M.P. of half his years whom I have ever met. No Irishman living has
+dealt stronger or more open blows than he against the English dominion
+in Ireland. Born in Tipperary, where he inherited a small property in
+houses, he was sent to Trinity College in Dublin, and while a student
+there was drawn into the "Young Ireland" party mainly by the poems of
+Thomas Davis. Late in the electrical year of the "battle summer," 1848,
+he was arrested on suspicion of being concerned in a plot to rescue
+Smith O'Brien and other state prisoners. The suspicion was well founded,
+but could not be established, and after a day or two he was liberated.
+From Trinity, after this, he went to the Queen's College in Cork, where
+he took his degree, and studied medicine. When the Fenian movement
+became serious, after the close of our American Civil War, O'Leary threw
+himself into it with Stephens, Luby, and Charles Kickham. Stephens
+appointed him one of the chief organisers of the I.E.B. with Luby and
+Kickham, and he took charge of the _Irish People_--the organ of the
+Fenians of 1865. It was as a subordinate contributor to this journal
+that Sir William Harcourt's familiar Irish bogy, O'Donovan Rossa[26],
+was arrested together with his chief, Mr. O'Leary, and with Kickham in
+1865, and found guilty, with them, after a trial before Mr. Justice
+Keogh, of treason-felony. The speech then delivered by Mr. O'Leary in
+the dock made a profound impression upon the public mind in America. It
+was the speech, not of a conspirator, but of a patriot. The indignation
+with which he repelled for himself and for his associate Luby the
+charges levelled at them both, without a particle of supporting
+evidence, by the prosecuting counsel, of aiming at massacre and plunder,
+was its most salient feature. The terrible sentence passed upon him, of
+penal servitude for twenty years, Mr. O'Leary accepted with a calm
+dignity, which I am glad, for the sake of Irish manhood, to find that
+his friends here now recall with pride, when their ears are vexed by the
+shrill and clamorous complaints of more recent "patriots," under the
+comparatively trivial punishments which they invite.
+
+In 1870, Mr. O'Leary and his companions were released and pardoned on
+condition of remaining beyond the British dominions until the expiration
+of their sentences. Mr. O'Leary fixed his residence for a time in Paris,
+and thence went to America, where he and Kickham were regarded as the
+leaders of the American branch of the I. R. B. He returned to Ireland in
+1885, his term of sentence having then expired, and it was shortly after
+his return that he gave to my correspondent the letter upon Irish
+affairs to which I have already referred. He had been chosen President
+of the "Young Ireland Society" of Dublin before he returned, and in that
+capacity delivered at the Rotunda, in the Irish capital, before a vast
+crowd assembled to welcome him back, an address which showed how
+thoughtfully and calmly he had devoted himself during his long years of
+imprisonment and exile to the cause of Ireland. Mr. William O'Brien,
+M.P., and Mr. Redmond, M.P., took part in this reception, but their
+subsequent course shows that they can hardly have relished Mr. O'Leary's
+fearless and outspoken protests against the intolerance and injustice of
+the agrarian organisation which controls their action. In England, as
+well as well as in Ireland, Mr. O'Leary spoke to great multitudes of his
+countrymen, and always in the same sense. Mr. Rolleston tells me that
+Mr. O'Leary's denunciations of "the dynamite section of the Irish
+people," to use the euphemism of an American journal, "are the only ones
+ever uttered by an Irish leader, lay or clerical." The day must come, if
+it be not already close at hand, when the Irish leader of whom this can
+be truly said, must be felt by his own people to be the one man worthy
+of their trust. The thing that has been shall be, and there is nothing
+new under the sun. The Marats and the Robespierres, the Barères and the
+Collots, are the pallbearers, not the standard-bearers of liberty.
+
+Towards the National League, as at present administered on the lines of
+the agrarian agitation, Mr. O'Leary has so far preserved an attitude of
+neutrality, though he has never for a moment hesitated either in public
+or in private most vehemently to condemn such sworn Fenians as have
+accepted seats in the British Parliament, speaking his mind freely and
+firmly of them as "double-oathed men" playing a constitutional part with
+one hand, and a treasonable part with the other.
+
+Yet he is not at one with the extreme and fanatical Fenians who oppose
+constitutional agitation simply because it is constitutional. His
+objection to the existing Nationalism was exactly put, Mr. Rolleston
+tells me, by a clever writer in the Dublin _Mail_, who said that
+O'Connell having tried "moral force" and failed, and the Fenians having
+tried "physical force" and failed, the Leaguers were now trying to
+succeed by the use of "immoral force."
+
+Dr. Sigerson, who, as a man of science, must necessarily revolt from the
+coarse and clumsy methods of the blunderers who have done so much since
+1885 to discredit the cause of Ireland, evidently clings to the hope
+that something may still be saved from the visible wreck of what has
+come, even in Ireland, to be called "Parnellism," and he good-naturedly
+persisted in speaking of our host last night and of his friends as
+"mugwumps." For the "mugwumps" of my own country I have no particular
+admiration, being rather inclined, with my friend Senator Conkling (now
+gone to his rest from the racket of American politics), to regard them
+as "Madonnas who wish it to be distinctly understood that they might
+have been Magdalens." But these Irish "mugwumps" seem to me to earn
+their title by simply refusing to believe that two and two, which make
+four in France or China, can be bullied into making five in Ireland.
+"What certain 'Parnellites' object to," said one of the company, "is
+that we can't be made to go out gathering grapes of thorns or figs of
+thistles. Some of them expect to found an Irish republic on robbery, and
+to administer it by falsehood. We don't."[27] This is precisely the
+spirit in which Mr. Rolleston wrote to me not long before I left England
+this week. "I have been slowly forced," he wrote, "to the conclusion
+that the National League is a body which deserves nothing but
+reprobation from all who wish well to Ireland. It has plunged this
+country into a state of moral degradation, from which it will take us at
+least a generation to recover. It is teaching the people that no law of
+justice, of candour, of honour, or of humanity can be allowed to
+interfere with the political ends of the moment. It is, in fact,
+absolutely divorcing morality from politics. The mendacity of some of
+its leaders is shameless and sickening, and still more sickening is the
+complete indifference with which this mendacity is regarded in Ireland."
+
+
+It is the spirit, too, of a letter which I received not long ago from
+the west of Ireland, in which my correspondent quoted the bearer of one
+of the most distinguished of Irish names, and a strong "Home Ruler," as
+saying to him, "These Nationalists are stripping Irishmen as bare of
+moral sense as the Bushmen of South Africa."
+
+This very day I find in one of the leading Nationalist journals here
+letters from Mr. Davitt, Mr. O'Leary, and Mr. Taylor himself, which
+convict that journal of making last week a statement about Mr. Taylor
+absolutely untrue, and, so far as appears, absolutely without the shadow
+of a foundation. These letters throw such a curious light on passing
+events here at this moment that I shall preserve them.[28] The statement
+to which they refer was thus put in the journal which made it: "We have
+absolute reason to know that when the last Coercion Act was in full
+swing this pure-souled and disinterested patriot (Mr. John F. Taylor)
+begged for, received, and accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship
+under a Coercion Government. As was wittily said at the time, He sold
+his principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+stirred the mess." This is no assertion "upon hearsay"--no publication of
+a rumour or report. It is an assertion made, not upon belief even, but
+upon a claim of "absolute knowledge."
+
+Yet to-day, in the same journal, I find Mr. Taylor declaring this
+statement, made upon a claim of "absolute knowledge," to be "absolutely
+untrue," and appealing in support of this declaration to Mr. Walker, the
+host of Lord Riand Mr. Morley, and to The M'Dermot, Q.C., a conspicuous
+Home Ruler; to which Mr. Davitt adds: "Mr. Taylor, on my advice,
+declined the Crown Prosecutorship for King's County, a post afterwards
+applied for by, and granted to, a near relative of one of the most
+prominent members of the Irish Party,"--meaning Mr. Luke Dillon, a
+cousin of Mr. John Dillon, M.P.!
+
+We had much interesting conversation last night about the relations of
+the Irish leaders here with public and party questions in America, as to
+which I find Mr. O'Leary unusually well and accurately informed.
+
+I am sorry that I must get off to-morrow into Mayo to see Lord Lucan's
+country there, for I should have been particularly pleased to look more
+closely with Mr. Rolleston into the intellectual revolt against
+"Parnellism" and its methods, of which his attitude and that of his
+friends here is an unmistakable symptom. As he tersely puts it, he sees
+"no hope in Irish politics, except a reformation of the League, a return
+to the principles of Thomas Davis."
+
+The lines for a reformation or transformation of the League, as it now
+exists, appear to have been laid down in the original constitution of
+the body. Under that constitution, it seems, the League was meant to be
+controlled by a representative committee chosen annually, open to public
+criticism, and liable to removal by a new election. As things now are,
+the officers of this alleged democratic organisation are absolutely
+self-elected, and wield the wide and indefinite power they possess over
+the people of Ireland in a perfectly unauthorised, irresponsible way. It
+is a curious illustration of the autocratic or bureaucratic system under
+which the Irish movement is now conducted, that Mr. Davitt, who does not
+pretend to be a Parliamentarian, and owes indeed much of his authority
+to his refusal to enter Parliament and take oaths of allegiance, does
+not hesitate for a moment to discipline any Irish member of Parliament
+who incurs his disapprobation. Sir Thomas Esmonde, for example, was
+severely taken to task by him the other day in the public prints for
+venturing to put a question, in his place at Westminster, to the
+Government about a man-of-war stationed in Kingstown harbour. Mr. Davitt
+very peremptorily ordered Sir Thomas to remember that he is not sent to
+Westminster to recognise the British Government, or concern himself
+about British regiments or ships, and Sir Thomas accepts the rebuke in
+silence. Whom does such a member of Parliament represent--the
+constituents who nominally elect him, or the leader who cracks the whip
+over him so sharply?
+
+I have to-day been looking through a small and beautifully-printed
+volume of poems just issued here by Gill and Son, Nationalist
+publishers, I take it, who have the courage of their convictions, since
+their books bear the imprint of "O'Connell," and not of Sackville
+Street. This little book of the _Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland _is
+a symptom too. It is dedicated in a few brief but vigorous stanzas to
+John O'Leary, as one who
+
+ "Hated all things base,
+ And held his country's honour high."
+
+And the spirit of all the poems it contains is the spirit of '48, or of
+that earlier Ireland of Robert Emmet, celebrated in some charming verses
+by "Rose Kavanagh" on "St. Michan's Churchyard," where the
+
+ "sunbeam went and came
+ Above the stone which waits the name
+ His land must write with freedom's flame."
+
+It interests an American to find among these poems and ballads a
+striking threnody called "The Exile's Return," signed with the name of
+"Patrick Henry"; and it is noteworthy, for more reasons than one, that
+the volume winds up with a "Marching Song of the Gaelic Athletes,"
+signed "An Chraoibhin Aoibbinn." These Athletes are numbered now, I am
+assured, not by thousands, but by myriads, and their organisation covers
+all parts of Ireland. If the spirit of '48 and of '98 is really moving
+among them, I should say they are likely to be at least as troublesome
+in the end to the "uncrowned king" as to the crowned Queen of Ireland.
+
+As for the literary merit of these _Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland_,
+it strikes one key with their political quality. One exquisite ballad of
+"The Stolen Child," by W. B. Yeats, might have been sung in the
+moonlight on a sylvan lake by the spirit of Heinrich Heine.
+
+I spent an hour or two this morning most agreeably in the libraries of
+the Law Courts and of Trinity College: the latter one of the stateliest
+most academic "halls of peace" I have ever seen; and this afternoon I
+called upon Dr. Sigerson, a most patriotic Irishman, of obviously Danish
+blood, who has his own ideas as to Clontarf and Brian Boru; and who gave
+me very kindly a copy of his valuable report on that Irish Crisis of
+1879-80, out of which Michael Davitt so skilfully developed the agrarian
+movement whereof "Parnellism" down to this time has been the not very
+well adjusted instrument. The report was drawn up after a thorough
+inspection by Dr. Sigerson and his associate, Dr. Kenny, visiting
+physicians to the North Dublin Union, of some of the most distressed
+districts of Mayo, Sligo, and Galway; and a more interesting,
+intelligent, and impressive picture of the worst phases of the social
+conditions of Ireland ten years ago is not to be found. I have just been
+reading it over carefully in conjunction with my memoranda made from the
+Emigration and Seed Potato Fund Reports, which Mr. Tuke gave me some
+time ago, and it strongly reinforces the evidence imbedded in those
+reports, which goes to show that agitation for political objects in
+Ireland has perhaps done as much as all other causes put together to
+depress the condition of the poor in Ireland, by driving and keeping
+capital out of the country. The worst districts visited in 1879 by Dr.
+Sigerson and Dr. Kenny do not appear to have been so completely cut off
+from civilisation as was the region about Gweedore before the purchase
+of his property there by Lord George Hill, and the remedies suggested by
+Dr. Sigerson for the suffering in these districts are all in the
+direction of the remedies applied by Lord George Hill to the condition
+in which he found Gweedore. After giving full value to the stock
+explanations of Irish distress in the congested districts, such as
+excessive rents, penal laws, born of religious or "racial" animosity,
+and a defective system of land tenure, it seems to be clear that the
+main difficulties have arisen from the isolation of these districts, and
+from the lack of varied industries. Political agitation has checked any
+flow of capital into these districts, and a flow of capital into them
+would surely have given them better communications and more varied
+industries. Dr. Sigerson states that some of the worst of these regions
+in the west of Ireland are as well adapted to flax-culture as Ulster,
+and Napoleon III. showed what could be done for such wastes as La
+Sologne and the desert of the Landes by the intelligent study of a
+country and the judicious development of such values as are inherent in
+it. The loss of population in Ireland is not unprecedented. The State of
+New Hampshire, in America, one of the original thirteen colonies which
+established the American Union, has twice shown an actual loss in
+population during the past century. The population of the State declined
+during the decade between 1810 and 1820, and again during the decade
+between 1860 and 1870. This phenomenon, unique in American history, is
+to be explained only by three causes, all active in the case of
+congested Ireland,--a decaying agriculture, lack of communications, and
+the absence of varied industries. During the decade from 1860 to 1870
+the great Civil War was fought out. Yet, despite the terrible waste of
+life and capital in that war, especially at the South, the Northern
+State of New Hampshire, peopled by the energetic English adventurers who
+founded New England, was actually the only State which came out of the
+contest with a positive decline in population. Virginia (including West
+Virginia, which seceded from that Commonwealth in 1861) rose from
+1,596,318 inhabitants in 1860 to 1,667,177 in 1870. South Carolina,
+which was ravaged by the war more severely than any State except
+Virginia, and upon which the Republican majority at Washington pressed
+with such revengeful hostility after the downfall of the Confederacy,
+showed in 1870 a positive increase in population, as compared with 1860,
+from 703,708 to 705,606. But New Hampshire, lying hundreds of miles
+beyond the area of the conflict, showed a positive decrease from 326,073
+to 318,300. During my college days at Cambridge the mountain regions of
+New Hampshire were favourite "stamping grounds" in the vacations, and I
+exaggerate nothing when I say that in the secluded nooks and corners of
+the State, the people cut off from communication with the rest of New
+England, and scratching out of a rocky land an inadequate subsistence,
+were not much, if at all, in advance of the least prosperous dwellers in
+the most remote parts of Ireland which I have visited. They furnished
+their full contingent to that strange American exodus, which, about a
+quarter of a century ago, was led out of New England by one Adams to the
+Holy Land, in anticipation of the Second Advent, a real modern crusade
+of superstitious land speculators, there to perish, for the most part,
+miserably about Jaffa--leaving houses and allotments to pass into the
+control of a more practical colony of Teutons, which I found
+establishing itself there in 1869.
+
+Since 1870 a change has come over New Hampshire. The population has
+risen to 346,984. In places waste and fallen twenty years ago brisk and
+smiling villages have sprung up along lines of communication established
+to carry on the business of thriving factories.
+
+What reason can there be in the nature of things to prevent the
+development of analogous results, through the application of analogous
+forces, in the case of "congested" Ireland? A Nationalist friend, to
+whom I put this question this afternoon, answers it by alleging that so
+long as fiscal laws for Ireland are made at Westminster, British capital
+invested in Great Britain will prevent the application of these
+analogous forces to "congested" Ireland. His notion is that were Ireland
+as independent of Great Britain, for example, in fiscal matters as is
+Canada, Ireland might seek and secure a fiscal union with the United
+States, such as was partially secured to Canada under the Reciprocity
+Treaty denounced by Mr. Seward.
+
+"Give us this," he said, "and take us into your system of American
+free-trade as between the different States of your American Union, and
+no end of capital will soon be coming into Ireland, not only from your
+enormously rich and growing Republic, but from Great Britain too. Give
+us the American market, putting Great Britain on a less-favoured
+footing, just as Mr. Blake and his party wish to do in the case of
+Canada, and between India doing her own manufacturing on the one side,
+and Ireland becoming a manufacturing centre on the other, and a mart in
+Europe for American goods, we'll get our revenge on Elizabeth and
+Cromwell in a fashion John Bull has never dreamt of in these times,
+though he used to be in a mortal funk of it a hundred years ago, when
+there wasn't nearly as much danger of it!"
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Sunday, June 24._--"Put not your faith in porters!" I had
+expected to pass this day at Castlebar, on the estate of Lord Lucan, and
+I exchanged telegrams to that effect yesterday with Mr. Harding, the
+Earl's grandson, who, in the absence of his wonderfully energetic
+grandsire, is administering there what Lord Lucan, with pardonable
+pride, declares to be the finest and most successful dairy-farm in all
+Ireland. I asked the porter to find the earliest morning train; and
+after a careful search he assured me that by leaving Dublin just after 7
+A.M. I could reach Castlebar a little after noon.
+
+Upon this I determined to dine with Mr. Colomb, and spend the night in
+Dublin. But when I reached the station a couple of hours ago, it was to
+discover that my excellent porter had confounded 7 A.M. with 7 P.M.
+
+There is no morning train to Castlebar! So here I am with no recourse,
+my time being short, but to give up the glimpse I had promised myself of
+Mayo, and go on this afternoon to Belfast on my way back to London.
+
+At dinner last night Mr. Colomb gave me further and very interesting
+light upon the events of 1867, of which he had already spoken with me at
+Cork, as well as upon the critical period of Mr. Gladstone's experiments
+of 1881-82 at "Coercion" in Ireland.
+
+Mr. Colomb lives in a remarkably bright and pleasant suburb of Dublin,
+which not only is called a "park," as suburbs are apt to be, but really
+is a park, as suburbs are less apt to be. His house is set near some
+very fine old trees, shading a beautiful expanse of turf. He is an
+amateur artist of much more than ordinary skill. His walls are gay, and
+his portfolios filled, with charming water-colours, sketches, and
+studies made from Nature all over the United Kingdom. The grand
+coast-scenery of Cornwall and of Western Ireland, the lovely lake
+landscapes of Killarney, sylvan homes and storied towers, all have been
+laid under contribution by an eye quick to seize and a hand prompt to
+reproduce these most subtle and transient atmospheric effects of light
+and colour which are the legitimate domain of the true water-colourist.
+With all these pictures about us--and with Mr. Colomb's workshop fitted
+up with Armstrong lathes and all manner of tools wherein he varies the
+routine of official life by making all manner of instruments, and
+wreaking his ingenuity upon all kinds of inventions--and with the
+pleasant company of Mr. Davies, the agreeable and accomplished official
+secretary of Sir West Ridgway, the evening wore quickly away. In the
+course of conversation the question of the average income of the Irish
+priests arose, and I mentioned the fact that Lord Lucan, whose knowledge
+of the smallest details of Irish life is amazingly thorough, puts it
+down at about ten shillings a year per house in the average Irish
+parish.
+
+He rated Father M'Fadden and his curate of Gweedore, for example,
+without a moment's hesitation, at a thousand pounds a year in the whole,
+or very nearly the amount stated to me by Sergeant Mahony at Baron's
+Court. This brought from Mr. Davies a curious account of the proceedings
+in a recent case of a contested will before Judge Warren here in Dublin.
+The will in question was made by the late Father M'Garvey of Milford, a
+little village near Mulroy Bay in Donegal, notable chiefly as the scene
+of the murder of the late Earl of Leitrim. Father M'Garvey, who died in
+March last, left by this will to religious and charitable uses the whole
+of his property, save £800 bequeathed in it to his niece, Mrs. O'Connor.
+It was found that he died possessed not only of a farm at Ardara, but of
+cash on deposit in the Northern Bank to the very respectable amount of
+£23,711. Mrs. O'Connor contested the will. The Archbishop of Armagh, and
+Father Sheridan, C.C. of Letterkenny, instituted an action against her
+to establish the will. Father M'Fadden of Gweedore, lying in Londonderry
+jail as a first-class misdemeanant, was brought from Londonderry as a
+witness for the niece. But on the trial of the case it appeared that
+there was actually no evidence to sustain the plea of the niece that
+"undue influence" had been exerted upon her uncle by the Archbishop, who
+at the time of the making of the will was Bishop of Raphoe, or by
+anybody else; so the judge instructed the jury to find on all the issues
+for the plaintiffs, which was done. The judge declared the conduct of
+the defendant in advancing a charge of "undue influence" in such
+circumstances against ecclesiastics to be most reprehensible; but the
+Archbishop very graciously intimated through his lawyer his intention of
+paying the costs of the niece who had given him all this trouble,
+because she was a poor woman who had been led into her course by
+disappointment at receiving so small a part of so large an inheritance.
+Had the priest's property come to him in any other way than through his
+office as a priest her claim might have been more worthy of
+consideration, but Mr. M'Dermot, Q.C., who represented the Archbishop,
+took pains to make it clear that as an ecclesiastic his client, who had
+nothing to do with the making of the will, was bound to regard it "as
+proper and in accordance with the fitness of things that what had been
+received from the poor should be given back to the poor."
+
+I see no adequate answer to this contention of the Archbishop. But it
+certainly goes to confirm the estimates given me by Sergeant Mahony of
+Father M'Fadden's receipts at Gweedore, and the opinion expressed to me
+by Lord Lucan as to the average returns of an average Catholic parish,
+that the priest of Milford, a place hardly so considerable as Gweedore,
+should have acquired so handsome a property in the exercise there of his
+parochial functions.
+
+One form in which the priests in many parts of Ireland collect dues is
+certainly unknown to the practice of the Church elsewhere, I believe,
+and it must tend to swell the incomes of the priests at the expense,
+perhaps, of their legitimate influence. This is the custom of personal
+collections by the priests. In many parishes the priest stands by the
+church-door, or walks about the church--not with a bag in his hand, as
+is sometimes done in France on great occasions when a _quéle_ is made by
+the _curé_ for some special object,--but with an open plate in which the
+people put their offerings. I have heard of parishes in which the priest
+sits by a table near the church-door, takes the offerings from the
+parishioners as they pass, and comments freely upon the ratio of the
+gift to the known or presumed financial ability of the giver.
+
+We had some curious stories, too, from a gentleman present of the
+relation of the priests in wild, out-of-the-way corners of Ireland to
+the people, stories which take one back to days long before Lever. One,
+for example, of a delightful and stalwart old parish priest of eighty,
+upon whom an airy young patriot called to propose that he should accept
+the presidency of a local Land League. The veteran, whose only idea of
+the Land League was that it had used bad language about Cardinal Cullen,
+no sooner caught the drift of the youth than he snatched up a huge
+blackthorn, fell upon him, and "boycotted" him head-foremost out of a
+window. Luckily it was on the ground floor.
+
+Another strenuous spiritual shepherd came down during the distribution
+of potato-seed to the little port in which it was going on, and took up
+his station on board of the distributing ship. One of his parishioners,
+having received his due quota, made his way back again unobserved on
+board of the ship. As he came up to receive a second dole, the good
+father spied him, and staying not "to parley or dissemble," simply
+fetched him a whack over the sconce with a stick, which tumbled him out
+of the ship, head-foremost, into the hooker riding beside her! Quite of
+another drift was a much more astonishing tale of certain proceedings
+had here in February last before the Lord Chief-Justice. These took
+place in connection with a motion to quash the verdict of a coroner's
+jury, held in August 1887, on the body of a child named Ellen Gaffney,
+at Philipstown, in King's County, which preserves the memory of the
+Spanish sovereign of England, as Maryborough in Queen's preserves the
+memory of his Tudor consort. Cervantes never imagined an Alcalde of the
+quality of the "Crowner"' who figures in this story. Were it not that
+his antics cost a poor woman her liberty from August 1887 till December
+of that year, when the happy chance of a winter assizes set her free,
+and might have cost her her life, the story of this ideal magistrate
+would be extremely diverting.
+
+A child was born to Mrs. Gaffney at Philipstown on the 23d of July, and
+died there on the 25th of August 1887, Mrs. Gaffney being the wife of a
+"boycotted" man.
+
+A local doctor named Clarke came to the police and asked the Sergeant to
+inspect the body of the child, and call for an inquest. The sergeant
+inspected the body, and saw no reason to doubt that the child had died a
+natural death. This did not please the doctor, so the Coroner was sent
+for. He came to Philipstown the next day, conferred there with the
+doctor, and with a priest, Father Bergin, and proceeded to hold an
+inquest on the child in a public-house, "a most appropriate place," said
+Sir Michael Morris from the bench, "for the transactions which
+subsequently occurred." Strong depositions were afterwards made by the
+woman Mrs. Gaffney, by her husband, and by the police authorities, as to
+the conduct of this "inquest." She and her husband were arrested on a
+verbal order of the Coroner on the day when the inquest was held, August
+27th, and the woman was kept in prison from that time till the assizes
+in December. The "inquest" was not completed on the 27th of August, and
+after the Coroner adjourned it, two priests drove away on a car from the
+"public-house" in which it had been held. That night, or the next day, a
+man came to a magistrate with a bundle of papers which he had found in
+the road near Philipstown. The magistrate examined them, and finding
+them to be the depositions taken before the Coroner in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney, handed them to the police. How did they come to be in the road?
+On the 1st of September the Coroner resumed his inquest, this time in
+the Court-House at Philipstown, and one of the police, with the
+depositions in his pocket, went to hear the proceedings. Great was his
+amazement to see certain papers produced, and calmly read, as being the
+very original depositions which at that moment were in his own custody!
+He held his peace, and let the inquest go on. A letter was read from the
+Coroner, to the effect that he saw no ground for detaining the husband,
+Gaffney--but the woman was taken before a justice of the peace, and
+committed to prison on this finding by the Coroner's jury: "That Mary
+Anne Gaffney came by her death; and that the mother of the child, Ellen
+Gaffney, is guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food
+and care to sustain the life of this child "!
+
+It is scarcely credible, but it is true, that upon this extraordinary
+finding the Coroner issued a warrant for "murder" against this poor
+woman, on which she was actually locked up for more than three months!
+The jury which made this unique finding consisted of nineteen persons,
+and it was in evidence that their foreman reported thirteen of the jury
+to be for finding one way and six for finding another, whereupon a
+certain Mr. Whyte, who came into the case as the representative of
+Father Bergin, President of the local branch of the National
+League--nobody can quite see on what colourable pretext--was allowed by
+the Coroner to write down the finding I have quoted, and hand it to the
+Coroner. The Coroner read it over. He and Mr. Whyte then put six of the
+jury in one place, and thirteen in another; the Coroner read the finding
+aloud to the thirteen, and said to them, "Is that what you agree to?"
+and so the inquest was closed, and the warrant issued--for murder--and
+the woman, this poor peasant mother sent off to jail with the brand upon
+her of infanticide.[29]
+
+Where would that poor woman be now were there no "Coercion" in Ireland
+to protect her against "Crowner's quest law" thus administered? And what
+is to be thought of educated and responsible public men in England who,
+as recent events have shown, are not ashamed to go to "Crowner's quest
+Courts" of this sort for weapons of attack, not upon the administration
+only of their own Government, but upon the character and the motives of
+their political opponents?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+BELFAST, _Monday, June 25._--I left Dublin yesterday at 4 P.M., in a
+train which went off at high pressure as an "express," but came into
+Belfast panting and dilatory as an "excursion." The day was fine, and
+the line passes through what is reputed to be the most prosperous part
+of Ireland. In this part of Ireland, too, the fate of the island has
+been more than once settled by the arbitrament of arms; and if
+Parliamentary England throws up the sponge in the wrestle with the
+League, it is probable enough that the old story will come to be told
+over again here.
+
+At Dundalk the Irish monarchy of the Braces was made and unmade. The
+plantation of Ulster under James I. clinched the grasp not so much of
+England as of Scotland upon Ireland, and determined the course of events
+here through the Great Rebellion. The landing of the Duke of Schomberg
+at Carrickfergus opened the way for the subjugation of Jacobite Ireland
+by William of Orange. The successful descent of the French upon the same
+place in February 1760, after the close of "the Great Year," in which
+Walpole tells us he came to expect a new victory every morning with the
+rolls for breakfast, and after Hawke had broken the strength of the
+great French Armada off Belleisle, and done for England the service
+which Nelson did for her again off Trafalgar in 1805, shows what might
+have happened had Thurot commanded the fleet of Conflans. In this same
+region, too, the rout of Munro by Nugent at Ballinahinch practically
+ended the insurrection of 1798.
+
+There are good reasons in the physical geography of the British Islands
+for this controlling influence of Ulster over the affairs of Ireland,
+which it seems to me a serious mistake to overlook.
+
+The author of a brief but very hard-headed and practical letter on the
+pacification of Ireland, which appeared in the _Times_ newspaper in
+1886, while the air was thrilling with rumours of Mr. Gladstone's
+impending appearance as the champion of "Home Rule," carried, I
+remember, to the account of St. George's Channel "nine-tenths of the
+troubles, religious, political, and social, under which Ireland has
+laboured for seven centuries." I cannot help thinking he hit the nail on
+the head; and St. George's Channel does not divide Ulster from Scotland.
+From Donaghadee, which has an excellent harbour, the houses on the
+Scottish coast can easily be made out in clear weather. A chain is no
+stronger than its weakest link, and it is as hard to see how, even with
+the consent of Ulster, the independence of Ireland could be maintained
+against the interests and the will of Scotland, as it is easy to see why
+Leinster, Munster, and Connaught have been so difficult of control and
+assimilation by England. To dream of establishing the independence of
+Ireland against the will of Ulster appears to me to be little short of
+madness.
+
+At Moira, which stands very prettily above the Ulster Canal, a small
+army of people returning from a day in the country to Belfast came upon
+us and trebled the length of our train. We picked up more at Lisburn,
+where stands the Cathedral Church of Jeremy Taylor, the "Shakespeare of
+divines." Here my only companion in the compartment from Dublin left me,
+a most kindly, intelligent Ulster man, who had very positive views as to
+the political situation. He much commended the recent discourse in
+Scotland of a Presbyterian minister, who spoke of the Papal Decree as
+"pouring water on a drowned mouse," a remark which led me to elicit the
+fact that he had never seen either Clare or Kerry; and he was very warm
+in his admiration of Mr. Chamberlain. He told me, what I had heard from
+many other men of Ulster, that the North had armed itself thoroughly
+when the Home Rule business began with Mr. Gladstone. "I am a Unionist,"
+he said, "but I think the Union is worth as much to England as it is to
+Ireland, and if England means to break it up it is not the part of
+Irishmen who think and feel as I do to let her choose her own time for
+doing it, and stand still while she robs us of our property and turns us
+out defenceless to be trampled under foot by the most worthless
+vagabonds in our own island." He thinks the National League has had its
+death-blow. "What I fear now," he said, "is that we are running straight
+into a social war, and that will never be a war against the landlords in
+Ireland; it'll be a war against the Protestants and all the decent
+people there are among the Catholics."
+
+He was very cordial when he found I was an American, and with that
+offhand hospitality which seems to know no distinctions of race or
+religion in Ireland urged me to come and make him a visit at a place he
+has nearer the sea-coast. "I'll show you Downpatrick," he said, "where
+the tombs of St. Patrick and St. Bridget and St. Columb are, the saints
+sleeping quite at their ease, with a fine prosperous Presbyterian town
+all about them. And I'll drive you to Tullymore, where you'll see the
+most beautiful park, and the finest views from it all the way to the
+Isle of Man, that are to be seen in all Ireland." He was very much
+interested in the curious story of the sequestration of the remains of
+Mr. Stewart of New York, who was born, he tells me, at Lisburn, where
+the wildest fabrications on the subject seem to have got currency. That
+this feat of body-snatching is supposed to have been performed by a
+little syndicate of Italians, afterwards broken up by the firmness of
+Lady Crawford in resisting the ghastly pressure to which the widow and
+the executors of Mr. Stewart are believed to have succumbed, was quite a
+new idea to him.
+
+From Moira to Belfast the scenery along the line grows in beauty
+steadily. If Belfast were not the busiest and most thriving city in
+Ireland, it would still be well worth a visit for the picturesque charms
+of its situation and of the scenery which surrounds it. At some future
+day I hope to get a better notion both of its activity and of its
+attractions than it would be possible for me to attempt to get in this
+flying visit, made solely to take the touch of the atmosphere of the
+place at this season of the year; for we are on the very eve of the
+battle month of the Boyne.
+
+Mr. Cameron, the Town Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary, met me
+at the station, in accordance with a promise which he kindly made when I
+saw him several weeks ago at Cork; and this morning he took me all over
+the city. It is very well laid out, in the new quarters especially, with
+broad avenues and spacious squares. In fact, as a local wag said to me
+to-day at the Ulster Club, "You can drive through Belfast without once
+going into a street"--most of the thoroughfares which are not called
+"avenues" or "places" being known as "roads." It is, of course, an
+essentially modern city. When Boate made his survey of Ireland two
+centuries ago, Belfast was so small a place that he took small note of
+it, though it had been incorporated by James I. in 1613 in favour of the
+Chichester family, still represented here. In a very careful _Tour in
+Ireland_, published at Dublin in 1780, the author says of Belfast, "I
+could not help remarking the great number of Scots who reside in this
+place, and who carry on a good trade with Scotland." It seems then to
+have had a population of less than 20,000 souls, as it only touched that
+number at the beginning of this century. It has since then advanced by
+"leaps and bounds," after an almost American fashion, till it has now
+become the second, and bids fair at no distant day to become the first,
+city in Ireland. Few of the American cities which are its true
+contemporaries can be compared with Belfast in beauty. The quarter in
+which my host lives was reclaimed from the sea marshes not quite so long
+ago, I believe, as was the Commonwealth Avenue quarter of Boston, and
+though it does not show so many costly private houses perhaps as that
+quarter of the New England capital, its "roads" and "avenues" are on the
+whole better built, and there is no public building in Boston so
+imposing as the Queen's College, with its Tudor front six hundred feet
+in length, and its graceful central tower. The Botanic Gardens near by
+are much prettier and much better equipped for the pleasure and
+instruction of the people than any public gardens in either Boston or
+New York. These American comparisons make themselves, all the conditions
+of Belfast being rather of the New World than of the Old. The oldest
+building pointed out to me to-day is the whilom mansion of the Marquis
+of Donegal, now used as offices, and still called the Castle.
+
+This stands near Donegal Square, a fine site, disfigured by a quadrangle
+of commonplace brick buildings, occupied as a sort of Linen Exchange,
+concerning which a controversy rages, I am told. They are erected on
+land granted by Lord Donegal to encourage the linen trade, and the
+buildings used to be leased at a rental of £1 per window. The present
+holders receive £10 per window, and are naturally loath to part with so
+good a thing, though there is an earnest desire in the city to see these
+unsightly structures removed, and their place taken by stately municipal
+buildings more in key with the really remarkable and monumental private
+warehouses which already adorn this Square. Mr. Robinson, one of the
+partners of a firm which has just completed one of these warehouses, was
+good enough to show us over it. It is built of a warm grey stone, which
+lends itself easily to the chisel, and it is decorated with a wealth of
+carving and of architectural ornaments such as the great burghers of
+Flanders lavished on their public buildings. The interior arrangements
+are worthy of the external stateliness of the warehouse. Pneumatic tubes
+for the delivery of cash--a Scottish invention--electric lights, steam
+lifts, a kitchen at the top of the lofty edifice heated by steam from
+the great engine-room in the cellars, and furnishing meals to the
+employees, attest the energy and enterprise of the firm. The most
+delicate of the linen fabrics sold here are made, I was informed, all
+over the north country. The looms, three or four of which are kept going
+here in a great room to show the intricacy and perfection of the
+processes, are supplied by the firm to the hand-workers on a system
+which enables them, while earning good wages from week to week, to
+acquire the eventual ownership of the machines. The building is crowned
+by a sort of observatory, from which we enjoyed a noble prospect
+overlooking the whole city and miles of the beautiful country around. A
+haze on the horizon hid the coast of Scotland, which is quite visible
+under a clear sky. The Queen's Bridge over the Lagan, built in 1842
+between Antrim and Down, was a conspicuous feature in the panorama. Its
+five great arches of hewn granite span the distance formerly traversed
+by an older bridge of twenty-one arches 840 feet in length, which was
+begun in 1682, and finished just in time to welcome Schomberg and King
+William.
+
+The not less imposing warehouse of Richardson and Co., built of a
+singularly beautiful brown stone, and decorated with equal taste and
+liberality, adjoins that of Robinson and Cleaver. The banks, the public
+offices, the clubs, the city library, the museum, the Presbyterian
+college, the principal churches, all of them modern, all alike bear
+witness to the public spirit and pride in their town of the good people
+of Belfast. With more time at my disposal I would have been very glad to
+visit some of the flax-mills called into being by the great impulse
+which the cotton famine resulting from our Civil War gave to the linen
+manufactures of Northern Ireland, and the famous shipyards of the Woolfs
+on Queen's Island, As things are, it was more to my purpose to see some
+of the representative men of this great Protestant stronghold.
+
+I passed a very interesting hour with the Rev. Dr. Hanna, who is reputed
+to be a sort of clerical "Lion of the North," and whom I found to be in
+almost all respects a complete antitype of Father M'Fadden of Gweedore.
+
+
+Dr. Hanna is not unjustly proud of being at the head of the most
+extensive Sunday-school organisation in Ireland, if not in the world;
+and I find that the anniversary parade of his pupils, appointed for
+Saturday, June 30th, is looked forward to with some anxiety by the
+authorities here. He tells me that he expects to put two thousand
+children that day into motion for a grand excursion to Moira; but
+although he speaks very plainly as to the ill-will with which a certain
+class of the Catholics here regard both himself and his organisation, he
+does not anticipate any attack from them. With what seems to me very
+commendable prudence, he has resolved this year to put this procession
+into the streets without banners and bands, so that no charge of
+provocation may be even colourably advanced against it. This is no
+slight concession from a man so determined and so outspoken, not to say
+aggressive, in his Protestantism as Dr. Hanna; and the Nationalist
+Catholics will be very ill-advised, it strikes me, if they misinterpret
+it.
+
+He spoke respectfully of the Papal decree against Boycotting and the
+Plan of Campaign; but he seems to think it will not command the respect
+of the masses of the Catholic population, nor be really enforced by the
+clergy. Like most of the Ulstermen I have met, he has a firm faith, not
+only in the power of the Protestant North to protect itself, but in its
+determination to protect itself against the consequences which the
+northern Protestants believe must inevitably follow any attempt to
+establish an Irish nationality. Dr. Hanna is neither an Orangeman nor a
+Tory. He says there are but three known Orangemen among the clerical
+members of the General Assembly of the Irish Presbyterian Church, which
+unanimously pronounced against Mr. Gladstone's scheme of Home Rule, and
+not more than a dozen Tories. Of the 550 members of the Assembly, 538,
+he says, were followers of Mr. Gladstone before he adopted the politics
+of Mr. Parnell; and only three out of the whole number have given him
+their support. In the country at large, Dr. Hanna puts down the
+Unionists at two millions, of whom 1,200,000 are Protestants, and
+800,000 Catholics; and he maintains that if the Parliamentary
+representatives were chosen by a general vote, the Parnellite 80 would
+be cut down to 62; while the Unionists would number 44. He regards the
+Parnellite policy as "an organised imposture," and firmly believes that
+an Irish Parliament in Dublin would now mean civil war in Ireland. He
+had a visit here last week, he says, from an American Presbyterian
+minister, who came out to Ireland a month ago a "Home Ruler"; but, as
+the result of a trip through North-Western Ireland, is going back to
+denounce the Home Rule movement as a mischievous fraud.
+
+When I asked him what remedy he would propose for the discontent stirred
+up by the agitation of Home Rule, this Presbyterian clergyman replied
+emphatically, "Balfour, Balfour, and more Balfour!"
+
+This on the ground, as I understood, that Mr. Balfour's administration
+of the law has been the firmest, least wavering, and most equitable
+known in Ireland for many a day.
+
+Later in the day I had the pleasure of a conversation with the Rev. Dr.
+Kane, the Grand Master of the Orangemen at Belfast. Dr. Kane is a tall,
+fine-looking, frank, and resolute man, who obviously has the courage of
+his opinions. He thinks there will be no disturbances this year on the
+12th of July, but that the Orange demonstrations will be on a greater
+scale and more imposing than ever. He derides the notion that
+"Parnellism" is making any progress in Ulster. On the contrary, the
+concurrence this year of the anniversary of the defeat of the Great
+Armada with the anniversary of the Revolution of 1688 has aroused the
+strongest feelings of enthusiasm among the Protestants of the North, and
+they were never so determined as they now are not to tolerate anything
+remotely looking to the constitution of a separate and separatist
+Government at Dublin.
+
+BELFAST, _Tuesday, June 26._--Sir John Preston, the head of one of the
+great Belfast houses, and a former Mayor of the city, dined with us last
+night, and in the evening Sir James Haslett, the actual Mayor, came in.
+
+I find that in Belfast the office of Mayor is served without a salary,
+and is consequently filled as a rule by citizens of "weight and
+instance." In Dublin the Lord Mayor receives £3000 a year, with a
+contingent fund of £1500, and the office is becoming a distinctly
+political post. The face of Belfast is so firmly set against the
+tendency to subordinate municipal interests to general party exigencies,
+that the Corporation compelled Mr. Cobain, M.P., who sits at Westminster
+now for this constituency, to resign the post which he held as treasurer
+and cashier of the Corporation when he became a candidate for a seat in
+Parliament. I am not surprised, therefore, to learn that the city rates
+and taxes are much lower in the commercial than they are in the
+political capital of Ireland.
+
+Both Sir John Preston and Sir James Haslett have visited America. Sir
+John went there to represent the linen industries of Ireland, and to
+urge upon Congress the propriety of reducing our import duties upon
+fabrics which the American climate makes it practically imposssible to
+manufacture on our side of the water. Senator Sherman, who twenty years
+ago had the candour to admit that the wit of man could not devise a
+tariff so adjusted as to raise the revenue necessary for the Government
+which should not afford adequate incidental protection to all legitimate
+American industries, gave Sir John reason to hope that something might
+be done in the direction of a more liberal treatment of the linen
+industries. But nothing practical came of it. Sir John ought to have
+known that our typical American Protectionist, the late Horace Greeley,
+really persuaded himself, and tried to persuade other people, that with
+duties enough clapped on the Asiatic production, excellent tea might be
+grown on the uplands of South Carolina!
+
+In former years Sir John Preston used to visit Gweedore every year for
+sport and recreation. He knew Lord George Hill very well, "as true and
+noble a man as ever lived, who stinted himself to improve the state of
+his tenants." He threw an odd light on the dreamy desire which had so
+much amused me of the "beauty of Gweedore" to become "a dressmaker at
+Derry," by telling me that long ago the gossips there used to tell
+wonderful stories of a Gweedore girl who had made her fortune as a
+milliner in the "Maiden City."
+
+This morning Mr. Cameron, who as Town Inspector of the Royal Irish
+Constabulary will be responsible for public peace and order here during
+the next critical fortnight, held a review of his men on a common beyond
+the Theological College. About two hundred and fifty of the force were
+paraded, with about twenty mounted policemen, and for an hour and a
+half, under a tolerably warm sun, they were put through a regular
+military drill. A finer body of men cannot be seen, and in point of
+discipline and training they can hold their own, I should say, with the
+best of her Majesty's regiments. Without such discipline and training it
+would not be easy for any such body of men to pass with composure
+through the ordeal of insults and abuse to which the testimony of
+trustworthy eye-witnesses compels me to believe they are habitually
+subjected in the more disturbed districts of Ireland. As to the
+immediate outlook here, Mr. Cameron seems quite at his ease. Even if
+ill-disposed persons should set about provoking a collision between "the
+victors and the vanquished of the Boyne" his arrangements are so made,
+he says, as to prevent the development of anything like the outbreaks of
+former years.
+
+On the advice of Sir John Preston I shall take the Fleetwood route on my
+return to London to-night.
+
+This secures one a comfortable night on board of a very good and
+well-equipped boat, from which you go ashore, he tells me, into an
+excellent station of the London and North-Western Railway at Fleetwood,
+on the mouth of the Wyre on the Lancashire coast. Twenty years ago this
+was a small bathing resort called into existence chiefly by the
+enterprise of a local baronet whose name it bears. Its present
+prosperity and prospective importance are another illustration of the
+vigour and vitality of the North of Ireland, which is connected through
+Fleetwood with the great manufacturing regions of middle and northern
+England, as it is through Larne with the heart of Scotland.
+
+While it is as true now of the predominantly Catholic south of Ireland
+as it was when Sir Robert Peel made the remark forty years ago, that it
+stands "with its back to England and its face to the West," this
+Protestant Ireland of the North faces both ways, drawing Canada and the
+United States to itself through Moville and Derry and Belfast, and
+holding fast at the same time upon the resources of Great Britain
+through Glasgow and Liverpool. One of the best informed bankers in
+London told me not long ago, that pretty nearly all the securities of
+the great company which has recently taken over the business of the
+Guinnesses have already found their way into the North of Ireland and
+are held here. With such resources in its wealth and industry, better
+educated, better equipped, and holding a practically impregnable
+position in the North of Ireland, with Scotland and the sea at its back,
+Ulster is very much stronger relatively to the rest of Ireland than La
+Vendée was relatively to the rest of the French Republic in the last
+century. In a struggle for independence against the rest of Ireland it
+would have nothing to fear from the United States, where any attempt to
+organise hostilities against it would put the Irish-American population
+in serious peril, not only from the American Government, but from
+popular feeling, and force home upon the attention of the
+quickest-witted people in the world the significant fact that while the
+chief contributions, so far, of America to Southern Ireland, have been
+alms and agitation, the chief contributions of Scotland to Northern
+Ireland have been skilled agriculture and successful activity. It is
+surely not without meaning that the only steamers of Irish build which
+now traverse the Atlantic come from the dockyards, not of Galway nor of
+Cork, the natural gateways of Ireland to the west, but of Belfast, the
+natural gateway of Ireland to the north.
+
+
+
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+Not once, but a hundred times, during the visits to Ireland recorded in
+this book, I have been reminded of the state of feeling and opinion
+which existed in the Border States, as they were called, of the American
+Union, after the invasion of Virginia by a piratical band under John
+Brown, and before the long-pending issues between the South, insisting
+upon its constitutional rights, and the North, restive under its
+constitutional obligations, were brought to a head by the election of
+President Lincoln.
+
+All analogies, I know, are deceptive, and I do not insist upon this
+analogy. But it has a certain value here. For to-day in Ireland, as then
+in America, we find a grave question of politics, in itself not
+unmanageable, perhaps, by a race trained to self-government, seriously
+complicated and aggravated, not only by considerations of moral right
+and moral wrong, but by a profound perturbation of the material
+interests of the community.
+
+I well remember that after a careful study of the situation in America
+at the time of which I speak, Mr. Nassau Senior, a most careful and
+competent observer, frankly told me that he saw no possible way in which
+the problem could be worked out peacefully. The event justified this
+gloomy forecast.
+
+It would be presumptuous in me to say as much of the actual situation in
+Ireland; but it would be uncandid not to say that the optimists of
+Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee had greater
+apparent odds in their favour in 1861 than the optimists of Ireland seem
+to me to have in 1888.
+
+Ireland stands to-day between Great Britain and the millions of the
+Irish race in America and Australia very much as the Border States of
+the American Union stood in 1861 between the North and the South. There
+was little either in the Tariff question or in the Slavery question to
+shake the foundations of law and order in the Border States, could they
+have been left to themselves; and the Border States enjoyed all the
+advantages and immunities of "Home Rule" to an extent and under
+guarantees never yet openly demanded for Ireland by any responsible
+legislator within the walls of the British Parliament. But so powerful
+was the leverage upon them of conflicting passions and interests beyond
+their own borders that these sovereign states, well organised,
+homogeneous, prosperous communities, much more populous and richer in
+the aggregate in 1861 than Ireland is to-day, practically lost the
+control of their own affairs, and were swept helplessly into a terrific
+conflict, which they had the greatest imaginable interest in avoiding,
+and no interest whatever in promoting.
+
+I have seen and heard nothing in Ireland to warrant the very common
+impression that the country, as a whole, is either misgoverned or
+ungovernable; nothing to justify me in regarding the difficulties which
+there impede the maintenance of law and order as really indigenous and
+spontaneous. The "agitated" Ireland of 1888 appears to me to be almost
+as clearly and demonstrably the creation of forces not generated in, but
+acting upon, a country, as was the "bleeding Kansas" of 1856. But the
+"bleeding Kansas" of 1856 brought the great American Union to the verge
+of disruption, and the "agitated Ireland" of 1888 may do as much, or
+worse, for the British Empire. There is, no doubt, a great deal of
+distress in one or another part of Ireland, though it has not been my
+fortune to come upon any outward and visible signs of such grinding
+misery as forces itself upon you in certain of the richest provinces of
+that independent, busy, prosperous, Roman Catholic kingdom of Belgium,
+which on a territory little more than one-third as large as the
+territory of Ireland, maintains nearly a million more inhabitants, and
+adds to its population, on an average, in round numbers, as many people
+in four years as Ireland loses in five.
+
+I have seen peasant proprietors in Flanders and Brabant who could give
+the ideal Irish agent of the Nationalist newspapers lessons in
+rack-renting, though I am not at all sure that they might not get a hint
+or two themselves from some of the small farmers who came in my way in
+Ireland.
+
+Like all countries, mainly agricultural, too, Ireland has suffered a
+great deal of late years from the fall in prices following upon a period
+of intoxicating prosperity. Whether she has suffered more relatively
+than we should have suffered from the same cause in America, had we been
+foolish enough to imitate the monometallic policy of Germany in 1873, is
+however open to question; and I have an impression, which it will
+require evidence to remove, that the actual organisation known as the
+National Land League could never have been called into being had the
+British Government devoted to action upon the Currency Question, before
+1879, the time and energy which it has expended before and since that
+date in unsettling the principles of free contract, and tinkering at the
+relations of landlord and tenant in Ireland.
+
+But I am trenching upon inquiries here beyond the province of this book.
+
+Fortunately it is not necessary to my object in printing these volumes
+that I should either form or formulate any positive opinions as to the
+origin of the existing crisis in Ireland. Nor need I volunteer any
+suggestions of my own as to the methods by which order may best be
+maintained and civil government carried on in Ireland. It suffices for
+me that I close this self-imposed survey of men and things in that
+country with a conviction, as positive as it is melancholy, that the
+work which Mr. Redmond, M.P., informed us at Chicago that he and his
+Nationalist colleagues had undertaken, of "making the government of
+Ireland by England impossible," has been so far achieved, and by such
+methods as to make it extremely doubtful whether Ireland can be governed
+by anybody at all in accordance with any of the systems of government
+hitherto recognised in or adopted for that country. I certainly can see
+nothing in the organisation and conduct, down to this time, of the party
+known as the party of the Irish Nationalists, I will not say to
+encourage, but even to excuse, a belief that Ireland could be governed
+as a civilised country were it turned over to-morrow to their control. A
+great deal has been done by them to propagate throughout Christendom a
+general impression that England has dismally failed to govern Ireland in
+the past, and is unlikely hereafter to succeed in governing Ireland. But
+even granting this impression to be absolutely well founded, it by no
+means follows that Ireland is any more capable of governing herself than
+England is of governing her. The Russians have not made a brilliant
+success of their administration in Poland, but the Poles certainly
+administered Poland no better than the Russians have done. With an Irish
+representation in an Imperial British Parliament at Westminster,
+Ireland, under Mr. Gladstone's "base and blackguard" Union of 1800, has
+at least succeeded in shaking off some of the weightiest of the burdens
+by which, in the days of Swift, of Grattan, and of O'Connell, she most
+loudly declared herself to be oppressed. Whether with a Parliament at
+Dublin she would have fared as well in this respect since 1800 must be a
+matter of conjecture merely--and it must be equally a matter of
+conjecture also whether she would fare any better in this respect with a
+Parliament at Dublin hereafter. I am in no position to pronounce upon
+this--but it is quite certain that nothing is more uncommon than to find
+an educated and intelligent man, not an active partisan, in Ireland
+to-day, who looks forward to the reestablishment, in existing
+circumstances, of a Parliament at Dublin with confidence or hope.
+
+How the establishment of such a Parliament would affect the position of
+Great Britain as a power in Europe, and how it would affect the fiscal
+policy, and with the fiscal policy the well-being of the British people,
+are questions for British subjects to consider, not for me.
+
+That the processes employed during the past decade, and now employed to
+bring about the establishment of such a Parliament, have been, and are
+in their nature, essentially revolutionary, subversive of all sound and
+healthy relations between man and man, inconsistent with social
+stability, and therefore with social progress and with social peace,
+what I have seen and heard in Ireland during the past six months compels
+me to feel. Of the "Coercion," under which the Nationalist speakers and
+writers ask us in America to believe that the island groans and
+travails, I have seen literally nothing.
+
+Nowhere in the world is the press more absolutely free than to-day in
+Ireland. Nowhere in the world are the actions of men in authority more
+bitterly and unsparingly criticised. If public men or private citizens
+are sent to prison in Ireland, they are sent there, not as they were in
+America during the civil war, or in Ireland under the "Coercion Act" of
+1881, on suspicion of something they may have done, or may have intended
+to do, but after being tried for doing, and convicted of having done,
+certain things made offences against the law by a Parliament in which
+they are represented, and of which, in some cases, they are members.
+
+To call this "Coercion" is, from the American point of view, simply
+ludicrous. What it may be from the British or the Irish point of view is
+another affair, and does not concern me. I may be permitted, however, I
+hope without incivility, to say that if this be "Coercion" from the
+British or the Irish point of view, I am well content to be an American
+citizen. Ours is essentially a government not of emotions, but of
+statutes, and most Americans, I think, will agree with me that the sage
+was right who declared it to be better to live where nothing is lawful
+than where all things are lawful.
+
+The "Coercion" which I have found established in Ireland, and which I
+recognise in the title of this book, is the "Coercion," not of a
+government, but of a combination to make a particular government
+impossible. It is a "Coercion" applied not to men who break a public
+law, or offend against any recognised code of morals, but to men who
+refuse to be bound in their personal relations and their business
+transactions by the will of other men, their equals only, clothed with
+no legal authority over them. It is a "Coercion" administered not by
+public and responsible functionaries, but by secret tribunals. Its
+sanctions are not the law and honest public opinion, but the base
+instinct of personal cowardice, and the instinct, not less base, of
+personal greed. Whether anything more than a steady, firm administration
+of the law is needed to abolish this "Coercion" is a matter as to which
+authorities differ. I should be glad to believe with Colonel Saunderson
+that "the Leaguers would not hold up the 'land-grabber' to execration,
+and denounce him as they do, unless they knew in fact that the moment
+the law is made supreme in Ireland the tenants would become just as
+amenable to it as any other subjects of the Queen." But some recent
+events suggest a doubt whether these "other subjects of the Queen" are
+as amenable to the law as my own countrymen are.
+
+That the Church to which the great majority of the Irish people have for
+so many ages, and through so many tribulations, borne steadfast
+allegiance, has been shaken in its hold upon the conscience of Ireland
+by the machinery of this odious and ignoble "Coercion," appears to me to
+be unquestionable. That the head of that Church, being compelled by
+evidence to believe this, has found it necessary to intervene for the
+restoration of the just spiritual authority of the Church over the Irish
+people all the world now knows--nor can I think that his intervention
+has come a day or an hour too soon, to arrest the progress in Ireland of
+a social disease which threatens, not the political interests of the
+empire of which Ireland is a part alone, but the character of the Irish
+people themselves, and the very existence among them of the elementary
+conditions of a Christian civilisation.
+
+It would be unjust to the Irish people to forget that this demoralising
+"Coercion" against which the Head of the Catholic Church has declared
+war, seems to me to have been seriously reinforced by the Land
+Legislation of the Imperial Parliament.
+
+No one denies that great reforms and readjustments of the Land Tenure in
+Ireland needed to be made long before any serious attempt was made to
+make them.
+
+But that such reforms and readjustments might have been made without
+cutting completely loose from the moorings of political economy, appears
+pretty clearly, not only from examples on the continent of Europe, and
+in my own country, but from the Rent and Tenancy Acts carried out in
+India under the viceroyalty of Lord Dufferin since 1885. The conditions
+of these measures were different, of course, in each of the cases of
+Oudh, Bengal, and the Punjab, and in none of these cases were they
+nearly identical with the conditions of any practicable land measure for
+Ireland. But two great characteristics seem to me to mark the Indian
+legislation, which are not conspicuous in the legislation for Ireland.
+
+These are a spirit of equity as between the landlords and the tenants,
+and finality. I do not see how it can be questioned that the landlords
+of Ireland have been dealt with by recent British legislation as if they
+were offenders to be mulcted, and that the tenants in Ireland have been
+encouraged by recent British legislation to anticipate an eventual
+transfer to them, on steadily improving terms, of the land-ownership of
+the island. Mr. Davitt is perhaps the most popular Irishman living, and
+I believe him to be sincerely convinced that the ownership of the land
+of Ireland (and of all other countries) ought to be vested in the State.
+But if the independence of Ireland were acknowledged by Great Britain
+to-morrow, and all the actual landlords of Ireland were compelled
+to-morrow to part with their ownership, such as it is, of the land, I
+believe Mr. Davitt would be further from the recognition and triumph of
+his principle of State-ownership than he is to-day with a British
+Parliament hostile to "Home Rule," but apparently not altogether
+unwilling to make the landlords of Ireland an acceptable burnt-offering
+upon the altar of imperial unity. Probably he sees this himself, and the
+existing state of things may not be wholly displeasing to him, as
+holding out a hope that the flame which he has been helped by British
+legislation to kindle in Ireland may already be taking hold upon the
+substructions and outworks of the edifice of property in Great Britain
+also.
+
+One thing at least is clear.
+
+The two antagonistic principles which confront each other in Ireland
+to-day are the principles of the Agrarian Revolution represented by Mr.
+Davitt, and the principle of Authority, represented in the domain of
+politics by the British Government, and in the domain of morals by the
+Vatican. With one or the other of these principles the victory must
+rest. If the Irish people of all classes who live in Ireland could be
+polled to-day, it is likely enough that a decisive majority of them
+would declare for the principle of Authority in the State and in the
+Church, could that over-riding issue be made perfectly plain and
+intelligible to them. But how is that possible? In what country of the
+world, and in what age of the world, has it ever been possible to get
+such an issue made perfectly plain and intelligible to any people?
+
+In the domain of morals the principle of Authority, so far as concerns
+Catholic Ireland, rests with a power which is not likely to waver or
+give way. The Papal Decree has gone forth. Those who profess to accept
+it will be compelled to obey it. Those who reject it, whatever their
+place in the hierarchy of the Church may be, must sooner or later find
+themselves where Dr. M'Glynn of New York now is. Catholic Ireland can
+only continue to be Catholic on the condition of obedience, not formal
+but real, not in matters indifferent, but in matters vital and
+important, to the Head of the Catholic Church.
+
+In the domain of politics the principle of Authority rests with an
+Administration which is at the mercy of the intelligence or the
+ignorance, the constancy or the fickleness, the weakness or the
+strength, of constituencies in Great Britain, not necessarily familiar
+with the facts of the situation in Ireland, not necessarily enlightened
+as to the real interests either of Great Britain or of Ireland, nor even
+necessarily awake, with Cardinal Manning, to the truth that upon the
+future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.
+
+With two, three, four, or five years of a steady and cool administration
+of the laws in Ireland, by an executive officer such as Mr. Balfour
+seems to me to have shown himself to be--with a judicious abstinence of
+the British Legislature from feverish and fussy legislation about
+Ireland, with a prudent and persistent development of the material
+resources of Ireland, and with a genuine co-operation of the people who
+own land in Ireland with the people who wish to own land in Ireland, for
+the readjustment of land-ownership, the principle of Authority in the
+domain of politics may doubtless win in the conflict with the principle
+of the Agrarian revolution.
+
+But how many contingencies are here involved! Meanwhile the influences
+which imperil in Ireland the principle of Authority, in the domains
+alike of politics and of morals, are at work incessantly, to undermine
+and deteriorate the character of the Irish people, to take the vigour
+and the manhood out of them, to unfit them day by day, not only for good
+citizenship in the British Empire or the United States, but for good
+citizenship in any possible Ireland under any possible form of
+government. To arrest these influences before they bring on in Ireland a
+social crash, the effects of which must be felt far beyond the
+boundaries of that country, is a matter of primary importance,
+doubtless, to the British people. It is a matter, too, of hardly less
+than primary importance to the people of my own country. Unfortunately
+it does not rest with us to devise or to apply an efficient check to
+these influences.
+
+That rests with the people of Great Britain, so long as they insist that
+Ireland shall remain an integral portion of the British dominions. I do
+not see how they can acquit themselves of this responsibility, or escape
+the consequences of evading it, solely by devising the most ingenious
+machinery of local administration for Ireland, or the most liberal
+schemes for fostering the material interests of the Irish people. Such
+things, of course, must in due time be attended to. But the first duty
+of a government is to govern; and I believe that Earl Grey has summed up
+the situation in Ireland more concisely and more courageously than any
+other British statesman in his outspoken declaration, that "in order to
+avert the wreck of the nation, it is absolutely necessary that some
+means or other should be found for securing to Ireland during the
+present crisis a wiser and more stable administration of its affairs
+than can be looked for under its existing institutions."
+
+I have heard and read a good deal in the past of the "Three F's" thought
+a panacea for Irish discontent. Three other F's seem to me quite as
+important to the future of Irish content and public order. These are,
+Fair Dealing towards Landlords as well as Tenants; Finality of Agrarian
+Legislation at Westminster; and last and most essential of all, Fixity
+of Executive Tenure.
+
+The words I have just quoted of Earl Grey, show it to be the conviction
+of the oldest living leader of English Liberalism that this last is the
+vital point, the key of the situation. Let me bracket with his words,
+and leave to the consideration of my readers, the following pregnant
+passage from a letter written to me by an Irish correspondent who is as
+devoted to Irish independence as is Earl Grey to imperial unity:--
+
+"If the present Nationalist movement succeeds, it will have the effect
+of putting the worst elements of the Irish nation in power, and keeping
+them there irremoveably. We are to have an Executive at the mercy of a
+House of Representatives, and the result will be a government, or series
+of governments, as weak and vicious as those of France, with this
+difference, that here all purifying changes such as seem imminent in
+France will be absolutely prevented by the irresistible power of
+England. The true model for us would be a constitution like yours in the
+United States, with an Executive responsible to the nation at large, and
+irremoveable for a term of years. But this we shall never get from
+England. Shall we make use of Home Rule to take it for ourselves?
+
+"Many earnest and active Irish Unionists now say that if any bill
+resembling Mr. Gladstone's passes, they will make separation, their
+definite policy. If Home Rule comes without the landlords having been
+bought out on reasonable terms, a class will be created in Ireland full
+of bitter and most just hatred of England--a class which may very likely
+one day play the part here which the persecuted Irish Presbyterians who
+fled from the tyranny of the English Church in Ireland played in your
+own Revolution beyond the Atlantic."
+
+
+<p><hr /></p>
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+NOTE F.
+
+THE "MOONLIGHTERS" AND "HOME RULE."
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 38.)
+
+
+On Monday, the 1st of February 1886, the _Irish Times_ published the
+following story from Tralee, near the scene of the "boycotting,"
+temporal and spiritual, of the unfortunate daughters of Mr. Jeremiah
+Curtin, murdered in his own house by "moonlighters":--
+
+ "TRALEE, _Sunday_.
+
+ "It was stated that the bishop had ordered Mass to be celebrated
+ for them--the Curtins--but this did not take place. At the village
+ of Firies a number of people had assembled. They stopped loitering
+ about the place in the forenoon, waiting for a meeting of the
+ National League, which was subsequently held. A threatening notice
+ was discovered posted up on the door of a house formerly used as a
+ forge. It ran as follows:--
+
+ "'NOTICE.--If we are honoured by the presence of the bloodthirsty
+ perjurers at Mass on any of the forthcoming Sundays, take good care
+ you'll stand up very politely and walk out. Don't be under the
+ impression that all the Moonlighters are dead, and that this notice
+ is a child's play, as Shawn Nelleen titled the last one. I'll be
+ sure to keep my word, as you will see before long, so have no
+ welcome for the Curtins, and, above all, let no one work for them
+ in any way. As you respect the Captain, and as you value your own
+ life, abide by this notice.'--Signed, 'A MOONLIGHTER.'
+
+ "The above notice was written on tea paper in large legible style,
+ and evidently by an intelligent person. Groups were perusing it
+ during the day. A force of police marched through the village and
+ back, but did not observe this document, as it is still posted on
+ the door of the house."
+
+The "bloodthirsty perjurers" here mentioned were the daughters who had
+dared to demand and to promote the punishment of the assassins of their
+father! For this crime these daughters were to be excommunicated by the
+people of Firies, and denied the consolations of religion in their deep
+sorrow, even in defiance of the order of the Catholic bishop.
+
+As the advent of Mr. Gladstone to power in alliance with Mr. Parnell was
+then imminent, Mr. Sheehan, M.P., wrote a letter to the parish priest of
+Firies, the Rev. Mr. O'Connor, begging him in substance to put the
+brakes--for a time--upon the wheels of the local rack, lest the outcries
+of the young women subjected to this moral torture should interfere with
+the success of the new alliance. This, in plain English, is the only
+possible meaning of the letter which I here reprint from a leaflet
+issued by an Irish society:--
+
+ "The Rev. Father O'Connor, P.P., has received the following letter
+ from Mr. Sheehau, M.P., in reference to this matter, under date
+
+ "'House of Commons, _January 26th._
+
+ "'REV. DEAR SIR,--At this important juncture in our history, I am
+ sorry to see reports of the Firies display. Nothing that has taken
+ place yet in the South of Ireland has done so much harm to the
+ National cause. If they persist they will ruin us. To-morrow
+ evening will be most important in Parliamentary history. Our party
+ expect the defeat of the Government and resumption of power by Mr.
+ Gladstone. If we succeed in this, which we are confident of, the
+ future of our country will be great, and, although an appeal to the
+ constituencies must be made, the Irish party in those few days have
+ made an impression in future that no Government can withstand. The
+ Salisbury Government want to appeal to the country on the integrity
+ of the empire, and, of course, for the last few days have tried all
+ means to lead to this by raking up the Curtin case and all judicial
+ cases, which _must be avoided for a short time_, as our stoppage to
+ the Eviction Act will cover all this.--Yours faithfully, J.D.
+ SHEEHAN.'"
+
+This letter was read, the leaflet informs us, by the Rev. Mr. O'Connor,
+at the National Schools and other places.
+
+
+
+NOTE G.
+
+THE PONSONBY PROPERTY.
+
+(Vol. ii. pp. 59-66.)
+
+
+The account which the Rev. Canon Keller gave me of "The Struggle for
+Life on the Ponsonby Estate," in a tract bearing that title, and
+authorised by him to be published by the National League, is so
+circumstantial and elaborate that, after reading it carefully, I took
+unusual pains to obtain some reply to it from the representatives of the
+landlord implicated. These finally led to a visit from Mr. Ponsonby
+himself, who was so kind as to call upon me in London on the 15th of
+May, with papers and documents. I give in the following colloquy the
+results of this interview, putting together with the allegations of
+Canon Keller the answers of Mr. Ponsonby, and leave the matter in this
+form to the judgment of my readers.
+
+_Q_. Canon Keller, I see, describes you, Mr. Ponsonby, as "a retired
+navy officer, and an absentee Irish landlord." He says your estate is
+now "universally known as the famous Ponsonby Estate," and that it is
+occupied "by from 300 to 400 tenants, holding farms varying in extent
+from an acre and a half to over two hundred acres." Are these statements
+correct?
+
+_A_. I am a retired navy officer certainly, and perhaps I may be called
+an "absentee Irish landlord." I lived on my property for some time, and
+I have always attended to it. I succeeded to the estate in 1868, and
+almost my first act was to borrow £2000 of the Board of Works for
+drainage purposes--the tenants agreeing to pay half the interest. As a
+matter of fact some never paid at all, and I afterwards wiped out the
+claims against them. There are about 300 tenants on the property, and
+the average holdings are of about 36 acres, at an average rental of £30
+a holding. There are, however, not a few large farms.
+
+_Q_. Canon Keller says that "in the memory of living witnesses, and far
+beyond it, the Ponsonby tenants have been notoriously rack-rented and
+oppressed"; and that they have been committed to the "tender mercies of
+agents, seeing little or nothing of their landlord, and experiencing no
+practical sympathy from that quarter." How is this?
+
+_A_. I wish to believe Canon Keller truthful when he knows the truth. He
+certainly does not know the truth here. He is a newcomer at Youghal,
+having come there in November 1885, and hardly so much of an authority
+about "the memory of living witnesses and far beyond it" as the tenants
+on the estate, who, when I went there first with my wife, presented to
+me, May 25, 1868, an address of welcome, referring in very different
+terms to the history of the estate and of my family connection with it.
+Here is the original address, and a copy of it--the latter being quite
+at your service.
+
+This original address is very handsomely engrossed, and is signed by
+fifty tenants. Among the names I observed those of Martin Loughlin,
+Peter McDonough, Michael Gould, William Forrest, and John Heaphey, all
+of whom are cited by Canon Keller in his tract as conspicuous victims of
+the oppression and rack-renting which he says have prevailed upon the
+Ponsonby estates time out of mind. It was rather surprising, therefore,
+to find them joining with more than forty other tenants to sign an
+address, of which I here print the text:--
+
+ To C.W. TALBOT PONSONBY, Esq.
+
+ Honoured Sir,--The Tenantry of your Estates near Youghal have heard
+ with extreme pleasure of the arrival of yourself and lady in the
+ neighbourhood, and have deputed us to address you on their behalf.
+
+ Through us they bid you and Mrs. Ponsonby welcome, and respectfully
+ congratulate you on your accession to the Estates.
+
+ The name of Ponsonby is traditionally revered in this part of the
+ country, being associated in the recollections and impressions of
+ the people with all that is exalted, honourable, and generous. It
+ has been matter of regret that the heads of the family have not
+ (probably from uncontrollable causes) visited these Estates for
+ many years, but the tenantry have never wavered in their sentiments
+ of respect towards them.
+
+ We will not disguise from you the conviction generally entertained
+ that the improvement of landed property, and the condition of its
+ occupiers, is best promoted under the personal observation and
+ supervision of the proprietor, and your tenantry on that account
+ hail with satisfaction the promise your presence affords of future
+ intercourse between you and them.
+
+ Again, on the part of your Tenants and all connected with your
+ Estates, tendering you and your lady a most hearty welcome, and
+ sincerely wishing you and her a long and happy career--We subscribe
+ ourselves, Honoured Sir, Respectfully yours,
+
+ YOUGHAL, _May_ 1868.
+
+_Q_. Did Canon Keller ever see this address, may I ask, Mr. Ponsonby?
+
+_A_. I believe not; and I may as well say at once that I suppose he has
+taken for gospel all the stories which any of the tenants under the
+terrorism which has been established on the place think it best to pour
+into his listening ear. As I have said, he is quite a new man at
+Youghal, and when he first came there he was a quiet and not at all
+revolutionary priest. You saw him, and saw how good his manners are, and
+that he is a well-educated man. But on Sunday, November 7, 1886, a great
+meeting was held at Youghal. It was a queer meeting for a Sunday, being
+openly a political meeting, with banners and bands, to hear speeches
+from Mr. Lane, M.P., Mr. Flynn, M.P., and others. The Rev. Mr. Keller
+presided, and a priest from America, Father Hayes of Georgetown, Iowa,
+in the United States, was present. It was ostensibly a Home Rule
+meeting, but the burden of the speeches was agrarian. Mr. Lane, M.P.,
+made a bitter personal attack on another Nationalist member, Sir Joseph
+M'Kenna of Killeagh, calling him a "heartless and inhuman landlord;" and
+my property was also attended to by Mr. Lane, who advised my tenants
+openly not to accept my offer of 20 per cent. reduction, but to demand
+40 per cent. Father Hayes in his speech bade "every man stand to his
+guns," and wound up by declaring that if England and the landlords
+behaved in America as they behaved in Ireland, the Americans "would pelt
+them not only with dynamite, but with the lightnings of Heaven and the
+fires of hell, till every British bull-dog, whelp, and cur would be
+pulverised and made top-dressing for the soil." Canon Keller afterwards
+expressed disapproval of this speech of Hayes, and this coming to the
+knowledge of Hayes in America, Hayes denounced Keller for not daring to
+do this at the time in his presence. Since then Canon Keller has been
+much more violent in tone.
+
+_Q_. I don't want to carry you through a long examination, Mr. Ponsonby,
+but I see typical cases here, about which I should like to ask a
+question or two. Here, is Callaghan Flavin, for instance, described by
+Canon Keller as one of eight tenants who "had to retreat before the
+crowbar brigade," and who "deserved a better fate." Canon Keller says he
+is assured by a competent judge that Flavin's improvements, "full value
+for £341, 10s.," are now "the landlord's property." What are the facts
+about Mr. Flavin?
+
+_A_. Mr. Flavin's farm was held by his cousin, Ellen Flavin of Gilmore,
+who, on the 7th of February 1872, surrendered it to the landlord on
+receiving from me a sum of £172, 10s. 6d. I obtained a charging order
+under section 27 of the Land Act, entitling me to an annuity of £8, 12s.
+6d. for thirty-five years from July 3, 1872. It was let to Callaghan
+Flavin in preference to other applicants, July 3, 1872; and in 1873, at
+his request, I obtained a loan from the Board of Works for the thorough
+draining of a portion of the farm. Thirteen acres were drained at a cost
+of £84, 6s. 3d., for which the tenant promised to pay 5 per cent.
+interest, which I eventually forgave him. There was no house on the
+farm. He took it without one, and I did not want one there. He built a
+house himself without consulting my agent, and then wanted me to make
+him an allowance for it. I told him he had thirty-one years to enjoy it
+in, and must be content with that. About the same time he took another
+farm of mine at a rent of £35. Since I came into my property in 1868 I
+have laid out upon it in drainage, buildings, and planting--here are the
+accounts, which you may look at--over £15,000, including about £8000 of
+loans from the Board of Works. In the drainage the tenants got work for
+which they were paid. I gave them slates for the buildings, with timber
+and stone from the estate, and they supplied the labour. There is no
+case in which the outlays for improvements came from the tenants--not a
+single one. I repeat it, Canon Keller's tract is a tissue of fictions.
+
+What nonsense it is to talk about the "traditional rack-renting" of a
+property held by the Ponsonbys for two hundred years, the tenants on
+which could welcome me when I came into it with the language of the
+address you have here seen!
+
+I never evicted tenants for less than three years' arrears, till what
+Canon Keller calls the "crowbar brigade," by which he means the officers
+of the law, had to be put into action to meet the "Plan of Campaign" in
+May last. I did not proceed against the tenants because they could not
+pay. I selected the tenants who could pay, and who were led, or, I
+believe in most cases, "coerced," into refusing to pay by agitators with
+Mr. Lane, M.P., to inspire them, and Canon Keller, P.P., to glorify them
+in a tract.
+
+_Q_. What were your personal relations with the tenants when you were at
+Inchiquin?
+
+_A_. Always most friendly; and even the other day when I was there,
+while none of them would speak to me when they were all together, those
+I met individually touched their hats, and were as civil as ever. I
+believe they would all be thankful to have things as they were, and I
+have never refused to meet and treat with them on fair individual terms.
+
+In November 1885 my offer of an abatement of 15 per cent. being refused,
+a few tenants, I believe, clubbed their rents, and for the sake of peace
+I then offered 20 per cent., which they accepted and paid. In October
+1886 I hoped to prevent trouble by making the same offer of 20 per cent.
+abatement on non-judicial and 10 per cent. on judicial rents. One man
+took the latter abatement and paid. Then another tenant demanded 40 per
+cent. My agent said he would give them time, and also take money on
+account, the effect of which would be to put me out of court, and
+prevent my getting an order of ejectment if I wanted to for the balance.
+I thought this fair, and approved it, but I refused to make a 40 per
+cent. all-round abatement, authorising my agent, however, to make what
+abatements he liked in special cases. My words were, "I don't limit you
+on the amount of abatement you give, or as to the number of tenants you
+may choose so to treat." If this was not a fair free hand, what would
+be? My agent afterwards told me he had no chance to make this known. The
+fact is they meant to force the Plan on the tenants and me, and to
+prevent any settlement but a "victory for the League!"
+
+In my original notes of my conversation with Father Keller at Youghal, I
+found the name of one tenant whom he introduced to me, and who certainly
+told me that his holdings amounted to some £300 a year, and that they
+had been in his family for "two hundred years," set down as Doyle--I so
+printed it with the statements made. But Father Keller, to whom I
+submitted my proofs, and who was so good as to revise them, struck out
+the name of Doyle, and inserted that of Loughlin, putting the rental
+down at £94 (vol. ii. p. 71). Of course I accept this correction. But on
+my mentioning the matter to Mr. Ponsonby by letter, he replies to me
+(July 27th) as follows:--
+
+ "Maurice Doyle is a son of Richard Doyle, who died in 1876, leaving
+ his widow to carry on his farm of 74 acres 1 rood, in the townland
+ of Ballykitty, which he held in 1858 at a rental of £50, 11s. In
+ 1868 this was reduced to £48, 11s. In September 1871 he took in
+ addition a farm of 159 acres 2 roods at £130, in Burgen and
+ Ballykitty. He afterwards got a lease for thirty-one years of this
+ larger farm, with a portion of his earlier holding, for £155. This
+ left him to pay £21, 11s. for the residue of the earlier holding as
+ in 1858. But at his request, in 1876, the year of his death, I
+ reduced this to £17.
+
+ "In March 1879, by the death of Mr. Henry Hall, in whose family it
+ had been for certainly a century, the Inchiquin farm of 213 acres,
+ valued at £258, 10s., came on my hands. This farm was valued in
+ 1873 by one valuer at £384, 10s., and by another at £390, 10s. In
+ an old lease I find that this farm was let at £3 an acre. Mr. Henry
+ Hall to the day of his death held it at £306, 7s. 6d., under a
+ lease which I made a lease for life. For this farm Mrs. Richard
+ Doyle applied, agreeing to take it on a 31 years' lease, at £370 a
+ year. I let it to her, and she became the lease-holder, putting in
+ her son Maurice Doyle to take charge of it, though not as the
+ tenant. He was an active Land Leaguer from the moment he got into
+ the place, and in 1886 he was a leader in promoting the Plan of
+ Campaign. Proceedings had to be taken against his mother in order
+ to eject him, as she was the tenant, not he. I objected to this,
+ for I always have had the greatest regard for her. Had she been let
+ alone she would have paid her rent as she had always done. But Mr.
+ Lane and his allies saw it would never do to let Maurice Doyle
+ retain his place on his mother's holding. All this will show you
+ that Maurice Doyle did not inherit the Inchiquin farm. The only
+ inherited holding of his mother is the farm of 74 acres 1 rood in
+ the townland of Ballykitty, held by his father in 1858. I have no
+ doubt you saw Doyle at Youghal, by the description you gave me, and
+ you remembered his name at once. He was a thickset heavy-looking
+ man, florid, with a military moustache, the last time I saw him.
+ His mother is one of the 'rack-rented' tenants you hear of, having
+ been able in ten years to increase her acreage from 74 acres to 376
+ acres, and her rental from £48, 11s. to £542!"
+
+
+As to the general effect of all this business upon the tenants, and upon
+himself, Mr. Ponsonby spoke most feelingly. "The tenants are ruined
+where they might have been thriving. My means of being useful to them or
+to myself are taken away. My charges, though, all remain. I have to pay
+tithes for Protestant Church service, of which I can't have the benefit,
+the churches being closed; and the other day I had a notice that any
+property I had in England would be held liable for quit-rents to the
+Crown on my property in Ireland, of which the Government denies me
+practically any control or use!"
+
+
+
+NOTE G2.
+
+THE GLENBEHY EVICTION FUND.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 12.)
+
+
+In the _London Times_ of September 15 appears the following letter from
+the Land Agent whom I saw at Glenbehy, setting forth the effect of this
+"Glenbehy Eviction Fund" upon the morals of the tenants and the peace of
+the place:--
+
+ _To the Editor of the Times._
+
+ "Sir,--Although nearly eighteen months have elapsed since the
+ evictions on the Glenbehy estate, after which the above-named fund
+ was started and largely subscribed to by the sympathetic British
+ public, I think it only fair to throw a little light on the manner
+ in which this fund has been expended, and the effects which are
+ still felt in consequence of the money not yet being exhausted.
+
+ "It was generally supposed that the tenants then evicted were in
+ such poor circumstances as to be unable to settle, whereas, as a
+ matter of fact, they were, and are, with a few exceptions, the most
+ well-to-do on the estate, having, for the most part, from five to
+ fifteen head of cattle, in addition to sheep, pigs, etc.
+
+ "Among the tenants evicted at that time many had not paid rents
+ since 1879, and had been in illegal occupation since 1884, from
+ which latter date the landlord was responsible for taxes, provided
+ it is proved that sufficient distress cannot be made of the lands.
+ These tenants were offered a clear receipt to May 1, 1886, if they
+ paid half a year's rent, which would scarcely have paid the cost of
+ proceedings, and the landlord would therefore have been put to
+ actual loss. These people, though well able to settle, are given to
+ understand that as soon as they do so their participation in the
+ eviction fund will cease, and thus it will be seen that a direct
+ premium is being paid to dishonesty.
+
+ "In one case a widow woman was summoned for being on the farm from
+ which she was at that time evicted. Finding out that one of her
+ children was ill, I applied to the magistrate at the hearing of the
+ case only to impose a nominal fine. In consequence she was fined
+ one penny, but sooner than pay this she went to gaol, though she
+ had several head of cattle and, prior to her eviction, a very nice
+ farm. The case of this woman fairly illustrates the combination
+ which has existed to avoid the fulfilment of obligations.
+
+ "The amount of fines paid for similar offences comes, in several
+ instances, to nearly what I require to effect a settlement. Some of
+ the tenants actually wrote to the late agent on this estate begging
+ him to evict them in order that they might come in for a share of
+ the money raised for the relief of distress, and this clearly shows
+ beyond dispute that the well-meaning subscribers to the fund will
+ be more or less responsible for any further evictions to which it
+ may be necessary to resort. I may mention that the parish priest is
+ one of the trustees for the money which is thus being used for the
+ purpose of preventing settlements and keeping the place in a
+ continual state of turmoil.
+
+ "Judge Currane, at the January sessions held at Killarney this
+ year, ruled in about fifty ejectment cases on this estate that
+ tenants owing one and a half to nine years' rent should pay half a
+ year's rent and costs within a week, a quarter of a year's rent by
+ June 1, and a quarter of a year's rent by October 1; arrears to be
+ cancelled. Some of these, owing to non-compliance with the Judge's
+ ruling, may have to be evicted, and their eviction will be what is
+ termed the unrooting of peasants' houses and the ejectment of
+ overburdened tenants for not paying impossible rents.
+
+ "I confess I am at a loss to understand how Mr. Parnell's Arrears
+ Act would have improved matters or have averted what one of your
+ contemporaries calls a "painful scandal."--I am, Sirs, yours, &c.,
+
+ "D. TODD-THORNTON, J.P., Land Agent.
+
+ "Glenbehy, Killarney."
+
+
+
+NOTE G.
+
+HOME RULE AND PROTESTANTISM.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 68.)
+
+
+I fear that all the "Nationalist" clergy in Ireland are not as careful
+as Father Keller to avoid giving occasion for this impression that Irish
+autonomy would be followed by a persecution of the Protestants. But a
+little more than three years ago, for example, the following circular
+was issued by the Bishop of Ossory, and affixed to the door of the
+churches in his diocese. Who can wonder that it should have been
+regarded by Protestants in that diocese as a direct stirring up of
+bitter religious animosities against them? Or that, emanating directly
+as it did from a bishop of the Church, it should be represented as
+emanating indirectly from the Head of the Church himself at Rome?
+
+ "_Kilkenny, April 16th, 1885._
+
+ "REV. DEAR SIR,--May I ask you to read the following circular for
+ the people at each of the Masses on Sunday, 19th April?
+
+ "The course to be adopted for the future by the Priest of the Parish
+ to whom notice of a Mixed Marriage is given by the Minister, or the
+ Registrar, is as follows:--he makes the following entry on the book
+ of Parochial announcements, and reads it three consecutive Sundays
+ from the Altar:--
+
+ "'The Priests of the Parish have received the following notice of a
+ marriage to be celebrated between a Catholic and a Protestant. [Here
+ read Registrar's notice in full.] We have now to inform you that the
+ law of the Catholic Church regarding such marriages is: that the
+ Catholic party contracting marriage before a Registrar or other
+ unauthorised person is, by the very fact of so doing,
+ Excommunicated; and the witnesses to such marriage are also
+ Excommunicated.'
+
+ "I should be very much obliged if, as occasion may require, you
+ would explain the effects of this Excommunication from the Altar.
+
+ "You will please take notice that the Registrar or Minister is bound
+ legally to send the notice of marriage referred to above, and also,
+ that in reading it out _in the form, and with the accompanying
+ remarks above_, you incur no legal penalty.
+
+ "I feel sure that with your accustomed zeal you will do everything
+ in your power to prevent abuses in regard to the Sacrament of
+ Matrimony, which is great in Christ and the Church, and to induce
+ the faithful to prepare for receiving it by Prayer, by works of
+ Charity, and by approaching the Sacrament of Penance to purify their
+ souls.--Yours faithfully in Christ,
+
+ [Image: Cross] A. BROWNRIGG."
+
+
+ "MY DEAR BRETHREN,--We have been very much pained to learn, within
+ the past month, that marriages between Catholics and non-Catholics
+ have increased very much in this city of Kilkenny. Many
+ _evil-disposed_ persons, utterly unmindful of the prohibitions of
+ the Church, and regardless of the dreadful consequences they bring
+ on themselves, have not hesitated to enter into those _unholy
+ matrimonial alliances_ called "Mixed Marriages," which the Catholic
+ Church has always _hated and detested_. Those misguided Catholics,
+ who do not deserve the name, have not blushed to go, in some
+ instances, before the Protestant Minister, in other instances,
+ before the Public Registrar, to ask them to assist at their marriage
+ with a Protestant. By contracting marriage in this way, they run a
+ great risk of bringing on themselves and on their children, should
+ they have any, the _maledictions_ of Heaven instead of the blessings
+ of religion. In order to put a stop to this growing abuse, and to
+ prevent it from spreading like a contagion to other parts of the
+ Diocese, we beg to remind the faithful of certain regulations which,
+ for the future, shall have force in the Diocese of Ossory in
+ reference to the Catholics, who so far forget themselves as to
+ contract such marriages.
+
+ "1. In the first place, any one who contracts a "Mixed Marriage"
+ without a dispensation from the Holy See and before a Protestant
+ Minister or a Registrar is, by the very fact, guilty of a most
+ grievous mortal sin by violating a solemn law of the Church in a
+ most grave matter.
+
+ "2. The Catholic who assists as witness at such marriage also
+ commits a most grievous sin by co-operating in an unlawful act.
+
+ "3. Both the Catholic party contracting the marriage and the
+ Catholic witnesses to it cannot be absolved by any priest in the
+ Diocese of Ossory, unless by the Bishop or by those to whom he
+ grants special faculties.
+
+ "4. In order more effectually to deter people from entering into
+ _those detestable marriages_, the penalty of _Excommunication_
+ is hereby attached to that sin both for the Catholic _contracting_
+ party as also for the Catholic _witnesses_ to such marriage.
+
+ "5. The notice which the Protestant Rector or the Registrar is
+ legally bound in such cases to send to the Parish Priest of the
+ Catholic party, will be read from the Altar for three consecutive
+ Sundays, and thus the _crime_ of the offending party brought out
+ into open light before his or her fellow-parishioners.
+
+ "6. For the rest, we hope the sense of decency and religion of the
+ Catholic people and their Pastors shall be no more hurt by any
+ Catholic entering into those marriages, so full of, misery and evil
+ of every kind for themselves, their children, and society at
+ large.--Yours faithfully in Christ,
+
+ [Image: Cross] ABRAHAM, Bishop of Ossory.
+
+
+
+NOTE H.
+
+TULLY AND THE WOODFORD EVICTIONS.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 149.)
+
+
+Since the first edition of this book was published certain "evictions"
+mentioned in it as impending on the Clanricarde estates have been
+carried out. I have no reason to suppose that there was more or less
+reason for carrying out these evictions than there usually is, not in
+Ireland only, but all over the civilised world, for a resort by the
+legal owners of property to legal means of recovering the possession of
+it from persons who fail to comply with the terms on which it was put
+into their keeping. Whether this failure results from dishonesty or from
+misfortune is a consideration not often allowed, I think, to affect the
+right of the legal owner of the property concerned to his legal remedy
+in any other country but Ireland, nor even in Ireland in the case of any
+property other than property in land. But as what I learned on the spot
+touching the general condition of the Clanricarde tenants, and touching
+the conduct and character of Lord Clanricarde's agent, Mr. Tener, led me
+to take a special interest in these evictions, I asked him to send me
+some account of them. In reply he gave me a number of interesting
+details.
+
+The only serious attempt at resisting the execution of the law was made
+by "Dr." Tully, one of the leading local "agitators," to the tendency of
+whose harangues judicial reference was made during the investigation
+into the case of Mr. Wilfrid Blunt. Tully had a holding of seventeen
+acres at a rent of £2, 10s., the Government valuation being £4. He
+earned a good livelihood as a boat-builder, and he had put up a slated
+house on his holding. But in November 1884 he chose to stop paying the
+very low rent at which he held his place, and he has paid no rent since
+that time. As is stated in a footnote on page 153, vol. ii. of this
+book, a decree was granted against Tully by Judge Henn for three years'
+rent due in May 1887, and his equity of redemption having expired July
+9, 1888, this recourse was had to the law against him.
+
+As the leading spirit of the agitation, Tully had put a garrison into
+his house of twelve men and two women. He had dug a ditch around it,
+taken out the window-sashes, filled up the casements and the doorways
+with stones and trunks of trees. Portholes had been pierced under the
+roof, through which the defenders might thrust red-hot pikes,
+pitchforks, and other weapons, and empty pails of boiling water upon the
+assailants. A brief parley took place. Tully refused to make any offer
+of a settlement unless the agent would agree to reinstate all the
+evicted tenants, to which Mr. Tener replied that he would recognise no
+"combination," but was ready to deal with every tenant fairly and
+individually. Finally the Sheriff ordered his men to take the place.
+Ladders were planted, and while some of the constables, under the
+protection of a shield covered with zinc, a sort of Roman _testudo_,
+worked at removing the earthern ramparts, others nimbly climbed to the
+roof and began to break in from above. In their excitement the garrison
+helped this forward by breaking holes through the roof themselves to get
+at the attacking party, and in about twenty minutes the fortress was
+captured, and the inmates were prisoners. Two constables were burned by
+the red-hot pikes, the gun of another was broken to pieces by a huge
+stone, and a fourth was slightly wounded by a fork. One of the defenders
+got a sword-cut; and Tully was brought forth as one too severely wounded
+to walk. Upon investigation, however, the surgeon refused to certify
+that he was unable to undergo the ordinary imprisonment in such cases
+made and provided.
+
+The collapse of the resistance at this central point was followed by a
+general surrender.
+
+After the capture of Tully's house, Mr. Tener writes to me, "I found it
+being gutted by his family, who would have carried it away piecemeal.
+They had already taken away the flooring of one of the rooms." Thereupon
+Mr. Tener had the house pulled down, with the result of seeing a
+statement made in a leading Nationalist paper that he was "evicting the
+tenants and pulling down their houses."
+
+"Yesterday," Mr. Tener writes to me on the 9th of September, "I walked
+twenty-five miles, visiting thirty farms about Portumna. Except in two
+or three cases, the tenants have ample means, and part of the live stock
+alone on the farms, exclusive of the crops, would suffice to pay all the
+rents I had demanded. On the farms recently 'evicted,' I found treble
+the amount of the rent due in live stock alone."
+
+As to one case of these recent evictions, I found it stated in an Irish
+journal that a young man, who had been ill of consumption for two years,
+the son of a tenant, was removed from the house, the local physician
+refusing to certify that he was unfit for removal, and that he died a
+few days afterwards. The implication was obvious, and I asked Mr. Tener
+for the facts.
+
+He replied, "This young man, John Fahey, was in consumption, but did not
+appear to be in any danger. Dr. Carte, an Army surgeon, examined him,
+and said there was no immediate danger. The day was fine and he walked
+about wrapped in a comfortable coat, and talked with me and others. His
+father, a respectable man, made no attempt to defend his house; and at
+his request, after the crowd had gone away, my man in charge permitted
+the invalid and the family to reoccupy the house temporarily because of
+his illness. There was no inquest, and no need of any, after his death.
+His father, Patrick Fahey, had means to pay, but told me he 'could not,'
+which meant he 'dared not.' I went to him personally twice, and sent him
+many messages. But the terror of the League was upon the poor man.
+
+"An interesting case is that of Michael Fahey, of Dooras. In 1883 his
+rent was judicially reduced about 5 per cent., from £33 to £31, 5s. His
+house and all about it is substantial and comfortable. His father, about
+thirty years ago, fought for a whole night and bravely beat off a party
+of 'Terry-Alts,' the 'Moonlighters' of that day. For his courage the
+Government presented him with a gun, of which the son is very proud.
+Pity he did not inherit the pluck with the gun of his parent!
+
+"I had been privately told that this tenant would pay; but that he would
+first produce a doctor's certificate that his old mother could not be
+moved. He did give the Sheriff a carefully worded document to show this,
+but it was so vague that I objected to its being received by the
+Sheriff. Upon this (not before! mark the craft of even a well-disposed
+Irish tenant in those evil days), I was asked to go into the house. I
+went in and entered the parlour. There the tenant told me he would pay
+the year's rent and the costs, amounting to £50. He had risen from his
+seat to fetch the money, when, lo! Father Egan (the priest upon whose
+head the widow of the murdered Finlay called down the curse of God in
+the open street of Woodford) appeared in the doorway. He had come in on
+a pretence of seeing the old mother of the tenant, who had (for that
+occasion) taken to her bed. The bedroom lay beyond the parlour, and was
+entered from it. The tenant actually shook with fear as Father Egan
+passed through, and I thought all hope of a settlement gone, when
+suddenly the officer of the police came in, passed into the bedroom, and
+told Father Egan he must withdraw. This Father Egan refused to do,
+whereupon the officer said very quietly, 'I shall remove you forthwith
+if you do not go out quietly.' Upon this Father Egan hastily left. The
+tenant then went into the bedroom and soon reappeared with the £50 in
+bank-notes, which he paid me. All this was dramatic enough. But the
+comedy was next performed in front of the house, where all could see it,
+of handing to the Sheriff the alleged doctor's certificate, and of my
+saying aloud that 'in the circumstances' I had no objection to his
+receiving it! After this all the forces proceeded to take their luncheon
+on the green bank sloping down to the Shannon in front of the
+farm-house. There is a fine orchard on the place, and it recalled to me
+some of the farms I saw in Virginia.
+
+"I had gone into the house again, and was standing near the fire in the
+kitchen, where some of my escort were taking their luncheon. It is a
+large kitchen, and perhaps a dozen people were in it, when in came
+Father Egan again and called to the tenant Fahey, 'Put out those
+policemen, and do not suffer one of them to remain.'
+
+"The sergeant instantly said, 'We are here on duty, Father Egan, and if
+you dare to try to intimidate this tenant, I shall either put you out or
+arrest you.'
+
+"'Yes,' I interposed, looking at the sergeant, 'you are certainly here
+on duty, and in the name of the law, and it is sad to see a clergyman
+here in the interest of an illegal, criminal, and rebellious movement,
+and of the immoral Plan of Campaign.'
+
+"'Oh!' exclaimed Father Egan, 'the opinion of the agent of the Marquis
+of Clanricarde is valuable, truly!'
+
+"'I give you,' I said, 'not my opinion, but the opinion of Dr. Healy and
+Dr. O'Dwyer, bishops of your Church, and men worthy of all respect and
+reverence. And I am sorry to know that some ecclesiastics deserve no
+respect, but that at their doors lies the main responsibility for the
+misery and the crime which afflict our unhappy country. I feel sure a
+just God will punish them in due time.'
+
+"Father Egan made no reply, but paused a moment, and then walked out of
+the house.
+
+"At the next house, that of Dennis Fahey, we found a still better
+dwelling. Here we had another mock certificate, but we received the rent
+with the costs."
+
+
+
+NOTE H2.
+
+BOYCOTTING THE DEAD.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 151.)
+
+
+The following official account sent to me (July 24) of an affair in
+Donegal, the result of the gospel of "Boycotting" taught in that region,
+needs and will bear no comment.
+
+Patrick Cavanagh came to reside at Clonmany, County Donegal, about two
+months ago, as caretaker on some evicted farms. He died on Wednesday
+evening, June 20th, having received the full rites of the Roman Catholic
+Church. The people had displayed no ill-will towards him during his
+brief residence at Clonmany, and on the evening of his death his body
+was washed and laid out by some women. On Thursday two townsmen dug his
+grave, where pointed out by Father Doherty, P.P.
+
+The first symptom of change of feeling was that on Thursday every
+carpenter applied to had some excuse for not making a coffin for the
+body of deceased. On Friday morning the grave was found to be filled
+with stones, and a deputation waited on Father Doherty to protest
+against Cavanagh's burial in the chapel graveyard. He told them to go
+home and mind their business. About 10.30 A.M. on Friday the chapel bell
+was rung--not tolled or rung as for service, but faster. The local
+sergeant of police went to the cemetery; when he arrived there the
+tolling ceased. He then went to Father Doherty, who told those present
+that their conduct was such as to render them unfit for residence
+anywhere but in a savage country. He told them to go to their homes, and
+advised them to allow the corpse to be buried in the grave he had marked
+out. After Father Doherty had left, the people condemned his
+interference, and said they would not allow any stranger to be buried in
+the graveyard. When Constable Brady put it to those present that their
+real objection did not lie in the fact that Cavanagh had been a
+stranger, he was not contradicted.
+
+The body was ultimately buried at Carndonagh on Saturday, several people
+remaining in the graveyard at Clonmany all through the night (Friday)
+till the body was taken to Carndonagh for burial.
+
+At Carndonagh Petty Sessions, on the 18th July 1888, Con. Doherty and
+Owen Doherty, with five others, were prosecuted for unlawful assembly on
+the occasion above referred to. The first two named, who were the
+ringleaders, were convicted, and sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment
+each with hard labour; the charges against the remainder were dismissed.
+
+
+
+NOTE I.
+
+POST-OFFICE SAVINGS BANKS.
+
+(Vol. i. p. 117; vol. ii. pp. 5, 12, 66, 95, 200, 248.)
+
+
+As the Post-Office Savings Banks represent the smaller depositors, and
+command special confidence among them even in the disturbed districts, I
+print here an official statement showing the balances due to depositors
+in the undermentioned offices, situated in certain of the most disturbed
+regions I visited, on the 31st December of the years 1880 and 1887
+respectively:--
+
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ | OFFICE. | 1880. | 1887. |
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ | | £ s. d. | £ s. d. |
+ | Bunbeg, | 1,270 6 7 | 1,206 18 2 |
+ | Falcarragh, | 62 15 10 | 494 10 8 |
+ | Gorey, | 3,690 14 4 | 5,099 5 7 |
+ | Inch, |[A] 8 11 0 | 209 7 5 |
+ | Killorglin, | 282 15 9 | 1,299 2 6 |
+ | Loughrea, | 5,500 19 9 | 6,311 4 11 |
+ | Mitchelstown, | 1,387 13 2 | 2,846 9 3 |
+ | Portumna, | 2,539 10 11 | 3,376 5 4 |
+ | Sixmilebridge, | 382 17 10 | 934 13 4 |
+ | Stradbally, | 1,812 14 8 | 2,178 18 2 |
+ | Woodford, | 259 14 6 | 1,350 17 11 |
+ | Youghal, | 3,031 0 7 | 7,038 7 2 |
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ [A] This Office was not opened for Savings Bank
+ business until the year 1881, the amount shown
+ being balance due on the 31st December 1882.
+
+It appears from this table that the deposits in these Savings Banks
+increased in the aggregate from £20,329, 15s. 11d. in 1880 to £32,347,
+9s. 7d. in 1887, or almost 60 per cent, in seven years. They fell off in
+only one case, at Bunbeg, and there only to a nominal amount. At Youghal
+they much more than doubled, increasing about 133 per cent. Yet in all
+these places the Plan of Campaign has been invoked "because the people
+were penniless and could not pay their debts!"
+
+
+
+NOTE K.
+
+THE COOLGREANY EVICTIONS.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 216.)
+
+
+Captain Hamilton sends me the following graphic account of this affair
+at Coolgreany:--
+
+In the _Freeman's Journal_ of the 16th December 1886, it is reported
+that a meeting of the Brooke tenantry, the Rev. P. O'Neill in the chair,
+was held at Coolgreany on the Sunday previous to the 15th December 1886,
+the date on which the "Plan of Campaign" was adopted on the estate, at
+which it was resolved that if I refused the terms offered they would
+join the "Plan."
+
+I had no conference at Freeman's house or anywhere else at any time with
+two parish priests. On the 15th December 1886, when seated in Freeman's
+house waiting to receive the rents, four priests, a reporter of the
+_Freeman's Journal_, some local reporters, and four of the tenants
+rushed into the room; and the priests in the rudest possible manner (the
+Rev. P. Farrelly, one of them, calling me "Francy Hyne's hangman," and
+other terms of abuse) informed me that unless I re-instated a former
+Roman Catholic tenant in a farm which he had previously held, and which
+was then let to a Protestant, and gave an abatement of 30 per cent., no
+rent would be paid _me_ that day. Dr. Dillon, C.C., was not present on
+this occasion, or, if so, I do not remember seeing him.
+
+On my asking if I had no alternative but to concede to their demand, the
+Rev. Mr. Dunphy, parish priest, replied, "None other; do not think, sir,
+we have come here to-day to do honour to you."
+
+The Rev. P. O'Neill spoke as he always does, in a more gentlemanly and
+conciliatory manner, and I therefore, as the confusion in the room was
+great, offered to discuss the matter with him, the Rev. O'Donel, C.C.,
+and the tenants, if the other priests, who were strangers to me, and the
+reporters would leave the room. This the Rev. Mr. Dunphy declared they
+would not do, and I accordingly refused further to discuss the matter.
+
+After they left the house, one of the tenants, Mick Darcy, stepped
+forward and said, "Settle with us, Captain." I replied, "Certainly, if
+you come back with me into the house." The Rev. Mr. Dunphy took him by
+the collar of his coat and threw him against the wall of the house, then
+turning to me with his hand raised said, "You shall not do so; we, who
+claim the temporal as well as spiritual power over _you_ as well as
+these poor creatures, will settle this matter with you."
+
+The tenants were then taken down to the League rooms, where two M.P.s,
+Sir Thomas Esmonde and Mr. Mayne, were waiting to receive the rents,
+which, one by one, they were ordered in to pay into the war-chest of the
+"Plan of Campaign."
+
+I have I fear written too much of this commencement of the war on the
+estate which has since led to over seventy of the tenants and their
+families being ejected, and has brought ruin on nearly all who joined
+it. I have considerable experience as a land agent, but I know of no
+estate where the tenants were more respectable, better housed, or, as a
+body, in better circumstances than on the Brooke estate. They had a
+kind, indulgent landlord, and they knew it; and nothing but the belief
+that, led by their clergy, they were foremost in a battle fighting for
+their country and religion, would have induced them to put up with the
+great hardships and loss they have undoubtedly had to suffer.
+
+
+
+NOTE L.
+
+A DUCAL SUPPER IN IRELAND IN 1711.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 283.)
+
+
+The following entry I take from the Expense-Book of the Duke of Ormond,
+under date of August 23, 1711:--
+
+His Grace came to Kilkenny, half an hour after 10 at night.
+
+HIS GRACE'S TABLE.
+
+Pottage. Sautee Veal.
+5 Pullets, Bacon and Collyflowers.
+Pottage Meagre.
+Pikes with White Sauce.
+A Turbot with Lobster Sauce.
+Umbles.
+A Hare Hasht.
+Buttered Chickens, G.
+Hasht Veal and New Laid Eggs.
+Removes.
+A Shoulder and Neck of Mutton.
+Haunch of Venison.
+
+_Second Course._
+
+Lobsters.
+Tarts, an Oval Dish.
+Crabbs Buttered.
+4 Pheasants, 4 Partridges, 4 Turkeys.
+Ragoo Mushrooms.
+Kidney Beans. Ragoo Oysters.
+Fritters.
+Two Sallets.
+
+
+
+NOTE M.
+
+LETTER FROM MR. O'LEARY.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 291.)
+
+
+In the first edition of this book I credited Mr. O'Leary with making
+this pungent remark about figs and grapes, because I found it jotted
+down in my original memoranda as coming from him. In a private note he
+assures me that he does not think it was made by him, and though this
+does not agree with my own recollection, I defer, of course, to his
+impression. And this I do the more readily that it affords me an
+opportunity for printing the following very characteristic and
+interesting letter sent to me by him for publication should I think fit
+to use it.
+
+As the most important support given by the Irish in America to the
+Nationalists is solicited by their agents on the express ground that
+they are really labouring to establish an Irish Republic, this outspoken
+declaration of Mr. O'Leary, that he does not believe they "expect or
+desire" the establishment of an Irish Republic, will be of interest on
+my side of the water:--
+
+ "DUBLIN, _Sept._ 9, '88.
+
+ "My Dear Sir,--I am giving more bother about what you make me say
+ in your book than the thing is probably worth, especially seeing
+ that what you say about me and my present attitude towards men and
+ things here is almost entirely correct.
+
+ "It is proverbially hard to prove a negative, and my main reason
+ for believing I did not say the thing about figs and grapes is that
+ I never could remember the whole of any proverb in conversation;
+ but I am absolutely certain I never said that 'some of them (the
+ National Leaguers) expect to found an Irish republic on robbery,
+ and to administer it by falsehood. We don't.' Most certainly I do
+ not expect to found anything on robbery, or administer anything by
+ falsehood, but I do not in the least believe that the National
+ League either expects or desires to found an Irish republic at all!
+ Neither do I believe that the Leaguers will long retain the
+ administration of such small measure of Home Rule, as I now (since
+ the late utterances of Mr. Parnell and Mr. Gladstone) believe we
+ are going to get. My fault with the present people is not that they
+ are looking, or mean to look, for too much, but that they may be
+ induced, by pressure from their English Radical allies, to be
+ content with too little. It is only a large and liberal measure of
+ Home Rule which will ever satisfy the Irish people, and I fear
+ that, if the smaller fry of Radical M.P.'s are allowed to have a
+ strong voice in a matter of which they know next to nothing, the
+ settlement of the Irish question will be indefinitely postponed.--I
+ remain, faithfully yours,
+
+ "JOHN O'LEARY."
+
+
+
+NOTE N
+
+BOYCOTTING PRIVATE OPINION.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 293.)
+
+
+This case of Mr. Taylor is worth preserving _in extenso_ as an
+illustration of that spirit in the Irish journalism of the day, against
+which Mr. Rolleston and his friends protest as fatal to independence,
+manliness, and truth. I simply cite the original attack made upon Mr.
+Taylor, the replies made by himself and his friends, and the comments
+made upon those replies by the journal which assailed him. They all tell
+their own story.
+
+ (_UNITED IRELAND_, JUNE 16.)
+
+ Mr. John F. Taylor owes everything he has or is to the Irish
+ National Party; nor is he slow to confess it where the
+ acknowledgment will serve his personal interests. His sneers are
+ all anonymous, and, like Mr. Fagg, the grateful and deferential
+ valet in _The Rivals_, "it hurts his conscience to be found out."
+ There is no honesty or sincerity in the man. His covert gibes are
+ the spiteful emanation of personal disappointment; his lofty
+ morality is a cloak for unscrupulous self-seeking. He has always
+ shown himself ready to say anything or do anything that may serve
+ his own interests. In the general election of 1885 he made frantic
+ efforts to get into Parliament as a member of the Irish Party. He
+ ghosted every member of the party whose influence he thought might
+ help him--notably the two men, Mr. Dillon and Mr. O'Brien, at whom
+ he now sneers, as he fondly believes, in the safe seclusion of an
+ anonymous letter of an English newspaper. During the period of
+ probation his hand was incessant on Mr. Dillon's door-knocker. The
+ most earnest supplications were not spared. All in vain. Either his
+ character or his ability failed to satisfy the Irish leader, and
+ his claim was summarily rejected. Since then his wounded vanity has
+ found vent in spiteful calumny of almost every member of the Irish
+ Party--whenever he found malice a luxury that could be safely
+ indulged in.
+
+ "His next step was a startling one. We have absolute reason to
+ know, when the last Coercion Act was in full swing, this
+ pure-souled and disinterested patriot begged for, received, and
+ accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship under a Coercion
+ Government. As was wittily said at the time, he sold his
+ principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+ stirred the mess. Strong pressure was brought to bear on him, and
+ he was induced for his own sake, after many protests and with much
+ reluctance, to publicly refuse the office he had already privately
+ accepted. Mr. Taylor professes to model himself on Robert Emmet and
+ Thomas Davis; it is hard to realise Thomas Davis or Robert Emmet as
+ a Coercion Crown Prosecutor in the pay of Dublin Castle. Since then
+ there has been no more persistent caviller at the Irish policy and
+ the Irish Party in company where he believed such cavilling paid.
+ When Home Rule was proposed by Mr. Gladstone, he had a thousand
+ foolish sneers for the measure and its author. When the Bill was
+ defeated, he elected Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Goschen, and Mr. T.W.
+ Russell as the gods of his idolatry. Such a nature needs a patron,
+ and Mr. Webb, Q.C., the Tory County Court Judge who doubled the
+ sentence on Father M'Fadden, was the patron to be selected. It is
+ shrewdly suspected that he supplied most of the misguiding
+ information for Dr. Webb's coercion pamphlet, and it is probable
+ that Dr. Webb gives him a lift with his weekly letter to the
+ _Manchester Guardian._
+
+
+ (_UNITED IRELAND_, JUNE 23.)
+
+ MR. JOHN F. TAYLOR.
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Sir,--You would not, I am sure, allow intentional misstatements to
+ appear in your columns, and I ask you to allow me space to correct
+ three erroneous observations made about myself in your current
+ issue--
+
+ 1. The first statement is to the effect that I owe everything I
+ have, or that I am, to the Irish National Party. I owe absolutely
+ nothing to the Irish Party, except an attempt to boycott me on my
+ circuit, which, fortunately for me, has failed.
+
+ 2. The second is to the effect that I made "frantic efforts" (these
+ are the words, I think) to enter Parliament, and besieged Mr.
+ Dillon's house during the time when candidates were being chosen. I
+ saw Mr. Dillon exactly twice, both occasions at Mr. Davitt's
+ request. Mr. Davitt urged me to allow my name to go forward as a
+ candidate, and it was at his wish and solicitation that I saw Mr.
+ Dillon.
+
+ 3. It is further said that I begged a Crown Prosecutorship.
+ Fortunately, Mr. Walker and The M'Dermot are living men, and they
+ know this to be absolutely untrue. I was offered such an
+ appointment, and, contrary to my own judgment, I allowed myself to
+ be guided by Mr. Davitt, who thought the matter would be
+ misunderstood in the state of things then existing. I believe I am
+ the only person that ever declined such an offer.
+
+ As to general statements, these are of no importance, and I shall
+ not trouble you about them.--Yours very truly,
+
+ JOHN F. TAYLOR.
+
+ _P.S._--The introduction of Dr. Webb's name was a gratuitous
+ outrage, Dr. Webb and I never assisted each other in anything
+ except in the defence of P.N. Fitzgerald. J.F.T.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Dear Sir,--As my name has been introduced into the controversy
+ between yourself and Mr. Taylor, I feel called upon to substantiate
+ the two statements wherein my name occurs in Mr. Taylor's letter of
+ last week. It was at my request that he called upon Mr. John
+ Dillon, M.P. I think I accompanied him on the occasion, and unless
+ my memory is very much at fault, Mr. Dillon was not unfriendly to
+ Mr. Taylor's proposed candidature. This visit occurred some three
+ months after Mr. Taylor had, on my advice, declined the Crown
+ Prosecutorship for King's County, a post afterwards applied for by
+ and granted to a near relative of one of the most prominent members
+ of the Irish Party. With Mr. Taylor's general views on the present
+ situation, or opinions upon parties or men, I have no concern. But,
+ in so far as the circumstances related above are dealt with in your
+ issue of last week, I think an unjust imputation has been made
+ against him, and in the interests of truth and fair play I feel
+ called upon to adduce the testimony of facts as they
+ occurred.--Yours truly,
+
+ MICHAEL DAVITT.
+
+ Ballybrack, Co. Dublin,
+
+ June 19, 1888.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Sir,--As this is, I believe, the first time I have sought to
+ intrude upon your columns, I hope you will allow me some slight
+ space in the interests of fair-play and freedom of speech. Those
+ interests seem to me to have been quite set at naught in the
+ attack, or rather series of attacks, upon Mr. Taylor in your last
+ issue. Mr. Taylor's views upon many matters are not mine. He is far
+ more democratic in his opinions than I see any sufficient reason
+ for being, and he is very much more of what is called a land
+ reformer than I am; but on an acquaintance of some years I have
+ ever found him an honourable and high-minded gentleman, and as good
+ a Nationalist, from my point of view, as most of the members of the
+ Irish Parliamentary Party whom I either know or know of. Of some of
+ the charges made against Mr. Taylor, such as the seeking for Crown
+ Prosecutorships and the like, I am in no position to speak, save
+ from my knowledge of his character, but I understand Mr. Davitt
+ knows all about these things, and I suppose he will tell what he
+ knows. But of the main matter, and I think the chief cause of your
+ ire, I am quite in a position to speak. I have read at least a
+ score of Mr. Taylor's letters to the _Manchester Guardian_, and I
+ have always found them very intelligently written, and invariably
+ characterised by a spirit of fairness and moderation; indeed, the
+ chief fault I found with them was that they took too favourable a
+ view of the motives, if not the acts, of many of our public men,
+ but notably of Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien. You may, of course,
+ fairly say that I am not the best judge of either the acts or the
+ motives of these gentlemen, and I freely grant you that I may not,
+ for my way of looking upon the Irish question is quite other than
+ theirs; but what I must be excused for holding is that both I and
+ Mr. Taylor have quite as good a right to our opinions as either of
+ these gentlemen, or as any other member of the Irish Parliamentary
+ Party. But this is the very last right that people are inclined to
+ grant to each other in Ireland just now. Personally I care very
+ little for this, but for Ireland's sake I care much. Some twenty
+ years ago or so I was sent into penal servitude with the almost
+ entire approval, expressed or implied, of the Irish Press. Some
+ short time after the same Press found out that I and my friends had
+ not sinned so grievously in striving to free Ireland. But men and
+ times and things may change again, and, though I am growing old, I
+ hope still to live long enough to be forgiven for my imperfect
+ appreciation of the blessings of Boycotting, and the Plan of
+ Campaign, and many similar blessings. It matters little indeed how
+ or when I die, so that Ireland lives, but her life can only be a
+ living death if Irishmen are not free to say what they believe, and
+ to act as they deem right.--Your obedient servant,
+
+ JOHN O'LEARY.
+
+ June 18, 1888.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Dear Sir,--I observe that in your last issue, amongst other things,
+ you state that Mr. Taylor accepted a Crown Prosecutorship in 1885.
+ I happen to know the precise facts. Mr. Taylor was offered the
+ Crown Prosecutorship of the King's County, and some of us strongly
+ advised him to accept it. There were no political prosecutions
+ impending at the time, and it seemed to me that a Nationalist who
+ would do his work honestly in prosecuting offenders against the
+ ordinary law might strike a blow against tyranny by refusing to
+ accept a brief, if offered, against men accused of political
+ offences or prosecuted under a Coercion Act. I know that a similar
+ view was entertained by the late Very Rev. Dr. Kavanagh of Kildare,
+ and many others. However, we failed to influence Mr. Taylor further
+ than to make him say that he would do nothing in the matter until
+ Mr. Davitt was consulted. I, for one, called on Mr. Davitt, and
+ pressed my views upon him; but he was decided that no Nationalist
+ could identify himself in the smallest way with Castle rule in
+ Ireland. This settled the question, and Mr. Taylor declined the
+ post, which was subsequently applied for by Mr. Luke Dillon, who
+ now holds it.--Faithfully yours,
+
+ JAMES A. POOLE.
+
+ 29 Harcourt Street.
+
+
+
+ EDITORIAL NOTE.
+
+ _"United Ireland," June 23._
+
+ We devote a large portion of our space to-day to the apparently
+ organised defence of Mr. J.F. Taylor and his friends, and we are
+ quite content to rest upon their letters the justification for our
+ comments. When a gentleman who avows himself a disappointed
+ aspirant for Parliamentary honours, and who owns his regret that he
+ did not become a petty Castle placeman, is discovered writing in an
+ important English Liberal paper, venomous little innuendos at the
+ expense of sorely attacked Irish leaders which excite the
+ enthusiasm of the _Liarish Times_, it was high time to intimate to
+ the _Manchester Guardian_ the source from which its Irish
+ information is derived. The case against Mr. Taylor as a
+ criticaster is clinched by the fact that his cause is espoused by
+ Mr. John O'Leary. The Irish public are a little weary of Mr.
+ O'Leary's querulous complaints as an _homme incompris_. So far as
+ we are aware, the only ground he himself has for complaining of
+ want of toleration is that he possibly considers the good-humoured
+ toleration for years invariably extended to his opinions on men and
+ things savours of neglect. His idea of toleration with respect to
+ others seems to be toleration for everybody except the unhappy
+ wretches who may happen to be for the moment doing any practicable
+ service in the Irish cause.
+
+
+
+
+NOTE O.
+
+BOYCOTTING BY "CROWNER'S QUEST LAW."
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 312.)
+
+
+The following circumstantial account of this deplorable case of Ellen
+Gaffney preserved here, as I find it printed in the _Irish Times_ of
+February 27, 1888.
+
+"In the Court of Queen's Bench, on Saturday, the Lord Chief-Justice (Sir
+Michael Morris, Bart.), Mr. Justice O'Brien, Mr. Justice Murphy, and Mr.
+Justice Gibson presiding, judgment was delivered in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney. The original motion was to quash the verdict of a coroner's
+jury held at Philipstown on August 27th and September 1st last, on the
+body of a child named Mary Anne Gaffney.
+
+"The Lord Chief-Justice said it appeared that Mary Anne Gaffney, the
+child on whose body the inquest was held, was born on the 23d July, and
+that she died on the 25th August, 1887. A Dr. Clarke, who had been very
+much referred to in the course of the proceedings, called upon the local
+sergeant of the police, and directed his attention to the body, but the
+sergeant having inspected the body, came to the conclusion that there
+was no need for an inquest. The doctor considered differently, and the
+sergeant communicated with the Coroner on the 26th August, and on the
+next day that gentleman arrived in Philipstown. He had a conference
+there with Dr. Clarke and with a reverend gentleman named Father Bergin,
+and subsequently proceeded to hold an inquest upon the child in a
+public-house--a most appropriate place apparently for the transactions
+which afterwards occurred there. The investigation, if it might be so
+called, was proceeded with upon that 27th of August. Very strong
+affidavits had been made on the part of Mrs. Gaffney--who applied to
+have the inquisition quashed--her husband, and some of the constabulary
+authorities as to the line of conduct pursued upon that occasion. Ellen
+Gaffney and her husband were taken into custody on the day the inquest
+opened by the verbal direction of the Coroner, who refused to complete
+the depositions given by the former on the ground that she was not
+sworn. That did not take him out of the difficulty, for if she was not
+sworn she had a right to be sworn, and the Coroner had no right to
+prevent her. The inquest was resumed on the 1st September in the
+court-house at Philipstown--the proper place--and a curious letter was
+read from the Coroner, the effect of which was that he did not consider
+that there was any ground for detaining the man Gaffney in custody, but
+the woman was brought before a justice of the peace and committed for
+trial. She was in prison from August 27th until the month of December,
+when the lucky accident of a winter assize occurred, else she might be
+there still. At the adjourned inquest the Coroner proceeded to read over
+the depositions taken on the former day, and it was sworn by four
+witnesses, whom he (the Lord Chief-Justice) entirely credited, that the
+Coroner read these depositions as if they were originals, whereas an
+unprecedented transaction had occurred. The Coroner had given the
+original depositions out of his own custody, and given them to a
+reverend gentleman who was rather careless of them, as was shown by the
+evidence of a witness named Greene, who deposed that he saw a car on the
+road upon which sat two clergymen, and he found on the road the original
+depositions which, presumably, one of the clergymen had dropped. The
+depositions were handed to a magistrate and afterwards returned to the
+police at Philipstown, who had possession of them on the resumption of
+the inquest. If the case stood alone there it was difficult to
+understand how a Coroner could come into court and appear by counsel to
+resist the quashing of an inquisition in regard to which at the very
+door such gross personal misconduct was demonstrated. No doubt, he said,
+he did not read them as originals but as copies, and it was strange,
+that being so, that he did not inform the jury of what had become of
+them, and he complained now of not being told by the police of their
+recovery--not told of his own misconduct. On the 1st September, Ellen
+Gaffney applied by a solicitor--Mr. Disdall, and as a set-off the
+Coroner permitted a gentleman named O'Kearney Whyte to appear--for whom?
+Was it for the constituted authorities or for the next-of-kin? No, but
+for the Rev. Father Bergin, who was described as president of the local
+branch of the National League, and the Coroner (Mr. Gowing) alleged as
+the reason why he allowed him to appear and cross-examine the witnesses
+and address the jury and give him the right of reply like Crown counsel
+was, that Ellen Gaffney stated that she had been so much annoyed by
+Father Bergin that she attributed the loss of her child to him--that it
+was he who had murdered the child. It was asserted that Father Bergin
+sat on the bench with the Coroner and interfered during the conduct of
+the inquest, and having to give some explanation of that Mr. Gowing's
+version was certainly a most amusing one. He said it was the habit to
+invite to a seat on the bench people of a respectable position in
+life--which, of course, a clergyman should be in--and that he asked
+Father Bergin to sit beside him in that capacity. But see the dilemma
+the Coroner put himself in. According to his own statement he had
+previously allowed this reverend gentleman to interfere, and to be
+represented by a solicitor because he was incriminated, inculpated, or
+accused, and it certainly was not customary to invite any one so
+situated to occupy a seat on the bench. He (the Lord Chief Baron) did
+not believe that Father Bergin was incriminated in any way, but that was
+the Coroner's allegation, and such was his peculiar action thereafter.
+The Coroner further stated that no matter whether he read the originals
+or the copies of the first day's depositions, it was on the evidence of
+September 1st that the jury acted. If that was so he placed himself in a
+further dilemma, for there was no evidence before the jury at all on the
+second day upon which they could bring a verdict against Ellen Gaffney.
+In regard to the recording and announcing of the verdict it appeared
+that the jury were 19 in number, and after their deliberations the
+foreman declared that 13 were for finding a verdict one way and 6 for
+another; that Mr. Whyte dictated the verdict to the Coroner, and the
+Coroner asked the 13 men if that was what they agreed to. Mr. Whyte's
+statement was that the jury, through the foreman, stated what their
+verdict was; that he wrote it down, and that the Coroner asked him for
+what he had written, and used it himself. But in addition to that, when
+the jury came in the Coroner and Mr. Whyte divided them--placed them
+apart while the verdict was being written--and then said to the 13 men,
+"Is that what you agree to?" Such apparent misconduct it was hardly
+possible to conceive in anybody occupying a judicial position as did the
+Coroner, and especially a Coroner who had an inquisition quashed before.
+What he had mentioned was sufficient to call forth the emphatic decision
+of the court quashing the proceedings, which, however, were also
+impeached on the grounds of its insufficiency and irregularity, and of
+the character of the finding itself. It was not until the Coroner had
+been threatened with the consequences of his contempt that he made a
+return to the visit of _certiorari_, and it was then found that out of
+ten so-called depositions only one contained any signature--that of Dr.
+Clarke's, which was one of those lost by the clergyman, and not before
+the jury on the 1st September. He (the Lord Chief-Justice) had tried to
+read the documents, but in vain--they were of such a scrawling and
+scribbling character, but, as he had said, all were incomplete and
+utterly worthless except the one which was not properly before the jury.
+Then, what was the finding on this inquisition, which should have been
+substantially as perfect as an indictment? "That Mary Anne Gaffney came
+by her death, and that the mother of this child, Ellen Gaffney, is
+guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food and care to
+sustain the life of this child." Upon what charge could the woman have
+been implicated on that vague finding? He (his Lordship) could
+understand its being contended that that amounted argumentatively to a
+verdict of manslaughter; but the Coroner issued his warrant and sent
+this woman to prison as being guilty of murder, and she remained in
+custody, as he had already remarked, until discharged by the learned
+judge who went the Winter Assizes in December. Upon all of these grounds
+they were clearly of opinion that this inquisition should be quashed,
+and Mr. Coroner Gowing having had the self-possession to come there to
+show cause against the conditional order, under such circumstances, must
+bear the costs of that argument.
+
+Mr. Fred. Moorhead, who, instructed by Mr. O'Kearney Whyte, appeared for
+the Coroner, asked whether the Court would require, as was usual when
+costs were awarded against a magistrate, an undertaking from the other
+side--
+
+The Lord Chief-Justice.--That is not to bring an action against the
+Coroner, you mean?
+
+Mr. Moorhead.--Yes, my Lord. I think it is a usual undertaking when
+costs are awarded in such a case. I think you ought--
+
+The Lord Chief-Justice.--Well, I don't know that we ought, but we most
+certainly will not. (Laughter.)
+
+Mr. David Sherlock, who (instructed by Mr. Archibald W. Disdall)
+appeared for Ellen Gaffney.--Rest assured, we certainly will bring an
+action.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] I have the authority of Mr. Hennessey, "the best living
+Irish scholar, and a Kerryman to boot," for this spelling. I am quite
+right, he says, in stating that the people there pronounce the names of
+Glenbeigh and Rossbeigh as Glenbéhy and Rossbéhy in three syllables.
+"Bethe," pronounced "behy," is the genitive of "beith," the birch, of
+which there were formerly large woods in Ireland. Glenbehy and Rossbehy
+mean the "Glen," and the "Ross" or "wooded point" of the birch.
+
+[2] A letter received by me from a Protestant Irish gentleman,
+long an ardent Nationalist, seems to confirm this. He writes to me (June
+15),
+
+ "There is a noble river here, with a convenient line of quays for
+ unloading merchandise. But every sack that is landed must be carried
+ out of the ship on men's backs. The quay labourers won't allow a
+ steam crane to be set up. If it is tried there is a riot and a
+ tumult, and no Limerick tradesman can purchase anything from a
+ vessel that uses it, on pain of being boycotted. The result is that
+ the labourers are masters of the situation, and when they catch a
+ vessel with a cargo which it is imperative to land quickly, they
+ wait till the work is half done, and then strike for 8s. a day! If
+ other labourers are imported, they are boycotted for 'grabbing
+ work,' and any one who sells provisions to them is boycotted."
+
+[3] An interesting account of this gentleman, and of his
+connection with the earlier developments of the Irish agitation, given
+to me by Mr. Colomb of the R.I.C., will be found at p.38, and in the
+Appendix, Note F.
+
+[4] See Appendix, Note F.
+
+[5] The name of this blacksmith's son learned in the Law of the
+League is given in Lord Cowper's Report (2. 18,370) as Michael Healy.
+While these pages are in the printer's hands the London papers chronicle
+(May 25, 1888) the arrest of a person described to me as this
+magistrate's brother, Jeremiah Healy, on a charge of robbing and setting
+fire to the Protestant church at Killarney!
+
+[6] Mr. Colomb sends me, June 30, the following interesting
+note:--The letter of which I gave you a copy was produced in evidence at
+Kerry Summer Assizes, 1867. J. D. Sheehan, Esq., M.P., is the same man
+who was arrested on the 12th February 1867, and to whom the foregoing
+letter, ordering the rising in Killarney, is addressed. He was kept in
+custody for some time, and eventually released, it is believed, on the
+understanding that he was to keep out of Ireland. He came back in 1873
+or 1874 and married the proprietress of a Hotel at Killarney. His
+connection with the Glenbehy evictions is referred to on page 10, and in
+Note F of the Appendix I give an interesting account, furnished me by
+Mr. Colomb, of his activity in connection with the case of the Misses
+Curtin at Firies.
+
+[7] In the time of Henry VIII. these cities waged actual war
+with each other, like Florence and Pisa, by sea and land. Limerick was
+then called "Little London."
+
+[8] It was on the 17th October 1886 that Mr. Dillon first
+promulgated the Plan of Campaign at all at Portumna.
+
+[9] Mr. Ponsonby's account of this affair will be found in the
+Appendix, Note G. The Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Youghal,
+which were £3031, 0s. 7d. in 1880, rose to £7038, 7s. 2d. in 1887.
+
+[10] As to the ability of these tenants to pay their way, one
+fact which I have since ascertained sufficiently supports Mr. Tener's
+contention. The deposits in the Postal Savings Banks of the three purely
+agricultural towns of Portumna, Woodford, and Loughrea, which in 1880,
+throwing off the shillings and pence, were respectively, £2539, £259,
+and £5500, rose in 1887 to £3376, £1350, and £6311, an increase of
+nearly £3000.
+
+[11] Mr. Tener, to whom I sent proofs of these pages, writes to
+me (July 18): "I shall soon execute the decree of the County-Court Judge
+Henn against Father Coen for £5, 5s., being two and a half year's
+rent."
+
+[12] At a hearing of cases before Judge Henn some time after I
+left Portumna, the Judge was reported in the papers as "severely"
+commenting upon the carelessness with which the estate-books were kept,
+tenants who were proceeded against for arrears producing "receipts" in
+court. I wrote to Mr. Tener on this subject. Under date of June 5th he
+replied to me: "Judge Henn did not use the severe language reported.
+There was no reporter present but a local man, and I have reason to
+believe the report in the _Freeman's Journal_ came from the lawyer of
+the tenants, who is on the staff of that journal. But the tenants are
+drilled not to show the receipts they hold, and to take advantage of
+every little error which they might at once get corrected by calling at
+the estate office. In no case, however, did any wrong occur to any
+tenant."
+
+[13] The town and estate proper of Woodford belong to Sir Henry
+Burke, Bart. The nearest point to Woodford of Lord Clamicarde's property
+is distant one mile from the town. And on the so-called Woodford estate
+there are not "316 tenants," as stated in publications I have seen, but
+260.
+
+[14] Martin Kenny, the "victim" of this eviction, is the tenant
+to whom the Rev. Mr. Crawford (_vide_ page 118) gave £50 for certain
+cattle, in order that he (Kenny) might pay his rent But, although he got
+the £50, he nevertheless suffered himself to be evicted; no doubt
+fearing the vengeance of the League should he pay.
+
+[15] The valuation for taxes of this holding is £7, 15s. for
+the land, and £5 for the presbytery house. The church is exempt.
+
+[16] Of "Dr." Tully Mr. Tener wrote to me (July 18):
+
+ "Tully has the holding at £2, 10s. a year, being 50 per cent, under
+ the valuation of the land for taxes, which is £3, 15s. As the total
+ valuation with the house (built by him) is only £4, he pays no
+ poor-rates. He was in arrears May 1, 1887, of three years for £7,
+ 10s. Lord Clanricarde offered him, with others, 20 per cent,
+ abatement, making for him 70 per cent, under the valuation--and he
+ refused!"
+
+Since then (on Saturday Sept. 1), Tully has been evicted after a
+dramatic "resistance," of which, with instructive incidents attending
+it, Mr. Tener sends me an account, to be found in the Appendix, Note H.
+
+[17] Note H2.
+
+[18] Mr. Tener writes to me (July 18):
+
+ "At Allendarragh, near the scene of Finlay's murder, Thomas Noonan,
+ who lately was brave enough to accept the post of process-server
+ vacated by that murder, was shot at on the 13th instant. It was on
+ the highway. He heard a heavy stone fall from a wall on the road and
+ turned to see what caused it. He distinctly saw two men behind the
+ wall with guns, and saw them fire. One shot struck a stone in the
+ road very near him--the other went wide. His idea is that one gun
+ dislodged the stone on which it had been laid for an aim, and that
+ its fall disturbed the aim and saved him. He fully identifies one of
+ the men as Henry Bowles, a nephew of 'Dr.' Tully, who lives with
+ Tully, and Bowles, after being arrested and examined at Woodford,
+ has been remanded, bail being refused, to Galway Jail. Before this
+ shooting Noonan had served a notice from me upon Tully, against whom
+ I have Judge Henn's decree for three years' rent, and whose equity
+ of redemption expired July 9th."
+
+[19] I have since learned that my jarvey was well informed. Sir
+Henry Burke actually paid Mr. Dillon £160 for the maintenance of his
+tenants while out of their farms. This, two other landlords, Lords
+Dunsandle and Westmeath, refused to do, but, like Sir Henry, they both
+paid all the costs, and accepted a "League" reduction of 5s. 6d. and 6s.
+in the pound (June 9, 1888).
+
+[20] Down to the date at which I write this note (June 9), Mr.
+Seigne has kindly, but without results, endeavoured to get for me some
+authentic return made by a small tenant-farmer of his incomings and
+outgoings.
+
+[21] Note I.
+
+[22] Note K.
+
+[23] While these pages are going through the press a Scottish
+friend sends me the following extract from a letter published in the
+_Scotsman_ of July 25:--
+
+ "In the same way I, in August last, when in Wicklow, ascertained as
+ carefully as I could the facts as to the Bodyke evictions; and being
+ desirous to learn now if that estate was still out of cultivation,
+ as I had found it in August, I wrote the gentleman I have referred
+ to above. His reply is as follows:--
+
+ "'I can answer your question as far as the Brooke estate is
+ concerned. None of the tenants are back in their farms, nor
+ are they likely to be. The landlord has the land partly
+ stocked with cattle; but I may say the land is nearly waste;
+ the gates, fences, and farmsteads partly destroyed. I was at
+ the fair of Coolgreany about three weeks ago, and the country
+ looked quite changed; the weeds predominating in the land
+ that the tenantry had under cultivation when they were
+ evicted from their farms. The landlord has done nothing to
+ lay the land down with grass seed, consequently the land is
+ waste. The village of Coolgreany is on the property, and
+ there was a good monthly fair held there, but it is very much
+ gone down since the disagreement between the landlord and
+ tenant. The tenants, speaking generally, in allowing
+ themselves to be evicted and not redeeming before six months,
+ are giving up all their improvements to the landlord, no
+ matter what they may be worth. I have got quite tired of the
+ vexed question, and may say I have given up reading about
+ evictions, and pity the tenant who is foolish enough to allow
+ any party to advise him so badly as to allow himself to be
+ evicted.'
+
+ "Those who read this testimony of a candid witness, and remember the
+ cordial footing on which Mr. Brooke stood with his tenantry in
+ Bodyke before Mr. Billon appeared amongst them, may well ask what
+ good his interference did to the now impoverished tenantry of
+ Bodyke, or to the district now deserted or laid waste.--I am, etc.,
+
+ A RADICAL UNIONIST."
+
+[24] In curious confirmation of this opinion expressed to me by
+a man of the country in March, I find in the _Dublin Express_ of July
+19th this official news from the Athy Vice-Guardians:
+
+ "At the meeting of the Vice-Guardians of the Athy Union yesterday, a
+ letter was read from Mr. G. Finlay, Auditor, in which he stated that
+ the two sureties of Collector Kealy, of the Luggacurren district,
+ had been evicted from their holdings by Lord Lansdowne, and were not
+ now in possession of any lands there. They were allowed outdoor
+ relief to the extent of £1 a week each on the ground of destitution.
+ The Auditor continued: 'The Collector tells me that they both
+ possess other lands, and have money in bank. The Collector is
+ satisfied that they are as good, if not better, securities for the
+ amount of his bond now than at the time they became sureties for
+ him. The Clerk of the Union concurs in this opinion.'
+
+ "It was ordered to bring the matter under the notice of the Board."
+
+[25] _Explanatory Note attached to First Edition._--After this
+chapter had actually gone to press, I received a letter from the friend
+who had put me into communication with the labourers referred to in it,
+begging me to strike out all direct indications of their whereabouts, on
+the ground that these might lead to grave annoyance and trouble for
+these poor men from the local tyrants.
+
+I do not know that I ought to regret the annoyance thus caused to my
+publisher and to me, as no words of mine could emphasise so clearly the
+nature and the scope of the odious, illegal, or anti-legal "coercion"
+established in certain parts of Ireland as the asterisks which mark my
+compliance with my friend's request. What can be said for the freedom of
+a country in which a man of character and position honestly believes it
+to be "dangerous" for poor men to say the things recorded in the text of
+this chapter about their own feelings, wishes, opinions, and interests?
+
+[26] It may be well to say here that whatever prominence Mr.
+O'Donovan Rossa has had among the Irish in America has been largely, if
+not chiefly, due to the curious persistency of Sir William Harcourt,
+when a Minister, in making him the ideal Irish-American leader. In and
+out of Parliament, Sir William Harcourt continually spoke of Mr. Rossa
+as of a kind of Irish Jupiter Tonans, wielding all the terrors of
+dynamite from beyond the Atlantic. This was a source of equal amusement
+to the Irish-American organisers in America and satisfaction to Mr.
+Rossa himself. I remember that when a question arose of excluding Mr.
+Rossa from an important Irish-American convention at Philadelphia, as
+not being the delegate of any recognised Irish-American body, Mr.
+Sullivan told me that he should recommend the admission of Mr. Rossa to
+the floor without a right to deliberative action, expressly because his
+presence, when reported, would be a cause of terror to Sir William
+Harcourt.
+
+[27] See Appendix, Note M.
+
+[28] Note N.
+
+[29] Note O.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of
+2) (1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14511 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14511 ***</div>
+
+<h1>IRELAND UNDER COERCION</h1>
+
+<h2>THE DIARY OF AN AMERICAN</h2>
+
+<h1>BY<br />WILLIAM HENRY HURLBERT</h1>
+
+<h2>VOL. II.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>SECOND EDITION.</i></h3>
+
+<h2>1888</h2>
+
+
+<h3>&ldquo;Upon the future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.&rdquo;<br />CARDINAL MANNING TO EARL GREY, 1868</h3>
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h2>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER VII.</p>
+<ul class="TOC">
+<li>Rossbehy, Feb. 21, <a href="#page1">1</a></li>
+<li>The latest eviction at Glenbehy, <a href="#page1">1</a></li>
+<li>Trafalgar Square, <a href="#page1">1</a>, <a href="#page2">2</a></li>
+<li>Father Little, <a href="#page3">3</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Frost, <a href="#page3">3</a>, <a href="#page4">4</a></li>
+<li>Priest and landlord, <a href="#page3">3</a></li>
+<li>Savings Banks&rsquo; deposits at Six-mile Bridge, <a href="#page5">5</a></li>
+<li>Drive through Limerick, <a href="#page5">5</a></li>
+<li>Population and trade, <a href="#page5">5</a>, <a href="#page6">6</a></li>
+<li>Boycotting and commerce, <a href="#page6">6</a>, <a href="#page7">7</a></li>
+<li>Shores of the Atlantic, <a href="#page7">7</a></li>
+<li>Tralee, <a href="#page7">7</a></li>
+<li>Killorglin, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+<li>Hostelry in the hills, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+<li>Facts of the eviction, <a href="#page9">9</a>-<a href="#page13">13</a></li>
+<li>Glenbehy Eviction Fund (see Note <a href="#noteG2">G2</a>), <a href="#page12">12</a></li>
+<li>A walk on Washington&rsquo;s birthday, <a href="#page13">13</a></li>
+<li>A tenant at Glenbehy offers &pound;13 in two instalments in full for &pound;240 arrears, <a href="#page13">13</a></li>
+<li>English and Irish members, <a href="#page14">14</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Winn&rsquo;s Folly,&rdquo; <a href="#page15">15</a></li>
+<li>Acreage and rental of the Glenbehy estate, <a href="#page16">16</a></li>
+<li>Work of eviction begun, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+<li>Patience of officers, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+<li>American and Irish evictions contrasted, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s quite familiar,&rdquo; <a href="#page18">18</a></li>
+<li>A modest Poor Law Guardian, <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href="#page19">19</a></li>
+<li>Moonlighters&rsquo; swords, <a href="#page20">20</a></li>
+<li>Father Quilter and the &ldquo;poor slaves,&rdquo; his people, <a href="#page21">21</a>,<a href="#page22">22</a></li>
+<li>Beauty of Lough Caragh, <a href="#page23">23</a></li>
+<li>Difficulty of getting evidence, <a href="#page25">25</a></li>
+<li>Effects of terrorism in Kerry, <a href="#page25">25</a></li>
+<li>Singular identification of a murderer, <a href="#page26">26</a></li>
+<li>Local administration in Tralee, <a href="#page28">28</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">
+CHAPTER VIII.</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Cork, Feb. 23, <a href="#page30">30</a></li>
+<li>Press accounts of Glenbehy evictions astonish an eye-witness, <a href="#page30">30</a></li>
+<li>Castle Island, <a href="#page31">31</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Roche and Mr. Gladstone, <a href="#page31">31</a></li>
+<li>Opinions of a railway traveller, <a href="#page31">31</a>, <a href="#page32">32</a></li>
+<li>Misrepresentations of evictions, <a href="#page32">32</a></li>
+<li>Cork, past and present, <a href="#page34">34</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Gladstone and the Dean, <a href="#page35">35</a></li>
+<li>League Courts in Kerry, <a href="#page36">36</a></li>
+<li>Local Law Lords, <a href="#page36">36</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Colomb and the Fenian rising in 1867, <a href="#page37">37</a></li>
+<li>Remarkable letter of an M.P., <a href="#page38">38</a></li>
+<li>Irish Constabulary, <i>morale</i> of the force, <a href="#page40">40</a></li>
+<li>The clergy and the Plan of Campaign, <a href="#page41">41</a></li>
+<li>Municipal history, <a href="#page43">43</a></li>
+<li>Increase of public burdens, <a href="#page44">44</a></li>
+<li>Tralee Board of Guardians, <a href="#page46">46</a></li>
+<li>Labourers and tenants, <a href="#page46">46</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 25, <a href="#page47">47</a></li>
+<li>Boycotting, <a href="#page47">47</a>-<a href="#page49">49</a></li>
+<li>Land law and freedom of contract, <a href="#page49">49</a></li>
+<li>Rivalry between Limerick and Cork, <a href="#page50">50</a></li>
+<li>Henry VIII. and the Irish harp, <a href="#page50">50</a></li>
+<li>Municipal Parliamentary franchise, <a href="#page51">51</a></li>
+<li>Environs of Cork, <a href="#page52">52</a></li>
+<li>Churches and chapels, <a href="#page53">53</a></li>
+<li>Attractive home at Belmullet, <a href="#page54">54</a></li>
+<li>Lord Carnarvon and the Priest, <a href="#page55">55</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 26, <a href="#page56">56</a></li>
+<li>Blarney Castle, 56, <a href="#page57">57</a></li>
+<li>St. Anne&rsquo;s Hill, <a href="#page56">56</a>, <a href="#page57">57</a></li>
+<li>An evicted woman on &ldquo;the Plan,&rdquo; <a href="#page59">59</a></li>
+<li>The Ponsonby estate, <a href="#page59">59</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 27&mdash;A day at Youghal, <a href="#page60">60</a></li>
+<li>Father Keller, <a href="#page61">61</a>-<a href="#page76">76</a></li>
+<li>On emigration and migration, <a href="#page66">66</a></li>
+<li>Protestants and Catholics (see Note <a href="#noteG3">G3</a>), <a href="#page68">68</a></li>
+<li>Meath as a field for peasant proprietors, <a href="#page69">69</a></li>
+<li>Ghost of British protection, <a href="#page70">70</a></li>
+<li>A farmer evicted from a tenancy of <a href="#page200">200</a> years, <a href="#page71">71</a></li>
+<li>Sir Walter Raleigh&rsquo;s house and garden, <a href="#page71">71</a>-<a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+<li>Churches of St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+<li>Monument and churchyard, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a></li>
+<li>An Elizabethan candidate for canonisation, <a href="#page75">75</a></li>
+<li>Drive to Lismore, <a href="#page76">76</a></li>
+<li>Driver&rsquo;s opinions on the Ponsonby estates, <a href="#page77">77</a></li>
+<li>Dromaneen Castle and the Countess of Desmond, <a href="#page78">78</a></li>
+<li>Trappist Monastery at Cappoquin, <a href="#page78">78</a></li>
+<li>Lismore, <a href="#page78">78</a>, <a href="#page79">79</a></li>
+<li>Castle grounds and cathedral, <a href="#page79">79</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER IX.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Feb. 28, <a href="#page82">82</a></li>
+<li>Portumna, Galway, <a href="#page82">82</a></li>
+<li>Run through Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen&rsquo;s and King&rsquo;s County to Parsonstown, <a href="#page82">82</a></li>
+<li>A Canadian priest on the situation, <a href="#page83">83</a></li>
+<li>His reply to M. de Mandat Grancey, <a href="#page83">83</a></li>
+<li>Relations of priests with the League, <a href="#page83">83</a>-<a href="#page85">85</a></li>
+<li>Parsonstown and Lord Rosse, <a href="#page86">86</a></li>
+<li>Drive to Portumna, <a href="#page87">87</a></li>
+<li>An abandoned railway, <a href="#page88">88</a></li>
+<li>American storms, grain, and beasts, <a href="#page88">88</a>, <a href="#page89">89</a></li>
+<li>Portumna Castle, <a href="#page90">90</a>, <a href="#page91">91</a></li>
+<li>Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s estate, <a href="#page92">92</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Tener, <a href="#page92">92</a>-<a href="#page128">128</a></li>
+<li>Plan of Campaign, <a href="#page94">94</a>-<a href="#page99">99</a></li>
+<li>Ability of tenants to pay their rents, <a href="#page95">95</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Dillon in 1886, <a href="#page96">96</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Parnell in 1885, <a href="#page97">97</a></li>
+<li>Tenants in greater danger than landlords and agents, <a href="#page100">100</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 29, <a href="#page100">100</a></li>
+<li>Conference between evicted tenants and agent, <a href="#page100">100</a>-<a href="#page106">106</a></li>
+<li>Castle and park, <a href="#page107">107</a></li>
+<li>The League shopkeeper and tenant, <a href="#page108">108</a></li>
+<li>Under police escort, <a href="#page109">109</a></li>
+<li>Cost of &lsquo;knocking&rsquo; a man, <a href="#page109">109</a></li>
+<li>What constitutes a group, <a href="#page110">110</a></li>
+<li>Favourite spots for administering a League oath, <a href="#page110">110</a></li>
+<li>Disbursing treasurers, <a href="#page111">111</a></li>
+<li>Change of venue, <a href="#page111">111</a></li>
+<li>Bishop of Clonfert, <a href="#page112">112</a>-<a href="#page115">115</a></li>
+<li>Bector of Portumna, <a href="#page115">115</a></li>
+<li>Father Coen, <a href="#page116">116</a></li>
+<li>Coercion on the part of the League, <a href="#page118">118</a>-<a href="#page121">121</a></li>
+<li>Deposits in banks, <a href="#page120">120</a></li>
+<li>Should landlords and shopkeepers be placed on one footing? <a href="#page121">121</a></li>
+<li>New Castle of Portumna, <a href="#page122">122</a></li>
+<li>Portumna Union, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a></li>
+<li>Troubles of resident landlords, <a href="#page125">125</a>-<a href="#page127">127</a></li>
+<li>Effects of the agitation on the people, <a href="#page124">124</a></li>
+<li>War against property and private rights, <a href="#page127">127</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Tener&rsquo;s experiences in Cavan, <a href="#page127">127</a>-<a href="#page130">130</a></li>
+<li>Similar cases in Leitrim, <a href="#page130">130</a>-<a href="#page132">132</a></li>
+<li>Sale of rents and value of tenant-right, <a href="#page133">133</a>, <a href="#page134">134</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER X.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Dublin, March 1, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+<li>Portumna to Woodford, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+<li>Evictions of October 1887, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+<li>Capture of Cloondadauv Castle, <a href="#page137">137</a>-<a href="#page141">141</a></li>
+<li>A tenant and a priest, <a href="#page141">141</a>-<a href="#page144">144</a></li>
+<li>Workmen&rsquo;s wages in Massachusetts compared with the profits of a tenant farmer in Ireland, <a href="#page146">146</a></li>
+<li>Loughrea, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page149">149</a></li>
+<li>Murder of Finlay, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page151">151</a></li>
+<li>The chrysoprase Lake of Loughrea, <a href="#page154">154</a></li>
+<li>Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s estate office, acreage, and rental, <a href="#page155">155</a></li>
+<li>Woodford acreage and rental, <a href="#page155">155</a>,<a href="#page156">156</a></li>
+<li>Drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn, <a href="#page156">156</a>-<a href="#page160">160</a></li>
+<li>A Galway &ldquo;jarvey&rdquo; on the situation, <a href="#page156">156</a>-<a href="#page159">159</a></li>
+<li>Woodlawn and the Ashtown property, <a href="#page160">160</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XI.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Borris, March 2, <a href="#page161">161</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kavanagh, <a href="#page161">161</a>-<a href="#page163">163</a></li>
+<li>Borris House, <a href="#page163">163</a>-<a href="#page167">167</a></li>
+<li>A living Banshee, <a href="#page165">165</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a></li>
+<li>Land Corporation&mdash;its mode of working, <a href="#page167">167</a></li>
+<li>Meeting in Dublin, 1885, <a href="#page168">168</a></li>
+<li>Rev. Mr. Cantwell, <a href="#page168">168</a></li>
+<li>Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s property at Luggacurren, <a href="#page169">169</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kavanagh&rsquo;s career, <a href="#page170">170</a></li>
+<li>Books and papers at Borris, <a href="#page171">171</a></li>
+<li>Strongbow, <a href="#page172">172</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;The five bloods,&rdquo; <a href="#page172">172</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a></li>
+<li>Genealogy of M&lsquo;Morroghs and Kavanaghs, <a href="#page173">173</a></li>
+<li>March 4, <a href="#page174">174</a></li>
+<li>Protestant service read every morning, <a href="#page174">174</a></li>
+<li>A Catholic gentleman&rsquo;s views, <a href="#page175">175</a></li>
+<li>Relation of tenants to village despots, <a href="#page176">176</a></li>
+<li>Would America make a State of Ireland? <a href="#page177">177</a></li>
+<li>Land Acts since 1870, <a href="#page178">178</a></li>
+<li>The O&rsquo;Grady of Kilballyowen and his rental, <a href="#page179">179</a></li>
+<li>Dispute with his tenants: its cause and effect, <a href="#page180">180</a></li>
+<li>His circular to his tenantry, <a href="#page181">181</a>-<a href="#page186">186</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XII.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Grenane House, March 5, <a href="#page187">187</a></li>
+<li>Visit to Mr. Seigne, <a href="#page187">187</a></li>
+<li>Beautiful situation of Grenane, <a href="#page189">189</a></li>
+<li>A lady of the country, <a href="#page189">189</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Seigne&rsquo;s experience of the tenants, <a href="#page191">191</a>-<a href="#page194">194</a></li>
+<li>The beauty of Woodstock, <a href="#page194">194</a>-<a href="#page198">198</a></li>
+<li>The watch of Waterloo, <a href="#page197">197</a>-<a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+<li>Curious discovery of stolen property, <a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, March 6, <a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+<li>State of deposits in the Savings Banks, <a href="#page200">200</a>-<a href="#page201">201</a></li>
+<li>Interest on &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; funds, <a href="#page202">202</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XIII.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Dublin, March 8, <a href="#page203">203</a></li>
+<li>Inch and the Coolgreany evictions, <a href="#page203">203</a></li>
+<li>Sweet vale of Avoca, <a href="#page204">204</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Dillon of Arklow, <a href="#page204">204</a></li>
+<li>Fathers O&rsquo;Neill and Dunphy, <a href="#page205">205</a>, <a href="#page206">206</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Davitt watching the evictions, <a href="#page207">207</a></li>
+<li>Lazy and thriftless tenants better off than before, <a href="#page209">209</a></li>
+<li>A self-made committee, <a href="#page211">211</a></li>
+<li>The Brooke estate, <a href="#page212">212</a></li>
+<li>Sir Thomas Esmonde&rsquo;s house, <a href="#page213">213</a></li>
+<li>An Arklow dinner, <a href="#page214">214</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Dillon in his study, <a href="#page215">215</a>-<a href="#page217">217</a></li>
+<li>Visit to Glenart Castle, <a href="#page217">217</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XIV.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Dublin, March 9, <a href="#page219">219</a></li>
+<li>Athy, <a href="#page219">219</a></li>
+<li>A political jarvey, <a href="#page220">220</a>-<a href="#page225">225</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Who is Mr. Gilhooly?&rdquo; <a href="#page221">221</a></li>
+<li>Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s offer refused through pressure of the League, <a href="#page226">226</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kilbride, M.P., and Mr. Dunne, <a href="#page226">226</a>-<a href="#page228">228</a></li>
+<li>Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s estate in Kerry, <a href="#page228">228</a>-<a href="#page231">231</a></li>
+<li>Plan of Campaign at Luggacurren, <a href="#page231">231</a>-<a href="#page236">236</a></li>
+<li>Interview with Father Maher, <a href="#page236">236</a>-<a href="#page239">239</a></li>
+<li>A &ldquo;jarvey&rdquo; on a J.P., <a href="#page240">240</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Railway amenities,&rdquo; <a href="#page241">241</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, March 10, <a href="#page242">242</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Brooke, <a href="#page242">242</a>-<a href="#page248">248</a></li>
+<li>Unreasonable tenants, <a href="#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a></li>
+<li>Size and rental of estate, <a href="#page246">246</a></li>
+<li>Sub-commissioner&rsquo;s reduction reversed, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href="#page247">247</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XV.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Maryborough, <a href="#page249">249</a></li>
+<li>Archbishop Croke, <a href="#page249">249</a></li>
+<li>Interviews with labourers, <a href="#page251">251</a>-<a href="#page253">253</a></li>
+<li>Views of a successful country teacher, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href="#page255">255</a></li>
+<li>A veteran of the &rsquo;48, <a href="#page256">256</a>-<a href="#page260">260</a></li>
+<li>Amount of wages to men, <a href="#page261">261</a></li>
+<li>The farmers and labourers and lawyers, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href="#page265">265</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, June 23, <a href="#page268">268</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, <a href="#page268">268</a>-<a href="#page270">270</a></li>
+<li>From Attanagh to Ballyragget, <a href="#page270">270</a></li>
+<li>Case of &ldquo;a little-good-for tenant,&rdquo; <a href="#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kough and his tenants, <a href="#page273">273</a>-<a href="#page277">277</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Richardson of Castle Comer, <a href="#page277">277</a></li>
+<li>Position of the tenants, <a href="#page282">282</a></li>
+<li>&pound;70 a year for whisky, <a href="#page282">282</a></li>
+<li>Kilkenny Castle, <a href="#page282">282</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, <a href="#page283">283</a>-<a href="#page292">292</a></li>
+<li>John O&rsquo;Leary, <a href="#page285">285</a>-<a href="#page292">292</a></li>
+<li>Boycotting private opinion, <a href="#page292">292</a></li>
+<li>The League as now conducted, <a href="#page295">295</a></li>
+<li>Poems and Ballads of &ldquo;Young Ireland,&rdquo; <a href="#page296">296</a></li>
+<li>Law Courts and Trinity College, <a href="#page297">297</a></li>
+<li>American Civil War, <a href="#page299">299</a>-<a href="#page302">302</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, June 24, <a href="#page302">302</a></li>
+<li>A dinner with officials, <a href="#page303">303</a>-<a href="#page306">306</a></li>
+<li>A priest earns over &pound;20,000, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Crowner&rsquo;s Quest Law,&rdquo; <a href="#page309">309</a>-<a href="#page311">311</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XVI.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Belfast, June 25, <a href="#page313">313</a></li>
+<li>Ulster in Irish history, <a href="#page313">313</a></li>
+<li>Moira, <a href="#page315">315</a></li>
+<li>Views of an Ulsterman, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a></li>
+<li>Beauty of Belfast, <a href="#page317">317</a>, <a href="#page318">318</a></li>
+<li>Its buildings, <a href="#page319">319</a>-<a href="#page321">321</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Hanna, <a href="#page322">322</a>-<a href="#page324">324</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Kane, <a href="#page325">325</a></li>
+<li>June 26, <a href="#page326">326</a></li>
+<li>Sir John Preston, <a href="#page326">326</a>-<a href="#page328">328</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Cameron, of Royal Irish Constabulary, <a href="#page328">328</a></li>
+<li>Police parade, <a href="#page328">328</a></li>
+<li>Belfast steamers, <a href="#page329">329</a></li>
+<li>Scotland and America at work on Ireland, <a href="#page330">330</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">EPILOGUE, p. <a href="#page333">333</a>-<a href="#page349">349</a></p>
+
+<p class="i0">
+APPENDIX.<br /><br />NOTES&mdash;
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+
+<li><a href="#noteF">F.</a> The Moonlighters and Home Rule (pp. <a href="#page10">10</a>, <a href="#page38">38</a>), <a href="#page351">351</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteG">G.</a> The Ponsonby Property (pp. <a href="#page59">59</a>-<a href="#page66">66</a>), <a href="#page353">353</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteG2">G2.</a> The Glenbehy Eviction Fund (p. <a href="#page12">12</a>), <a href="#page360">360</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteG3">G3.</a> Home Rule and Protestantism (p. <a href="#page68">68</a>), <a href="#page362">362</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteH">H.</a> Tully and the Woodford Evictions (p. <a href="#page149">149</a>), <a href="#page364">364</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteH2">H2.</a> Boycotting the Dead (p. <a href="#page151">151</a>), <a href="#page370">370</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteI">I.</a> The Savings Banks (P.O.) (vol. i. p. <a href="#page39">39</a>, vol. ii. pp. <a href="#page5">5</a> and <a href="#page200">200</a>), <a href="#page371">371</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteK">K.</a> The Coolgreany Evictions (p. <a href="#page216">216</a>), <a href="#page372">372</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteL">L.</a> A Ducal Supper in 1711 (p. <a href="#page283">283</a>), <a href="#page374">374</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteM">M.</a> Letter from Mr. O&rsquo;Leary (p. <a href="#page291">291</a>), <a href="#page375">375</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteN">N.</a> Boycotting Private Opinion (p. <a href="#page293">293</a>), <a href="#page377">377</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteO">O.</a> Boycotting by Crowner&rsquo;s Quest Law (p. <a href="#page312">312</a>), <a href="#page382">382</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 1]
+</span>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">ROSSBEHY,<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> <i>Feb. 21.</i>&mdash;</span>We are here on the eve of battle! An &ldquo;eviction&rdquo;
+is to be made to-morrow on the Glenbehy
+<a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> estate of Mr. Winn, an uncle
+of Lord Headley, so upon the invitation of Colonel Turner, who has come
+to see that all is done decently and in order, I left Ennis with him at
+7.40 A.M. for Limerick; the &ldquo;city of the Liberator&rdquo; for &ldquo;the city of the
+Broken Treaty.&rdquo; There we breakfasted at the Artillery Barracks.</p>
+
+<p>The officers showed us there the new twelve-pounder gun with its
+elaborately scientific machinery, its Scotch sight, and its four-mile
+range. I compared notes about the Trafalgar Square riots of February
+1886 with an Irish officer who happened to have <a name="page2" id="page2"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 2]
+</span>been on the opposite
+side of Pall Mall from me at the moment when the mob, getting out of the
+hand of my socialistic friend Mr. Hyndman, and advancing towards St.
+James&rsquo; Street and Piccadilly was broken by a skilful and very spirited
+charge of the police. He gave a most humorous account of his own
+sensations when he first came into contact with the multitude after
+emerging from St. Paul&rsquo;s, where, as he put it, he had left the people
+&ldquo;all singing away like devils.&rdquo; But I found he quite agreed with me in
+thinking that there was a visible nucleus of something like military
+organisation in the mob of that day, which was overborne and, as it
+were, smothered by the mere mob element before it came to trying
+conclusions with the police.</p>
+
+<p>On our way to Limerick, Colonel Turner caught sight, at a station, of
+Father Little, the parish priest of Six Mile Bridge, in County Clare,
+and jumping out of the carriage invited him to get in and pursue his
+journey with us, which he very politely did. Father Little is a tall
+fine-looking man of a Saxon rather than a Celtic type, and I daresay
+comes of the Cromwellian stock. He is a staunch and outspoken
+Nationalist, and has been made rather prominent of late by his
+championship of certain of his <a name="page3" id="page3"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 3]
+</span>parishioners in their contest with their
+landlord, Mr. H.V. D&rsquo;Esterre, who lives chiefly at Bournemouth in
+England, but owns 2833 acres in County Clare at Rosmanagher, valued at
+&pound;1625 a year. More than a year ago one of Father Little&rsquo;s parishioners,
+Mr. Frost, successfully resisted a large force of the constabulary bent
+on executing a process of ejectment against him obtained by Mr.
+D&rsquo;Esterre.</p>
+
+<p>Frost&rsquo;s holding was of 33 Irish, or, in round numbers, about 50 English,
+acres, at a rental of &pound;117, 10s., on which he had asked but had not
+obtained an abatement. The Poor-Law valuation of the holding was &pound;78,
+and Frost estimated the value of his and his father&rsquo;s improvements,
+including the homestead and the offices, or in other words his
+tenant-right, at &pound;400. The authorities sent a stronger body of
+constables and ejected Frost. But as soon as they had left the place
+Frost came back with his family, on the 28th Jan. 1887, and reoccupied
+it. Of course proceedings were taken against him immediately, and a
+small war was waged over the Frost farm until the 5th of September last,
+when an expedition was sent against it, and it was finally captured, and
+Frost evicted with <a name="page4" id="page4"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 4]
+</span>his family. Upon this last occasion Father Little
+(who gave me a very temperate but vigorous account of the whole affair)
+distinguished himself by a most ingenious and original attempt to &ldquo;hold
+the fort.&rdquo; He chained himself to the main doorway, and stretching the
+chains right and left secured them to two other doors. It was of this
+refreshing touch of humour that I heard the other day at Abbeyleix as
+happening not in Clare but in Kerry.</p>
+
+<p>Since his eviction Frost has been living, Father Little tells me, in a
+wooden hut put up for him on the lands of a kinsman of the same name,
+who is also a tenant of Mr. D&rsquo;Esterre, and who has since been served by
+his landlord with a notice of ejectment for arrears, although he had
+paid up six months&rsquo; dues two months only before the service. Father
+Little charged the landlord in this case with prevarication and other
+evasive proceedings in the course of his negotiations with the tenants;
+and Colonel Turner did not contest the statements made by him in support
+of his contention that the Rosmanagher difficulty might have been
+avoided had the tenants been more fairly and more considerately dealt
+with. It is strong presumptive evidence against the landlord that a
+kinsman, Mr. Robert <a name="page5" id="page5"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 5]
+</span>D&rsquo;Esterre, is one of the subscribers to a fund
+raised by Father Little in aid of the evicted man Frost. On the other
+hand, as illustrating the condition of the tenants, it is noteworthy
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank&rsquo;s deposits at Six-Mile Bridge rose
+from &pound;382, 17s. 10d. in 1880 to &pound;934, 13s. 4d. in 1887.
+
+After breakfast we took a car and drove rapidly about the city for an
+hour. With its noble river flowing through the very heart of the place,
+and broadening soon into an estuary of the Atlantic, Limerick ought long
+ago to have taken its place in the front rank of British ports dealing
+with the New World. In the seventeenth century it was the fourth city of
+Ireland, Boate putting it then next after Dublin, Galway, and Waterford.
+Belfast at that time, he describes as a place hardly comparable &ldquo;to a
+small market-town in England.&rdquo; To-day Limerick has a population of some
+forty thousand, and Belfast a population of more than two hundred
+thousand souls. This change cannot be attributed solely, if at all, to
+the &ldquo;Protestant ascendency,&rdquo; nor yet to the alleged superiority of the
+Northern over the Southern Irish in energy and thrift, For in the
+seventeenth century Limerick <a name="page6" id="page6"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 6]
+</span>was more important than Cork, whereas it
+had so far fallen behind its Southern competitor in the eighteenth
+century that it contained in 1781 but 3859 houses, while Cork contained
+5295. To-day its population is about half as large as that of Cork. It
+is a very well built city, its main thoroughfare, George Street, being
+at least a mile in length, and a picturesque city also, thanks to the
+island site of its most ancient quarter, the English Town, and to the
+hills of Clare and Killaloe, which close the prospect of the surrounding
+country. But the streets, though many of them are handsome, have a
+neglected look, as have also the quays and bridges. One of my
+companions, to whom I spoke of this, replied, &ldquo;if they look neglected,
+it&rsquo;s because they are neglected. Politics are the death of the place,
+and the life of its publics.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>As we approached the shores of the Atlantic from Limerick, the scenery
+became very grand and <a name="page7" id="page7"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 7]
+</span>beautiful. On the right of the railway the country
+rolled and undulated away towards the Stacks, amid the spurs and slopes
+of which, in the wood of Clonlish, Sanders, the Nuncio sent over to
+organise Catholic Ireland against Elizabeth, miserably perished of want
+and disease six years before the advent of the great Armada. To the
+south-west rose the grand outlines of the Macgillicuddy&rsquo;s Reeks, the
+highest points, I believe, in the South of Ireland. We established
+ourselves at the County Kerry Club on our arrival in Tralee, which I
+found to be a brisk prosperous-looking town, and quite well built. A
+Nationalist member once gave me a gloomy notion of Tralee, by telling
+me, when I asked him whether he looked forward with longing to a seat in
+the Parliament of Ireland, that &ldquo;when he was in Dublin now he always
+thought of London, just as when he used to be in Tralee he always
+thought of Dublin.&rdquo; But he did less than justice to the town upon the
+Lee. We left it at half-past <a name="page8" id="page8"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 8]
+</span>four in the train for Killorglin. The
+little station there was full of policemen and soldiers, and knots of
+country people stood about the platform discussing the morrow. There had
+been some notion that the car-drivers at Killorglin might &ldquo;boycott&rdquo; the
+authorities. But they were only anxious to turn an honest penny by
+bringing us on to this lonely but extremely neat and comfortable
+hostelry in the hills.</p>
+
+<p>We left the Sheriff and the escort to find their way as best they could
+after us.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Shee, the landlady here, ushered us into a very pretty room hung
+with little landscapes of the country, and made cheery by a roaring
+fire. Two or three officers of the soldiers sent on here to prevent any
+serious uproar to-morrow dined with us.</p>
+
+<p>The constabulary are in force, but in great good humour. They have no
+belief that there will be any trouble, though all sorts of wild tales
+were flying about Tralee before we left, of English members of
+Parliament coming down to denounce the &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; law, and of risings in
+the hills, and I know not what besides. The agent of the Winn property,
+or of Mr. Head of Reigate in Surrey, the mortgagee of the estate, who
+holds a power of attorney from Mr. Winn, is here, a quiet, intelligent
+<a name="page9" id="page9"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 9]
+</span>young man, who has given me the case in a nut-shell.</p>
+
+<p>The tenant to be evicted, James Griffin, is the son and heir of one Mrs.
+Griffin, who on the 5th of April 1854 took a lease of the lands known as
+West Lettur from the then Lord Headley and the Hon. R. Winn, at the
+annual rent of &pound;32, 10s. This rent has since been reduced by a judicial
+process to &pound;26. In 1883 James Griffin, who was then, as he is now, an
+active member of the local branch of the National League, and who was
+imprisoned under Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s Act of 1881 as a &ldquo;suspect,&rdquo; was
+evicted, being then several years in arrears. He re-entered unlawfully
+immediately afterwards, and has remained in West Lettur unlawfully ever
+since, actively deterring and discouraging other tenants from paying
+their rents. He took a great part in promoting the refusal to pay which
+led to the famous evictions of last year. As to these, it seems the
+tenants had agreed, in 1886, to accept a proposition from Mr. Head,
+remitting four-fifths of all their arrears upon payment of one year&rsquo;s
+rent and costs. Mr. Sheehan, M.P., a hotel-keeper in Killarney,
+intervened, advising the tenants that the Dublin Parliament would soon
+be established, and would abolish &ldquo;landlordism,&rdquo; whereupon they <a name="page10" id="page10"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 10]</span>refused
+to keep their agreement.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a> Sir Redvers Buller, who then filled the post
+now held by Sir West Ridgway, seeing this alarming deadlock, urged Mr.
+Head to go further, and offer to take a half-year&rsquo;s rent and costs. If
+the tenants refused this Sir Redvers advised Mr. Head to destroy all
+houses occupied by mere trespassers, such as Griffin, who, if they could
+hold a place for twelve years, would acquire a title under the Statute
+of Limitations. A negotiation conducted by Sir Redvers and Father
+Quilter, P.P., followed, and Father Quilter, for the tenants, finally,
+in writing, accepted Mr. Head&rsquo;s offer, under which, by the payment of
+&pound;865, they would be rid of a legal liability for &pound;6177. The League again
+intervened with bribes and threats, and Father Quilter found himself
+obliged to write to Colonel Turner a letter in which he said, &ldquo;Only
+seventeen of the seventy tenants have sent on their rents to Mr. Roe
+(the agent). Though promising that they would accept the terms, they
+have withdrawn at the last moment from fulfilment.... I shall never
+again during my time in Glenbehy <a name="page11" id="page11"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 11]
+</span>interfere between a landlord and his
+tenants. I have poor slaves who will not keep their word. Now let Mr.
+Roe or any other agent in future deal with Glenbeighans as he likes.&rdquo;
+The farms lie at a distance even from this inn, and very far therefore
+from Killorglin, and the agent, knowing that the tenants would be
+encouraged by Griffin and by Mr. Harrington, M.P., and others, to come
+back into their holdings as soon as the officers withdrew, ordered the
+woodwork of several cottages to be burned in order to prevent this. This
+burning of the cottages, which were the lawful property of the
+mortgagee, made a great figure in the newspaper reports, and
+&ldquo;scandalised the civilised world.&rdquo; The present agent thinks it was
+impolitic on that account, but he has no doubt it was a good thing
+financially for the evicted tenants. &ldquo;You will see the shells of the
+cottages to-morrow,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you will judge for yourself what they
+were worth.&rdquo; But the sympathy excited by the illustrations of the cruel
+conflagration and the heartrending descriptions of the reporters,
+resulted in a very handsome subscription for the benefit of the tenants
+of Glenbehy. General Sir William Butler, whose name came so prominently
+before the public in connection with <a name="page12" id="page12"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 12]
+</span>his failure to appear and give
+evidence in a recent <i>cause c&eacute;l&egrave;bre</i>, and whose brother is a Resident
+Magistrate in Kerry, was one of the subscribers. The fund thus raised
+has been since administered by two trustees, Father Quilter, P.P., and
+Mr. Shee, a son of our brisk little landlady here, who maintain out of
+it very comfortably the evicted tenants. Not long ago a man in Tralee
+tried to bribe the agent into having him evicted, that he might make a
+claim on this fund! At Killorglin the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits,
+which stood at &pound;282, 15s. 9d. in 1880, rose in 1887 to &pound;1299, 2s. 6d.
+James Griffin, despite, or because, of the two evictions through which
+he has passed, is very well off. He owns a very good horse and cart, and
+seven or eight head of cattle. His arrears now amount to about &pound;240, and
+on being urged yesterday to make a proposition which might avoid an
+eviction, he gravely offered to pay &pound;8 of the current half-year&rsquo;s rent
+in cash, and the remaining &pound;5 in June, the landlord taking on himself
+all the costs and giving him a clean receipt! This liberal proposition
+was declined. The zeal of her son in behalf of the evicted tenants does
+not seem to affect the amiable anxiety of our trim and energetic hostess
+to make things agreeable here to the minions of the alien <a name="page13" id="page13"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 13]
+</span>despotism. The
+officers both of the police and of the military appear to be on the best
+of terms with the whole household, and everything is going as merrily as
+marriage bells on this eve of an eviction.</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">TRALEE, <i>Wednesday evening, Feb. 22.</i>&mdash;</span>We rose early at Mrs. Shee&rsquo;s,
+made a good breakfast, and set out for the scene of the day&rsquo;s work. It
+was a glorious morning for Washington&rsquo;s birthday, and I could not help
+imagining the amazement with which that stern old Virginian landlord
+would have regarded the elaborate preparations thought necessary here in
+Ireland in the year of our Lord 1888, to eject a tenant who owes two
+hundred and forty pounds of arrears on a holding at twenty-six pounds a
+year, and offers to settle the little unpleasantness by paying thirteen
+pounds in two instalments!</p>
+
+<p>We had a five miles&rsquo; march of it through a singularly wild and
+picturesque region, the hills which lead up to the Macgillicuddy&rsquo;s Reeks
+on our left, and on the right the lower hills trending to the salt water
+of Dingle Bay. Our start had been delayed by the non-appearance of the
+Sheriff, in aid of whom all this parade of power was made; but it turned
+out afterwards that he had gone on without stopping to let Colonel
+Turner know it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 14]
+</span>The air was so bracing and the scenery so fine that we walked most of
+the way. Two or three cars drove past us, the police and the troops
+making way for them very civilly, though some of the officers thought
+they were taking some Nationalist leaders and some English
+&ldquo;sympathisers&rdquo; to Glenbehy. One of the officers, when I commented upon
+this, told me they never had much trouble with the Irish members. &ldquo;Some
+of them,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;talk more than is necessary, and flourish about; but
+they have sense enough to let us go about our work without foolishly
+trying to bother us. The English are not always like that.&rdquo; And he then
+told me a story of a scene in which an English M.P., we will call Mr.
+Gargoyle, was a conspicuous actor. Mr. Gargoyle being present either at
+an eviction or a prohibited meeting, I didn&rsquo;t note which, with two or
+three Irish members, all of them were politely requested to step on one
+side and let the police march past. The Irish members touched their hats
+in return to the salute of the officer, and drew to one side of the
+road. But Mr. Gargoyle defiantly planted himself in the middle of the
+road. The police, marching four abreast, hesitated for a moment, and
+then suddenly dividing into two columns <a name="page15" id="page15"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 15]
+</span>marched on. The right-hand man
+of the first double file, as he went by, just touched the M.P. with his
+shoulder, and thereby sent him up against the left-hand man of the
+corresponding double file, who promptly returned the attention. And in
+this manner the distinguished visitor went gyrating through the whole
+length of the column, to emerge at the end of it breathless, hatless,
+and bewildered, to the intense and ill-suppressed delight of his Irish
+colleagues.</p>
+
+<p>Our hostess&rsquo;s son, the trustee of the Eviction Fund, was on one of the
+cars which passed us, with two or three companions, who proved to be
+&ldquo;gentlemen of the Press.&rdquo; We passed a number of cottages and some larger
+houses on the way, the inmates of which seemed to be minding their own
+business and taking but a slight interest in the great event of the day.
+We made a little detour at one of the finest points on the road to visit
+&ldquo;Winn&rsquo;s Folly,&rdquo; a modern medi&aelig;val castle of considerable size, upon a
+most enchanting site, with noble views on every side, quite impossible
+to be seen through its narrow loopholed and latticed windows. The castle
+is extremely well built, of a fine stone from the neighbourhood, and
+with a very small expenditure might <a name="page16" id="page16"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 16]
+</span>be made immediately habitable. But
+no one has ever lived in it. It has only been occupied as a temporary
+barrack by the police when sent here, and the largest rooms are now
+littered with straw for the use of the force. At the beginning of the
+century, and for many years afterwards, Lord and Lady Headley lived on
+the estate, and kept a liberal house. Their residence was on a fine
+point running out into the bay, but, I am told, the sea has now invaded
+it, and eaten it away. In 1809 the acreage of this Glenbehy property was
+8915 Irish acres or 14,442 English acres, set down under Bath&rsquo;s
+valuation at &pound;2299, 17s. 6d. Between 1830 and 1860 the rental averaged
+&pound;5000 a year, and between these years &pound;17,898, 14s. 5d. were expended by
+the landlord in improvements upon the property. This castle, which we
+visited, must have involved since then an outlay of at least &pound;10,000 in
+the place.</p>
+
+<p>The present Lord Headley, only a year or two ago, went through the
+Bankruptcy Court, and the Hon. Rowland Winn, his uncle, the titular
+owner of Glenbehy, is set down among the Irish landlords as owning
+13,932 Irish acres at a rental of &pound;1382.</p>
+
+<p>After we passed the castle we began to hear the blowing of rude horns
+from time to time on the <a name="page17" id="page17"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 17]
+</span>distant hills. These were signals to the people
+of our approach, and gave quite the air of an invasion to our
+expedition. We passed the burned cottages of last year just before
+reaching Mr. Griffin&rsquo;s house at West Lettur. They were certainly not
+large cottages, and I saw but three of them. We found the Sheriff at
+West Lettur. The police and the soldiers drew a cordon around the place,
+within which no admittance was to be had except on business; and the
+myrmidons of the law going into the house with the agent held a final
+conference with the tenant, of which nothing came but a renewal of his
+previous offer. Then the work of eviction began. There was no attempt at
+a resistance, and but for the martial aspect of the forces, and an
+occasional blast of a horn from the hills, or the curious noises made
+from time to time by a small concourse of people, chiefly women,
+assembled on the slope of an adjoining tenancy, the proceedings were as
+dull as a parish meeting. What most struck me about the affair was the
+patience and good-nature of the officers. In the two hours and a half
+which we spent at West Lettur a New York Sheriff&rsquo;s deputies would have
+put fifty tenants with all their bags and baggage out of as many houses <a name="page18" id="page18"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 18]
+</span>
+into the street. In fact it is very likely that at least that number of
+New York tenants were actually so ousted from their houses during this
+very time.</p>
+
+<p>The evicted Mr. Griffin was a stout, stalwart man of middle age,
+comfortably dressed, with the air rather of a citizen than of a farmer,
+who took the whole thing most coolly, as did also his women-kind. All of
+them were well dressed, and they superintended the removal and piling up
+of their household goods as composedly as if they were simply moving out
+of one house into another. The house itself was a large comfortable
+house of the country, and it was amply furnished.</p>
+
+<p>I commented on Griffin&rsquo;s indifference to the bailiff, a quiet,
+good-natured man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s quite familiar,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s the third time he&rsquo;s been
+evicted! I believe&rsquo;s going to America.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! he will do very well,&rdquo; said a gentleman who had joined the
+expedition like myself to see the scene. &ldquo;He is a shrewd chap, and not
+troubled by bashfulness. He sat on a Board of Guardians with a man I
+knew four years ago, and one day he read out his own name, &lsquo;James
+Griffin,&rsquo; among a list of applicants for relief at Cahirciveen. The <a name="page19" id="page19"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 19]
+</span>
+chairman looked up, and said, &lsquo;Surely that is not your name you are
+reading, is it?&rsquo; &lsquo;It is, indeed,&rsquo; replied Griffin, &lsquo;and I am as much in
+need of relief as any one!&rsquo; Perhaps you&rsquo;ll be surprised to hear he
+didn&rsquo;t get it. This is a good holding he had, and he used to do pretty
+well with it&mdash;not in his mother&rsquo;s time only of the flush prices, but in
+his own. It was the going to Kilmainham that spoiled him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How did that spoil him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it made a great man of him, being locked up. He was too well
+treated there. He got a liking for sherry and bitters, and he&rsquo;s never
+been able to make his dinner since without a nip of them. Mrs. Shee
+knows that well.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To make an eviction complete and legal here, everything belonging to the
+tenant, and every live creature must be taken out of the house. A cat
+may save a house as a cat may save a derelict ship. Then the Sheriff
+must &ldquo;walk&rdquo; over the whole holding. All this takes time. There was an
+unobtrusive search for arms too going on all the time. Three ramrods
+were found hidden in a straw-bed&mdash;two of which showed signs of recent
+use. But the guns had vanished. An officer told me that not long ago two
+revolvers were found in a corner of the <a name="page20" id="page20"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 20]
+</span>thatch of a house; but the
+cartridges for them were only some time afterwards discovered neatly
+packed away in the top of a bedroom wall. It is not the ownership of
+these arms, it is the careful concealment of them which indicates
+sinister intent. One of the constables brought out three &ldquo;Moonlighters&rsquo;
+swords&rdquo; found hidden away in the house. One of these Colonel Turner
+showed me. It was a reversal of the Scriptural injunction, being a
+ploughshare beaten into a weapon, and a very nasty weapon of offence,
+one end of it sharpened for an ugly thrust, the other fashioned into
+quite a fair grip. While I was examining this trophy there was a stir,
+and presently two of the gentlemen who had passed us on Mr. Shee&rsquo;s car
+came rather suddenly out of the house in company with two or three
+constables.</p>
+
+<p>They were representatives, they said, of the Press, and as such desired
+to be allowed to remain. Colonel Turner replied that this could not be,
+and, in fact, no one had been suffered to enter the house except the
+law-officers, the agent, and the constables. So the representatives of
+the Press were obliged to pass outside of the lines, one of the
+constables declaring that they had got into the house through a hole in
+the back wall!</p>
+
+<p><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 21]
+</span>Shortly after this incident there arose a considerable noise of groaning
+and shouting from the hill-side beyond the highway, and presently a
+number of people, women and children predominating, appeared coming down
+towards the precincts of the house. They were following a person in a
+clerical dress, who proved to be Father Quilter, the parish priest, who
+had denounced his people to Colonel Turner as &ldquo;poor slaves&rdquo; of the
+League! A colloquy followed between Father Quilter and the policemen of
+the cordon. This was brought to a close by Mr. Roche, the resident
+magistrate, who went forward, and finding that Father Quilter wished to
+pass the cordon, politely but firmly informed him that this could not be
+done. &ldquo;Not if I am the bearer of a telegram for the lawyer?&rdquo; asked
+Father Quilter, in a loud and not entirely amiable tone. &ldquo;Not on any
+terms whatever,&rdquo; responded the magistrate. Father Quilter still
+maintaining his ground, the women crowded in around and behind him, the
+men bringing up the rear at a respectable distance, and the small boys
+shouting loudly. For a moment faint hopes arose within me that I was
+about to witness one of the .exciting scenes of which I have more than
+once <a name="page22" id="page22"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 22]
+</span>read. But only for a moment. The magistrate ordered the police to
+advance. As they drew near the wall with an evident intention of going
+over it into the highway, Father Quilter and the women fell back, the
+boys and men retreated up the opposite hill, and the brief battle of
+Glenbehy was over.</p>
+
+<p>A small messenger bearing a telegram then emerged from the crowd, and
+showing his telegram, was permitted to pass. Father Quilter, in a loud
+voice, commented upon this, crying out, &ldquo;See now your consistency! You
+said no one should pass, and you let the messenger come in!&rdquo; To this
+sally no reply was returned. After a little the priest, followed by most
+of the people, went up the hill to the holding of another tenant, and
+there, as the police came in and reported, held a meeting. From time to
+time cries were heard in the distance, and ever and anon the blast of a
+horn came from some outlying hill.</p>
+
+<p>But no notice was taken of these things by the police, and when the
+tedious formalities of the law had all been gone through with, a squad
+of men were put in charge of the house and the holding, the rest of the
+army re-formed for the march back, our cars came up, and we left West
+Lettur. <a name="page23" id="page23"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 23]
+</span>Seeing a number of men come down the hill, as the column
+prepared to move, Mr. Roche, making his voice tremendous, after the
+fashion of a Greek chorus, commanded the police to arrest and handcuff
+any riotous person making provocative noises. This had the desired
+effect, and the march back began in silence. When the column was fairly
+in the road, &ldquo;boos&rdquo; and groans went up from knots of men higher up the
+hill, but no heed was taken of these, and no further incident occurred.
+I shall be curious to see whether the story of this affair can possibly
+be worked up into a thrilling narrative.</p>
+
+<p>We lunched at Mrs. Shee&rsquo;s, where no sort of curiosity was manifested
+about the proceedings at West Lettur, and I came back here with Colonel
+Turner by another road, which led us past one of the loveliest lakes I
+have ever seen&mdash;Lough Caragh. Less known to fame than the much larger
+Lake of Killarney, it is in its way quite worthy of comparison with any
+of the lesser lakes of Europe. It is not indeed set in a coronal of
+mountains like Orta, but its shores are well wooded, picturesque, and
+enlivened by charming seats&mdash;now, for the most part, alas!--abandoned by
+their owners. We had a pleasant club dinner here this evening, after
+which <a name="page24" id="page24"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 24]
+</span>came in to see me Mr. Hussey, to whom I had sent a letter from Mr.
+Froude. Few men, I imagine, know this whole region better than Mr.
+Hussey. Some gentlemen of the country joined in the conversation, and
+curious stories were told of the difficulty of getting evidence in
+criminal cases. What Froude says of the effect of the prohibitive and
+protection policy in Ireland upon the morals of the people as to
+smuggling must be said, I fear, of the effect of the Penal Laws against
+Catholics upon their morals as to perjury. It is not surprising that the
+peasants should have been educated into the state of mind of the
+Irishman in the old American story, who, being solicited to promise his
+vote when he landed in New York, asked whether the party which sought it
+was for the Government or against it. Against it, he was told, &ldquo;Then
+begorra you shall have my vote, for I&rsquo;m agin the Government whatever it
+is.&rdquo; One shocking case was told of a notorious and terrible murder here
+in Kerry. An old man and his son, so poor that they lay naked in their
+beds, were taken out and shot by a party of Moonlighters for breaking a
+boycott. They were left for dead, and their bodies thrown upon a
+dunghill. The boy, however, was <a name="page25" id="page25"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 25]
+</span>still alive when they were found, and it
+was thought he might recover. The magistrates questioned him as to his
+knowledge of the murderers. The boy&rsquo;s mother stood behind the
+magistrate, and when the question was put, held up her finger in a
+warning manner at the poor lad. She didn&rsquo;t wish him to &ldquo;peach,&rdquo; as, if
+he lived, the friends of the murderers would make it impossible for them
+to keep their holding and live on it. The lad lied, and died with the
+lie on his lips. Who shall sit in judgment on that wretched mother and
+her son? But what rule can possibly be too stern to crush out the
+terrorism which makes such things possible?</p>
+
+<p>And what right have Englishmen to expect their dominion to stand in
+Ireland when their party leaders for party ends shake hands with men who
+wink at and use this terrorism? It has so wrought upon the population
+here, that in another case, in which the truth needed by justice and the
+fears of a poor family trembling for their substance and their lives
+came thus into collision, an Irish Judge did not hesitate to warn the
+jury against allowing themselves to be influenced by &ldquo;the usual family
+lie&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>A magistrate told us a curious story, which <a name="page26" id="page26"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 26]
+</span>recalls a case noted by Sir
+Walter Scott, about the detection of a murderer, who lay long in wait
+for a certain police sergeant, obnoxious to the &ldquo;Moonlighters,&rdquo; and
+finally shot him dead in the public street of Loughrea, after dark on a
+rainy night, as he was returning from the Post-Office on one side of the
+street to the Police Barracks on the other. The town and the
+neighbouring country were all agog about the matter, but no trace could
+be got until the Dublin detectives came down three days after the
+murder. It had rained more or less every one of these days, and the
+pools of water were still standing in the street, as on the night of the
+murder. One of the Dublin officers closely examining the highway saw a
+heavy footprint in the coarse mud at the bottom of one of these pools.
+He had the water drawn off, and made out clearly, from the print in the
+mud, that the brogan worn by the foot which made it had a broken
+sole-piece turned over under the foot. By this the murderer was
+eventually traced, captured, tried, and found guilty.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Morphy, I find, is coming down from Dublin to conduct the
+prosecution in the case of the Crown against the murderers of
+Fitzmaurice, the old man, <a name="page27" id="page27"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 27]
+</span>so brutally slain the other day near Lixnaw,
+in the presence of his daughter, for taking and farming a farm given up
+by his thriftless brother. &ldquo;He will find,&rdquo; said one of the company,
+&ldquo;the mischief done in this instance also by prematurely pressing for
+evidence. The girl Honora, who saw her father murdered, never ought to
+have been subjected to any inquiry at first by any one, least of all by
+the local priest. Her first thought inevitably was that if she intimated
+who the men were, they would be screened, and she would suffer. Now she
+is recovering her self-possession and coming round, and she will tell
+the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Meanwhile,&rdquo; said a magistrate, &ldquo;the girl and her family are all
+&lsquo;boycotted,&rsquo; and that, mark you, by the priest, as well as by the
+people. The girl&rsquo;s life would be in peril were not these scoundrels
+cowards as well as bullies. Two staunch policemen&mdash;Irishmen and
+Catholics both of them&mdash;are in constant attendance, with orders to
+prevent any one from trying to intimidate or to tamper with her. A
+police hut is putting up close to the Fitzmaurice house. The Nationalist
+papers haven&rsquo;t a word to say for this poor girl or her murdered father.
+But they are always putting in some sly word in behalf <a name="page28" id="page28"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 28]
+</span>of Moriarty and
+Hayes, the men accused of the murder.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Furthermore,&rdquo; said another guest, &ldquo;these two men are regularly supplied
+while in prison with special meals by Mrs. Tangney. Who foots the bills?
+That is what she won&rsquo;t tell, nor has the Head-Constable so far been able
+accurately to ascertain. All we know is that the friends of the
+prisoners haven&rsquo;t the money to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Late in the evening came in a tall fine-looking Kerry squire, who told
+us, <i>&agrave; propos</i> of the Fitzmaurice murder, that only a day or two ago a
+very decent tenant of his, who had taken over a holding from a
+disreputable kinsman, intending to manage it for the benefit of this
+kinsman&rsquo;s family, came to him and said he must give it up, as the
+Moonlighters had threatened him if he continued to hold it.</p>
+
+<p>A man of substance in Tralee gave me some startling facts as to the
+local administration here. In Tralee Union, he said, there were in 1879
+eighty-seven persons receiving outdoor relief, at a cost to the Union of
+&pound;30, 17s. 11d., being an average per head of 7s. 1d., and 1879 was a
+very bad year, the worst since the great famine year, 1847. A
+Nationalist Board was elected in 1880, <a name="page29" id="page29"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 29]
+</span>and a Nationalist chairman in
+1884. 1884 was a very good year, but in that year no fewer than 3434
+persons received outdoor relief, at a cost of &pound;2534, 13s. 10d., making
+an average per head of 14s. 9d.! And at the present time &pound;5000 nominal
+worth of dishonoured cheques of the authorities were flying all over the
+county!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;On whom,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;does the burden fall of these levies and
+extravagances?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;On the landlords, not on the tenants,&rdquo; he promptly replied. &ldquo;The
+landlord pays the whole of the rates on all holdings of less than &pound;4 a
+year, and on all land which is either really or technically in his own
+possession. He also pays one-half of the rates on all the rest of his
+property.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then, in a case like that of Griffin&rsquo;s, evicted at Glenbehy, with
+arrears going back to 1883, who would pay the rates?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The landlord of course!&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 30]
+</span>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Thursday, Feb. 23d.</i>&mdash;</span>We left Tralee this morning. It was
+difficult to recognise the events yesterday witnessed by us at Glenbehy
+in the accounts which we read of them to-day when we got the newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>As these accounts are obviously intended to be read, not in Ireland,
+where nobody seems to take the least interest in Irish affairs beyond
+his own bailiwick, but in England and America, it is only natural, I
+suppose, that they should be coloured to suit the taste of the market
+for which they are destined. It is astonishing how little interest the
+people generally show in the newspapers. The Irish make good journalists
+as they make good soldiers; but most of the journalists who now
+represent Irish constituencies at Westminster find their chief field of
+activity, I am told, not in Irish but in British or in American
+journals. Mr. Roche, R.M., who travelled with us as far as Castle
+Island, where we <a name="page31" id="page31"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 31]
+</span>left him, was much less moved by the grotesque accounts
+given in the local journals of his conduct yesterday than by Mr.
+Gladstone&rsquo;s &ldquo;retractation&rdquo; of the extraordinary attack which he made the
+other day upon Mr. Roche himself, and four other magistrates by name.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The retractation aggravates the attack,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>When one sees what a magistrate now represents in Ireland, it certainly
+is not easy to reconcile an inconsiderate attack upon the character and
+conduct of such an officer with the most elementary ideas of good
+citizenship.</p>
+
+<p>After Mr. Roche left us, a gentleman in the carriage, who is interested
+in some Castle Island property, told us that nothing could be worse than
+the state of that region. Open defiance of the moral authority of the
+clergy is as rife there, he says, as open defiance of the civil
+authorities. The church was not long ago broken into, and the sacred
+vestments were defiled; and, but the other day, a young girl of the
+place came to a magistrate and asked him to give her a summons against
+the parish priest &ldquo;for assaulting her.&rdquo; The magistrate, a Protestant,
+but a personal friend of the priest, esteeming him for his fidelity to
+his duties, asked the girl what <a name="page32" id="page32"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 32]
+</span>on earth she meant. She proceeded with
+perfect coolness to say that the priest had impertinently interfered
+with her, &ldquo;assaulted her,&rdquo; and told her to &ldquo;go home,&rdquo; when he found her
+sitting in a lonely part of the road with her young man, rather late at
+night! For this, the girl, professing to be a Catholic, actually wanted
+the Protestant magistrate to have her parish priest brought into his
+court! He told the girl plainly what he thought of her conduct,
+whereupon she went away, very angry, and vowing vengeance both against
+the priest and against him.</p>
+
+<p>This same gentleman said that at the Bodyke evictions, of which so much
+has been heard, the girls and women swarmed about the police using
+language so revoltingly obscene that the policemen blushed&mdash;such
+language, he said, as was never heard from decent Irishwomen in the days
+of his youth.</p>
+
+<p>Of this business of evictions, he said, the greatest imaginable
+misrepresentations are made in the press and by public speakers. &ldquo;You
+have just seen one eviction yourself,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you can judge for
+yourself whether that can be truly described in Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s language
+as a &lsquo;sentence of death.&rsquo; The people that were put out of these burned
+houses <a name="page33" id="page33"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 33]
+</span>you saw, houses that never would have needed to be burned, had
+Harrington and the other Leaguers allowed the people to keep their
+pledges given Sir Redvers Buller, those very people are better off now
+than they were before they were evicted, in so far as this, that they
+get their food and drink and shelter without working for it, and I&rsquo;m
+sorry to say that the Government and the League, between them, have been
+soliciting half of Ireland for the last six or eight years to think that
+sort of thing a heaven upon earth. An eviction in Ireland in these days
+generally means just this, that the fight between a landlord and the
+League has come to a head. If the tenant wants to be rid of his holding,
+or if he is more afraid of the League than of the law, why, out he goes,
+and then he is a victim of heartless oppression; but if he is
+well-to-do, and if he thinks he will be protected, he takes the eviction
+proceedings just for a notice to stop palavering and make a settlement,
+and a settlement is made. The ordinary Irish tenant don&rsquo;t think anything
+more of an eviction than Irish gentlemen used to think of a duel; but
+you can never get English people to understand the one any more than the
+other!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 34]
+</span>The fine broad streets which Cork owes to the filling up and bridging
+over of the canals which in the last century made her a kind of Irish
+Venice, give the city a comely and even stately aspect. But they are not
+much better kept and looked after than the streets of New York. And they
+are certainly less busy and animated than when I last was here, five
+years ago. All the canals, however, are not filled up or bridged over.
+From my windows, in a neat comfortable little private hotel on
+Morrison&rsquo;s Quay, I look down upon the deck of a small barque, moored
+well up among the houses. The hospitable and dignified County Club is
+within two minutes&rsquo; walk of my hostelry, and the equally hospitable and
+more bustling City Club, but a little farther off, at the end of the
+South Mall. At luncheon to-day a gentleman who was at Kilkenny with Mr.
+Gladstone on the occasion of his visit to that city told me a story too
+good to be lost. The party were eight in number, and on their return to
+Abbeyleix they naturally looked out for an empty railway carriage. The
+train was rather full, but in one compartment my informant descried a
+dignitary, whom he knew, of the Protestant Church of Ireland, its only
+occupant. <a name="page35" id="page35"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 35]
+</span>He went up and saluted the Dean, and, pointing to his
+companions, asked if he would object to changing his place in the train,
+which would give them a compartment to themselves. The Dean courteously,
+and indeed briskly, assented, when he saw that Mr. Gladstone was one of
+the party.</p>
+
+<p>After the train moved off, Mr. Gladstone said, &ldquo;Was not that gentleman
+who so kindly vacated his place for us a clergyman?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; &ldquo;I hope he won&rsquo;t think I have disestablished him again!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>At the next station, my informant getting out for a moment to thank the
+Dean again for his civility, and chat with him, repeated Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s
+remark.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said the Dean; &ldquo;you may tell him I don&rsquo;t mind his disestablishing
+me again; for he didn&rsquo;t disendow me; he didn&rsquo;t confiscate my ticket!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>With this gentleman was another from Kerry, who tells me there is a
+distinct change for the better already visible in that county, which he
+attributes to the steady action of the Dublin authorities in enforcing
+the law.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The League Courts,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;are ceasing to be the terror they used to
+be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I asked what he meant by the &ldquo;League Courts,&rdquo; <a name="page36" id="page36"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 36]
+</span>when he expressed his
+astonishment at my not knowing that it was the practice of the League to
+hold regular Courts, before which the tenants are summoned, as if by a
+process of the law, to explain their conduct, when they are charged with
+paying their rents without the permission of the Local League. In his
+part of Kerry, he tells me, these Courts used not very long ago to sit
+regularly every Sunday. The idea, he says, is as old as the time of the
+United Irishmen, who used to terrorise the country just in the same way.
+A man whom he named, a blacksmith, acted as a kind of &ldquo;Law Lord,&rdquo; and to
+him the chairmen of the different local &ldquo;Courts&rdquo; used to refer cases
+heard before them!<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>All this was testified to openly two years ago, before Lord Cowper&rsquo;s
+Commission, but no decisive action has ever been taken by the Government
+to put a stop to the scandal, and relieve the tenants from this open
+tyranny. These Courts enforced, and still enforce, their decrees by
+various forms of outrage, <a name="page37" id="page37"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 37]
+</span>ranging &ldquo;from the boycott,&rdquo; in its simplest
+forms up to direct outrages upon property and the person.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This dual Government business,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;can only end in a duel
+between the two Governments, and it must be a duel to the death of one
+or the other.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To-night at dinner I had a most interesting conversation with Mr.
+Colomb, Assistant Inspector-General of the Constabulary, who is here
+engaged with Mr. Cameron of Belfast, and Colonel Turner, in
+investigating the affair at Mitchelstown. Mr. Colomb was at Killarney at
+the time of the Fenian rising under &ldquo;General O&rsquo;Connor&rdquo; in 1867&mdash;a rising
+which was undoubtedly an indirect consequence of our own Civil War in
+America. Warning came to two magistrates, of impending trouble from
+Cahirciveen. Upon this Mr. Colomb immediately ordered the arrest of all
+passengers to arrive that day at Killarney by the &ldquo;stage-car&rdquo; from that
+place. When the car came in at night, it brought only one person&mdash;&ldquo;an
+awful-looking ruffian he was,&rdquo; said Mr. Colomb, &ldquo;whom, by his
+square-toed shoes, we knew to be just arrived from your side of the
+water.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was examined, and said he was a commercial traveller, and that he had
+only one letter about him, a business letter, addressed to &ldquo;J. D.
+Sheehan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 38]
+</span>&ldquo;Have you any objection to show us that letter?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; he replied very coolly, and, taking it out of his
+pocket, he walked toward a table on which stood a candle, as if to read
+it. A gentleman who was closely watching him, caught him by the wrist,
+just as he was putting the letter to the flame, and saved it. It was
+addressed to J. D. Sheehan, Esq., Killarney [Present], and ran as
+follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;<i>Feb. 12th, Morning</i>.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;MY DEAR SHEEHAN,&mdash;I have the honour to introduce to you Captain
+ Mortimer Moriarty. He will be of great assistance to you, and I
+ have told him all that is to be done until I get to your place. The
+ Private <i>Spys</i> are very active this morning. Unless they smell a
+ rat all will be done without any trouble.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Success to you. Hoping to meet soon,&mdash;Yours as ever.</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> &ldquo;(Signed) JOHN J. O&rsquo;CONNOR.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 39]
+</span>Despatches were at once sent off to the authorities at different points.
+They were all transmitted, except to Cahirciveen, the wires to which
+place were found to have been cut. Mr. Colomb&mdash;who had a force of but
+seventeen men in the town of Killarney&mdash;saw the uselessness of trying to
+communicate with the officer at Cahirciveen, but was so strongly urged
+by the magistrates that he unwillingly consented to endeavour to do so,
+and a mounted orderly was sent. Just after this unfortunate officer had
+passed Glenbehy (the scene of the eviction I have just witnessed) he was
+shot by some of O&rsquo;Connor&rsquo;s party, whom he tried to pass in the dark, and
+who were marching on Killarney, and fell from his horse, which galloped
+off. He managed to crawl to a neighbouring cottage, where he was not
+long after found by &rdquo;General O&rsquo;Connor&ldquo; and some of his followers. The
+wounded man was kindly treated by O&rsquo;Connor, who had him examined for
+despatches, but prevented one of his men from shooting him dead, as he
+lay on the ground, and had his wounds as well attended to as was
+possible. There was no response in the country to the Kerry rising, such
+as it was, because the intended seizure of Chester Castle by the Fenians
+failed, but O&rsquo;Connor <a name="page40" id="page40"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 40]
+</span>was not captured, though great efforts were made to
+seize him. How he escaped is not known to this day.</p>
+
+<p>At that time, as always in emergencies, Mr. Colomh says the Constabulary
+behaved with exemplary coolness, courage, and fidelity. His position
+gives him a very thorough knowledge of the force, which is almost
+entirely recruited from the body of the Irish people. Of late years not
+a few men of family, reduced in fortune, have taken service in it. Among
+these has been mentioned to me a young Irishman of title, and of an
+ancient race, who is a sergeant in the force, and who recently declined
+to accept a commission, as his increased expenses would make it harder
+for him to support his two sisters. Another constable in the ranks
+represents a family illustrious in the annals of England four centuries
+ago.</p>
+
+<p>As to the <i>morale</i> of the force, he cites one eloquent fact. Out of a
+total of more than 13,000 men, the cases of drunkenness, proved or
+admitted, average no more than fourteen a week! On many days absolutely
+no such cases occur. This is really amazing when one thinks how many of
+the men are isolated on lonely posts all over the island, exposed to all
+sorts of weather, and cut off from the ordinary resources and amusements
+of social life.</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Friday, Feb. 24th.</i>&mdash;</span>This morning after breakfast I met in the
+South Mall a charming ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance I made in Rome
+while I was attending the great celebration there in 1867 of St. Peter&rsquo;s
+Day. Father Burke introduced me to him after the Pontifical Mass at San
+Paolo fuori le Mure; and we had a delightful symposium that afternoon. I
+walked with him to his lodgings, talking over those &rdquo;days long
+vanished,&ldquo; and the friend whose genius made them, like the suppers of
+Plato, &rdquo;a joy for ever.&ldquo; He is sorely troubled now by the attitude of a
+portion of the clergy in his part of Ireland, which is one almost of
+open hostility, he says, to the moral authority of the Church, and
+indicates the development of a class of priests moving in the direction
+of the &rdquo;conventional priests,&ldquo; by whom the Church was disgraced during
+the darkest days of the French Revolution of 1793.</p>
+
+<p>Almost more mischievous than these men, he thinks, who must eventually
+go the way of their kind in times past, are the timid priests, for the
+most part parish priests, who go in fear of their violent curates, and
+of the politicians who tyrannise their <a name="page41" id="page41"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 41]
+</span>flocks. He showed me a letter
+written to him last week by one of these, whose parish is just now in a
+tempest over the Plan of Campaign. Certainly a most remarkable letter.
+In it the writer frankly says, &rdquo;There is no justification for the Plan
+of Campaign on this property.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I assented to putting it in force here,&rdquo; he goes on, &ldquo;because I did not
+at the time know the facts of the case, and took them on trust from
+persons who, I find, have practised upon my confidence. What am I to do?
+I am made to appear as a consenting party now, and, indeed, an assisting
+agent in action, which I certainly was led to believe right and
+necessary, but which upon the facts I now see involves much injustice
+to &mdash;&mdash; (naming the landlord), and I fear positive ruin to worthy men and
+families of my people. I shall be grateful and glad of your counsel in
+these most distressing circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What can any one do to help such a man?&rdquo; said my friend. &ldquo;The
+rebellious and unruly in the Church, be they priests or laymen, can only
+in the end damage themselves. <i>Tu es Petrus</i>; and revolt, like schism,
+is a devil which only carries away those of whom it gets possession out
+of the Church and <a name="page42" id="page42"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 42]
+</span>into the sea. But a weak sentinel on the wall or at
+the gate who drops his musket to wipe his eyes, that is a thing for
+tears!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He asked me to come and see him if possible in his own county, and he
+has promised to send me letters to-day for priests who will he glad to
+tell me what they know only too well of the pressure put upon the better
+sort of the people by the organised idlers and mischief-makers in Clare
+and Kerry.</p>
+
+<p>To-day at the City Club, I made the acquaintance of the Town-Clerk of
+Cork, Mr. Alexander M&lsquo;Carthy, a staunch Nationalist and Home Ruler, who
+holds his office almost by a sort of hereditary tenure, having been
+appointed to it in 1859 in succession to his father. He gave me many
+interesting particulars as to the municipal history and administration
+of Cork, and showed me some of the responses he is receiving to a kind
+of circular letter sent by the municipality to the town governments of
+England, touching the recent proceedings against the Mayor. So far these
+responses have not been very sympathetic. He invited me to lunch here
+with him to-morrow, and visit some of the most interesting points in and
+around the city. Here, too, I met Colonel Spaight, Inspector <a name="page43" id="page43"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 43]
+</span>of the
+Local Government Board, who gives me a startling account of the increase
+of the public burdens. Twenty years ago there were no persons whatever
+seeking outdoor relief in Cork. This year, out of a total population of
+145,216, there are 3775 persons here receiving indoor relief, and 4337
+receiving outdoor relief, making in all 8112, or nearly 6 per cent. of
+the inhabitants. This proportion is swelled by the influx of people from
+other regions seeking occupation here, which they do not find, or simply
+coming here because they are sure of relief. This state of things
+illustrates not so much the decay of industry in Cork as the development
+of a spirit of mendicancy throughout Ireland. In the opinion of many
+thoughtful people, this began with the Duchess of Marlborough&rsquo;s Fund,
+and with the Mansion House Fund. Colonel Spaight remembers that in
+Strokestown Union, Roscommon, when the guardians there received a supply
+of one hundred tons of seed potatoes, they distributed eighty tons, and
+were then completely at a loss what to do with the remaining twenty
+tons. Mr. Parnell and Mr. O&rsquo;Kelly, however, came to Roscommon, and the
+latter made a speech out of the hotel window to the people, advising
+them to apply for more, and <a name="page44" id="page44"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 44]
+</span>take all they could get. &ldquo;With a stroke of a
+pen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll wipe out the seed rate!&rdquo; Whereupon the
+applications for seed rose to six hundred tons!</p>
+
+<p>The Labourers Act, passed by the British Parliament for the benefit of
+the Irish labourers, who get but scant recognition of their wants and
+wishes from the tenant farmers, is not producing the good results
+expected from it, mainly because it is perverted <a name="page45" id="page45"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 45]
+</span>to all sorts of
+jobbery. Only last week Colonel Spaight had to hand in to the Local
+Government Board a report on certain schemes of expenditure under this
+Act, prepared by the Board of Guardians of Tralee. These schemes
+contemplated the erection of 196 cottages in 135 electoral divisions of
+the Union. This meant, of course, so much money of the ratepayers to be
+turned over to local contractors. Colonel Spaight on inspection found
+that of the 196 proposed cottages, the erection of 61 had been forbidden
+by the sanitary authorities, the notices for the erection of 23 had been
+wrongly served, 20 were proposed to be erected on sites not adjoining a
+public road, and no necessity had been shown for erecting 40 of the
+others. He accordingly recommended that only 32 be allowed to be
+erected! For a small town like Tralee this proposition to put <a name="page46" id="page46"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 46]
+</span>up 196
+buildings at the public expense where only 32 were needed is not bad. It
+has the right old Tammany Ring smack, and would have commanded, I am
+sure, the patronising approval of the late Mr. Tweed.</p>
+
+<p>I mentioned it to-night at the County Club, when a gentleman said that
+this morning at Macroom a serious &ldquo;row&rdquo; had occurred between the local
+Board of Guardians there and a great crowd of labourers. The labourers
+thronged the Board-room, demanding the half-acre plots of land which had
+been promised them. The Guardians put them off, promising to attend to
+them when the regular business of the meeting was over. So the poor
+fellows were kept waiting for three mortal hours, at the end of which
+time they espied the elected Nationalist members of the Board subtly
+filing out of the place. This angered them. They stopped the fugitives,
+blockaded the Board-room, and forced the Guardians to appoint a
+committee to act upon their demands.</p>
+
+<p>It is certainly a curious fact that, so far, in Ireland I have seen no
+decent cottages for labourers, excepting those put up at their own
+expense on their own property by landlords.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 47]
+</span>I dined to-night at the County Club with Captain Plunkett, a most
+energetic, spirited, and well-informed resident magistrate, a brother of
+the late Lord Louth,&mdash;still remembered, I dare say, at the New York
+Hotel as the only Briton who ever really mastered the mystery of
+concocting a &ldquo;cocktail,&rdquo;&mdash;and an uncle of the present peer. We had a
+very cheery dinner, and a very clever lawyer, Mr. Shannon, gave us an
+irresistible reproduction of a charge delivered by an Irish judge famous
+for shooting over the heads of juries, who sent twelve worthy citizens
+of Galway out of their minds by bidding them remember, in a case of
+larceny, that they could not find the prisoner guilty unless they were
+quite sure &ldquo;as to the <i>animus furandi</i> and the <i>asportavit</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary"><i>Saturday, Feb. 25.</i>&mdash;</span>I had an interesting talk this morning at the
+County Club with a gentleman from Limerick on the subject of
+&ldquo;boycotting.&rdquo; I told him what I had seen at Edenvale of the practice as
+applied to a forlorn and helpless old woman, for the crime of standing
+by her &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; son. &ldquo;You think this an extreme case,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but
+you are quite mistaken. It is a typical case certainly, but it gives you
+only an inadequate idea of <a name="page48" id="page48"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 48]
+</span>the scope given to this infernal machinery.
+The &lsquo;boycott&rsquo; is now used in Ireland as the Inquisition was used in
+Spain,&mdash;to stifle freedom of thought and action. It is to-day the chief
+reliance of the National League for keeping up its membership, and
+squeezing subscriptions out of the people. If you want proof of this,&rdquo;
+he added, &ldquo;ask any Nationalist you know whether members of the League in
+the country allow farmers who are not members to associate with them in
+any way. I can cite you a case at Ballingarry, in my county, where last
+summer a resolution of the League was published and put on the Chapel
+door, that members of the National League were thenceforth to have no
+dealings or communication with any person not a member. This I saw with
+my own eyes, and it was matter of public notoriety.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I lunched at the City Club with Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy. Sir Daniel O&rsquo;Sullivan,
+formerly Mayor of Cork, whose views of Home Rule seem to differ widely
+from those of his successor, now incarcerated here, was one of the
+company. In the course of an animated but perfectly good-natured
+discussion of the Land Law question between two other gentlemen present,
+one of them, a strong Nationalist, <a name="page49" id="page49"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 49]
+</span>smote his Unionist opponent very
+neatly under the fifth rib. The latter contending that it was monstrous
+to interfere by law with the principle of freedom of contract, the
+Nationalist responded, &ldquo;That cannot be; it must be right and legitimate
+to do it, for the Imperial Parliament has done it four times within
+seventeen years!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I walked with Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy to his apartments, where he showed me many
+curious papers and volumes bearing on municipal law and municipal
+history in Ireland. Among these, two most elaborate and interesting
+volumes, being the Council Books of Cork, Youghal, and Kinsale, from
+1610 to 1659, 1666 to 1687, and 1690 to 1800. The records for the years
+not enumerated have perished, that is, for the first five or six years
+after the Restoration, and for the years just preceding and just
+following the fall of James II. These volumes take one back to the
+condition of Southern Ireland immediately after English greed and
+intrigue had sapped the foundations of the peace which followed the
+submission of the great Earl of Tyrone, and brought about the flight to
+the Continent of that chieftain, and of his friend and ally, the Earl of
+Tyrconnell.</p>
+
+<p>They give us no picture, unfortunately, of the <a name="page50" id="page50"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 50]
+</span>closing years of
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s long struggle to establish the English power, or of the
+occupation of Kinsale by the Spanish in the name of the Pope. But there
+is abundant evidence in them of the theological hatred which so
+embittered the conflict of races in Ireland during the seventeenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>It was a relief to turn from these to a solemn controversy waged in our
+own times between Cork and Limerick over a question of municipal
+precedence, in which Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy did battle for the City of the Galley
+and the Towers<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a> against the City of the Gateway and Cathedral dome.
+The truth seems to be that King John gave charters to both cities, but
+to Cork twelve years earlier than to Limerick. Speaking of this contest,
+by the way, with a loyalist of Cork to-night, I observed that it was
+almost as odd to find such a question hotly disputed between two
+Nationalist cities as to see the champions of Irish independence
+marching under the banner of the harp, which was invented for Ireland by
+Henry VIII.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know why you call Cork a Nationalist <a name="page51" id="page51"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 51]
+</span>city,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;for
+Parnell and Maurice Healy were returned for it by a clear minority of
+the voters. If all the voters had gone to the polls, they would both
+have been beaten.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A curious statement certainly, and worth looking into. Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy gave
+me also much information as to the working of the municipal system here,
+and a copy of the rules which govern the debates of the Town Council.
+One of these might be adopted with advantage in other assemblies, to
+wit, &ldquo;that no member be permitted to occupy the time of the Council for
+more than ten minutes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There is an important difference between the parliamentary and the
+municipal constituencies of Cork. The former constituency comprises all
+residents within the borough boundaries occupying premises of the
+rateable value of &pound;10 a year. The municipal constituency consists of no
+more than 1800 voters, divided among the seven wards which make up the
+city under the &ldquo;3d and 4th Victoria,&rdquo; and which contain about 13,000 of
+the 15,116 Parliamentary voters of the borough. The same thing is true
+in the main of nine out of the eleven municipal boroughs of Ireland
+including Dublin. The 3d and 4th Victoria was amended for Dublin in
+<a name="page52" id="page52"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 52]
+</span>1849, so as to give that city the municipal franchise then existing in
+England, but no move in that direction was made for Cork, Waterford,
+Limerick, or any other municipal borough. The Nationalists have taken no
+interest in the question. Perhaps they have good reason for this, as in
+Belfast, where the municipal franchise has been widely extended since
+the present Government came into power, the democratic electorate has
+put the whole municipal government into the hands of the Unionists. The
+day being cool, though fine, Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy got an &ldquo;inside car,&rdquo; and we
+went off for a drive about the city. The environs of Cork are very
+attractive. We visited the new cemetery grounds which are very neatly
+and tastefully laid out. There was a conflict over them, the owners of
+family vaults staunchly standing out against the &ldquo;levelling&rdquo; tendency of
+a harmonious city of the dead. But all is well that ends well, and now
+two handsome stone chapels, one Catholic and one Protestant, keep watch
+and ward over the silent sleepers, standing face to face near the grand
+entrance, and exactly alike in their architecture. A very pretty drive
+took us to the water-works, which are extensive, well planned, and
+exceedingly well <a name="page53" id="page53"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 53]
+</span>kept. They are awaiting now the arrival from America of
+some great turbine wheels, but the engines are of English make. In the
+city we visited the new Protestant cathedral of St. Finbar, a very fine
+church, which advantageously replaces a &ldquo;spacious structure of the Doric
+order,&rdquo; built here in the reign of George II., with the proceeds of a
+parliamentary tax on coals. Despite his name, I imagine that admirable
+prelate, Dr. England, the first Catholic bishop of my native city in
+America, must have been a Corkonian, for he it was, I believe, who put
+the cathedral of Charleston under the invocation of St. Finbar, the
+first bishop of Cork. The church stands charmingly amid fine trees on a
+southern branch of the river Lea. We visited also two fine Catholic
+churches, one of St. Vincent de Paul, and the other the Church of St.
+Peter and St. Paul, a grandly proportioned and imposing edifice.</p>
+
+<p>It was at vespers that we entered it, and found it filled with the
+kneeling people. This noble church is rather ignobly hidden away behind
+crowded houses and shops, and the contrast was very striking when we
+emerged from its dim religious space and silence into the thronged and
+rather noisy streets. There is a statue here of Father Mathew; but what
+<a name="page54" id="page54"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 54]
+</span>I have seen to-night makes me doubt whether the present generation of
+Corkonians would have erected it.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner a gentleman gave us a most interesting account of the
+picturesque home which a man of taste, and a lover of natural history,
+has made for himself at the remote seaside village of Belmullet, in
+Mayo, the seat of the Mayo quarries, in which Mr. Davitt takes so much
+interest. The sea brings in there all sorts of wreckage, and the house
+is beautifully finished with mahogany and other rare woods, just as I
+remember finding in a noble mansion in South Wales, near a dangerous
+head-land, some magnificent doors and wainscotings made of that most
+beautiful of the Central American woods, nogarote, which I never saw in
+the United States, excepting in a superb specimen of it sent home by
+myself from Corinto. This colonist of Mayo employs all the people he can
+get in the fisheries there, which are very rich; and the ducks and wild
+geese are so numerous that he sometimes sends as far as to Wicklow for
+men to capture and sell them for him. He was once fortunate enough to
+trap a pair of the snow geese of the Arctic region, but Belmullet, in
+other respects a <a name="page55" id="page55"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 55]
+</span>primeval paradise, is cursed with the small boy of
+civilisation; and one of these pests of society slew the goose with a
+stone. The widowed gander consoled himself by contracting family ties
+with the common domestic goose of the parish, and all his progeny, in
+other particulars indistinguishable from that familiar bird, bear the
+black marks distinctive of the Arctic tribe.</p>
+
+<p>Belmullet, this gentleman tells me, boasts a very good little inn, kept
+by a Mrs. Deehan, which was honoured by a visit from Lord Carnarvon with
+his wife and daughters during the Earl&rsquo;s Viceroyalty. This was in the
+course of a private and personal, not official tour, during which, Lord
+Carnarvon says, he was everywhere received with the greatest courtesy by
+all sorts and conditions of the people. It is an interesting
+illustration of the temper in which certain priests in Ireland deal with
+matters of State, that when Lord Carnarvon politely invited the parish
+priest of Belmullet to come to see him, that functionary declined to do
+so. Upon this the placable Viceroy sent to know whether the priest would
+receive the visit he refused to pay. The priest replied that he never
+declined to receive any gentleman who wished to see him; and the Vice<a name="page56" id="page56"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 56]
+</span>roy
+accordingly called upon him, to the edification of the people, who
+afterwards listened very respectfully to a little speech which His
+Excellency made to them from a car. It is rather surprising that these
+incidents have never been adduced in proof of Lord Carnarvon&rsquo;s
+determination to take the Home Rule wind out of the sails of the
+Liberals!</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Sunday, Feb. 26.</i>&mdash;</span>I went out to-day with Mr. Cameron to see
+Blarney Castle and St. Anne&rsquo;s Hill. Nothing can be lovelier than the
+country around Cork and the valley of the Lea. A &ldquo;light railway,&rdquo; of the
+sort authorised by the Act of 1883, takes you out quickly enough to
+Blarney, and the train was well filled. The construction of these
+railways is found fault with as aggravating instead of relieving those
+defects in the organisation and management of the Irish railways, which
+are so thoroughly and intelligently exposed in the Public Works Report
+of Sir James Allport and his fellow-commissioners. A morning paper
+to-day points this out sharply.</p>
+
+<p>In the days of King William III. Blarney Castle must have been a
+magnificent stronghold. It stands very finely on a well-wooded height,
+and <a name="page57" id="page57"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 57]
+</span>dominates the land for miles around. But it held out against the
+victor of the Boyne so long that, when he captured it, he thought it
+best, in the expressive phrase of the Commonwealth, to &ldquo;slight&rdquo; it,
+little now remaining of it but the gigantic keep, the walls of which are
+some six yards thick, and a range of ruined outworks stretching along
+and above a line of caverns, probably the work of the quarrymen who got
+out the stone for the Castle ages ago. The legend of the Blarney Stone
+does not seem to be a hundred years old, but the stone itself is one of
+the front battlements of the grand old tower, which has more than once
+fallen to the ground from the giddy height at which it was originally
+set. It is now made fast there by iron clamps, in such a position that
+to kiss it one should be a Japanese acrobat, or a volunteer rifleman
+shooting for the championship of the world. There are many and very fine
+trees in the grounds about the Castle, and there is a charming garden,
+now closed against the casual tourist, as it has been leased with the
+modern house to a tenant who lives here. In the leafy summer the place
+must be a dream of beauty. An avenue of stately trees quite overarching
+the highway leads from Blarney to St. Anne&rsquo;s Hill, the <a name="page58" id="page58"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 58]
+</span>site of which, at
+least, is that of an ideal sanatorium. We walked thither over hill and
+dale. The panorama commanded by the buildings of the sanatorium is one
+of the widest and finest imaginable, worthy to be compared with the
+prospect from the Star and Garter at Richmond, or with that from the
+terrace at St. Germain.</p>
+
+<p>Several handsome lodges or cottages have been built about the extensive
+grounds. These are comfortably furnished and leased to people who prefer
+to bring their households here rather than take up their abode in the
+hotel, which, however, seems to be a very well kept and comfortable sort
+of place, with billiard and music rooms, a small theatre, and all kinds
+of contrivances for making the country almost as tedious as the town.
+The establishment is directed now by a German resident physician, but
+belongs to an Irish gentleman, Mr. Barter, who lives here himself, and
+here manages what I am told is one of the finest dairy farms and dairies
+in Ireland. Our return trip to Cork on the &ldquo;light railway,&rdquo; with a warm
+red sunset lighting up the river Lea, and throwing its glamour over the
+varied and picturesque scenery through which we ran, was not the least
+delightful part of a very delightful excursion.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 59]
+</span>After we got back I spent half-an-hour with a gentleman who knows the
+country about Youghal, which I propose to visit to-morrow, and who saw
+something of the recent troubles there arising out of the Plan of
+Campaign, as put into effect on the Ponsonby property.</p>
+
+<p>He is of the opinion that the Nationalists were misled into this contest
+by bad information as to Mr. Ponsonby&rsquo;s resources and relations. They
+expected to drive him to the wall, but they will fail to do this, and
+failing to do this they will be left in the vocative. He showed me a
+curious souvenir of the day of the evictions, in the shape of a
+quatrain, written by the young wife of an evicted tenant. This young
+woman, Mrs. Mahoney, was observed by one of the officers, as the
+eviction went on, to go apart to a window, where she stood for a while
+apparently writing something on a wooden panel of the shutter. After the
+eviction was over the officer remembered this, and going up to the
+window found these lines pencilled upon the panel:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&ldquo;We&nbsp;are&nbsp;evicted&nbsp;from&nbsp;this&nbsp;house,<br />
+<span class="i2">Me&nbsp;and&nbsp;my&nbsp;loving&nbsp;man;</span><br />
+We&rsquo;re&nbsp;homeless&nbsp;now&nbsp;upon&nbsp;the&nbsp;world!<br />
+<span class="i2">May&nbsp;the&nbsp;divil&nbsp;take&nbsp;&lsquo;the&nbsp;Plan&rsquo;!&rdquo;</span>
+</p>
+<p class="diary"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 60]
+</span><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Monday, Feb. 27.</i>&mdash;</span>A most interesting day. I left alone and early
+by the train for Youghal, having sent before me a letter of introduction
+to Canon Keller, the parish priest, who has recently become a
+conspicuous person through his refusal to give evidence about matters,
+his knowledge of which he conceives to be &ldquo;privileged,&rdquo; as acquired in
+his capacity as a priest.</p>
+
+<p>I had many fine views of the shore and the sea as we ran along, and the
+site of Youghal itself is very fine. It is an old seaport town, and once
+was a place of considerable trade, especially in wool.</p>
+
+<p>Oliver dwelt here for a while, and from Youghal he embarked on his
+victorious return to England. He seems to have done his work while he
+was here &ldquo;not negligently,&rdquo; like Harrison at Naseby Field, for when he
+departed he left Youghal a citadel of Protestant intolerance. Even under
+Charles II they maintained an ordinance forbidding &ldquo;any Papist to buy or
+barter anything in the public markets,&rdquo; which may be taken as a piece of
+cold-blooded and statutory &ldquo;boycotting.&rdquo; Then there was no parish priest
+in Youghal; now it may almost be said there is nobody in Youghal but the
+<a name="page61" id="page61"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 61]
+</span>parish priest! So does &ldquo;the whirligig of time bring in his revenges&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>At Youghal station a very civil young man came up, calling me by name,
+and said Father Keller had sent him with a car to meet me. We drove up
+past some beautiful grounds into the main street. A picturesque
+waterside town, little lanes and narrow streets leading out of the main
+artery down to the bay, and a savour of the sea in the place, grateful
+doubtless to the souls of Raleigh and the west country folk he brought
+over here when he became lord of the land, just three hundred years ago.
+Edmund Spenser came here in those days to see him, and talk over the
+events of that senseless rising of the Desmonds, which gave the poet of
+the &ldquo;Faerie Queen&rdquo; his awful pictures of the desolation of Ireland, and
+made the planter of Virginia master of more than forty thousand acres of
+Irish land.</p>
+
+<p>We turned suddenly into a little narrow wynd, and pulled up, the driver
+saying, &ldquo;There is the Father, yer honour!&rdquo; In a moment up came a tall,
+very fine-looking ecclesiastic, quite the best dressed and most
+distinguished-looking priest I have yet seen in Ireland, with features
+of a fine Teutonic <a name="page62" id="page62"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 62]
+</span>type, and the erect bearing of a soldier. I jumped
+down to greet him, and he proposed that we should walk together to his
+house near by. An extremely good house I found it to be, well placed in
+the most interesting quarter of the town. Having it in my mind to drive
+on from Youghal to Lismore, there to make an early dinner, see the
+castle of the Duke of Devonshire, and return to Cork by an evening
+train, I had to decline Father Keller&rsquo;s cordial hospitalities, but he
+gave me a most interesting hour with him in his comfortable study.
+Father Keller stands firmly by the position which earned for him a
+sentence of imprisonment last year, when he refused to testify before a
+court of justice in a bankruptcy case, on the ground that it might
+&ldquo;drift him into answers which would disclose secrets he was bound in
+honour not to disclose.&rdquo; He does not accept the view taken of his
+conduct, however, by Lord Selborne, that, in the circumstances, his
+refusal is to be regarded as the act of his ecclesiastical superiors
+rather than his own. He maintains it as his own view of the sworn duty
+of a priest, and not unnaturally therefore he looks upon his sentence as
+a blow levelled at the clergy; nor, as I understood him, has he
+abandoned his original contention, that the Court had no right to <a name="page63" id="page63"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 63]
+</span>summon
+him as a witness. It was impossible to listen to him on this subject,
+and doubt his entire good faith, nor do I see that he ought to be held
+responsible for the interpretation put by Mr. Lane, M.P., and others
+upon his attitude as a priest, in a sense going to make him merely a
+&ldquo;martyr&rdquo; of Home Rule. I did not gather from what he said that, in his
+mind, the question of his relations with the Nationalists or the Plan of
+Campaign entered into that affair at all, but simply that he believed
+the right and the duty of a priest to protect, no matter at what cost to
+himself, secrets confided to him as a priest, was really involved in his
+consent or refusal to answer, when he was asked whether he was or was
+not on a certain day at the &ldquo;Mall House&rdquo; in Youghal. Of course from the
+connection of this refusal in this particular case with the Nationalist
+movement, Nationalists would easily glide into the idea that he refused
+to testify in order to serve their cause.</p>
+
+<p>As to the troubles on the Ponsonby estate, Father Keller spoke very
+freely. He divided the responsibility for them between the
+untractableness of the agent, and the absenteeism of the owner. It was
+only since the troubles began, he said, that he <a name="page64" id="page64"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 64]
+</span>had ever seen Mr.
+Ponsonby, who lived in Hampshire, and was therefore out of touch with
+the condition and the feelings of the people here. In a personal
+interview with him he had found Mr. Ponsonby a kindly disposed
+Englishman, but the estate is heavily encumbered, and the agent who has
+had complete control of it forced the tenants, by his hard and fast
+refusal of a reasonable reduction more than two years ago, into an
+initial combination to defend themselves by &ldquo;clubbing&rdquo; their rents. That
+was before Mr. Dillon announced the Plan of Campaign at all.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was not till the autumn of 1886,&rdquo; said Father Keller, &ldquo;that any
+question arose of the Plan of Campaign here,<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> and it was by the
+tenants themselves that the determination was taken to adopt it. My part
+has been that of a peace-maker throughout, and we should have had peace
+if Mr. Ponsonby would have listened to me; we should have had peace, and
+he would have received a reasonable rental for his property. Instead of
+this, look at the law costs arising out of bankruptcy proceedings and
+sheriff&rsquo;s sales and writs and <a name="page65" id="page65"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 65]
+</span>processes, and the whole district thrown
+into disorder and confusion, and the industrious people now put out of
+their holdings, and forced into idleness.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the recent evictions which had taken place, Father Keller said
+they had taken him as well as the people by surprise, and had thus led
+to greater agitation and excitement. &ldquo;But the unfortunate incident of
+the loss of Hanlon&rsquo;s life,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;would never have occurred had I
+been duly apprised of what was going on in the town. I had come home
+into my house, having quieted the people, and left all in order, as I
+thought, when that charge of the police, for which there was no
+occasion, and which led to the killing of Hanlon, was ordered. I made my
+way rapidly to the people, and when I appeared they were brought to
+patience and to good order with astonishing ease, despite all that had
+occurred.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the present outlook, it was his opinion that Mr. Ponsonby, even
+with the Cork Defence Union behind him, could not hold out. &ldquo;The Land
+Corporation were taking over some parts of the estate, and putting
+Emergency men on them&mdash;a set of desperate men, a kind of <i>enfants
+perdus</i>,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to work and manage the land;&rdquo; but he did not believe
+the operation could be successfully <a name="page66" id="page66"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 66]
+</span>carried out. Meanwhile he
+confidently counted upon seeing &ldquo;the present Tory Government give way,
+and go out, when it would become necessary for the landlords to do
+justice to the rack-rented people. Pray understand,&rdquo; said Father Keller,
+&ldquo;that I do not say all landlords stand at all where Mr. Ponsonby has
+been put by his agent, for that is not the case; but the action of many
+landlords in the county Cork in sustaining Mr. Ponsonby, whose estate is
+and has been as badly rack-rented an estate as can be found, is, in my
+judgment, most unwise, and threatening to the peace and happiness of
+Ireland.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag9"
+ name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I asked whether, in his opinion, it would be possible for the Ponsonby
+tenants to live and prosper here on this estate, could they become
+peasant proprietors of it under Lord Ashbourne&rsquo;s Act, provided they
+increased in numbers, as in that event might be expected. This he
+thought very doubtful so far as a few of the tenants are concerned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would you seek a remedy, then,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;in emigration?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 67]
+</span>&ldquo;No, not in emigration,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;but in migration.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I begged him to explain the difference.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What I mean,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is, that the people should migrate, not out of
+Ireland, but from those parts of Ireland which cannot support them into
+parts of Ireland which can support them. There is room in Meath, for
+example, for the people of many congested districts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You would, then, turn the great cattle farms of Meath,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;into
+peasant holdings?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But would not that involve the expropriation of many people now
+established in Meath, and the disturbance or destruction of a great
+cattle industry for which Ireland has especial advantages?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To this Father Keller replied that he did not wish to see Ireland
+exporting her cattle, any more than to see Ireland exporting her sons
+and daughters. &ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; he said, quite earnestly, &ldquo;when they are forced
+to export them to pay exorbitant rents, and thus deprive themselves of
+their capital or of a fair share of the comforts of life. I should be
+glad to see the Irish people sufficient to themselves by the domestic
+exchange of their own industries and <a name="page68" id="page68"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 68]
+</span>products.&rdquo; At the same time he
+begged me to understand that he had no wish to see this development
+attended by any estrangement or hostile feeling between Ireland and
+Great Britain. &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have seen with the
+greatest satisfaction the growth of such good feeling towards England as
+I never expected to witness, as the result of the visits here of English
+public men, sympathising with the Irish tenants. I believe their visits
+are opening the way to a real union of the Democracies of the two
+countries, and to an alliance between them against the aristocratic
+classes which depress both peoples.&rdquo; This alliance Father Keller
+believed would be a sufficient guarantee against any religious contest
+between the Catholics of Ireland and the Protestants of Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was much astounded,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the other day, to hear from an English
+gentleman that he had met a Protestant clergyman who told him he really
+believed that a persecution of the Protestants would follow the
+establishment of Home Rule in Ireland. I begged him to consider that Mr.
+Parnell was a Protestant, and I assured him Protestants would have
+absolutely nothing to fear from Home Rule.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reverting to his idea of re-distributing the Irish <a name="page69" id="page69"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 69]
+</span>population through
+Ireland, under changed conditions, social and economical, I asked him
+how in Meath, for example, he would meet the difficulty of stocking with
+cattle the peasant holdings of a new set of proprietors not owning
+stock. He thought it would be easily met by advances of money from the
+Treasury to the peasant proprietors, these advances to be repaid, with
+interest, as in the case of Lady Burdett Coutts, and the advances made
+by her to the fishermen now under the direction of Father Davis at
+Baltimore.</p>
+
+<p>I was struck by the resemblance of these views to the Irish policy
+sketched for me by my Nationalist fellow-traveller of the other night
+from London. &ldquo;The evil that men do lives after them&rdquo;&mdash;and when one
+remembers how only a hundred years ago, and just after the establishment
+of American Independence ought to have taught England a lesson, the
+Irish House of Commons had to deal with the persistent determination of
+the English manufacturers to fight the bogey of Irish competition by
+protective duties in England against imports from Ireland, it is not
+surprising that Irishmen who allow sentiment to get the upper hand of
+sense should now think of playing a return game. England <a name="page70" id="page70"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 70]
+</span>went in fear
+then not only of Irish beasts and Irish butter, but of Irish woollens,
+Irish cottons, Irish leather, Irish glass. Nay, absurd as it may now
+seem, English ironmasters no longer ago than in 1785 testified before a
+Parliamentary Committee that unless a duty was clapped on Irish
+manufactures of iron, the Irish ironmasters had such advantages through
+cheaper labour and through the discrimination in their favour under the
+then existing relations with the new Republic of the United States that
+they would &ldquo;ruin the ironmasters of England.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In Ireland, as in America, the benign spirit of Free Trade is thwarted
+and intercepted at every turn by the abominable ghost of British
+Protection. What a blessing it would have been if the meddlesome
+palaverers of the Cobden Club, American as well as English, could ever
+have been made to understand the essentially insular character of
+Protection and the essentially continental character of Free Trade!</p>
+
+<p>It should never be forgotten, and it is almost never remembered, that
+when the Treaty of Versailles was making in 1783 the American
+Commissioners offered complete free trade between the United States and
+all parts of the British Dominions <a name="page71" id="page71"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 71]
+</span>save the territories of the East
+India Company. The British Commissioner, David Hartley, saw the value of
+this proposition, and submitted it at London. But King George III. would
+not entertain it.</p>
+
+<p>When I rose to leave him Father Keller courteously insisted on showing
+me the &ldquo;lions&rdquo; of Youghal. A most accomplished cicerone he proved to be.
+As we left his house we met in the street two or three of the &ldquo;evicted&rdquo;
+tenants, whom he introduced to me. One of these, Mr. Loughlin, was the
+holder of farms representing a rental of &pound;94. A stalwart, hearty,
+rotund, and rubicund farmer he was, and in reply to my query how long
+the holdings he had lost had been in his family, he answered, &ldquo;not far
+from two hundred years.&rdquo; Certainly some one must have blundered as badly
+as at Balaklava to make it necessary for a tenant with such a past
+behind him to go out of his holdings on arrears of a twelvemonth. Father
+Keller gave me, as we left Mr. Loughlin and his friend, a leaflet in
+which he has printed the story of &ldquo;the struggle for life on the Ponsonby
+estate,&rdquo; as he understands it.</p>
+
+<p>A minute&rsquo;s walk brought us to Sir Walter Raleigh&rsquo;s house, now the
+property of Sir John Pope Hennessey. <a name="page72" id="page72"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 72]
+</span>It was probably built by Sir Walter
+while he lived here in 1588-89, during the time of the great Armada; for
+it is a typical Elizabethan house, quaintly gabled, with charming Tudor
+windows, and delightfully wainscoted with richly carved black oak. A
+chimney-piece in the library where Sir John&rsquo;s aged mother received us
+most kindly and hospitably is a marvel of Elizabethan woodwork. The
+shelves are filled with a quaint and miscellaneous collection of old and
+rare books. I opened at random one fine old quarto, and found it to
+contain, among other curious tracts, models of typography, a Latin
+critical disquisition by Raphael Regini on the first edition of
+Plutarch&rsquo;s Life of Cicero, &ldquo;<i>nuper invent&acirc; diu desiderai&acirc; </i>&rdquo;&mdash;a
+disquisition quite aglow with the cinquecento delight in discovery and
+adventure. In the grounds of this charming house stand four very fine
+Irish yews forming a little hollow square, within which, according to a
+local legend, Sir Walter sat enjoying the first pipe of tobacco ever
+lighted in Ireland, when his terrified serving-maid espying the smoke
+that curled about her master&rsquo;s head hastily ran up and emptied a pail of
+water over him. In the garden here, too, we are told, was first planted
+the esculent which better deserves to be called the <a name="page73" id="page73"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 73]
+</span>Curse of Ireland
+than does the Nine of Diamonds to be known as the Curse of Scotland. The
+Irish yew must have been indigenous here, for the name of Youghal,
+Father Keller tells me, in Irish signifies &ldquo;the wood of yew-trees.&rdquo; A
+subterranean passage is said to lead from Sir Walter&rsquo;s dining-room into
+the church, but we preferred the light of day.</p>
+
+<p>The precincts of the church adjoin the grounds and garden, and with
+these make up a most fascinating poem in architecture. The churches of
+St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway have always been cited to
+me as the two most interesting churches in Ireland. Certainly this
+church of St. Mary, as now restored, is worth a journey to see. Its
+massive tower, with walls eight feet thick, its battlemented chancel,
+the pointed arches of its nave and aisles, a curious and, so far as I
+know, unique arch in the north transept, drawn at an obtuse angle and
+demarcating a quaint little side-chapel, and the interesting monuments
+it contains, all were pointed out to me with as much zest and
+intelligent delight by Father Keller as if the edifice were still
+dedicated to the faith which originally called it into existence. It
+contains a fine Jacobean tomb of Richard, the &ldquo;great Earl of Cork,&rdquo; who
+died here in <a name="page74" id="page74"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 74]
+</span>September 1643. On this monument, which is in admirable
+condition, the effigy of the earl appears between those of his two
+wives, while below them kneel his five sons and seven daughters, their
+names and those of their partners in marriage inscribed upon the marble.
+It was of this earl that Oliver said: &ldquo;Had there been an Earl of Cork in
+every province, there had been no rebellion in Ireland.&rdquo; Several Earls
+of Desmond are also buried here, including the founder of the church,
+and under a monumental effigy in one of the transepts lies the wonderful
+old Countess of Desmond, who having danced in her youth with Richard
+III. lived through the Tudor dynasty &ldquo;to the age of a hundred and ten,&rdquo;
+and, as the old distich tells us, &ldquo;died by a fall from a cherry-tree
+then.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the churchyard is a hillock, bare of grass, about a tomb. There lies
+buried, according to tradition, a public functionary who attested a
+statement by exclaiming, &ldquo;If I speak falsely, may grass never grow on my
+grave.&rdquo; One of his descendants is doubtless now an M.P. Mr. Cameron had
+kindly written from Cork to the officer in charge of the constabulary
+here asking him to get me a good car for Lismore. So Father Keller very
+kindly walked with <a name="page75" id="page75"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 75]
+</span>me through the town to the &ldquo;Devonshire Arms,&rdquo; a very
+neat and considerable hotel, in quest of him. On the way he pointed out
+to me what remains of a house which is supposed to have served as the
+headquarters of Cromwell while he was here, and a small chapel also in
+which the Protector worshipped after his sort. Off the main street is a
+lane called Windmill Lane, where probably stood the windmill from which
+in 1580 a Franciscan friar, Father David O&rsquo;Neilan, was hung by the feet
+and shot to death by the soldiers of Elizabeth because he refused to
+acknowledge the spiritual supremacy of the Queen. He had been dragged
+through the main street at the tail of a horse to the place of
+execution. His name is one of many names of confessors of that time
+about to be submitted at Rome for canonisation. We could not find the
+officer I sought at the hotel, but Father Keller took me to a livery-man
+in the main street, who very promptly got out a car with &ldquo;his best
+horse,&rdquo; and a jarvey who would &ldquo;surely take me over to Lismore inside of
+two hours and a half.&rdquo; He was as good as his master&rsquo;s word, and a
+delightful drive it was, following the course of Spenser&rsquo;s river, the
+Awniduffe, &ldquo;which by the Englishman is called Blackwater.&rdquo; <a name="page76" id="page76"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 76]
+</span>Nobody now
+calls it anything else. The view of Youghal Harbour, as we made a great
+circuit by the bridge on leaving the town, was exceedingly fine. Lying
+as it does within easy reach of Cork, this might be made a very pleasant
+summer halting-place for Americans landing at Queenstown, who now go
+further and probably fare worse. One Western wanderer, with his family,
+Father Keller told me, did last year establish himself here, a Catholic
+from Boston, to whom a son was born, and who begged the Father to give
+the lad a local name in baptism, &ldquo;the oldest he could think of.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I should have thought St. Declan would have been &ldquo;old&rdquo; enough, or St.
+Nessan of &ldquo;Ireland&rsquo;s Eye,&rdquo; or Saint Cartagh, who made Lismore a holy
+city, &ldquo;into the half of which no woman durst enter,&rdquo; sufficiently
+&ldquo;local,&rdquo; but Father Keller found in the Calendar a more satisfactory
+saint still in St. Goran or &ldquo;Curran,&rdquo; known also as St. Mochicaroen <i>de
+Nona</i>, from a change he made in the recitation of that part of the Holy
+Office.</p>
+
+<p>The drive from Youghal to Lismore along the Blackwater, begins,
+continues, and ends in beauty. In the summer a steamer makes the trip by
+the river, and it must be as charming in its way <a name="page77" id="page77"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 77]
+</span>as the ascent of the
+Dart from Dartmouth to Totness, or of the Eance from Dinard to St.
+Suliac. My jarvey was rather a taciturn fellow, but by no means
+insensible to the charms of his native region. About the Ponsonby estate
+and its troubles he said very little, but that little was not entirely
+in keeping with what I had heard at Youghal. &ldquo;It was an old place, and
+there was no grand house on it. But the landlord was a kind-man.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Father Keller was a good man too. It was a great pity the people
+couldn&rsquo;t be on their farms; and there was land that was taken on the
+hills. It was a great pity. The people came from all parts to see the
+Blackwater and Lismore; and there was money going.&rdquo; &ldquo;Yes, he would be
+glad to see it all quiet again. Ah yes! that was a most beautiful place
+there just running out into the Blackwater. It was a gentleman owned it;
+he lived there a good deal, and he fished. Ah! there&rsquo;s no such river in
+the whole world for salmon as the Blackwater; indeed, there is not!
+Everything was better when he was a lad. There was more money going, and
+less talking. Father Keller was a very good man; but he was a new man,
+and came to Youghal from Queenstown.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 78]
+</span>We passed on our way the ruins of Dromaneen Castle, the birthplace of
+the lively old Countess of Desmond, who lies buried at Youghal. Here,
+too, according to a local tradition, she met her death, having climbed
+too high into a famous cherry-tree at Affane, near Dromaneen, planted
+there by Sir Walter Raleigh, who first introduced this fruit, as well as
+the tobacco plant and the potato, into Ireland. At Cappoquin, which
+stands beautifully on the river, I should have been glad to halt for the
+night, in order to visit the Trappist Monastery there, an offshoot of La
+Meilleraye, planted, I think, by some monks from Santa Susanna, of
+Lulworth, after Charles X. took refuge in the secluded and beautiful
+home of the Welds. The schools of this monastery have been a benediction
+to all this part of Ireland for more than half a century.</p>
+
+<p>Lismore has nothing now to show of its ancient importance save its
+castle and its cathedral, both of them absolutely modern! A hundred
+years ago the castle was simply a ruin overhanging the river. It then
+belonged to the fifth Duke of Devonshire, who had inherited it from his
+mother, the only child and heiress of the friend of Pope, Richard,
+fourth Earl of Cork, and third Earl of Burlington. <a name="page79" id="page79"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 79]
+</span>It had come into the
+hands of the Boyles by purchase from Sir Walter Ealeigh, to whom
+Elizabeth had granted it, with all its appendages and appurtenances. The
+fifth Duke of Devonshire, who was the husband of Coleridge&rsquo;s &ldquo;lady
+nursed in pomp and pleasure,&rdquo; did little or nothing, I believe, to
+restore the vanished glories of Lismore; and the castle, as it now
+exists, is the creation of his son, the artistic bachelor Duke, to whom
+England owes the Crystal Palace and all the other outcomes of Sir Joseph
+Paxton&rsquo;s industry and enterprise. His kinsman and successor, the present
+Duke, used to visit Lismore regularly down to the time of the atrocious
+murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish, and many of the beautiful walks and
+groves which make the place lovely are due, I believe, to his taste and
+his appreciation of the natural charms of Lismore. I dismissed my car at
+the &ldquo;Devonshire Arms,&rdquo; an admirable little hotel near the river, and
+having ordered my dinner there, walked down to the castle, almost within
+the grounds of which the hotel stands. It is impossible to imagine a
+more picturesque site for a great inland mansion. The views up and down
+the Blackwater from the drawing-room windows are simply the perfection
+of <a name="page80" id="page80"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 80]
+</span>river landscape. The grounds are beautifully laid out, one secluded
+garden-walk, in particular, taking you back to the inimitable Italian
+garden-walks of the seventeenth century. In the vestibule is the sword
+of state of the Corporation of Youghal, a carved wooden cradle for which
+still stands in the church at that place, and over the great gateway are
+the arms of the great Earl of Cork, but these are almost the only
+outward and visible signs of the historic past about the castle. Seen
+from the graceful stone bridge which spans the river, its grey towers
+and turrets quite excuse the youthful enthusiasm with which the Duke of
+Connaught, who made a visit here when he was Prince Arthur, is said to
+have written to his mother, that Lismore was &ldquo;a beautiful place, very
+like Windsor Castle, only much finer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Lismore Cathedral was almost entirely rebuilt by the second Earl of Cork
+three or four years after the Restoration, and has a handsome marble
+spire, but there is little in it to recall the Catholic times in which
+Lismore was a city of churches and a centre of Irish devotion.</p>
+
+<p>The hostess of the &ldquo;Devonshire Arms&rdquo; gave me some excellent salmon,
+fresh from the river, and a <a name="page81" id="page81"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 81]
+</span>very good dinner. She bewailed the evil days
+on which she has fallen, and the loss to Lismore of all that the Castle
+used to mean to the people. Lady Edward Cavendish had spent a short time
+here some little time ago, she said, and the people were delighted to
+have her come there. &ldquo;It would be a great thing for the country if all
+the uproar and quarrelling could be put an end to. It did nobody any
+good, least of all the poor people.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>From Lismore I came back by the railway through Fermoy.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 82]
+</span>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diay"><span class="diary">PORTUMNA, GALWAY, <i>Feb. 28.</i>&mdash;</span>I left Cork by an early train to-day, and
+passing through the counties of Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen&rsquo;s, and
+King&rsquo;s, reached this place after dark on a car from Parsonstown. The day
+was delightfully cool and bright. I had the carriage to myself almost
+all the way, and gave up all the time I could snatch from the constantly
+varying and often very beautiful scenery to reading a curious pamphlet
+which I picked up in Dublin entitled <i>Pour I&rsquo;Irlande.</i> It purports to
+have been written by a &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; living at Lurgan in Ireland,
+and to be a reply to M. de Mandat Grancey&rsquo;s volume, <i>Chez Paddy.</i> It is
+adorned with a frontispiece representing a monster of the Cerberus type
+on a monument, with three heads and three collars labelled respectively
+&ldquo;Flattery,&rdquo; &ldquo;Famine,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Coercion.&rdquo; On the pedestal is the
+inscription&mdash;&ldquo;1800 to 1887. Erected by the grateful Irish to the English
+<a name="page83" id="page83"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 83]
+</span>Government.&rdquo; The text is in keeping with the frontispiece. In a passage
+devoted to the &ldquo;atrocious evictions&rdquo; of Glenbehy in 1887, the agent of
+the property is represented as &ldquo;setting fire with petroleum&rdquo; to the
+houses of two helpless men, and turning out &ldquo;eighteen human beings into
+the highway in the depth of winter.&rdquo; Not a word is said of the agent&rsquo;s
+flat denial of these charges, nor a word of the advice given to the
+agent by Sir Redvers Buller that the mortgagee ought to level the
+cottages occupied by trespassers, nor a word about Father Quilter&rsquo;s
+letter to Colonel Turner, branding his flock as &ldquo;poor slaves&rdquo; of the
+League, and turning them over to &ldquo;Mr. Roe or any other agent&rdquo; to do as
+he liked with them, since they could not, or would not, keep their
+plighted faith given through their own priest.</p>
+
+<p>This sort of ostrich fury is common enough among the regular drumbeaters
+of the Irish agitation. But it is not creditable to a &ldquo;Canadian priest.&rdquo;
+Still less creditable is his direct arraignment of M. de Mandat
+Grancey&rsquo;s good faith and veracity upon the strength of what he describes
+as M. de Mandat Grancey&rsquo;s amplification and distortion of a story told
+by himself. This was a tale of a <a name="page84" id="page84"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 84]
+</span>priest called out to confess one of his
+parishioners. The penitent accused himself of killing one man, and
+trying to kill several others. The priest, as the dreadful tale went on,
+made a tally on his sleeve, with chalk, of the crimes recited. &ldquo;Good
+heavens! my son,&rdquo; he cried at last, &ldquo;what had all these men done to you
+that you tried to send them all into eternity? Who were they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Father, they were all bailiffs or tax-collectors!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You idiot!&rdquo; exclaimed the confessor, angrily rubbing at his sleeve,
+&ldquo;why didn&rsquo;t ye tell me that before instead of letting me spoil my best
+cassock?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As I happened to have the book of M. de Mandat Grancey in my
+despatch-box, I compared it with the attack made upon it. The results
+were edifying. In the first place, M. de Mandat Grancey does not
+indicate the Canadian priest as his authority. He says that he heard the
+story, apparently at a dinner-table in France, from a <i>cur&eacute; Irlandais</i>,
+who was endeavouring to impress upon his hearers &ldquo;the sympathy of the
+clergy with the Land League.&rdquo; The &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; now comes forward
+and makes it a count in his indictment against M. de Mandat Grancey that
+he is described as an &ldquo;Irish <a name="page85" id="page85"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 85]
+</span>curate,&rdquo; when he is in fact neither an
+Irishman nor a curate. What was more natural than that an ecclesiastic,
+claiming to live in Ireland, and telling stories in France about the
+sympathy of the Irish clergy with the Land League, should be taken by
+one of his auditors to be an Irish <i>cur&eacute;</i>, particularly as the French
+<i>cur&eacute;</i> is, I believe, the equivalent of the Irish &ldquo;parish priest&rdquo;?</p>
+
+<p>In the next place, the &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; declares that the story &ldquo;is as
+old as the Round Towers of Ireland,&rdquo; and that M. de Mandat Grancey
+represents him as making himself the hero of the tale. As a matter of
+fact, M. de Mandat Grancey does nothing of the kind. On the contrary, he
+expressly says that the <i>cur&eacute; Irlandais</i>, who told the story, gave it to
+his hearers as having occurred not to himself at all, but &ldquo;to one of his
+colleagues.&rdquo; Furthermore he is at the pains to add (<i>Chez Paddy</i>, p. <a href="#page43">43</a>)
+that the story, which was not to the taste of some of the French
+ecclesiastics who heard it, was related &ldquo;as a simple pleasantry.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;But,&rdquo; he adds, and this I suspect is the sting which has so exasperated
+the &ldquo;Canadian priest,&rdquo; &ldquo;he gave us to understand at the same time that
+this pleasantry struck the keynote of the state of mind of many Irish
+priests, and, he <a name="page86" id="page86"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 86]
+</span>said, that he was himself the President of the League
+in his district.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In connection with Colonel Turner&rsquo;s statements as to the conduct of
+Father White at Milltown Malbay, and with the accounts given me of the
+conduct of Father Sheehan at Lixnaw, this side-light upon the relations
+of a certain class of the Irish clergy with the most violent henchmen of
+the League, is certainly noteworthy. I happen to have had some
+correspondence with friends of mine in Paris, who are friends also of M.
+de Mandat Grarncey, about his visit to Ireland before he made it, and I
+am quite certain that he went there, to put the case mildly, with no
+prejudices in favour of the English Government or against the
+Nationalists. Perhaps the extreme bitterness shown in the pamphlet of
+the &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; may have been born of his disgust at finding that
+the sympathy of French Catholics with Catholic Ireland draws the line at
+priests who regard the assassination of &ldquo;bailiffs and tax-collectors&rdquo; as
+a pardonable, if not positively amusing, excess of patriotic zeal.</p>
+
+<p>It was late when I reached Parsonstown, known of old in Irish story as
+Birr, from St. Brendan&rsquo;s Abbey of Biorra, and now a clean prosperous
+place, <a name="page87" id="page87"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 87]
+</span>carefully looked after by the chief landlord of the region, the
+Earl of Rosse, who, while he inherits the astronomical tastes and the
+mathematical ability of his father, is not so absorbed in star-gazing as
+to be indifferent to his terrestrial duties and obligations. I have
+heard nothing but good of him, and of his management of his estates,
+from men of the most diverse political views. But I think it more
+important to get a look at the Clanricarde property, about which I have
+heard little but evil from anybody. The strongest point I have heard
+made in favour of the owner is, that he is habitually described by that
+dumb organ of a down-trodden people, <i>United Ireland</i>, as &ldquo;the most vile
+Clanricarde.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I found a good car at the railway station, and set off at once for
+Portumna. Parsonstown was called by Sir William Petty, in his <i>Survey of
+Ireland</i>, the <i>umbilicus Hiberni&aelig;</i>. It is the centre of Ireland, as a
+point near Newnham Paddox is of England, and the famous or infamous &ldquo;Bog
+of Allan&rdquo; stretches hence to Athlone. Our way fortunately took us
+westward. A light railway was laid down some years ago from Parsonstown
+to Portumna, but it did not pay, and it has now been abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What has become of the road?&rdquo; I asked my jarvey.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 88]
+</span>&ldquo;Oh! they just take up the rails when they like, the people do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what do they do with them?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is it what they do with them? Oh; they make fences of them for the
+beasts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was a dry, shrewd old fellow, not very amiably disposed, I was sorry
+to find, towards my own country.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! it&rsquo;s America, sorr, that&rsquo;s been the ruin of us entirely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pray, how is that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the storms they send; and then the grain; and now they tell me
+it&rsquo;s the American beasts that&rsquo;s spoiling the market altogether for
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is that what your member tells you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The member, sorr? which member?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The member of Parliament for your district, I mean. What is his name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;His name? Well, I&rsquo;m not sure; and I don&rsquo;t know that I know the man at
+all. But I believe his name is Mulloy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Does he live in Portumna?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, not at all. I don&rsquo;t know at all where he lives, but I believe
+it&rsquo;s in Tullamore. But what would he know about America? Sure, any one
+can <a name="page89" id="page89"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 89]
+</span>see it&rsquo;s the storms and the grain that is the death of us in
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I thought it was the landlords and the rents?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s in Woodford and Loughrea; not here at all. There&rsquo;ll be no
+good till we get a war.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get a war? with whom? What do you want a war for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! it was the good time when we had the Crimean war&mdash;with the wheat
+all about Portumna. I&rsquo;ll show you the great store there was built. It&rsquo;s
+no use now. But we&rsquo;ll have a war. My son, he&rsquo;s a soldier now. He went
+out to America. But he didn&rsquo;t like it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he didn&rsquo;t like it. He could get no work, but to be a porter, and it
+was too hard. So he came back in three months&rsquo; time, and then he &rsquo;listed
+for a soldier. He&rsquo;s over in England now. He likes it very well. He&rsquo;s
+getting very good pay. They pay the soldiers well. There&rsquo;s a troop of
+Hussars here now. They bring a power of money to the place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do they do with the wheat lands now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they&rsquo;re for sheep; they do very well. Were you ever in Australia,
+sorr?&rdquo; pointing to a <a name="page90" id="page90"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 90]
+</span>place we were passing. &ldquo;There was a man came here
+from Australia with a pot of money, and he bought that place; but he
+thought he was a bigger man than he was, and now he&rsquo;s found himself out.
+I think he would have done as well to stay in Australia where he was.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In quite a different vein he spoke of the landlord of another large
+seat, and of the way in which the people, some of them, had
+misbehaved&mdash;breaking open the graves of the family on the place, &ldquo;and
+tossing the coffins and the bones about, and all for what?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The view as we crossed the long and very fine bridge over the Shannon
+after dusk was very striking. It was not too dark to make out the course
+of the broad gleaming river, and the lights of the town made it seem
+larger, I daresay, than it really is. As we drove up the main street I
+told my jarvey to take me to the Castle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;To the Castle, is it?&rdquo; he replied, looking around at me with an
+astonished air.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I am going to see Mr. Tener, the agent, who lives there,
+doesn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the new agent? Oh yes; I believe he&rsquo;s a very good man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<a name="page91" id="page91"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 91]
+</span>You don&rsquo;t expect to be &lsquo;boycotted&rsquo; for going to the Castle, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And why should I be? But I haven&rsquo;t been inside of the Castle gates for
+twenty years. And&mdash;here they are!&rdquo; he cried out suddenly, pulling up his
+horse just in time to avoid driving him up against a pair of iron gates
+inhospitably closed. It was by this time pitch dark. Not a light could
+we see within the enclosure. But presently a couple of shadowy forms
+appeared behind the iron gates; the iron gates creaked on their hinges,
+a masculine voice bade us drive in, and a policeman with a lantern
+advanced from a thicket of trees. All this had a fine martial and
+adventurous aspect, and my jarvey seemed to enjoy it as much as I.</p>
+
+<p>We got directions from the friendly policeman as to the roads and the
+landmarks, and after once nearly running into a clump of trees found
+ourselves at last in an open courtyard, where men appeared and took
+charge of the car, the horse, and my luggage. We were in a quadrangle of
+the out-buildings attached to the old residence of the Clanricardes,
+which had escaped the fire of 1826. The late Marquis for a long time
+hesitated whether to reconstruct the castle on the old site (the walls
+are <a name="page92" id="page92"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 92]
+</span>still standing), or to build an entirely new house on another site.
+He finally chose the latter alternative, chiefly, I am told, under the
+advice of his oldest son, the late Lord Dunkellin, one of the most
+charming and deservedly popular men of his time. He was a great friend
+and admirer of Father Burke, whom he used to claim as a Galway cousin,
+and with whom I met him in Rome not long before his death in the summer
+of 1867. His brother, the present Marquis, I have never met, but Mr.
+Tener, his present agent here, who passed some time in America several
+years ago, learning from him that I wished to see this place, very
+courteously wrote to me asking me to make his house my headquarters. I
+found my way through queer passages to a cheery little hall where my
+host met me, and taking me into a pleasant little parlour, enlivened by
+flowers, and a merrily blazing fire, presented me to Mrs. Tener.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener is an Ulster man from the County Cavan. He went with his wife
+on their bridal trip to America, and what he there saw of the peremptory
+fashion in which the authorities deal with conspiracies to resist the
+law seems not unnaturally to have made him a little impatient of the
+dilatory, not to say dawdling, processes of the law in his <a name="page93" id="page93"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 93]
+</span>own country.
+He gave me a very interesting account after dinner this evening of the
+situation in which he found affairs on this property, an account very
+different from those which I have seen in print. He is himself the owner
+of a small landed property in Cavan, and he has had a good deal of
+experience as an agent for other properties. &ldquo;I have a very simple
+rule,&rdquo; he said to me, &ldquo;in dealing with Irish tenants, and that is
+neither to do an injustice nor to submit to one.&rdquo; It was only, he said,
+after convincing himself that the Clanricarde tenants had no legitimate
+ground of complaint against the management of the estate, not removable
+upon a fair and candid discussion of all the issues involved between
+them and himself, that he consented to take charge of the property. That
+to do this was to run a certain personal risk, in the present state of
+the country, he was quite aware.</p>
+
+<p>But he takes this part of the contract very coolly, telling me that the
+only real danger, he thinks, is incurred when he makes a journey of
+which he has to send a notice by telegraph&mdash;a remark which recalled to
+me the curious advice given me in Dublin to seal my letters, as a
+protection against &ldquo;the Nationalist clerks in the post-offices.&rdquo; The
+park of Portumua Castle, which is very extensive, is patrolled <a name="page94" id="page94"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 94]
+</span>by armed
+policemen, and whenever Mr. Tener drives out he is followed by a police
+car carrying two armed men.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Against whom are all these precautions necessary?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Against
+the evicted tenants, or against the local agents of the League?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all against the tenants,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;as you can satisfy
+yourself by talking with them. The trouble comes not from the tenants at
+all, nor from the people here at Portumna, but from mischievous and
+dangerous persons at Loughrea and Woodford. Woodford, mind you, not
+being Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s place at all, though all the country has been
+roused about the cruel Clanricarde and his wicked Woodford evictions.
+Woodford was simply the headquarters of the agitation against Lord
+Clanricarde and my predecessor, Mr. Joyce, and it has got the name of
+the &lsquo;cockpit of Ireland,&rsquo; because it was there that Mr. Dillon, in
+October 1886, opened the &lsquo;war against the landlords&rsquo; with the &lsquo;Plan of
+Campaign.&rsquo; It is an odd circumstance, by the way, worth noting, that
+when these apostles of Irish agitation went to Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s
+property nearer the city of Gralway, and tried to stir the people up,
+they failed dismally, because the people there could understand no
+English, and the Irish agitators could <a name="page95" id="page95"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 95]
+</span>speak no Irish! Nobody has ever
+had the face to pretend that the Clanricarde estates were &lsquo;rack-rented.&rsquo;
+There have been many personal attacks made upon Mr. Joyce and upon Lord
+Clanricarde, and Mr. Joyce has brought that well-known action against
+the Marquis for libel, and all this answers with the general public as
+an argument to show that the tenants on the Clanricarde property must
+have had great grievances, and must have been cruelly ground down and
+unable to pay their way. I will introduce you, if you will allow me, to
+the Catholic Bishop here, and to the resident Protestant clergyman, and
+to the manager of the bank, and they can help you to form your own
+judgment as to the state of the tenants. You will find that whatever
+quarrels they may have had with their landlord or his agent, they are
+now, and always have been, quite able to pay their rents, and I need not
+tell you that it is no longer in the power of a landlord or an agent to
+say what these rents shall be.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag10"
+ name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Dillon in that speech of his at Woodford <a name="page96" id="page96"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 96]
+</span>(I have it here as
+published in <i>United Ireland</i>), you will see, openly advised, or rather
+ordered, the tenants here to club their rents, or, in plain English, the
+money due to their landlord, with the deliberate intent to confiscate to
+their own use, or, in their own jargon, &lsquo;grab,&rsquo; the money of any one of
+their number who, after going into this dishonest combination, might
+find it working badly and wish to get out of it. Here is his own
+language:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I took the speech as reported in the <i>United Ireland</i> of October 23rd,
+1886, and therein found Mr. Dillon, M.P., using these words:&mdash;&ldquo;If you
+mean to fight really, you must put the money aside for two
+reasons&mdash;first of all because you want the means to support the men who
+are hit first; and, secondly, because you want to prohibit traitors
+going behind your back. There is no way to deal with a traitor except to
+get his money under lock and key, and if you find that he pays his rent,
+and betrays the organisation, what will you do with him? I will tell you
+what to do with him. <i>Close upon his money, and use it for the
+organisation</i>. I have always opposed outrages. <i>This is a legal plan,
+and it is ten times more effective</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Not a word here as to the morality of the proceeding thus recommended;
+but almost in the <a name="page97" id="page97"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 97]
+</span>same breath in which he bade his ignorant hearers
+regard his plan as &ldquo;legal,&rdquo; Mr. Dillon said to them, &ldquo;<i>this must be done
+privately, and you must not inform the public where the money is
+placed</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Why not, if the plan was &ldquo;legal&rdquo;? Mr. Dillon, I believe, is not a
+lawyer, but he can hardly have deluded himself into thinking his plan of
+campaign &ldquo;legal&rdquo; in the face of the particular pains taken by his
+leader, Mr. Parnell, to disclaim all participation in any such plans. A
+year before Mr. Dillon made this curious speech, Mr. Parnell, I
+remember, on the 11th of October 1885, speaking at Kildare, declared
+that he had &ldquo;in no case during the last few years advised any
+combination among tenants against even rack-rents,&rdquo; and insisted that
+any combination of the sort which might exist should be regarded as an
+&ldquo;isolated&rdquo; combination, &ldquo;confined to the tenants of individual estates,
+who, of their own accord, without any incitement from us, on the
+contrary, kept back by us, without any urging on our part, without any
+advice on our part, but stung by necessity, and the terrible realities
+of their position, may have formed such a combination among themselves
+to secure such a reduction of rent as will enable them to live in their
+own homes.&rdquo; From this language of Mr. Parnell in October 1885 to <a name="page98" id="page98"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 98]
+</span>Mr.
+Dillon&rsquo;s speech in October 1886, urging and advising the tenants to
+organise, exact contributions from every member of the organisation, and
+put these contributions under the control of third parties determined to
+confiscate the money subscribed by any member who might not find the
+organisation working to his advantage, is a rather long step! It covers
+all the distance between a cunning defensive evasion of the law, and an
+open aggressive violation of the law&mdash;not of the land only, but of
+common honesty. One of two things is clear: either these combinations
+are voluntary and &ldquo;isolated,&rdquo; and intended, as Mr. Parnell asserts, to
+secure such a reduction of rents as will enable the tenants, and each of
+them, to live peacefully and comfortably at home, and in that case any
+member of the combination who finds that he can attain his object better
+by leaving it has an absolute right to do this, and to demand the return
+of his money; or they are part of a system imposed upon the tenants by a
+moral coercion inconsistent with the most elementary ideas of private
+right and personal freedom. This makes the importance of Mr. Dillon&rsquo;s
+speech, that by his denunciation of any member who wishes to withdraw
+from this &ldquo;voluntary&rdquo; combination as a &ldquo;traitor,&rdquo; and by his order to
+&ldquo;close upon the <a name="page99" id="page99"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 99]
+</span>money&rdquo; of any such member, &ldquo;and use it for the
+organisation,&rdquo; he brands the &ldquo;organisation&rdquo; as a subterranean despotism
+of a very cheap and nasty kind. The Government which tolerates the
+creation of such a Houndsditch tyranny as this within its dominions
+richly deserves to be overthrown. As for the people who submit
+themselves to it, I do not wonder that in his more lucid moments a
+Catholic priest like Father Quilter feels himself moved to denounce them
+as &ldquo;poor slaves.&rdquo; Of course with a benevolent neutral like myself, the
+question always recurs, Who trained them to submit to this sort of
+thing? But I really am at a loss to see why a parcel of conspirators
+should be encouraged in the nineteenth century to bully Irish farmers
+out of their manhood and their money, because in the seventeenth century
+it pleased the stupid rulers of England, as the great Duke of Ormond
+indignantly said, to &ldquo;put so general a discountenance upon the
+improvement of Ireland, as if it were resolved that to keep it low is to
+keep it safe.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On going back to the little drawing-room after dinner we found Mrs.
+Tener among her flowers, busy with some literary work. It is not a gay
+life here, she admits, her nearest visiting acquaintance living <a name="page100" id="page100"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 100]
+</span>some
+seven or eight miles away&mdash;but she takes long walks with a couple of
+stalwart dogs in her company, and has little fear of being molested.
+&ldquo;The tenants are in more danger,&rdquo; she thinks, &ldquo;than the landlords or the
+agents&rdquo;&mdash;nor do I see any reason to doubt this, remembering the Connells
+whom I saw at Edenvale, and the story of the &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; Fitzmaurice
+brutally murdered in the presence of his daughter at Lixnaw on the 31st
+of January, as if by way of welcome to Lord Ripon and Mr. Morley on
+their arrival at Dublin.</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">PORTUMNA, <i>Feb. 29th.</i>&mdash;</span>Early this morning two of the &ldquo;evicted&rdquo; tenants,
+and an ex-bailiff of the property here, came by appointment to discuss
+the situation with Mr. Tener. He asked me to attend the conference, and
+upon learning that I was an American, they expressed their perfect
+willingness that I should do so. The tenants were quiet, sturdy,
+intelligent-looking men. I asked one of them if he objected to telling
+me whether he thought the rent he had refused to pay excessive, or
+whether he was simply unable to pay it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had the money, sir, to pay the rent,&rdquo; he <a name="page101" id="page101"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 101]
+</span>replied, &ldquo;and I wanted to
+pay the rent&mdash;only I wouldn&rsquo;t be let.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who wouldn&rsquo;t let you?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The people that were in with the League.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was your holding worth anything to you?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was indeed. Two or three years ago I could have sold my right for a
+matter of three hundred pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; interrupted the other tenant, &ldquo;and a bit before that for six
+hundred pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is it not worth three hundred pounds to you now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;for he has lost it by refusing the settlement I
+offered to make, and driving us into proceedings against him, and
+allowing his six months&rsquo; equity of redemption to lapse.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And sure, if we had it, no one would be let to buy it now, sir,&rdquo; said
+the tenant. &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s we that hope Mr. Tener here will let us come back
+on the holdings&mdash;that is, if we&rsquo;d be protected coming back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, do you see,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;what it is you ask me to do? You ask
+me to make you a present outright of the property you chose foolishly to
+throw away, and to do this after you have put <a name="page102" id="page102"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 102]
+</span>the estate to endless
+trouble and expense; don&rsquo;t you think that is asking me to do a good
+deal?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenants looked at one another, at Mr. Tener, and at me, and the
+ex-bailiff smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You must see this,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;but I am perfectly willing now to
+say to you, in the presence of this gentleman, that in spite of all, I
+am quite willing to do what you ask, and to let you come back into the
+titles you have forfeited, for I would rather have you back on the
+property than strangers&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And, indeed, we&rsquo;re sure you would.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But understand, you must pay down a year&rsquo;s rent and the costs you have
+put us to.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! sure you wouldn&rsquo;t have us to pay the costs?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But indeed I will,&rdquo; responded Mr. Tener; &ldquo;you mustn&rsquo;t for a moment
+suppose I will have any question about that. You brought all this
+trouble on yourselves, and on us; and while I am ready and willing to
+deal more than fairly, to deal liberally with you about the arrears&mdash;and
+to give you time&mdash;the costs you must pay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what would they be, the costs?&rdquo; queried one of the tenants
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that I can&rsquo;t tell you, for I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said <a name="page103" id="page103"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 103]
+</span>Mr. Tener, &ldquo;but they
+shall not be anything beyond the strict necessary costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And if we come back would we be protected?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course you will have protection. But why do you want protection?
+Here you are, a couple of strong grown men, with men-folk of your
+families. See here! why don&rsquo;t you go to such an one, and such an one,&rdquo;
+naming other tenants; &ldquo;you know them well. Go to them quietly and sound
+them to see if they will come back on the same terms with you; form a
+combination to be honest and to stand by your rights, and defy and break
+up the other dishonest combination you go in fear of! Is it not a shame
+for men like you to lie down and let those fellows walk over you, and
+drive you out of your livelihood and your homes?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenants looked at each other, and at the rest of us. &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said
+one of them at last, &ldquo;I think &mdash;&mdash; and &mdash;&mdash;,&rdquo; naming two men, &ldquo;would come
+with us. Of course,&rdquo; turning to Mr. Tener, &ldquo;you wouldn&rsquo;t discover on us,
+sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Discover on you! Certainly not,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener. &ldquo;But why don&rsquo;t you
+make up your minds to be men, and &lsquo;discover&rsquo; on yourselves, and defy
+these fellows?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 104]
+</span>&ldquo;And the cattle, sir? would we get protection for the cattle? They&rsquo;d be
+murdered else entirely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;the police would endeavour to protect the
+cattle.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then, turning to me, he said, &ldquo;That is a very reasonable question. These
+scoundrels, when they are afraid to tackle the men put under their ban,
+go about at night, and mutilate and torture and kill the poor beasts. I
+remember a case,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;in Roscommon, where several head of
+cattle mysteriously disappeared. They could be found nowhere. No trace
+of them could be got. But long weeks after they vanished, some lads in a
+field several miles away saw numbers of crows hovering over a particular
+point. They went there, and there at the bottom of an abandoned
+coal-shaft lay the shattered remains of these lost cattle. The poor
+beasts had been driven blindfold over the fields and down into this pit,
+where, with broken limbs, and maimed, they all miserably died of
+hunger.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said one of the tenants, &ldquo;and our cattle&rsquo;d be driven into the
+Shannon, and drownded, and washed away.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You must understand,&rdquo; interposed Mr. Tener <a name="page105" id="page105"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 105]
+</span>&ldquo;that when cattle are thus
+maliciously destroyed the owners can recover nothing unless the remains
+of the poor beasts are found and identified within three days.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The disgust which I felt and expressed at these revelations seemed to
+encourage the tenants. One of them said that before the evictions came
+off certain of the National Leaguers visited him, and told him he must
+resist the officers. &ldquo;I consulted my sister,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and she said,
+&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t you be such a fool as to be doing that; we&rsquo;ll all be ruined
+entirely by those rascals and rogues of the League.&rsquo; And I didn&rsquo;t
+resist. But only the other day I went to a priest in the trouble we are
+in, and what do you think he said to me? He said, &lsquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you do as
+you were bid? then you would be helped,&rsquo; and he would do nothing for us!
+Would you think that right, sir, in your country?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I should think in my country,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;that a priest who behaved in
+that way ought to be unfrocked.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you pay over all your rent into the hands of the trustees of the
+League?&rdquo; I asked of one of these tenants.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I paid over money to them, sir,&rdquo; he replied.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 106]
+</span>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but did you pay over all the amount of the rent, or how
+much of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I paid as much as I thought they would think I ought to pay!&rdquo; he
+responded, with that sly twinkle of the peasant&rsquo;s eye one sees so often
+in rural France.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I understand,&rdquo; I said, laughing. &ldquo;But if you come to terms now with
+Mr. Tener here, will you get that money back again?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Divil a penny of it!&rdquo; he replied, with much emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>Finally they got up together to take their leave, after a long whispered
+conversation together.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And if we made it half the costs?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; said Mr. Tener good-naturedly but firmly; &ldquo;not a penny off the
+costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, we&rsquo;ll see the men, sir, just quietly, and we&rsquo;ll let you know what
+can be done&rdquo;; and with that they wished us, most civilly, good-morning,
+and went their way.</p>
+
+<p>We walked in the park for some time, and a wild, beautiful park it is,
+not the less beautiful for being given up, as it is, very much to the
+Dryads to deal with it as they list. It is as unlike a trim English park
+as possible; but it contains many <a name="page107" id="page107"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 107]
+</span>very fine trees, and grand open sweeps
+of landscape. In a tangled copse are the ruins of an ancient Franciscan
+abbey, in one corner of which lie buried together, under a monumental
+mound of brickwork, the late Marquis of Clanricarde and his wife. The
+walls of the Castle, burned in 1826, are still standing, and so perfect
+that the building might easily enough have been restored. A keen-eyed,
+wiry old household servant, still here, told us the house was burned in
+the afternoon of January 6, 1826. There were three women-servants in the
+house&mdash;&ldquo;Anna and Mary Meehan, and Mrs. Underwood, the housekeeper&rdquo;; and
+they were getting the Castle ready for his Lordship&rsquo;s arrival, so little
+of an &ldquo;absentee&rdquo; was the late Lord Clanricarde, then only one year
+married to the daughter of George Canning. The fires were laid on in the
+upper rooms, and Mrs. Underwood went off upon an errand. When she came
+back all was in flames.</p>
+
+<p>The deer-park is full of deer, now become quite wild. We heard them
+crashing through the undergrowth on all sides. There must be capital
+fishing, too, in the lake, and in the river of which it is an expansion.</p>
+
+<p>While they were getting the cars ready for a <a name="page108" id="page108"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 108]
+</span>drive, came up another son
+of the soil. This man I found had only a small interest in the battle on
+the Clanricarde estates, holding his homestead of another landlord. But
+he admitted he had gone in a manner into the &ldquo;combination,&rdquo; in that he
+had paid a certain, not very large, sum, which he named, to the
+trustees, &ldquo;just for peace and quiet.&rdquo; He considered it gone, past
+recovery; and he named another man with a small holding, but doing a
+considerable business in other ways, who had &ldquo;paid &pound;10 or more just not
+to be bothered.&rdquo; Upon this Mr. Tener told me of a shopkeeper at Loughrea
+in a large way of business, a man with seven or eight thousand pounds,
+who, finding his goods about to be seized after the agent had turned a
+sharp strategic corner on him, and unexpectedly got into his shop, was
+about to own up to his defeat, and make a fair settlement, when the
+secretary of the League appeared, and requested a private talk with him.
+In a quarter of an hour the tradesman reappeared looking rather sullen
+and crestfallen. He said he couldn&rsquo;t pay, and must let the goods be
+taken. So taken they were, and duly put up under the process and sold.
+He bought them in himself, paying all the costs.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 109]
+</span>Presently two cars appeared. We got upon one, Mr. Tener driving a
+spirited nag, and taking on the seat with him a loaded carbine-rifle.
+Two armed policeman followed us upon the other, keeping at such a
+distance as would enable them easily to cover any one approaching from
+either side of the roadway. It quite took me back to the delightful days
+of 1866 in Mexico, when we used to ride out to picnics at the Rincon at
+Orizaba armed to the teeth, and ready at a moment&rsquo;s notice to throw the
+four-in-hand mule-wagons into a hollow square, and prepare to receive
+cavalry. As it seems to be perfectly well understood that the regular
+price paid for shooting a designated person (they call it &ldquo;knocking&rdquo; him
+in these parts) is the ridiculously small sum of four pounds, and that
+two persons who divide this sum are always detailed by the organisers of
+outrage to &ldquo;knock&rdquo; an objectionable individual, it is obvious that too
+much care can hardly be taken by prudent people in coming and going
+through such a country. Fortunately for the people most directly
+concerned to avoid these unpleasantnesses a systematic leakage seems to
+exist in the machinery of mischief. The places where the oaths of this
+local &ldquo;Mafia&rdquo; are admin<a name="page110" id="page110"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 110]
+</span>istered, for instance, are well known. A roadside
+near a chapel is frequently selected&mdash;and this for two or three obvious
+reasons. The sanctity of the spot may be supposed to impress the
+neophyte; and if the police or any other undesirable people should
+suddenly come upon the officiating adepts and the expectant acolyte, a
+group on the roadside is not necessarily a criminal gathering&mdash;though I
+do not see why, in such times, our old American college definition of a
+&ldquo;group&rdquo; as a gathering of &ldquo;three or more persons&rdquo; should not be adopted
+by the authorities, and held to make such a gathering liable to
+dispersion by the police, as our &ldquo;groups&rdquo; used to be subject to
+proctorial punishment. Mills are another favourite resort of the
+law-breakers. Mr. Tener tells me that a large mill between this place
+and Loughrea is a great centre of trouble, not wholly to the
+disadvantage of the astute miller, who finds it not only brings grist to
+his mill, but takes away grist from another mill belonging to a couple
+of worthy ladies, and once quite prosperous. It is no uncommon thing, it
+appears, for the same person to be put through the ceremony of swearing
+fidelity more than once, and at more than one place, with the not
+unnatural result, however, of <a name="page111" id="page111"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 111]
+</span>diminishing the pressure of the oath upon
+his conscience or his fears, and also of alienating his affections, as
+he is expected to pay down two shillings on each occasion. Once a
+member, he contributes a penny a week to the general fund. It seems also
+to be an open secret who the disbursing treasurers are of this fund,
+from whom the members, detailed to do the dark bidding of the
+&ldquo;organisation,&rdquo; receive their wage. &ldquo;A stout gentleman with sandy hair
+and wearing glasses&rdquo; was the description given to me of one such
+functionary. When so much is known of the methods and the men, why is it
+that so many crimes are committed with virtual impunity? For two
+sufficient reasons. Witnesses cannot be got to testify, or trusted, if
+they do testify, to speak the truth; and it is idle to expect juries of
+the vicinage in nine cases out of ten will do their duty. Political
+cowardice having made it impossible to transfer the venue in cases of
+Irish crime, as to which all the authorities were agreed about these
+points, from Ireland into Great Britain, it is found that even to
+transfer the trial of &ldquo;Moonlighters&rdquo; from Clare or Kerry into Wicklow,
+for example, has a most instructive effect, opening the eyes of the
+people of Wicklow to a state of things <a name="page112" id="page112"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 112]
+</span>in their own island, of which
+happily for themselves they were previously as ignorant as the people of
+Surrey or of Middlesex. This explains the indignant wish expressed to me
+some time ago in a letter from a priest in another part of Ireland, that
+&ldquo;martial law&rdquo; might be proclaimed in Clare and Kerry to &ldquo;stamp out the
+Moonlighters, those pests of society.&rdquo; That in Clare and Kerry priests
+should be found not only disposed to wink at and condone the proceedings
+of these &ldquo;pests of society,&rdquo; but openly to co-operate with them under
+the pretext of a &ldquo;national&rdquo; movement, is surely a thing equally
+intolerable by the Church and dangerous to the cause of Irish autonomy.
+This I am glad to say is strongly felt, and has been on more than one
+occasion very vigorously stated by one of the most eminent and estimable
+of Irish ecclesiastics, the Bishop-Coadjutor of Clonfert, upon whom I
+called this morning. Dr. Healy, who is a senator of the Royal University
+of Ireland, and a member of the Royal Irish Academy, presides over that
+part of the diocese of Clonfort which includes Portumna and Woodford. He
+lives in a handsome and commodious, but simple and unpretentious house,
+set in ample grounds well-planted, and commanding a wide view <a name="page113" id="page113"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 113]
+</span>of a most
+agreeable country. We were ushered into a well-furnished study, and the
+bishop came in at once to greet us with the most cordial courtesy. He is
+a frank, dignified, unaffected man, and in his becoming episcopal
+purple, with the gold chain and cross, looked every inch a bishop. I was
+particularly anxious to see Dr. Healy, as a type of the high-minded and
+courageous ecclesiastics who, in Ireland, have resolutely refused to
+subordinate their duties and their authority as ecclesiastics to the
+convenience and the policy of an organisation absolutely controlled by
+Mr. Parnell, who not only is not a Catholic, but who is an open ally and
+associate of the bitterest enemies of the Catholic Church in France and
+in England. Protestant historians affirm that Pope Innocent was one of
+the financial backers of William of Orange when he set sail from Holland
+to crush the Catholic faith in Great Britain and Ireland, and drive the
+Catholic house of Stuart into exile. But it was reserved for the
+nineteenth century to witness the strange spectacle of men, calling
+themselves Irishmen and Catholics, deliberately slandering and assailing
+in concord with a non-Catholic political leader the consecrated pastors
+and masters of the Church in Ireland. When in <a name="page114" id="page114"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 114]
+</span>order to explain what they
+themselves concede to be &ldquo;the absence from the popular ranks of the best
+of the priesthood,&rdquo; Nationalist writers find it necessary to denounce
+Cardinal Cullen and Cardinal M&lsquo;Cabe as &ldquo;anti-Irish &rdquo;; and to sneer at
+men like Dr. Healy as &ldquo;Castle Bishops,&rdquo; it is impossible not to be
+reminded of the three &ldquo;patriotic&rdquo; tailors of Tooley Street.</p>
+
+<p>Bishop Healy looks upon the systematic development of a substantial
+peasant proprietary throughout Ireland as the economic hope of the
+country, and he regards therefore the actual &ldquo;campaigning&rdquo; of the
+self-styled &ldquo;Nationalists&rdquo; as essentially anti-national, inasmuch as its
+methods are demoralising the people of Ireland, and destroying that
+respect for law and for private rights which lies at the foundation of
+civil order and of property. In his opinion, &ldquo;Home Rule,&rdquo; to the people
+in general, means simply ownership of the land which they are to live
+on, and to live by. How that ownership shall be brought about peaceably,
+fairly, and without wrong or outrage to any man or class of men is a
+problem of politics to be worked out by politicians, and by public men.
+That men, calling themselves Catholics, should be led on to attempt <a name="page115" id="page115"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 115]
+</span>to
+bring this or any other object about by immoral and criminal means is
+quite another matter, and a matter falling within the domain, not of the
+State primarily, but of the Church.</p>
+
+<p>As to this, Bishop Healy, who was in Rome not very long ago, and who,
+while in Rome, had more than one audience of His Holiness by command,
+has no doubt whatever that the Vatican will insist upon the abandonment
+and repudiation by Catholics of boycotting, and &ldquo;plans of campaign,&rdquo; and
+all such devices of evil. Nor has the Bishop any doubt that whenever the
+Holy Father speaks the priests and the people of Ireland will obey.</p>
+
+<p>To say this, of course, is only to say that the Bishop believes the
+priests of Ireland to be honest priests, and the people of Ireland to be
+good Catholics.</p>
+
+<p>If he is mistaken in this it will be a doleful thing, not for the
+Church, but for the Irish priests, and for the Irish people. No Irishman
+who witnessed the magnificent display made at Rome this year, of the
+scope and power of the Catholic Church, can labour under any delusions
+on that point.</p>
+
+<p>From the Bishop&rsquo;s residence we went to call upon the Protestant rector
+of Portumna, Mr. Crawford. <a name="page116" id="page116"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 116]
+</span>The handsome Anglican church stands within an
+angle of the park, and the parsonage is a very substantial mansion. Mr.
+Crawford, the present rector, who is a man of substance, holds a fine
+farm of the Clanricarde estate, at a peppercorn rent, and he is tenant
+also of another holding at &pound;118 a year, as to which he has brought the
+agent into Court, with the object, as he avers, of setting an example to
+the other tenants, and inducing them, like himself, to fight under the
+law instead of against it. He is not, however, in arrears, and in that
+respect sets a better example, I am sorry to say, than the Catholic
+priest, Father Coen, who made himself so conspicuous here on the
+occasion of the much bewritten Woodford evictions. The case of Father
+Coen is most instructive, and most unpleasant. He occupies an excellent
+house on a holding of twenty-three acres of good laud, with a garden&mdash;in
+short, a handsome country residence, which was provided by the late Lord
+Clanricarde, expressly for the accommodation of whoever might be the
+Catholic priest in that part of his estate. For all this the rent is
+fixed at the absurd and nominal sum of two guineas a year! Yet Father
+Coen, who now enjoys the mansion, and has a substantial income from the
+parish, is actually two <a name="page117" id="page117"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 117]
+</span>years and a half in arrears with this rent! This
+fact Mr. Tener mentioned to the Bishop, whose countenance naturally
+darkened. &ldquo;What am I to do in such a case, my lord?&rdquo; asked Mr. Tener.
+&ldquo;Do?&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;do your plain duty, and proceed against him
+according to law.&rdquo; But suppose he were proceeded against and evicted, as
+in America he certainly would be, who can doubt that he would instantly
+be paraded, before the world, on both sides of the Atlantic as a
+&ldquo;martyr,&rdquo; suffering for the holy cause of an oppressed and down-trodden
+people, at the hands of a &ldquo;most vile&rdquo; Marquis, and of a remorse-less and
+blood-thirsty agent?<a id="footnotetag11"
+ name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> Mr. Crawford, a tall, fine-looking man, talked
+very fully and freely about the situation here. He came to Portumna
+about eight years ago; one of his reasons for accepting the position
+here offered him being that he wished to take over a piece of property
+near Woodford from his brother-in-law, who found he could not manage it.
+As a practical farmer, and a straightforward capable man of business, he
+has gradually acquired the general confidence of the tenants here. That
+<a name="page118" id="page118"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 118]
+</span>they are, as a rule, quite able to pay the rents which they have been
+&ldquo;coerced&rdquo; into refusing to pay, he fully believes. He told me of cases
+in which Catholic tenants of Lord Clanricarde came to him when the
+agitation began about the Plan of Campaign, and begged him privately to
+take the money for their rents, and hold it for them till the time
+should come for a settlement.</p>
+
+<p>The reason for this was that they did not wish to be obliged to give
+over the money into the &ldquo;Trust&rdquo; created by the Campaigners, and wanted
+it to be safely put beyond the reach of these obliging &ldquo;friends.&rdquo; One
+very shrewd tenant came to him and begged him to buy some beasts, in
+order that he might pay his rent out of the proceeds. The man owed &pound;15
+to the Clanricarde property. Mr. Crawford did not particularly want to
+buy his beasts, but eventually agreed to do so, and gave him &pound;50 for
+them. The man went off with the money, but he never paid the rent! Mr.
+Crawford discovering this called him to account, and refused to grant
+him some further favour which he asked. The result is that the
+&ldquo;distressed tenant&rdquo; now cuts Mr. Crawford when he meets him, and is the
+prosperous owner of quite a small herd of cattle.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 119]
+</span>Mr. Crawford&rsquo;s opinion of the mischief done by the methods and spirit of
+the National League in this place is quite in accord with the opinions
+of the Bishop-Coadjutor. Power without responsibility, which made the
+C&aelig;esars madmen, easily turns the heads of village tyrants, and there is
+something positively grotesque in the excesses of this subterranean
+&ldquo;Home Rule.&rdquo; Mr. Crawford told me of a case here, in which a tenant
+farmer, whom he named, came to him in great wrath, not unmingled with
+terror, to say that the League had ordered him, on pain of being
+boycotted, to give up his holding to the heirs of a woman from whom,
+twenty years ago, he had bought, for &pound;100 in cash, the tenant-right of
+her deceased husband! There was no question of refunding the &pound;100. He
+was merely to consider himself a &ldquo;land-grabber,&rdquo; and evict himself for
+the benefit of those heirs who had never done a stroke of work on the
+property for twenty years, and who had no shadow of a legal or moral
+claim on it, except that the oldest of them was an active member of the
+local League!</p>
+
+<p>Nor was this unique.</p>
+
+<p>In another case, the children of a tenant, who died forty years ago,
+came forward and called upon the <a name="page120" id="page120"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 120]
+</span>League to boycott an old man who had
+been in possession of the holding during nearly half a century. In a
+third case, a tenant-farmer, some ten years ago, had in his employ as
+herd a man who fell ill and died. He put into the vacant place an
+honest, capable young fellow, who still holds it, and has faithfully and
+efficiently served him. Only the other day this tenant-farmer was warned
+by the League to expect trouble, unless he dismissed this herd, and put
+into his place the son, now grown to man&rsquo;s estate, of the herd who died
+ten years ago!</p>
+
+<p>It is amusing, if not instructive, to find the hereditary principle,
+just now threatened in its application to the British Senate, cropping
+out afresh as an element in the regeneration of Irish agriculture and
+the land tenure of Ireland!</p>
+
+<p>On our way back to the Castle we called on Mr. Place, the manager of the
+Portumna Branch of the Hibernian Bank, who lives in the town. He was
+amusing himself, after the labour of the day in the bank, with some
+amateur work as a carpenter, but received us very cordially. He said
+there was no doubt that the deposits in the bank had increased
+considerably since the adoption of the Plan of Campaign on the
+Clanricarde property. <a name="page121" id="page121"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 121]
+</span>Money was paid into the bank continually by
+persons who wished the fact of their payments kept secret; and he knew
+of more than one case in which tenants, whose stock had been seized by
+the agent for the rents, were much delighted at the seizure, since it
+had paid off their rents, and so enabled them to retain their holdings
+and keep out of the grasp of the League, even though to do this they had
+undergone a forced sale and been muleted in costs.</p>
+
+<p>It was his opinion that the tenants on the Clanricarde property, who are
+not in arrears, would gladly accept a twenty-five per cent. reduction,
+and do very well by accepting it. But they are constrained into a
+hostile attitude by the tenants who are in arrears, some of them for
+several years (as, for example, Father Coen), although I find, to my
+astonishment, that in Ireland the landlord has no power to distrain for
+more than a twelvemonth&rsquo;s rent, no matter how far back the arrears may
+run.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Place seems to think it would be well to put all the creditors of
+the tenants on one footing with the landlords. The shopkeepers and other
+creditors, he thinks, in that event would see many things in quite a new
+light.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 122]
+</span>What is called the new Castle of Portumna is a large and handsome
+building of the Mansard type, standing on an eminence in the park, at
+some distance from the original seat. The building was finished not long
+before the death of his father, the late Marquis. It has never been
+occupied, save by a large force of police quartered in it not very long
+ago by Mr. Tener in readiness for an expedition against the Castle of
+Cloondadauv, to the scene of which he promises to drive me to-morrow on
+my way back to Dublin. It is thoroughly well built, and might easily be
+made a most delightful residence. The views which it commands of the
+Shannon are magnificent, and there are many fine trees about it.</p>
+
+<p>The old man who has charge of it is a typical Galway retainer of the old
+school. The &ldquo;boys,&rdquo; he says, once tried to &ldquo;boycott&rdquo; him because he was
+the pound-master; but he showed fight, and they let him alone. He
+pointed out to me from the top of the house, in the distance, the
+residences of Colonel Hickie, and of the young Lord Avonmore, who lately
+succeeded on the death of his brother in the recent Egyptian expedition.
+The place is now shut up, and the owners live in France.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 123]
+</span>We visited too the Portumna Union before driving home. The buildings of
+this Union are extensive for the place, and well built, and it seems to
+be well-ordered and neatly kept&mdash;thanks, in no small degree, I suspect,
+to the influence of the Sisters who have charge of the hospital, but
+whose benign spirit shows itself not only in the flower-garden which
+they have called into being, but in many details of the administration
+beyond their special control.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast was very striking between the atmosphere of this
+unpretending refuge of the helpless and that of certain of the
+&ldquo;laicised&rdquo; hospitals of France, which I not long ago visited, from which
+the devoted nuns have been expelled to make way for hired nurses. I made
+a remark to this effect to the clerk of the Union, Mr. Lavan, whom we
+found in his office.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have no doubt of that. We owe more than I can say
+to the Sisters, but I don&rsquo;t know how long we should have them here if
+the local guardians could have their way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In explanation of this, he went on to tell me that these local
+guardians, who are elected, are hostile to the whole administration,
+because of its <a name="page124" id="page124"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 124]
+</span>relations with the Local Government Board at Dublin,
+which controls their generous tendency to expend the money of the
+ratepayers. By way of expressing their feelings, therefore, they have
+been trying to cut down, not only the salary of the clerk, but that of
+the Catholic chaplain of the Union; and as there is a good deal of
+irreligious feeling among the agitators here, it is his impression that
+they would make things disagreeable for the Sisters also were they in
+any way to get the management into their own hands. That there cannot be
+much real distress in this neighbourhood appears from two facts. There
+are now but 130 inmates of this Union, out of a population of 12,900,
+and the outlay for out-of-door relief averages between eight and ten
+pounds a week.</p>
+
+<p>In the quiet, neat chapel two or three of the inmates were kneeling at
+prayers; and others whom we saw in the kitchen and about the offices had
+nothing of the &ldquo;workhouse&rdquo; look which is so painful in the ordinary
+inmates of an English or American almshouse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The trouble with the place,&rdquo; said Mr. Lavan, &ldquo;is that they like it too
+well. It takes an eviction almost to get them out of it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 125]
+</span>We sat down with Mr. Lavan in his office, and had an interesting talk
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>He is the agent of Mr. Mathews, who lives between Woodford and Portumna.
+Mr. Mathews is a resident landlord, he says, who has constantly employed
+and has lived on friendly terms with his tenants, numbering twenty, who
+hold now under judicial rents. On these judicial rents two years ago
+they were allowed a further reduction of 15 per cent. Last year they
+were allowed 20 per cent. This year he offered them a reduction of 25
+per cent., which they rejected, demanding 35 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>This demand Mr. Lavan considers to be unreasonable in the extreme, and
+he attributes it to the influence of the National Leaguers here, whose
+representatives among the local guardians constantly vote away the money
+of the ratepayers in &ldquo;relief to evicted tenants who have ample means and
+can in no respect be called destitute.&rdquo; In his opinion the effect of the
+Nationalist agitation here has been to upset all ideas of right and
+wrong in the minds of the people where any question arises between
+tenants and landlords. He told a story, confirmed by Mr. Tener, of a
+bailiff, whom he named, on the <a name="page126" id="page126"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 126]
+</span>Clanricarde property here, who was
+compelled two years ago to resign his place in order to prevent the
+&ldquo;boycotting&rdquo; of his mother who keeps a shop on the farm. He was
+familiar, too, with the details of a story told me by one of the
+Clanricarde tenants, a farmer near Loughrea who holds a farm at &pound;90 a
+year. This man was forced to subscribe to the Plan of Campaign. The
+agent proceeded against him for the rent due, and he incurred costs of
+&pound;10. His sheep and crop were then seized.</p>
+
+<p>He begged the local leaders to &ldquo;permit&rdquo; him to pay his rent, as he was
+able to do it <i>without drawing out the funds in their hands</i>! They
+refused, and so compelled him to allow his property to be publicly sold,
+and to incur further costs of &pound;10. &ldquo;His farm lies so near the town that
+he did not dare to risk the vengeance of the local ruffians.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lavan gave me the name also of another man who is now actually under
+a &ldquo;boycott,&rdquo; because he has ventured to resist the modest demand made by
+the son of a man whose tenant-right he bought, paying him &pound;100 for it,
+twenty years ago, that he shall give up his farm without being
+reimbursed for his outlay made to purchase it! In other words, after
+twenty years&rsquo; peaceable <a name="page127" id="page127"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 127]
+</span>possession of a piece of property, bought and
+paid for, this tenant-farmer is treated as a &ldquo;land-grabber&rdquo; by the
+self-installed &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo; government of Ireland, because he will not
+submit to be robbed both of the money which he paid for his
+tenant-right, and of his tenant-right!</p>
+
+<p>Obviously in such a case as this the &ldquo;war against landlordism&rdquo; is simply
+a war against property and against private rights. Priests of the
+Catholic Church who not only countenance but aid and abet such
+proceedings certainly go even beyond Dr. M&lsquo;Glynn. Dr. M&lsquo;Glynn, so far as
+I know, stops at the confiscation of all private property in rent by the
+State for the State. But here is simply a confiscation of the property
+of A for the benefit of B, such as might happen if B, being armed and
+meeting A unarmed in a forest, should confiscate the watch and chain of
+A, bought by A of B&rsquo;s lamented but unthrifty father twenty years before!</p>
+
+<p>After dinner to-night Mr. Tener gave me some interesting and edifying
+accounts of his experience in other parts of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Some time ago, before the Plan of Campaign was adopted, one of his
+tenants in Cavan came to him with a doleful story of the bad times and
+the low <a name="page128" id="page128"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 128]
+</span>prices, and wound up by saying he could pay no more than half a
+year&rsquo;s rent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now his rent had been reduced under the Land Act,&rdquo; said Mr, Tener, &ldquo;and
+I had voluntarily thrown off a lot of arrears, so I looked at him
+quietly and said, &lsquo;Mickey, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have
+been very well treated, and you can perfectly well pay your rent. Your
+wife would be ashamed of you if she knew you were trying to get out of
+it.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah no, your honour!&rdquo; he briskly replied; &ldquo;indade she would approve it.
+If you won&rsquo;t discover on me, I&rsquo;ll tell you the truth. It was the wife
+herself, she&rsquo;s a great schollard, and reads the papers, that tould me
+not to pay you more than half the rent&mdash;for she says there&rsquo;s a new Act
+coming to wipe it all out. Will you take the half-year?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I will not. Don&rsquo;t be afraid of your wife, but pay what you owe,
+like a man. You&rsquo;ve got the money there in your pocket.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was a good shot. Mickey couldn&rsquo;t resist it, and his countenance
+broke into a broad smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah no! I&rsquo;ve got it in two pockets. Begorra, it was the wife herself
+made up the money in two <a name="page129" id="page129"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 129]
+</span>parcels, and she put one into each pocket, to
+be sure&mdash;and I wasn&rsquo;t to give your honour but one, if you would take it.
+But there&rsquo;s the money, and I daresay it&rsquo;s all for the best.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On another occasion, when he was collecting the rents of a property in
+the county of Longford, one tenant came forward as the spokesman of the
+rest, admitted that the rents had been accepted fairly after a reduction
+under the Land Act, expressed the general wish of the tenants to meet
+their obligations, and wound up by asking a further abatement, &ldquo;the
+times were so bad, and the money couldn&rsquo;t be got, it couldn&rsquo;t indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener listened patiently&mdash;to listen patiently is the most essential
+quality of an agent in Ireland&mdash;and finally said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, if you haven&rsquo;t got the money to pay in full, pay
+three-quarters of it, and I&rsquo;ll give you time for the rest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thank your honour!&rdquo; said Pat, &ldquo;and that&rsquo;ll be thirty pounds&mdash;and here
+it is in one pound notes, and hard enough to get they are, these times!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So Mr. Tener took the money, counted the notes twice over, and then,
+writing out a receipt, handed it to the tenant.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 130]
+</span>&ldquo;All right, Pat, there&rsquo;s your receipt for thirty-nine pounds, and I&rsquo;m
+glad to see ten-pound notes going about the country in these hard
+times!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>By mistake the &ldquo;distressful&rdquo; orator had put one ten-pound note into his
+parcel! He took his receipt, and went off without a word. But the
+combination to get an &ldquo;abatement&rdquo; broke down then and there, and the
+other tenants came forward and put down their money.</p>
+
+<p>These incidents occurred to Mr. Tener himself. Not less amusing and
+instructive was a similar mistake on a larger scale made by an
+over-crafty tenant in dealing with one of Mr. Tener&rsquo;s friends a few
+years ago in the county of Leitrim. This tenant, whom we will call
+Denis, was the fugleman also of a combination. He was a cattle dealer as
+well as a farmer, and having spent a couple of hours in idly eloquent
+attempts to bring about a general abatement of the rents, he lost his
+patience.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, well, your honour!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t stay here all day talking
+like these men, I must go to the fair at Boyle. Will you take a
+deposit-receipt of the bank for ten pounds and give me the pound change?
+that&rsquo;ll just be the nine pounds for the half-year&rsquo;s rent. But all the
+same, yer honour, <a name="page131" id="page131"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 131]
+</span>those men are all farmers, and it&rsquo;s not out of the
+farm at all I made the ten pounds, it&rsquo;s out of the dealing!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you couldn&rsquo;t deal without a farm, Denis, for the stock,&rdquo; said the
+agent, as he glanced at the receipt. He hastily turned it over, and went
+on, &ldquo;Just indorse the receipt, and I&rsquo;ll consider your proposition.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The receipt was indorsed, and at once taken off by the agent&rsquo;s clerk to
+the bank to bring back pound-notes for it, while the agent quietly
+proceeded to fill out the regular form of receipt for a full year&rsquo;s
+rent, eighteen pounds. Denis noted what he supposed of course to be the
+agent&rsquo;s blunder, but like an astute person held his peace. The clerk
+came back with the notes. Denis took up his receipt, and the agent
+quietly began handing him note after note across the table.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, your honour!&rdquo; exclaimed Denis, &ldquo;what on earth are ye giving me all
+this money for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s your change,&rdquo; said the agent, quite imperturbably. &ldquo;You gave me a
+bank receipt for one hundred pounds. I have given you a receipt for your
+full year&rsquo;s rent, and here are eighty-two pounds in notes, and with it
+eighteen shillings in <a name="page132" id="page132"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 132]
+</span>silver&mdash;that&rsquo;s five per cent. reduction. I would
+have made it ten per cent., only you were so very sharp, first about not
+having the money, and then about the full receipt!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In an instant all eyes were fastened upon Denis. Ichabod! the glory had
+departed. The chorus went up from his disenchanted followers:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, glory be to God, you were not bright enough for the agent, Denis!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And so that day the agent made a very full and handsome collection&mdash;and
+there was a slight reduction in the deposit-accounts of the local bank!</p>
+
+<p>In the evening Mr. Tener gave me the details of some cases of direct
+intimidation with the names of the tenants concerned. One man, whose
+farm he visited, told him he had paid his rent not long before to the
+previous agent. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;show me your receipt!&rdquo; On this
+the tenant said that he dare not keep the receipt about him, nor even in
+the house, lest it should be demanded by the emissaries of the League,
+who went round to keep the tenants up to the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign,&rdquo; and
+that it was hidden in his stable. And he went out to the stable and
+brought it in.</p>
+
+<p>This, he had reason to believe, was not an uncom<a name="page133" id="page133"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 133]
+</span>mon case.<a id="footnotetag12"
+ name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a> The same
+man, wishing to take a grass farm which the people hoped the agent would
+consent to have &ldquo;cut up&rdquo; was asked to give two names on a
+promissory-note to pay the rent. He demurred to this, and after a parley
+said, &ldquo;Would a certificate do?&rdquo; upon which he pulled out an old
+tobacco-box, and carefully unfolded from it a bank certificate of
+deposit for a hundred pounds sterling! This tenant held eleven Irish, or
+more than seventeen English, acres, and his yearly rent was &pound;11, 16s.
+6d.</p>
+
+<p>The people before this agitation began were generally quiet, thrifty,
+and industrious. They were great sheep-raisers. An old law of the Irish
+Parliament had exempted sheep, but not cattle or <a name="page134" id="page134"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 134]
+</span>crops, from distraint,
+with an eye to encouraging the woollen interest in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>As to the sale of tenant-right in Ireland, he told me a curious story.
+One woman, a widow, whom he named, owed two year&rsquo; rent on a holding in
+Ulster at &pound;4 a year. She was abundantly able to pay, but for her own
+reasons preferred to be evicted, and, finally, by an understanding with
+him, offered her tenant-right for sale. A man who had made money in
+iron-mines in the County of Durham was a bidder, and finally offered
+&pound;240 for the holding. It was knocked down to him. He then saw the agent,
+who told him he had paid too much. The woman was then appealed to, and
+she admitted that the agent was right. But it was shown that others had
+offered &pound;200, and the woman finally agreed to take, and received, that
+amount in gold, being fifty years&rsquo; purchase!</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 135]
+</span>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Thursday, March 1.</i>&mdash;</span>This has been a crowded day. I left
+Portumna very early on a car with Mr. Tener, intending to visit the
+scene of his latest collision with the &ldquo;National&rdquo; government of Ireland,
+on my way to Loughrea. It was a bright spring morning, more like April
+in Italy than like March in America, and the country is full of natural
+beauty. We made our first halt at the derelict house of Martin Kenny,
+one of the &ldquo;victims&rdquo; of the famous &ldquo;Woodford evictions,&rdquo; so called, as I
+have said, because Woodford is the nearest town.<a id="footnotetag13"
+ name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a> The eviction here
+took place October 21st, 1887. The house has been dismantled by the
+neighbours since that time, each man carrying off a door, or a shutter,
+<a name="page136" id="page136"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 136]
+</span>or whatever best suited him. One of the constables who followed us as
+Mr. Tener&rsquo;s body-guard had been present at the eviction. He came into
+the house with us, and very graphically described the performance. The
+house was still full of heavy stones taken into it, partly to block the
+entrances, and partly as ammunition; and trunks of trees used as
+<i>chevaux defrise</i> still protruded through the door and the window. These
+trees had been cut down by the garrison in the woodlands here and there
+all over the property. I asked if the law in Ireland punished
+depredations of this sort, and was informed that trees planted by
+tenants, if registered by them within a certain time, are the property
+of the tenants. This would astonish our landlords in America, where the
+tenant who sticks so much as a sunflower into his garden-patch makes a
+present of it to his landlord.<a id="footnotetag14"
+ name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I asked if the place made a long defence. Mr. Tener and the constable
+both laughed, and the <a name="page137" id="page137"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 137]
+</span>former told me that when the storming party
+arrived shortly after daybreak, they found the house garrisoned only by
+some small boys, who had been left there to keep watch. The men were
+fast asleep at some other place. The small boys ran away as fast as
+possible to give the alarm, but the police went in, and in a jiffey
+pulled to pieces the elaborate defences prepared to repel them. Father
+Coen, the constable said, got to Kenny&rsquo;s house an hour after it was all
+over, with a mob of people howling and groaning. But the work had been
+done, and other work also at the Castle of Cloondadauv, to which we next
+drove.</p>
+
+<p>This place takes its truly awe-inspiring name from a ruined Norman tower
+standing on a picturesque promontory of no great height, which juts out
+into the lovely lake here made by the Shannon. At no great expense this
+tower might be so restored as to make an ideal fishing-box. It now
+simply adorns the holding formerly occupied by Mr. John Stanislaus
+Burke, a former tenant of Lord Clanricarde. The story of its capture on
+the 17th of September is worth telling.</p>
+
+<p>Some days before the evictions were to come off, a meeting was held at
+Woodford or Loughrea, at <a name="page138" id="page138"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 138]
+</span>which one of the speakers, the patriotic Dr.
+Tully, rather incautiously and exultingly told his hearers that the
+defence in 1886 of the tenant&rsquo;s house known as &ldquo;Fort Saunders&rdquo; had been
+a grand and gallant affair indeed, but that next time &ldquo;the exterminators
+would have to storm a castle&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>This put Mr. Tener at once on the alert, and as Mr. Burke of Cloondadauv
+was set down for eviction, it didn&rsquo;t require much cogitation to fix upon
+the fortress destined to be &ldquo;stormed.&rdquo; So he set about the campaign. The
+County Inspector of the constabulary, who had made a secret
+reconnaissance, reported that he found the place too strong to be taken
+if defended, except &ldquo;by artillery.&rdquo; So it was determined to take it by
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>When the previous evictions were made, the agent and the public forces
+had marched from Portumna by the highway to Woodford, so that, of
+course, their advent was announced by the scouts and sentinels of the
+League from hill to hill long before they reached the scene of action,
+and abundant time was given to the agitators for organising a
+&ldquo;reception.&rdquo; Mr. Tener profited by the experience of his predecessors.
+He contrived to get his force of constabulary through the town of
+Portumna <a name="page139" id="page139"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 139]
+</span>without attracting any popular attention. And as early rising
+is not a popular virtue here, he resolved to steal a march on the
+defenders of Cloondadauv.</p>
+
+<p>He had brought up certain large boats to Portumna, and put them on the
+lake. Rousing his men before dawn, he soon had them all embarked, and on
+their way swiftly and silently by the river and the lake to Cloondadauv.
+They reached the promontory by daybreak, and as soon as the hour of
+legal action had arrived they were landed, and surrounded the &ldquo;castle.&rdquo;
+The ancient portal was found to be blocked with heavy stones and trunks
+of trees, nor did any adit appear to be available, till a young
+gentleman who had accompanied the party as a volunteer, discovered in
+one wall of the tower, at some little height from the ground, the vent
+of one of those conduits not infrequently found running down through the
+walls of old castles, which were used sometimes as waste-ways for
+rubbish from above, and sometimes to receive water-pipes from below.
+Looking up into this vent, he saw a rope hanging free within it. Upon
+this he hauled resolutely, and finding it firmly attached above, came to
+the <a name="page140" id="page140"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 140]
+</span>conclusion that it must have been fixed there by the garrison as a
+means of access to the interior.</p>
+
+<p>Like an adventurous young tar, he bade his comrades stand by, and nimbly
+&ldquo;swarmed&rdquo; up the rope, without thought or care of what might await him
+at the top. In a few moments his shouts from above proclaimed the
+capture of the stronghold. It was absolutely deserted; the garrison,
+confident that no attack would that day be made, had gone off to the
+nearest village. The interior of the castle was found filled with
+munitions of war, in the shape of huge beams and piles of stones
+laboriously carried up the winding stairs, and heaped on all the
+landing-places in readiness for use. On the flat roof of the castle was
+established a sort of furnace for heating water or oil, to be poured
+down upon the besiegers; and crowbars lay there in readiness to loosen
+out and dislodge the battlements, and topple them over upon the
+assailants.</p>
+
+<p>The officers soon made their way all over the building, and thence
+proceeded to the residence of Mr. Burke near by, a large and very
+commodious house. All the formalities were gone through with, a
+detachment of policemen was put in charge, and the rest of the forces
+set out on their return to <a name="page141" id="page141"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 141]
+</span>Portumna, before the organised &ldquo;defenders&rdquo; of
+Cloondadauv, hastily called out of their comfortable beds or from their
+breakfast-tables had realised the situation, and got the populace into
+motion. A mass meeting was held in the neighbourhood, and many speeches
+were made. But the castle and the farm-house and the holding all remain
+in the hands of a cool, quiet, determined-looking young Ulsterman, who
+tells me that he is getting on very well, and feels quite able with his
+police-guard to protect himself. &ldquo;Once in a while,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;they come
+here from Loughrea with English Parliament-men, and stand outside of the
+gate, and call me &lsquo;Clanricarde&rsquo;s dog,&rsquo; and make like speeches at me; but
+I don&rsquo;t mind them, and they see it, and go away again.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Of Mr. Burke, the evicted tenant here, Mr. Crawford, the Protestant
+clergyman at Portumna, told me that he was abundantly able to pay his
+rent. The whole debt for which Burke was evicted was &pound;115; and Mr.
+Crawford said he had himself offered Burke &pound;300 for the holding. Burke
+would have gladly taken this, but &ldquo;the League wouldn&rsquo;t let him.&rdquo; When
+his right was put up for sale at Galway for &pound;5, he did not dare to buy
+it in, <a name="page142" id="page142"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 142]
+</span>and he is now living with his wife and children on the League
+funds. Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s agent offered to take him back and restore his
+right if he would pay what he owed; but he dared not accept. This farm
+comprises over one hundred and ten English acres, which Burke held at a
+rent&mdash;fixed by the Land Court&mdash;of &pound;77, the valuation for taxes being
+&pound;83.</p>
+
+<p>To call the eviction of such a tenant in such circumstances from such a
+holding a &ldquo;sentence of death,&rdquo; is making ducks and drakes of the English
+language. Mr. Crawford&rsquo;s opinion, founded upon a thorough personal
+knowledge of the region, is that there is no exceptional distress in
+this part of Ireland, and that over-renting has nothing to do with such
+distress as does exist here. The case of a man named Egan, one of the
+&ldquo;victims&rdquo; of the Woodford evictions of 1886, certainly bears out this
+view of the matter. Egan, who was a tenant, not at all of Lord
+Clanricarde, but of a certain Mrs. Lewis, had occupied for twenty years
+a holding of about sixteen Irish acres, or more than twenty English
+acres. This he held at a yearly rental of &pound;8, 15s., being 9d. over the
+valuation.</p>
+
+<p>In August 1886 he was evicted for refusing to <a name="page143" id="page143"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 143]
+</span>pay one year&rsquo;s rent then
+due. At that time the crops standing on the land were valued by him at
+&pound;60, 13s. He also owned six beasts. In other words, this man, when he
+was called upon to pay a debt of &pound;8, 15s. had in his own possession,
+beside the valuable tenant-right of his holding, more than a hundred
+pounds sterling of merchantable assets. He refused to pay, and he was
+evicted.</p>
+
+<p>This was in August 1886. But such are the ideas now current in Ireland
+as to the relations of landlord and tenant, that immediately after his
+eviction Egan sent his daughter to gather some cabbages off the farm as
+if nothing had happened. The Emergency men in charge actually objected,
+and sent the damsel away. Thereupon Egan, on the 6th of September,
+served a legal notice on Mrs. Lewis, his landlady, requiring her either
+to let him take all the crops on the farm, or to pay him their value,
+estimated by him, as I have said, at &pound;60, 13s. Two days after this, on
+the 8th of September, more than a hundred men came to the place by night
+and removed the greater portion of the crops. Not wishing a return of
+these visitors, Mrs. Lewis, on the 16th of September, sent word to Egan
+to come and take away what was left of the crops; one of <a name="page144" id="page144"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 144]
+</span>the horses
+employed in the nocturnal harvest of September 8th having been seized by
+the police and identified as belonging to Egan. Egan did not respond;
+but in July 1887 he brought an action against his landlady to recover
+&pound;100 sterling for her &ldquo;detention of his goods,&rdquo; and her &ldquo;conversion of
+the same to her own use &rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>The case was heard by the Recorder at Kilmainham, and the facts which I
+have briefly recited were established by the evidence. The daughter of
+this extraordinary &ldquo;victim&rdquo; Egan appeared as a witness, so &ldquo;fashionably
+dressed&rdquo; as to attract a remark on the subject from the defendant&rsquo;s
+counsel. To this she replied that &ldquo;her brothers in America sent her
+money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If your brothers in America sent you money for such purposes,&rdquo; not
+unnaturally observed the Recorder, &ldquo;why did they allow your father to
+sacrifice crops worth &pound;60 for the non-payment of <a name="page145" id="page145"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 145]
+</span>&pound;8, 15s.?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They were tired of that,&rdquo; said the young lady airily; &ldquo;the land wasn&rsquo;t
+worth the rent!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>That is to say, a farm which yielded a crop of &pound;60, and pastured several
+head of cattle, was not worth &pound;8, 15s. a year. Certainly it was not
+worth &pound;8, 15s. a year if the tenant under the operation of the existing
+or the impending laws of Great Britain in Ireland could get, or hope to
+get it for the half of that rent, or for no rent at all.</p>
+
+<p>But this being thus, on what grounds are the rest of mankind invited to
+regard this excellent man as a &ldquo;victim&rdquo; worthy of sympathy and of
+material aid? How had he come to be in arrears of a year in August 1886?
+The proceedings at Kilmainham tell us this.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1885 he had demanded, with other tenants of Mrs. Lewis, a
+reduction of 50 per cent. This would have given him his holding at a
+rental of &pound;4, 7s. 6d. Mrs. Lewis refused the concession, and a month
+afterwards an attempt was made to blow up her son&rsquo;s house with dynamite.
+Between that time and August 1886, all the efforts of her son, who was
+also her agent, to collect her dues by seizing beasts, were defeated by
+the driving away of the cattle, so that no remedy but an eviction was
+left to her. I take it for granted that Mrs. Lewis had a family to
+maintain, and debts of one sort and another to pay, as well as Mr.
+Egan&mdash;but I observe this material difference between her position and
+his during the whole of this period of &ldquo;strained <a name="page146" id="page146"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 146]
+</span>relations&rdquo; between
+herself and her tenant, that whereas she lay completely out of the
+enjoyment of the rent due her, being the interest on her capital,
+represented in her title to the land, Mr. Egan remained in the complete
+enjoyment and use of the land. Clearly the tenant was in a better
+position than the landlord, and as we are dealing not with the history
+of Ireland in the past, but with the condition of Ireland at present, it
+appears to me to be quite beside the purpose to ask my sympathies for
+Mr. Egan on the ground that a century or half a century ago the
+ancestors of Mr. Egan may have been at the mercy of the ancestors of
+Mrs. Lewis. However that may have been, Mr. Egan seems to me now to have
+had legally much the advantage of Mrs. Lewis. Not only this. Both
+legally and materially Mr. Egan, the tenant-farmer at Woodford, seems to
+me to have had much the advantage of thousands of his countrymen living
+and earning their livelihood by their daily labour in such a typical
+American commonwealth, for example, as Massachusetts. I have here with
+me the Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of
+Massachusetts. From this I learn that in 1876 the average yearly wages
+earned by workmen in Massachusetts were <a name="page147" id="page147"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 147]
+</span>$482.72, or in round numbers
+something over &pound;96. Out of this amount the Massachusetts workman had to
+feed, clothe, and house himself, and those dependent on him.</p>
+
+<p>His outlay for rent alone was on the average $109.07, or in round
+numbers rather less than &pound;22, making 22-1/2 per cent, of his earnings.</p>
+
+<p>How was it with Mr. Egan? Out of his labour on his holding he got
+merchantable crops worth &pound;60 sterling, or in round numbers $300, besides
+producing in the shape of vegetables and dairy stuff, pigs and poultry,
+certainly a very large proportion of the food necessary for his
+household, and raising and fattening beasts, worth at a low estimate &pound;20
+or $100 more. And while thus engaged, his outlay for rent, which
+included not only the house in which he lived, but the land out of which
+he got the returns of his labour expended upon it, was &pound;8, 15s., or
+considerably less than one-half the outlay of the Massachusetts workman
+upon the rent of nothing more than a roof to shelter himself and his
+family. Furthermore, the money thus paid out by the Massachusetts
+workman for rent was simply a tribute paid for accommodation had and
+enjoyed, while out of every pound sterling paid as rent by <a name="page148" id="page148"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 148]
+</span>the Irish
+tenant there reverted to his credit, so long as he continued to fulfil
+his legal obligations, a certain proportion, calculable, valuable, and
+saleable, in the form of his tenant-right.</p>
+
+<p>I am not surprised to learn that the Recorder dismissed the suit brought
+by Mr. Egan, and gave costs against him. But the mere fact that in such
+circumstances it was possible for Egan to bring such a suit, and get a
+hearing for it, makes it quite clear that Americans of a sympathetic
+turn of mind can very easily find much more meritorious objects of
+sympathy than the Irish tenant-farmers of Galway without crossing the
+Atlantic in quest of them.</p>
+
+<p>From Cloondadauv to Loughrea we had a long but very interesting drive,
+passing on the way, and at no great distance from each other, Father
+Coen&rsquo;s neat, prosperous-looking presbytery of Ballinakill, and the shop
+and house of a local boat-builder named Tully, who is pleasantly known
+in the neighbourhood as &ldquo;Dr. Tully,&rdquo; by reason of his recommendation of
+a very particular sort of &ldquo;pills for landlords.&rdquo; The presbytery is now
+occupied by Father Coen, who finds it becoming his position as the moral
+teacher and guide of his people to be in arrears of two and a half years
+with the rent of his holding, and who is said to <a name="page149" id="page149"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 149]
+</span>have entertained Mr.
+Blunt and other sympathising statesmen very handsomely on their visit to
+Loughrea and Woodford,<a id="footnotetag15"
+ name="footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a> &ldquo;Dr.&rdquo; Tully being one of the guests invited
+to meet them.<a id="footnotetag16"
+ name="footnotetag16"></a><a href="#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a> Not far from this presbytery, Mr. Tener showed me the
+scene of one of the most cowardly murders which have disgraced this
+region. Of Loughrea, the objective of our drive this morning, Sir George
+Trevelyan, I am told, during his brief rule in Ireland, found it
+necessary to say that murder had there become an institution. Woodford,
+previously a dull and law-abiding spot, was illuminated by a lurid light
+of modern progress about three years ago, upon the transfer thither in
+the summer of 1885 of a priest from Loughrea, familiarly known as &ldquo;the
+firebrand priest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In November of that year, as I have already related, Mr. Egan and other
+tenants of Mrs. Lewis of <a name="page150" id="page150"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 150]
+</span>Woodford made their demand for a 50 per cent.
+reduction of their rents, upon the refusal of which an attempt was made
+with dynamite on the 18th December to blow up the house of Mrs. Lewis&rsquo;s
+son and agent. All the bailiffs in the region round about were warned to
+give up serving processes, and many of them were cowed into doing so.
+One man, however, was not cowed. This was a gallant Irish soldier,
+discharged with honour after the Crimean war, and known in the country
+as &ldquo;Balaklava,&rdquo; because he was one of the &ldquo;noble six hundred,&rdquo; who there
+rode &ldquo;into the jaws of death, into the valley of hell.&rdquo; His name was
+Finlay, and he was a Catholic. At a meeting in Woodford, Father Coen
+(the priest now in arrears), it is said, looked significantly at Finlay,
+and said, &ldquo;no process-server will be got to serve processes for Sir
+Henry Burke of Marble Hill.&rdquo; The words and the look were thrown away on
+the veteran who had faced the roar and the crash of the Russian guns,
+and later on, in December 1885, Finlay did his duty, and served the
+processes given to him. From that moment he and his wife were
+&ldquo;boycotted.&rdquo; His own kinsfolk dared not speak to him. His house was
+attacked by night. He was a doomed man. On the 3d March 1886, about 2
+o&rsquo;clock P.M., <a name="page151" id="page151"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 151]
+</span>he left his house&mdash;which Mr. Tener pointed out to me&mdash;to
+cut fuel in a wood belonging to Sir Henry Burke, at no great distance.
+Twice he made the journey between his house and the wood. The third time
+he went and returned no more. His wife growing uneasy at his prolonged
+absence went out to look for him. She found his body riddled with
+bullets lying lifeless in the highway. The police who went into Woodford
+with the tale report the people as laughing and jeering at the agony of
+the widowed woman. She was with them, and, maddened by the savage
+conduct of these wretched creatures, she knelt down over-against the
+house of Father Egan, and called down the curse of God upon him.</p>
+
+<p>On the next day things were worse. No one could be found to supply a
+coffin for the murdered man.<a id="footnotetag17"
+ name="footnotetag17"></a><a href="#footnote17"><sup>17</sup></a> When the police called upon the priests
+to exert their influence and enforce some semblance at least of
+Christian and Catholic decency upon the people confided to their charge,
+the priests not only refused to do their duty, but floutingly referred
+the police to Lady Mary Burke. &ldquo;He did her work,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;let her
+send a hearse now to bury him.&rdquo; <a name="page152" id="page152"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 152]
+</span>The lady thus insolently spoken of is
+one of the best of the Catholic women of Ireland. At her summons Father
+Burke, a few years only before his death, I remember, made a long winter
+journey, though in very bad health, from Dublin to Marble Hill to soothe
+the last hours and attend the death-bed of her husband.</p>
+
+<p>No one who knew and loved him can wish him to have lived to hear from
+her lips such a tale of the degradation of Catholic priests in his own
+land of Galway.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener pointed out to me, at another place on the road, near
+Ballinagar, the deserted burying-ground in which, after much trouble, a
+grave was found for the brave old soldier who had escaped the Russian
+cannon-balls to be so foully done to death by felons of his own race.
+There the last rites were performed by Father Callaghy, a priest who was
+himself &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; for resigning the presidency of the League in his
+parish, and for the still graver offence of paying his rent. For weeks
+it was necessary to guard the grave!<a id="footnotetag18"
+ name="footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18"><sup>18</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 153]
+</span>From that day to this no one has been brought to justice for this crime,
+committed in broad daylight, and within sight of the highway. Mr. Place,
+whom I saw at Portumna, told me that he believed the police had no moral
+doubt as to the murderer of Finlay, but that it was useless to think of
+getting legal evidence to convict him.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener tells me that when Mr. Wilfrid Blunt came to Woodford he went
+with Father Egan, and accompanied by the police, to see the widow of
+this murdered man, heard from her own lips the sickening story, and took
+notes of it. But when Mr. Rowlands, M.P., an English &ldquo;friend of Home
+Rule,&rdquo; was examined the other day during the trial of Mr. Blunt, he was
+obliged to confess that though he had visited Woodford more than once,
+and conversed <a name="page154" id="page154"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 154]
+</span>freely with Mr. Blunt about it, he had &ldquo;never heard of the
+murder of Finlay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Such an incident is apparently of little interest to politicians at
+Westminster. Fortunately for Ireland, it is of a nature to command more
+attention at the Vatican.</p>
+
+<p>Nature has sketched the scenery of this part of Ireland with a free,
+bold hand. It is not so grand or so wild as the scenery of Western
+Donegal, but it has both a wildness and a grandeur of its own. Sir Henry
+Burke&rsquo;s seat of Marble Hill, as seen in the distance from the road,
+stands superbly, high up on a lofty range of wooded hills, from which it
+commands the country for miles. And no town I have seen in Ireland is
+more picturesquely placed than Loughrea. It has an almost Italian aspect
+as you approach it from Woodford. But no lake in Lombardy or Piedmont is
+so peculiarly and exquisitely tinted as the lough on which it stands.
+The delicate grey-green of the sparkling waters reminded me of the
+singular and well-defined belts and stretches of chrysoprase upon which
+you sometimes come in sailing through the dark azure of the Southern
+Seas. I have never before seen precisely such a hue in any body of fresh
+water. The lake <a name="page155" id="page155"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 155]
+</span>is incorrectly described, Mr. Tener tells me, in the
+guide-books, as being one of the many curious developments of the Lower
+Shannon. It is fed by springs, but if, like the river-lakes, it was
+formed by a solution of the limestone, this fact may have some chemical
+relation with its very peculiar colour. It contains three picturesque
+islands. No stream flows into it, but two streams issue from it. The
+town of Loughrea is an ancient holding of the De Burghs, and the
+estate-office of Lord Clanricarde is here in one wing of a great
+barrack, standing, as I understood Mr. Tener to say, on the site of a
+former fortress of the family. Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s property here is put
+down by Mr. Hussey de Burgh at 49,025 acres in County Galway, valued at
+&pound;19,634, and at 3576 acres in the county of the City of Galway, valued
+at &pound;1202. These, I believe, are statute acres, and in estimating the
+relation of Irish rentals to Irish land this fact must be always
+ascertained. Of the so-called &ldquo;Woodford&rdquo; property the present rental is
+no more than &pound;1900, payable by 260 tenants. The Poor-Law valuation for
+taxes is &pound;2400. There was a revision of the whole Galway property made
+by the father of the present Marquis. Of the 260 Woodford holdings <a name="page156" id="page156"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 156]
+</span>only
+twelve were increased, in no case more than 6-1/4 per cent, over the
+valuation. In 1882 six of these twelve tenants applied to the Land
+Court. The rents were in no case restored to the figures before 1872,
+but about 7 per cent. was taken off the increased rental. The assertion
+repeatedly made that in 1882 rents were reduced by the Land Court 50 per
+cent. on the Clanricarde estates, Mr. Tener tells me, is absolutely
+false. In the first year of the Court no reduction went beyond 10 per
+cent., and in later years, even under the panic of low prices, the
+average has not exceeded 20 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>After making arrangements for a car to take me on to Woodlawn, where I
+was to catch the Dublin train, I went out with Mr. Tener to look at the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>My drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn was delightful. It took me over a
+long stretch of the best hunting country of Galway, and my jarvey was a
+Galwegian of the type dear to the heart of Lever. He was a &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo;
+after his fashion, but he did not hesitate to come rattling up through
+the town to the Estate Office to take me up; and after we got fairly off
+upon the highway, he spoke with more freedom than respect of all sorts
+and conditions of men in and about Loughrea.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 157]
+</span>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a sharp little man, that Mr. Tener,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and he gave the
+boys a most beautiful beating at Burke&rsquo;s place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was said with genuine gusto, and not at all in the querulous spirit
+of the delightful member of Parliament who complained at Westminster
+with unconscious humour that the agent and the police in that case had
+&ldquo;dishonourably&rdquo; stolen a march on the defenders of Cloondadauv!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But we&rsquo;ve beaten them entirely,&rdquo; he said, with equal zest, &ldquo;at Marble
+Hill. Sir Henry has agreed to pay all the costs, and the living expenses
+too, of the poor men that were put out.<a id="footnotetag19"
+ name="footnotetag19"></a><a href="#footnote19"><sup>19</sup></a> I didn&rsquo;t ever think we&rsquo;d get
+that; but ye see the truth is,&rdquo; he added confidentially, &ldquo;he must have
+the money, Sir Henry&mdash;he&rsquo;s lying out of a deal, and then there&rsquo;s heavy
+charges on the property. A fine property it is indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In fact,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;you put Sir Henry to the wall. Is that it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s like that. But we shan&rsquo;t get that out <a name="page158" id="page158"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 158]
+</span>of Clanricarde, I&rsquo;m
+thinking. He&rsquo;s got a power o&rsquo; money they tell me; and he&rsquo;s that of the
+ould Burke blood, he won&rsquo;t mind fighting just as long as you like!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As we drove along, he pointed out to me several fine stretches of
+hunting country, and, to my surprise, informed me that only the other
+day &ldquo;there was as fine a meet as ever you saw, more than a hundred
+ladies and gentlemen&mdash;a grand sight it was.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I asked if the hunting had not been &ldquo;put down by the League.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, now then, sir, who&rsquo;d be wanting to put down the hunting here in
+Galway?&mdash;and Ballinasloe? Were you ever at Ballinasloe? just the
+grandest horse fair there is in the whole wide world!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I insisted that I had always heard a great deal about the opposition of
+the League to hunting.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;ll be some little lawyer fellow,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;like that
+Healy, that can&rsquo;t sit on a horse! It&rsquo;s the grandest country in all the
+world for riding over. What for wouldn&rsquo;t they ride over it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Were there many went out to America from about Loughrea?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes; they were always coming and going. But as many came back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 159]
+</span>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they didn&rsquo;t like the country. It wasn&rsquo;t as good a country, was it,
+as old Ireland? And they had to work too hard; and then some of them got
+money, and they&rsquo;d like to spend it in the old place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The country about Woodlawn is very picturesque and well wooded, and for
+a long distance we followed the neatly-kept stone walls of the large and
+handsome park of Lord Ashtown.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The most beautiful and biggest trees in all Ireland, sorr,&rdquo; said the
+jarvey, &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s a great pity, it is, ye can&rsquo;t stay to let me drive you
+all over it, for the finest part of the park is just what you can&rsquo;t see
+from this road. Oh, her ladyship would never object to any gentleman
+driving about to see the beauties of the place. She is a very good
+woman, is her ladyship. She gave work the last Christmas to thirty-two
+men, and there wasn&rsquo;t another house in the country there that had work
+for more than ten or twelve. A very good woman she is, indeed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, that is a very handsome church, it is indeed. It is the Protestant
+Church. Lord Ashtown built it; he was a very good man too, and did a
+power of good&mdash;building and making roads, and giving work to the people.
+He was buried there in <a name="page160" id="page160"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 160]
+</span>that Castle, over the station&mdash;Trench&rsquo;s Castle,
+they called it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All that lumber there by the station?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That came out of the Ashtown woods. They were always cutting down the
+trees; there was so many of them you might be cutting for years&mdash;you
+would never get to the end of them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Woodlawn Station is one of the neatest and prettiest railway stations I
+have seen in Ireland&mdash;more like a picturesque stone cottage, green and
+gay with flowers, than like a station. The station-master&rsquo;s family of
+cheery well-dressed lads and lasses went and came about the bright fire
+in the waiting-room in a friendly unobtrusive fashion, chatting with the
+policeman and the porter and the passengers. It was hard to believe
+one&rsquo;s-self within an easy drive of the &ldquo;cockpit of Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 161]
+</span>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BORRIS, <i>Friday, March 2d.</i>&mdash;</span>This is the land of the Kavanaghs, and a
+lovely, picturesque, richly-wooded land it is. I left Dublin with Mr.
+Gyles by an afternoon train; the weather almost like June. We ran from
+the County of Dublin into Kildare, and from Kildare into Carlow, through
+hills; rural scenery quite unlike anything I have hitherto seen in
+Ireland. At Bagnalstown, a very pretty place, with a spire which takes
+the eye, our host joined us, and came on with us to this still more
+attractive spot. Borris has been the seat of his family for many
+centuries. The MacMorroghs of Leinster, whom the Kavanaghs lineally
+represent, dwelt here long before Dermot MacMorrogh, finding his
+elective throne in Leinster too hot to hold him, went off into
+Aquitaine, to get that famous &ldquo;letter of marque&rdquo; from Henry II. of
+England, with the help of which this king without a kingdom induced
+Richard de Clare, an earl without an earldom, to lend him a <a name="page162" id="page162"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 162]
+</span>hand and
+bring the Normans into Ireland. Many of this race lie buried in the
+ruins of St. Mullen&rsquo;s Abbey, on the Barrow, in this county. But none of
+them, I opine, ever did such credit to the name as its present
+representative, Arthur MacMorrogh Kavanagh.</p>
+
+<p>I had some correspondence with Mr. Kavanagh several years ago, when he
+sent me, through my correspondent for publication in New York, a very
+striking statement of his views on the then condition of Irish
+affairs&mdash;views since abundantly vindicated; and like most people who
+have paid any attention to the recent history of Ireland, I knew how
+wonderful an illustration his whole career has been of what philosophers
+call the superiority of man to his accidents, and plain people the power
+of the will. But I knew this only imperfectly. His servant brought him
+up to the carriage and placed him in it. This it was impossible not to
+see. But I had not talked with him for five minutes before it quite
+passed out of my mind. Never was there such a justification of the
+paradoxical title which Wilkinson gave to his once famous book, <i>The
+Human Body, and its Connexion with Man</i>,&mdash;never such a living refutation
+of the theory that it is the <a name="page163" id="page163"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 163]
+</span>thumb which differentiates man from the
+lower animals. Twenty times this evening I have been reminded of the
+retort I heard made the other day at Cork by a lawyer, who knows Mr.
+Kavanagh well, to a priest of &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo; proclivities, who knows him
+not at all. Some allusion having been made to Borris, the lawyer said to
+me, &ldquo;You will see at Borris the best and ablest Irishman alive.&rdquo; On this
+the priest testily and tartly broke in, &ldquo;Do you mean the man without
+hands or feet?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; replied the lawyer, very quietly, &ldquo;the man in whom all that
+has gone in you or me to arms and legs has gone to heart and head!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Borris House stands high in the heart of an extensive and nobly wooded
+park, and commands one of the finest landscapes I have seen in Ireland.
+As we stood and gazed upon it from the hall door, the distant hills were
+touched with a soft purple light such as transfigures the Apennines at
+sunset.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You should see this view in June,&rdquo; said Mrs, Kavanagh, &ldquo;we are all
+brown and bare now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Brown and bare, like most other terms, are relative. To the eye of an
+American this whole region now seems a sea of verdure, less clear and
+fresh, I can easily suppose, than it may be in the early <a name="page164" id="page164"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 164]
+</span>summer, but
+verdure still. And one must get into the Adirondacks, or up among the
+mountains of Western Virginia, to find on our Atlantic slope such trees
+as I have this evening seen. One grand ilex near the house could hardly
+be matched in the Villa d&rsquo;Este.</p>
+
+<p>The house is stately and commodious, and more ancient than it appears to
+be,&mdash;so many additions have been made to it at different times. It has
+passed through more than one siege, and in the &rsquo;98 Mr. Kavanagh tells me
+the townspeople of Borris came up here and sought refuge. There are vast
+caverns under the house and grounds, doubtless made by taking out from
+the hill the stone used in building this house, and the fortresses which
+stood here before it. In these all sorts of stores were kept, and many
+of the people found shelter.</p>
+
+<p>I need not say that there is a banshee at Borris&mdash;though no living
+witness, I believe, has heard its warning wail. But as we sat in the
+beautiful library, and watched the dying light of day, a lady present
+told us a tale more gruesome than many of those in which the &ldquo;psychical&rdquo;
+inquirers delight. She was sitting, she said, in an upper room of an
+ancient mansion here in Carlow, in which she <a name="page165" id="page165"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 165]
+</span>lives, when, from the lawn
+below, there came up to her a low, sad, shrill cry&mdash;the croon of a
+woman, such as one hears from the mourners sitting among the turbaned
+tombstones of the hill of Eyoub at Constantinople. It startled her, and
+she held her breath and listened. She was alone, as she knew, in that
+part of the house, and the hall door below was unlocked, as is the
+fashion still in Ireland, despite all the troubles and turmoils. Again
+the sound came, and this time nearer to the house. Could it be the
+banshee? Again and again it rose and died away, each time nearer and
+nearer. Then, as she listened, all her nerves strung to the keenest
+sensibility, it came again, and now, beyond a doubt, within the hall
+below.</p>
+
+<p>With an effort she rose from her chair, opened a door leading into a
+corridor running aside from the main stairway, and fled at full speed
+towards the wing in which she knew that she would find some of the
+maids. As she sped along she heard the cry again and again far behind
+her, as from a creature slowly and steadily mounting the grand stairway
+towards the room which she had just quitted.</p>
+
+<p>She found the maids, who fell into a terrible fright when she told her
+story and dared not budge. <a name="page166" id="page166"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 166]
+</span>So the bells were violently rung till the
+butler and footman appeared. To the first she said simply, &ldquo;There is a
+mad woman in this house&mdash;go and find her!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The man looked at me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;as I spoke with a curious expression
+in his face as of one who thought, &lsquo;yes, there is a mad woman in the
+house, and she is not far to seek!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the lady insisted, and the men finally went off on their quest. In
+the course of half an hour it was rewarded. The mad woman&mdash;a dangerous
+creature&mdash;who had wandered away from an asylum in the neighbourhood, was
+found curled up and fast asleep in the lady&rsquo;s own bed!</p>
+
+<p>Fancy a delicate woman going alone into her bedroom at midnight to be
+suddenly confronted by an apparition of that sort!</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BORRIS, <i>March 3d.</i>&mdash;</span>After a stroll on the lawn this morning, the wide
+and glorious prospect bathed in the light of a really soft spring day, I
+had a conversation with Mr. Kavanagh about the Land Corporation, of
+which he is the guiding spirit. This is a defensive organisation of the
+Irish landlords against the Land League. When a landlord has been driven
+into <a name="page167" id="page167"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 167]
+</span>evicting his tenants, the next step, in the &ldquo;war against
+landlordism,&rdquo; is to prevent other tenants from taking the vacated lands
+and cultivating them. This is accomplished by &ldquo;boycotting&rdquo; any man who
+does this as a &ldquo;land-grabber.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The ultimate sanction of the &ldquo;boycott&rdquo; being &ldquo;murder,&rdquo; derelict farms
+increased under this system very rapidly; and the Eleventh Commandment
+of the League, &ldquo;Thou shalt not pay the rent which thy neighbour hath
+refused to pay,&rdquo; was in a fair way to dethrone the Ten Commandments of
+Sinai throughout Ireland, even before the formal adoption in 1886 of the
+&ldquo;Plan of Campaign.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Gladstone would perhaps have hit the facts more accurately, if,
+instead of calling an eviction in Ireland a &ldquo;sentence of death,&rdquo; he had
+called the taking of a tenancy a sentence of death. Mr. Hussey at Lixnaw
+had two tenants, Edmond and James Fitzmaurice. Edmond Fitzmaurice was
+&ldquo;evicted&rdquo; in May 1887; but he was taken into the house of a neighbour,
+made very comfortable, and still lives. James Fitzmaurice took, for the
+sake of the family, the land from which Edmond was evicted, and for this
+he was denounced as a &ldquo;land-grabber,&rdquo; boycotted, and finally shot dead
+in the presence of his daughter.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 168]
+</span>At a meeting in Dublin in the autumn of 1885, a parish priest, the Rev.
+Mr. Cantwell, described it as a &ldquo;cardinal virtue&rdquo; that &ldquo;no one should
+take a farm from which another had been evicted,&rdquo; and called upon the
+people who heard him to &ldquo;pass any such man by unnoticed, and treat him
+as an enemy in their midst.&rdquo; Public opinion and the law, if not the
+authorities of his church would make short work of any priest who talked
+in this fashion in New York. But in Ireland, and under the British
+Government, it seems they order things differently. So it occurred one
+day to the landlords thus assailed, as it did to the sea-lions of the
+Cape of Good Hope when the French sailors attacked them, that they might
+defend themselves.</p>
+
+<p>To this end the Land Corporation was instituted, with a considerable
+capital at its back, and Mr. Kavanagh at its head. The &ldquo;plan of
+campaign&rdquo; of this Corporation is to take over from the landlords
+derelict lands and cultivate them, stocking them where that is
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>It is in this way that the derelict lands on the Ponsonby property at
+Youghal are now worked. But Mr. Kavanagh tells me that the men employed
+by the Corporation, of whom Father Keller spoke <a name="page169" id="page169"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 169]
+</span>as a set of desperadoes
+or &ldquo;<i>enfants perdus</i>,&rdquo; are really a body of resolute and capable working
+men farmers. Many, but by no means all of them, are Protestants and
+Ulstermen; and that they are up to their work would seem to be shown by
+the fact stated to me, that in no case so far have any of them been
+deterred and driven off from the holdings confided to them. A great part
+of the Luggacurren property of Lord Lansdowne is now worked by the
+Corporation; and Mr. Kavanagh was kind enough to let me see the
+accounts, which indicate a good business result for the current year on
+that property. This is all very interesting. But what a picture it
+presents of social demoralisation! And what is to be the end of it all?
+Can a country be called civilised in which a farmer with a family to
+maintain, having the capital and the experience necessary to manage
+successfully a small farm, is absolutely forbidden, on pain of social
+ostracism, and eventually on pain of death, by a conspiracy of his
+neighbours, to take that farm of its lawful owner at what he considers
+to be a fair rent? And how long can any civilisation of our complex
+modern type endure in a country in which such a state of things
+tolerated by the alleged Government of that country <a name="page170" id="page170"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 170]
+</span>has to be met, and
+more or less partially mitigated, by deviating to the cultivation of
+farms rendered in this way derelict large amounts of capital which might
+be, and ought to be, far more profitably employed in other ways?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Kavanagh, after serving the office of High Sheriff thirty years ago,
+first for Kilkenny, and then for Carlow, sat in Parliament for fourteen
+years, from 1866 to 1880, as an Irish county member. He has a very large
+property here in Carlow, and property also in Wexford, and in Kilkenny,
+and was sworn into the Privy Council two years ago. If the personal
+interests and the family traditions of any man alive can be said to be
+rooted in the Irish soil, this is certainly true of his interests and
+his traditions. How can the peace and prosperity of Ireland be served by
+a state of things which condemns an Irishman of such ties and such
+training to expend his energies and his ability in defending the
+elementary right of Paddy O&rsquo;Rourke to take stock and work a ten-acre
+farm on terms that suit himself and his landlord?</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon we took a delightful walk through the woods, Mr.
+Kavanagh going with us on horseback. Every hill and clump of trees on
+this <a name="page171" id="page171"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 171]
+</span>large domain he knows, and he led us like a master of woodcraft
+through all manner of leafy byways to the finest points of view. The
+Barrow flows past Borris, making pictures at every turn, and the banks
+on both sides are densely and beautifully wooded. We came in one place
+upon a sawmill at work in the forest, and Mr. Kavanagh showed us with
+pride the piles of excellent timber which he turns out here. But he took
+a greater pride in a group, sacred from the axe, of really magnificent
+Scotch firs, such as I had certainly not expected to find in Ireland.
+Nearer the mansion are some remarkable Irish yews. The gardens are of
+all sorts and very extensive, but we found the head-gardener bitterly
+lamenting the destruction by a fire in one of the conservatories of more
+than six thousand plants just prepared for setting out.</p>
+
+<p>There are many curious old books and papers here, and a student of early
+Irish history might find matter to keep him well employed for a long
+time in this region. It was from this region and the race which ruled
+it, of which race Mr. Kavanagh is the actual representative, that the
+initiative came of the first Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. Strongbow
+made what, from the Anglo-Norman point of view, <a name="page172" id="page172"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 172]
+</span>was a perfectly
+legitimate bargain, with a dispossessed prince to help him to the
+recovery of his rights on the understanding that these rights, when
+recovered, should pass in succession to himself through the only
+daughter of the prince, whom he proposed to marry. It does not appear
+that Strongbow knew, or that Dermot MacMorrogh cared to tell him, how
+utterly unlike the rights of an Anglo-Norman prince were those of the
+elective life-tenant of an Irish principality. FitzStephen, the son by
+her second marriage of Nesta, the Welsh royal mistress of Henry
+Beauclerk, and his cousin, Maurice Fitzgerald, the leaders into Ireland
+of the Geraldines, were no more clear in their minds about this than
+Strongbow, and it is to the original muddle thus created that Professor
+Richey doubtless rightly refers the worst and most troublesome
+complications of the land question in Ireland. The distinction between
+the King&rsquo;s lieges and the &ldquo;mere Irish,&rdquo; for example, is unquestionably a
+legal distinction, though it is continually and most mischievously used
+as if it were a proof of the race-hatred borne by the Normans and Saxons
+in Ireland from the first against the Celts. The O&rsquo;Briens, the O&rsquo;Neills,
+the O&rsquo;Mullaghlins, the O&rsquo;Connors, and the M&lsquo;Morroghs, <a name="page173" id="page173"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 173]
+</span>&ldquo;the five bloods,&rdquo;
+as they are called, were certainly Celts, but whether in virtue of their
+being, or claiming to be, the royal races respectively of Minister, of
+Ulster, of Meath, of Connaught, and of Leinster, or from whatever other
+reason, these races were &ldquo;within the king&rsquo;s law,&rdquo; and were never &ldquo;mere
+Irish&rdquo; from the first planting of the Anglo-Norman power in Ireland. The
+case of a priest, Shan O&rsquo;Kerry, &ldquo;an Irish enemy of the king,&rdquo; presented
+&ldquo;contrary to the form of statute&rdquo; to the vicarage of Lusk, in the reign
+of Edward IV. (1465), illustrates this. An Act of Parliament was passed
+to declare the aforesaid &ldquo;Shan O&rsquo;Kerry,&rdquo; or &ldquo;John of Kevernon,&rdquo; to be
+&ldquo;English born, and of English nation,&rdquo; and that he might &ldquo;hold and enjoy
+the said benefice.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There is a genealogy here of the M&lsquo;Morroghs and Kavanaghs, most
+gorgeously and elaborately gotten up many years ago for Mr. Kavanagh&rsquo;s
+grandfather, which shows how soon the Norman and the native strains of
+blood become commingled. When one remembers how much Norman blood must
+have gone even into far-off Connaught when King John, in the early part
+of the thirteenth century, coolly gave away that realm of the O&rsquo;Connors
+to the <a name="page174" id="page174"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 174]
+</span>De Burgos, and how continually the English of the Pale fled from
+the exactions inflicted upon them by their own people, and sought refuge
+&ldquo;among the savage and mere Irish,&rdquo; one cannot help thinking that the&ldquo;
+Race Question&rdquo; has been &ldquo;worked for at least all it is worth&rdquo; by
+philosophers bent on unravelling the &lsquo;snarl&rsquo; of Irish affairs. If this
+genealogy may be trusted, there was little to choose between the ages
+which immediately preceded and the ages which followed the Anglo-Norman
+invasion in the matter of respect for human life. Celtic chiefs and
+Norman knights &ldquo;died in their boots&rdquo; as regularly as frontiersmen in
+Texas. One personage is designated in the genealogy as &ldquo;the murderer,&rdquo;
+for the truly Hibernian reason, so far as appears, that he was himself
+murdered while quite a youth, and before he had had a chance to murder
+more than three or four of his immediate relatives. It was as if the son
+of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Lady Constance should be branded in
+history as &ldquo;Arthur, the Assassin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BORRIS, <i>March 4th.</i>&mdash;</span>This is a staunch Protestant house, and Mr.
+Kavanagh himself reads a Protestant service every morning. But there is
+little or <a name="page175" id="page175"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 175]
+</span>nothing apparently in this part of Ireland of the bitter
+feeling about and against the Catholics which exists in the North. A
+very lively and pleasant Catholic gentleman came in to-day informally
+and joined the house party at luncheon. We all walked out over the
+property afterwards, visiting quite a different region from that which
+we saw yesterday&mdash;different but equally beautiful and striking, and this
+Catholic gentleman cited several cases which had fallen within his own
+knowledge of priests who begin to feel their moral control of the people
+slipping away from them through the operation of the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign.&rdquo;
+I told him what I had heard in regard to one such priest from my
+ecclesiastical friend in Cork. &ldquo;It does not surprise me at all,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;and, indeed, I not very long ago read precisely such another
+letter from a priest in a somewhat similar position. I read it with pain
+and shame as a Catholic,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;for it was simply a complete
+admission that the priest, although entirely convinced that his
+parishioners were making most unfair demands upon their landlord to whom
+the letter was addressed, felt himself entirely powerless to bring them
+to a sense of their misconduct.&rdquo; &ldquo;Had this priest given in his ad<a name="page176" id="page176"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 176]
+</span>hesion
+to the Plan of Campaign?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;and it was
+this fact which had broken his hold on the people when he tried to bring
+them to abandon their attitude under the Plan. His letter was really
+nothing more nor less than an appeal to the landlord, and that landlord
+a Protestant, to help him to get out of the hole into which he had put
+himself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Of the tenants and their relation to the village despots who administer
+the Plan of Campaign, this gentleman had many stories also to tell of
+the same tenor with all that I have hitherto heard on this subject.
+Everywhere it is the same thing. The well-to-do and well-disposed
+tenants are coerced by the thriftless and shiftless. &ldquo;I have the
+agencies of several properties,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and in some of the best parts
+of Ireland. I have had little or no trouble on any of them, for I have
+one uniform method. I treat every tenant as if he were the only man I
+had to deal with, study his personal ways and character, humour him, and
+get him on my side against himself. You can always do this with an
+Irishman if you will take the trouble to do it. Within the past years I
+have had tenants come and tell me they were in fear the Plan of Campaign
+<a name="page177" id="page177"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 177]
+</span>would be brought upon them, just as if it were a kind of potato disease,
+and beg me to agree to take the rent from them in that case, and just
+not discover on them that they had paid it before it was due!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This gentleman is a pessimist as to the future. &ldquo;I am a youngish man
+still,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and a single man, and I am glad of it. I don&rsquo;t believe
+the English will ever learn how to govern this country, and I am sure it
+can never govern itself. Would your people make a State of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To this I replied that with Cuba and Canada and Mexico, all still to be
+digested and assimilated, I thought the deglutition of Ireland by the
+great Republic must be remitted to a future much too remote to interest
+either of us.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; he said in a humorously despondent tone; &ldquo;and so I see
+nothing for people who think as I do, but Australia or New Zealand!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Kavanagh sees the future, I think, in colouring not quite so dark.
+As a public man, familiar for years with the method and ways of British
+Parliaments, he seems to regard the possible future legislation of
+Westminster with more anxiety and alarm than the past or present
+agitations in Ireland. <a name="page178" id="page178"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 178]
+</span>The business of banishing political economy to
+Jupiter and Saturn, however delightful it may be to the people who make
+laws, is a dangerous one to the people for whom the laws are made. While
+he has very positive opinions as to the wisdom of the concession made in
+the successive Land Acts for Ireland, which have been passed since 1870,
+he is much less disquieted, I think, by those concessions, than by the
+spirit by which the legislation granting them has been guided. He thinks
+great good has been already done by Mr. Balfour, and that much more good
+will be done by him if the Irish people are made to feel that clamorous
+resistance to the law will no longer be regarded at Westminster as a
+sufficient reason for changing the law. That is as much as to say that
+party spirit in Great Britain is the chief peril of Ireland to-day. And
+how can any Irishman, no matter what his state in his own country may
+be, or his knowledge of Irish affairs, or his patriotic earnestness and
+desire for Irish prosperity, hope to control the tides of party spirit
+in England or Scotland?</p>
+
+<p>Of the influence upon the people in Ireland of the spirit of recent
+legislation for Ireland, the story of the troubles on the O&rsquo;Grady
+estate, as Mr. <a name="page179" id="page179"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 179]
+</span>Kavanagh tells it to me, is a most striking illustration.
+&ldquo;The O&rsquo;Grady of Kilballyowen,&rdquo; as his title shows, is the direct
+representative, not of any Norman invader, but of an ancient Irish race.
+The O&rsquo;Gradys were the heads of a sept of the &ldquo;mere Irish&rdquo;; and if there
+be such a thing&mdash;past, present, or future&mdash;as an &ldquo;Irish nation,&rdquo; the
+place of the O&rsquo;Gradys in that nation ought to be assumed. Mr. Thomas De
+Courcy O&rsquo;Grady, who now wears the historic designation, owns and lives
+on an estate of a little more than 1000 acres, in the Golden Vein of
+Ireland, at Killmallock, in the county of Limerick. The land is
+excellent, and for the last half-century certainly it has been let to
+the tenants at rents which must be considered fair, since they have
+never been raised. In 1845, two years before the great famine, the
+rental was &pound;2142. This rental was paid throughout the famine years
+without difficulty; and in 1881 the rental stood at &pound;2108.</p>
+
+<p>There has never been an eviction on the estate until last year, when six
+tenants were evicted. All of these lived in good comfortable houses, and
+were prosperous dairy-farmers. Why were they evicted?</p>
+
+<p><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 180]
+</span>In October 1886, during the candidacy at New York of the Land Reformer,
+Mr. George, Mr. Dillon, M.P., propounded the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; at
+Portumna in Galway. The March rents being then due on the estate of The
+O&rsquo;Grady in Limerick, his agent, Mr. Shine, was directed to continue the
+abatements of 15 per cent, on the judicial rents, and of 25 per cent, on
+all other rents, which had been cheerfully accepted in 1885. But there
+was a priest at Kilballyowen, Father Ryan, who wrought upon the tenants
+until they demanded a general abatement of 40 per cent. This being
+refused, they asked for 30 per cent. on the judicial rents, and 40 per
+cent. on the others. This also being refused, Father Ryan had his way,
+and the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; was adopted. The O&rsquo;Grady&rsquo;s writs issued
+against several of the tenants were met by a &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; auction
+of cattle at Herbertstown in December 1886, the returns of which were
+paid into &ldquo;the Fund.&rdquo; For this, one of the tenants, Thomas Moroney, who
+held, besides a a farm of 37 Irish acres, a &ldquo;public,&rdquo; and five small
+houses, at Herbertstown, and the right to the tolls on cattle at the
+Herbertstown farm, valued at from &pound;50 to &pound;60 a year, and who held all
+these at a <a name="page181" id="page181"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 181]
+</span>yearly rent of &pound;85, was proceeded against. Judge Boyd
+pronounced him a bankrupt.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1887, after The O&rsquo;Grady had been put to great costs and
+trouble, the tenants made a move. They offered to accept a general
+abatement of 17-1/2 per cent., &ldquo;The O&rsquo;Grady to pay all the costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Here is the same story again of the small solicitors behind the &ldquo;Plan of
+Campaign&rdquo; promoting the strife, and counting on the landlords to defray
+the charges of battle!</p>
+
+<p>The O&rsquo;Grady responded with the following circular:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> KlLLBALLYOWEN, BRUFF, CO. LlMERICK,<br />
+<i>13th August 1877</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center">To my Tenants on Kilballyowen and Herbertstown Estate, Co.
+ Limerick.</p>
+
+<p> MY FRIENDS,&mdash;Pending the evictions by the Sheriff on my estate,
+ caused by your refusal to pay judicial rents on offers of liberal
+ abatements, I desire to remind you of the following facts:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> I am a resident landlord; my ancestors have dwelt amongst you for
+ over 400 years; every tenant is personally known to me, and the
+ most friendly relations have always existed between us.</p>
+
+<p> I am not aware of there ever having been an eviction by the Sheriff
+ on my estate.</p>
+
+<p> Farming myself over 400 acres, and my late agent (Mr. Shine), a
+ tenant farmer living within four miles <a name="page182" id="page182"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 182]
+</span>of my property, I have every
+ opportunity of realising and knowing your wants.</p>
+
+<p> On the passing of the Land Act of 1881, I desired you to have any
+ benefit it could afford you, and as you nearly all held under
+ lease&mdash;which precluded you from going into court&mdash;I intimated to
+ you my wish, and offered you to allow your lands to be valued at my
+ expense, or to let you go into court and get your rents fixed by
+ the sub-commissioners.</p>
+
+<p> You elected to have a valuation made, and Mr. Edmond Moroney was
+ agreed on as a land-valuer, possessing the confidence of tenants
+ and landlord.</p>
+
+<p> I may mention, up to then I had not known Mr. Moroney personally.</p>
+
+<p> In 1883 Mr. Moroney valued your holdings, and, as a result, his
+ valuation was accepted (except in three or four cases), and
+ judicial agreements signed by you, at rents ascertained by Mr.
+ Moroney&rsquo;s valuation.</p>
+
+<p> The late Patrick Hogan objected to Mr. Moroney&rsquo;s valuation of his
+ farm, and went into court, and had his rent fixed by the County
+ Court Judge.</p>
+
+<p> Thomas Moroney would not allow Mr. Edmond Moroney to value his
+ holding, nor would he go into court, his reason no doubt being he
+ should disclose the receipts of the amount of the tolls of the
+ fairs.</p>
+
+<p> The rents were subsequently paid on Mr. Moroney&rsquo;s valuation with
+ punctuality.</p>
+
+<p> In 1885, recognising the fall in prices of stock and produce, and
+ at the request of my late agent, Mr. Shine, I directed him to allow
+ you 15 per cent. on all judicial rents, or rents abated on Mr.
+ Moroney&rsquo;s valuation, and 25 per cent. on all other rents, when you
+ paid punctually and with thanks.</p>
+
+<p> In October last, when calling in the March 1886 rents, at the
+ instance of Mr. Shine, I agreed to con<a name="page183" id="page183"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 183]
+</span>tinue the abatement of 15 per
+ cent, and 25 per cent., which, when intimated to you, were refused,
+ and a meeting held, demanding an all-round abatement of 40 per
+ cent.</p>
+
+<p> This I considered unreasonable and unjust, and I refused to give
+ it.</p>
+
+<p> The Plan of Campaign was then most unjustly adopted on the estate,
+ and you refused to pay your rents.</p>
+
+<p> Thomas Moroney was elected as a test case to try the legality of
+ the sale and removal of your property to avoid payment of your
+ rent. His tenancy was a mixed holding of house property in the
+ village of Herbertstown, the tolls of the fairs, and 37 acres of
+ land, at a rent of &pound;85, and a Poor-Law valuation of &pound;73, 5s., made
+ as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"> <table><tr><td> Land valued</td><td>at &pound;42 5 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td> Tolls of fair </td><td>at 17 0 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td> Public house and yard </td><td>at 11 0 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td> Five small houses and forge </td><td>at 3 0 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td>&pound;73 5 0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p> I always was led to believe the tolls of the fair averaged from &pound;50
+ to &pound;60 a year, there being four fairs in the year; and I believe
+ his reason for refusing to allow Mr. E. Moroney to value his
+ holding, or to go into court, was that he should disclose the
+ amount of the tolls, and in consequence I never considered he was
+ entitled to any abatement; but still I gave it to him, and was
+ prepared to do so. The result of his case was that his conduct in
+ making away with his property was unjustifiable, and his farm and
+ holding was sold out for the benefit of his creditors, and he is no
+ longer a tenant on the estate.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page184" id="page184"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 184]
+</span>I subsequently took proceedings against six other tenants, who
+ refused payment of rent, and removed their cattle off the land to
+ avoid payment, and having got judgment against them, the Sheriff
+ sold out four of their farms, and writs of possession on the title
+ were taken out against them, and are now lodged with the Sheriff
+ for execution. I have also got judgments for possession against two
+ other tenants for non-payment of rent, also lodged with the
+ Sheriff. One the widow of Patrick Hogan, who got his rent fixed in
+ the County Court, and the other Mrs. Denis Ryan, whose farm on her
+ marriage I assented to be put in settlement for her protection, Mr.
+ Shine, my agent, consenting to act as one of her trustees, whose
+ name, with his co-trustee, Mr. Thomas FitzGerald, appear as
+ defendants, they having signed her judicial agreement.</p>
+
+<p> The following are the names of the above tenants, the extent of
+ their holdings, the rent, the Poor-Law valuation, and the average
+ rent per Irish acre:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table>
+<thead><tr>
+<td> TENANT. </td>
+<td> Acreage in Irish&nbsp;Measure.</td>
+<td> Judicial&nbsp;Rent Less 20&nbsp;per&nbsp;cent</td>
+<td> Rent per acre [A] </td>
+<td> Poor Law Valuation </td></tr>
+</thead><tbody>
+ <tr><td> </td><td> A. R. P. </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td><td> </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>John&nbsp;Carroll </td><td> 87&nbsp;3&nbsp;38 </td><td> 132&nbsp;4&nbsp;0 </td><td> 30/- </td><td> 127&nbsp;10&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Honora&nbsp;Crimmins </td><td> 35&nbsp;0&nbsp;27 </td><td> 64&nbsp;5&nbsp;6 </td><td> 36/6 </td><td> 52&nbsp;15&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>James&nbsp;Baggott </td><td> 18&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td><td> 37&nbsp;16&nbsp;10 </td><td> 42/- </td><td> 22&nbsp;5&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Margaret&nbsp;Moloney </td><td> 23&nbsp;2&nbsp;9 </td><td> 46&nbsp;2&nbsp;8 </td><td> 39/2 </td><td> 44&nbsp;15&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Mrs.&nbsp;Denis&nbsp;Ryan </td><td> 66&nbsp;2&nbsp;3 </td><td> 93&nbsp;2&nbsp;5 </td><td> 28/- </td><td> 96&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Maryanne&nbsp;Hogan </td><td> 53&nbsp;2&nbsp;33 </td><td> 112&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td><td> 41/8 </td><td> 117&nbsp;15&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td> </td><td> 294&nbsp;3&nbsp;30 </td><td> 485&nbsp;11&nbsp;5 </td><td> ... </td><td> 461&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+</tbody></table>
+</div>
+<p>[A] Rent per Irish acre after abatement of 20 per cent.</p>
+
+<p> This represents an average of 34s. the Irish acre, for some of the
+ best land in Ireland, and shows a difference of only &pound;24, 11s. 5d.
+ between the rent, less 20 per cent. now offered, and Poor-Law
+ valuation.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page185" id="page185"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 185]
+</span>After putting me to the cost of these proceedings, and giving me
+ every opposition and annoyance, amongst such, compelling my agent
+ (by threats of boycotting) to resign, boycotting myself and
+ household, preventing my servants from attending chapel, and
+ driving my labourers away, negotiations for a settlement were
+ opened, and you offered to accept an all-round abatement of 17-1/2
+ per cent. and to pay up one year&rsquo;s rent, provided I paid all costs,
+ including the costs in Moroney&rsquo;s case; this of course I refused,
+ but with a desire to aid you in coming to a settlement, and to
+ prevent the loss to the tenants of the farms under eviction on the
+ Title, I offered to allow the 17-1/2 per cent. all round on payment
+ of one year&rsquo;s rent and costs, and to give time for payment of the
+ costs as stated in my Solicitor&rsquo;s letter of the 2d June 1887 to
+ Canon Scully.</p>
+
+<p> This offer was refused, and the writs for possession have been
+ lodged with the Sheriff.</p>
+
+<p> I never commenced these proceedings in a vindictive spirit, or with
+ any desire to punish any of you for your ungracious conduct, but
+ simply to protect my property from unjust and unreasonable demands.</p>
+
+<p> You will owe two years&rsquo; rent next month (September), and I now
+ write you this circular letter to point out to each, individually,
+ the position of the tenants under eviction, and even at this late
+ hour to give them an opportunity of saving their holdings, to
+ enable them to do so, and with a view to settlement, I am now
+ prepared to allow 20 per cent. all round, on payment of a year&rsquo;s
+ rent and costs.</p>
+
+<p> Under no circumstance will I forego payment of costs, as they must
+ be paid in full.</p>
+
+<p> If this money be paid forthwith, I will arrange with my brother,
+ the purchaser, to restore the four holdings purchased by him at
+ sheriff&rsquo;s sale to the late tenants.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page186" id="page186"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 186]
+</span>After this offer I disclaim any responsibility for the result of
+ the evictions, and the loss attendant thereon, as it now remains
+ with you to avert same.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>All the evictions have since been carried out, and the Land Corporation
+men are at work upon the estate! Whom has all this advantaged? The
+tenants?&mdash;Certainly not. The O&rsquo;Grady?&mdash;Certainly not. The peace and
+order of Ireland?&mdash;Certainly not. But it has given the National League
+another appeal to the intelligent &ldquo;sympathies&rdquo; of England and America.
+It has strengthened the revolutionary element in Irish society. It has
+&ldquo;driven another nail into the coffin&rdquo; of Irish landlordism and of the
+private ownership of land throughout Great Britain.</p>
+
+
+<p>Such at least is the opinion of Mr. Kavanagh. If I were an Englishman or
+a Scotchman, I should be strongly inclined to take very serious account
+of this opinion in forecasting the future of landed property in England
+or Scotland.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 187]
+</span>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">GREENANE HOUSE, THOMASTOWN, <i>March 5th.</i>&mdash;</span>The breakfast-room at Borris
+this morning was gay with pink coats. A meet was to come off at a place
+between Borris and Thomastown, and bidding fare-well to my cordial host
+and hostess, I set out at 11 o&rsquo;clock for a flying visit to this quaint
+and charming house of Mr. Seigne, one of the best known and most highly
+esteemed agents in this part of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>My jarvey from Borris had an unusually neat and well-balanced car. When
+I praised it he told me it was &ldquo;built by an American,&rdquo; not an Irish
+American, I understood him to say, but a genuine Yankee, who, for some
+mysterious reason, has established himself in this region, where he has
+prospered as a cart and car builder ever since. &ldquo;Just the best cars in
+all Ireland he builds, your honour!&rdquo; Why don&rsquo;t he naturalise them in
+America?</p>
+
+<p>All the way was charming, the day very bright, and even warm, and the
+hill scenery picturesque at every turn. We looked out sharply for the
+hunt, <a name="page188" id="page188"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 188]
+</span>but in vain. My jarvey, who knew the whole country, said they must
+have broken cover somewhere on the upper road, and we should miss them
+entirely. And so we did.</p>
+
+<p>The silting up of the river Nore has reduced Thomastown or
+Ballymacanton, which was its Irish name, from its former importance as
+an emporium for the country about Kilkenny. The river now is not
+navigable above Inistiogue. But two martial square towers, one at either
+end of a fine bridge which spans the stream here, speak of the good old
+times when the masters of Thomastown took toll and tribute of traders
+and travellers. The lands about the place then belonged to the great
+monastery of Jerpoint, the ruins of which are still the most interesting
+of their kind in this part of Ireland. They have long made a part of the
+estate of the Butlers. We rattled rapidly through the quiet little town,
+and whisking out of a small public square into a sort of wynd between
+two houses, suddenly found ourselves in the precincts of Grenane House.
+The house takes its name from the old castle of Grenane, an Irish
+fortress established here by some native despot long before Thomas
+Fitz-Anthony the Norman came into the <a name="page189" id="page189"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 189]
+</span>land. The ruins of this castle
+still stand some half a mile away. &ldquo;We call the place Candahar,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Seigne, as he came up with two ladies from the meadows below the
+house, &ldquo;because you come into it so suddenly, just as you do into that
+Oriental town.&rdquo; But what a charming occidental place it is! It stands
+well above the river, the slope adorned with many fine old trees, some
+of which grow, and grow prosperously, in the queerest and most
+improbable forms, bent double, twisted, but still most green and
+vigorous. They have no business under any known theory of arboriculture
+to be beautiful, but beautiful they are. The views of the bridge, of the
+towers, and of the river, from this slope would make the fortune of the
+place in a land of peace and order.</p>
+
+<p>A most original and delightful lady of the country lunched with
+us,&mdash;such a character as Miss Edgeworth or Miss Austen might have drawn.
+Shrewd, humorous, sensible, fearless, and ready with impartial hand to
+box the ears alike of Trojan and of Tyrian. She not only sees both sides
+of the question in Ireland as between the landlords and the tenants, but
+takes both sides of the question. She holds lands by inheritance, which
+make her keenly <a name="page190" id="page190"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 190]
+</span>alive to the wrongs of the landlords, and she holds
+farms as a tenant, which make her implacably critical as to their
+claims. She mercilessly demolished in one capacity whatever she advanced
+in the other, and all with the most perfect nonchalance and good faith.
+This curiously dual attitude reminded me of the confederate General,
+Braxton Bragg, of whom his comrades in the old army of the United States
+used to say that he once had a very sharp official correspondence with
+himself. He happened to hold a staff appointment, being also a line
+officer. So in his quality of a staff officer, he found fault with
+himself in his capacity as a line officer, reprimanded himself sharply,
+replied defiantly to the reprimand, and eventually reported himself to
+himself for discipline at head-quarters. She told an excellent story of
+a near kinsman of hers who, holding a very good living in the Protestant
+Irish Church, came rather unexpectedly by inheritance into a baronetcy,
+upon which his women-folk insisted that it would be derogatory to a
+baronet to be a parson. &ldquo;Would you believe it, the poor man was silly
+enough to listen to their cackle, and resign seven hundred a year!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That didn&rsquo;t clear him,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;of the cloth, did it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<a name="page191" id="page191"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 191]
+</span>Not a bit, of course, poor foolish man. He was just as much a parson as
+ever, only without a parsonage. Men are fools enough of themselves,
+don&rsquo;t you think, without needing to listen to women?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Seigne comes of a French Protestant stock long ago planted in
+Ireland, and his Gallic blood doubtless helps him to handle the
+practical problems daily submitted in these days to an Irish
+land-agent&mdash;problems very different, as he thinks, from those with which
+an Irish agent had to deal in the days before 1870. The Irish tenant has
+a vantage-ground now in his relations with his landlord which he never
+had in the olden time, and this makes it more important than it ever was
+that the agent should have what may be called a diplomatic taste for
+treating with individuals, finding out the bent of mind of this man and
+of that, and negotiating over particulars, instead of insisting, in the
+English fashion, on general rules, without regard to special cases. I
+have met no one who has seemed to me so cool and precise as Mr. Seigne
+in his study of the phenomena of the present situation. I asked him
+whether he could now say, as Mr. Senior did a quarter of century ago,
+that the Irish tenants were <a name="page192" id="page192"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 192]
+</span>less improvident, and more averse from
+running into debt than the English.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;on the contrary, in some parts of Ireland
+now the shopkeepers are kept on the verge of bankruptcy by the
+recklessness with which the tenants incurred debts immediately after the
+passing of the Land Act of 1870&mdash;a time when shopkeepers, and bankers
+also, almost forced credit upon the farmers, and made thereby &lsquo;bad
+debts&rsquo; innumerable. Farmers rarely keep anything like an account of
+their receipts and expenses. I know only one tenant-farmer in this
+neighbourhood who keeps what can be called an account, showing what he
+takes from his labour and spends on his living.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag20"
+ name="footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20"><sup>20</sup></a> &ldquo;They save a great
+deal of money often,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;but almost never in any systematic way.
+They spend much less on clothes and furniture, and the outward show of
+things, than English people of the same condition do, and they do not
+stint themselves in meat and drink as the French peasants do. In fact,
+under the operation of existing circumstances, they are getting into the
+way of improving <a name="page193" id="page193"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 193]
+</span>their condition, not so much by sacrifices and savings,
+as by an insistence on rent being fixed low enough to leave full margin
+for improved living.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had a very frank statement on this point,&rdquo; said Mr. Seigne, &ldquo;not long
+ago from a Tipperary man. When I tried to show him that his father had
+paid a good many years ago the very same rent which he declares himself
+unable to pay now, he admitted this at once. But it was a confession and
+avoidance. &lsquo;My father could pay the rent, and did pay the rent,&rsquo; he
+said, &lsquo;because he was content to live so that he could pay it. He sat on
+a boss of straw, and ate out of a bowl. He lived in a way in which I
+don&rsquo;t intend to live, and so he could pay the rent. Now, I must have,
+and I mean to have, out of the land, before I pay the rent, the means of
+living as I wish to live; and if I can&rsquo;t have it, I&rsquo;ll sell out and go
+away; but I&rsquo;ll be&mdash;if I don&rsquo;t fight before I do that same!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What could you reply to that?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;&lsquo;that&rsquo;s square and straightforward. Only just let me know
+the point at which you mean to fight, and then we&rsquo;ll see if we can agree
+about something.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo; said Mr. Seigne, &ldquo;that there is a <a name="page194" id="page194"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 194]
+</span>pressure upward now
+from below. The labourers don&rsquo;t want to live any longer as the farmers
+have always made them live; and so the farmers, having to consider the
+growing demands of the labourers, and meaning to live better themselves,
+push up against the landlord, and insist that the means of the
+improvement shall come out of him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He then told me an instructive story of his calling upon a
+tenant-farmer, at whose place he found the labourers sitting about their
+meal of pork and green vegetables. The farmer asked him into another
+room, where he saw the farmer&rsquo;s family making their meal of stirabout
+and milk and potatoes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I asked you in here,&rdquo; said the farmer, &ldquo;because we keep in here to
+ourselves. I don&rsquo;t want those fellows to see that we can&rsquo;t afford to
+give ourselves what we have to give them,&rdquo;&mdash;this with strong language
+indicating that he must himself be given a way to advance equally with
+the progressive labourer, or he would know the reason why!</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon Mr. Seigne drove me over through a beautiful country to
+Woodstock, near Inistiogue, the seat of the late Colonel Tighe, the head
+of the family of which the authoress of &ldquo;Psyche&rdquo; was an ornament.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 195]
+</span>It is the finest place in this part of Ireland, and one of the finest I
+have seen in the three kingdoms, a much more picturesque and more nobly
+planted place indeed than its namesake in England. The mansion has no
+architectural pretensions, being simply a very large and, I should
+think, extremely comfortable house of the beginning of this century. The
+library is very rich, and there are some good pictures, as well as
+certain statues in the vestibule, which would have no interest for the
+Weissnichtwo professor of <i>Sartor Resartus</i>, but are regarded with some
+awe by the good people of Inistiogue.</p>
+
+<p>The park would do no discredit to a palace, and if the vague project of
+establishing a royal residence in Ireland for one of the British Princes
+should ever take shape, it would not be easy, I should say, to find a
+demesne more befitting the home of a prince than this of the Tighes. At
+present it serves the State at least as usefully, being the &ldquo;pleasaunce&rdquo;
+of the people for miles around, who come here freely to walk and drive.</p>
+
+<p>It stretches for miles along the Nore, and is crowned by a gloriously
+wooded hill nearly a thousand feet in height. The late Colonel Tighe, a
+most accomplished man, and a passionate lover of trees, <a name="page196" id="page196"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 196]
+</span>made it a kind
+of private Kew Gardens. He planted long avenues of the rarest and finest
+trees, araucarias, Scotch firs, oaks, beeches, cedars of Lebanon; laid
+out miles of the most varied and delightful drives, and built the most
+extensive conservatories in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>The turfed and terraced walks among those conservatories are
+indescribably lovely, and the whole place to-day was vocal with
+innumerable birds. Picturesque little cottages and arbours are to be
+found in unexpected nooks all through the woodlands, each commanding
+some green vista of forest aisles, or some wide view of hill and
+champaign, enlivened by the winding river. From one of those to-day we
+looked out over a landscape to which Turner alone or Claude could have
+done justice, the river, spanned by a fine bridge, in the middle
+distance, and all the region wooded as in the days of which Edmund
+Spenser sings, when Ireland</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="i6">&ldquo;Flourished&nbsp;in&nbsp;fame,</span><br />
+ Of&nbsp;wealth&nbsp;and&nbsp;goodnesse&nbsp;far&nbsp;above&nbsp;the&nbsp;rest<br />
+ Of&nbsp;all&nbsp;that&nbsp;bears&nbsp;the&nbsp;British&nbsp;Islands&rsquo;&nbsp;name.&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Over the whole place broods an indefinable charm. You feel that this was
+the home at once and the work of a refined and thoughtful spirit. And so
+<a name="page197" id="page197"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 197]
+</span>indeed it was. Here for the greater part of the current century the
+owner lived, making the development of the estate and of this demesne
+his constant care and chief pleasure. And here still lives his widow,
+with whom we took tea in a stately quiet drawing-room. Lady Louisa Tighe
+was in Brussels with her mother, the Duchess of Richmond, on the eve of
+Waterloo. She was a child then of ten years old, and her mother bade
+them bring her down into the historic ball-room before the Duke of
+Wellington left it. The duke took up his sword. &ldquo;Let Louisa buckle it
+for you,&rdquo; said her mother, and when the little girl had girded it on,
+the great captain stooped, took her up in his arms, and kissed her. &ldquo;One
+never knows what may happen, child,&rdquo; he said good-naturedly; and taking
+his small gold watch out of his fob, he bade her keep it for him.</p>
+
+<p>She keeps it still. For more than sixty years it has measured out in
+this beautiful Irish home the hours of a life given to good works and
+gracious usefulness. To-day, with all the vivacity of interest in the
+people and the place which one might look for in a woman of twenty, this
+charming old lady of eighty-three, showing barely threescore years in
+her carriage, her countenance, and her voice, entertained <a name="page198" id="page198"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 198]
+</span>us with minute
+and most interesting accounts of the local industries which flourish
+here mainly through her sympathetic and intelligent supervision. We
+seemed to be in another world from the Ireland of Chicago or
+Westminster!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Seigne drove me back here by a most picturesque road leading along
+the banks of the Nore, quite overhung with trees, which in places dip
+their branches almost into the swift deep stream. &ldquo;This is the favourite
+drive of all the lovers hereabouts,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and there is a spice of
+danger in it which makes it more romantic. Once, not very long ago, a
+couple of young people, too absorbed in their love-making to watch their
+horse, drove off the bank. Luckily for them they fell into the branches
+of one of these overhanging trees, while the horse and car went plunging
+into the water. There they swung, holding each other hand in hand,
+making a pretty and pathetic tableau, till their cries brought some
+anglers in a boat on the river to the rescue.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We spoke of Lady Louisa, and of the watch of Waterloo. &ldquo;That watch had a
+wonderful escape a few years ago,&rdquo; said Mr. Seigne.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Louisa, it seems, had a confidential butler <a name="page199" id="page199"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 199]
+</span>whom she most
+implicitly trusted. One day it was found that a burglary had apparently
+been committed at Woodstock, and that with a quantity of jewelry the
+priceless watch had vanished. The butler was very active about the
+matter, and as no trace could be found leading out of the house, he
+intimated a suspicion that the affair might possibly have some
+connection with a guest not long before at the house. This angered Lady
+Louisa, who thereupon consulted the agent, who employed a capable
+detective from Dublin. The detective came down to Inistiogue as a
+commercial traveller, wandered about, made the acquaintance of Lady
+Louisa&rsquo;s maid, of the butler, and of other people about the house, and
+formed his own conclusions. Two or three days after his arrival he
+walked into the shop of a small jeweller in a neighbouring town, and
+affecting a confidential manner, told the jeweller he wanted to buy
+&ldquo;some of those things from Woodstock.&rdquo; The man was taken by surprise,
+and going into a backshop produced one very fine diamond, and a number
+of pieces of silver plate, of the disappearance of which the butler had
+said nothing to his mistress. This led to the arrest of the butler, and
+to the discovery that for a long time <a name="page200" id="page200"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 200]
+</span>he had been purloining property
+from the house and selling it. Many cases of excellent claret had found
+their way in this fashion to a public-house which had acquired quite a
+reputation for its Bordeaux with the officers quartered in its
+neighbourhood. The wine-bins at Woodstock were found full of bottles of
+water. Much of the capital port left by Colonel Tighe had gone&mdash;but the
+hock was untouched. &ldquo;Probably the butler didn&rsquo;t care for hock,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Seigne. The Waterloo watch was recovered from a very decent fellow, a
+travelling dealer, to whom it had been sold: and many pieces of jewelry
+were traced up to London. But Lady Louisa could not be induced to go up
+to London to identify them or testify.</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Tuesday, March 6.</i>&mdash;</span>It is a curious fact, which I learned
+to-day from the Registrar-General, that the deposits in the Post-office
+Savings Banks have never diminished in Ireland since these banks were
+established.<a id="footnotetag21"
+ name="footnotetag21"></a><a href="#footnote21"><sup>21</sup></a> These deposits are chiefly made, I understand, by the
+small tenants, who are less represented by the deposits in the General
+Savings Banks than are the shopkeepers <a name="page201" id="page201"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 201]
+</span>and the cattle-drovers. In the
+General Savings Banks the deposit line fluctuates more; though on the
+whole there has been a steady increase in these deposits also throughout
+Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Of the details of the dealings of the private banks it is very hard to
+get an accurate account. One gentleman, the manager of a branch of one
+important bank, tells me that a great deal of money is made by usurers
+out of the tenants, by backing their small bills. This practice goes
+back to the first establishment of banks in Ireland. Formerly it was not
+an uncommon thing for a landlord to offer his tenants a reduction, say,
+of twenty per cent., on condition of their paying the rent when it fell
+due. Such were the relations then between landlord and tenants, and so
+little was punctuality expected in such payments that this might be
+regarded as a sort of discount arrangement. The tenant who wished to
+avail himself of such an offer would go to some friendly local usurer
+and ask for a loan that he might avail himself of it. &ldquo;One of these
+usurers, whom I knew very well,&rdquo; said the manager, &ldquo;told me long ago
+that he found these operations very profitable. His method of procedure
+was to agree to advance the rent to the tenant at ten per <a name="page202" id="page202"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 202]
+</span>cent., payable
+at a near and certain date. This would reduce the landlord&rsquo;s reduction
+at once, of course, for the tenant, to ten per cent., but that was not
+to be disdained; and so the bargain would be struck. If the money was
+repaid at the fixed date, it was not a bad thing for the usurer. But it
+was almost never so repaid; and with repeated renewals the usurer, by
+his own showing, used to receive eventually twenty, fifty, and, in some
+cases, nearly a hundred per cent, for his loan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is the opinion of this gentleman that, under the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign,&rdquo;
+a good deal of money-making is done in a quiet way by some of the
+&ldquo;trustees,&rdquo; who turn over at good interest, with the help of friendly
+financiers, the funds lodged with them, being held to account to the
+tenants only for the principal. &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;all this is
+doubtless at least as legitimate as any other part of the &lsquo;Plan,&rsquo; and I
+daresay it all goes for &lsquo;the good of the cause.&rsquo; But neither the tenants
+nor the landlords get much by it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 203]
+</span>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Thursday, March 8.</i>&mdash;</span>At eight o&rsquo;clock this morning I left the
+Harcourt Street station for Inch, to take a look at the scene of the
+Coolgreany evictions of last summer. These evictions came of the
+adoption of the Plan of Campaign, under the direction of Mr. Dillon,
+M.P., on the Wexford property of Mr. George Brooke of Dublin. The agent
+of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s estate, Captain Hamilton, is the honorary director of
+the Property Defence Association, so that we have here obviously a
+grapple between the National League doing the work, consciously or
+unconsciously, of the agrarian revolutionists, and a combination of
+landed proprietors fighting for the rights of property as they
+understand them.</p>
+
+<p>We ran through a beautiful country for the greater part of the way. At
+Bray, which is a favourite Irish watering-place, the sea broke upon us
+bright and full of life; and the station itself was more like a
+considerable English station than any <a name="page204" id="page204"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 204]
+</span>I have seen. Thence we passed into
+a richly-wooded region, with neat, well-kept hedges, as far as Rathdrum
+and the &ldquo;Sweet Vale of Avoca.&rdquo; The hills about Shillelagh are
+particularly well forested, though, as the name suggests, they must have
+been cut for cudgels pretty extensively for now a great many years. We
+came again on the sea at the fishing port of Arklow, where the stone
+walls about the station were populous with small ragamuffins, and at the
+station of Inch I found a car waiting for me with Mr. Holmes, a young
+English Catholic officer, who had most obligingly offered to show me the
+place and the people. We had hardly got into the roadway when we
+overtook a most intelligent-looking, energetic young priest, walking
+briskly on in the direction of our course. This was Dr. Dillon, the
+curate of Arklow. We pulled up at once, and Mr. Holmes, introducing me
+to him, we begged him to take a seat with us. He excused himself as
+having to join another priest with whom he was going to a function at
+Inch; but he was good enough to walk a little way with us, and gave me
+an appointment for 2 P.M. at his own town of Arklow, where I could catch
+the train back to Dublin. We drove on rapidly and called on <a name="page205" id="page205"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 205]
+</span>Father
+O&rsquo;Neill, the parish priest. We found him in full canonicals, as he was
+to officiate at the function this morning, and with him were Father
+Dunphy, the parish priest of Arklow, and two or three more robed
+priests.</p>
+
+<p>Father O&rsquo;Neill, whose face and manner are those of the higher order of
+the continental clergy, briefly set forth to me his view of the
+transactions at Coolgreany. He said that before the Plan of Campaign was
+adopted by the tenants, Mr. William O&rsquo;Brien, M.P., had written to him
+explaining what the effect of the Plan would be, and urging him to take
+whatever steps he could to obviate the necessity of adopting it, as it
+might eventually result to the disadvantage of the tenants. &ldquo;To that
+end,&rdquo; said Father O&rsquo;Neill, &ldquo;I called upon Captain Hamilton, the agent,
+with Dr. Dillon of Arklow, but he positively refused to listen to us,
+and in fact ordered us, not very civilly, to leave his office.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was after this he said that he felt bound to let the tenants take
+their own way. Eighty of them joined in the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; and paid
+the amount of the rent due, less a reduction of 30 per cent., which they
+demanded of the agent, into the hands of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., Sir
+Thomas <a name="page206" id="page206"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 206]
+</span>being a resident in the country, and Mr. Mayne, M.P. Writs of
+ejectment were obtained against them afterwards, and in July last
+sixty-seven of them were evicted, who are now living in &ldquo;Laud League
+huts,&rdquo; put up on the holdings of three small tenants who were exempted
+from the Plan of Campaign, and allowed to pay their rents subject to a
+smaller reduction made by the agent, in order that they might retain
+their land as a refuge for the rest.</p>
+
+<p>All this Father O&rsquo;Neill told us very quietly, in a gentle,
+undemonstrative way, but he was much interested when I told him I had
+recently come from Rome, where these proceedings, I was sure, were
+exciting a good deal of serious attention. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and Father
+Dunphy who is here in the other room, has just got back from Rome, where
+he had two audiences of the Holy Father.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doubtless, then,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;he will have given his Holiness full
+particulars of all that took place here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; responded Father O&rsquo;Neill, &ldquo;and he tells me the Holy Father
+listened with great attention to all he had to say&mdash;though of course, he
+expressed no opinion about it to Father Dunphy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 207]
+</span>As the time fixed for the function was at hand, we were obliged to leave
+without seeing Father Dunphy.</p>
+
+<p>From the Presbytery we drove to the scene of the evictions. These
+evictions were in July. Mr. Holmes witnessed them, and gave me a lively
+account of the affair. The &ldquo;battle&rdquo; was not a very tough one. Mr.
+Davitt, who was present, stood under a tree very quietly watching it
+all. &ldquo;He looked very picturesque,&rdquo; said Mr. Holmes, &ldquo;in a light grey
+suit, with a broad white beaver shading his dark Spanish face; and
+smoked his cigar very composedly.&rdquo; After it was over, Dr. Dillon brought
+up one of the tenants, and presented him to Mr. Davitt as &ldquo;the man who
+had resisted this unjust eviction.&rdquo; Mr. Davitt took his cigar from his
+lips, and in the hearing of all who stood about sarcastically said,
+&ldquo;Well, if he couldn&rsquo;t make a better resistance than that he ought to go
+up for six months!&rdquo; The first house we came upon was derelict&mdash;all
+battered and despoiled, the people in the neighbourhood here, as
+elsewhere, regarding such houses as free spoil, and carrying off from
+time to time whatever they happen to fancy. Near this house we met an
+emergency man, named <a name="page208" id="page208"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 208]
+</span>Bolton, an alert, energetic-looking native of
+Wicklow. He has four brothers; and is now at work on one of the
+&ldquo;evicted&rdquo; holdings.</p>
+
+<p>I asked if he was &ldquo;boycotted,&rdquo; and what his relations were with the
+people.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed in a shrewd, good-natured way. &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m boycotted, of
+course,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t care a button for any of these people,
+and I&rsquo;d rather they wouldn&rsquo;t speak to me. They know I can take care of
+myself, and they give me a good wide berth. All I have to object to is
+that they set fire to an outhouse of mine, and cut the ears of one of my
+heifers, and for that I want damages. Otherwise I&rsquo;m getting on very
+well; and I think this will be a good year, if the law is enforced, and
+these fellows are made to behave themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Near Bolton&rsquo;s farm we passed the holding of a tenant named Kavanagh, one
+of the three who were &ldquo;allowed&rdquo; to pay their rents. Several Land League
+huts are on his place, and the evicted people who occupy them put their
+cattle with his. He is a quiet, cautious man, and very reticent. But it
+seemed to me that he was not entirely satisfied with the &ldquo;squatters&rdquo; who
+have been quartered upon him. And it appears that he has taken another
+holding <a name="page209" id="page209"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 209]
+</span>in Carlow. From his place we drove to Ballyfad, where a large
+house, at the end of a good avenue of trees, once the mansion of a
+squire, but now much dilapidated, is occupied as headquarters by the
+police. Here we found Mr. George Freeman, the bailiff of the Coolgreany
+property, a strong, sturdy man, much disgusted at finding it necessary
+to go about protected by two policemen. That this was necessary,
+however, he admitted, pointing out to us the place where one Kinsella
+was killed not very long ago. The son of this man Kinsella was formerly
+one of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s gamekeepers, and is now, Mr. Freeman thinks, in
+concert with another man named Ryan, the chief stay of the League in
+keeping up its dominion over the evicted tenants.</p>
+
+<p>Many of these tenants, he believes, would gladly pay their rents now,
+and come back if they dared.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Every man, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that has anything to lose, would be glad to
+come back next Monday if he thought his life would be safe. But all the
+lazy and thriftless ones are better off now than they ever were; they
+get from &pound;4 to &pound;6 a month, with nothing to do, and so they&rsquo;re in clover,
+and they naturally don&rsquo;t like to have the industrious, well-<a name="page210" id="page210"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 210]
+</span>to-do
+tenants spoil their fun by making a general settlement.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Besides that,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that man Kinsella and his comrade Ryan are
+the terror of the whole of them. Kinsella always was a curious, silent,
+moody fellow. He knows every inch of the country, going over it all the
+time by night and day as a gamekeeper, and I am quite sure the
+Parnellite men and the Land Leaguers are just as much afraid of him and
+Ryan as the tenants are. He don&rsquo;t care a bit for them; and they&rsquo;ve no
+control of him at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Freeman said he remembered very well the occasion referred to by
+Father O&rsquo;Neill, when Captain Hamilton refused to confer with Dr. Dillon
+and himself.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did Father O&rsquo;Neill tell you, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that Captain Hamilton was
+quite willing to talk with him and Father O&rsquo;Donel, the parish priests,
+and with the Coolgreany people, but he would have nothing to say to any
+one who was not their priest, and had no business to be meddling with
+the matter at all?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; he did not tell me that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! well, sir, that made all the difference. Father Dunphy, who was
+there, is a high-tempered <a name="page211" id="page211"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 211]
+</span>man, and he said he had just as much right to
+represent the tenants as Captain Hamilton to represent the landlord, and
+that Captain Hamilton wouldn&rsquo;t allow. It was the outside people made all
+the trouble. In June of last year there was a conference at my house,
+and all that time there was a Committee sitting at Coolgreany, and the
+tenants would not be allowed to do anything without the Committee.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And who made the Committee?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they made themselves, I suppose, sir. There was Sir Thomas
+Esmonde&mdash;he was a convert, you know, of Father O&rsquo;Neill&mdash;and Mr. Mayne
+and Mr. John Dillon. And Dr. Dillon of Arklow, he was as busy as he
+could be till the evictions were made in July. And then he was in
+retreat. And I believe, sir, it is quite true that he wanted the Bishop
+to let him come out of the retreat just to have a hand in the business.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The police sergeant, a very cool, sensible man, quite agreed with the
+bailiff as to the influence upon the present situation of the
+ex-gamekeeper Kinsella, and his friend Eyan. &ldquo;If they were two
+Invincibles, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;these member fellows of the League couldn&rsquo;t
+be in greater fear of them than they are. <a name="page212" id="page212"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 212]
+</span>They say nothing, and do just
+as they please. That Kinsella, when Mr. John Dillon was down here, just
+told him before a lot of people that he &lsquo;wanted no words and no advice
+from him,&rsquo; and he&rsquo;s just in that surly way with all the people about.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the Brooke estate, I am told here it was bought more than twenty
+years ago with a Landed Estates Court title from Colonel Forde, by the
+grandfather of Mr. Brooke. He paid about &pound;75,000 sterling for it. His
+son died young, and the present owner came into it as a child, Mr. Vesey
+being then the agent, who, during the minority, spent a great deal on
+improving the property. Captain Hamilton came in as agent only a few
+years ago. While the Act of 1881 was impending, an abatement was granted
+of more than twenty per cent. In 1882 the tenants all paid except
+eleven, who went into Court and got their rents cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners. There were appeals; and in 1885, after Court
+valuations, the rents cut down by the Sub-Commissioners were restored in
+several cases. There never was any rack-renting on the estate at all.
+There are upon it in all more than a hundred tenants, twelve of whom are
+Protestants, holding a little less in all than one-fourth of the
+property.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 213]
+</span>There are fifteen judicial tenants, twenty-one lease-holders, and
+seventy-seven hold from year to year.</p>
+
+<p>The gross rental is a little over &pound;2000 a year of which one-half goes to
+Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s mother. Mr. Brooke himself is a wealthy man, at the head of
+the most important firm of wine-merchants in Ireland, and he has
+repeatedly spent on the property more than he took out of it.</p>
+
+<p>The house of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., was pointed out to me from the
+road. &ldquo;Sir Thomas is to marry an heiress, sir, isn&rsquo;t he, in America?&rdquo;
+asked an ingenuous inquirer. I avowed my ignorance on this point. &ldquo;Oh,
+well, they say so, for anyway the old house is being put in order for
+now the first time in forty years.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We reached Arklow in time for luncheon, and drove to the large police
+barracks there. These were formerly the quarters of the troops. Arklow
+was one of the earliest settlements of the Anglo-Normans in Ireland
+under Henry II., and once rejoiced in a castle and a monastery both now
+obliterated; though a bit of an old tower here is said to have been
+erected in his time. The town lives by fishing, and by shipping copper
+and lead ore to <a name="page214" id="page214"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 214]
+</span>South Wales. The houses are rather neat and well kept;
+but the street was full of little ragged, merry mendicants.</p>
+
+<p>We went into a small branch of the Bank of Ireland, and asked where we
+should find the hotel. We were very civilly directed to &ldquo;The Register&rsquo;s
+Office over the way.&rdquo; This seemed odd enough. But reaching it we were
+further puzzled to see the sign over the doorway of a &ldquo;coach-builder&rdquo;!
+However, we rang the bell, and presently a maid-servant appeared, who
+assured us that this was really the hotel, and that we could have
+&ldquo;whatever we liked&rdquo; for luncheon. We liked what we found we could
+get&mdash;chops, potatoes, and parsnips; and without too much delay these
+were neatly served to us in a most remarkable room, ablaze with mural
+ornaments and decorations, upon which every imaginable pigment of the
+modern palette seemed to have been lavished, from a Nile-water-green
+dado to a scarlet and silver frieze. There were five times as many
+potatoes served to us as two men could possibly eat, and not one of them
+was half-boiled. But otherwise the meal was well enough, and the service
+excellent. Beer could be got for us, but the house had no licence, Lord
+Carysfort, the owner of the <a name="page215" id="page215"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 215]
+</span>property, thinking, so our hostess said,
+that &ldquo;there were too many licences in the town already.&rdquo; Lord Carysfort
+is probably right; but it is not every owner of a house, or even of a
+lease in Ireland, I fear, who would take such a view and act on it to
+the detriment of his own property.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Dillon lives in the main square of Arklow in a very neat house. He
+was absent at a funeral in the handsome Catholic church near by when we
+called, but we were shown into his study, and he presently came in.</p>
+
+<p>His study was that of a man of letters and of politics. Blue-books and
+statistical works lay about in all directions, and on the table were the
+March numbers of the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, and the <i>Contemporary
+Review</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You are abreast of the times, I see,&rdquo; I said to him, pointing to these
+periodicals.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;they have just come in; and there is a capital paper
+by Mr. John Morley in this <i>Nineteenth Century</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be livelier than Dr. Dillon&rsquo;s interest in all that is
+going on on both sides of the Atlantic, more positive than his opinions,
+or more terse and clear than his way of putting them. He <a name="page216" id="page216"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 216]
+</span>agreed entirely
+with Father O&rsquo;Neill as to the pressure put upon the Coolgreany tenants,
+not so much by Mr. Brooke as by the agent, Captain Hamilton; but he
+thought Mr. Brooke also to blame for his treatment of them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Two of the most respectable of them,&rdquo; said Dr. Dillon, &ldquo;went to see Mr.
+Brooke in Dublin, and he wouldn&rsquo;t listen to them. On the contrary, he
+absolutely put them out of his office without hearing a word they had to
+say.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag22"
+ name="footnotetag22"></a><a href="#footnote22"><sup>22</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I found Dr. Dillon a strong disciple of Mr. Henry George, and a firm
+believer in the doctrine of the &ldquo;nationalisation of the land.&rdquo; &ldquo;It is
+certain to come,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as certain to come in Great Britain as in
+Ireland, and the sooner the better. The movement about the sewerage
+rates in London,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;is the first symptom of the land war in
+London. It is the thin edge of the wedge to break down landlordism in
+the British metropolis.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He is watching American politics, too, very closely, and inclines to
+sympathise with President Cleveland. Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia, he
+tells me, in his passage through Ireland the other day, did not hesitate
+to express his conviction that President Cleveland would be re-elected.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 217]
+</span>Dr. Dillon was so earnest and so interesting that the time slipped by
+very fast, until a casual glance at my watch showed me that we must make
+great haste to catch the Dublin train.</p>
+
+<p>We left therefore rather hurriedly, but before reaching the station we
+saw the Dublin train go careering by, its white pennon of smoke and
+vapour curling away along the valley.</p>
+
+<p>I made the best of it, however, and letting Mr. Holmes depart by a train
+which took him home, I found a smart jarvey with a car, and drove out to
+Glenart Castle, the beautiful house of the Earl of Carysfort. This is a
+very handsome modern house, built in a castellated style of a very good
+whitish grey marble, with extensive and extremely well-kept terraced
+gardens and conservatories.</p>
+
+<p>It stands very well on one high bank of the river, a residence of the
+Earl of Wicklow occupying the other bank. My jarvey called my attention
+to the excellence of the roads, on which he said Lord Carysfort has
+spent &ldquo;a deal of money,&rdquo; as well as upon the gardens of the new Castle.
+The head-gardener, an Englishman, told me he found the native labourers
+very intelligent and willing both to learn and to work. Evidently here
+is another centre of useful <a name="page218" id="page218"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 218]
+</span>and civilising influences, not managed by an
+&ldquo;absentee.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag23"
+ name="footnotetag23"></a><a href="#footnote23"><sup>23</sup></a></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 219]
+</span>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Friday, March 9th.</i>&mdash;</span>At 7.40 this morning I took the train for
+Athy to visit the Luggacurren estates of Lord Lansdowne. Mr. Lynch, a
+resident magistrate here, some time ago kindly offered to show me over
+the place, but I thought it as well to take my chance with the people of
+Athy who are reported to have been very hot over the whole matter here,
+and so wrote to Mr. Lynch that I would find him at the Lodge, which is
+the headquarters of the property.</p>
+
+<p>Athy is a neat, well-built little town, famous of old as a frontier
+fortress of Kildare. An embattled tower, flanked by small square
+turrets, guards a picturesque old bridge here over the Barrow, the
+bridge being known in the country as &ldquo;Crom-a-boo,&rdquo; from the old war-cry
+of the Fitz-Geralds. It is a busy place now; and there was quite a
+bustle at the very pretty little station. I asked a friendly old porter
+which was the best hotel in the town. &ldquo;The <a name="page220" id="page220"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 220]
+</span>best? Ah! there&rsquo;s only one,
+and it&rsquo;s not the best&mdash;but there are worse&mdash;and it&rsquo;s Kavanagh&rsquo;s.&rdquo; I
+found it easily enough, and was ushered by a civil man, who emerged from
+the shop which occupies part of it, into a sort of reading-room with a
+green table. A rather slatternly but very active girl soon converted
+this into a neat breakfast-table, and gave me an excellent breakfast.
+The landlord found me a good car, and off I set for the residence of
+Father Maher, the curate of whom I had heard as one of the most fiery
+and intractable of the National League priests in this part of Ireland.</p>
+
+
+<p>My jarvey was rather taciturn at first, but turned out to be something
+of a politician. He wanted Home Rule, one of his reasons being that then
+they &ldquo;wouldn&rsquo;t let the Americans come and ruin them altogether, driving
+out the grain from the markets.&rdquo; About this he was very clear and
+positive. &ldquo;Oh, it doesn&rsquo;t matter now whether the land is good or bad,
+America has just ruined the farmers entirely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I told him I had always heard this achievement attributed to England.
+&ldquo;Oh! that was quite a mistake! What the English did was to punish the
+men that stood up for Ireland. There was Mr. O&rsquo;Brien. But for him there
+wasn&rsquo;t a man of Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s <a name="page221" id="page221"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 221]
+</span>people would have had the heart to
+stand up. He did it all; and now, what were they doing to him? They were
+putting him on a cold plank-bed on a stone floor in a damp cell!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But the English put all their prisoners in those cells, don&rsquo;t they?&rdquo; I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what of it, sir?&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re good enough for most of
+them, but not for a gentleman like Mr. O&rsquo;Brien, that would spill the
+last drop of his heart&rsquo;s blood for Ireland!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;they&rsquo;re doing just the same thing with Mr. Gilhooly, I
+hear.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And who is Mr. Gilhooly, now? And it&rsquo;s not for the likes of him to
+complain and be putting on airs as if he was Mr. O&rsquo;Brien!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is a fine country for hunting!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was it ever put down here, the hunting?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, indeed! Sure, the people wouldn&rsquo;t let it be!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not if Mr. O&rsquo;Brien told them they must?&rdquo; I queried.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. O&rsquo;Brien; ah, he wouldn&rsquo;t think of such a thing! It brings money all
+the time to Athy, and sells the horses.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the troubles at Luggacurren, he was not very clear. &ldquo;It was a
+beautiful place, Mr. Dunne&rsquo;s; we&rsquo;d <a name="page222" id="page222"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 222]
+</span>see it presently. And Mr. Dunne, he
+was a good one for sport. It was that, your honour, that got him into
+the trouble&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And Mr. Kilbride?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s place was a very good place too, but not like Mr.
+Dunne&rsquo;s. And he was doing very well, Mr. Kilbride. He was getting a good
+living from the League, and he was a Member of Parliament. Oh, yes, he
+wasn&rsquo;t the only one of the tenants that was doing good to himself. There
+was more of them that was getting more than ever they made out of the
+land.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag24"
+ name="footnotetag24"></a><a href="#footnote24"><sup>24</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was the land so bad, then?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 223]
+</span>&ldquo;No, there was as good land at Luggacurren as any there was in all
+Ireland; but,&rdquo; and here he pointed off to the crests of the hills in the
+distance, &ldquo;there was a deal of land there of the estate on the hills,
+and it was very poor land, but the tenants had to pay as much for that
+as for the good property of Dunne and Kilbride.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know Mr. Lynch, the magistrate?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;If you do, look out
+for him, as he has promised to join me and show me the place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, sorr!&rdquo; the jarvey exclaimed at once; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t mind about him. Hell
+have his own car, and your honour won&rsquo;t want to take him on ours.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; I persisted, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s plenty of room.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! but indeed, sir, if it wasn&rsquo;t that you were going to the priest&rsquo;s,
+Father Maher, you wouldn&rsquo;t get a car at Athy&mdash;no, not under ten pounds!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not under ten pounds,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;Would I get one then for ten
+pounds?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a deal of money, ten pounds, sorr, and you wouldn&rsquo;t have a poor
+man throw away ten pounds?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not, nor ten shillings either. Is it a question of principle,
+or a question of price?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The man looked around at me with a droll <a name="page224" id="page224"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 224]
+</span>glimmer in his eye: &ldquo;Ah, to be
+sure, your honour&rsquo;s a great lawyer; but he&rsquo;ll come pounding along with
+his big horse in his own car, Mr. Lynch; and sure it&rsquo;ll be quicker for
+your honour just driving to Father Maher&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There was no resisting this, so I laughed and bade him drive on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Whose house is that?&rdquo; I asked, as we passed a house surrounded with
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! that&rsquo;s the priest, Father Keogh&mdash;a very good man, but not so much
+for the people as Father Maher, who has everything to look after about
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We came presently within sight of a handsome residence, Lansdowne Lodge,
+the headquarters of the estate. Many fine cattle were grazing in the
+fields about it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They are Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s beasts,&rdquo; said my jarvey; &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s the
+emergency men are looking after them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nearly opposite were the Land League huts erected on the holding of an
+unevicted tenant&mdash;a small village of neat wooden &ldquo;shanties.&rdquo; On the
+roadway in front of these half-a-dozen men were lounging about. They
+watched us with much curiosity as we drove up, and whispered eagerly
+together.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 225]
+</span>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re some of the evicted men, your honour,&rdquo; said my jarvey, with a
+twinkle in his eye; and then under his breath, &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be thinking your
+honour&rsquo;s came down to arrange it all. They think everybody that comes is
+come about an arrangement.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, then, they all want it arranged!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; not all, but many of them do. Some of them like it well enough
+going about like gentlemen with nothing to do, only their hands in their
+pockets.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We turned out of the highway here and passed some very pretty cottages.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, they&rsquo;re not for labourers, your honour,&rdquo; said my jarvey; &ldquo;the
+estate built them for mechanics. It&rsquo;s the tenants look after the
+labourers, and little it is they do for them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then, pointing to a ridge of hills beyond us, he said: &ldquo;It was
+Kilbride&rsquo;s father, sir, evicted seventeen tenants on these hills&mdash;poor
+labouring men, with their families, many years ago,&mdash;and now he&rsquo;s
+evicted himself, and a Member of Parliament!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Father Maher&rsquo;s house stands well off from the highway. He was not at
+home, being &ldquo;away at a service in the hills,&rdquo; but would be back before
+two o&rsquo;clock. I left my name for him, with a memo<a name="page226" id="page226"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 226]
+</span>randum of my purpose in
+calling, and we drove on to see the bailiff of the estate, Mr. Hind. On
+the way we met Father Norris, a curate of the parish, in a smart trap
+with a good horse, and had a brief colloquy with him. Mr. Hind we found
+busy afield; a quiet, staunch sort of man. He spoke of the situation
+very coolly and dispassionately. &ldquo;The tenants in the main were a good
+set of men&mdash;as they had reason to be, Lord Lansdowne having been not
+only a fair landlord, but a liberal and enterprising promoter of local
+improvements.&rdquo; I had been told in Dublin that Lord Lansdowne had offered
+a subscription of &pound;200 towards establishing creameries, and providing
+high-class bulls for this estate. Similar offers had been cordially met
+by Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s tenants in Kerry, and with excellent results. But
+here they were rejected almost scornfully, though accompanied by offers
+of abatement on the rents, which, in the case of Mr. Kilbride, for
+example, amounted to 20 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How did this happen, the tenants being good men as you say?&rdquo; I asked of
+Mr. Hind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Because they were unable to resist the pressure put on them by the two
+chief tenants, Kilbride and Dunne, with the help of the League. Kilbride
+and <a name="page227" id="page227"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 227]
+</span>Dunne both lived very well.&rdquo; My information at Dublin was that Mr.
+Kilbride had a fine house built by Lord Lansdowne, and a farm of seven
+hundred acres, at a rent of &pound;760, 10s. Mr. Dunne, who co-operated with
+him, held four town lands comprising 1304 acres, at a yearly rent of
+&pound;1348, 15s. Upon this property Lord Lansdowne had expended in drainage
+and works &pound;1993, 11s. 9d., and in buildings &pound;631, 15s. 4d., or in all
+very nearly two years&rsquo; rental. On Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s holdings Lord Lansdowne
+had expended in drainage works &pound;1931, 6s. 3d., and in buildings &pound;1247,
+19s. 5d., or in all more than four years&rsquo; rental. Mr. Kilbride held his
+lands on life leases. Mr. Dunne held his smallest holding of 84 acres on
+a yearly tenure; his two largest holdings, one on a lease for 31 years
+from 1874, and the other on a life lease, and his fourth holding of 172
+acres on a life lease.</p>
+
+<p>Where does the hardship appear in all this to Mr. Dunne or Mr. Kilbride?</p>
+
+<p>On Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s holdings, for instance, Lord Lansdowne expended over
+&pound;3000, for which he added to the rent &pound;130 a year, or about 4 per cent.,
+while he himself stood to pay 6-1/2 per cent, on the loans he made from
+the Board of Works <a name="page228" id="page228"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 228]
+</span>for the expenditure. In the same way it was with Mr.
+Dunne&rsquo;s farms. They were mostly in grass, and Lord Lansdowne laid out
+more than &pound;2500 on them, borrowed at the same rate from the Board, for
+which he added to the rent only &pound;66 a year, or about 2-1/2 per cent. Mr.
+Kilbride was a Poor-Law Guardian, and Mr. Dunne a Justice of the Peace.
+The leases in both of these cases, and in those of other large tenants,
+seem to have been made at the instance of the tenants themselves, and
+afforded security against any advance in the rental during a time of
+high agricultural prices. And it would appear that for the last quarter
+of a century there has been no important advance in the rental. In 1887
+the rental was only &pound;300 higher than in 1862, though during the interval
+the landlord had laid out &pound;20,000 on improvements in the shape of
+drainage, roads, labourers&rsquo; cottages, and other permanent works.
+Moreover, in fifteen years only one tenant has been evicted for
+non-payment of rent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was there any ill-feeling towards the Marquis among the tenants?&rdquo; I
+asked of Mr. Hind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not, and no reason for any. They were a good set of men, and
+they would never have gone into this fight, only for a few who were in
+<a name="page229" id="page229"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 229]
+</span>trouble, and I&rsquo;m sure that to-day most of them would be thankful if they
+could settle and get back. The best of them had money enough, and didn&rsquo;t
+like the fight at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>All the trouble here seems to have originated with the adoption of the
+Plan of Campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne, besides this estate in Queen&rsquo;s County, owns property in
+a wild, mountainous part of the county of Kerry. On this property the
+tenants occupy, for the most part, small holdings, the average rental
+being about &pound;10, and many of the rentals much lower. They are not
+capitalist farmers at all, and few of them are able to average the
+profits of their industry, setting the gains of a good, against the
+losses of a bad, season. In October 1886, while Mr. Dillon was
+organising his Plan of Campaign, Lord Lansdowne visited his Kerry
+property to look into the condition of the people. The local Bank had
+just failed, and the shopkeepers and money-lenders were refusing credit
+and calling in loans. The pressure they put upon these small farmers,
+together with the fall in the price of dairy produce and of young stock
+at that time, caused real distress, and Lord Lansdowne, after looking
+into the situation, offered, of his own motion, abatements <a name="page230" id="page230"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 230]
+</span>varying from
+25 to 35 per cent, to all of them whose rents had not been judicially
+fixed under the Act of 1881, for a term of fifteen years.</p>
+
+<p>As to these, Lord Lansdowne wrote a letter on the 21st of October 1886
+(four days after the promulgation of the Plan of Campaign at Portumna on
+the Clanricarde property), to his agent, Mr. Townsend Trench. This
+letter was published. I have a copy of it given to me in Dublin, and it
+states the case as between the landlords and the tenants under judicial
+rents most clearly and temperately.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It might, I think,&rdquo; says the Marquis, &ldquo;be very fairly argued, that the
+State having imposed the terms of a contract on landlord and tenant,
+that contract should not be interfered with except by the State.</p>
+
+<p>The punctual payment of the &lsquo;judicial rent&rsquo; was the one advantage to
+which the landlords were desired to look when, in 1881, they were
+deprived of many of the most valuable attributes of ownership.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was distinctly stipulated that the enormous privileges which were
+suddenly and unexpectedly conferred upon the tenants were to be enjoyed
+by them conditionally upon the fulfilment on their part of the statutory
+obligations specified in the Act. <a name="page231" id="page231"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 231]
+</span>Of those, by far the most important
+was the punctual payment of the rent fixed by the Court for the judicial
+term.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This obligation being unfulfilled, the landlord might reasonably claim
+that he should be free to exercise his own discretion in determining
+whether any given tenancy should or should not be perpetuated.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In many cases [such cases are probably not so numerous on my estate as
+upon many others] the resumption of the holding, and the consolidation
+of adjoining farms, would be clearly advantageous to the whole
+community. In the congested districts the consolidation of farms is the
+only solution that I have seen suggested for meeting a chronic
+difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have no reason to believe that the Judicial Rents in force on my
+estate are such that, upon an average of the yield and prices of
+agricultural produce, my tenants would find it difficult to pay them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all these considerations Lord Lansdowne instructed Mr.
+Trench to grant to these tenants under judicial leases an abatement of
+20 per cent. on the November gale of 1886. This abatement, freely
+offered, was gladly accepted. There <a name="page232" id="page232"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 232]
+</span>had been no outrages or disturbances
+on the Kerry properties, and the relations of the landlord with his
+tenants, before and after this visit of Lord Lansdowne to Kerry, and
+these reductions which followed it, had been, and continued to be,
+excellent.</p>
+
+<p>But the tale of Kerry reached Luggacurren; and certain of the tenants on
+the latter estate were moved by it to demand for the Queen&rsquo;s County
+property identical treatment with that accorded to the very differently
+situated property in Kerry.</p>
+
+<p>The leaders of the Luggacurren movement, I gather from Mr. Hind, never
+pretended inability to pay their rents. They simply demanded abatements
+of 35 per cent. on non-judicial, and 25 per cent. on judicial, rents as
+their due, on the ground that they should be treated like the tenants in
+Kerry: and the Plan of Campaign being by this time in full operation in
+more than one part of Ireland, they threatened to resort to it if their
+demand was refused. Lord Lansdowne at once declared that he would not
+repeat at Luggacurren his concession made in Kerry as to the rents
+judicially fixed; but he offered on a fair consideration of the
+non-judicial rents to make abatements on them ranging from 15 to 25 per
+cent.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 233]
+</span>The offer was refused, and the war began. On the 23d of March 1887 Mr.
+Kilbride was evicted. One week afterwards, on the 29th of March, he got
+up in the rooms of the National League in Dublin, and openly declared
+that &ldquo;the Luggacurren evictions differed from most other evictions in
+this, that they were able to pay the rent. It was a fight,&rdquo; he
+exultingly exclaimed, &ldquo;of intelligence against intelligence; it was
+diamond cut diamond!&rdquo; In other words, it was a struggle, not for
+justice, but for victory.</p>
+
+<p>On all these points, and others furnished to me at Dublin touching this
+estate, much light was thrown by the bailiff, who had not been concerned
+in the evictions. He told me what he knew, and then very obligingly
+offered to conduct me to the lodge, where we should find Mr. Hutchins,
+who has charge now of the properties taken up by Mr. Kavanagh&rsquo;s Land
+Corporation. My patriotic jarvey from Athy made no objection to my
+giving the bailiff a lift, and we drove off to the lodge. On the way the
+jarvey good-naturedly exclaimed, &ldquo;Ah! there comes Mr. Lynch,&rdquo; and even
+offered to pull up that the magistrate might overtake us.</p>
+
+<p>We found Mr. Hutchins at home, a cool, quiet, <a name="page234" id="page234"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 234]
+</span>energetic, northern man,
+who seems to be handling the difficult situation here with great
+firmness and prudence. Mrs. Hutchins, who has lived here now for nearly
+a year&mdash;a life not unlike that of the wife of an American officer on the
+Far Western frontier&mdash;very amicably asked me to lunch, and Mr. Hutchins
+offered to show me the holdings of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride. Mr. Lynch
+proposed that we should all go on my car, but I remembered the protest
+of the jarvey, and sending him to await me at Father Maher&rsquo;s, I drove
+off with Mr. Hutchins. As we drove along, he confirmed the jarvey&rsquo;s hint
+as to the difference between the views and conduct of the parish priest
+and the views and conduct of his more fiery curate. This is a very
+common state of affairs, I find, all over Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>The house of Mr. Dunne is that of a large gentleman farmer. It is very
+well fitted up, but it was plain that the tenants had done little or
+nothing to make or keep it a &ldquo;house beautiful.&rdquo; The walls had never been
+papered, and the wood-work showed no recent traces of the brush. &ldquo;He
+spent more money on horse-racing than on housekeeping,&rdquo; said a shrewd
+old man who was in the house. In fact, Mr. Dunne, I am told, entered a
+horse for the <a name="page235" id="page235"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 235]
+</span>races at the Curragh after he had undergone what Mr.
+Gladstone calls &ldquo;the sentence of death&rdquo; of an eviction!</p>
+
+<p>Some of the doors bore marks of the crowbar but no great mischief had
+been done to them or to the large fine windows. The only serious damage
+done during the eviction was the cutting of a hole through the roof. An
+upper room had been provisioned to stand a siege, and so scientifically
+barricaded with logs and trunks of trees that after several vain
+attempts to break through the door the assailants climbed to the roof,
+and in twenty minutes cut their way in from without. The dining and
+drawing rooms were those of a gentleman&rsquo;s residence, and one of the
+party remembered attending here a social festivity got up with much
+display.</p>
+
+<p>A large cattle-yard has been established on this place, with an
+original, and, as I was assured, most successful weighing-machine by the
+Land Corporation. We found it full of very fine-looking cattle, and Mr.
+Hutchins seems to think the operation of managing the estate as a kind
+of &ldquo;ranch&rdquo; decidedly promising. &ldquo;I am not a bit sorry for Mr. Dunne,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;but I am very sorry for other quiet, good tenants who have been
+deluded or driven into giving <a name="page236" id="page236"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 236]
+</span>up valuable holdings to keep him and Mr.
+Kilbride company, and give colour to the vapourings of Mr. William
+O&rsquo;Brien.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The cases of some of these tenants were instructive. One poor man,
+Knowles, had gone out to America, and regularly sent home money to his
+family to pay the rent. They found other uses for it, and when the storm
+came he was two years and a half in arrears. In another instance, two
+brothers held contiguous holdings, and were in a manner partners. One
+was fonder of Athy than of agriculture; the other a steady husbandman.
+Four years&rsquo; arrears had grown up against the one; only a half-year&rsquo;s
+gale against the other. Clearly this difference originated outside of
+the fall of prices! In a third case, a tenant wrote to Mr. Trench
+begging to have something done, as he had the money to pay, and wanted
+to pay, but &ldquo;didn&rsquo;t dare.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>From Mr. Dunne&rsquo;s we drove to Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s, another ample, very
+comfortable house&mdash;not so thoroughly well fitted up with bathroom and
+other modern appurtenances as Mr. Dunne&rsquo;s perhaps&mdash;but still a very good
+house. It stands on a large green knoll, rather bare of trees, and
+commands a fine sweep of landscape.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 237]
+</span>Mr. Hutchins drove me to the little road which leads up past the &ldquo;Land
+League village&rdquo; to the house of Father Maher, and there set me down.</p>
+
+<p>I walked up and found the curate at home&mdash;a tall, slender, well-made
+young priest, with a keen, intelligent face. He received me very
+politely, and, when I showed him the card of an eminent dignitary of the
+Church, with cordiality.</p>
+
+<p>I found him full of sympathy with the people of his parish, but neither
+vehement nor unfair. He did not deny that there were tenants on Lord
+Lansdowne&rsquo;s estate who were amply able to pay their rents; but he did
+most emphatically assert that there were not a few of them who really
+could not pay their rents.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;there are some of them who cannot even pay
+their dues to their priest, and when I say that, you will know how
+pinched and driven they must indeed be.&rdquo; It was in view of these tenants
+that he seemed to justify the course of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride.
+&ldquo;They must all stand or fall together.&rdquo; He had nothing to say to the
+discredit of Lord Lansdowne; but he spoke with some bitterness of the
+agent, Mr. Townsend Trench, as having protested against Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s
+mak<a name="page238" id="page238"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 238]
+</span>ing reductions here while he had himself made the same reductions on
+the neighbouring estate of Mrs. Adair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In truth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Mr. Trench has made all this trouble worse all
+along. He is too much of a Napoleon&rdquo;&mdash;and with a humorous twinkle in his
+eye as he spoke&mdash;&ldquo;too much of a Napoleon the Third.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was just reading his father&rsquo;s book when you came in. Here it is,&rdquo; and
+he handed me a copy of Trench&rsquo;s <i>Realities of Irish Life</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever read it? This Mr. Trench, the father, was a kind of
+Napoleon among agents in his own time, and the son, you see, thinks it
+ought to be understood that he is quite as great a man as his father.
+Did you never hear how he found a lot of his father&rsquo;s manuscripts once,
+and threw them all in the fire, calling out as he did so, &lsquo;There goes
+some more of my father&rsquo;s vanity?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>About his people, and with his people, Father Maher said he &ldquo;felt most
+strongly.&rdquo; How could he help it? He was himself the son of an evicted
+father.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, Father Maher,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;you will understand that I wish to
+get at both sides of this <a name="page239" id="page239"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 239]
+</span>question and of all questions here. Pray tell
+me then, where I shall find the story of the Luggacurren property most
+fully and fairly set forth in print?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Without a moment&rsquo;s hesitation he replied, &ldquo;By far the best and fairest
+account of the whole matter you will get in the Irish correspondence of
+the London <i>Times</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How the conflict would end he could not say. But he was at a loss to see
+how it could pay Lord Lansdowne to maintain it.</p>
+
+<p>He very civilly pressed me to stay and lunch with him, but when I told
+him I had already accepted an invitation from Mr. Hutchins, he very
+kindly bestirred himself to find my jarvey.</p>
+
+<p>I hastened back to the lodge, where I found a very pleasant little
+company. They were all rather astonished, I thought, by the few words I
+had to say of Father Maher, and especially by his frank and sensible
+recommendation of the reports in the London <i>Times</i> as the best account
+I could find of the Luggacurren difficulty. To this they could not
+demur, but things have got, or are getting, in Ireland, I fear, to a
+point at which candour, on one side or the other of the burning
+questions here <a name="page240" id="page240"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 240]
+</span>debated, is regarded with at least as much suspicion as
+the most deliberate misrepresentation. As to Mr. Town send Trench, what
+Father Maher failed to tell me, I was here told: That down to the time
+of the actual evictions he offered to take six months&rsquo; rent from the
+tenants, give them a clean book, and pay all the costs. To refuse this
+certainly looks like a &ldquo;war measure.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But for the loneliness of her life here, Mrs. Hutchins tells me she
+would find it delightful. The country is exceedingly lovely in the
+summer and autumn months.</p>
+
+<p>When my car came out to take me back to Athy, I found my jarvey in
+excellent spirits, and quite friendly even with Mr. Hutchins himself. He
+kept up a running fire of lively commentaries upon the residents whose
+estates we passed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would you think now, your honour,&rdquo; he said, pointing with his whip to
+one large mansion standing well among good trees, &ldquo;that that&rsquo;s the
+snuggest man there is about Athy? But he is; and it&rsquo;s no wonder! Would
+you believe it, he never buys a newspaper, but he walks all the way into
+Athy, and goes about from the bank to the shops till he finds one, and
+picks it up and reads it. He&rsquo;s <a name="page241" id="page241"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 241]
+</span>mighty fond of the news, but he&rsquo;s fonder,
+you see, of a penny!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There now, your honour, just look at that house! It&rsquo;s a magistrate he
+is that lives there; and why? Why, just to be called &lsquo;your honour,&rsquo; and
+have the people tip their hats to him. Oh! he delights in that, he does.
+Why, you might knock a man, or put him in the water, you might, indeed,
+but if you came before Mr.&mdash;&mdash;, and you just called him &lsquo;your honour&rsquo;
+often enough, and made up to him, you&rsquo;d be all right! You&rsquo;ve just to go
+up to him with your hat in your hand, looking up at him, and to say,
+&lsquo;Ah! now, your honour&rsquo;&ldquo; (imitating the wheedling tone to perfection),
+&rdquo;and indeed you&rsquo;d get anything out of him&mdash;barring a sixpence, that is,
+or a penny!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! he&rsquo;s a snug one, too!&rdquo; And with that he launched a sharp thwack of
+the whip at the grey mare, and we went rattling on apace.</p>
+
+<p>At the very pretty station of Athy we parted the best of friends. &ldquo;Wish
+you safe home, your honour.&rdquo; The kindly railway porter, also, who had
+recommended Kavanagh&rsquo;s Hotel, was anxious to know how I found it, and so
+busied himself to get me a good carriage when the train came in, that I
+feel bound to exempt Athy from the judgment <a name="page242" id="page242"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 242]
+</span>passed by Sir James
+Allport&rsquo;s committee against the &ldquo;amenities of railway travelling in
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Saturday, March 10.</i>&mdash;</span>I called by appointment to-day upon Mr.
+Brooke, the owner of the Coolgreany estate, at his counting-house in
+Gardiner&rsquo;s Row. It is one of the spacious old last-century houses of
+Dublin; the counting-room is installed with dark, old-fashioned mahogany
+fittings, in what once was, and might easily again be made, a
+drawing-room. Pictures hang on the walls, and the atmosphere of the
+whole place is one of courtesy and culture rather than of mere modern
+commerce. One of the portraits here is that of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s
+granduncle&mdash;a handsome, full-blooded, rather testy-looking old warrior,
+in the close-fitting scarlet uniform of the Prince Regent&rsquo;s time.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He ought to have been called Lord Baltimore,&rdquo; said Mr. Brooke
+good-naturedly; &ldquo;for he fought against your people for that city at
+Bladensburg with Ross.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That was the battle,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;in which, according to a popular
+tradition in my country, the Americans took so little interest that they
+left the field almost as soon as it began.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Another portrait is of a kinsman who was mur<a name="page243" id="page243"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 243]
+</span>dered in the highway here in
+Ireland many years ago, under peculiarly atrocious circumstances, and
+with no sort of provocation or excuse.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brooke confirmed Dr. Dillon&rsquo;s statement that he had ordered out of
+his counting-house two tenants who came into it with a peculiarly brazen
+proposition, of which I must presume Dr. Dillon was ignorant when he
+cited the fact as a count against the landlord of Coolgreany. I give the
+story as Mr Brooke tells it. &ldquo;The Rent Audit,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;at which my
+tenants were idiots enough to join the Plan of Campaign occurred about
+the 12th December 1886, when, as you know, I refused to accept the terms
+which they proposed to me. I heard nothing more from them till about the
+middle of February 1887, when coming to my office one day I found two
+tenants waiting for me. One was Stephen Maher, a mountain man, and the
+other Patrick Kehoe. &lsquo;What do you want?&rsquo; I asked. Whereupon they both
+arose, and Pat Kehoe pointed to Maher. Maher fumbled at his clothes, and
+rubbed himself softly for a bit, and then produced a scrap of paper.
+&lsquo;It&rsquo;s a bit of paper from the tenants, sir,&rsquo; he said. A queer bit of
+paper it was to look at&mdash;ruled paper, with a composition written <a name="page244" id="page244"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 244]
+</span>upon it
+which might have been the work of a village schoolmaster. It was neither
+signed nor addressed! The pith of it was in these words,&mdash;&lsquo;in
+consequence of the manner in which we have been harassed, our cattle
+driven throughout the country, and our crops not sown, we shall be
+unable to pay the half-year&rsquo;s rent due in March, in addition to the
+reduction already claimed!&rsquo; I own I rather lost my temper at this!
+Remember I had already plainly refused to give &lsquo;the reduction already
+claimed,&rsquo; and had told them not once, but twenty times, that I would
+never surrender to the &lsquo;Plan of Campaign&rsquo;! I am afraid my language was
+Pagan rather than Parliamentary&mdash;but I told them plainly, at least, that
+if they did not break from the Plan of Campaign, and pay their debts,
+they might be sure I would turn the whole of them out! I gave them back
+their precious bit of paper and sent them packing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;One of them, I have told you, was a mountain man, Stephen Maher. He is
+commonly known among the people as &lsquo;the old fox of the mountain,&rsquo; and he
+is very proud of it!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This old Stephen Maher,&rdquo; said Mr. Brooke, &ldquo;is renowned in connection
+with a trial for murder, at <a name="page245" id="page245"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 245]
+</span>which he was summoned as a witness. When he
+was cross-examined by Mr. Molloy, Q.C., he fenced and dodged about with
+that distinguished counsellor for a long time, until getting vexed by
+the lawyer&rsquo;s persistency, he exclaimed, &lsquo;Now thin, Mr. Molloy, I&rsquo;d have
+ye to know that I had a cliverer man nor iver you was, Mr. Molloy, at
+me, and I had to shtan&rsquo; up to him for three hours before the Crowner,
+an&rsquo; he was onable to git the throoth out of me, so he was! so he was!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p>Neither did Dr. Dillon mention the fact that one of the demands made of
+Captain Hamilton, Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s agent, in December 1886, was that a
+Protestant tenant named Webster should be evicted by Mr. Brooke from a
+farm for which he had paid his rent, to make room for the return thither
+of a Roman Catholic tenant named Lenahan, previously evicted for
+non-payment of his rent.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s grandfather bought the Coolgreany property in 1864, he
+adopted a system of betterments, which has been ever since kept up on
+the estate. Nearly every tenant&rsquo;s house on the property has been slated,
+and otherwise repaired by the landlord, nor has one penny ever been
+added on that account to the rents.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 246]
+</span>In the village of Coolgreany all the houses on one side of the main
+street were built in this way by the landlord, and the same thing was
+done in the village of Croghan, where twenty tenants have a grazing
+right of three sheep for every acre held on the Croghan Mountain,
+pronounced by the valuers of the Land Court to be one of the best
+grazing mountains in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hamilton became the agent of the property in 1879, on the death
+of Mr. Vesey. One of his earliest acts was to advise Mr. Brooke to grant
+an abatement of 25 per cent. in June 1881, while the Land Act was
+passing. At the same time, he cautioned the tenants that this was only a
+temporary reduction, and advised them to get judicial rents fixed.</p>
+
+<p>The League advised them not to do this, but to demand 25 per cent.
+reduction again in December 1881. This demand was rejected, and forty
+writs were issued. The tenants thereupon in January 1882 came in and
+paid the full rent, with the costs.</p>
+
+<p>Eleven tenants after this went into Court, and in 1883 the
+Sub-Commissioners cut down their rents. In five cases Mr. Brooke
+appealed. What was the result before the Chief Commissioner? The rent <a name="page247" id="page247"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 247]
+</span>of
+Mary Green, which had been &pound;43, and had been cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners to &pound;39, was restored to &pound;43; the rent of Mr. Kavanagh,
+cut down from &pound;57 to &pound;52, was restored to &pound;55; the rent of Pat Kehoe
+(one of the two tenants &ldquo;ejected&rdquo; from Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s office as already
+stated), cut down from &pound;81 to &pound;70, was restored to &pound;81; the rent of
+Graham, cut down from &pound;38 to &pound;32, 10s., was restored to &pound;38. Other
+reductions were maintained.</p>
+
+<p>This appears to be the record of &ldquo;rack-renting&rdquo; on the Coolgreany
+property.</p>
+
+<p>There are 114 tenants, of whom 15 hold under judicial rents; 22 are
+leaseholders, and 77 are non-judicial yearly tenants. There are 12
+Protestants holding in all a little more than 1200 acres. All the rest
+are Catholics, 14 of these being cottier tenants. The estate consists of
+5165 acres. The average is about &pound;24, and the average rental about &pound;26,
+10s. The gross rental is &pound;2614, of which &pound;1000 go to the jointure of Mr.
+Brooke&rsquo;s mother, and &pound;800 are absorbed by the tithe charges, half
+poor-rates and other taxes. During the year 1886, in which this war was
+declared against him, Mr. Brooke spent &pound;714 in improvements upon the
+property: so in <a name="page248" id="page248"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 248]
+</span>that year his income from Coolgreany was practically
+<i>nil</i>.</p>
+
+<p>What in these circumstances would have been the position of this
+landlord had he not possessed ample means not invested in this
+particular estate? And what has been the result to the tenants of this
+conflict into which it seems clear that they were led, less to protect
+any direct interest of their own than to jeopardise their homes and
+their livelihood for the promotion of a general agrarian agitation? It
+is not clear that they are absolutely so far out of pocket, for I find
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Inch and Gorey rose from
+&pound;3699, 5s. 4d. in 1880 to &pound;5308, 13s. in 1887, showing an increase of
+&pound;1609, 7s. 8d. But they are out of house and home and work, entered
+pupils in that school of idleness and iniquity which has been kept by
+one Preceptor from the beginning of time.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 249]
+</span>CHAPTER XV.<a id="footnotetag25"
+ name="footnotetag25"></a><a href="#footnote25"><sup>25</sup></a></h2>
+
+
+<p>* * * *&mdash;Mrs. Kavanagh was quite right when she told me at Borris in
+March that this country should be seen in June! The drive to this lovely
+place this morning was one long enchantment of verdure and hawthorn
+blossoms and fragrance.</p>
+
+<p>I came over from London to bring to a head some inquiries which have too
+long delayed the publication of this diary. My intention had been to go
+directly to Thurles, but a telegram which I received from the Archbishop
+of Cashel just before <a name="page250" id="page250"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 250]
+</span>I left telling me that he could not be at home for
+the last three days of the week, I came directly here. Nothing can be
+more utterly unlike the popular notions of Ireland and of Irish life
+than the aspect of this most smiling and beautiful region: nothing more
+thoroughly Irish than its people.</p>
+
+<p>* * * who is one of the most active and energetic of Irish landlords,
+lives part of the year abroad, but keeps up his Irish property with
+care, at the expense, I suspect, of his estates elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>From a noble avenue of trees, making the highway like the main road of a
+private park, we turned into a literal paradise of gardens. The air was
+balmy with their wealth of odours. &ldquo;Oh! yes, sir,&rdquo; said the coachman,
+with an air of sympathetic pride, &ldquo;our lady is just the greatest lady in
+all this land for flowers!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And for ivy, he might have added. We drove between green walls of ivy up
+to a house which seemed itself to be built of ivy, like that wonderful
+old mansion of Castle Leod in Scotland. Here, plainly, is another centre
+of &ldquo;sweetness and light,&rdquo; the abolition of which must make, not this
+region alone, but Ireland poorer in that precise form of wealth, which,
+as Laboulaye has shown in one of the best of his lectures, is absolutely
+identical with <a name="page251" id="page251"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 251]
+</span>civilisation. It is such places as this, which, in the
+interest of the people, justify the exemption from redistribution and
+resettlement, made in one of a series of remarkable articles on Ireland
+recently published in the <i>Birmingham Post</i>, of lands, the &ldquo;breaking up
+of which would interfere with the amenity of a residence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>* * * relations with all classes of the people here are so cordial and
+straightforward that he has been easily able to give me to-day, what I
+have sought in vain elsewhere in Ireland, an opportunity of conversing
+frankly and freely with several labouring men. For obvious reasons these
+men, as a rule, shrink from any expression of their real feelings. Their
+position is apparently one of absolute dependence either upon the
+farmers or the landlords, there being no other local market for their
+labour, which is their only stock-in-trade. As one of them said to me
+to-day, &ldquo;The farmers will work a man just as long as they can&rsquo;t help it,
+and then they throw him away.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I asked if there were no regular farm-labourers hired at fixed rates by
+the year?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! very few&mdash;less now than ever; and there&rsquo;ll be fewer before there&rsquo;ll
+be more. The farmers don&rsquo;t want to pay the labourers or to pay the
+landlords; <a name="page252" id="page252"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 252]
+</span>they want the land and the work for nothing, sir,&mdash;they do
+indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What does a farm-hand get,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;if he is hired for a long time?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, permanent men, they&rsquo;ll get 6s. a week with breakfast and dinner,
+or 7s. maybe, with one meal; and a servant-boy, sir, he&rsquo;ll get 2s. a
+week or may be 3s. with his board; but it&rsquo;s seldom he gets it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what has he for his board?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, stirabout; and then twice a week coorse Russian or American meat,
+what they call the &lsquo;kitchen,&rsquo; and they like it better than good meat,
+sir, because it feeds the pot more.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>By this I found he meant that the &ldquo;coorse meat&rdquo; gave out more
+&ldquo;unctuosity&rdquo; in the boiling&mdash;the meat being always served up boiled in a
+pot with vegetables, like the &ldquo;bacon and greens&rdquo; of the &ldquo;crackers&rdquo; in
+the South.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And nothing else?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; buttermilk and potatoes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And these wages are the highest?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I know a boy got 5s., but by living in his father&rsquo;s house, and
+working out it was he got it. And then they go over to England to work.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What wages do they get there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 253]
+</span>&ldquo;Oh, it differs, but they do well; 9s. a week, I think, and their board,
+and straw to sleep on in the stables.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But doesn&rsquo;t it cost them a good deal to go and come?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no; they get cheap rates. They send them from Galway to Dublin like
+cattle, at &pound;2, 5s. a car, and that makes about 1s. 6d. a head; and then
+they are taken over on the steamers very cheap. Often the graziers that
+do large business with the companies, will have a right to send over a
+number of men free; and they stowaway too; and then on the railways in
+England they get passes free often from cattle-dealers, specially when
+they are coming back, and the dealers don&rsquo;t want their passes. They do
+very well. They&rsquo;ll bring back &pound;7 and &pound;10. I was on a boat once, and
+there was a man; he was drunk; he was from Galway somewhere, and they
+took away and kept for him &pound;18, all in good golden sovereigns; that was
+the most I ever saw. And he was drunk, or who&rsquo;d ever have known he had
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do the farmers build houses for the labourers?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Build houses, is it! Glory be to God! who ever heard of such a thing?
+The farmers are a poor proud lot. They&rsquo;d let a labourer die in the
+ditch!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 254]
+</span>All that this poor man said was corroborated by another man of a higher
+class, very familiar with the conditions of life and labour here, and
+indeed one of the most interesting men I have met in Ireland. Born the
+son of a labouring man, he was educated by a priest and educated
+himself, till he fitted himself for the charge of a small school, which
+he kept to such good purpose that in eighteen years he saved &pound;1100, with
+which capital he resolved to begin life as a small farmer and
+shopkeeper. He had studied all the agricultural works he could get, and
+before he went fairly into the business, he travelled on the Continent,
+looking carefully into the methods of culture and manner of life of the
+people, especially in Italy and in Belgium. The Belgian farming gave him
+new ideas of what might be done in Ireland, and those ideas he has put
+into practice, with the best results.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;On the same land with my neighbours,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I double their
+production. Where they get two tons of hay I get four or four and a
+half, where they get forty-five barrels of potatoes I get a hundred.
+Only the other day I got &pound;20 for a bullock I had taken pains with to
+fatten him up scientifically. Of course I had a small capital to start
+with: but where did I get that? Not from <a name="page255" id="page255"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 255]
+</span>the Government. I earned and
+saved it myself; and then I wasn&rsquo;t above learning how best to use it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He thinks the people here&mdash;though by no means what they might be with
+more thrift and knowledge&mdash;much better off than the same class in many
+other parts of Ireland. There are no &ldquo;Gombeen men&rdquo; here, he says, and no
+usurious shopkeepers. &ldquo;The people back each other in a friendly way when
+they need help.&rdquo; Many of the labourers, he says, are in debt to him, but
+he never presses them, and they are very patient with each other. They
+would do much better if any pains were taken to teach them. It is his
+belief that agricultural schools and model farms would do more than
+almost any measure that could be devised for bringing up the standard of
+comfort and prosperity here, and making the country quiet.</p>
+
+<p>It is the opinion of this man that the people of this place have been
+led to regard the Papal Decree as a kind of attack on their liberties,
+and that they are quite as likely to resist as to obey it. For his own
+part, he thinks Ireland ought to have her own parliament, and make her
+own laws. He is not satisfied with the laws actually made, though he
+admits they are better than the older laws were. &ldquo;The tenants get their
+own improvements now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and in <a name="page256" id="page256"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 256]
+</span>old times the more a man
+improved the worse it was for him, the agent all the while putting up
+the rents.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But he does not want Irish independence. &ldquo;The people that talk that
+way,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;have never travelled. They don&rsquo;t see how idle it is for
+Ireland to talk about supporting herself. She just can&rsquo;t do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Not less interesting was my talk to-day with quite a different person.
+This was a keen-eyed, hawk-billed, wiry veteran of the &rsquo;48. As a youth
+he had been out with &ldquo;Meagher of the Sword,&rdquo; and his eyes glowed when he
+found that I had known that champion of Erin. &ldquo;I was out at Ballinagar,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;there were five hundred men with guns, and five hundred
+pikemen.&rdquo; It struck me he would like to be going &ldquo;out&rdquo; again in the same
+fashion, but he had little respect for the &ldquo;Nationalists.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s too many lawyers among them,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;too many lawyers and
+too many dealers. The lawyers are doing well, thanks to the League. Oh
+yes!&rdquo; with a knowing chuckle, and a light of mischief in his eye; &ldquo;the
+lawyers are doing very well! There&rsquo;s one little bit of a solicitor not
+far from here was of no good at all four years ago, and now they tell me
+he&rsquo;s made four thousand pounds in three years&rsquo; time, <a name="page257" id="page257"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 257]
+</span>good money, and got
+it all in hand! And there&rsquo;s another, I hear, has made six thousand. The
+lawyers that call themselves Nationalists, they just keep mischief
+agoing to further themselves. What do they care for the labourers? Why,
+no more than the farmers do&mdash;and what would become of the poor men! * *
+* * here, he is making * * * * * * * and he keeps more poor men going
+than all the lawyers and all the farmers in the place a good part of the
+year.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are the labourers,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;Nationalists?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t know what they are,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;They hate the farmers,
+but they love Ireland, and they all stand together for the counthry!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How is it with the Plan of Campaign and the Boycotting?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now what use have the labourers got for the Plan of Campaign? No more
+than for the moon! And for the Boycotting, I never liked it&mdash;but I was
+never afraid of it&mdash;and there&rsquo;s not been much of it here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will the Papal Decree put a stop to what there is of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t mind the Pope&rsquo;s Decree no more than that door!&rdquo; he exclaimed
+indignantly. &ldquo;Hasn&rsquo;t <a name="page258" id="page258"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 258]
+</span>he enough, sure, to mind in Rome? Why didn&rsquo;t he
+defend his own country, not bothering about Ireland!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are you not a Catholic, then?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, I&rsquo;m a Catholic, but I wouldn&rsquo;t mind the Decree. Only remember,&rdquo;
+he added, after a pause, &ldquo;just this: it don&rsquo;t trouble me, for I&rsquo;ve
+nothing to do with the Plan of Campaign&mdash;only I don&rsquo;t want the Pope to
+be meddlin&rsquo; in matters that don&rsquo;t concern him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s out of respect, then, for the Pope that you wouldn&rsquo;t mind the
+Decree?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just that, intirely! It was some of them Englishmen wheedled it out of
+him, you may be sure, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am told you went out to America once.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I went there in &rsquo;48, and I came back in &rsquo;51.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What made you go?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is it what made me go?&rdquo; he replied, with a sudden fierceness in his
+voice. &ldquo;It was the evictions made me go; that we was put out of the good
+holding my father had, and his father before him; and I can never
+forgive it, never! But I came back; and it was * * * father that was <a name="page259" id="page259"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 259]
+</span>the
+good man to me and to mine, else where would I be?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I afterwards learned from * * * * that the evictions of which the old
+man spoke with so much bitterness were made in carrying out important
+improvements, and that it was quite true that his father had greatly
+befriended the emigrant when he got enough of the New World and came
+home.</p>
+
+<p>It was curious to see the old grudge fresh and fierce in the old man&rsquo;s
+heart, but side by side with it the lion lying down with the lamb&mdash;a
+warm and genuine recognition of the kindness and help bestowed on
+himself. His resentment against the landlord&rsquo;s action in one generation
+did not in the least interfere with his recognition of the landlord&rsquo;s
+usefulness and liberality in the next generation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t like America?&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Where did you live there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I lived at North Brookfield in Massachusetts, a year or two,&rdquo; he
+replied, &ldquo;with Governor Amasa Walker. Did you know him? He was a good
+man; he was fond of the people, but he thought too much of the nagurs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;I know all about him, and he was, as you say, a very
+good man, even if he was <a name="page260" id="page260"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 260]
+</span>an abolitionist. But why didn&rsquo;t you stay in
+North Brookfield?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it was a poor country indeed! A blast of wind would blow all the
+ground away there was! It does no good to the people, going to America,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;they come back worse than they went!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He is at work now in some quarries here.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The quarrymen get six shillings a week,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;with bread and tea
+and butter and meat three times a week. With nine shillings a week and
+board, a man&rsquo;ll make himself bigger than * * *!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was the country quiet now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This country here? Oh! it&rsquo;s very quiet; with potatoes at 3s. 6d. a
+barrel, it&rsquo;s a good year for the people. They&rsquo;re a very quiet
+people,&rdquo;&mdash;in corroboration apparently of which statement he told me a
+story of a coroner&rsquo;s jury called to sit on the body of a man found on
+the highway shot through the head, which returned an unanimous verdict
+of &ldquo;Died by the visitation of God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This country is dominated by the Rocky Hills climbing up to Cullenagh,
+which divides the Barrow valley from the Nore. We drove this afternoon
+to * a most lovely place. The mansion there is now shut <a name="page261" id="page261"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 261]
+</span>up and
+dismantled, but the park and the grounds are very beautiful, with a
+beauty rather enhanced than diminished by the somewhat unkempt
+luxuriance of the vegetation. We passed a now well-grown tree planted by
+the Prince of Wales * * * * * * and drove over many miles of excellent
+road made by * * * * * * * * employs * * * * * * * * regularly, * * *
+men as labourers, cartmen and masons, to whom he pays out annually the
+sum of * * Mr. * * who, by the way, rather resented my asking him if he
+came of one of the Cromwellian English families so numerous here, and
+informed me that his people came over with Strongbow&mdash;assures me that
+but for these works of * * * * these men under him would be literally
+without occupation. In addition to these there are about a dozen more
+men employed * * as gamekeepers and plantation-men. At the * * places
+belonging to * * * * * * * * * * above eighty men find constant
+employment, and receive regular wages amounting to over &pound;4000. Were * *
+* * dispossessed or driven out of Ireland, all <a name="page262" id="page262"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 262]
+</span>this outlay would come to
+an end, and with what result to these working-men? As things now are,
+while * * * working-men receive a regular wage of five shillings, the
+same men, as farmers&rsquo; labourers, would receive, now and then, five
+shillings a week, and that without food! I saw enough in the course of
+our afternoon&rsquo;s drive to satisfy me that my informant of the morning had
+probably not overstated matters when he told me that for at least
+seventy per cent. of the work done by the labourers here, from November
+to May, they have to look to the landlords. On the property of * * as
+well as on the neighbouring properties * * * * * * * the houses have
+been generally put up by the landlords. We called in the course of the
+afternoon upon a labouring man who lives with his wife in a very neat,
+cozy, and quite new house, built recently for him by * *. These good
+people have been living on this property for now nearly half a century.
+Their new house having been built for them, * * has had an agreement
+prepared, under which it may be secured to them. The terms have all been
+discussed and found satisfactory, but the old labourer now hesitates
+<a name="page263" id="page263"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 263]
+</span>about signing the agreement. He gives, and can be got to give, no reason
+for this; but when we drove up he came out to greet us in the most
+friendly manner. We went in and found his wife, a shrewd, sharp-eyed,
+little old dame, with whom * * * * fell into a confabulation, while I
+went into the next room with the labourer himself. The house was neatly
+furnished&mdash;with little ornaments and photographs on the mantel-shelf,
+and nothing of the happy-go-lucky look so common about the houses of the
+working people in Ireland, as well as about the houses of the lesser
+squires.</p>
+
+<p>I paid him a compliment on the appearance of his house and grounds.
+&ldquo;Yes, sir!&rdquo; he answered: &ldquo;it&rsquo;s a very good place it is, and * * * * has
+built it just to please us.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I am told you want to leave it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, no, that is not so, sir, indeed at all! We&rsquo;ve three children you
+see, sir, in America&mdash;two girls and a boy we have.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And where are they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, the girls they&rsquo;re not in any factory at all. They&rsquo;re like leddies,
+living out in a place they call * * in Massachusetts; and the lad, he
+was on a farm there. But we don&rsquo;t know where he is nor <a name="page264" id="page264"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 264]
+</span>his sisters any
+more just now. And the wife, she thinks she would like to go out to
+America and see the children.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you hear from them regularly?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s only a few pounds they send, but they&rsquo;re doing very well.
+Domestics they are, quite like leddies; there&rsquo;s their pictures on the
+shelf.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what would you do there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! we&rsquo;d have lodgings, the wife says, sir. But I like the ould place
+myself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think you are quite right there,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;And do you get work
+here from the farmers as the labourers do in my country?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Work from the farmers, sir?&rdquo; he answered, rather sharply. &ldquo;What they
+can&rsquo;t help we get, but no more! If the farmers in America is like them,
+it&rsquo;s not I would be going there! The farmers! For the farmers, a
+labourer, sir, is not of the race of Adam! They think any place good
+enough for a labourer&mdash;any place and any food! Is the farmers that way
+in America?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know that they are so very much more liberal than your
+farmers are,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;but I think they&rsquo;d have to treat you as being
+of the race of Adam! But are not the farmers here, or <a name="page265" id="page265"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 265]
+</span>the Guardians,
+obliged to build houses for the labourers? I thought there was an Act of
+Parliament about that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And so there is but what&rsquo;s the good of it? It&rsquo;s just to get the
+labourers&rsquo; votes, and then they fool the labourers, just making them
+quarrel about where the cottages shall be, what they call the &lsquo;sites&rsquo;;
+and then there&rsquo;s no cottages built at all, at all. It&rsquo;s the lawyers, you
+see, sir, gets in with the farmers&mdash;the strongest farmers&mdash;and then they
+just make fools of the labourers as if there was no Act of Parliament at
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But if the labourers want to go away, to emigrate,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;as you
+want to do, to America, don&rsquo;t the farmers, or the Government, or the
+landlords, help them to get away and make a start?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not a bit of it, sir,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;not a bit of it. I believe,
+though,&rdquo; he added after a moment; &ldquo;I believe they do get some help to go
+to Australia. But they&rsquo;re mostly no good that goes that way. The best is
+them that go for themselves, or their friends help them. But there&rsquo;s not
+so many going this year.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>When we drove away I asked * * if he had made any progress towards a
+signature of the agreement with the labourer&rsquo;s wife.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 266]
+</span>&ldquo;No; she couldn&rsquo;t be got to say yes or no. I asked her,&rdquo; said * * &ldquo;what
+reason they had for imagining that after all these years I would try to
+do them an injury? She protested they never thought of such a thing; but
+she couldn&rsquo;t be brought to say she wished her husband to sign the paper.
+It&rsquo;s very odd, indeed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I couldn&rsquo;t help suspecting that the <i>materfamilias</i> was at the bottom of
+it all, and that she was bent upon going out to America to participate
+in the prosperity of her two daughters, who were living &ldquo;like leddies&rdquo;
+at * * in Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>The incident recalled to me something which happened years ago when I
+was returning with the Storys from Rome to Boston. Our Cunarder, in the
+middle of the night, off the Irish coast, ran down and instantly sank a
+small schooner.</p>
+
+<p>In a wonderfully short time we had come-to, and a boat&rsquo;s crew had
+succeeded in picking up and bringing all the poor people on board. Among
+them was a wizened old woman, upon whom all sorts of kind attentions
+were naturally lavished by the ship&rsquo;s company. She could not be
+persuaded to go into a cabin after she had recovered from the shock and
+the fright of the accident, but, comforted <a name="page267" id="page267"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 267]
+</span>and clothed with new and dry
+garments, she took refuge under one of the companion-ways, and there,
+sitting huddled up, with her arms about her knees, she crooned and
+moaned to herself, &ldquo;I was near being in a wetter and a warmer place; I
+was near being in a wetter and a warmer place!&rdquo; by the half hour
+together. We found that the poor old soul had been to Liverpool to see
+her son off on a sailing ship as an emigrant to America. So a
+subscription was soon made up to send her on our arrival to New York
+there to await her son. We had some trouble in making her understand
+what was to be done with her, but when she finally got it fairly into
+her head, gleams of mingled surprise and delight came over her withered
+face, and she finally broke out, &ldquo;Oh, then, glory be to God! it&rsquo;s a
+mercy that I was drownded! glory be to God! and it&rsquo;s the proud boy
+Terence will be when he gets out to America to find his poor ould mother
+waiting for him there that he left behind him in Liverpool, and quite
+the leddy with all this good gold money in her hand, glory be to God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On our way back to * * we passed through * * a very neat
+prosperous-looking town, which * * tells me is growing up on <a name="page268" id="page268"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 268]
+</span>the heels
+of * *. * * * was one of the few places at which the &ldquo;no rent&rdquo;
+manifesto, issued by Mr. Parnell and his colleagues from their prison in
+Kilmainham, during the confinement of Mr. Davitt at Portland, and
+without concert with him, was taken up by a village curate and commended
+to the people. He was arrested for it by Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s Government, and
+locked up for six weeks.</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Saturday, June 23d.</i>&mdash;</span>I left * * * yesterday morning early on
+an &ldquo;outside car,&rdquo; with one of my fellow-guests in that &ldquo;bower of
+beauty,&rdquo; who was bent on killing a salmon somewhere in the Nore * * We
+drove through a most varied and picturesque country, viewing on the way
+the seats of Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, both finely
+situated in well-wooded parks. Mr. Stubber was formerly master of the
+Queen&rsquo;s County hounds, a famous pack, which, as our jarvey put it,
+&ldquo;brought a power of money into the county, and made it aisy for a poor
+man.&rdquo; But the local agitations wore out his patience, and he put the
+pack down some years ago. Not far from his house is an astonishing
+modern &ldquo;tumulus,&rdquo; or mound of hewn <a name="page269" id="page269"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 269]
+</span>and squared stones. These it seems
+were quarried and brought here by him, with the intention of building a
+new and handsome residence. This intention he abandoned under the same
+annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They call it Mr. Stubber&rsquo;s Cairn,&rdquo; said the jarvey; &ldquo;and a sorrowful
+sight it is, to think of the work it would have given the people,
+building the big house that&rsquo;ll never be built now, I&rsquo;m thinking.&rdquo; If Mr.
+Stubber should become an &ldquo;absentee,&rdquo; he can hardly, I think, be blamed
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>His property marches with that of Mr. Robert Staples, who comes of a
+Gloucestershire family planted in Ireland under Charles I.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Staples is farming his own lands,&rdquo; said our jarvey, when I
+commented on the fine appearance of some fields as we drove by; &ldquo;and
+he&rsquo;ll be doing very well this year. Ah! he comes and goes, but he&rsquo;s here
+a great deal, and he looks after everything himself; that&rsquo;s the reason
+the fields is good.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This is a property of some 1500 statute acres. Only last March the
+landlord took over from one tenant, who was in arrears of two years and
+a half and owed him some &pound;300, a farm of 90 acres, giving the man fifty
+pounds to boot, and bidding him go in peace. I wonder whether this
+proceeding would <a name="page270" id="page270"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 270]
+</span>make the landlord a &ldquo;land-grabber,&rdquo; and expose him to
+the pains and penalties of &ldquo;boycotting&rdquo;?</p>
+
+<p>On this place, too, it seems that Mr. Staples&rsquo;s grandfather put up many
+houses for the tenants; a thing worth noting, as one of not a few
+instances I have come upon to show that it will not do to accept without
+examination the sweeping statements so familiar to us in America, that
+improvements have never been made by the landlord upon Irish estates.</p>
+
+<p>My companion had meant to put me down at the railway station of
+Attanagh, there to catch a good train to Kilkenny.</p>
+
+<p>But we had a capital nag, and reached Attanagh so early that we
+determined to drive on to Ballyragget.</p>
+
+<p>From Attanagh to Ballyragget the road ran along a plateau which
+commanded the most beautiful views of the valley of the Nore and of the
+finely wooded country beyond. Ballyragget itself is a brisk little
+market town, the American influence showing itself here, as in so many
+other places, in such trifles as the signs on the shops which describe
+them as &ldquo;stores.&rdquo; My salmon-fishing companion put me down at the station
+and went off to the <a name="page271" id="page271"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 271]
+</span>river, which flows through the town, and is here a
+swift and not inconsiderable stream.</p>
+
+<p>An hour in the train took me to Kilkenny, where I met by appointment
+several persons whom I had been unable to see during my previous visit
+in March.</p>
+
+<p>These gentlemen, experienced agents, gave me a good deal of information
+as to the effect of the present state of things upon the &ldquo;<i>moral</i>&rdquo; of
+the tenantry in different parts of Ireland. On one estate, for example,
+in the county of Longford, a tenant has been doing battle for the cause
+of Ireland in the following extraordinary fashion.</p>
+
+<p>He held certain lands at a rental of &pound;23, 4s. Being, to use the
+picturesque language of the agent, a &ldquo;little good for tenant,&rdquo; he fell
+into arrears, and on the 1st of May 1885 owed nearly three years&rsquo; rent,
+or &pound;63, 12s., in addition to a sum of &pound;150 which he had borrowed of his
+amiable landlord three or four years before to enable him to work his
+farm. Of this total sum of &pound;213, 12s. he positively refused to pay one
+penny. Proceedings were accordingly taken against him, and he was
+evicted. By this eviction his title to the tenancy was broken. The
+landlord nevertheless, for the sake of peace and quiet, offered <a name="page272" id="page272"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 272]
+</span>to allow
+him to sell, to a man who wished to take the place, any interest he
+might have had in the holding, and to forgive both the arrears of the
+rent and the &pound;150 which had been borrowed by him. The ex-tenant flatly
+refused to accept this offer, became a weekly pensioner upon the
+National League, and declared war. The landlord was forced to get a
+caretaker for the place from the Property Defence Association at a cost
+of &pound;1 per week, to provide a house for a police protection party, and to
+defray the expenses of that party upon fuel and lights. Nor was this
+all. The landlord found himself further obliged to employ men from the
+same Property Defence Association to cut and save the hay-crop on the
+land, and when this had been done no one could be found to buy the crop.
+The crop and the lands were &ldquo;boycotted.&rdquo; It was only in May last that a
+purchaser could be found for the hay cut and saved two years ago&mdash;this
+purchaser being himself a &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; man on an adjoining property. He
+bought the hay, paying for it a price which did not quite cover one-half
+the cost of sowing it!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No one denies for a moment,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;that the tenant in all
+this business has been more than fairly, even generously, treated by the
+estate; <a name="page273" id="page273"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 273]
+</span>yet no one seems to think it anything but natural and reasonable
+that he should demand, as he now demands, to be put back into the
+possession of his forfeited tenancy at a certain rent fixed by himself,&rdquo;
+which he will obligingly agree to pay, &ldquo;provided that the hay cut and
+saved on the property two years ago is accounted for to him by the
+estate!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In another case an agent, Mr. Ivough, had to deal with a body of five
+hundred tenants on a considerable estate. Of these tenants, two hundred
+settled their rents with the landlord before the passing of the Land Act
+of 1881, and valuations made by the landlord&rsquo;s valuer, with their full
+assent. There was no business for the lawyers, so far as they were
+concerned, and no compulsion of any sort was put on them. Among them was
+a man who had married the daughter of an old tenant on the estate, and
+so came into a holding of 12 Irish, or more than 20 statute, acres, at a
+rental of &pound;18 a year. The valuer reduced this to &pound;14, 10s., which
+satisfied the tenant, and as the agent agreed to make this reduced
+valuation retroactive, all went as smoothly as possible for two years,
+when the tenant began to fall into arrears. When the Sub-Commissioners,
+between 1885 and 1887, took to <a name="page274" id="page274"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 274]
+</span>making sweeping reductions, the tenants
+who had settled freely under the recent valuation grumbled bitterly. As
+one of them tersely put it to the agent, &ldquo;We were a parcel of bloody
+fools, and you ought to have told us these Sub-Commissioners were
+coming!&rdquo; Mr. Sweeney, the tenant by marriage already mentioned, was not
+content to express his particular dissatisfaction in idle words, but
+kept on going into arrears. In May 1888 things came to a crisis. The
+agent refused to accept a settlement which included the payment by him
+of the costs of the proceedings forced upon him by his tenant. &ldquo;You have
+had a good holding,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;with plenty of water and good
+land. In this current year two acres of your wheat will pay the whole
+rent. You have broken up and sold bit by bit a mill that was on the
+place; and above all, when Mr. Gladstone made us accept the judicial
+rents, he told us we might be sure, if we did this, of punctual payment.
+That was the one consideration held out to us. And we are entitled to
+that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenant being out of his holding, the agent wishes to put another
+tenant into it. But the holding is &ldquo;boycotted.&rdquo; Several tenants are
+anxious <a name="page275" id="page275"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 275]
+</span>for it, and would gladly take it, but they dare not The great
+evicted will neither sell any tenant-right he may have, nor pay his
+arrears and costs, nor give up the place to another tenant. To put
+Property Defence men on the holding would cost the landlord &pound;2, 10s. a
+week, and do him no great good, as the evicted man &ldquo;holds the fort,&rdquo;
+being established in a house which he occupies on an adjoining property,
+and for which presumably he pays his rent. It seems as if Mr. Sweeney
+were inspired by the example of another tenant, named Barry, who, before
+the passing of the Land Act of 1881, gave up freely a holding of 20
+acres, on a property managed by Mr. Kough; but as he was on such good
+terms with the agent that he could borrow money of him, he begged the
+agent to let him retain at a low rent a piece of this surrendered land
+directly adjoining his house. He asked this in the name of his eight or
+nine children, and it was granted him. The agent afterwards found that
+the piece of land in question was by far the best of the surrendered
+holding. But that is a mere detail. This ingenious tenant Barry, living
+now on another estate just outside the grasp of the agent, has
+systematically &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; for the last nine years <a name="page276" id="page276"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 276]
+</span>the land which he
+gave up, feeding his own cattle upon it freely meanwhile, and keeping
+all would-be tenants at a distance! &ldquo;He is now,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;quite
+a wealthy man in his way, jobbing cattle at all the great markets!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When the eviction of Sweeney took place,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;I was
+present in person, as I thought I ought to be, and the result is that I
+have been held up to the execration of mankind as a monster for putting
+out a child in a cradle into a storm. As a matter of fact,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;there was a cradle in the way, which the sheriff-Officer gently took
+up, and by direction of the tenant&rsquo;s wife removed. I made no remark
+about it at all, but a local paper published a lying story, which the
+publisher had to retract, that I had said &lsquo;Throw out the child!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Two priests,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;came quite uninvited and certainly without
+provocation, to see me, and one of them shouted out, &lsquo;Ah! we know you&rsquo;ll
+be making another Coolgreany,&rsquo; which was as much as to say there &lsquo;would
+be bloodshed.&rsquo; This was the more intolerable,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that, as I
+afterwards found, I had already done for the sake of the tenants
+precisely what these ecclesiastics professed that they had come to ask
+me to do!</p>
+
+<p><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 277]
+</span>&ldquo;For thirty years,&rdquo; said this gentleman, &ldquo;I have lived in the midst of
+these people&mdash;and in all that time I have never had so much as a
+threatening letter. But after this story was published of my throwing
+out a cradle with a child in it, I was insulted in the street by a woman
+whom I had never seen before. Two girls, too, called out at the
+eviction, &lsquo;You&rsquo;ve bad pluck; why didn&rsquo;t you tell us you were coming down
+the day?&rsquo; and another woman made me laugh by crying after me, &lsquo;You&rsquo;ve
+two good-looking daughters, but you&rsquo;re a bad man yourself.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quite as instructive is the story given me on this occasion of the
+Tyaquin estate in the county of Galway. This estate is managed by an
+agent, Mr. Eichardson of Castle Coiner, in this county of Kilkenny.</p>
+
+<p>The rents on this Galway estate, as Mr. Richardson assures me, have been
+unaltered for between thirty and forty years, and some of them for even
+a longer period. For the last twenty-five years certainty, during which
+Mr. Richardson has been the agent of the estate, and probably, he
+thinks, for many years previous, there has never been a case of the
+non-payment of rent, except in recent years <a name="page278" id="page278"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 278]
+</span>when rents were withheld for
+a time for political reasons.</p>
+
+<p>Large sums of money have been laid out in various useful improvements.
+Constant occupation was given to those requiring it, until the agrarian
+agitation became fully developed. On the demesne and the home farms the
+best systems of reclaiming waste lands and the best systems of
+agriculture were practically exhibited, so that the estate was an
+agricultural free school for all who cared to learn.</p>
+
+<p>When the Land Act of 1881 was passed, almost all the tenants applied,
+and had judicial rents fixed, many of them by consent of the agent.</p>
+
+<p>In 1887 the tenants were called on as usual to pay these judicial rents.
+A large minority refused to do so except on certain terms, which were
+refused. The dispute continued for many months, but as the charges on
+the estate had to be met, the agent was obliged to give way, and allow
+an abatement of four shillings in the pound on these judicial rents.
+Some of these charges, to meet which the agent gave way, were for money
+borrowed from the Commissioners of Public Works to <i>improve the holdings
+of the tenants</i>. For these improvements thus thrown entirely upon the
+funds of the estate no increase of <a name="page279" id="page279"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 279]
+</span>rent or charge of any kind had been
+laid upon the tenants.</p>
+
+<p>When a settlement was agreed on, those of the tenants who had adopted
+the Plan came in a body to pay their rents on 3d January 1888. They
+stated that they were unable to pay more than the rent due up to
+November 1886, and that they would never have adopted the Plan had they
+not been driven into it by <i>sheer distress</i>. After which they handed Mr.
+Richardson a cheque drawn by John T. Dillon, Esq., M.P., for the amount
+banked with the National League.</p>
+
+<p>An article appeared shortly afterwards in a League newspaper, loudly
+boasting of the great victory won by Mr. Dillon, M.P., for the starving
+and poverty-stricken tenants. Two of these tenants (brothers) were under
+a yearly rent of &pound;7, 10s. They declared they could only pay &pound;3, 15s., or
+a <a name="page280" id="page280"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 280]
+</span>half-year&rsquo;s rent, and this only if they got an abatement of 15s. Yet
+these same tenants were then paying Mr. Richardson &pound;50 a year for a
+grass farm, and about &pound;12 for meadows, as well as &pound;30 a year more for a
+grass farm to an adjoining landlord.</p>
+
+<p>Another tenant who held a farm at &pound;13, 5s. a year declared he could only
+pay &pound;6, 12s. 6d., or a half-year&rsquo;s rent, if he got an abatement of &pound;1,
+6s. 6d. A very short time before, this tenant had taken a grass farm
+from an adjoining landlord, and he was so anxious to get it that he
+showed the landlord a bundle of large notes, amounting to rather more
+than &pound;300 sterling, in order to prove his solvency! The same tenant has
+since written a letter to Mr. Richardson offering &pound;50 a year for a grass
+farm!</p>
+
+<p>All these campaigners, Mr. Richardson says, &ldquo;with one noble exception,
+the wife of a tenant who was ill, declined to pay a penny of rent beyond
+November 1st, 1886,&rdquo; stating that they were &ldquo;absolutely unable&rdquo; to do
+more. So they all left the May 1887 rent unpaid, and the hanging gale to
+November 1887, which, however, they were not even asked to pay.</p>
+
+<p>The morning after the settlement many of the tenants who, when they were
+all present in a body on the previous evening, had declared their
+&ldquo;inability&rdquo; to pay the half-year&rsquo;s rent due down to May 1887,
+individually came to Mr. Richardson unasked, and paid it, some saying
+they had &ldquo;borrowed the money that night,&rdquo; but others frankly declaring
+that they dared not break the rule publicly, having been ordered by the
+League only <a name="page281" id="page281"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 281]
+</span>to pay to November 1886, for fear of the consequences. These
+would have been injury to their cattle, or the burning of their hay, or
+possibly murder.</p>
+
+<p>Of the country about Kilkenny, I am told, as of the country about
+Carlow, that nearly or quite seventy per cent, of the labourers are
+dependent upon the landlords from November to May for such employment as
+they get.</p>
+
+<p>The shopkeepers, too, are in a bad way, being in many cases reduced to
+the condition of mere agents of the great wholesale houses elsewhere,
+and kept going by these houses mainly in the hope of recovering old
+debts. There is a severe pressure of usury, too, upon the farmers. &ldquo;If a
+farmer,&rdquo; said one resident to me, &ldquo;wants to borrow a small sum of the
+Loan Fund Bank, he must have two securities&mdash;one of them a substantial
+man good for the debt. These two indorsers must be &lsquo;treated&rsquo; by the
+borrower whom they back; and he must pay them a weekly sum for the
+countenance they have given him, which not seldom amounts, before he
+gets through with the matter, to a hundred per cent, on the original
+loan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I am assured too that the consumption of spirits <a name="page282" id="page282"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 282]
+</span>all through this region
+has greatly increased of late years. &ldquo;The official reports will show
+you,&rdquo; said one gentleman, &ldquo;that the annual outlay upon whisky in Ireland
+equals the sum saved to the tenants by the reductions in rent.&rdquo; This is
+a proposition so remarkable that I simply record it for future
+verification, as having been made by a very quiet, cool, and methodical
+person, whose information on other points I have found to be correct. He
+tells me too, as of his own knowledge, that in going over some financial
+matters with a small farmer in his neighbourhood, he ascertained, beyond
+a peradventure, that this farmer annually spent in whisky, for the use
+of his family, consisting of himself, his wife and three adult children,
+nearly, or quite, <i>seventy pounds a year</i>! &ldquo;You won&rsquo;t believe this,&rdquo; he
+said to me; &ldquo;and if you print the statement nobody else will believe it;
+but for all that it is the simple unexaggerated truth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Falstaff&rsquo;s reckoning at Dame Quickly&rsquo;s becomes a moderate score in
+comparison with this!</p>
+
+<p>I spent half an hour again in the muniment-room at Kilkenny Castle,
+where, in the Expense-Book of the second Duke of Ormond, I found a
+supper <i>menu</i> worthy of record, as illustrating what people meant <a name="page283" id="page283"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 283]
+</span>by
+&ldquo;keeping open house&rdquo; in the great families of the time of Queen
+Anne.[Note <a href="#noteL">L.</a>]</p>
+
+<p>Taking a train early in the afternoon, I came on here in time to dine
+last night with Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, an uncompromising Protestant
+&ldquo;Home Ruler&rdquo;&mdash;as Protestant and as uncompromising as John Mitchel&mdash;whose
+recent pamphlet on &ldquo;Boycotting&rdquo; has deservedly attracted so much
+attention on both sides of the Irish Sea.</p>
+
+<p>I was first led into a correspondence with Mr. Rolleston by a remarkable
+article of his published in the <i>Dublin University Review</i> for February
+1886, on &ldquo;The Archbishop in Politics.&rdquo; In that article, Mr. Rolleston,
+while avowing himself to be robust enough to digest without much
+difficulty the <i>ex officio</i> franchise conferred upon the Catholic clergy
+by Mr. Parnell to secure the acceptance of his candidates at
+Parliamentary conventions, made a very firm and fearless protest against
+the attempt of the Archbishops of Dublin and Cashel to &ldquo;boycott&rdquo;
+Catholic criticism of the National League and its methods, by declaring
+such criticism to be &ldquo;a public insult&rdquo; offered, not to the Archbishops
+of Cashel and Dublin personally, or as political sup<a name="page284" id="page284"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 284]
+</span>porters of the
+National League, but to the Archbishops as dignitaries of the Catholic
+Church, and to their Archiepiscopal office. The &ldquo;boycotting,&rdquo; by
+clerical machinery, of independent lay opinion in civil matters, is to
+the body politic of a Catholic country what the germ of cancer is to the
+physical body. And though Mr. Rolleston, in this article, avowed himself
+to be a hearty supporter of the &ldquo;political programme of the National
+League,&rdquo; and went so far even as to maintain that the social boycotting,
+&ldquo;which makes the League technically an illegal conspiracy against law
+and individual liberty,&rdquo; might be &ldquo;in many cases justified by the
+magnitude of the legalised crime against which it was directed,&rdquo; it was
+obvious to me that he could not long remain blind to the true drift of
+things in an organisation condemned, by the conditions it has created
+for itself, to deal with the thinkers of Ireland as it deals with the
+tenants of Ireland. His recent pamphlet on &ldquo;Boycotting&rdquo; proves that I
+was right. What he said to me the other day in a letter about the
+pamphlet may be said as truly of the article. It was &ldquo;a shaft sunk into
+the obscure depths of Irish opinion, to bring to light and turn to
+service whatever there may be in those depths of <a name="page285" id="page285"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 285]
+</span>sound and healthy;&rdquo; and
+one of my special objects in this present visit to Ireland was to get a
+personal touch of the intellectual movement which is throwing such
+thinkers as Mr. Rolleston to the front.</p>
+
+<p>We were five at table, Mr. Rolleston&rsquo;s other guests being Mr. John
+O&rsquo;Leary, whose name is held in honour for his courage and honesty by all
+who know anything of the story of Ireland in our times, and who was sent
+a quarter of a century ago as a Fenian patriot&mdash;not into seclusion with
+sherry and bitters, at Kilmainham, like Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s &ldquo;suspects&rdquo; of
+1881&mdash;but like Michael Davitt, into the stern reality of penal
+servitude; Dr. Sigerson, Dean of the Faculty of Science of the Boyal
+University, and an authority upon the complicated question of Irish Land
+Tenures; and Mr. John F. Taylor, a leading barrister of Dublin, an ally
+on the Land Question of Mr. Davitt, and an outspoken Repealer of the
+Union of 1800.</p>
+
+<p>I have long wished to meet Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, who sent me, through a
+correspondent of mine, two years ago, one of the most thoughtful and
+well-considered papers I have ever read on the possibilities and
+impossibilities of Home Rule for Ireland; and it was a great pleasure to
+find in the man the eleva<a name="page286" id="page286"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 286]
+</span>tion of tone, the breadth of view, and the
+refined philosophic perception of the strong and weak points in the
+Irish case, which had charmed me in. the paper. Now that &ldquo;Conservative&rdquo;
+Englishmen have come to treat the main points of Chartism almost as
+commonplaces in politics, it is surely time for them to recognise the
+honesty and integrity of the spirit which revolted in the Ireland of
+1848 against the then seemingly hopeless condition of that country. Of
+that spirit Mr. O&rsquo;Leary is a living, earnest, and most interesting
+incarnation. He strikes one at once as a much younger man in all that
+makes the youth of the intellect and the emotions than any Nationalist
+M.P. of half his years whom I have ever met. No Irishman living has
+dealt stronger or more open blows than he against the English dominion
+in Ireland. Born in Tipperary, where he inherited a small property in
+houses, he was sent to Trinity College in Dublin, and while a student
+there was drawn into the &ldquo;Young Ireland&rdquo; party mainly by the poems of
+Thomas Davis. Late in the electrical year of the &ldquo;battle summer,&rdquo; 1848,
+he was arrested on suspicion of being concerned in a plot to rescue
+Smith O&rsquo;Brien and other state prisoners. The suspicion was well founded,
+but could not be estab<a name="page287" id="page287"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 287]
+</span>lished, and after a day or two he was liberated.
+From Trinity, after this, he went to the Queen&rsquo;s College in Cork, where
+he took his degree, and studied medicine. When the Fenian movement
+became serious, after the close of our American Civil War, O&rsquo;Leary threw
+himself into it with Stephens, Luby, and Charles Kickham. Stephens
+appointed him one of the chief organisers of the I.E.B. with Luby and
+Kickham, and he took charge of the <i>Irish People</i>&mdash;the organ of the
+Fenians of 1865. It was as a subordinate contributor to this journal
+that Sir William Harcourt&rsquo;s familiar Irish bogy, O&rsquo;Donovan Rossa<a id="footnotetag26"
+ name="footnotetag26"></a><a href="#footnote26"><sup>26</sup></a>,
+was arrested together with his chief, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, and with Kickham in
+1865, and found guilty, <a name="page288" id="page288"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 288]
+</span>with them, after a trial before Mr. Justice
+Keogh, of treason-felony. The speech then delivered by Mr. O&rsquo;Leary in
+the dock made a profound impression upon the public mind in America. It
+was the speech, not of a conspirator, but of a patriot. The indignation
+with which he repelled for himself and for his associate Luby the
+charges levelled at them both, without a particle of supporting
+evidence, by the prosecuting counsel, of aiming at massacre and plunder,
+was its most salient feature. The terrible sentence passed upon him, of
+penal servitude for twenty years, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary accepted with a calm
+dignity, which I am glad, for the sake of Irish manhood, to find that
+his friends here now recall with pride, when their ears are vexed by the
+shrill and clamorous complaints of more recent &ldquo;patriots,&rdquo; under the
+comparatively trivial punishments which they invite.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary and his companions were released and pardoned on
+condition of remaining beyond the British dominions until the expiration
+of their sentences. Mr. O&rsquo;Leary fixed his residence for a time in Paris,
+and thence went to America, where he and Kickham were regarded as the
+leaders of the American branch of the I. R. B. He returned to <a name="page289" id="page289"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 289]
+</span>Ireland in
+1885, his term of sentence having then expired, and it was shortly after
+his return that he gave to my correspondent the letter upon Irish
+affairs to which I have already referred. He had been chosen President
+of the &ldquo;Young Ireland Society&rdquo; of Dublin before he returned, and in that
+capacity delivered at the Rotunda, in the Irish capital, before a vast
+crowd assembled to welcome him back, an address which showed how
+thoughtfully and calmly he had devoted himself during his long years of
+imprisonment and exile to the cause of Ireland. Mr. William O&rsquo;Brien,
+M.P., and Mr. Redmond, M.P., took part in this reception, but their
+subsequent course shows that they can hardly have relished Mr. O&rsquo;Leary&rsquo;s
+fearless and outspoken protests against the intolerance and injustice of
+the agrarian organisation which controls their action. In England, as
+well as well as in Ireland, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary spoke to great multitudes of his
+countrymen, and always in the same sense. Mr. Rolleston tells me that
+Mr. O&rsquo;Leary&rsquo;s denunciations of &ldquo;the dynamite section of the Irish
+people,&rdquo; to use the euphemism of an American journal, &ldquo;are the only ones
+ever uttered by an Irish leader, lay or clerical.&rdquo; The day must come, if
+it be not already close at hand, when the Irish leader of <a name="page290" id="page290"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 290]
+</span>whom this can
+be truly said, must be felt by his own people to be the one man worthy
+of their trust. The thing that has been shall be, and there is nothing
+new under the sun. The Marats and the Robespierres, the Bar&egrave;res and the
+Collots, are the pallbearers, not the standard-bearers of liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the National League, as at present administered on the lines of
+the agrarian agitation, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary has so far preserved an attitude of
+neutrality, though he has never for a moment hesitated either in public
+or in private most vehemently to condemn such sworn Fenians as have
+accepted seats in the British Parliament, speaking his mind freely and
+firmly of them as &ldquo;double-oathed men&rdquo; playing a constitutional part with
+one hand, and a treasonable part with the other.</p>
+
+<p>Yet he is not at one with the extreme and fanatical Fenians who oppose
+constitutional agitation simply because it is constitutional. His
+objection to the existing Nationalism was exactly put, Mr. Rolleston
+tells me, by a clever writer in the Dublin <i>Mail</i>, who said that
+O&rsquo;Connell having tried &ldquo;moral force&rdquo; and failed, and the Fenians having
+tried &ldquo;physical force&rdquo; and failed, the Leaguers were now trying to
+succeed by the use of &ldquo;immoral force.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page291" id="page291"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 291]
+</span>Dr. Sigerson, who, as a man of science, must necessarily revolt from the
+coarse and clumsy methods of the blunderers who have done so much since
+1885 to discredit the cause of Ireland, evidently clings to the hope
+that something may still be saved from the visible wreck of what has
+come, even in Ireland, to be called &ldquo;Parnellism,&rdquo; and he good-naturedly
+persisted in speaking of our host last night and of his friends as
+&ldquo;mugwumps.&rdquo; For the &ldquo;mugwumps&rdquo; of my own country I have no particular
+admiration, being rather inclined, with my friend Senator Conkling (now
+gone to his rest from the racket of American politics), to regard them
+as &ldquo;Madonnas who wish it to be distinctly understood that they might
+have been Magdalens.&rdquo; But these Irish &ldquo;mugwumps&rdquo; seem to me to earn
+their title by simply refusing to believe that two and two, which make
+four in France or China, can be bullied into making five in Ireland.
+&ldquo;What certain &lsquo;Parnellites&rsquo; object to,&rdquo; said one of the company, &ldquo;is
+that we can&rsquo;t be made to go out gathering grapes of thorns or figs of
+thistles. Some of them expect to found an Irish republic on robbery, and
+to administer it by falsehood. We don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag27"
+ name="footnotetag27"></a><a href="#footnote27"><sup>27</sup></a> This is precisely the
+<a name="page292" id="page292"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 292]
+</span>spirit in which Mr. Rolleston wrote to me not long before I left England
+this week. &ldquo;I have been slowly forced,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;to the conclusion
+that the National League is a body which deserves nothing but
+reprobation from all who wish well to Ireland. It has plunged this
+country into a state of moral degradation, from which it will take us at
+least a generation to recover. It is teaching the people that no law of
+justice, of candour, of honour, or of humanity can be allowed to
+interfere with the political ends of the moment. It is, in fact,
+absolutely divorcing morality from politics. The mendacity of some of
+its leaders is shameless and sickening, and still more sickening is the
+complete indifference with which this mendacity is regarded in Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p>It is the spirit, too, of a letter which I received not long ago from
+the west of Ireland, in which my correspondent quoted the bearer of one
+of the most distinguished of Irish names, and a strong &ldquo;Home Ruler,&rdquo; as
+saying to him, &ldquo;These Nationalists are stripping Irishmen as bare of
+moral sense as the Bushmen of South Africa.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This very day I find in one of the leading Nationalist journals here
+letters from Mr. Davitt, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, and Mr. Taylor himself, which
+convict <a name="page293" id="page293"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 293]
+</span>that journal of making last week a statement about Mr. Taylor
+absolutely untrue, and, so far as appears, absolutely without the shadow
+of a foundation. These letters throw such a curious light on passing
+events here at this moment that I shall preserve them.<a id="footnotetag28"
+ name="footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28"><sup>28</sup></a> The statement
+to which they refer was thus put in the journal which made it: &ldquo;We have
+absolute reason to know that when the last Coercion Act was in full
+swing this pure-souled and disinterested patriot (Mr. John F. Taylor)
+begged for, received, and accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship
+under a Coercion Government. As was wittily said at the time, He sold
+his principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+stirred the mess.&rdquo; This is no assertion &ldquo;upon hearsay&rdquo;&mdash;no publication of
+a rumour or report. It is an assertion made, not upon belief even, but
+upon a claim of &ldquo;absolute knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Yet to-day, in the same journal, I find Mr. Taylor declaring this
+statement, made upon a claim of &ldquo;absolute knowledge,&rdquo; to be &ldquo;absolutely
+untrue,&rdquo; and appealing in support of this declaration to Mr. Walker, the
+host of Lord Riand Mr. Morley, and to The M&lsquo;Dermot, Q.C., a conspicuous
+Home Ruler; to which Mr. Davitt adds: &ldquo;Mr. Taylor, on my <a name="page294" id="page294"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 294]
+</span>advice,
+declined the Crown Prosecutorship for King&rsquo;s County, a post afterwards
+applied for by, and granted to, a near relative of one of the most
+prominent members of the Irish Party,&rdquo;&mdash;meaning Mr. Luke Dillon, a
+cousin of Mr. John Dillon, M.P.!</p>
+
+<p>We had much interesting conversation last night about the relations of
+the Irish leaders here with public and party questions in America, as to
+which I find Mr. O&rsquo;Leary unusually well and accurately informed.</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry that I must get off to-morrow into Mayo to see Lord Lucan&rsquo;s
+country there, for I should have been particularly pleased to look more
+closely with Mr. Rolleston into the intellectual revolt against
+&ldquo;Parnellism&rdquo; and its methods, of which his attitude and that of his
+friends here is an unmistakable symptom. As he tersely puts it, he sees
+&ldquo;no hope in Irish politics, except a reformation of the League, a return
+to the principles of Thomas Davis.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The lines for a reformation or transformation of the League, as it now
+exists, appear to have been laid down in the original constitution of
+the body. Under that constitution, it seems, the League was meant to be
+controlled by a representative committee chosen annually, open to public
+criticism, <a name="page295" id="page295"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 295]
+</span>and liable to removal by a new election. As things now are,
+the officers of this alleged democratic organisation are absolutely
+self-elected, and wield the wide and indefinite power they possess over
+the people of Ireland in a perfectly unauthorised, irresponsible way. It
+is a curious illustration of the autocratic or bureaucratic system under
+which the Irish movement is now conducted, that Mr. Davitt, who does not
+pretend to be a Parliamentarian, and owes indeed much of his authority
+to his refusal to enter Parliament and take oaths of allegiance, does
+not hesitate for a moment to discipline any Irish member of Parliament
+who incurs his disapprobation. Sir Thomas Esmonde, for example, was
+severely taken to task by him the other day in the public prints for
+venturing to put a question, in his place at Westminster, to the
+Government about a man-of-war stationed in Kingstown harbour. Mr. Davitt
+very peremptorily ordered Sir Thomas to remember that he is not sent to
+Westminster to recognise the British Government, or concern himself
+about British regiments or ships, and Sir Thomas accepts the rebuke in
+silence. Whom does such a member of Parliament represent&mdash;the
+constituents who nominally elect him, or the leader who cracks the whip
+over him so sharply?</p>
+
+<p><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 296]
+</span>I have to-day been looking through a small and beautifully-printed
+volume of poems just issued here by Gill and Son, Nationalist
+publishers, I take it, who have the courage of their convictions, since
+their books bear the imprint of &ldquo;O&rsquo;Connell,&rdquo; and not of Sackville
+Street. This little book of the <i>Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland </i>is
+a symptom too. It is dedicated in a few brief but vigorous stanzas to
+John O&rsquo;Leary, as one who</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="i4">&ldquo;Hated&nbsp;all&nbsp;things&nbsp;base,</span><br />
+ And&nbsp;held&nbsp;his&nbsp;country&rsquo;s&nbsp;honour&nbsp;high.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And the spirit of all the poems it contains is the spirit of &rsquo;48, or of
+that earlier Ireland of Robert Emmet, celebrated in some charming verses
+by &ldquo;Rose Kavanagh&rdquo; on &ldquo;St. Michan&rsquo;s Churchyard,&rdquo; where the</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="i4"> &ldquo;sunbeam&nbsp;went&nbsp;and&nbsp;came</span><br />
+ Above&nbsp;the&nbsp;stone&nbsp;which&nbsp;waits&nbsp;the&nbsp;name<br />
+ His&nbsp;land&nbsp;must&nbsp;write&nbsp;with&nbsp;freedom&lsquo;s&nbsp;flame.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>It interests an American to find among these poems and ballads a
+striking threnody called &ldquo;The Exile&rsquo;s Return,&rdquo; signed with the name of
+&ldquo;Patrick Henry&rdquo;; and it is noteworthy, for more reasons than one, that
+the volume winds up with a &ldquo;Marching Song of the Gaelic Athletes,&rdquo;
+signed &ldquo;An Chraoibhin Aoibbinn.&rdquo; These Athletes are <a name="page297" id="page297"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 297]
+</span>numbered now, I am
+assured, not by thousands, but by myriads, and their organisation covers
+all parts of Ireland. If the spirit of &rsquo;48 and of &rsquo;98 is really moving
+among them, I should say they are likely to be at least as troublesome
+in the end to the &ldquo;uncrowned king&rdquo; as to the crowned Queen of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>As for the literary merit of these <i>Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland</i>,
+it strikes one key with their political quality. One exquisite ballad of
+&ldquo;The Stolen Child,&rdquo; by W. B. Yeats, might have been sung in the
+moonlight on a sylvan lake by the spirit of Heinrich Heine.</p>
+
+<p>I spent an hour or two this morning most agreeably in the libraries of
+the Law Courts and of Trinity College: the latter one of the stateliest
+most academic &ldquo;halls of peace&rdquo; I have ever seen; and this afternoon I
+called upon Dr. Sigerson, a most patriotic Irishman, of obviously Danish
+blood, who has his own ideas as to Clontarf and Brian Boru; and who gave
+me very kindly a copy of his valuable report on that Irish Crisis of
+1879-80, out of which Michael Davitt so skilfully developed the agrarian
+movement whereof &ldquo;Parnellism&rdquo; down to this time has been the not very
+well adjusted instrument. The report was drawn up after a thorough
+inspection by Dr. Siger<a name="page298" id="page298"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 298]
+</span>son and his associate, Dr. Kenny, visiting
+physicians to the North Dublin Union, of some of the most distressed
+districts of Mayo, Sligo, and Galway; and a more interesting,
+intelligent, and impressive picture of the worst phases of the social
+conditions of Ireland ten years ago is not to be found. I have just been
+reading it over carefully in conjunction with my memoranda made from the
+Emigration and Seed Potato Fund Reports, which Mr. Tuke gave me some
+time ago, and it strongly reinforces the evidence imbedded in those
+reports, which goes to show that agitation for political objects in
+Ireland has perhaps done as much as all other causes put together to
+depress the condition of the poor in Ireland, by driving and keeping
+capital out of the country. The worst districts visited in 1879 by Dr.
+Sigerson and Dr. Kenny do not appear to have been so completely cut off
+from civilisation as was the region about Gweedore before the purchase
+of his property there by Lord George Hill, and the remedies suggested by
+Dr. Sigerson for the suffering in these districts are all in the
+direction of the remedies applied by Lord George Hill to the condition
+in which he found Gweedore. After giving full value to the stock
+explanations of Irish distress in the congested districts, such as
+excessive rents, <a name="page299" id="page299"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 299]
+</span>penal laws, born of religious or &ldquo;racial&rdquo; animosity,
+and a defective system of land tenure, it seems to be clear that the
+main difficulties have arisen from the isolation of these districts, and
+from the lack of varied industries. Political agitation has checked any
+flow of capital into these districts, and a flow of capital into them
+would surely have given them better communications and more varied
+industries. Dr. Sigerson states that some of the worst of these regions
+in the west of Ireland are as well adapted to flax-culture as Ulster,
+and Napoleon III. showed what could be done for such wastes as La
+Sologne and the desert of the Landes by the intelligent study of a
+country and the judicious development of such values as are inherent in
+it. The loss of population in Ireland is not unprecedented. The State of
+New Hampshire, in America, one of the original thirteen colonies which
+established the American Union, has twice shown an actual loss in
+population during the past century. The population of the State declined
+during the decade between 1810 and 1820, and again during the decade
+between 1860 and 1870. This phenomenon, unique in American history, is
+to be explained only by three causes, all active in the case of
+congested Ireland,&mdash;a decaying agriculture, lack of communications, and
+the absence of varied <a name="page300" id="page300"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 300]
+</span>industries. During the decade from 1860 to 1870
+the great Civil War was fought out. Yet, despite the terrible waste of
+life and capital in that war, especially at the South, the Northern
+State of New Hampshire, peopled by the energetic English adventurers who
+founded New England, was actually the only State which came out of the
+contest with a positive decline in population. Virginia (including West
+Virginia, which seceded from that Commonwealth in 1861) rose from
+1,596,318 inhabitants in 1860 to 1,667,177 in 1870. South Carolina,
+which was ravaged by the war more severely than any State except
+Virginia, and upon which the Republican majority at Washington pressed
+with such revengeful hostility after the downfall of the Confederacy,
+showed in 1870 a positive increase in population, as compared with 1860,
+from 703,708 to 705,606. But New Hampshire, lying hundreds of miles
+beyond the area of the conflict, showed a positive decrease from 326,073
+to 318,300. During my college days at Cambridge the mountain regions of
+New Hampshire were favourite &ldquo;stamping grounds&rdquo; in the vacations, and I
+exaggerate nothing when I say that in the secluded nooks and corners of
+the State, the people cut off from communication with the rest of New
+England, and scratching out <a name="page301" id="page301"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 301]
+</span>of a rocky land an inadequate subsistence,
+were not much, if at all, in advance of the least prosperous dwellers in
+the most remote parts of Ireland which I have visited. They furnished
+their full contingent to that strange American exodus, which, about a
+quarter of a century ago, was led out of New England by one Adams to the
+Holy Land, in anticipation of the Second Advent, a real modern crusade
+of superstitious land speculators, there to perish, for the most part,
+miserably about Jaffa&mdash;leaving houses and allotments to pass into the
+control of a more practical colony of Teutons, which I found
+establishing itself there in 1869.</p>
+
+<p>Since 1870 a change has come over New Hampshire. The population has
+risen to 346,984. In places waste and fallen twenty years ago brisk and
+smiling villages have sprung up along lines of communication established
+to carry on the business of thriving factories.</p>
+
+<p>What reason can there be in the nature of things to prevent the
+development of analogous results, through the application of analogous
+forces, in the case of &ldquo;congested&rdquo; Ireland? A Nationalist friend, to
+whom I put this question this afternoon, answers it by alleging that so
+long as fiscal laws for Ireland are made at Westminster, British capital
+invested <a name="page302" id="page302"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 302]
+</span>in Great Britain will prevent the application of these
+analogous forces to &ldquo;congested&rdquo; Ireland. His notion is that were Ireland
+as independent of Great Britain, for example, in fiscal matters as is
+Canada, Ireland might seek and secure a fiscal union with the United
+States, such as was partially secured to Canada under the Reciprocity
+Treaty denounced by Mr. Seward.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Give us this,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and take us into your system of American
+free-trade as between the different States of your American Union, and
+no end of capital will soon be coming into Ireland, not only from your
+enormously rich and growing Republic, but from Great Britain too. Give
+us the American market, putting Great Britain on a less-favoured
+footing, just as Mr. Blake and his party wish to do in the case of
+Canada, and between India doing her own manufacturing on the one side,
+and Ireland becoming a manufacturing centre on the other, and a mart in
+Europe for American goods, we&rsquo;ll get our revenge on Elizabeth and
+Cromwell in a fashion John Bull has never dreamt of in these times,
+though he used to be in a mortal funk of it a hundred years ago, when
+there wasn&rsquo;t nearly as much danger of it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Sunday, June 24.</i>&mdash;</span>&ldquo;Put not your faith in <a name="page303" id="page303"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 303]
+</span>porters!&rdquo; I had
+expected to pass this day at Castlebar, on the estate of Lord Lucan, and
+I exchanged telegrams to that effect yesterday with Mr. Harding, the
+Earl&rsquo;s grandson, who, in the absence of his wonderfully energetic
+grandsire, is administering there what Lord Lucan, with pardonable
+pride, declares to be the finest and most successful dairy-farm in all
+Ireland. I asked the porter to find the earliest morning train; and
+after a careful search he assured me that by leaving Dublin just after 7
+A.M. I could reach Castlebar a little after noon.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this I determined to dine with Mr. Colomb, and spend the night in
+Dublin. But when I reached the station a couple of hours ago, it was to
+discover that my excellent porter had confounded 7 A.M. with 7 P.M.</p>
+
+<p>There is no morning train to Castlebar! So here I am with no recourse,
+my time being short, but to give up the glimpse I had promised myself of
+Mayo, and go on this afternoon to Belfast on my way back to London.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner last night Mr. Colomb gave me further and very interesting
+light upon the events of 1867, of which he had already spoken with me at
+Cork, as well as upon the critical period of Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s experiments
+of 1881-82 at &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page304" id="page304"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 304]
+</span>Mr. Colomb lives in a remarkably bright and pleasant suburb of Dublin,
+which not only is called a &ldquo;park,&rdquo; as suburbs are apt to be, but really
+is a park, as suburbs are less apt to be. His house is set near some
+very fine old trees, shading a beautiful expanse of turf. He is an
+amateur artist of much more than ordinary skill. His walls are gay, and
+his portfolios filled, with charming water-colours, sketches, and
+studies made from Nature all over the United Kingdom. The grand
+coast-scenery of Cornwall and of Western Ireland, the lovely lake
+landscapes of Killarney, sylvan homes and storied towers, all have been
+laid under contribution by an eye quick to seize and a hand prompt to
+reproduce these most subtle and transient atmospheric effects of light
+and colour which are the legitimate domain of the true water-colourist.
+With all these pictures about us&mdash;and with Mr. Colomb&rsquo;s workshop fitted
+up with Armstrong lathes and all manner of tools wherein he varies the
+routine of official life by making all manner of instruments, and
+wreaking his ingenuity upon all kinds of inventions&mdash;and with the
+pleasant company of Mr. Davies, the agreeable and accomplished official
+secretary of Sir West Ridgway, the evening wore quickly away. In the
+course of conversation the question of the average income of the <a name="page305" id="page305"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 305]
+</span>Irish
+priests arose, and I mentioned the fact that Lord Lucan, whose knowledge
+of the smallest details of Irish life is amazingly thorough, puts it
+down at about ten shillings a year per house in the average Irish
+parish.</p>
+
+<p>He rated Father M&lsquo;Fadden and his curate of Gweedore, for example,
+without a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, at a thousand pounds a year in the whole,
+or very nearly the amount stated to me by Sergeant Mahony at Baron&rsquo;s
+Court. This brought from Mr. Davies a curious account of the proceedings
+in a recent case of a contested will before Judge Warren here in Dublin.
+The will in question was made by the late Father M&lsquo;Garvey of Milford, a
+little village near Mulroy Bay in Donegal, notable chiefly as the scene
+of the murder of the late Earl of Leitrim. Father M&lsquo;Garvey, who died in
+March last, left by this will to religious and charitable uses the whole
+of his property, save &pound;800 bequeathed in it to his niece, Mrs. O&rsquo;Connor.
+It was found that he died possessed not only of a farm at Ardara, but of
+cash on deposit in the Northern Bank to the very respectable amount of
+&pound;23,711. Mrs. O&rsquo;Connor contested the will. The Archbishop of Armagh, and
+Father Sheridan, C.C. of Letterkenny, instituted an action against her
+to establish the will. Father M&lsquo;Fadden of Gweedore, <a name="page306" id="page306"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 306]
+</span>lying in Londonderry
+jail as a first-class misdemeanant, was brought from Londonderry as a
+witness for the niece. But on the trial of the case it appeared that
+there was actually no evidence to sustain the plea of the niece that
+&ldquo;undue influence&rdquo; had been exerted upon her uncle by the Archbishop, who
+at the time of the making of the will was Bishop of Raphoe, or by
+anybody else; so the judge instructed the jury to find on all the issues
+for the plaintiffs, which was done. The judge declared the conduct of
+the defendant in advancing a charge of &ldquo;undue influence&rdquo; in such
+circumstances against ecclesiastics to be most reprehensible; but the
+Archbishop very graciously intimated through his lawyer his intention of
+paying the costs of the niece who had given him all this trouble,
+because she was a poor woman who had been led into her course by
+disappointment at receiving so small a part of so large an inheritance.
+Had the priest&rsquo;s property come to him in any other way than through his
+office as a priest her claim might have been more worthy of
+consideration, but Mr. M&lsquo;Dermot, Q.C., who represented the Archbishop,
+took pains to make it clear that as an ecclesiastic his client, who had
+nothing to do with the making of the will, was bound to regard it &ldquo;as
+proper and in accordance <a name="page307" id="page307"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 307]
+</span>with the fitness of things that what had been
+received from the poor should be given back to the poor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I see no adequate answer to this contention of the Archbishop. But it
+certainly goes to confirm the estimates given me by Sergeant Mahony of
+Father M&lsquo;Fadden&rsquo;s receipts at Gweedore, and the opinion expressed to me
+by Lord Lucan as to the average returns of an average Catholic parish,
+that the priest of Milford, a place hardly so considerable as Gweedore,
+should have acquired so handsome a property in the exercise there of his
+parochial functions.</p>
+
+<p>One form in which the priests in many parts of Ireland collect dues is
+certainly unknown to the practice of the Church elsewhere, I believe,
+and it must tend to swell the incomes of the priests at the expense,
+perhaps, of their legitimate influence. This is the custom of personal
+collections by the priests. In many parishes the priest stands by the
+church-door, or walks about the church&mdash;not with a bag in his hand, as
+is sometimes done in France on great occasions when a <i>qu&eacute;le</i> is made by
+the <i>cur&eacute;</i> for some special object,&mdash;but with an open plate in which the
+people put their offerings. I have heard of parishes in which the priest
+sits by a table near the church-door, takes the offerings <a name="page308" id="page308"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 308]
+</span>from the
+parishioners as they pass, and comments freely upon the ratio of the
+gift to the known or presumed financial ability of the giver.</p>
+
+<p>We had some curious stories, too, from a gentleman present of the
+relation of the priests in wild, out-of-the-way corners of Ireland to
+the people, stories which take one back to days long before Lever. One,
+for example, of a delightful and stalwart old parish priest of eighty,
+upon whom an airy young patriot called to propose that he should accept
+the presidency of a local Land League. The veteran, whose only idea of
+the Land League was that it had used bad language about Cardinal Cullen,
+no sooner caught the drift of the youth than he snatched up a huge
+blackthorn, fell upon him, and &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; him head-foremost out of a
+window. Luckily it was on the ground floor.</p>
+
+<p>Another strenuous spiritual shepherd came down during the distribution
+of potato-seed to the little port in which it was going on, and took up
+his station on board of the distributing ship. One of his parishioners,
+having received his due quota, made his way back again unobserved on
+board of the ship. As he came up to receive a second dole, the good
+father spied him, and staying not &ldquo;to parley or dissemble,&rdquo; <a name="page309" id="page309"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 309]
+</span>simply
+fetched him a whack over the sconce with a stick, which tumbled him out
+of the ship, head-foremost, into the hooker riding beside her! Quite of
+another drift was a much more astonishing tale of certain proceedings
+had here in February last before the Lord Chief-Justice. These took
+place in connection with a motion to quash the verdict of a coroner&rsquo;s
+jury, held in August 1887, on the body of a child named Ellen Gaffney,
+at Philipstown, in King&rsquo;s County, which preserves the memory of the
+Spanish sovereign of England, as Maryborough in Queen&rsquo;s preserves the
+memory of his Tudor consort. Cervantes never imagined an Alcalde of the
+quality of the &ldquo;Crowner&rdquo;&rsquo; who figures in this story. Were it not that
+his antics cost a poor woman her liberty from August 1887 till December
+of that year, when the happy chance of a winter assizes set her free,
+and might have cost her her life, the story of this ideal magistrate
+would be extremely diverting.</p>
+
+<p>A child was born to Mrs. Gaffney at Philipstown on the 23d of July, and
+died there on the 25th of August 1887, Mrs. Gaffney being the wife of a
+&ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; man.</p>
+
+<p>A local doctor named Clarke came to the police and asked the Sergeant to
+inspect the body of the <a name="page310" id="page310"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 310]
+</span>child, and call for an inquest. The sergeant
+inspected the body, and saw no reason to doubt that the child had died a
+natural death. This did not please the doctor, so the Coroner was sent
+for. He came to Philipstown the next day, conferred there with the
+doctor, and with a priest, Father Bergin, and proceeded to hold an
+inquest on the child in a public-house, &ldquo;a most appropriate place,&rdquo; said
+Sir Michael Morris from the bench, &ldquo;for the transactions which
+subsequently occurred.&rdquo; Strong depositions were afterwards made by the
+woman Mrs. Gaffney, by her husband, and by the police authorities, as to
+the conduct of this &ldquo;inquest.&rdquo; She and her husband were arrested on a
+verbal order of the Coroner on the day when the inquest was held, August
+27th, and the woman was kept in prison from that time till the assizes
+in December. The &ldquo;inquest&rdquo; was not completed on the 27th of August, and
+after the Coroner adjourned it, two priests drove away on a car from the
+&ldquo;public-house&rdquo; in which it had been held. That night, or the next day, a
+man came to a magistrate with a bundle of papers which he had found in
+the road near Philipstown. The magistrate examined them, and finding
+them to be the depositions taken before the Coroner in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney, handed them <a name="page311" id="page311"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 311]
+</span>to the police. How did they come to be in the road?
+On the 1st of September the Coroner resumed his inquest, this time in
+the Court-House at Philipstown, and one of the police, with the
+depositions in his pocket, went to hear the proceedings. Great was his
+amazement to see certain papers produced, and calmly read, as being the
+very original depositions which at that moment were in his own custody!
+He held his peace, and let the inquest go on. A letter was read from the
+Coroner, to the effect that he saw no ground for detaining the husband,
+Gaffney&mdash;but the woman was taken before a justice of the peace, and
+committed to prison on this finding by the Coroner&rsquo;s jury: &ldquo;That Mary
+Anne Gaffney came by her death; and that the mother of the child, Ellen
+Gaffney, is guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food
+and care to sustain the life of this child &rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>It is scarcely credible, but it is true, that upon this extraordinary
+finding the Coroner issued a warrant for &ldquo;murder&rdquo; against this poor
+woman, on which she was actually locked up for more than three months!
+The jury which made this unique finding consisted of nineteen persons,
+and it was in evidence that their foreman reported thirteen of the jury
+to be for finding one way and six for finding <a name="page312" id="page312"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 312]
+</span>another, whereupon a
+certain Mr. Whyte, who came into the case as the representative of
+Father Bergin, President of the local branch of the National
+League&mdash;nobody can quite see on what colourable pretext&mdash;was allowed by
+the Coroner to write down the finding I have quoted, and hand it to the
+Coroner. The Coroner read it over. He and Mr. Whyte then put six of the
+jury in one place, and thirteen in another; the Coroner read the finding
+aloud to the thirteen, and said to them, &ldquo;Is that what you agree to?&rdquo;
+and so the inquest was closed, and the warrant issued&mdash;for murder&mdash;and
+the woman, this poor peasant mother sent off to jail with the brand upon
+her of infanticide.<a id="footnotetag29"
+ name="footnotetag29"></a><a href="#footnote29"><sup>29</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Where would that poor woman be now were there no &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; in Ireland
+to protect her against &ldquo;Crowner&rsquo;s quest law&rdquo; thus administered? And what
+is to be thought of educated and responsible public men in England who,
+as recent events have shown, are not ashamed to go to &ldquo;Crowner&rsquo;s quest
+Courts&rdquo; of this sort for weapons of attack, not upon the administration
+only of their own Government, but upon the character and the motives of
+their political opponents?</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page313" id="page313"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 313]
+</span>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BELFAST, <i>Monday, June 25.</i>&mdash;</span>I left Dublin yesterday at 4 P.M., in a
+train which went off at high pressure as an &ldquo;express,&rdquo; but came into
+Belfast panting and dilatory as an &ldquo;excursion.&rdquo; The day was fine, and
+the line passes through what is reputed to be the most prosperous part
+of Ireland. In this part of Ireland, too, the fate of the island has
+been more than once settled by the arbitrament of arms; and if
+Parliamentary England throws up the sponge in the wrestle with the
+League, it is probable enough that the old story will come to be told
+over again here.</p>
+
+<p>At Dundalk the Irish monarchy of the Braces was made and unmade. The
+plantation of Ulster under James I. clinched the grasp not so much of
+England as of Scotland upon Ireland, and determined the course of events
+here through the Great Rebellion. The landing of the Duke of Schomberg
+at Carrickfergus opened the way for the subjugation of Jacobite <a name="page314" id="page314"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 314]
+</span>Ireland
+by William of Orange. The successful descent of the French upon the same
+place in February 1760, after the close of &ldquo;the Great Year,&rdquo; in which
+Walpole tells us he came to expect a new victory every morning with the
+rolls for breakfast, and after Hawke had broken the strength of the
+great French Armada off Belleisle, and done for England the service
+which Nelson did for her again off Trafalgar in 1805, shows what might
+have happened had Thurot commanded the fleet of Conflans. In this same
+region, too, the rout of Munro by Nugent at Ballinahinch practically
+ended the insurrection of 1798.</p>
+
+<p>There are good reasons in the physical geography of the British Islands
+for this controlling influence of Ulster over the affairs of Ireland,
+which it seems to me a serious mistake to overlook.</p>
+
+<p>The author of a brief but very hard-headed and practical letter on the
+pacification of Ireland, which appeared in the <i>Times</i> newspaper in
+1886, while the air was thrilling with rumours of Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s
+impending appearance as the champion of &ldquo;Home Rule,&rdquo; carried, I
+remember, to the account of St. George&rsquo;s Channel &ldquo;nine-tenths of the
+troubles, religious, political, and social, under which Ireland has
+<a name="page315" id="page315"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 315]
+</span>laboured for seven centuries.&rdquo; I cannot help thinking he hit the nail on
+the head; and St. George&rsquo;s Channel does not divide Ulster from Scotland.
+From Donaghadee, which has an excellent harbour, the houses on the
+Scottish coast can easily be made out in clear weather. A chain is no
+stronger than its weakest link, and it is as hard to see how, even with
+the consent of Ulster, the independence of Ireland could be maintained
+against the interests and the will of Scotland, as it is easy to see why
+Leinster, Munster, and Connaught have been so difficult of control and
+assimilation by England. To dream of establishing the independence of
+Ireland against the will of Ulster appears to me to be little short of
+madness.</p>
+
+<p>At Moira, which stands very prettily above the Ulster Canal, a small
+army of people returning from a day in the country to Belfast came upon
+us and trebled the length of our train. We picked up more at Lisburn,
+where stands the Cathedral Church of Jeremy Taylor, the &ldquo;Shakespeare of
+divines.&rdquo; Here my only companion in the compartment from Dublin left me,
+a most kindly, intelligent Ulster man, who had very positive views as to
+the political situation. He much commended the recent dis<a name="page316" id="page316"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 316]
+</span>course in
+Scotland of a Presbyterian minister, who spoke of the Papal Decree as
+&ldquo;pouring water on a drowned mouse,&rdquo; a remark which led me to elicit the
+fact that he had never seen either Clare or Kerry; and he was very warm
+in his admiration of Mr. Chamberlain. He told me, what I had heard from
+many other men of Ulster, that the North had armed itself thoroughly
+when the Home Rule business began with Mr. Gladstone. &ldquo;I am a Unionist,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;but I think the Union is worth as much to England as it is to
+Ireland, and if England means to break it up it is not the part of
+Irishmen who think and feel as I do to let her choose her own time for
+doing it, and stand still while she robs us of our property and turns us
+out defenceless to be trampled under foot by the most worthless
+vagabonds in our own island.&rdquo; He thinks the National League has had its
+death-blow. &ldquo;What I fear now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is that we are running straight
+into a social war, and that will never be a war against the landlords in
+Ireland; it&rsquo;ll be a war against the Protestants and all the decent
+people there are among the Catholics.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was very cordial when he found I was an <a name="page317" id="page317"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 317]
+</span>American, and with that
+offhand hospitality which seems to know no distinctions of race or
+religion in Ireland urged me to come and make him a visit at a place he
+has nearer the sea-coast. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show you Downpatrick,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;where
+the tombs of St. Patrick and St. Bridget and St. Columb are, the saints
+sleeping quite at their ease, with a fine prosperous Presbyterian town
+all about them. And I&rsquo;ll drive you to Tullymore, where you&rsquo;ll see the
+most beautiful park, and the finest views from it all the way to the
+Isle of Man, that are to be seen in all Ireland.&rdquo; He was very much
+interested in the curious story of the sequestration of the remains of
+Mr. Stewart of New York, who was born, he tells me, at Lisburn, where
+the wildest fabrications on the subject seem to have got currency. That
+this feat of body-snatching is supposed to have been performed by a
+little syndicate of Italians, afterwards broken up by the firmness of
+Lady Crawford in resisting the ghastly pressure to which the widow and
+the executors of Mr. Stewart are believed to have succumbed, was quite a
+new idea to him.</p>
+
+<p>From Moira to Belfast the scenery along the line grows in beauty
+steadily. If Belfast were not the busiest and most thriving city in
+Ireland, it would <a name="page318" id="page318"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 318]
+</span>still be well worth a visit for the picturesque charms
+of its situation and of the scenery which surrounds it. At some future
+day I hope to get a better notion both of its activity and of its
+attractions than it would be possible for me to attempt to get in this
+flying visit, made solely to take the touch of the atmosphere of the
+place at this season of the year; for we are on the very eve of the
+battle month of the Boyne.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cameron, the Town Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary, met me
+at the station, in accordance with a promise which he kindly made when I
+saw him several weeks ago at Cork; and this morning he took me all over
+the city. It is very well laid out, in the new quarters especially, with
+broad avenues and spacious squares. In fact, as a local wag said to me
+to-day at the Ulster Club, &ldquo;You can drive through Belfast without once
+going into a street&rdquo;&mdash;most of the thoroughfares which are not called
+&ldquo;avenues&rdquo; or &ldquo;places&rdquo; being known as &ldquo;roads.&rdquo; It is, of course, an
+essentially modern city. When Boate made his survey of Ireland two
+centuries ago, Belfast was so small a place that he took small note of
+it, though it had been incorporated by James I. in 1613 in favour of the
+Chichester <a name="page319" id="page319"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 319]
+</span>family, still represented here. In a very careful <i>Tour in
+Ireland</i>, published at Dublin in 1780, the author says of Belfast, &ldquo;I
+could not help remarking the great number of Scots who reside in this
+place, and who carry on a good trade with Scotland.&rdquo; It seems then to
+have had a population of less than 20,000 souls, as it only touched that
+number at the beginning of this century. It has since then advanced by
+&ldquo;leaps and bounds,&rdquo; after an almost American fashion, till it has now
+become the second, and bids fair at no distant day to become the first,
+city in Ireland. Few of the American cities which are its true
+contemporaries can be compared with Belfast in beauty. The quarter in
+which my host lives was reclaimed from the sea marshes not quite so long
+ago, I believe, as was the Commonwealth Avenue quarter of Boston, and
+though it does not show so many costly private houses perhaps as that
+quarter of the New England capital, its &ldquo;roads&rdquo; and &ldquo;avenues&rdquo; are on the
+whole better built, and there is no public building in Boston so
+imposing as the Queen&rsquo;s College, with its Tudor front six hundred feet
+in length, and its graceful central tower. The Botanic Gardens near by
+are much prettier and much better equipped for the pleasure and
+instruction of the <a name="page320" id="page320"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 320]
+</span>people than any public gardens in either Boston or
+New York. These American comparisons make themselves, all the conditions
+of Belfast being rather of the New World than of the Old. The oldest
+building pointed out to me to-day is the whilom mansion of the Marquis
+of Donegal, now used as offices, and still called the Castle.</p>
+
+<p>This stands near Donegal Square, a fine site, disfigured by a quadrangle
+of commonplace brick buildings, occupied as a sort of Linen Exchange,
+concerning which a controversy rages, I am told. They are erected on
+land granted by Lord Donegal to encourage the linen trade, and the
+buildings used to be leased at a rental of &pound;1 per window. The present
+holders receive &pound;10 per window, and are naturally loath to part with so
+good a thing, though there is an earnest desire in the city to see these
+unsightly structures removed, and their place taken by stately municipal
+buildings more in key with the really remarkable and monumental private
+warehouses which already adorn this Square. Mr. Robinson, one of the
+partners of a firm which has just completed one of these warehouses, was
+good enough to show us over it. It is built of a warm grey stone, which
+lends itself easily to the chisel, <a name="page321" id="page321"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 321]
+</span>and it is decorated with a wealth of
+carving and of architectural ornaments such as the great burghers of
+Flanders lavished on their public buildings. The interior arrangements
+are worthy of the external stateliness of the warehouse. Pneumatic tubes
+for the delivery of cash&mdash;a Scottish invention&mdash;electric lights, steam
+lifts, a kitchen at the top of the lofty edifice heated by steam from
+the great engine-room in the cellars, and furnishing meals to the
+employees, attest the energy and enterprise of the firm. The most
+delicate of the linen fabrics sold here are made, I was informed, all
+over the north country. The looms, three or four of which are kept going
+here in a great room to show the intricacy and perfection of the
+processes, are supplied by the firm to the hand-workers on a system
+which enables them, while earning good wages from week to week, to
+acquire the eventual ownership of the machines. The building is crowned
+by a sort of observatory, from which we enjoyed a noble prospect
+overlooking the whole city and miles of the beautiful country around. A
+haze on the horizon hid the coast of Scotland, which is quite visible
+under a clear sky. The Queen&rsquo;s Bridge over the Lagan, built in 1842
+between Antrim and Down, was a conspicuous <a name="page322" id="page322"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 322]
+</span>feature in the panorama. Its
+five great arches of hewn granite span the distance formerly traversed
+by an older bridge of twenty-one arches 840 feet in length, which was
+begun in 1682, and finished just in time to welcome Schomberg and King
+William.</p>
+
+<p>The not less imposing warehouse of Richardson and Co., built of a
+singularly beautiful brown stone, and decorated with equal taste and
+liberality, adjoins that of Robinson and Cleaver. The banks, the public
+offices, the clubs, the city library, the museum, the Presbyterian
+college, the principal churches, all of them modern, all alike bear
+witness to the public spirit and pride in their town of the good people
+of Belfast. With more time at my disposal I would have been very glad to
+visit some of the flax-mills called into being by the great impulse
+which the cotton famine resulting from our Civil War gave to the linen
+manufactures of Northern Ireland, and the famous shipyards of the Woolfs
+on Queen&rsquo;s Island, As things are, it was more to my purpose to see some
+of the representative men of this great Protestant stronghold.</p>
+
+<p>I passed a very interesting hour with the Rev. Dr. Hanna, who is reputed
+to be a sort of clerical <a name="page323" id="page323"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 323]
+</span>&ldquo;Lion of the North,&rdquo; and whom I found to be in
+almost all respects a complete antitype of Father M&lsquo;Fadden of Gweedore.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Hanna is not unjustly proud of being at the head of the most
+extensive Sunday-school organisation in Ireland, if not in the world;
+and I find that the anniversary parade of his pupils, appointed for
+Saturday, June 30th, is looked forward to with some anxiety by the
+authorities here. He tells me that he expects to put two thousand
+children that day into motion for a grand excursion to Moira; but
+although he speaks very plainly as to the ill-will with which a certain
+class of the Catholics here regard both himself and his organisation, he
+does not anticipate any attack from them. With what seems to me very
+commendable prudence, he has resolved this year to put this procession
+into the streets without banners and bands, so that no charge of
+provocation may be even colourably advanced against it. This is no
+slight concession from a man so determined and so outspoken, not to say
+aggressive, in his Protestantism as Dr. Hanna; and the Nationalist
+Catholics will be very ill-advised, it strikes me, if they misinterpret
+it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page324" id="page324"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 324]
+</span>He spoke respectfully of the Papal decree against Boycotting and the
+Plan of Campaign; but he seems to think it will not command the respect
+of the masses of the Catholic population, nor be really enforced by the
+clergy. Like most of the Ulstermen I have met, he has a firm faith, not
+only in the power of the Protestant North to protect itself, but in its
+determination to protect itself against the consequences which the
+northern Protestants believe must inevitably follow any attempt to
+establish an Irish nationality. Dr. Hanna is neither an Orangeman nor a
+Tory. He says there are but three known Orangemen among the clerical
+members of the General Assembly of the Irish Presbyterian Church, which
+unanimously pronounced against Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s scheme of Home Rule, and
+not more than a dozen Tories. Of the 550 members of the Assembly, 538,
+he says, were followers of Mr. Gladstone before he adopted the politics
+of Mr. Parnell; and only three out of the whole number have given him
+their support. In the country at large, Dr. Hanna puts down the
+Unionists at two millions, of whom 1,200,000 are Protestants, and
+800,000 Catholics; and he maintains that if the Parliamentary
+representatives were <a name="page325" id="page325"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 325]
+</span>chosen by a general vote, the Parnellite 80 would
+be cut down to 62; while the Unionists would number 44. He regards the
+Parnellite policy as &ldquo;an organised imposture,&rdquo; and firmly believes that
+an Irish Parliament in Dublin would now mean civil war in Ireland. He
+had a visit here last week, he says, from an American Presbyterian
+minister, who came out to Ireland a month ago a &ldquo;Home Ruler&rdquo;; but, as
+the result of a trip through North-Western Ireland, is going back to
+denounce the Home Rule movement as a mischievous fraud.</p>
+
+<p>When I asked him what remedy he would propose for the discontent stirred
+up by the agitation of Home Rule, this Presbyterian clergyman replied
+emphatically, &ldquo;Balfour, Balfour, and more Balfour!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This on the ground, as I understood, that Mr. Balfour&rsquo;s administration
+of the law has been the firmest, least wavering, and most equitable
+known in Ireland for many a day.</p>
+
+<p>Later in the day I had the pleasure of a conversation with the Rev. Dr.
+Kane, the Grand Master of the Orangemen at Belfast. Dr. Kane is a tall,
+fine-looking, frank, and resolute man, who obviously has the courage of
+his opinions. He thinks there will be no disturbances this year on the
+12th of <a name="page326" id="page326"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 326]
+</span>July, but that the Orange demonstrations will be on a greater
+scale and more imposing than ever. He derides the notion that
+&ldquo;Parnellism&rdquo; is making any progress in Ulster. On the contrary, the
+concurrence this year of the anniversary of the defeat of the Great
+Armada with the anniversary of the Revolution of 1688 has aroused the
+strongest feelings of enthusiasm among the Protestants of the North, and
+they were never so determined as they now are not to tolerate anything
+remotely looking to the constitution of a separate and separatist
+Government at Dublin.</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BELFAST, <i>Tuesday, June 26.</i>&mdash;</span>Sir John Preston, the head of one of the
+great Belfast houses, and a former Mayor of the city, dined with us last
+night, and in the evening Sir James Haslett, the actual Mayor, came in.</p>
+
+<p>I find that in Belfast the office of Mayor is served without a salary,
+and is consequently filled as a rule by citizens of &ldquo;weight and
+instance.&rdquo; In Dublin the Lord Mayor receives &pound;3000 a year, with a
+contingent fund of &pound;1500, and the office is becoming a distinctly
+political post. The face of Belfast is so firmly set against the
+tendency to <a name="page327" id="page327"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 327]
+</span>subordinate municipal interests to general party exigencies,
+that the Corporation compelled Mr. Cobain, M.P., who sits at Westminster
+now for this constituency, to resign the post which he held as treasurer
+and cashier of the Corporation when he became a candidate for a seat in
+Parliament. I am not surprised, therefore, to learn that the city rates
+and taxes are much lower in the commercial than they are in the
+political capital of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Both Sir John Preston and Sir James Haslett have visited America. Sir
+John went there to represent the linen industries of Ireland, and to
+urge upon Congress the propriety of reducing our import duties upon
+fabrics which the American climate makes it practically imposssible to
+manufacture on our side of the water. Senator Sherman, who twenty years
+ago had the candour to admit that the wit of man could not devise a
+tariff so adjusted as to raise the revenue necessary for the Government
+which should not afford adequate incidental protection to all legitimate
+American industries, gave Sir John reason to hope that something might
+be done in the direction of a more liberal treatment of the linen
+industries. But nothing practical came of it. Sir John ought to <a name="page328" id="page328"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 328]
+</span>have
+known that our typical American Protectionist, the late Horace Greeley,
+really persuaded himself, and tried to persuade other people, that with
+duties enough clapped on the Asiatic production, excellent tea might be
+grown on the uplands of South Carolina!</p>
+
+<p>In former years Sir John Preston used to visit Gweedore every year for
+sport and recreation. He knew Lord George Hill very well, &ldquo;as true and
+noble a man as ever lived, who stinted himself to improve the state of
+his tenants.&rdquo; He threw an odd light on the dreamy desire which had so
+much amused me of the &ldquo;beauty of Gweedore&rdquo; to become &ldquo;a dressmaker at
+Derry,&rdquo; by telling me that long ago the gossips there used to tell
+wonderful stories of a Gweedore girl who had made her fortune as a
+milliner in the &ldquo;Maiden City.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This morning Mr. Cameron, who as Town Inspector of the Royal Irish
+Constabulary will be responsible for public peace and order here during
+the next critical fortnight, held a review of his men on a common beyond
+the Theological College. About two hundred and fifty of the force were
+paraded, with about twenty mounted policemen, and for an hour and a
+half, under a tolerably warm <a name="page329" id="page329"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 329]
+</span>sun, they were put through a regular
+military drill. A finer body of men cannot be seen, and in point of
+discipline and training they can hold their own, I should say, with the
+best of her Majesty&rsquo;s regiments. Without such discipline and training it
+would not be easy for any such body of men to pass with composure
+through the ordeal of insults and abuse to which the testimony of
+trustworthy eye-witnesses compels me to believe they are habitually
+subjected in the more disturbed districts of Ireland. As to the
+immediate outlook here, Mr. Cameron seems quite at his ease. Even if
+ill-disposed persons should set about provoking a collision between &ldquo;the
+victors and the vanquished of the Boyne&rdquo; his arrangements are so made,
+he says, as to prevent the development of anything like the outbreaks of
+former years.</p>
+
+<p>On the advice of Sir John Preston I shall take the Fleetwood route on my
+return to London to-night.</p>
+
+<p>This secures one a comfortable night on board of a very good and
+well-equipped boat, from which you go ashore, he tells me, into an
+excellent station of the London and North-Western Railway at Fleetwood,
+on the mouth of the Wyre on the <a name="page330" id="page330"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 330]
+</span>Lancashire coast. Twenty years ago this
+was a small bathing resort called into existence chiefly by the
+enterprise of a local baronet whose name it bears. Its present
+prosperity and prospective importance are another illustration of the
+vigour and vitality of the North of Ireland, which is connected through
+Fleetwood with the great manufacturing regions of middle and northern
+England, as it is through Larne with the heart of Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>While it is as true now of the predominantly Catholic south of Ireland
+as it was when Sir Robert Peel made the remark forty years ago, that it
+stands &ldquo;with its back to England and its face to the West,&rdquo; this
+Protestant Ireland of the North faces both ways, drawing Canada and the
+United States to itself through Moville and Derry and Belfast, and
+holding fast at the same time upon the resources of Great Britain
+through Glasgow and Liverpool. One of the best informed bankers in
+London told me not long ago, that pretty nearly all the securities of
+the great company which has recently taken over the business of the
+Guinnesses have already found their way into the North of Ireland and
+are held here. With such resources in its wealth and industry, better
+educated, better <a name="page331" id="page331"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 331]
+</span>equipped, and holding a practically impregnable
+position in the North of Ireland, with Scotland and the sea at its back,
+Ulster is very much stronger relatively to the rest of Ireland than La
+Vend&eacute;e was relatively to the rest of the French Republic in the last
+century. In a struggle for independence against the rest of Ireland it
+would have nothing to fear from the United States, where any attempt to
+organise hostilities against it would put the Irish-American population
+in serious peril, not only from the American Government, but from
+popular feeling, and force home upon the attention of the
+quickest-witted people in the world the significant fact that while the
+chief contributions, so far, of America to Southern Ireland, have been
+alms and agitation, the chief contributions of Scotland to Northern
+Ireland have been skilled agriculture and successful activity. It is
+surely not without meaning that the only steamers of Irish build which
+now traverse the Atlantic come from the dockyards, not of Galway nor of
+Cork, the natural gateways of Ireland to the west, but of Belfast, the
+natural gateway of Ireland to the north<a name="page332" id="page332"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 332]
+</span>.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page333" id="page333"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 333]
+</span>EPILOGUE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Not once, but a hundred times, during the visits to Ireland recorded in
+this book, I have been reminded of the state of feeling and opinion
+which existed in the Border States, as they were called, of the American
+Union, after the invasion of Virginia by a piratical band under John
+Brown, and before the long-pending issues between the South, insisting
+upon its constitutional rights, and the North, restive under its
+constitutional obligations, were brought to a head by the election of
+President Lincoln.</p>
+
+<p>All analogies, I know, are deceptive, and I do not insist upon this
+analogy. But it has a certain value here. For to-day in Ireland, as then
+in America, we find a grave question of politics, in itself not
+unmanageable, perhaps, by a race trained to self-government, seriously
+complicated and aggravated, not only by considerations of moral right
+and moral wrong, but by a profound perturbation of the material
+interests of the community.</p>
+
+<p>I well remember that after a careful study of the <a name="page334" id="page334"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 334]
+</span>situation in America
+at the time of which I speak, Mr. Nassau Senior, a most careful and
+competent observer, frankly told me that he saw no possible way in which
+the problem could be worked out peacefully. The event justified this
+gloomy forecast.</p>
+
+<p>It would be presumptuous in me to say as much of the actual situation in
+Ireland; but it would be uncandid not to say that the optimists of
+Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee had greater
+apparent odds in their favour in 1861 than the optimists of Ireland seem
+to me to have in 1888.</p>
+
+<p>Ireland stands to-day between Great Britain and the millions of the
+Irish race in America and Australia very much as the Border States of
+the American Union stood in 1861 between the North and the South. There
+was little either in the Tariff question or in the Slavery question to
+shake the foundations of law and order in the Border States, could they
+have been left to themselves; and the Border States enjoyed all the
+advantages and immunities of &ldquo;Home Rule&rdquo; to an extent and under
+guarantees never yet openly demanded for Ireland by any responsible
+legislator within the walls of the British Parliament. But so powerful
+was the leverage upon them of conflicting passions and interests beyond
+their own borders that these sovereign states, well organised,
+homogeneous, pros<a name="page335" id="page335"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 335]
+</span>perous communities, much more populous and richer in
+the aggregate in 1861 than Ireland is to-day, practically lost the
+control of their own affairs, and were swept helplessly into a terrific
+conflict, which they had the greatest imaginable interest in avoiding,
+and no interest whatever in promoting.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen and heard nothing in Ireland to warrant the very common
+impression that the country, as a whole, is either misgoverned or
+ungovernable; nothing to justify me in regarding the difficulties which
+there impede the maintenance of law and order as really indigenous and
+spontaneous. The &ldquo;agitated&rdquo; Ireland of 1888 appears to me to be almost
+as clearly and demonstrably the creation of forces not generated in, but
+acting upon, a country, as was the &ldquo;bleeding Kansas&rdquo; of 1856. But the
+&ldquo;bleeding Kansas&rdquo; of 1856 brought the great American Union to the verge
+of disruption, and the &ldquo;agitated Ireland&rdquo; of 1888 may do as much, or
+worse, for the British Empire. There is, no doubt, a great deal of
+distress in one or another part of Ireland, though it has not been my
+fortune to come upon any outward and visible signs of such grinding
+misery as forces itself upon you in certain of the richest provinces of
+that independent, busy, prosperous, Roman Catholic kingdom of Belgium,
+which on a territory little more than one-third as large as the
+territory of Ireland, maintains nearly a <a name="page336" id="page336"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 336]
+</span>million more inhabitants, and
+adds to its population, on an average, in round numbers, as many people
+in four years as Ireland loses in five.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen peasant proprietors in Flanders and Brabant who could give
+the ideal Irish agent of the Nationalist newspapers lessons in
+rack-renting, though I am not at all sure that they might not get a hint
+or two themselves from some of the small farmers who came in my way in
+Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Like all countries, mainly agricultural, too, Ireland has suffered a
+great deal of late years from the fall in prices following upon a period
+of intoxicating prosperity. Whether she has suffered more relatively
+than we should have suffered from the same cause in America, had we been
+foolish enough to imitate the monometallic policy of Germany in 1873, is
+however open to question; and I have an impression, which it will
+require evidence to remove, that the actual organisation known as the
+National Land League could never have been called into being had the
+British Government devoted to action upon the Currency Question, before
+1879, the time and energy which it has expended before and since that
+date in unsettling the principles of free contract, and tinkering at the
+relations of landlord and tenant in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>But I am trenching upon inquiries here beyond the province of this book.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page337" id="page337"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 337]
+</span>Fortunately it is not necessary to my object in printing these volumes
+that I should either form or formulate any positive opinions as to the
+origin of the existing crisis in Ireland. Nor need I volunteer any
+suggestions of my own as to the methods by which order may best be
+maintained and civil government carried on in Ireland. It suffices for
+me that I close this self-imposed survey of men and things in that
+country with a conviction, as positive as it is melancholy, that the
+work which Mr. Redmond, M.P., informed us at Chicago that he and his
+Nationalist colleagues had undertaken, of &ldquo;making the government of
+Ireland by England impossible,&rdquo; has been so far achieved, and by such
+methods as to make it extremely doubtful whether Ireland can be governed
+by anybody at all in accordance with any of the systems of government
+hitherto recognised in or adopted for that country. I certainly can see
+nothing in the organisation and conduct, down to this time, of the party
+known as the party of the Irish Nationalists, I will not say to
+encourage, but even to excuse, a belief that Ireland could be governed
+as a civilised country were it turned over to-morrow to their control. A
+great deal has been done by them to propagate throughout Christendom a
+general impression that England has dismally failed to govern Ireland in
+the past, and is unlikely hereafter to succeed in <a name="page338" id="page338"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 338]
+</span>governing Ireland. But
+even granting this impression to be absolutely well founded, it by no
+means follows that Ireland is any more capable of governing herself than
+England is of governing her. The Russians have not made a brilliant
+success of their administration in Poland, but the Poles certainly
+administered Poland no better than the Russians have done. With an Irish
+representation in an Imperial British Parliament at Westminster,
+Ireland, under Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s &ldquo;base and blackguard&rdquo; Union of 1800, has
+at least succeeded in shaking off some of the weightiest of the burdens
+by which, in the days of Swift, of Grattan, and of O&rsquo;Connell, she most
+loudly declared herself to be oppressed. Whether with a Parliament at
+Dublin she would have fared as well in this respect since 1800 must be a
+matter of conjecture merely&mdash;and it must be equally a matter of
+conjecture also whether she would fare any better in this respect with a
+Parliament at Dublin hereafter. I am in no position to pronounce upon
+this&mdash;but it is quite certain that nothing is more uncommon than to find
+an educated and intelligent man, not an active partisan, in Ireland
+to-day, who looks forward to the reestablishment, in existing
+circumstances, of a Parliament at Dublin with confidence or hope.</p>
+
+<p>How the establishment of such a Parliament would affect the position of
+Great Britain as a power <a name="page339" id="page339"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 339]
+</span>in Europe, and how it would affect the fiscal
+policy, and with the fiscal policy the well-being of the British people,
+are questions for British subjects to consider, not for me.</p>
+
+<p>That the processes employed during the past decade, and now employed to
+bring about the establishment of such a Parliament, have been, and are
+in their nature, essentially revolutionary, subversive of all sound and
+healthy relations between man and man, inconsistent with social
+stability, and therefore with social progress and with social peace,
+what I have seen and heard in Ireland during the past six months compels
+me to feel. Of the &ldquo;Coercion,&rdquo; under which the Nationalist speakers and
+writers ask us in America to believe that the island groans and
+travails, I have seen literally nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Nowhere in the world is the press more absolutely free than to-day in
+Ireland. Nowhere in the world are the actions of men in authority more
+bitterly and unsparingly criticised. If public men or private citizens
+are sent to prison in Ireland, they are sent there, not as they were in
+America during the civil war, or in Ireland under the &ldquo;Coercion Act&rdquo; of
+1881, on suspicion of something they may have done, or may have intended
+to do, but after being tried for doing, and convicted of having done,
+certain things made offences against the law by a <a name="page340" id="page340"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 340]
+</span>Parliament in which
+they are represented, and of which, in some cases, they are members.</p>
+
+<p>To call this &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; is, from the American point of view, simply
+ludicrous. What it may be from the British or the Irish point of view is
+another affair, and does not concern me. I may be permitted, however, I
+hope without incivility, to say that if this be &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; from the
+British or the Irish point of view, I am well content to be an American
+citizen. Ours is essentially a government not of emotions, but of
+statutes, and most Americans, I think, will agree with me that the sage
+was right who declared it to be better to live where nothing is lawful
+than where all things are lawful.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; which I have found established in Ireland, and which I
+recognise in the title of this book, is the &ldquo;Coercion,&rdquo; not of a
+government, but of a combination to make a particular government
+impossible. It is a &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; applied not to men who break a public
+law, or offend against any recognised code of morals, but to men who
+refuse to be bound in their personal relations and their business
+transactions by the will of other men, their equals only, clothed with
+no legal authority over them. It is a &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; administered not by
+public and responsible functionaries, but by secret tribunals. Its
+sanctions are not the law and honest public opinion, but the base
+instinct of personal <a name="page341" id="page341"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 341]
+</span>cowardice, and the instinct, not less base, of
+personal greed. Whether anything more than a steady, firm administration
+of the law is needed to abolish this &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; is a matter as to which
+authorities differ. I should be glad to believe with Colonel Saunderson
+that &ldquo;the Leaguers would not hold up the &lsquo;land-grabber&rsquo; to execration,
+and denounce him as they do, unless they knew in fact that the moment
+the law is made supreme in Ireland the tenants would become just as
+amenable to it as any other subjects of the Queen.&rdquo; But some recent
+events suggest a doubt whether these &ldquo;other subjects of the Queen&rdquo; are
+as amenable to the law as my own countrymen are.</p>
+
+<p>That the Church to which the great majority of the Irish people have for
+so many ages, and through so many tribulations, borne steadfast
+allegiance, has been shaken in its hold upon the conscience of Ireland
+by the machinery of this odious and ignoble &ldquo;Coercion,&rdquo; appears to me to
+be unquestionable. That the head of that Church, being compelled by
+evidence to believe this, has found it necessary to intervene for the
+restoration of the just spiritual authority of the Church over the Irish
+people all the world now knows&mdash;nor can I think that his intervention
+has come a day or an hour too soon, to arrest the progress in Ireland of
+a social disease which threatens, not the political interests of the
+<a name="page342" id="page342"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 342]
+</span>empire of which Ireland is a part alone, but the character of the Irish
+people themselves, and the very existence among them of the elementary
+conditions of a Christian civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>It would be unjust to the Irish people to forget that this demoralising
+&ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; against which the Head of the Catholic Church has declared
+war, seems to me to have been seriously reinforced by the Land
+Legislation of the Imperial Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>No one denies that great reforms and readjustments of the Land Tenure in
+Ireland needed to be made long before any serious attempt was made to
+make them.</p>
+
+<p>But that such reforms and readjustments might have been made without
+cutting completely loose from the moorings of political economy, appears
+pretty clearly, not only from examples on the continent of Europe, and
+in my own country, but from the Rent and Tenancy Acts carried out in
+India under the viceroyalty of Lord Dufferin since 1885. The conditions
+of these measures were different, of course, in each of the cases of
+Oudh, Bengal, and the Punjab, and in none of these cases were they
+nearly identical with the conditions of any practicable land measure for
+Ireland. But two great characteristics seem to me to mark the Indian
+legislation, which are not conspicuous in the legislation for Ireland.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page343" id="page343"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 343]
+</span>These are a spirit of equity as between the landlords and the tenants,
+and finality. I do not see how it can be questioned that the landlords
+of Ireland have been dealt with by recent British legislation as if they
+were offenders to be mulcted, and that the tenants in Ireland have been
+encouraged by recent British legislation to anticipate an eventual
+transfer to them, on steadily improving terms, of the land-ownership of
+the island. Mr. Davitt is perhaps the most popular Irishman living, and
+I believe him to be sincerely convinced that the ownership of the land
+of Ireland (and of all other countries) ought to be vested in the State.
+But if the independence of Ireland were acknowledged by Great Britain
+to-morrow, and all the actual landlords of Ireland were compelled
+to-morrow to part with their ownership, such as it is, of the land, I
+believe Mr. Davitt would be further from the recognition and triumph of
+his principle of State-ownership than he is to-day with a British
+Parliament hostile to &ldquo;Home Rule,&rdquo; but apparently not altogether
+unwilling to make the landlords of Ireland an acceptable burnt-offering
+upon the altar of imperial unity. Probably he sees this himself, and the
+existing state of things may not be wholly displeasing to him, as
+holding out a hope that the flame which he has been helped by British
+legislation to kindle in Ireland may already be taking hold upon the
+substructions <a name="page344" id="page344"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 344]
+</span>and outworks of the edifice of property in Great Britain
+also.</p>
+
+<p>One thing at least is clear.</p>
+
+<p>The two antagonistic principles which confront each other in Ireland
+to-day are the principles of the Agrarian Revolution represented by Mr.
+Davitt, and the principle of Authority, represented in the domain of
+politics by the British Government, and in the domain of morals by the
+Vatican. With one or the other of these principles the victory must
+rest. If the Irish people of all classes who live in Ireland could be
+polled to-day, it is likely enough that a decisive majority of them
+would declare for the principle of Authority in the State and in the
+Church, could that over-riding issue be made perfectly plain and
+intelligible to them. But how is that possible? In what country of the
+world, and in what age of the world, has it ever been possible to get
+such an issue made perfectly plain and intelligible to any people?</p>
+
+<p>In the domain of morals the principle of Authority, so far as concerns
+<a name="page345" id="page345"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 345]
+</span>Catholic Ireland, rests with a power which is not likely to waver or
+give way. The Papal Decree has gone forth. Those who profess to accept
+it will be compelled to obey it. Those who reject it, whatever their
+place in the hierarchy of the Church may be, must sooner or later find
+themselves where Dr. M&lsquo;Glynn of New York now is. Catholic Ireland can
+only continue to be Catholic on the condition of obedience, not formal
+but real, not in matters indifferent, but in matters vital and
+important, to the Head of the Catholic Church.</p>
+
+<p>In the domain of politics the principle of Authority rests with an
+Administration which is at the mercy of the intelligence or the
+ignorance, the constancy or the fickleness, the weakness or the
+strength, of constituencies in Great Britain, not necessarily familiar
+with the facts of the situation in Ireland, not necessarily enlightened
+as to the real interests either of Great Britain or of Ireland, nor even
+necessarily awake, with Cardinal Manning, to the truth that upon the
+future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>With two, three, four, or five years of a steady and cool administration
+of the laws in Ireland, by an executive officer such as Mr. Balfour
+seems to me to have shown himself to be&mdash;with a judicious abstinence of
+the British Legislature from feverish and fussy legislation about
+Ireland, with a prudent and persistent development of the material
+resources of Ireland, and with a genuine co-operation of the people who
+own land in Ireland with the people who wish to own land in Ireland, for
+the readjustment of land-ownership, the principle of Authority in the
+domain of politics may doubtless win in the conflict with the principle
+of the Agrarian revolution.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page346" id="page346"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 346]
+</span>But how many contingencies are here involved! Meanwhile the influences
+which imperil in Ireland the principle of Authority, in the domains
+alike of politics and of morals, are at work incessantly, to undermine
+and deteriorate the character of the Irish people, to take the vigour
+and the manhood out of them, to unfit them day by day, not only for good
+citizenship in the British Empire or the United States, but for good
+citizenship in any possible Ireland under any possible form of
+government. To arrest these influences before they bring on in Ireland a
+social crash, the effects of which must be felt far beyond the
+boundaries of that country, is a matter of primary importance,
+doubtless, to the British people. It is a matter, too, of hardly less
+than primary importance to the people of my own country. Unfortunately
+it does not rest with us to devise or to apply an efficient check to
+these influences.</p>
+
+<p>That rests with the people of Great Britain, so long as they insist that
+Ireland shall remain an integral portion of the British dominions. I do
+not see how they can acquit themselves of this responsibility, or escape
+the consequences of evading it, solely by devising the most ingenious
+machinery of local administration for Ireland, or the most liberal
+schemes for fostering the material interests of the Irish people. Such
+things, of course, must <a name="page347" id="page347"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 347]
+</span>in due time be attended to. But the first duty
+of a government is to govern; and I believe that Earl Grey has summed up
+the situation in Ireland more concisely and more courageously than any
+other British statesman in his outspoken declaration, that &ldquo;in order to
+avert the wreck of the nation, it is absolutely necessary that some
+means or other should be found for securing to Ireland during the
+present crisis a wiser and more stable administration of its affairs
+than can be looked for under its existing institutions.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I have heard and read a good deal in the past of the &ldquo;Three F&rsquo;s&rdquo; thought
+a panacea for Irish discontent. Three other F&rsquo;s seem to me quite as
+important to the future of Irish content and public order. These are,
+Fair Dealing towards Landlords as well as Tenants; Finality of Agrarian
+Legislation at Westminster; and last and most essential of all, Fixity
+of Executive Tenure.</p>
+
+<p>The words I have just quoted of Earl Grey, show it to be the conviction
+of the oldest living leader of English Liberalism that this last is the
+vital point, the key of the situation. Let me bracket with his words,
+and leave to the consideration of my readers, the following pregnant
+passage from a letter written to me by an Irish correspondent who is as
+devoted to Irish independence as is Earl Grey to imperial unity:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page348" id="page348"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 348]
+</span>If the present Nationalist movement succeeds, it will have the effect
+of putting the worst elements of the Irish nation in power, and keeping
+them there irremoveably. We are to have an Executive at the mercy of a
+House of Representatives, and the result will be a government, or series
+of governments, as weak and vicious as those of France, with this
+difference, that here all purifying changes such as seem imminent in
+France will be absolutely prevented by the irresistible power of
+England. The true model for us would be a constitution like yours in the
+United States, with an Executive responsible to the nation at large, and
+irremoveable for a term of years. But this we shall never get from
+England. Shall we make use of Home Rule to take it for ourselves?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Many earnest and active Irish Unionists now say that if any bill
+resembling Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s passes, they will make separation, their
+definite policy. If Home Rule comes without the landlords having been
+bought out on reasonable terms, a class will be created in Ireland full
+of bitter and most just hatred of England&mdash;a class which may very likely
+one day play the part here which the persecuted Irish Presbyterians who
+fled from the tyranny of the English Church in Ireland played in your
+own Revolution beyond the Atlantic.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name="page349" id="page349"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 349]
+</span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="page350" id="page350"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 350]
+</span>APPENDIX.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page351" id="page351"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 351]
+</span><a name="noteF" id="noteF" />NOTE F.<br />
+
+THE &ldquo;MOONLIGHTERS&rdquo; AND &ldquo;HOME RULE.&rdquo;<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 38.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>On Monday, the 1st of February 1886, the <i>Irish Times</i> published the
+following story from Tralee, near the scene of the &ldquo;boycotting,&rdquo;
+temporal and spiritual, of the unfortunate daughters of Mr. Jeremiah
+Curtin, murdered in his own house by &ldquo;moonlighters&rdquo;:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;TRALEE, <i>Sunday</i>.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;It was stated that the bishop had ordered Mass to be celebrated
+ for them&mdash;the Curtins&mdash;but this did not take place. At the village
+ of Firies a number of people had assembled. They stopped loitering
+ about the place in the forenoon, waiting for a meeting of the
+ National League, which was subsequently held. A threatening notice
+ was discovered posted up on the door of a house formerly used as a
+ forge. It ran as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote> &ldquo;&lsquo;NOTICE.&mdash;If we are honoured by the presence of the bloodthirsty
+ perjurers at Mass on any of the forthcoming Sundays, take good care
+ you&rsquo;ll stand up very politely and walk out. Don&rsquo;t be under the
+ impression that all the Moonlighters are dead, and that this notice
+ is a child&rsquo;s play, as Shawn Nelleen titled the last one. I&rsquo;ll be
+ sure to keep my word, as you will see before long, so have no
+ welcome for the Curtins, and, above all, let no one work for them
+ in any way. As you respect the Captain, and as you value your own
+ life, abide by this notice.&rsquo;&mdash;Signed,
+ <p class="signed">&lsquo;A MOONLIGHTER.&rsquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+<p> &ldquo;The above notice was written on tea paper in large legible style,
+ and evidently by an intelligent person. Groups were perusing it
+ during the day. A force of police marched through the village and
+ back, but did not observe this document, as it is still posted on
+ the door of the house.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;bloodthirsty perjurers&rdquo; here mentioned were the daughters who had
+dared to demand and to pro<a name="page352" id="page352"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 352]
+</span>mote the punishment of the assassins of their
+father! For this crime these daughters were to be excommunicated by the
+people of Firies, and denied the consolations of religion in their deep
+sorrow, even in defiance of the order of the Catholic bishop.</p>
+
+<p>As the advent of Mr. Gladstone to power in alliance with Mr. Parnell was
+then imminent, Mr. Sheehan, M.P., wrote a letter to the parish priest of
+Firies, the Rev. Mr. O&rsquo;Connor, begging him in substance to put the
+brakes&mdash;for a time&mdash;upon the wheels of the local rack, lest the outcries
+of the young women subjected to this moral torture should interfere with
+the success of the new alliance. This, in plain English, is the only
+possible meaning of the letter which I here reprint from a leaflet
+issued by an Irish society:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p> &ldquo;The Rev. Father O&rsquo;Connor, P.P., has received the following letter
+ from Mr. Sheehau, M.P., in reference to this matter, under date</p>
+
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;&lsquo;House of Commons, <i>January 26th.</i></p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;&lsquo;REV. DEAR SIR,&mdash;At this important juncture in our history, I am
+ sorry to see reports of the Firies display. Nothing that has taken
+ place yet in the South of Ireland has done so much harm to the
+ National cause. If they persist they will ruin us. To-morrow
+ evening will be most important in Parliamentary history. Our party
+ expect the defeat of the Government and resumption of power by Mr.
+ Gladstone. If we succeed in this, which we are confident of, the
+ future of our country will be great, and, although an appeal to the
+ constituencies must be made, the Irish party in those few days have
+ made an impression in future that no Government can withstand. The
+ Salisbury Government want to appeal to the country on the integrity
+ of the empire, and, of course, for the last few days have tried all
+ means to lead to this by raking up the Curtin case and all judicial
+ cases, which <i>must be avoided for a short time</i>, as our stoppage to
+ the Eviction Act will cover all this.&mdash;</p>
+<p class='signed'>Yours faithfully, J.D. SHEEHAN.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class="i0">This letter was read, the leaflet informs us, by the Rev. Mr. O&rsquo;Connor,
+at the National Schools and other places.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page353" id="page353"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 353]
+</span><a name="noteG" id="noteG" />NOTE G.<br />
+
+THE PONSONBY PROPERTY.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. pp. <a href="#page59">59</a>-<a href="#page66">66</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The account which the Rev. Canon Keller gave me of &ldquo;The Struggle for
+Life on the Ponsonby Estate,&rdquo; in a tract bearing that title, and
+authorised by him to be published by the National League, is so
+circumstantial and elaborate that, after reading it carefully, I took
+unusual pains to obtain some reply to it from the representatives of the
+landlord implicated. These finally led to a visit from Mr. Ponsonby
+himself, who was so kind as to call upon me in London on the 15th of
+May, with papers and documents. I give in the following colloquy the
+results of this interview, putting together with the allegations of
+Canon Keller the answers of Mr. Ponsonby, and leave the matter in this
+form to the judgment of my readers.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. Canon Keller, I see, describes you, Mr. Ponsonby, as &ldquo;a retired
+navy officer, and an absentee Irish landlord.&rdquo; He says your estate is
+now &ldquo;universally known as the famous Ponsonby Estate,&rdquo; and that it is
+occupied &ldquo;by from 300 to 400 tenants, holding farms varying in extent
+from an acre and a half to over two hundred acres.&rdquo; Are these statements
+correct?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. I am a retired navy officer certainly, and perhaps I may be called
+an &ldquo;absentee Irish landlord.&rdquo; I lived on my property for some time, and
+I have always attended to it. I succeeded to the estate in 1868, and
+almost my first act was to borrow &pound;2000 of the Board of Works for
+drainage purposes&mdash;the tenants agreeing to pay half the interest. As a
+matter of fact some never paid at all, and I afterwards wiped out the
+claims against them. There are about 300 tenants on the property, and
+the average holdings are of about 36 <a name="page354" id="page354"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 354]
+</span>acres, at an average rental of &pound;30
+a holding. There are, however, not a few large farms.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. Canon Keller says that &ldquo;in the memory of living witnesses, and far
+beyond it, the Ponsonby tenants have been notoriously rack-rented and
+oppressed&rdquo;; and that they have been committed to the &ldquo;tender mercies of
+agents, seeing little or nothing of their landlord, and experiencing no
+practical sympathy from that quarter.&rdquo; How is this?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. I wish to believe Canon Keller truthful when he knows the truth. He
+certainly does not know the truth here. He is a newcomer at Youghal,
+having come there in November 1885, and hardly so much of an authority
+about &ldquo;the memory of living witnesses and far beyond it&rdquo; as the tenants
+on the estate, who, when I went there first with my wife, presented to
+me, May 25, 1868, an address of welcome, referring in very different
+terms to the history of the estate and of my family connection with it.
+Here is the original address, and a copy of it&mdash;the latter being quite
+at your service.</p>
+
+<p>This original address is very handsomely engrossed, and is signed by
+fifty tenants. Among the names I observed those of Martin Loughlin,
+Peter McDonough, Michael Gould, William Forrest, and John Heaphey, all
+of whom are cited by Canon Keller in his tract as conspicuous victims of
+the oppression and rack-renting which he says have prevailed upon the
+Ponsonby estates time out of mind. It was rather surprising, therefore,
+to find them joining with more than forty other tenants to sign an
+address, of which I here print the text:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="center"> To C.W. TALBOT PONSONBY, Esq.</p>
+
+<p> Honoured Sir,&mdash;The Tenantry of your Estates near Youghal have heard
+ with extreme pleasure of the arrival of yourself and lady in the
+ neighbourhood, and have deputed us to address you on their behalf.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page355" id="page355"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 355]
+</span>Through us they bid you and Mrs. Ponsonby welcome, and respectfully
+ congratulate you on your accession to the Estates.</p>
+
+<p> The name of Ponsonby is traditionally revered in this part of the
+ country, being associated in the recollections and impressions of
+ the people with all that is exalted, honourable, and generous. It
+ has been matter of regret that the heads of the family have not
+ (probably from uncontrollable causes) visited these Estates for
+ many years, but the tenantry have never wavered in their sentiments
+ of respect towards them.</p>
+
+<p> We will not disguise from you the conviction generally entertained
+ that the improvement of landed property, and the condition of its
+ occupiers, is best promoted under the personal observation and
+ supervision of the proprietor, and your tenantry on that account
+ hail with satisfaction the promise your presence affords of future
+ intercourse between you and them.</p>
+
+<p> Again, on the part of your Tenants and all connected with your
+ Estates, tendering you and your lady a most hearty welcome, and
+ sincerely wishing you and her a long and happy career&mdash;We subscribe
+ ourselves, Honoured Sir, Respectfully yours,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> YOUGHAL, <i>May</i> 1868.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Q</i>. Did Canon Keller ever see this address, may I ask, Mr. Ponsonby?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. I believe not; and I may as well say at once that I suppose he has
+taken for gospel all the stories which any of the tenants under the
+terrorism which has been established on the place think it best to pour
+into his listening ear. As I have said, he is quite a new man at
+Youghal, and when he first came there he was a quiet and not at all
+revolutionary priest. You saw him, and saw how good his manners are, and
+that he is a well-educated man. But on Sunday, November 7, 1886, a great
+meeting was held at Youghal. It was a queer meeting for a Sunday, being
+openly a political meeting, with banners and bands, to hear speeches
+from Mr. Lane, M.P., Mr. Flynn, M.P., and others. The Rev. Mr. Keller
+presided, and a priest from America, Father Hayes of Georgetown, Iowa,
+in the United States, was present. It was ostensibly a <a name="page356" id="page356"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 356]
+</span>Home Rule
+meeting, but the burden of the speeches was agrarian. Mr. Lane, M.P.,
+made a bitter personal attack on another Nationalist member, Sir Joseph
+M&lsquo;Kenna of Killeagh, calling him a &ldquo;heartless and inhuman landlord;&rdquo; and
+my property was also attended to by Mr. Lane, who advised my tenants
+openly not to accept my offer of 20 per cent. reduction, but to demand
+40 per cent. Father Hayes in his speech bade &ldquo;every man stand to his
+guns,&rdquo; and wound up by declaring that if England and the landlords
+behaved in America as they behaved in Ireland, the Americans &ldquo;would pelt
+them not only with dynamite, but with the lightnings of Heaven and the
+fires of hell, till every British bull-dog, whelp, and cur would be
+pulverised and made top-dressing for the soil.&rdquo; Canon Keller afterwards
+expressed disapproval of this speech of Hayes, and this coming to the
+knowledge of Hayes in America, Hayes denounced Keller for not daring to
+do this at the time in his presence. Since then Canon Keller has been
+much more violent in tone.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. I don&rsquo;t want to carry you through a long examination, Mr. Ponsonby,
+but I see typical cases here, about which I should like to ask a
+question or two. Here, is Callaghan Flavin, for instance, described by
+Canon Keller as one of eight tenants who &ldquo;had to retreat before the
+crowbar brigade,&rdquo; and who &ldquo;deserved a better fate.&rdquo; Canon Keller says he
+is assured by a competent judge that Flavin&rsquo;s improvements, &ldquo;full value
+for &pound;341, 10s.,&rdquo; are now &ldquo;the landlord&rsquo;s property.&rdquo; What are the facts
+about Mr. Flavin?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. Mr. Flavin&rsquo;s farm was held by his cousin, Ellen Flavin of Gilmore,
+who, on the 7th of February 1872, surrendered it to the landlord on
+receiving from me a sum of &pound;172, 10s. 6d. I obtained a charging order
+under section 27 of the Land Act, entitling me to an annuity of &pound;8, 12s.
+6d. for thirty-five years from <a name="page357" id="page357"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 357]
+</span>July 3, 1872. It was let to Callaghan
+Flavin in preference to other applicants, July 3, 1872; and in 1873, at
+his request, I obtained a loan from the Board of Works for the thorough
+draining of a portion of the farm. Thirteen acres were drained at a cost
+of &pound;84, 6s. 3d., for which the tenant promised to pay 5 per cent.
+interest, which I eventually forgave him. There was no house on the
+farm. He took it without one, and I did not want one there. He built a
+house himself without consulting my agent, and then wanted me to make
+him an allowance for it. I told him he had thirty-one years to enjoy it
+in, and must be content with that. About the same time he took another
+farm of mine at a rent of &pound;35. Since I came into my property in 1868 I
+have laid out upon it in drainage, buildings, and planting&mdash;here are the
+accounts, which you may look at&mdash;over &pound;15,000, including about &pound;8000 of
+loans from the Board of Works. In the drainage the tenants got work for
+which they were paid. I gave them slates for the buildings, with timber
+and stone from the estate, and they supplied the labour. There is no
+case in which the outlays for improvements came from the tenants&mdash;not a
+single one. I repeat it, Canon Keller&rsquo;s tract is a tissue of fictions.</p>
+
+<p>What nonsense it is to talk about the &ldquo;traditional rack-renting&rdquo; of a
+property held by the Ponsonbys for two hundred years, the tenants on
+which could welcome me when I came into it with the language of the
+address you have here seen!</p>
+
+<p>I never evicted tenants for less than three years&rsquo; arrears, till what
+Canon Keller calls the &ldquo;crowbar brigade,&rdquo; by which he means the officers
+of the law, had to be put into action to meet the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; in
+May last. I did not proceed against the tenants because they could not
+pay. I selected the tenants who could pay, and who were led, or, I
+believe <a name="page358" id="page358"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 358]
+</span>in most cases, &ldquo;coerced,&rdquo; into refusing to pay by agitators with
+Mr. Lane, M.P., to inspire them, and Canon Keller, P.P., to glorify them
+in a tract.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. What were your personal relations with the tenants when you were at
+Inchiquin?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. Always most friendly; and even the other day when I was there,
+while none of them would speak to me when they were all together, those
+I met individually touched their hats, and were as civil as ever. I
+believe they would all be thankful to have things as they were, and I
+have never refused to meet and treat with them on fair individual terms.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1885 my offer of an abatement of 15 per cent. being refused,
+a few tenants, I believe, clubbed their rents, and for the sake of peace
+I then offered 20 per cent., which they accepted and paid. In October
+1886 I hoped to prevent trouble by making the same offer of 20 per cent.
+abatement on non-judicial and 10 per cent. on judicial rents. One man
+took the latter abatement and paid. Then another tenant demanded 40 per
+cent. My agent said he would give them time, and also take money on
+account, the effect of which would be to put me out of court, and
+prevent my getting an order of ejectment if I wanted to for the balance.
+I thought this fair, and approved it, but I refused to make a 40 per
+cent. all-round abatement, authorising my agent, however, to make what
+abatements he liked in special cases. My words were, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t limit you
+on the amount of abatement you give, or as to the number of tenants you
+may choose so to treat.&rdquo; If this was not a fair free hand, what would
+be? My agent afterwards told me he had no chance to make this known. The
+fact is they meant to force the Plan on the tenants and me, and to
+prevent any settlement but a &ldquo;victory for the League!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In my original notes of my conversation with Father <a name="page359" id="page359"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 359]
+</span>Keller at Youghal, I
+found the name of one tenant whom he introduced to me, and who certainly
+told me that his holdings amounted to some &pound;300 a year, and that they
+had been in his family for &ldquo;two hundred years,&rdquo; set down as Doyle&mdash;I so
+printed it with the statements made. But Father Keller, to whom I
+submitted my proofs, and who was so good as to revise them, struck out
+the name of Doyle, and inserted that of Loughlin, putting the rental
+down at &pound;94 (vol. ii. p. <a href="#page71">71</a>). Of course I accept this correction. But on
+my mentioning the matter to Mr. Ponsonby by letter, he replies to me
+(July 27th) as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p> &ldquo;Maurice Doyle is a son of Richard Doyle, who died in 1876, leaving
+ his widow to carry on his farm of 74 acres 1 rood, in the townland
+ of Ballykitty, which he held in 1858 at a rental of &pound;50, 11s. In
+ 1868 this was reduced to &pound;48, 11s. In September 1871 he took in
+ addition a farm of 159 acres 2 roods at &pound;130, in Burgen and
+ Ballykitty. He afterwards got a lease for thirty-one years of this
+ larger farm, with a portion of his earlier holding, for &pound;155. This
+ left him to pay &pound;21, 11s. for the residue of the earlier holding as
+ in 1858. But at his request, in 1876, the year of his death, I
+ reduced this to &pound;17.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;In March 1879, by the death of Mr. Henry Hall, in whose family it
+ had been for certainly a century, the Inchiquin farm of 213 acres,
+ valued at &pound;258, 10s., came on my hands. This farm was valued in
+ 1873 by one valuer at &pound;384, 10s., and by another at &pound;390, 10s. In
+ an old lease I find that this farm was let at &pound;3 an acre. Mr. Henry
+ Hall to the day of his death held it at &pound;306, 7s. 6d., under a
+ lease which I made a lease for life. For this farm Mrs. Richard
+ Doyle applied, agreeing to take it on a 31 years&rsquo; lease, at &pound;370 a
+ year. I let it to her, and she became the lease-holder, putting in
+ her son Maurice Doyle to take charge of it, though not as the
+ tenant. He was an active Land Leaguer from the moment he got into
+ the place, and in 1886 he was a leader in promoting the Plan of
+ Campaign. Proceedings had to be taken against his mother in order
+ to eject him, as she was the tenant, not he. I objected to this,
+ for I always have had the greatest regard for her. Had she been let
+ alone she would have paid her rent as she had always done. But Mr.
+ Lane and his allies saw it would <a name="page360" id="page360"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 360]
+</span>never do to let Maurice Doyle
+ retain his place on his mother&rsquo;s holding. All this will show you
+ that Maurice Doyle did not inherit the Inchiquin farm. The only
+ inherited holding of his mother is the farm of 74 acres 1 rood in
+ the townland of Ballykitty, held by his father in 1858. I have no
+ doubt you saw Doyle at Youghal, by the description you gave me, and
+ you remembered his name at once. He was a thickset heavy-looking
+ man, florid, with a military moustache, the last time I saw him.
+ His mother is one of the &lsquo;rack-rented&rsquo; tenants you hear of, having
+ been able in ten years to increase her acreage from 74 acres to 376
+ acres, and her rental from &pound;48, 11s. to &pound;542!&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>As to the general effect of all this business upon the tenants, and upon
+himself, Mr. Ponsonby spoke most feelingly. &ldquo;The tenants are ruined
+where they might have been thriving. My means of being useful to them or
+to myself are taken away. My charges, though, all remain. I have to pay
+tithes for Protestant Church service, of which I can&rsquo;t have the benefit,
+the churches being closed; and the other day I had a notice that any
+property I had in England would be held liable for quit-rents to the
+Crown on my property in Ireland, of which the Government denies me
+practically any control or use!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteG2" id="noteG2" />NOTE G2.<br />
+
+THE GLENBEHY EVICTION FUND.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page12">12</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the <i>London Times</i> of September 15 appears the following letter from
+the Land Agent whom I saw at Glenbehy, setting forth the effect of this
+&ldquo;Glenbehy Eviction Fund&rdquo; upon the morals of the tenants and the peace of
+the place:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="center"> <i>To the Editor of the Times.</i></p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Sir,&mdash;Although nearly eighteen months have elapsed since the
+ evictions on the Glenbehy estate, after which the above-<a name="page361" id="page361"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 361]
+</span>named fund
+ was started and largely subscribed to by the sympathetic British
+ public, I think it only fair to throw a little light on the manner
+ in which this fund has been expended, and the effects which are
+ still felt in consequence of the money not yet being exhausted.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;It was generally supposed that the tenants then evicted were in
+ such poor circumstances as to be unable to settle, whereas, as a
+ matter of fact, they were, and are, with a few exceptions, the most
+ well-to-do on the estate, having, for the most part, from five to
+ fifteen head of cattle, in addition to sheep, pigs, etc.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Among the tenants evicted at that time many had not paid rents
+ since 1879, and had been in illegal occupation since 1884, from
+ which latter date the landlord was responsible for taxes, provided
+ it is proved that sufficient distress cannot be made of the lands.
+ These tenants were offered a clear receipt to May 1, 1886, if they
+ paid half a year&rsquo;s rent, which would scarcely have paid the cost of
+ proceedings, and the landlord would therefore have been put to
+ actual loss. These people, though well able to settle, are given to
+ understand that as soon as they do so their participation in the
+ eviction fund will cease, and thus it will be seen that a direct
+ premium is being paid to dishonesty.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;In one case a widow woman was summoned for being on the farm from
+ which she was at that time evicted. Finding out that one of her
+ children was ill, I applied to the magistrate at the hearing of the
+ case only to impose a nominal fine. In consequence she was fined
+ one penny, but sooner than pay this she went to gaol, though she
+ had several head of cattle and, prior to her eviction, a very nice
+ farm. The case of this woman fairly illustrates the combination
+ which has existed to avoid the fulfilment of obligations.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;The amount of fines paid for similar offences comes, in several
+ instances, to nearly what I require to effect a settlement. Some of
+ the tenants actually wrote to the late agent on this estate begging
+ him to evict them in order that they might come in for a share of
+ the money raised for the relief of distress, and this clearly shows
+ beyond dispute that the well-meaning subscribers to the fund will
+ be more or less responsible for any further evictions to which it
+ may be necessary to resort. I may mention that the parish priest is
+ one of the trustees for the money which is thus being used for the
+ purpose of preventing settlements and keeping the place in a
+ continual state of turmoil.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Judge Currane, at the January sessions held at Killarney <a name="page362" id="page362"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 362]
+</span>this
+ year, ruled in about fifty ejectment cases on this estate that
+ tenants owing one and a half to nine years&rsquo; rent should pay half a
+ year&rsquo;s rent and costs within a week, a quarter of a year&rsquo;s rent by
+ June 1, and a quarter of a year&rsquo;s rent by October 1; arrears to be
+ cancelled. Some of these, owing to non-compliance with the Judge&rsquo;s
+ ruling, may have to be evicted, and their eviction will be what is
+ termed the unrooting of peasants&rsquo; houses and the ejectment of
+ overburdened tenants for not paying impossible rents.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;I confess I am at a loss to understand how Mr. Parnell&rsquo;s Arrears
+ Act would have improved matters or have averted what one of your
+ contemporaries calls a &ldquo;painful scandal.&rdquo;&mdash;I am, Sirs, yours, &amp;c.,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> &ldquo;D. TODD-THORNTON, J.P., Land Agent.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> &ldquo;Glenbehy, Killarney.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteG3" id="noteG3" />NOTE G3.<br />
+
+HOME RULE AND PROTESTANTISM.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page68">68</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>I fear that all the &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo; clergy in Ireland are not as careful
+as Father Keller to avoid giving occasion for this impression that Irish
+autonomy would be followed by a persecution of the Protestants. But a
+little more than three years ago, for example, the following circular
+was issued by the Bishop of Ossory, and affixed to the door of the
+churches in his diocese. Who can wonder that it should have been
+regarded by Protestants in that diocese as a direct stirring up of
+bitter religious animosities against them? Or that, emanating directly
+as it did from a bishop of the Church, it should be represented as
+emanating indirectly from the Head of the Church himself at Rome?</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;<i>Kilkenny, April 16th, 1885.</i></p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;REV. DEAR SIR,&mdash;May I ask you to read the following circular for
+ the people at each of the Masses on Sunday, 19th April?</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;The course to be adopted for the future by the Priest of the Parish
+ to whom notice of a Mixed Marriage is given by the <a name="page363" id="page363"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 363]
+</span>Minister, or the
+ Registrar, is as follows:&mdash;he makes the following entry on the book
+ of Parochial announcements, and reads it three consecutive Sundays
+ from the Altar:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;&lsquo;The Priests of the Parish have received the following notice of a
+ marriage to be celebrated between a Catholic and a Protestant. [Here
+ read Registrar&rsquo;s notice in full.] We have now to inform you that the
+ law of the Catholic Church regarding such marriages is: that the
+ Catholic party contracting marriage before a Registrar or other
+ unauthorised person is, by the very fact of so doing,
+ Excommunicated; and the witnesses to such marriage are also
+ Excommunicated.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;I should be very much obliged if, as occasion may require, you
+ would explain the effects of this Excommunication from the Altar.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;You will please take notice that the Registrar or Minister is bound
+ legally to send the notice of marriage referred to above, and also,
+ that in reading it out <i>in the form, and with the accompanying
+ remarks above</i>, you incur no legal penalty.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;I feel sure that with your accustomed zeal you will do everything
+ in your power to prevent abuses in regard to the Sacrament of
+ Matrimony, which is great in Christ and the Church, and to induce
+ the faithful to prepare for receiving it by Prayer, by works of
+ Charity, and by approaching the Sacrament of Penance to purify their
+ souls.&mdash;Yours faithfully in Christ,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> [Image: Cross] A. BROWNRIGG.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p> &ldquo;MY DEAR BRETHREN,&mdash;We have been very much pained to learn, within
+ the past month, that marriages between Catholics and non-Catholics
+ have increased very much in this city of Kilkenny. Many
+ <i>evil-disposed</i> persons, utterly unmindful of the prohibitions of
+ the Church, and regardless of the dreadful consequences they bring
+ on themselves, have not hesitated to enter into those <i>unholy
+ matrimonial alliances</i> called &ldquo;Mixed Marriages,&rdquo; which the Catholic
+ Church has always <i>hated and detested</i>. Those misguided Catholics,
+ who do not deserve the name, have not blushed to go, in some
+ instances, before the Protestant Minister, in other instances,
+ before the Public Registrar, to ask them to assist at their marriage
+ with a Protestant. By contracting marriage in this way, they run a
+ great risk of bringing on themselves and on their children, should
+ they have any, the <i>maledictions</i> of Heaven instead of the blessings
+ of religion. In order to put a stop to this growing abuse, and to
+ prevent it from spreading like a contagion to other parts of the
+ Diocese, we beg to remind the faithful of certain regulations which,
+ for the future, shall have force in the Diocese of <a name="page364" id="page364"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 364]
+</span>Ossory in
+ reference to the Catholics, who so far forget themselves as to
+ contract such marriages.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;1. In the first place, any one who contracts a &ldquo;Mixed Marriage&rdquo;
+ without a dispensation from the Holy See and before a Protestant
+ Minister or a Registrar is, by the very fact, guilty of a most
+ grievous mortal sin by violating a solemn law of the Church in a
+ most grave matter.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;2. The Catholic who assists as witness at such marriage also
+ commits a most grievous sin by co-operating in an unlawful act.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;3. Both the Catholic party contracting the marriage and the
+ Catholic witnesses to it cannot be absolved by any priest in the
+ Diocese of Ossory, unless by the Bishop or by those to whom he
+ grants special faculties.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;4. In order more effectually to deter people from entering into
+ <i>those detestable marriages</i>, the penalty of <i>Excommunication</i>
+ is hereby attached to that sin both for the Catholic <i>contracting</i>
+ party as also for the Catholic <i>witnesses</i> to such marriage.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;5. The notice which the Protestant Rector or the Registrar is
+ legally bound in such cases to send to the Parish Priest of the
+ Catholic party, will be read from the Altar for three consecutive
+ Sundays, and thus the <i>crime</i> of the offending party brought out
+ into open light before his or her fellow-parishioners.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;6. For the rest, we hope the sense of decency and religion of the
+ Catholic people and their Pastors shall be no more hurt by any
+ Catholic entering into those marriages, so full of, misery and evil
+ of every kind for themselves, their children, and society at
+ large.&mdash;Yours faithfully in Christ,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> [Image: Cross] ABRAHAM, Bishop of Ossory.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteH" id="noteH" />NOTE H.<br />
+
+TULLY AND THE WOODFORD EVICTIONS.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page149">149</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>Since the first edition of this book was published certain &ldquo;evictions&rdquo;
+mentioned in it as impending on the Clanricarde estates have been
+carried out. I have <a name="page365" id="page365"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 365]
+</span>no reason to suppose that there was more or less
+reason for carrying out these evictions than there usually is, not in
+Ireland only, but all over the civilised world, for a resort by the
+legal owners of property to legal means of recovering the possession of
+it from persons who fail to comply with the terms on which it was put
+into their keeping. Whether this failure results from dishonesty or from
+misfortune is a consideration not often allowed, I think, to affect the
+right of the legal owner of the property concerned to his legal remedy
+in any other country but Ireland, nor even in Ireland in the case of any
+property other than property in land. But as what I learned on the spot
+touching the general condition of the Clanricarde tenants, and touching
+the conduct and character of Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s agent, Mr. Tener, led me
+to take a special interest in these evictions, I asked him to send me
+some account of them. In reply he gave me a number of interesting
+details.</p>
+
+<p>The only serious attempt at resisting the execution of the law was made
+by &ldquo;Dr.&rdquo; Tully, one of the leading local &ldquo;agitators,&rdquo; to the tendency of
+whose harangues judicial reference was made during the investigation
+into the case of Mr. Wilfrid Blunt. Tully had a holding of seventeen
+acres at a rent of &pound;2, 10s., the Government valuation being &pound;4. He
+earned a good livelihood as a boat-builder, and he had put up a slated
+house on his holding. But in November 1884 he chose to stop paying the
+very low rent at which he held his place, and he has paid no rent since
+that time. As is stated in a footnote on page <a href="#page153">153</a>, vol. ii. of this
+book, a decree was granted against Tully by Judge Henn for three years&rsquo;
+rent due in May 1887, and his equity of redemption having expired July
+9, 1888, this recourse was had to the law against him.</p>
+
+<p>As the leading spirit of the agitation, Tully had put <a name="page366" id="page366"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 366]
+</span>a garrison into
+his house of twelve men and two women. He had dug a ditch around it,
+taken out the window-sashes, filled up the casements and the doorways
+with stones and trunks of trees. Portholes had been pierced under the
+roof, through which the defenders might thrust red-hot pikes,
+pitchforks, and other weapons, and empty pails of boiling water upon the
+assailants. A brief parley took place. Tully refused to make any offer
+of a settlement unless the agent would agree to reinstate all the
+evicted tenants, to which Mr. Tener replied that he would recognise no
+&ldquo;combination,&rdquo; but was ready to deal with every tenant fairly and
+individually. Finally the Sheriff ordered his men to take the place.
+Ladders were planted, and while some of the constables, under the
+protection of a shield covered with zinc, a sort of Roman <i>testudo</i>,
+worked at removing the earthern ramparts, others nimbly climbed to the
+roof and began to break in from above. In their excitement the garrison
+helped this forward by breaking holes through the roof themselves to get
+at the attacking party, and in about twenty minutes the fortress was
+captured, and the inmates were prisoners. Two constables were burned by
+the red-hot pikes, the gun of another was broken to pieces by a huge
+stone, and a fourth was slightly wounded by a fork. One of the defenders
+got a sword-cut; and Tully was brought forth as one too severely wounded
+to walk. Upon investigation, however, the surgeon refused to certify
+that he was unable to undergo the ordinary imprisonment in such cases
+made and provided.</p>
+
+<p>The collapse of the resistance at this central point was followed by a
+general surrender.</p>
+
+<p>After the capture of Tully&rsquo;s house, Mr. Tener writes to me, &ldquo;I found it
+being gutted by his family, who would have carried it away piecemeal.
+They had <a name="page367" id="page367"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 367]
+</span>already taken away the flooring of one of the rooms.&rdquo; Thereupon
+Mr. Tener had the house pulled down, with the result of seeing a
+statement made in a leading Nationalist paper that he was &ldquo;evicting the
+tenants and pulling down their houses.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesterday,&rdquo; Mr. Tener writes to me on the 9th of September, &ldquo;I walked
+twenty-five miles, visiting thirty farms about Portumna. Except in two
+or three cases, the tenants have ample means, and part of the live stock
+alone on the farms, exclusive of the crops, would suffice to pay all the
+rents I had demanded. On the farms recently &lsquo;evicted,&rsquo; I found treble
+the amount of the rent due in live stock alone.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to one case of these recent evictions, I found it stated in an Irish
+journal that a young man, who had been ill of consumption for two years,
+the son of a tenant, was removed from the house, the local physician
+refusing to certify that he was unfit for removal, and that he died a
+few days afterwards. The implication was obvious, and I asked Mr. Tener
+for the facts.</p>
+
+<p>He replied, &ldquo;This young man, John Fahey, was in consumption, but did not
+appear to be in any danger. Dr. Carte, an Army surgeon, examined him,
+and said there was no immediate danger. The day was fine and he walked
+about wrapped in a comfortable coat, and talked with me and others. His
+father, a respectable man, made no attempt to defend his house; and at
+his request, after the crowd had gone away, my man in charge permitted
+the invalid and the family to reoccupy the house temporarily because of
+his illness. There was no inquest, and no need of any, after his death.
+His father, Patrick Fahey, had means to pay, but told me he &lsquo;could not,&rsquo;
+which meant he &lsquo;dared not.&rsquo; I went to him personally twice, and sent him
+many messages. But the terror of the League was upon the poor man.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page368" id="page368"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 368]
+</span>&ldquo;An interesting case is that of Michael Fahey, of Dooras. In 1883 his
+rent was judicially reduced about 5 per cent., from &pound;33 to &pound;31, 5s. His
+house and all about it is substantial and comfortable. His father, about
+thirty years ago, fought for a whole night and bravely beat off a party
+of &lsquo;Terry-Alts,&rsquo; the &lsquo;Moonlighters&rsquo; of that day. For his courage the
+Government presented him with a gun, of which the son is very proud.
+Pity he did not inherit the pluck with the gun of his parent!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had been privately told that this tenant would pay; but that he would
+first produce a doctor&rsquo;s certificate that his old mother could not be
+moved. He did give the Sheriff a carefully worded document to show this,
+but it was so vague that I objected to its being received by the
+Sheriff. Upon this (not before! mark the craft of even a well-disposed
+Irish tenant in those evil days), I was asked to go into the house. I
+went in and entered the parlour. There the tenant told me he would pay
+the year&rsquo;s rent and the costs, amounting to &pound;50. He had risen from his
+seat to fetch the money, when, lo! Father Egan (the priest upon whose
+head the widow of the murdered Finlay called down the curse of God in
+the open street of Woodford) appeared in the doorway. He had come in on
+a pretence of seeing the old mother of the tenant, who had (for that
+occasion) taken to her bed. The bedroom lay beyond the parlour, and was
+entered from it. The tenant actually shook with fear as Father Egan
+passed through, and I thought all hope of a settlement gone, when
+suddenly the officer of the police came in, passed into the bedroom, and
+told Father Egan he must withdraw. This Father Egan refused to do,
+whereupon the officer said very quietly, &lsquo;I shall remove you forthwith
+if you do not go out quietly.&rsquo; Upon this Father Egan hastily left. The
+tenant then went into the bedroom and soon <a name="page369" id="page369"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 369]
+</span>reappeared with the &pound;50 in
+bank-notes, which he paid me. All this was dramatic enough. But the
+comedy was next performed in front of the house, where all could see it,
+of handing to the Sheriff the alleged doctor&rsquo;s certificate, and of my
+saying aloud that &lsquo;in the circumstances&rsquo; I had no objection to his
+receiving it! After this all the forces proceeded to take their luncheon
+on the green bank sloping down to the Shannon in front of the
+farm-house. There is a fine orchard on the place, and it recalled to me
+some of the farms I saw in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had gone into the house again, and was standing near the fire in the
+kitchen, where some of my escort were taking their luncheon. It is a
+large kitchen, and perhaps a dozen people were in it, when in came
+Father Egan again and called to the tenant Fahey, &lsquo;Put out those
+policemen, and do not suffer one of them to remain.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The sergeant instantly said, &lsquo;We are here on duty, Father Egan, and if
+you dare to try to intimidate this tenant, I shall either put you out or
+arrest you.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; I interposed, looking at the sergeant, &lsquo;you are certainly here
+on duty, and in the name of the law, and it is sad to see a clergyman
+here in the interest of an illegal, criminal, and rebellious movement,
+and of the immoral Plan of Campaign.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh!&rsquo; exclaimed Father Egan, &lsquo;the opinion of the agent of the Marquis
+of Clanricarde is valuable, truly!&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I give you,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;not my opinion, but the opinion of Dr. Healy and
+Dr. O&rsquo;Dwyer, bishops of your Church, and men worthy of all respect and
+reverence. And I am sorry to know that some ecclesiastics deserve no
+respect, but that at their doors lies the main responsibility for the
+misery and the crime which afflict our unhappy country. I feel sure a
+just God will punish them in due time.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page370" id="page370"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 370]
+</span>&ldquo;Father Egan made no reply, but paused a moment, and then walked out of
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At the next house, that of Dennis Fahey, we found a still better
+dwelling. Here we had another mock certificate, but we received the rent
+with the costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteH2" id="noteH2" />NOTE H2.<br />
+
+BOYCOTTING THE DEAD.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page151">151</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The following official account sent to me (July 24) of an affair in
+Donegal, the result of the gospel of &ldquo;Boycotting&rdquo; taught in that region,
+needs and will bear no comment.</p>
+
+<p>Patrick Cavanagh came to reside at Clonmany, County Donegal, about two
+months ago, as caretaker on some evicted farms. He died on Wednesday
+evening, June 20th, having received the full rites of the Roman Catholic
+Church. The people had displayed no ill-will towards him during his
+brief residence at Clonmany, and on the evening of his death his body
+was washed and laid out by some women. On Thursday two townsmen dug his
+grave, where pointed out by Father Doherty, P.P.</p>
+
+<p>The first symptom of change of feeling was that on Thursday every
+carpenter applied to had some excuse for not making a coffin for the
+body of deceased. On Friday morning the grave was found to be filled
+with stones, and a deputation waited on Father Doherty to protest
+against Cavanagh&rsquo;s burial in the chapel graveyard. He told them to go
+home and mind their business. About 10.30 A.M. on Friday the chapel bell
+was rung&mdash;not tolled or rung as for service, but faster. The local
+sergeant of police went to the cemetery; when he <a name="page371" id="page371"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 371]
+</span>arrived there the
+tolling ceased. He then went to Father Doherty, who told those present
+that their conduct was such as to render them unfit for residence
+anywhere but in a savage country. He told them to go to their homes, and
+advised them to allow the corpse to be buried in the grave he had marked
+out. After Father Doherty had left, the people condemned his
+interference, and said they would not allow any stranger to be buried in
+the graveyard. When Constable Brady put it to those present that their
+real objection did not lie in the fact that Cavanagh had been a
+stranger, he was not contradicted.</p>
+
+<p>The body was ultimately buried at Carndonagh on Saturday, several people
+remaining in the graveyard at Clonmany all through the night (Friday)
+till the body was taken to Carndonagh for burial.</p>
+
+<p>At Carndonagh Petty Sessions, on the 18th July 1888, Con. Doherty and
+Owen Doherty, with five others, were prosecuted for unlawful assembly on
+the occasion above referred to. The first two named, who were the
+ringleaders, were convicted, and sentenced to six weeks&rsquo; imprisonment
+each with hard labour; the charges against the remainder were dismissed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteI" id="noteI" />NOTE I.<br />
+
+POST-OFFICE SAVINGS BANKS.<br />
+
+(Vol. i. p. 117; vol. ii. pp. <a href="#page5">5</a>, <a href="#page12">12</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page95">95</a>, <a href="#page200">200</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>As the Post-Office Savings Banks represent the smaller depositors, and
+command special confidence among them even in the disturbed districts, I
+print here an official statement showing the balances due to depositors
+in the undermentioned offices, situated in certain of the most disturbed
+regions I visited, on the <a name="page372" id="page372"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 372]
+</span>31st December of the years 1880 and 1887
+respectively:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table>
+<thead><tr><td> OFFICE </td><td> 1880 </td><td> 1887 </td></tr></thead><tbody>
+<tr><td> </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Bunbeg </td><td> 1,270&nbsp;6&nbsp;7 </td><td> 1,206&nbsp;18&nbsp;2 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Falcarragh </td><td> 62&nbsp;15&nbsp;10 </td><td> 494&nbsp;10&nbsp;8 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Gorey </td><td> 3,690&nbsp;14&nbsp;4 </td><td> 5,099&nbsp;5&nbsp;7 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Inch </td><td>[A] 8&nbsp;11&nbsp;0 </td><td> 209&nbsp;7&nbsp;5 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Killorglin </td><td> 282&nbsp;15&nbsp;9 </td><td> 1,299&nbsp;2&nbsp;6 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Loughrea </td><td> 5,500&nbsp;19&nbsp;9 </td><td> 6,311&nbsp;4&nbsp;11 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Mitchelstown </td><td> 1,387&nbsp;13&nbsp;2 </td><td> 2,846&nbsp;9&nbsp;3 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Portumna </td><td> 2,539&nbsp;10&nbsp;11 </td><td> 3,376&nbsp;5&nbsp;4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Sixmilebridge </td><td> 382&nbsp;17&nbsp;10 </td><td> 934&nbsp;13&nbsp;4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Stradbally </td><td> 1,812&nbsp;14&nbsp;8 </td><td> 2,178&nbsp;18&nbsp;2 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Woodford </td><td> 259&nbsp;14&nbsp;6 </td><td> 1,350&nbsp;17&nbsp;11 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Youghal </td><td> 3,031&nbsp;0&nbsp;7 </td><td> 7,038&nbsp;7&nbsp;2 </td></tr></tbody>
+</table></div>
+<p>
+ [A] This Office was not opened for Savings Bank
+ business until the year 1881, the amount shown
+ being balance due on the 31st December 1882.</p>
+
+<p>It appears from this table that the deposits in these Savings Banks
+increased in the aggregate from &pound;20,329, 15s. 11d. in 1880 to &pound;32,347,
+9s. 7d. in 1887, or almost 60 per cent, in seven years. They fell off in
+only one case, at Bunbeg, and there only to a nominal amount. At Youghal
+they much more than doubled, increasing about 133 per cent. Yet in all
+these places the Plan of Campaign has been invoked &ldquo;because the people
+were penniless and could not pay their debts!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteK" id="noteK" />NOTE K.<br />
+
+THE COOLGREANY EVICTIONS.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page216">216</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>Captain Hamilton sends me the following graphic account of this affair
+at Coolgreany:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page373" id="page373"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 373]
+</span>In the <i>Freeman&rsquo;s Journal</i> of the 16th December 1886, it is reported
+that a meeting of the Brooke tenantry, the Rev. P. O&rsquo;Neill in the chair,
+was held at Coolgreany on the Sunday previous to the 15th December 1886,
+the date on which the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; was adopted on the estate, at
+which it was resolved that if I refused the terms offered they would
+join the &ldquo;Plan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I had no conference at Freeman&rsquo;s house or anywhere else at any time with
+two parish priests. On the 15th December 1886, when seated in Freeman&rsquo;s
+house waiting to receive the rents, four priests, a reporter of the
+<i>Freeman&rsquo;s Journal</i>, some local reporters, and four of the tenants
+rushed into the room; and the priests in the rudest possible manner (the
+Rev. P. Farrelly, one of them, calling me &ldquo;Francy Hyne&rsquo;s hangman,&rdquo; and
+other terms of abuse) informed me that unless I re-instated a former
+Roman Catholic tenant in a farm which he had previously held, and which
+was then let to a Protestant, and gave an abatement of 30 per cent., no
+rent would be paid <i>me</i> that day. Dr. Dillon, C.C., was not present on
+this occasion, or, if so, I do not remember seeing him.</p>
+
+<p>On my asking if I had no alternative but to concede to their demand, the
+Rev. Mr. Dunphy, parish priest, replied, &ldquo;None other; do not think, sir,
+we have come here to-day to do honour to you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. P. O&rsquo;Neill spoke as he always does, in a more gentlemanly and
+conciliatory manner, and I therefore, as the confusion in the room was
+great, offered to discuss the matter with him, the Rev. O&rsquo;Donel, C.C.,
+and the tenants, if the other priests, who were strangers to me, and the
+reporters would leave the room. This the Rev. Mr. Dunphy declared they
+would not do, and I accordingly refused further to discuss the matter.</p>
+
+<p>After they left the house, one of the tenants, Mick <a name="page374" id="page374"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 374]
+</span>Darcy, stepped
+forward and said, &ldquo;Settle with us, Captain.&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;Certainly, if
+you come back with me into the house.&rdquo; The Rev. Mr. Dunphy took him by
+the collar of his coat and threw him against the wall of the house, then
+turning to me with his hand raised said, &ldquo;You shall not do so; we, who
+claim the temporal as well as spiritual power over <i>you</i> as well as
+these poor creatures, will settle this matter with you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenants were then taken down to the League rooms, where two M.P.s,
+Sir Thomas Esmonde and Mr. Mayne, were waiting to receive the rents,
+which, one by one, they were ordered in to pay into the war-chest of the
+&ldquo;Plan of Campaign.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I have I fear written too much of this commencement of the war on the
+estate which has since led to over seventy of the tenants and their
+families being ejected, and has brought ruin on nearly all who joined
+it. I have considerable experience as a land agent, but I know of no
+estate where the tenants were more respectable, better housed, or, as a
+body, in better circumstances than on the Brooke estate. They had a
+kind, indulgent landlord, and they knew it; and nothing but the belief
+that, led by their clergy, they were foremost in a battle fighting for
+their country and religion, would have induced them to put up with the
+great hardships and loss they have undoubtedly had to suffer.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page375" id="page375"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 375]
+</span><a name="noteL" id="noteL" />NOTE L.<br />
+
+A DUCAL SUPPER IN IRELAND IN 1711.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page283">283</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The following entry I take from the Expense-Book of the Duke of Ormond,
+under date of August 23, 1711:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<br /><br />
+His Grace came to Kilkenny, half an hour after 10 at night.
+<br /><br />
+HIS GRACE&rsquo;S TABLE.<br /><br />
+
+Pottage.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sautee Veal.<br />
+5 Pullets, Bacon and Collyflowers.<br />
+Pottage Meagre.<br />
+Pikes with White Sauce.<br />
+A Turbot with Lobster Sauce.<br />
+Umbles.<br />
+A Hare Hasht.<br />
+Buttered Chickens, G.<br />
+Hasht Veal and New Laid Eggs.<br />
+Removes.<br />
+A Shoulder and Neck of Mutton.<br />
+Haunch of Venison.<br />
+<br /><br />
+<i>Second Course.</i><br />
+<br />
+Lobsters.<br />
+Tarts, an Oval Dish.<br />
+Crabbs Buttered.<br />
+4 Pheasants, 4 Partridges, 4 Turkeys.<br />
+Ragoo Mushrooms.<br />
+Kidney Beans.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ragoo Oysters.<br />
+Fritters.<br />
+Two Sallets.
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteM" id="noteM" />NOTE M.<br />
+
+LETTER FROM MR. O&rsquo;LEARY.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page291">291</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the first edition of this book I credited Mr. O&rsquo;Leary with making
+this pungent remark about figs and grapes, because I found it jotted
+down in my original memoranda as coming from him. In a private note he
+assures me that he does not think it was made by him, and though this
+does not agree with my own <a name="page376" id="page376"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 376]
+</span>recollection, I defer, of course, to his
+impression. And this I do the more readily that it affords me an
+opportunity for printing the following very characteristic and
+interesting letter sent to me by him for publication should I think fit
+to use it.</p>
+
+<p>As the most important support given by the Irish in America to the
+Nationalists is solicited by their agents on the express ground that
+they are really labouring to establish an Irish Republic, this outspoken
+declaration of Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, that he does not believe they &ldquo;expect or
+desire&rdquo; the establishment of an Irish Republic, will be of interest on
+my side of the water:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;DUBLIN, <i>Sept.</i> 9, &rsquo;88.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;My Dear Sir,&mdash;I am giving more bother about what you make me say
+ in your book than the thing is probably worth, especially seeing
+ that what you say about me and my present attitude towards men and
+ things here is almost entirely correct.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;It is proverbially hard to prove a negative, and my main reason
+ for believing I did not say the thing about figs and grapes is that
+ I never could remember the whole of any proverb in conversation;
+ but I am absolutely certain I never said that &lsquo;some of them (the
+ National Leaguers) expect to found an Irish republic on robbery,
+ and to administer it by falsehood. We don&rsquo;t.&rsquo; Most certainly I do
+ not expect to found anything on robbery, or administer anything by
+ falsehood, but I do not in the least believe that the National
+ League either expects or desires to found an Irish republic at all!
+ Neither do I believe that the Leaguers will long retain the
+ administration of such small measure of Home Rule, as I now (since
+ the late utterances of Mr. Parnell and Mr. Gladstone) believe we
+ are going to get. My fault with the present people is not that they
+ are looking, or mean to look, for too much, but that they may be
+ induced, by pressure from their English Radical allies, to be
+ content with too little. It is only a large and liberal measure of
+ Home Rule which will ever satisfy the Irish people, and I fear
+ that, if the smaller fry of Radical M.P.&rsquo;s are allowed to have a
+ strong voice in a matter of which they know next to nothing, the
+ settlement of the Irish question will be indefinitely postponed.&mdash;I
+ remain, faithfully yours,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> &ldquo;JOHN O&rsquo;LEARY.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page377" id="page377"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 377]
+</span><a name="noteN" id="noteN" />NOTE N.<br />
+
+BOYCOTTING PRIVATE OPINION.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page293">293</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>This case of Mr. Taylor is worth preserving <i>in extenso</i> as an
+illustration of that spirit in the Irish journalism of the day, against
+which Mr. Rolleston and his friends protest as fatal to independence,
+manliness, and truth. I simply cite the original attack made upon Mr.
+Taylor, the replies made by himself and his friends, and the comments
+made upon those replies by the journal which assailed him. They all tell
+their own story.</p>
+
+<p class="center"> (<i>UNITED IRELAND</i>, JUNE 16.)</p>
+
+<p> Mr. John F. Taylor owes everything he has or is to the Irish
+ National Party; nor is he slow to confess it where the
+ acknowledgment will serve his personal interests. His sneers are
+ all anonymous, and, like Mr. Fagg, the grateful and deferential
+ valet in <i>The Rivals</i>, &ldquo;it hurts his conscience to be found out.&rdquo;
+ There is no honesty or sincerity in the man. His covert gibes are
+ the spiteful emanation of personal disappointment; his lofty
+ morality is a cloak for unscrupulous self-seeking. He has always
+ shown himself ready to say anything or do anything that may serve
+ his own interests. In the general election of 1885 he made frantic
+ efforts to get into Parliament as a member of the Irish Party. He
+ ghosted every member of the party whose influence he thought might
+ help him&mdash;notably the two men, Mr. Dillon and Mr. O&rsquo;Brien, at whom
+ he now sneers, as he fondly believes, in the safe seclusion of an
+ anonymous letter of an English newspaper. During the period of
+ probation his hand was incessant on Mr. Dillon&rsquo;s door-knocker. The
+ most earnest supplications were not spared. All in vain. Either his
+ character or his ability failed to satisfy the Irish leader, and
+ his claim was summarily rejected. Since then his wounded vanity has
+ found vent in spiteful calumny of almost every member of the Irish
+ Party&mdash;whenever he found malice a luxury that could be safely
+ indulged in.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;His next step was a startling one. We have absolute <a name="page378" id="page378"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 378]
+</span>reason to
+ know, when the last Coercion Act was in full swing, this
+ pure-souled and disinterested patriot begged for, received, and
+ accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship under a Coercion
+ Government. As was wittily said at the time, he sold his
+ principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+ stirred the mess. Strong pressure was brought to bear on him, and
+ he was induced for his own sake, after many protests and with much
+ reluctance, to publicly refuse the office he had already privately
+ accepted. Mr. Taylor professes to model himself on Robert Emmet and
+ Thomas Davis; it is hard to realise Thomas Davis or Robert Emmet as
+ a Coercion Crown Prosecutor in the pay of Dublin Castle. Since then
+ there has been no more persistent caviller at the Irish policy and
+ the Irish Party in company where he believed such cavilling paid.
+ When Home Rule was proposed by Mr. Gladstone, he had a thousand
+ foolish sneers for the measure and its author. When the Bill was
+ defeated, he elected Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Goschen, and Mr. T.W.
+ Russell as the gods of his idolatry. Such a nature needs a patron,
+ and Mr. Webb, Q.C., the Tory County Court Judge who doubled the
+ sentence on Father M&lsquo;Fadden, was the patron to be selected. It is
+ shrewdly suspected that he supplied most of the misguiding
+ information for Dr. Webb&rsquo;s coercion pamphlet, and it is probable
+ that Dr. Webb gives him a lift with his weekly letter to the
+ <i>Manchester Guardian.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> (<i>UNITED IRELAND</i>, JUNE 23.)</p>
+
+<p class="center"> MR. JOHN F. TAYLOR.</p>
+
+<p class="center"> <i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Sir,&mdash;You would not, I am sure, allow intentional misstatements to
+ appear in your columns, and I ask you to allow me space to correct
+ three erroneous observations made about myself in your current
+ issue&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> 1. The first statement is to the effect that I owe everything I
+ have, or that I am, to the Irish National Party. I owe absolutely
+ nothing to the Irish Party, except an attempt to boycott me on my
+ circuit, which, fortunately for me, has failed.</p>
+
+<p> 2. The second is to the effect that I made &ldquo;frantic efforts&rdquo; (these
+ are the words, I think) to enter Parliament, and besieged Mr.
+ Dillon&rsquo;s house during the time when candidates were being chosen. I
+ saw Mr. Dillon exactly twice, both occasions at Mr. Davitt&rsquo;s
+ request. Mr. Davitt urged me to <a name="page379" id="page379"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 379]
+</span>allow my name to go forward as a
+ candidate, and it was at his wish and solicitation that I saw Mr.
+ Dillon.</p>
+
+<p> 3. It is further said that I begged a Crown Prosecutorship.
+ Fortunately, Mr. Walker and The M&lsquo;Dermot are living men, and they
+ know this to be absolutely untrue. I was offered such an
+ appointment, and, contrary to my own judgment, I allowed myself to
+ be guided by Mr. Davitt, who thought the matter would be
+ misunderstood in the state of things then existing. I believe I am
+ the only person that ever declined such an offer.</p>
+
+<p> As to general statements, these are of no importance, and I shall
+ not trouble you about them.&mdash;Yours very truly,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> JOHN F. TAYLOR.</p>
+
+<p> <i>P.S.</i>&mdash;The introduction of Dr. Webb&rsquo;s name was a gratuitous
+ outrage, Dr. Webb and I never assisted each other in anything
+ except in the defence of P.N. Fitzgerald. J.F.T.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> <i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Dear Sir,&mdash;As my name has been introduced into the controversy
+ between yourself and Mr. Taylor, I feel called upon to substantiate
+ the two statements wherein my name occurs in Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s letter of
+ last week. It was at my request that he called upon Mr. John
+ Dillon, M.P. I think I accompanied him on the occasion, and unless
+ my memory is very much at fault, Mr. Dillon was not unfriendly to
+ Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s proposed candidature. This visit occurred some three
+ months after Mr. Taylor had, on my advice, declined the Crown
+ Prosecutorship for King&rsquo;s County, a post afterwards applied for by
+ and granted to a near relative of one of the most prominent members
+ of the Irish Party. With Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s general views on the present
+ situation, or opinions upon parties or men, I have no concern. But,
+ in so far as the circumstances related above are dealt with in your
+ issue of last week, I think an unjust imputation has been made
+ against him, and in the interests of truth and fair play I feel
+ called upon to adduce the testimony of facts as they
+ occurred.&mdash;Yours truly,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> MICHAEL DAVITT.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> Ballybrack, Co. Dublin,<br /> June 19, 1888.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> <br /><i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Sir,&mdash;As this is, I believe, the first time I have sought to
+ intrude upon your columns, I hope you will allow me some <a name="page380" id="page380"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 380]
+</span>slight
+ space in the interests of fair-play and freedom of speech. Those
+ interests seem to me to have been quite set at naught in the
+ attack, or rather series of attacks, upon Mr. Taylor in your last
+ issue. Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s views upon many matters are not mine. He is far
+ more democratic in his opinions than I see any sufficient reason
+ for being, and he is very much more of what is called a land
+ reformer than I am; but on an acquaintance of some years I have
+ ever found him an honourable and high-minded gentleman, and as good
+ a Nationalist, from my point of view, as most of the members of the
+ Irish Parliamentary Party whom I either know or know of. Of some of
+ the charges made against Mr. Taylor, such as the seeking for Crown
+ Prosecutorships and the like, I am in no position to speak, save
+ from my knowledge of his character, but I understand Mr. Davitt
+ knows all about these things, and I suppose he will tell what he
+ knows. But of the main matter, and I think the chief cause of your
+ ire, I am quite in a position to speak. I have read at least a
+ score of Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s letters to the <i>Manchester Guardian</i>, and I
+ have always found them very intelligently written, and invariably
+ characterised by a spirit of fairness and moderation; indeed, the
+ chief fault I found with them was that they took too favourable a
+ view of the motives, if not the acts, of many of our public men,
+ but notably of Messrs. Dillon and O&rsquo;Brien. You may, of course,
+ fairly say that I am not the best judge of either the acts or the
+ motives of these gentlemen, and I freely grant you that I may not,
+ for my way of looking upon the Irish question is quite other than
+ theirs; but what I must be excused for holding is that both I and
+ Mr. Taylor have quite as good a right to our opinions as either of
+ these gentlemen, or as any other member of the Irish Parliamentary
+ Party. But this is the very last right that people are inclined to
+ grant to each other in Ireland just now. Personally I care very
+ little for this, but for Ireland&rsquo;s sake I care much. Some twenty
+ years ago or so I was sent into penal servitude with the almost
+ entire approval, expressed or implied, of the Irish Press. Some
+ short time after the same Press found out that I and my friends had
+ not sinned so grievously in striving to free Ireland. But men and
+ times and things may change again, and, though I am growing old, I
+ hope still to live long enough to be forgiven for my imperfect
+ appreciation of the blessings of Boycotting, and the Plan of
+ Campaign, and many similar blessings. It matters little indeed how
+ or when I die, so that Ireland lives, but her life can only be a
+ living death if Irishmen are not free to say <a name="page381" id="page381"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 381]
+</span>what they believe, and
+ to act as they deem right.&mdash;Your obedient servant,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> JOHN O&rsquo;LEARY.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> June 18, 1888.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> <br /><i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Dear Sir,&mdash;I observe that in your last issue, amongst other things,
+ you state that Mr. Taylor accepted a Crown Prosecutorship in 1885.
+ I happen to know the precise facts. Mr. Taylor was offered the
+ Crown Prosecutorship of the King&rsquo;s County, and some of us strongly
+ advised him to accept it. There were no political prosecutions
+ impending at the time, and it seemed to me that a Nationalist who
+ would do his work honestly in prosecuting offenders against the
+ ordinary law might strike a blow against tyranny by refusing to
+ accept a brief, if offered, against men accused of political
+ offences or prosecuted under a Coercion Act. I know that a similar
+ view was entertained by the late Very Rev. Dr. Kavanagh of Kildare,
+ and many others. However, we failed to influence Mr. Taylor further
+ than to make him say that he would do nothing in the matter until
+ Mr. Davitt was consulted. I, for one, called on Mr. Davitt, and
+ pressed my views upon him; but he was decided that no Nationalist
+ could identify himself in the smallest way with Castle rule in
+ Ireland. This settled the question, and Mr. Taylor declined the
+ post, which was subsequently applied for by Mr. Luke Dillon, who
+ now holds it.&mdash;Faithfully yours,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> JAMES A. POOLE.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> 29 Harcourt Street.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><br /> EDITORIAL NOTE.<br />
+<i>&ldquo;United Ireland,&rdquo; June 23.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p> We devote a large portion of our space to-day to the apparently
+ organised defence of Mr. J.F. Taylor and his friends, and we are
+ quite content to rest upon their letters the justification for our
+ comments. When a gentleman who avows himself a disappointed
+ aspirant for Parliamentary honours, and who owns his regret that he
+ did not become a petty Castle placeman, is discovered writing in an
+ important English Liberal paper, venomous little innuendos at the
+ expense of sorely attacked Irish leaders which excite the
+ enthusiasm of the <i>Liarish Times</i>, it was high time to intimate to
+ the <i>Manchester Guardian</i> the source from which its Irish
+ information is derived. The case against Mr. Taylor as a
+ criticaster is clinched by the fact that his cause is espoused by
+ Mr. John <a name="page382" id="page382"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 382]
+</span>O&rsquo;Leary. The Irish public are a little weary of Mr.
+ O&rsquo;Leary&rsquo;s querulous complaints as an <i>homme incompris</i>. So far as
+ we are aware, the only ground he himself has for complaining of
+ want of toleration is that he possibly considers the good-humoured
+ toleration for years invariably extended to his opinions on men and
+ things savours of neglect. His idea of toleration with respect to
+ others seems to be toleration for everybody except the unhappy
+ wretches who may happen to be for the moment doing any practicable
+ service in the Irish cause.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteO" id="noteO" />NOTE O.<br />
+
+BOYCOTTING BY &ldquo;CROWNER&rsquo;S QUEST LAW.&rdquo;<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page312">312</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The following circumstantial account of this deplorable case of Ellen
+Gaffney preserved here, as I find it printed in the <i>Irish Times</i> of
+February 27, 1888.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;In the Court of Queen&rsquo;s Bench, on Saturday, the Lord Chief-Justice (Sir
+Michael Morris, Bart.), Mr. Justice O&rsquo;Brien, Mr. Justice Murphy, and Mr.
+Justice Gibson presiding, judgment was delivered in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney. The original motion was to quash the verdict of a coroner&rsquo;s
+jury held at Philipstown on August 27th and September 1st last, on the
+body of a child named Mary Anne Gaffney.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Lord Chief-Justice said it appeared that Mary Anne Gaffney, the
+child on whose body the inquest was held, was born on the 23d July, and
+that she died on the 25th August, 1887. A Dr. Clarke, who had been very
+much referred to in the course of the proceedings, called upon the local
+sergeant of the police, and directed his attention to the body, but the
+sergeant having inspected the body, came to the conclusion that there
+was no need for an inquest. The doctor considered differently, and the
+sergeant communicated with the Coroner on the 26th August, and <a name="page383" id="page383"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 383]
+</span>on the
+next day that gentleman arrived in Philipstown. He had a conference
+there with Dr. Clarke and with a reverend gentleman named Father Bergin,
+and subsequently proceeded to hold an inquest upon the child in a
+public-house&mdash;a most appropriate place apparently for the transactions
+which afterwards occurred there. The investigation, if it might be so
+called, was proceeded with upon that 27th of August. Very strong
+affidavits had been made on the part of Mrs. Gaffney&mdash;who applied to
+have the inquisition quashed&mdash;her husband, and some of the constabulary
+authorities as to the line of conduct pursued upon that occasion. Ellen
+Gaffney and her husband were taken into custody on the day the inquest
+opened by the verbal direction of the Coroner, who refused to complete
+the depositions given by the former on the ground that she was not
+sworn. That did not take him out of the difficulty, for if she was not
+sworn she had a right to be sworn, and the Coroner had no right to
+prevent her. The inquest was resumed on the 1st September in the
+court-house at Philipstown&mdash;the proper place&mdash;and a curious letter was
+read from the Coroner, the effect of which was that he did not consider
+that there was any ground for detaining the man Gaffney in custody, but
+the woman was brought before a justice of the peace and committed for
+trial. She was in prison from August 27th until the month of December,
+when the lucky accident of a winter assize occurred, else she might be
+there still. At the adjourned inquest the Coroner proceeded to read over
+the depositions taken on the former day, and it was sworn by four
+witnesses, whom he (the Lord Chief-Justice) entirely credited, that the
+Coroner read these depositions as if they were originals, whereas an
+unprecedented transaction had occurred. The Coroner had given the
+original depositions out of his own custody, and given them to a
+<a name="page384" id="page384"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 384]
+</span>reverend gentleman who was rather careless of them, as was shown by the
+evidence of a witness named Greene, who deposed that he saw a car on the
+road upon which sat two clergymen, and he found on the road the original
+depositions which, presumably, one of the clergymen had dropped. The
+depositions were handed to a magistrate and afterwards returned to the
+police at Philipstown, who had possession of them on the resumption of
+the inquest. If the case stood alone there it was difficult to
+understand how a Coroner could come into court and appear by counsel to
+resist the quashing of an inquisition in regard to which at the very
+door such gross personal misconduct was demonstrated. No doubt, he said,
+he did not read them as originals but as copies, and it was strange,
+that being so, that he did not inform the jury of what had become of
+them, and he complained now of not being told by the police of their
+recovery&mdash;not told of his own misconduct. On the 1st September, Ellen
+Gaffney applied by a solicitor&mdash;Mr. Disdall, and as a set-off the
+Coroner permitted a gentleman named O&rsquo;Kearney Whyte to appear&mdash;for whom?
+Was it for the constituted authorities or for the next-of-kin? No, but
+for the Rev. Father Bergin, who was described as president of the local
+branch of the National League, and the Coroner (Mr. Gowing) alleged as
+the reason why he allowed him to appear and cross-examine the witnesses
+and address the jury and give him the right of reply like Crown counsel
+was, that Ellen Gaffney stated that she had been so much annoyed by
+Father Bergin that she attributed the loss of her child to him&mdash;that it
+was he who had murdered the child. It was asserted that Father Bergin
+sat on the bench with the Coroner and interfered during the conduct of
+the inquest, and having to give some explanation of that Mr. Gowing&rsquo;s
+version was certainly a most amusing one. He said it <a name="page385" id="page385"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 385]
+</span>was the habit to
+invite to a seat on the bench people of a respectable position in
+life&mdash;which, of course, a clergyman should be in&mdash;and that he asked
+Father Bergin to sit beside him in that capacity. But see the dilemma
+the Coroner put himself in. According to his own statement he had
+previously allowed this reverend gentleman to interfere, and to be
+represented by a solicitor because he was incriminated, inculpated, or
+accused, and it certainly was not customary to invite any one so
+situated to occupy a seat on the bench. He (the Lord Chief Baron) did
+not believe that Father Bergin was incriminated in any way, but that was
+the Coroner&rsquo;s allegation, and such was his peculiar action thereafter.
+The Coroner further stated that no matter whether he read the originals
+or the copies of the first day&rsquo;s depositions, it was on the evidence of
+September 1st that the jury acted. If that was so he placed himself in a
+further dilemma, for there was no evidence before the jury at all on the
+second day upon which they could bring a verdict against Ellen Gaffney.
+In regard to the recording and announcing of the verdict it appeared
+that the jury were 19 in number, and after their deliberations the
+foreman declared that 13 were for finding a verdict one way and 6 for
+another; that Mr. Whyte dictated the verdict to the Coroner, and the
+Coroner asked the 13 men if that was what they agreed to. Mr. Whyte&rsquo;s
+statement was that the jury, through the foreman, stated what their
+verdict was; that he wrote it down, and that the Coroner asked him for
+what he had written, and used it himself. But in addition to that, when
+the jury came in the Coroner and Mr. Whyte divided them&mdash;placed them
+apart while the verdict was being written&mdash;and then said to the 13 men,
+&ldquo;Is that what you agree to?&rdquo; Such apparent misconduct it was hardly
+possible to conceive in anybody <a name="page386" id="page386"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 386]
+</span>occupying a judicial position as did the
+Coroner, and especially a Coroner who had an inquisition quashed before.
+What he had mentioned was sufficient to call forth the emphatic decision
+of the court quashing the proceedings, which, however, were also
+impeached on the grounds of its insufficiency and irregularity, and of
+the character of the finding itself. It was not until the Coroner had
+been threatened with the consequences of his contempt that he made a
+return to the visit of <i>certiorari</i>, and it was then found that out of
+ten so-called depositions only one contained any signature&mdash;that of Dr.
+Clarke&rsquo;s, which was one of those lost by the clergyman, and not before
+the jury on the 1st September. He (the Lord Chief-Justice) had tried to
+read the documents, but in vain&mdash;they were of such a scrawling and
+scribbling character, but, as he had said, all were incomplete and
+utterly worthless except the one which was not properly before the jury.
+Then, what was the finding on this inquisition, which should have been
+substantially as perfect as an indictment? &ldquo;That Mary Anne Gaffney came
+by her death, and that the mother of this child, Ellen Gaffney, is
+guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food and care to
+sustain the life of this child.&rdquo; Upon what charge could the woman have
+been implicated on that vague finding? He (his Lordship) could
+understand its being contended that that amounted argumentatively to a
+verdict of manslaughter; but the Coroner issued his warrant and sent
+this woman to prison as being guilty of murder, and she remained in
+custody, as he had already remarked, until discharged by the learned
+judge who went the Winter Assizes in December. Upon all of these grounds
+they were clearly of opinion that this inquisition should be quashed,
+and Mr. Coroner Gowing having had the self-possession to come there to
+show cause against the conditional order, <a name="page387" id="page387"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 387]
+</span>under such circumstances, must
+bear the costs of that argument.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fred. Moorhead, who, instructed by Mr. O&rsquo;Kearney Whyte, appeared for
+the Coroner, asked whether the Court would require, as was usual when
+costs were awarded against a magistrate, an undertaking from the other
+side&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Chief-Justice.&mdash;That is not to bring an action against the
+Coroner, you mean?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Moorhead.&mdash;Yes, my Lord. I think it is a usual undertaking when
+costs are awarded in such a case. I think you ought&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Chief-Justice.&mdash;Well, I don&rsquo;t know that we ought, but we most
+certainly will not. (Laughter.)</p>
+
+<p>Mr. David Sherlock, who (instructed by Mr. Archibald W. Disdall)
+appeared for Ellen Gaffney.&mdash;Rest assured, we certainly will bring an
+action.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">THE END.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 1:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a><p>I have the authority of Mr. Hennessey, &ldquo;the best living
+Irish scholar, and a Kerryman to boot,&rdquo; for this spelling. I am quite
+right, he says, in stating that the people there pronounce the names of
+Glenbeigh and Rossbeigh as Glenb&eacute;hy and Rossb&eacute;hy in three syllables.
+&ldquo;Bethe,&rdquo; pronounced &ldquo;behy,&rdquo; is the genitive of &ldquo;beith,&rdquo; the birch, of
+which there were formerly large woods in Ireland. Glenbehy and Rossbehy
+mean the &ldquo;Glen,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Ross&rdquo; or &ldquo;wooded point&rdquo; of the birch.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a>
+ <span class='fnheader'>Footnote 2:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+<p> A letter received by me from a Protestant Irish gentleman,
+long an ardent Nationalist, seems to confirm this. He writes to me (June
+15),</p>
+<blockquote> &ldquo;There is a noble river here, with a convenient line of quays for
+ unloading merchandise. But every sack that is landed must be carried out
+ of the ship on men&rsquo;s backs. The quay labourers won&rsquo;t allow a steam crane
+ to be set up. If it is tried there is a riot and a tumult, and no
+ Limerick tradesman can purchase anything from a vessel that uses it, on
+ pain of being boycotted. The result is that the labourers are masters of
+ the situation, and when they catch a vessel with a cargo which it is
+ imperative to land quickly, they wait till the work is half done, and
+ then strike for 8s. a day! If other labourers are imported, they are
+ boycotted for &lsquo;grabbing work,&rsquo; and any one who sells provisions to them
+ is boycotted.&rdquo;
+</blockquote>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 3:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a><p> An interesting account of this gentleman, and of his
+connection with the earlier developments of the Irish agitation, given
+to me by Mr. Colomb of the R.I.C., will be found at p.<a href="#page38">38</a>, and in the
+Appendix, <a href="#noteF">Note F.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 4:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a><p> See Appendix, <a href="#noteF">Note F.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 5:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a><p> The name of this blacksmith&rsquo;s son learned in the Law of the
+League is given in Lord Cowper&rsquo;s Report (2. 18,370) as Michael Healy.
+While these pages are in the printer&rsquo;s hands the London papers chronicle
+(May 25, 1888) the arrest of a person described to me as this
+magistrate&rsquo;s brother, Jeremiah Healy, on a charge of robbing and setting
+fire to the Protestant church at Killarney!</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 6:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a><p> Mr. Colomb sends me, June 30, the following interesting
+note:&mdash;The letter of which I gave you a copy was produced in evidence at
+Kerry Summer Assizes, 1867. J. D. Sheehan, Esq., M.P., is the same man
+who was arrested on the 12th February 1867, and to whom the foregoing
+letter, ordering the rising in Killarney, is addressed. He was kept in
+custody for some time, and eventually released, it is believed, on the
+understanding that he was to keep out of Ireland. He came back in 1873
+or 1874 and married the proprietress of a Hotel at Killarney. His
+connection with the Glenbehy evictions is referred to on page <a href="#page10">10</a>, and in
+<a href="#noteF">Note F</a> of the Appendix I give an interesting account, furnished me by
+Mr. Colomb, of his activity in connection with the case of the Misses
+Curtin at Firies.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7"
+ name="footnote7"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 7:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag7">(return)</a><p> In the time of Henry VIII. these cities waged actual war
+with each other, like Florence and Pisa, by sea and land. Limerick was
+then called &ldquo;Little London.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8"
+ name="footnote8"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 8:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag8">(return)</a><p> It was on the 17th October 1886 that Mr. Dillon first
+promulgated the Plan of Campaign at all at Portumna.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote9"
+ name="footnote9"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 9:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag9">(return)</a><p> Mr. Ponsonby&rsquo;s account of this affair will be found in the
+Appendix, <a href="#noteG">Note G.</a> The Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Youghal,
+which were &pound;3031, 0s. 7d. in 1880, rose to &pound;7038, 7s. 2d. in 1887.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote10"
+ name="footnote10"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 10:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag10">(return)</a><p> As to the ability of these tenants to pay their way, one
+fact which I have since ascertained sufficiently supports Mr. Tener&rsquo;s
+contention. The deposits in the Postal Savings Banks of the three purely
+agricultural towns of Portumna, Woodford, and Loughrea, which in 1880,
+throwing off the shillings and pence, were respectively, &pound;2539, &pound;259,
+and &pound;5500, rose in 1887 to &pound;3376, &pound;1350, and &pound;6311, an increase of
+nearly &pound;3000.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote11"
+ name="footnote11"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 11:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag11">(return)</a><p> Mr. Tener, to whom I sent proofs of these pages, writes to
+me (July 18): &ldquo;I shall soon execute the decree of the County-Court Judge
+Henn against Father Coen for &pound;5, 5s., being two and a half year&rsquo;s
+rent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote12"
+ name="footnote12"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 12:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag12">(return)</a><p> At a hearing of cases before Judge Henn some time after I
+left Portumna, the Judge was reported in the papers as &ldquo;severely&rdquo;
+commenting upon the carelessness with which the estate-books were kept,
+tenants who were proceeded against for arrears producing &ldquo;receipts&rdquo; in
+court. I wrote to Mr. Tener on this subject. Under date of June 5th he
+replied to me: &ldquo;Judge Henn did not use the severe language reported.
+There was no reporter present but a local man, and I have reason to
+believe the report in the <i>Freeman&rsquo;s Journal</i> came from the lawyer of
+the tenants, who is on the staff of that journal. But the tenants are
+drilled not to show the receipts they hold, and to take advantage of
+every little error which they might at once get corrected by calling at
+the estate office. In no case, however, did any wrong occur to any
+tenant.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote13"
+ name="footnote13"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 13:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag13">(return)</a><p> The town and estate proper of Woodford belong to Sir Henry
+Burke, Bart. The nearest point to Woodford of Lord Clamicarde&rsquo;s property
+is distant one mile from the town. And on the so-called Woodford estate
+there are not &ldquo;316 tenants,&rdquo; as stated in publications I have seen, but
+260.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote14"
+ name="footnote14"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 14:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag14">(return)</a><p> Martin Kenny, the &ldquo;victim&rdquo; of this eviction, is the tenant
+to whom the Rev. Mr. Crawford (<i>vide</i> page <a href="#page118">118</a>) gave &pound;50 for certain
+cattle, in order that he (Kenny) might pay his rent But, although he got
+the &pound;50, he nevertheless suffered himself to be evicted; no doubt
+fearing the vengeance of the League should he pay.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote15"
+ name="footnote15"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 15:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag15">(return)</a><p> The valuation for taxes of this holding is &pound;7, 15s. for
+the land, and &pound;5 for the presbytery house. The church is exempt.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote16"
+ name="footnote16"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 16:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag16">(return)</a><p> Of &ldquo;Dr.&rdquo; Tully Mr. Tener wrote to me (July 18): &ldquo;Tully has
+the holding at &pound;2, 10s. a year, being 50 per cent, under the valuation
+of the land for taxes, which is &pound;3, 15s. As the total valuation with the
+house (built by him) is only &pound;4, he pays no poor-rates. He was in
+arrears May 1, 1887, of three years for &pound;7, 10s. Lord Clanricarde
+offered him, with others, 20 per cent, abatement, making for him 70 per
+cent, under the valuation&mdash;and he refused!&rdquo; Since then (on Saturday
+Sept. 1), Tully has been evicted after a dramatic &ldquo;resistance,&rdquo; of
+which, with instructive incidents attending it, Mr. Tener sends me an
+account, to be found in the Appendix, <a href="#noteH">Note H.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote17"
+ name="footnote17"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 17:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag17">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteH2">Note H2.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote18"
+ name="footnote18"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 18:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag18">(return)</a><p> Mr. Tener writes to me (July 18): &ldquo;At Allendarragh, near
+the scene of Finlay&rsquo;s murder, Thomas Noonan, who lately was brave enough
+to accept the post of process-server vacated by that murder, was shot at
+on the 13th instant. It was on the highway. He heard a heavy stone fall
+from a wall on the road and turned to see what caused it. He distinctly
+saw two men behind the wall with guns, and saw them fire. One shot
+struck a stone in the road very near him&mdash;the other went wide. His idea
+is that one gun dislodged the stone on which it had been laid for an
+aim, and that its fall disturbed the aim and saved him. He fully
+identifies one of the men as Henry Bowles, a nephew of &lsquo;Dr.&rsquo; Tully, who
+lives with Tully, and Bowles, after being arrested and examined at
+Woodford, has been remanded, bail being refused, to Galway Jail. Before
+this shooting Noonan had served a notice from me upon Tully, against
+whom I have Judge Henn&rsquo;s decree for three years&rsquo; rent, and whose equity
+of redemption expired July 9th.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote19"
+ name="footnote19"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 19:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag19">(return)</a><p> I have since learned that my jarvey was well informed. Sir
+Henry Burke actually paid Mr. Dillon &pound;160 for the maintenance of his
+tenants while out of their farms. This, two other landlords, Lords
+Dunsandle and Westmeath, refused to do, but, like Sir Henry, they both
+paid all the costs, and accepted a &ldquo;League&rdquo; reduction of 5s. 6d. and 6s.
+in the pound (June 9, 1888).</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote20"
+ name="footnote20"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 20:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag20">(return)</a><p> Down to the date at which I write this note (June 9), Mr.
+Seigne has kindly, but without results, endeavoured to get for me some
+authentic return made by a small tenant-farmer of his incomings and
+outgoings.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote21"
+ name="footnote21"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 21:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag21">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteI">Note I.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote22"
+ name="footnote22"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 22:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag22">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteK">Note K.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote23"
+ name="footnote23"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 23:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag23">(return)</a><p> While these pages are going through the press a Scottish
+friend sends me the following extract from a letter published in the
+<i>Scotsman</i> of July 25:&mdash;
+
+&ldquo;In the same way I, in August last, when in
+Wicklow, ascertained as carefully as I could the facts as to the Bodyke
+evictions; and being desirous to learn now if that estate was still out
+of cultivation, as I had found it in August, I wrote the gentleman I
+have referred to above. His reply is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I can answer your question as far as the Brooke estate is concerned.
+None of the tenants are back in their farms, nor are they likely to be.
+The landlord has the land partly stocked with cattle; but I may say the
+land is nearly waste; the gates, fences, and farmsteads partly
+destroyed. I was at the fair of Coolgreany about three weeks ago, and
+the country looked quite changed; the weeds predominating in the land
+that the tenantry had under cultivation when they were evicted from
+their farms. The landlord has done nothing to lay the land down with
+grass seed, consequently the land is waste. The village of Coolgreany is
+on the property, and there was a good monthly fair held there, but it is
+very much gone down since the disagreement between the landlord and
+tenant. The tenants, speaking generally, in allowing themselves to be
+evicted and not redeeming before six months, are giving up all their
+improvements to the landlord, no matter what they may be worth. I have
+got quite tired of the vexed question, and may say I have given up
+reading about evictions, and pity the tenant who is foolish enough to
+allow any party to advise him so badly as to allow himself to be
+evicted.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Those who read this testimony of a candid witness, and remember the
+cordial footing on which Mr. Brooke stood with his tenantry in Bodyke
+before Mr. Billon appeared amongst them, may well ask what good his
+interference did to the now impoverished tenantry of Bodyke, or to the
+district now deserted or laid waste.&mdash;I am, etc.,</p>
+
+<p class="signed">A RADICAL UNIONIST.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote24"
+ name="footnote24"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 24:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag24">(return)</a><p> In curious confirmation of this opinion expressed to me by
+a man of the country in March, I find in the <i>Dublin Express</i> of July
+19th this official news from the Athy Vice-Guardians:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At the meeting of the Vice-Guardians of the Athy Union yesterday, a
+letter was read from Mr. G. Finlay, Auditor, in which he stated that the
+two sureties of Collector Kealy, of the Luggacurren district, had been
+evicted from their holdings by Lord Lansdowne, and were not now in
+possession of any lands there. They were allowed outdoor relief to the
+extent of &pound;1 a week each on the ground of destitution. The Auditor
+continued: &lsquo;The Collector tells me that they both possess other lands,
+and have money in bank. The Collector is satisfied that they are as
+good, if not better, securities for the amount of his bond now than at
+the time they became sureties for him. The Clerk of the Union concurs in
+this opinion.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was ordered to bring the matter under the notice of the Board.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote25"
+ name="footnote25"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 25:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag25">(return)</a><p> <i>Explanatory Note attached to First Edition.</i>&mdash;After this
+chapter had actually gone to press, I received a letter from the friend
+who had put me into communication with the labourers referred to in it,
+begging me to strike out all direct indications of their whereabouts, on
+the ground that these might lead to grave annoyance and trouble for
+these poor men from the local tyrants.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know that I ought to regret the annoyance thus caused to my
+publisher and to me, as no words of mine could emphasise so clearly the
+nature and the scope of the odious, illegal, or anti-legal &ldquo;coercion&rdquo;
+established in certain parts of Ireland as the asterisks which mark my
+compliance with my friend&rsquo;s request. What can be said for the freedom of
+a country in which a man of character and position honestly believes it
+to be &ldquo;dangerous&rdquo; for poor men to say the things recorded in the text of
+this chapter about their own feelings, wishes, opinions, and interests?</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote26"
+ name="footnote26"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 26:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag26">(return)</a><p> It may be well to say here that whatever prominence Mr.
+O&rsquo;Donovan Rossa has had among the Irish in America has been largely, if
+not chiefly, due to the curious persistency of Sir William Harcourt,
+when a Minister, in making him the ideal Irish-American leader. In and
+out of Parliament, Sir William Harcourt continually spoke of Mr. Rossa
+as of a kind of Irish Jupiter Tonans, wielding all the terrors of
+dynamite from beyond the Atlantic. This was a source of equal amusement
+to the Irish-American organisers in America and satisfaction to Mr.
+Rossa himself. I remember that when a question arose of excluding Mr.
+Rossa from an important Irish-American convention at Philadelphia, as
+not being the delegate of any recognised Irish-American body, Mr.
+Sullivan told me that he should recommend the admission of Mr. Rossa to
+the floor without a right to deliberative action, expressly because his
+presence, when reported, would be a cause of terror to Sir William
+Harcourt.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote27"
+ name="footnote27"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 27:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag27">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteM">Note M.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote28"
+ name="footnote28"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 28:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag28">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteN">Note N.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote29"
+ name="footnote29"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 29:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag29">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteO">Note O.</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14511 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14511 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14511)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2)
+(1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2) (1888)
+
+Author: William Henry Hurlbert
+
+Release Date: December 29, 2004 [EBook #14511]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRELAND, VOL. 2 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Robert Ledger and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IRELAND UNDER COERCION
+
+THE DIARY OF AN AMERICAN
+
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM HENRY HURLBERT
+
+
+VOL. II.
+
+_SECOND EDITION._
+
+1888
+
+
+"Upon the future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire."
+CARDINAL MANNING TO EARL GREY, 1868
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+ Rossbehy, Feb. 21, 1
+ The latest eviction at Glenbehy, 1
+ Trafalgar Square, 1, 2
+ Father Little, 3
+ Mr. Frost, 3, 4
+ Priest and landlord, 3
+ Savings Banks' deposits at Six-mile Bridge, 5
+ Drive through Limerick, 5
+ Population and trade, 5, 6
+ Boycotting and commerce, 6, 7
+ Shores of the Atlantic, 7
+ Tralee, 7
+ Killorglin, 8
+ Hostelry in the hills, 8
+ Facts of the eviction, 9-13
+ Glenbehy Eviction Fund (see Note G2), 12
+ A walk on Washington's birthday, 13
+ A tenant at Glenbehy offers £13 in two instalments
+ in full for £240 arrears, 13
+ English and Irish members, 14
+ "Winn's Folly," 15
+ Acreage and rental of the Glenbehy estate, 16
+ Work of eviction begun, 17
+ Patience of officers, 17
+ American and Irish evictions contrasted, 17
+ "Oh, he's quite familiar," 18
+ A modest Poor Law Guardian, 18, 19
+ Moonlighters' swords, 20
+ Father Quilter and the "poor slaves," his people, 21,22
+ Beauty of Lough Caragh, 23
+ Difficulty of getting evidence, 25
+ Effects of terrorism in Kerry, 25
+ Singular identification of a murderer, 26
+ Local administration in Tralee, 28
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+ Cork, Feb. 23, 30
+ Press accounts of Glenbehy evictions astonish an eye-witness, 30
+ Castle Island, 31
+ Mr. Roche and Mr. Gladstone, 31
+ Opinions of a railway traveller, 31, 32
+ Misrepresentations of evictions, 32
+ Cork, past and present, 34
+ Mr. Gladstone and the Dean, 35
+ League Courts in Kerry, 36
+ Local Law Lords, 36
+ Mr. Colomb and the Fenian rising in 1867, 37
+ Remarkable letter of an M.P., 38
+ Irish Constabulary, _morale_ of the force, 40
+ The clergy and the Plan of Campaign, 41
+ Municipal history, 43
+ Increase of public burdens, 44
+ Tralee Board of Guardians, 46
+ Labourers and tenants, 46
+ Feb. 25, 47
+ Boycotting, 47-49
+ Land law and freedom of contract, 49
+ Rivalry between Limerick and Cork, 50
+ Henry VIII. and the Irish harp, 50
+ Municipal Parliamentary franchise, 51
+ Environs of Cork, 52
+ Churches and chapels, 53
+ Attractive home at Belmullet, 54
+ Lord Carnarvon and the Priest, 55
+ Feb. 26, 56
+ Blarney Castle, 56, 57
+ St. Anne's Hill, 56, 57
+ An evicted woman on "the Plan," 59
+ The Ponsonby estate, 59
+ Feb. 27--A day at Youghal, 60
+ Father Keller, 61-76
+ On emigration and migration, 66
+ Protestants and Catholics (see Note G3), 68
+ Meath as a field for peasant proprietors, 69
+ Ghost of British protection, 70
+ A farmer evicted from a tenancy of 200 years, 71
+ Sir Walter Raleigh's house and garden, 71-73
+ Churches of St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway, 73
+ Monument and churchyard, 73, 74
+ An Elizabethan candidate for canonisation, 75
+ Drive to Lismore, 76
+ Driver's opinions on the Ponsonby estates, 77
+ Dromaneen Castle and the Countess of Desmond, 78
+ Trappist Monastery at Cappoquin, 78
+ Lismore, 78, 79
+ Castle grounds and cathedral, 79, 80
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+ Feb. 28, 82
+ Portumna, Galway, 82
+ Run through Cork, Limerick, Tipperary,
+ Queen's and King's County to Parsonstown, 82
+ A Canadian priest on the situation, 83
+ His reply to M. de Mandat Grancey, 83
+ Relations of priests with the League, 83-85
+ Parsonstown and Lord Rosse, 86
+ Drive to Portumna, 87
+ An abandoned railway, 88
+ American storms, grain, and beasts, 88, 89
+ Portumna Castle, 90, 91
+ Lord Clanricarde's estate, 92
+ Mr. Tener, 92-128
+ Plan of Campaign, 94-99
+ Ability of tenants to pay their rents, 95
+ Mr. Dillon in 1886, 96
+ Mr. Parnell in 1885, 97
+ Tenants in greater danger than landlords and agents, 100
+ Feb. 29, 100
+ Conference between evicted tenants and agent, 100-106
+ Castle and park, 107
+ The League shopkeeper and tenant, 108
+ Under police escort, 109
+ Cost of 'knocking' a man, 109
+ What constitutes a group, 110
+ Favourite spots for administering a League oath, 110
+ Disbursing treasurers, 111
+ Change of venue, 111
+ Bishop of Clonfert, 112-115
+ Bector of Portumna, 115
+ Father Coen, 116
+ Coercion on the part of the League, 118-121
+ Deposits in banks, 120
+ Should landlords and shopkeepers be placed on one footing? 121
+ New Castle of Portumna, 122
+ Portumna Union, 123, 124
+ Troubles of resident landlords, 125-127
+ Effects of the agitation on the people, 124
+ War against property and private rights, 127
+ Mr. Tener's experiences in Cavan, 127-130
+ Similar cases in Leitrim, 130-132
+ Sale of rents and value of tenant-right, 133, 134
+
+CHAPTER X.
+ Dublin, March 1, 135
+ Portumna to Woodford, 135
+ Evictions of October 1887, 135
+ Capture of Cloondadauv Castle, 137-141
+ A tenant and a priest, 141-144
+ Workmen's wages in Massachusetts compared with
+ the profits of a tenant farmer in Ireland, 146
+ Loughrea, 148, 149
+ Murder of Finlay, 150, 151
+ The chrysoprase Lake of Loughrea, 154
+ Lord Clanricarde's estate office, acreage, and rental, 155
+ Woodford acreage and rental, 155,156
+ Drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn, 156-160
+ A Galway "jarvey" on the situation, 156-159
+ Woodlawn and the Ashtown property, 160
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+ Borris, March 2, 161
+ Mr. Kavanagh, 161-163
+ Borris House, 163-167
+ A living Banshee, 165, 166
+ Land Corporation--its mode of working, 167
+ Meeting in Dublin, 1885, 168
+ Rev. Mr. Cantwell, 168
+ Lord Lansdowne's property at Luggacurren, 169
+ Mr. Kavanagh's career, 170
+ Books and papers at Borris, 171
+ Strongbow, 172
+ "The five bloods," 172, 173
+ Genealogy of M'Morroghs and Kavanaghs, 173
+ March 4, 174
+ Protestant service read every morning, 174
+ A Catholic gentleman's views, 175
+ Relation of tenants to village despots, 176
+ Would America make a State of Ireland? 177
+ Land Acts since 1870, 178
+ The O'Grady of Kilballyowen and his rental, 179
+ Dispute with his tenants: its cause and effect, 180
+ His circular to his tenantry, 181-186
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+ Grenane House, March 5, 187
+ Visit to Mr. Seigne, 187
+ Beautiful situation of Grenane, 189
+ A lady of the country, 189
+ Mr. Seigne's experience of the tenants, 191-194
+ The beauty of Woodstock, 194-198
+ The watch of Waterloo, 197-200
+ Curious discovery of stolen property, 200
+ Dublin, March 6, 200
+ State of deposits in the Savings Banks, 200-201
+ Interest on "Plan of Campaign" funds, 202
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+ Dublin, March 8, 203
+ Inch and the Coolgreany evictions, 203
+ Sweet vale of Avoca, 204
+ Dr. Dillon of Arklow, 204
+ Fathers O'Neill and Dunphy, 205, 206
+ Mr. Davitt watching the evictions, 207
+ Lazy and thriftless tenants better off than before, 209
+ A self-made committee, 211
+ The Brooke estate, 212
+ Sir Thomas Esmonde's house, 213
+ An Arklow dinner, 214
+ Dr. Dillon in his study, 215-217
+ Visit to Glenart Castle, 217
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+ Dublin, March 9, 219
+ Athy, 219
+ A political jarvey, 220-225
+ "Who is Mr. Gilhooly?" 221
+ Lord Lansdowne's offer refused through pressure of the League, 226
+ Mr. Kilbride, M.P., and Mr. Dunne, 226-228
+ Lord Lansdowne's estate in Kerry, 228-231
+ Plan of Campaign at Luggacurren, 231-236
+ Interview with Father Maher, 236-239
+ A "jarvey" on a J.P., 240
+ "Railway amenities," 241
+ Dublin, March 10, 242
+ Mr. Brooke, 242-248
+ Unreasonable tenants, 243, 244
+ Size and rental of estate, 246
+ Sub-commissioner's reduction reversed, 246, 247
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+ Maryborough, 249
+ Archbishop Croke, 249
+ Interviews with labourers, 251-253
+ Views of a successful country teacher, 254, 255
+ A veteran of the '48, 256-260
+ Amount of wages to men, 261
+ The farmers and labourers and lawyers, 264, 265
+ Dublin, June 23, 268
+ Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, 268-270
+ From Attanagh to Ballyragget, 270
+ Case of "a little-good-for tenant," 271, 272
+ Mr. Kough and his tenants, 273-277
+ Mr. Richardson of Castle Comer, 277
+ Position of the tenants, 282
+ £70 a year for whisky, 282
+ Kilkenny Castle, 282
+ Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, 283-292
+ John O'Leary, 285-292
+ Boycotting private opinion, 292
+ The League as now conducted, 295
+ Poems and Ballads of "Young Ireland," 296
+ Law Courts and Trinity College, 297
+ American Civil War, 299-302
+ Dublin, June 24, 302
+ A dinner with officials, 303-306
+ A priest earns over £20,000, 305, 306
+ "Crowner's Quest Law," 309-311
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+ Belfast, June 25, 313
+ Ulster in Irish history, 313
+ Moira, 315
+ Views of an Ulsterman, 315, 316
+ Beauty of Belfast, 317, 318
+ Its buildings, 319-321
+ Dr. Hanna, 322-324
+ Dr. Kane, 325
+ June 26, 326
+ Sir John Preston, 326-328
+ Mr. Cameron, of Royal Irish Constabulary, 328
+ Police parade, 328
+ Belfast steamers, 329
+ Scotland and America at work on Ireland, 330
+
+EPILOGUE, p. 333-349
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ NOTES--
+
+ F. The Moonlighters and Home Rule (pp. 10, 38), 351
+ G. The Ponsonby Property (pp. 59-66), 353
+ G2 The Glenbehy Eviction Fund (p. 12), 360
+ G3 Home Rule and Protestantism (p. 68), 362
+ H. Tully and the Woodford Evictions (p. 149), 364
+ H2. Boycotting the Dead (p. 151), 370
+ I. The Savings Banks (P.O.) (vol. i. p. 39, vol. ii. pp. 5 and 200), 371
+ K. The Coolgreany Evictions (p. 216), 372
+ L. A Ducal Supper in 1711 (p. 283), 374
+ M. Letter from Mr. O'Leary (p. 291), 375
+ N. Boycotting Private Opinion (p. 293), 377
+ O. Boycotting by Crowner's Quest Law (p. 312), 382
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+ROSSBEHY,[1] _Feb. 21._--We are here on the eve of battle! An "eviction"
+is to be made to-morrow on the Glenbehy[1] estate of Mr. Winn, an uncle
+of Lord Headley, so upon the invitation of Colonel Turner, who has come
+to see that all is done decently and in order, I left Ennis with him at
+7.40 A.M. for Limerick; the "city of the Liberator" for "the city of the
+Broken Treaty." There we breakfasted at the Artillery Barracks.
+
+The officers showed us there the new twelve-pounder gun with its
+elaborately scientific machinery, its Scotch sight, and its four-mile
+range. I compared notes about the Trafalgar Square riots of February
+1886 with an Irish officer who happened to have been on the opposite
+side of Pall Mall from me at the moment when the mob, getting out of the
+hand of my socialistic friend Mr. Hyndman, and advancing towards St.
+James' Street and Piccadilly was broken by a skilful and very spirited
+charge of the police. He gave a most humorous account of his own
+sensations when he first came into contact with the multitude after
+emerging from St. Paul's, where, as he put it, he had left the people
+"all singing away like devils." But I found he quite agreed with me in
+thinking that there was a visible nucleus of something like military
+organisation in the mob of that day, which was overborne and, as it
+were, smothered by the mere mob element before it came to trying
+conclusions with the police.
+
+On our way to Limerick, Colonel Turner caught sight, at a station, of
+Father Little, the parish priest of Six Mile Bridge, in County Clare,
+and jumping out of the carriage invited him to get in and pursue his
+journey with us, which he very politely did. Father Little is a tall
+fine-looking man of a Saxon rather than a Celtic type, and I daresay
+comes of the Cromwellian stock. He is a staunch and outspoken
+Nationalist, and has been made rather prominent of late by his
+championship of certain of his parishioners in their contest with their
+landlord, Mr. H.V. D'Esterre, who lives chiefly at Bournemouth in
+England, but owns 2833 acres in County Clare at Rosmanagher, valued at
+£1625 a year. More than a year ago one of Father Little's parishioners,
+Mr. Frost, successfully resisted a large force of the constabulary bent
+on executing a process of ejectment against him obtained by Mr.
+D'Esterre.
+
+Frost's holding was of 33 Irish, or, in round numbers, about 50 English,
+acres, at a rental of £117, 10s., on which he had asked but had not
+obtained an abatement. The Poor-Law valuation of the holding was £78,
+and Frost estimated the value of his and his father's improvements,
+including the homestead and the offices, or in other words his
+tenant-right, at £400. The authorities sent a stronger body of
+constables and ejected Frost. But as soon as they had left the place
+Frost came back with his family, on the 28th Jan. 1887, and reoccupied
+it. Of course proceedings were taken against him immediately, and a
+small war was waged over the Frost farm until the 5th of September last,
+when an expedition was sent against it, and it was finally captured, and
+Frost evicted with his family. Upon this last occasion Father Little
+(who gave me a very temperate but vigorous account of the whole affair)
+distinguished himself by a most ingenious and original attempt to "hold
+the fort." He chained himself to the main doorway, and stretching the
+chains right and left secured them to two other doors. It was of this
+refreshing touch of humour that I heard the other day at Abbeyleix as
+happening not in Clare but in Kerry.
+
+Since his eviction Frost has been living, Father Little tells me, in a
+wooden hut put up for him on the lands of a kinsman of the same name,
+who is also a tenant of Mr. D'Esterre, and who has since been served by
+his landlord with a notice of ejectment for arrears, although he had
+paid up six months' dues two months only before the service. Father
+Little charged the landlord in this case with prevarication and other
+evasive proceedings in the course of his negotiations with the tenants;
+and Colonel Turner did not contest the statements made by him in support
+of his contention that the Rosmanagher difficulty might have been
+avoided had the tenants been more fairly and more considerately dealt
+with. It is strong presumptive evidence against the landlord that a
+kinsman, Mr. Robert D'Esterre, is one of the subscribers to a fund
+raised by Father Little in aid of the evicted man Frost. On the other
+hand, as illustrating the condition of the tenants, it is noteworthy
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank's deposits at Six-Mile Bridge rose
+from £382, 17s. 10d. in 1880 to £934, 13s. 4d. in 1887.
+
+After breakfast we took a car and drove rapidly about the city for an
+hour. With its noble river flowing through the very heart of the place,
+and broadening soon into an estuary of the Atlantic, Limerick ought long
+ago to have taken its place in the front rank of British ports dealing
+with the New World. In the seventeenth century it was the fourth city of
+Ireland, Boate putting it then next after Dublin, Galway, and Waterford.
+Belfast at that time, he describes as a place hardly comparable "to a
+small market-town in England." To-day Limerick has a population of some
+forty thousand, and Belfast a population of more than two hundred
+thousand souls. This change cannot be attributed solely, if at all, to
+the "Protestant ascendency," nor yet to the alleged superiority of the
+Northern over the Southern Irish in energy and thrift, For in the
+seventeenth century Limerick was more important than Cork, whereas it
+had so far fallen behind its Southern competitor in the eighteenth
+century that it contained in 1781 but 3859 houses, while Cork contained
+5295. To-day its population is about half as large as that of Cork. It
+is a very well built city, its main thoroughfare, George Street, being
+at least a mile in length, and a picturesque city also, thanks to the
+island site of its most ancient quarter, the English Town, and to the
+hills of Clare and Killaloe, which close the prospect of the surrounding
+country. But the streets, though many of them are handsome, have a
+neglected look, as have also the quays and bridges. One of my
+companions, to whom I spoke of this, replied, "if they look neglected,
+it's because they are neglected. Politics are the death of the place,
+and the life of its publics."[2]
+
+As we approached the shores of the Atlantic from Limerick, the scenery
+became very grand and beautiful. On the right of the railway the country
+rolled and undulated away towards the Stacks, amid the spurs and slopes
+of which, in the wood of Clonlish, Sanders, the Nuncio sent over to
+organise Catholic Ireland against Elizabeth, miserably perished of want
+and disease six years before the advent of the great Armada. To the
+south-west rose the grand outlines of the Macgillicuddy's Reeks, the
+highest points, I believe, in the South of Ireland. We established
+ourselves at the County Kerry Club on our arrival in Tralee, which I
+found to be a brisk prosperous-looking town, and quite well built. A
+Nationalist member once gave me a gloomy notion of Tralee, by telling
+me, when I asked him whether he looked forward with longing to a seat in
+the Parliament of Ireland, that "when he was in Dublin now he always
+thought of London, just as when he used to be in Tralee he always
+thought of Dublin." But he did less than justice to the town upon the
+Lee. We left it at half-past four in the train for Killorglin. The
+little station there was full of policemen and soldiers, and knots of
+country people stood about the platform discussing the morrow. There had
+been some notion that the car-drivers at Killorglin might "boycott" the
+authorities. But they were only anxious to turn an honest penny by
+bringing us on to this lonely but extremely neat and comfortable
+hostelry in the hills.
+
+We left the Sheriff and the escort to find their way as best they could
+after us.
+
+Mrs. Shee, the landlady here, ushered us into a very pretty room hung
+with little landscapes of the country, and made cheery by a roaring
+fire. Two or three officers of the soldiers sent on here to prevent any
+serious uproar to-morrow dined with us.
+
+The constabulary are in force, but in great good humour. They have no
+belief that there will be any trouble, though all sorts of wild tales
+were flying about Tralee before we left, of English members of
+Parliament coming down to denounce the "Coercion" law, and of risings in
+the hills, and I know not what besides. The agent of the Winn property,
+or of Mr. Head of Reigate in Surrey, the mortgagee of the estate, who
+holds a power of attorney from Mr. Winn, is here, a quiet, intelligent
+young man, who has given me the case in a nut-shell.
+
+The tenant to be evicted, James Griffin, is the son and heir of one Mrs.
+Griffin, who on the 5th of April 1854 took a lease of the lands known as
+West Lettur from the then Lord Headley and the Hon. R. Winn, at the
+annual rent of £32, 10s. This rent has since been reduced by a judicial
+process to £26. In 1883 James Griffin, who was then, as he is now, an
+active member of the local branch of the National League, and who was
+imprisoned under Mr. Gladstone's Act of 1881 as a "suspect," was
+evicted, being then several years in arrears. He re-entered unlawfully
+immediately afterwards, and has remained in West Lettur unlawfully ever
+since, actively deterring and discouraging other tenants from paying
+their rents. He took a great part in promoting the refusal to pay which
+led to the famous evictions of last year. As to these, it seems the
+tenants had agreed, in 1886, to accept a proposition from Mr. Head,
+remitting four-fifths of all their arrears upon payment of one year's
+rent and costs. Mr. Sheehan, M.P., a hotel-keeper in Killarney,
+intervened, advising the tenants that the Dublin Parliament would soon
+be established, and would abolish "landlordism," whereupon they refused
+to keep their agreement.[3] Sir Redvers Buller, who then filled the post
+now held by Sir West Ridgway, seeing this alarming deadlock, urged Mr.
+Head to go further, and offer to take a half-year's rent and costs. If
+the tenants refused this Sir Redvers advised Mr. Head to destroy all
+houses occupied by mere trespassers, such as Griffin, who, if they could
+hold a place for twelve years, would acquire a title under the Statute
+of Limitations. A negotiation conducted by Sir Redvers and Father
+Quilter, P.P., followed, and Father Quilter, for the tenants, finally,
+in writing, accepted Mr. Head's offer, under which, by the payment of
+£865, they would be rid of a legal liability for £6177. The League again
+intervened with bribes and threats, and Father Quilter found himself
+obliged to write to Colonel Turner a letter in which he said, "Only
+seventeen of the seventy tenants have sent on their rents to Mr. Roe
+(the agent). Though promising that they would accept the terms, they
+have withdrawn at the last moment from fulfilment.... I shall never
+again during my time in Glenbehy interfere between a landlord and his
+tenants. I have poor slaves who will not keep their word. Now let Mr.
+Roe or any other agent in future deal with Glenbeighans as he likes."
+The farms lie at a distance even from this inn, and very far therefore
+from Killorglin, and the agent, knowing that the tenants would be
+encouraged by Griffin and by Mr. Harrington, M.P., and others, to come
+back into their holdings as soon as the officers withdrew, ordered the
+woodwork of several cottages to be burned in order to prevent this. This
+burning of the cottages, which were the lawful property of the
+mortgagee, made a great figure in the newspaper reports, and
+"scandalised the civilised world." The present agent thinks it was
+impolitic on that account, but he has no doubt it was a good thing
+financially for the evicted tenants. "You will see the shells of the
+cottages to-morrow," he said, "and you will judge for yourself what they
+were worth." But the sympathy excited by the illustrations of the cruel
+conflagration and the heartrending descriptions of the reporters,
+resulted in a very handsome subscription for the benefit of the tenants
+of Glenbehy. General Sir William Butler, whose name came so prominently
+before the public in connection with his failure to appear and give
+evidence in a recent _cause célèbre_, and whose brother is a Resident
+Magistrate in Kerry, was one of the subscribers. The fund thus raised
+has been since administered by two trustees, Father Quilter, P.P., and
+Mr. Shee, a son of our brisk little landlady here, who maintain out of
+it very comfortably the evicted tenants. Not long ago a man in Tralee
+tried to bribe the agent into having him evicted, that he might make a
+claim on this fund! At Killorglin the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits,
+which stood at £282, 15s. 9d. in 1880, rose in 1887 to £1299, 2s. 6d.
+James Griffin, despite, or because, of the two evictions through which
+he has passed, is very well off. He owns a very good horse and cart, and
+seven or eight head of cattle. His arrears now amount to about £240, and
+on being urged yesterday to make a proposition which might avoid an
+eviction, he gravely offered to pay £8 of the current half-year's rent
+in cash, and the remaining £5 in June, the landlord taking on himself
+all the costs and giving him a clean receipt! This liberal proposition
+was declined. The zeal of her son in behalf of the evicted tenants does
+not seem to affect the amiable anxiety of our trim and energetic hostess
+to make things agreeable here to the minions of the alien despotism. The
+officers both of the police and of the military appear to be on the best
+of terms with the whole household, and everything is going as merrily as
+marriage bells on this eve of an eviction.
+
+TRALEE, _Wednesday evening, Feb. 22._--We rose early at Mrs. Shee's,
+made a good breakfast, and set out for the scene of the day's work. It
+was a glorious morning for Washington's birthday, and I could not help
+imagining the amazement with which that stern old Virginian landlord
+would have regarded the elaborate preparations thought necessary here in
+Ireland in the year of our Lord 1888, to eject a tenant who owes two
+hundred and forty pounds of arrears on a holding at twenty-six pounds a
+year, and offers to settle the little unpleasantness by paying thirteen
+pounds in two instalments!
+
+We had a five miles' march of it through a singularly wild and
+picturesque region, the hills which lead up to the Macgillicuddy's Reeks
+on our left, and on the right the lower hills trending to the salt water
+of Dingle Bay. Our start had been delayed by the non-appearance of the
+Sheriff, in aid of whom all this parade of power was made; but it turned
+out afterwards that he had gone on without stopping to let Colonel
+Turner know it.
+
+The air was so bracing and the scenery so fine that we walked most of
+the way. Two or three cars drove past us, the police and the troops
+making way for them very civilly, though some of the officers thought
+they were taking some Nationalist leaders and some English
+"sympathisers" to Glenbehy. One of the officers, when I commented upon
+this, told me they never had much trouble with the Irish members. "Some
+of them," he said, "talk more than is necessary, and flourish about; but
+they have sense enough to let us go about our work without foolishly
+trying to bother us. The English are not always like that." And he then
+told me a story of a scene in which an English M.P., we will call Mr.
+Gargoyle, was a conspicuous actor. Mr. Gargoyle being present either at
+an eviction or a prohibited meeting, I didn't note which, with two or
+three Irish members, all of them were politely requested to step on one
+side and let the police march past. The Irish members touched their hats
+in return to the salute of the officer, and drew to one side of the
+road. But Mr. Gargoyle defiantly planted himself in the middle of the
+road. The police, marching four abreast, hesitated for a moment, and
+then suddenly dividing into two columns marched on. The right-hand man
+of the first double file, as he went by, just touched the M.P. with his
+shoulder, and thereby sent him up against the left-hand man of the
+corresponding double file, who promptly returned the attention. And in
+this manner the distinguished visitor went gyrating through the whole
+length of the column, to emerge at the end of it breathless, hatless,
+and bewildered, to the intense and ill-suppressed delight of his Irish
+colleagues.
+
+Our hostess's son, the trustee of the Eviction Fund, was on one of the
+cars which passed us, with two or three companions, who proved to be
+"gentlemen of the Press." We passed a number of cottages and some larger
+houses on the way, the inmates of which seemed to be minding their own
+business and taking but a slight interest in the great event of the day.
+We made a little detour at one of the finest points on the road to visit
+"Winn's Folly," a modern mediæval castle of considerable size, upon a
+most enchanting site, with noble views on every side, quite impossible
+to be seen through its narrow loopholed and latticed windows. The castle
+is extremely well built, of a fine stone from the neighbourhood, and
+with a very small expenditure might be made immediately habitable. But
+no one has ever lived in it. It has only been occupied as a temporary
+barrack by the police when sent here, and the largest rooms are now
+littered with straw for the use of the force. At the beginning of the
+century, and for many years afterwards, Lord and Lady Headley lived on
+the estate, and kept a liberal house. Their residence was on a fine
+point running out into the bay, but, I am told, the sea has now invaded
+it, and eaten it away. In 1809 the acreage of this Glenbehy property was
+8915 Irish acres or 14,442 English acres, set down under Bath's
+valuation at £2299, 17s. 6d. Between 1830 and 1860 the rental averaged
+£5000 a year, and between these years £17,898, 14s. 5d. were expended by
+the landlord in improvements upon the property. This castle, which we
+visited, must have involved since then an outlay of at least £10,000 in
+the place.
+
+The present Lord Headley, only a year or two ago, went through the
+Bankruptcy Court, and the Hon. Rowland Winn, his uncle, the titular
+owner of Glenbehy, is set down among the Irish landlords as owning
+13,932 Irish acres at a rental of £1382.
+
+After we passed the castle we began to hear the blowing of rude horns
+from time to time on the distant hills. These were signals to the people
+of our approach, and gave quite the air of an invasion to our
+expedition. We passed the burned cottages of last year just before
+reaching Mr. Griffin's house at West Lettur. They were certainly not
+large cottages, and I saw but three of them. We found the Sheriff at
+West Lettur. The police and the soldiers drew a cordon around the place,
+within which no admittance was to be had except on business; and the
+myrmidons of the law going into the house with the agent held a final
+conference with the tenant, of which nothing came but a renewal of his
+previous offer. Then the work of eviction began. There was no attempt at
+a resistance, and but for the martial aspect of the forces, and an
+occasional blast of a horn from the hills, or the curious noises made
+from time to time by a small concourse of people, chiefly women,
+assembled on the slope of an adjoining tenancy, the proceedings were as
+dull as a parish meeting. What most struck me about the affair was the
+patience and good-nature of the officers. In the two hours and a half
+which we spent at West Lettur a New York Sheriff's deputies would have
+put fifty tenants with all their bags and baggage out of as many houses
+into the street. In fact it is very likely that at least that number of
+New York tenants were actually so ousted from their houses during this
+very time.
+
+The evicted Mr. Griffin was a stout, stalwart man of middle age,
+comfortably dressed, with the air rather of a citizen than of a farmer,
+who took the whole thing most coolly, as did also his women-kind. All of
+them were well dressed, and they superintended the removal and piling up
+of their household goods as composedly as if they were simply moving out
+of one house into another. The house itself was a large comfortable
+house of the country, and it was amply furnished.
+
+I commented on Griffin's indifference to the bailiff, a quiet,
+good-natured man.
+
+"Oh, he's quite familiar," was the reply; "it's the third time he's been
+evicted! I believe's going to America."
+
+"Oh! he will do very well," said a gentleman who had joined the
+expedition like myself to see the scene. "He is a shrewd chap, and not
+troubled by bashfulness. He sat on a Board of Guardians with a man I
+knew four years ago, and one day he read out his own name, 'James
+Griffin,' among a list of applicants for relief at Cahirciveen. The
+chairman looked up, and said, 'Surely that is not your name you are
+reading, is it?' 'It is, indeed,' replied Griffin, 'and I am as much in
+need of relief as any one!' Perhaps you'll be surprised to hear he
+didn't get it. This is a good holding he had, and he used to do pretty
+well with it--not in his mother's time only of the flush prices, but in
+his own. It was the going to Kilmainham that spoiled him."
+
+"How did that spoil him?"
+
+"Oh, it made a great man of him, being locked up. He was too well
+treated there. He got a liking for sherry and bitters, and he's never
+been able to make his dinner since without a nip of them. Mrs. Shee
+knows that well."
+
+To make an eviction complete and legal here, everything belonging to the
+tenant, and every live creature must be taken out of the house. A cat
+may save a house as a cat may save a derelict ship. Then the Sheriff
+must "walk" over the whole holding. All this takes time. There was an
+unobtrusive search for arms too going on all the time. Three ramrods
+were found hidden in a straw-bed--two of which showed signs of recent
+use. But the guns had vanished. An officer told me that not long ago two
+revolvers were found in a corner of the thatch of a house; but the
+cartridges for them were only some time afterwards discovered neatly
+packed away in the top of a bedroom wall. It is not the ownership of
+these arms, it is the careful concealment of them which indicates
+sinister intent. One of the constables brought out three "Moonlighters'
+swords" found hidden away in the house. One of these Colonel Turner
+showed me. It was a reversal of the Scriptural injunction, being a
+ploughshare beaten into a weapon, and a very nasty weapon of offence,
+one end of it sharpened for an ugly thrust, the other fashioned into
+quite a fair grip. While I was examining this trophy there was a stir,
+and presently two of the gentlemen who had passed us on Mr. Shee's car
+came rather suddenly out of the house in company with two or three
+constables.
+
+They were representatives, they said, of the Press, and as such desired
+to be allowed to remain. Colonel Turner replied that this could not be,
+and, in fact, no one had been suffered to enter the house except the
+law-officers, the agent, and the constables. So the representatives of
+the Press were obliged to pass outside of the lines, one of the
+constables declaring that they had got into the house through a hole in
+the back wall!
+
+Shortly after this incident there arose a considerable noise of groaning
+and shouting from the hill-side beyond the highway, and presently a
+number of people, women and children predominating, appeared coming down
+towards the precincts of the house. They were following a person in a
+clerical dress, who proved to be Father Quilter, the parish priest, who
+had denounced his people to Colonel Turner as "poor slaves" of the
+League! A colloquy followed between Father Quilter and the policemen of
+the cordon. This was brought to a close by Mr. Roche, the resident
+magistrate, who went forward, and finding that Father Quilter wished to
+pass the cordon, politely but firmly informed him that this could not be
+done. "Not if I am the bearer of a telegram for the lawyer?" asked
+Father Quilter, in a loud and not entirely amiable tone. "Not on any
+terms whatever," responded the magistrate. Father Quilter still
+maintaining his ground, the women crowded in around and behind him, the
+men bringing up the rear at a respectable distance, and the small boys
+shouting loudly. For a moment faint hopes arose within me that I was
+about to witness one of the .exciting scenes of which I have more than
+once read. But only for a moment. The magistrate ordered the police to
+advance. As they drew near the wall with an evident intention of going
+over it into the highway, Father Quilter and the women fell back, the
+boys and men retreated up the opposite hill, and the brief battle of
+Glenbehy was over.
+
+A small messenger bearing a telegram then emerged from the crowd, and
+showing his telegram, was permitted to pass. Father Quilter, in a loud
+voice, commented upon this, crying out, "See now your consistency! You
+said no one should pass, and you let the messenger come in!" To this
+sally no reply was returned. After a little the priest, followed by most
+of the people, went up the hill to the holding of another tenant, and
+there, as the police came in and reported, held a meeting. From time to
+time cries were heard in the distance, and ever and anon the blast of a
+horn came from some outlying hill.
+
+But no notice was taken of these things by the police, and when the
+tedious formalities of the law had all been gone through with, a squad
+of men were put in charge of the house and the holding, the rest of the
+army re-formed for the march back, our cars came up, and we left West
+Lettur. Seeing a number of men come down the hill, as the column
+prepared to move, Mr. Roche, making his voice tremendous, after the
+fashion of a Greek chorus, commanded the police to arrest and handcuff
+any riotous person making provocative noises. This had the desired
+effect, and the march back began in silence. When the column was fairly
+in the road, "boos" and groans went up from knots of men higher up the
+hill, but no heed was taken of these, and no further incident occurred.
+I shall be curious to see whether the story of this affair can possibly
+be worked up into a thrilling narrative.
+
+We lunched at Mrs. Shee's, where no sort of curiosity was manifested
+about the proceedings at West Lettur, and I came back here with Colonel
+Turner by another road, which led us past one of the loveliest lakes I
+have ever seen--Lough Caragh. Less known to fame than the much larger
+Lake of Killarney, it is in its way quite worthy of comparison with any
+of the lesser lakes of Europe. It is not indeed set in a coronal of
+mountains like Orta, but its shores are well wooded, picturesque, and
+enlivened by charming seats--now, for the most part, alas!--abandoned by
+their owners. We had a pleasant club dinner here this evening, after
+which came in to see me Mr. Hussey, to whom I had sent a letter from Mr.
+Froude. Few men, I imagine, know this whole region better than Mr.
+Hussey. Some gentlemen of the country joined in the conversation, and
+curious stories were told of the difficulty of getting evidence in
+criminal cases. What Froude says of the effect of the prohibitive and
+protection policy in Ireland upon the morals of the people as to
+smuggling must be said, I fear, of the effect of the Penal Laws against
+Catholics upon their morals as to perjury. It is not surprising that the
+peasants should have been educated into the state of mind of the
+Irishman in the old American story, who, being solicited to promise his
+vote when he landed in New York, asked whether the party which sought it
+was for the Government or against it. Against it, he was told, "Then
+begorra you shall have my vote, for I'm agin the Government whatever it
+is." One shocking case was told of a notorious and terrible murder here
+in Kerry. An old man and his son, so poor that they lay naked in their
+beds, were taken out and shot by a party of Moonlighters for breaking a
+boycott. They were left for dead, and their bodies thrown upon a
+dunghill. The boy, however, was still alive when they were found, and it
+was thought he might recover. The magistrates questioned him as to his
+knowledge of the murderers. The boy's mother stood behind the
+magistrate, and when the question was put, held up her finger in a
+warning manner at the poor lad. She didn't wish him to "peach," as, if
+he lived, the friends of the murderers would make it impossible for them
+to keep their holding and live on it. The lad lied, and died with the
+lie on his lips. Who shall sit in judgment on that wretched mother and
+her son? But what rule can possibly be too stern to crush out the
+terrorism which makes such things possible?
+
+And what right have Englishmen to expect their dominion to stand in
+Ireland when their party leaders for party ends shake hands with men who
+wink at and use this terrorism? It has so wrought upon the population
+here, that in another case, in which the truth needed by justice and the
+fears of a poor family trembling for their substance and their lives
+came thus into collision, an Irish Judge did not hesitate to warn the
+jury against allowing themselves to be influenced by "the usual family
+lie"!
+
+A magistrate told us a curious story, which recalls a case noted by Sir
+Walter Scott, about the detection of a murderer, who lay long in wait
+for a certain police sergeant, obnoxious to the "Moonlighters," and
+finally shot him dead in the public street of Loughrea, after dark on a
+rainy night, as he was returning from the Post-Office on one side of the
+street to the Police Barracks on the other. The town and the
+neighbouring country were all agog about the matter, but no trace could
+be got until the Dublin detectives came down three days after the
+murder. It had rained more or less every one of these days, and the
+pools of water were still standing in the street, as on the night of the
+murder. One of the Dublin officers closely examining the highway saw a
+heavy footprint in the coarse mud at the bottom of one of these pools.
+He had the water drawn off, and made out clearly, from the print in the
+mud, that the brogan worn by the foot which made it had a broken
+sole-piece turned over under the foot. By this the murderer was
+eventually traced, captured, tried, and found guilty.
+
+Mr. Morphy, I find, is coming down from Dublin to conduct the
+prosecution in the case of the Crown against the murderers of
+Fitzmaurice, the old man, so brutally slain the other day near Lixnaw,
+in the presence of his daughter, for taking and farming a farm given up
+by his thriftless brother. "He will find," said one of the company,
+"the mischief done in this instance also by prematurely pressing for
+evidence. The girl Honora, who saw her father murdered, never ought to
+have been subjected to any inquiry at first by any one, least of all by
+the local priest. Her first thought inevitably was that if she intimated
+who the men were, they would be screened, and she would suffer. Now she
+is recovering her self-possession and coming round, and she will tell
+the truth."
+
+"Meanwhile," said a magistrate, "the girl and her family are all
+'boycotted,' and that, mark you, by the priest, as well as by the
+people. The girl's life would be in peril were not these scoundrels
+cowards as well as bullies. Two staunch policemen--Irishmen and
+Catholics both of them--are in constant attendance, with orders to
+prevent any one from trying to intimidate or to tamper with her. A
+police hut is putting up close to the Fitzmaurice house. The Nationalist
+papers haven't a word to say for this poor girl or her murdered father.
+But they are always putting in some sly word in behalf of Moriarty and
+Hayes, the men accused of the murder."
+
+"Furthermore," said another guest, "these two men are regularly supplied
+while in prison with special meals by Mrs. Tangney. Who foots the bills?
+That is what she won't tell, nor has the Head-Constable so far been able
+accurately to ascertain. All we know is that the friends of the
+prisoners haven't the money to do it."
+
+Late in the evening came in a tall fine-looking Kerry squire, who told
+us, _à propos_ of the Fitzmaurice murder, that only a day or two ago a
+very decent tenant of his, who had taken over a holding from a
+disreputable kinsman, intending to manage it for the benefit of this
+kinsman's family, came to him and said he must give it up, as the
+Moonlighters had threatened him if he continued to hold it.
+
+A man of substance in Tralee gave me some startling facts as to the
+local administration here. In Tralee Union, he said, there were in 1879
+eighty-seven persons receiving outdoor relief, at a cost to the Union of
+£30, 17s. 11d., being an average per head of 7s. 1d., and 1879 was a
+very bad year, the worst since the great famine year, 1847. A
+Nationalist Board was elected in 1880, and a Nationalist chairman in
+1884. 1884 was a very good year, but in that year no fewer than 3434
+persons received outdoor relief, at a cost of £2534, 13s. 10d., making
+an average per head of 14s. 9d.! And at the present time £5000 nominal
+worth of dishonoured cheques of the authorities were flying all over the
+county!
+
+"On whom," I asked, "does the burden fall of these levies and
+extravagances?"
+
+"On the landlords, not on the tenants," he promptly replied. "The
+landlord pays the whole of the rates on all holdings of less than £4 a
+year, and on all land which is either really or technically in his own
+possession. He also pays one-half of the rates on all the rest of his
+property."
+
+"Then, in a case like that of Griffin's, evicted at Glenbehy, with
+arrears going back to 1883, who would pay the rates?"
+
+"The landlord of course!"[4]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+CORK, _Thursday, Feb. 23d._--We left Tralee this morning. It was
+difficult to recognise the events yesterday witnessed by us at Glenbehy
+in the accounts which we read of them to-day when we got the newspapers.
+
+As these accounts are obviously intended to be read, not in Ireland,
+where nobody seems to take the least interest in Irish affairs beyond
+his own bailiwick, but in England and America, it is only natural, I
+suppose, that they should be coloured to suit the taste of the market
+for which they are destined. It is astonishing how little interest the
+people generally show in the newspapers. The Irish make good journalists
+as they make good soldiers; but most of the journalists who now
+represent Irish constituencies at Westminster find their chief field of
+activity, I am told, not in Irish but in British or in American
+journals. Mr. Roche, R.M., who travelled with us as far as Castle
+Island, where we left him, was much less moved by the grotesque accounts
+given in the local journals of his conduct yesterday than by Mr.
+Gladstone's "retractation" of the extraordinary attack which he made the
+other day upon Mr. Roche himself, and four other magistrates by name.
+
+"The retractation aggravates the attack," he said.
+
+When one sees what a magistrate now represents in Ireland, it certainly
+is not easy to reconcile an inconsiderate attack upon the character and
+conduct of such an officer with the most elementary ideas of good
+citizenship.
+
+After Mr. Roche left us, a gentleman in the carriage, who is interested
+in some Castle Island property, told us that nothing could be worse than
+the state of that region. Open defiance of the moral authority of the
+clergy is as rife there, he says, as open defiance of the civil
+authorities. The church was not long ago broken into, and the sacred
+vestments were defiled; and, but the other day, a young girl of the
+place came to a magistrate and asked him to give her a summons against
+the parish priest "for assaulting her." The magistrate, a Protestant,
+but a personal friend of the priest, esteeming him for his fidelity to
+his duties, asked the girl what on earth she meant. She proceeded with
+perfect coolness to say that the priest had impertinently interfered
+with her, "assaulted her," and told her to "go home," when he found her
+sitting in a lonely part of the road with her young man, rather late at
+night! For this, the girl, professing to be a Catholic, actually wanted
+the Protestant magistrate to have her parish priest brought into his
+court! He told the girl plainly what he thought of her conduct,
+whereupon she went away, very angry, and vowing vengeance both against
+the priest and against him.
+
+This same gentleman said that at the Bodyke evictions, of which so much
+has been heard, the girls and women swarmed about the police using
+language so revoltingly obscene that the policemen blushed--such
+language, he said, as was never heard from decent Irishwomen in the days
+of his youth.
+
+Of this business of evictions, he said, the greatest imaginable
+misrepresentations are made in the press and by public speakers. "You
+have just seen one eviction yourself," he said, "and you can judge for
+yourself whether that can be truly described in Mr. Gladstone's language
+as a 'sentence of death.' The people that were put out of these burned
+houses you saw, houses that never would have needed to be burned, had
+Harrington and the other Leaguers allowed the people to keep their
+pledges given Sir Redvers Buller, those very people are better off now
+than they were before they were evicted, in so far as this, that they
+get their food and drink and shelter without working for it, and I'm
+sorry to say that the Government and the League, between them, have been
+soliciting half of Ireland for the last six or eight years to think that
+sort of thing a heaven upon earth. An eviction in Ireland in these days
+generally means just this, that the fight between a landlord and the
+League has come to a head. If the tenant wants to be rid of his holding,
+or if he is more afraid of the League than of the law, why, out he goes,
+and then he is a victim of heartless oppression; but if he is
+well-to-do, and if he thinks he will be protected, he takes the eviction
+proceedings just for a notice to stop palavering and make a settlement,
+and a settlement is made. The ordinary Irish tenant don't think anything
+more of an eviction than Irish gentlemen used to think of a duel; but
+you can never get English people to understand the one any more than the
+other!"
+
+The fine broad streets which Cork owes to the filling up and bridging
+over of the canals which in the last century made her a kind of Irish
+Venice, give the city a comely and even stately aspect. But they are not
+much better kept and looked after than the streets of New York. And they
+are certainly less busy and animated than when I last was here, five
+years ago. All the canals, however, are not filled up or bridged over.
+From my windows, in a neat comfortable little private hotel on
+Morrison's Quay, I look down upon the deck of a small barque, moored
+well up among the houses. The hospitable and dignified County Club is
+within two minutes' walk of my hostelry, and the equally hospitable and
+more bustling City Club, but a little farther off, at the end of the
+South Mall. At luncheon to-day a gentleman who was at Kilkenny with Mr.
+Gladstone on the occasion of his visit to that city told me a story too
+good to be lost. The party were eight in number, and on their return to
+Abbeyleix they naturally looked out for an empty railway carriage. The
+train was rather full, but in one compartment my informant descried a
+dignitary, whom he knew, of the Protestant Church of Ireland, its only
+occupant. He went up and saluted the Dean, and, pointing to his
+companions, asked if he would object to changing his place in the train,
+which would give them a compartment to themselves. The Dean courteously,
+and indeed briskly, assented, when he saw that Mr. Gladstone was one of
+the party.
+
+After the train moved off, Mr. Gladstone said, "Was not that gentleman
+who so kindly vacated his place for us a clergyman?"
+
+"Yes." "I hope he won't think I have disestablished him again!"
+
+At the next station, my informant getting out for a moment to thank the
+Dean again for his civility, and chat with him, repeated Mr. Gladstone's
+remark.
+
+"Oh!" said the Dean; "you may tell him I don't mind his disestablishing
+me again; for he didn't disendow me; he didn't confiscate my ticket!"
+
+With this gentleman was another from Kerry, who tells me there is a
+distinct change for the better already visible in that county, which he
+attributes to the steady action of the Dublin authorities in enforcing
+the law.
+
+"The League Courts," he said, "are ceasing to be the terror they used to
+be."
+
+I asked what he meant by the "League Courts," when he expressed his
+astonishment at my not knowing that it was the practice of the League to
+hold regular Courts, before which the tenants are summoned, as if by a
+process of the law, to explain their conduct, when they are charged with
+paying their rents without the permission of the Local League. In his
+part of Kerry, he tells me, these Courts used not very long ago to sit
+regularly every Sunday. The idea, he says, is as old as the time of the
+United Irishmen, who used to terrorise the country just in the same way.
+A man whom he named, a blacksmith, acted as a kind of "Law Lord," and to
+him the chairmen of the different local "Courts" used to refer cases
+heard before them![5]
+
+All this was testified to openly two years ago, before Lord Cowper's
+Commission, but no decisive action has ever been taken by the Government
+to put a stop to the scandal, and relieve the tenants from this open
+tyranny. These Courts enforced, and still enforce, their decrees by
+various forms of outrage, ranging "from the boycott," in its simplest
+forms up to direct outrages upon property and the person.
+
+"This dual Government business," he said, "can only end in a duel
+between the two Governments, and it must be a duel to the death of one
+or the other."
+
+To-night at dinner I had a most interesting conversation with Mr.
+Colomb, Assistant Inspector-General of the Constabulary, who is here
+engaged with Mr. Cameron of Belfast, and Colonel Turner, in
+investigating the affair at Mitchelstown. Mr. Colomb was at Killarney at
+the time of the Fenian rising under "General O'Connor" in 1867--a rising
+which was undoubtedly an indirect consequence of our own Civil War in
+America. Warning came to two magistrates, of impending trouble from
+Cahirciveen. Upon this Mr. Colomb immediately ordered the arrest of all
+passengers to arrive that day at Killarney by the "stage-car" from that
+place. When the car came in at night, it brought only one person--"an
+awful-looking ruffian he was," said Mr. Colomb, "whom, by his
+square-toed shoes, we knew to be just arrived from your side of the
+water."
+
+He was examined, and said he was a commercial traveller, and that he had
+only one letter about him, a business letter, addressed to "J. D.
+Sheehan."
+
+"Have you any objection to show us that letter?"
+
+"Certainly not," he replied very coolly, and, taking it out of his
+pocket, he walked toward a table on which stood a candle, as if to read
+it. A gentleman who was closely watching him, caught him by the wrist,
+just as he was putting the letter to the flame, and saved it. It was
+addressed to J. D. Sheehan, Esq., Killarney [Present], and ran as
+follows:
+
+ "_Feb. 12th, Morning_.
+
+ "MY DEAR SHEEHAN,--I have the honour to introduce to you Captain
+ Mortimer Moriarty. He will be of great assistance to you, and I
+ have told him all that is to be done until I get to your place. The
+ Private _Spys_ are very active this morning. Unless they smell a
+ rat all will be done without any trouble.
+
+ "Success to you. Hoping to meet soon,--Yours as ever.
+
+ "(Signed) JOHN J. O'CONNOR."[6]
+
+Despatches were at once sent off to the authorities at different points.
+They were all transmitted, except to Cahirciveen, the wires to which
+place were found to have been cut. Mr. Colomb--who had a force of but
+seventeen men in the town of Killarney--saw the uselessness of trying to
+communicate with the officer at Cahirciveen, but was so strongly urged
+by the magistrates that he unwillingly consented to endeavour to do so,
+and a mounted orderly was sent. Just after this unfortunate officer had
+passed Glenbehy (the scene of the eviction I have just witnessed) he was
+shot by some of O'Connor's party, whom he tried to pass in the dark, and
+who were marching on Killarney, and fell from his horse, which galloped
+off. He managed to crawl to a neighbouring cottage, where he was not
+long after found by "General O'Connor" and some of his followers. The
+wounded man was kindly treated by O'Connor, who had him examined for
+despatches, but prevented one of his men from shooting him dead, as he
+lay on the ground, and had his wounds as well attended to as was
+possible. There was no response in the country to the Kerry rising, such
+as it was, because the intended seizure of Chester Castle by the Fenians
+failed, but O'Connor was not captured, though great efforts were made to
+seize him. How he escaped is not known to this day.
+
+At that time, as always in emergencies, Mr. Colomh says the Constabulary
+behaved with exemplary coolness, courage, and fidelity. His position
+gives him a very thorough knowledge of the force, which is almost
+entirely recruited from the body of the Irish people. Of late years not
+a few men of family, reduced in fortune, have taken service in it. Among
+these has been mentioned to me a young Irishman of title, and of an
+ancient race, who is a sergeant in the force, and who recently declined
+to accept a commission, as his increased expenses would make it harder
+for him to support his two sisters. Another constable in the ranks
+represents a family illustrious in the annals of England four centuries
+ago.
+
+As to the _morale_ of the force, he cites one eloquent fact. Out of a
+total of more than 13,000 men, the cases of drunkenness, proved or
+admitted, average no more than fourteen a week! On many days absolutely
+no such cases occur. This is really amazing when one thinks how many of
+the men are isolated on lonely posts all over the island, exposed to all
+sorts of weather, and cut off from the ordinary resources and amusements
+of social life.
+
+CORK, _Friday, Feb. 24th._--This morning after breakfast I met in the
+South Mall a charming ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance I made in Rome
+while I was attending the great celebration there in 1867 of St. Peter's
+Day. Father Burke introduced me to him after the Pontifical Mass at San
+Paolo fuori le Mure; and we had a delightful symposium that afternoon. I
+walked with him to his lodgings, talking over those "days long
+vanished," and the friend whose genius made them, like the suppers of
+Plato, "a joy for ever." He is sorely troubled now by the attitude of a
+portion of the clergy in his part of Ireland, which is one almost of
+open hostility, he says, to the moral authority of the Church, and
+indicates the development of a class of priests moving in the direction
+of the "conventional priests," by whom the Church was disgraced during
+the darkest days of the French Revolution of 1793.
+
+Almost more mischievous than these men, he thinks, who must eventually
+go the way of their kind in times past, are the timid priests, for the
+most part parish priests, who go in fear of their violent curates, and
+of the politicians who tyrannise their flocks. He showed me a letter
+written to him last week by one of these, whose parish is just now in a
+tempest over the Plan of Campaign. Certainly a most remarkable letter.
+In it the writer frankly says, "There is no justification for the Plan
+of Campaign on this property.
+
+"I assented to putting it in force here," he goes on, "because I did not
+at the time know the facts of the case, and took them on trust from
+persons who, I find, have practised upon my confidence. What am I to do?
+I am made to appear as a consenting party now, and, indeed, an assisting
+agent in action, which I certainly was led to believe right and
+necessary, but which upon the facts I now see involves much injustice
+to ---- (naming the landlord), and I fear positive ruin to worthy men and
+families of my people. I shall be grateful and glad of your counsel in
+these most distressing circumstances."
+
+"What can any one do to help such a man?" said my friend. "The
+rebellious and unruly in the Church, be they priests or laymen, can only
+in the end damage themselves. _Tu es Petrus_; and revolt, like schism,
+is a devil which only carries away those of whom it gets possession out
+of the Church and into the sea. But a weak sentinel on the wall or at
+the gate who drops his musket to wipe his eyes, that is a thing for
+tears!"
+
+He asked me to come and see him if possible in his own county, and he
+has promised to send me letters to-day for priests who will he glad to
+tell me what they know only too well of the pressure put upon the better
+sort of the people by the organised idlers and mischief-makers in Clare
+and Kerry.
+
+To-day at the City Club, I made the acquaintance of the Town-Clerk of
+Cork, Mr. Alexander M'Carthy, a staunch Nationalist and Home Ruler, who
+holds his office almost by a sort of hereditary tenure, having been
+appointed to it in 1859 in succession to his father. He gave me many
+interesting particulars as to the municipal history and administration
+of Cork, and showed me some of the responses he is receiving to a kind
+of circular letter sent by the municipality to the town governments of
+England, touching the recent proceedings against the Mayor. So far these
+responses have not been very sympathetic. He invited me to lunch here
+with him to-morrow, and visit some of the most interesting points in and
+around the city. Here, too, I met Colonel Spaight, Inspector of the
+Local Government Board, who gives me a startling account of the increase
+of the public burdens. Twenty years ago there were no persons whatever
+seeking outdoor relief in Cork. This year, out of a total population of
+145,216, there are 3775 persons here receiving indoor relief, and 4337
+receiving outdoor relief, making in all 8112, or nearly 6 per cent. of
+the inhabitants. This proportion is swelled by the influx of people from
+other regions seeking occupation here, which they do not find, or simply
+coming here because they are sure of relief. This state of things
+illustrates not so much the decay of industry in Cork as the development
+of a spirit of mendicancy throughout Ireland. In the opinion of many
+thoughtful people, this began with the Duchess of Marlborough's Fund,
+and with the Mansion House Fund. Colonel Spaight remembers that in
+Strokestown Union, Roscommon, when the guardians there received a supply
+of one hundred tons of seed potatoes, they distributed eighty tons, and
+were then completely at a loss what to do with the remaining twenty
+tons. Mr. Parnell and Mr. O'Kelly, however, came to Roscommon, and the
+latter made a speech out of the hotel window to the people, advising
+them to apply for more, and take all they could get. "With a stroke of a
+pen," he said, "we'll wipe out the seed rate!" Whereupon the
+applications for seed rose to six hundred tons!
+
+The Labourers Act, passed by the British Parliament for the benefit of
+the Irish labourers, who get but scant recognition of their wants and
+wishes from the tenant farmers, is not producing the good results
+expected from it, mainly because it is perverted to all sorts of
+jobbery. Only last week Colonel Spaight had to hand in to the Local
+Government Board a report on certain schemes of expenditure under this
+Act, prepared by the Board of Guardians of Tralee. These schemes
+contemplated the erection of 196 cottages in 135 electoral divisions of
+the Union. This meant, of course, so much money of the ratepayers to be
+turned over to local contractors. Colonel Spaight on inspection found
+that of the 196 proposed cottages, the erection of 61 had been forbidden
+by the sanitary authorities, the notices for the erection of 23 had been
+wrongly served, 20 were proposed to be erected on sites not adjoining a
+public road, and no necessity had been shown for erecting 40 of the
+others. He accordingly recommended that only 32 be allowed to be
+erected! For a small town like Tralee this proposition to put up 196
+buildings at the public expense where only 32 were needed is not bad. It
+has the right old Tammany Ring smack, and would have commanded, I am
+sure, the patronising approval of the late Mr. Tweed.
+
+I mentioned it to-night at the County Club, when a gentleman said that
+this morning at Macroom a serious "row" had occurred between the local
+Board of Guardians there and a great crowd of labourers. The labourers
+thronged the Board-room, demanding the half-acre plots of land which had
+been promised them. The Guardians put them off, promising to attend to
+them when the regular business of the meeting was over. So the poor
+fellows were kept waiting for three mortal hours, at the end of which
+time they espied the elected Nationalist members of the Board subtly
+filing out of the place. This angered them. They stopped the fugitives,
+blockaded the Board-room, and forced the Guardians to appoint a
+committee to act upon their demands.
+
+It is certainly a curious fact that, so far, in Ireland I have seen no
+decent cottages for labourers, excepting those put up at their own
+expense on their own property by landlords.
+
+I dined to-night at the County Club with Captain Plunkett, a most
+energetic, spirited, and well-informed resident magistrate, a brother of
+the late Lord Louth,--still remembered, I dare say, at the New York
+Hotel as the only Briton who ever really mastered the mystery of
+concocting a "cocktail,"--and an uncle of the present peer. We had a
+very cheery dinner, and a very clever lawyer, Mr. Shannon, gave us an
+irresistible reproduction of a charge delivered by an Irish judge famous
+for shooting over the heads of juries, who sent twelve worthy citizens
+of Galway out of their minds by bidding them remember, in a case of
+larceny, that they could not find the prisoner guilty unless they were
+quite sure "as to the _animus furandi_ and the _asportavit_."
+
+_Saturday, Feb. 25._--I had an interesting talk this morning at the
+County Club with a gentleman from Limerick on the subject of
+"boycotting." I told him what I had seen at Edenvale of the practice as
+applied to a forlorn and helpless old woman, for the crime of standing
+by her "boycotted" son. "You think this an extreme case," he said, "but
+you are quite mistaken. It is a typical case certainly, but it gives you
+only an inadequate idea of the scope given to this infernal machinery.
+The 'boycott' is now used in Ireland as the Inquisition was used in
+Spain,--to stifle freedom of thought and action. It is to-day the chief
+reliance of the National League for keeping up its membership, and
+squeezing subscriptions out of the people. If you want proof of this,"
+he added, "ask any Nationalist you know whether members of the League in
+the country allow farmers who are not members to associate with them in
+any way. I can cite you a case at Ballingarry, in my county, where last
+summer a resolution of the League was published and put on the Chapel
+door, that members of the National League were thenceforth to have no
+dealings or communication with any person not a member. This I saw with
+my own eyes, and it was matter of public notoriety."
+
+I lunched at the City Club with Mr. M'Carthy. Sir Daniel O'Sullivan,
+formerly Mayor of Cork, whose views of Home Rule seem to differ widely
+from those of his successor, now incarcerated here, was one of the
+company. In the course of an animated but perfectly good-natured
+discussion of the Land Law question between two other gentlemen present,
+one of them, a strong Nationalist, smote his Unionist opponent very
+neatly under the fifth rib. The latter contending that it was monstrous
+to interfere by law with the principle of freedom of contract, the
+Nationalist responded, "That cannot be; it must be right and legitimate
+to do it, for the Imperial Parliament has done it four times within
+seventeen years!"
+
+I walked with Mr. M'Carthy to his apartments, where he showed me many
+curious papers and volumes bearing on municipal law and municipal
+history in Ireland. Among these, two most elaborate and interesting
+volumes, being the Council Books of Cork, Youghal, and Kinsale, from
+1610 to 1659, 1666 to 1687, and 1690 to 1800. The records for the years
+not enumerated have perished, that is, for the first five or six years
+after the Restoration, and for the years just preceding and just
+following the fall of James II. These volumes take one back to the
+condition of Southern Ireland immediately after English greed and
+intrigue had sapped the foundations of the peace which followed the
+submission of the great Earl of Tyrone, and brought about the flight to
+the Continent of that chieftain, and of his friend and ally, the Earl of
+Tyrconnell.
+
+They give us no picture, unfortunately, of the closing years of
+Elizabeth's long struggle to establish the English power, or of the
+occupation of Kinsale by the Spanish in the name of the Pope. But there
+is abundant evidence in them of the theological hatred which so
+embittered the conflict of races in Ireland during the seventeenth
+century.
+
+It was a relief to turn from these to a solemn controversy waged in our
+own times between Cork and Limerick over a question of municipal
+precedence, in which Mr. M'Carthy did battle for the City of the Galley
+and the Towers[7] against the City of the Gateway and Cathedral dome.
+The truth seems to be that King John gave charters to both cities, but
+to Cork twelve years earlier than to Limerick. Speaking of this contest,
+by the way, with a loyalist of Cork to-night, I observed that it was
+almost as odd to find such a question hotly disputed between two
+Nationalist cities as to see the champions of Irish independence
+marching under the banner of the harp, which was invented for Ireland by
+Henry VIII.
+
+"I don't know why you call Cork a Nationalist city," he replied, "for
+Parnell and Maurice Healy were returned for it by a clear minority of
+the voters. If all the voters had gone to the polls, they would both
+have been beaten."
+
+A curious statement certainly, and worth looking into. Mr. M'Carthy gave
+me also much information as to the working of the municipal system here,
+and a copy of the rules which govern the debates of the Town Council.
+One of these might be adopted with advantage in other assemblies, to
+wit, "that no member be permitted to occupy the time of the Council for
+more than ten minutes."
+
+There is an important difference between the parliamentary and the
+municipal constituencies of Cork. The former constituency comprises all
+residents within the borough boundaries occupying premises of the
+rateable value of £10 a year. The municipal constituency consists of no
+more than 1800 voters, divided among the seven wards which make up the
+city under the "3d and 4th Victoria," and which contain about 13,000 of
+the 15,116 Parliamentary voters of the borough. The same thing is true
+in the main of nine out of the eleven municipal boroughs of Ireland
+including Dublin. The 3d and 4th Victoria was amended for Dublin in
+1849, so as to give that city the municipal franchise then existing in
+England, but no move in that direction was made for Cork, Waterford,
+Limerick, or any other municipal borough. The Nationalists have taken no
+interest in the question. Perhaps they have good reason for this, as in
+Belfast, where the municipal franchise has been widely extended since
+the present Government came into power, the democratic electorate has
+put the whole municipal government into the hands of the Unionists. The
+day being cool, though fine, Mr. M'Carthy got an "inside car," and we
+went off for a drive about the city. The environs of Cork are very
+attractive. We visited the new cemetery grounds which are very neatly
+and tastefully laid out. There was a conflict over them, the owners of
+family vaults staunchly standing out against the "levelling" tendency of
+a harmonious city of the dead. But all is well that ends well, and now
+two handsome stone chapels, one Catholic and one Protestant, keep watch
+and ward over the silent sleepers, standing face to face near the grand
+entrance, and exactly alike in their architecture. A very pretty drive
+took us to the water-works, which are extensive, well planned, and
+exceedingly well kept. They are awaiting now the arrival from America of
+some great turbine wheels, but the engines are of English make. In the
+city we visited the new Protestant cathedral of St. Finbar, a very fine
+church, which advantageously replaces a "spacious structure of the Doric
+order," built here in the reign of George II., with the proceeds of a
+parliamentary tax on coals. Despite his name, I imagine that admirable
+prelate, Dr. England, the first Catholic bishop of my native city in
+America, must have been a Corkonian, for he it was, I believe, who put
+the cathedral of Charleston under the invocation of St. Finbar, the
+first bishop of Cork. The church stands charmingly amid fine trees on a
+southern branch of the river Lea. We visited also two fine Catholic
+churches, one of St. Vincent de Paul, and the other the Church of St.
+Peter and St. Paul, a grandly proportioned and imposing edifice.
+
+It was at vespers that we entered it, and found it filled with the
+kneeling people. This noble church is rather ignobly hidden away behind
+crowded houses and shops, and the contrast was very striking when we
+emerged from its dim religious space and silence into the thronged and
+rather noisy streets. There is a statue here of Father Mathew; but what
+I have seen to-night makes me doubt whether the present generation of
+Corkonians would have erected it.
+
+At dinner a gentleman gave us a most interesting account of the
+picturesque home which a man of taste, and a lover of natural history,
+has made for himself at the remote seaside village of Belmullet, in
+Mayo, the seat of the Mayo quarries, in which Mr. Davitt takes so much
+interest. The sea brings in there all sorts of wreckage, and the house
+is beautifully finished with mahogany and other rare woods, just as I
+remember finding in a noble mansion in South Wales, near a dangerous
+head-land, some magnificent doors and wainscotings made of that most
+beautiful of the Central American woods, nogarote, which I never saw in
+the United States, excepting in a superb specimen of it sent home by
+myself from Corinto. This colonist of Mayo employs all the people he can
+get in the fisheries there, which are very rich; and the ducks and wild
+geese are so numerous that he sometimes sends as far as to Wicklow for
+men to capture and sell them for him. He was once fortunate enough to
+trap a pair of the snow geese of the Arctic region, but Belmullet, in
+other respects a primeval paradise, is cursed with the small boy of
+civilisation; and one of these pests of society slew the goose with a
+stone. The widowed gander consoled himself by contracting family ties
+with the common domestic goose of the parish, and all his progeny, in
+other particulars indistinguishable from that familiar bird, bear the
+black marks distinctive of the Arctic tribe.
+
+Belmullet, this gentleman tells me, boasts a very good little inn, kept
+by a Mrs. Deehan, which was honoured by a visit from Lord Carnarvon with
+his wife and daughters during the Earl's Viceroyalty. This was in the
+course of a private and personal, not official tour, during which, Lord
+Carnarvon says, he was everywhere received with the greatest courtesy by
+all sorts and conditions of the people. It is an interesting
+illustration of the temper in which certain priests in Ireland deal with
+matters of State, that when Lord Carnarvon politely invited the parish
+priest of Belmullet to come to see him, that functionary declined to do
+so. Upon this the placable Viceroy sent to know whether the priest would
+receive the visit he refused to pay. The priest replied that he never
+declined to receive any gentleman who wished to see him; and the Viceroy
+accordingly called upon him, to the edification of the people, who
+afterwards listened very respectfully to a little speech which His
+Excellency made to them from a car. It is rather surprising that these
+incidents have never been adduced in proof of Lord Carnarvon's
+determination to take the Home Rule wind out of the sails of the
+Liberals!
+
+
+CORK, _Sunday, Feb. 26._--I went out to-day with Mr. Cameron to see
+Blarney Castle and St. Anne's Hill. Nothing can be lovelier than the
+country around Cork and the valley of the Lea. A "light railway," of the
+sort authorised by the Act of 1883, takes you out quickly enough to
+Blarney, and the train was well filled. The construction of these
+railways is found fault with as aggravating instead of relieving those
+defects in the organisation and management of the Irish railways, which
+are so thoroughly and intelligently exposed in the Public Works Report
+of Sir James Allport and his fellow-commissioners. A morning paper
+to-day points this out sharply.
+
+In the days of King William III. Blarney Castle must have been a
+magnificent stronghold. It stands very finely on a well-wooded height,
+and dominates the land for miles around. But it held out against the
+victor of the Boyne so long that, when he captured it, he thought it
+best, in the expressive phrase of the Commonwealth, to "slight" it,
+little now remaining of it but the gigantic keep, the walls of which are
+some six yards thick, and a range of ruined outworks stretching along
+and above a line of caverns, probably the work of the quarrymen who got
+out the stone for the Castle ages ago. The legend of the Blarney Stone
+does not seem to be a hundred years old, but the stone itself is one of
+the front battlements of the grand old tower, which has more than once
+fallen to the ground from the giddy height at which it was originally
+set. It is now made fast there by iron clamps, in such a position that
+to kiss it one should be a Japanese acrobat, or a volunteer rifleman
+shooting for the championship of the world. There are many and very fine
+trees in the grounds about the Castle, and there is a charming garden,
+now closed against the casual tourist, as it has been leased with the
+modern house to a tenant who lives here. In the leafy summer the place
+must be a dream of beauty. An avenue of stately trees quite overarching
+the highway leads from Blarney to St. Anne's Hill, the site of which, at
+least, is that of an ideal sanatorium. We walked thither over hill and
+dale. The panorama commanded by the buildings of the sanatorium is one
+of the widest and finest imaginable, worthy to be compared with the
+prospect from the Star and Garter at Richmond, or with that from the
+terrace at St. Germain.
+
+Several handsome lodges or cottages have been built about the extensive
+grounds. These are comfortably furnished and leased to people who prefer
+to bring their households here rather than take up their abode in the
+hotel, which, however, seems to be a very well kept and comfortable sort
+of place, with billiard and music rooms, a small theatre, and all kinds
+of contrivances for making the country almost as tedious as the town.
+The establishment is directed now by a German resident physician, but
+belongs to an Irish gentleman, Mr. Barter, who lives here himself, and
+here manages what I am told is one of the finest dairy farms and dairies
+in Ireland. Our return trip to Cork on the "light railway," with a warm
+red sunset lighting up the river Lea, and throwing its glamour over the
+varied and picturesque scenery through which we ran, was not the least
+delightful part of a very delightful excursion.
+
+After we got back I spent half-an-hour with a gentleman who knows the
+country about Youghal, which I propose to visit to-morrow, and who saw
+something of the recent troubles there arising out of the Plan of
+Campaign, as put into effect on the Ponsonby property.
+
+He is of the opinion that the Nationalists were misled into this contest
+by bad information as to Mr. Ponsonby's resources and relations. They
+expected to drive him to the wall, but they will fail to do this, and
+failing to do this they will be left in the vocative. He showed me a
+curious souvenir of the day of the evictions, in the shape of a
+quatrain, written by the young wife of an evicted tenant. This young
+woman, Mrs. Mahoney, was observed by one of the officers, as the
+eviction went on, to go apart to a window, where she stood for a while
+apparently writing something on a wooden panel of the shutter. After the
+eviction was over the officer remembered this, and going up to the
+window found these lines pencilled upon the panel:--
+
+ "We are evicted from this house,
+ Me and my loving man;
+ We're homeless now upon the world!
+ May the divil take 'the Plan'!"
+
+CORK, _Monday, Feb. 27._--A most interesting day. I left alone and early
+by the train for Youghal, having sent before me a letter of introduction
+to Canon Keller, the parish priest, who has recently become a
+conspicuous person through his refusal to give evidence about matters,
+his knowledge of which he conceives to be "privileged," as acquired in
+his capacity as a priest.
+
+I had many fine views of the shore and the sea as we ran along, and the
+site of Youghal itself is very fine. It is an old seaport town, and once
+was a place of considerable trade, especially in wool.
+
+Oliver dwelt here for a while, and from Youghal he embarked on his
+victorious return to England. He seems to have done his work while he
+was here "not negligently," like Harrison at Naseby Field, for when he
+departed he left Youghal a citadel of Protestant intolerance. Even under
+Charles II they maintained an ordinance forbidding "any Papist to buy or
+barter anything in the public markets," which may be taken as a piece of
+cold-blooded and statutory "boycotting." Then there was no parish priest
+in Youghal; now it may almost be said there is nobody in Youghal but the
+parish priest! So does "the whirligig of time bring in his revenges"!
+
+At Youghal station a very civil young man came up, calling me by name,
+and said Father Keller had sent him with a car to meet me. We drove up
+past some beautiful grounds into the main street. A picturesque
+waterside town, little lanes and narrow streets leading out of the main
+artery down to the bay, and a savour of the sea in the place, grateful
+doubtless to the souls of Raleigh and the west country folk he brought
+over here when he became lord of the land, just three hundred years ago.
+Edmund Spenser came here in those days to see him, and talk over the
+events of that senseless rising of the Desmonds, which gave the poet of
+the "Faerie Queen" his awful pictures of the desolation of Ireland, and
+made the planter of Virginia master of more than forty thousand acres of
+Irish land.
+
+We turned suddenly into a little narrow wynd, and pulled up, the driver
+saying, "There is the Father, yer honour!" In a moment up came a tall,
+very fine-looking ecclesiastic, quite the best dressed and most
+distinguished-looking priest I have yet seen in Ireland, with features
+of a fine Teutonic type, and the erect bearing of a soldier. I jumped
+down to greet him, and he proposed that we should walk together to his
+house near by. An extremely good house I found it to be, well placed in
+the most interesting quarter of the town. Having it in my mind to drive
+on from Youghal to Lismore, there to make an early dinner, see the
+castle of the Duke of Devonshire, and return to Cork by an evening
+train, I had to decline Father Keller's cordial hospitalities, but he
+gave me a most interesting hour with him in his comfortable study.
+Father Keller stands firmly by the position which earned for him a
+sentence of imprisonment last year, when he refused to testify before a
+court of justice in a bankruptcy case, on the ground that it might
+"drift him into answers which would disclose secrets he was bound in
+honour not to disclose." He does not accept the view taken of his
+conduct, however, by Lord Selborne, that, in the circumstances, his
+refusal is to be regarded as the act of his ecclesiastical superiors
+rather than his own. He maintains it as his own view of the sworn duty
+of a priest, and not unnaturally therefore he looks upon his sentence as
+a blow levelled at the clergy; nor, as I understood him, has he
+abandoned his original contention, that the Court had no right to summon
+him as a witness. It was impossible to listen to him on this subject,
+and doubt his entire good faith, nor do I see that he ought to be held
+responsible for the interpretation put by Mr. Lane, M.P., and others
+upon his attitude as a priest, in a sense going to make him merely a
+"martyr" of Home Rule. I did not gather from what he said that, in his
+mind, the question of his relations with the Nationalists or the Plan of
+Campaign entered into that affair at all, but simply that he believed
+the right and the duty of a priest to protect, no matter at what cost to
+himself, secrets confided to him as a priest, was really involved in his
+consent or refusal to answer, when he was asked whether he was or was
+not on a certain day at the "Mall House" in Youghal. Of course from the
+connection of this refusal in this particular case with the Nationalist
+movement, Nationalists would easily glide into the idea that he refused
+to testify in order to serve their cause.
+
+As to the troubles on the Ponsonby estate, Father Keller spoke very
+freely. He divided the responsibility for them between the
+untractableness of the agent, and the absenteeism of the owner. It was
+only since the troubles began, he said, that he had ever seen Mr.
+Ponsonby, who lived in Hampshire, and was therefore out of touch with
+the condition and the feelings of the people here. In a personal
+interview with him he had found Mr. Ponsonby a kindly disposed
+Englishman, but the estate is heavily encumbered, and the agent who has
+had complete control of it forced the tenants, by his hard and fast
+refusal of a reasonable reduction more than two years ago, into an
+initial combination to defend themselves by "clubbing" their rents. That
+was before Mr. Dillon announced the Plan of Campaign at all.
+
+"It was not till the autumn of 1886," said Father Keller, "that any
+question arose of the Plan of Campaign here,[8] and it was by the
+tenants themselves that the determination was taken to adopt it. My part
+has been that of a peace-maker throughout, and we should have had peace
+if Mr. Ponsonby would have listened to me; we should have had peace, and
+he would have received a reasonable rental for his property. Instead of
+this, look at the law costs arising out of bankruptcy proceedings and
+sheriff's sales and writs and processes, and the whole district thrown
+into disorder and confusion, and the industrious people now put out of
+their holdings, and forced into idleness."
+
+As to the recent evictions which had taken place, Father Keller said
+they had taken him as well as the people by surprise, and had thus led
+to greater agitation and excitement. "But the unfortunate incident of
+the loss of Hanlon's life," he said, "would never have occurred had I
+been duly apprised of what was going on in the town. I had come home
+into my house, having quieted the people, and left all in order, as I
+thought, when that charge of the police, for which there was no
+occasion, and which led to the killing of Hanlon, was ordered. I made my
+way rapidly to the people, and when I appeared they were brought to
+patience and to good order with astonishing ease, despite all that had
+occurred."
+
+As to the present outlook, it was his opinion that Mr. Ponsonby, even
+with the Cork Defence Union behind him, could not hold out. "The Land
+Corporation were taking over some parts of the estate, and putting
+Emergency men on them--a set of desperate men, a kind of _enfants
+perdus_," he said, "to work and manage the land;" but he did not believe
+the operation could be successfully carried out. Meanwhile he
+confidently counted upon seeing "the present Tory Government give way,
+and go out, when it would become necessary for the landlords to do
+justice to the rack-rented people. Pray understand," said Father Keller,
+"that I do not say all landlords stand at all where Mr. Ponsonby has
+been put by his agent, for that is not the case; but the action of many
+landlords in the county Cork in sustaining Mr. Ponsonby, whose estate is
+and has been as badly rack-rented an estate as can be found, is, in my
+judgment, most unwise, and threatening to the peace and happiness of
+Ireland."[9]
+
+I asked whether, in his opinion, it would be possible for the Ponsonby
+tenants to live and prosper here on this estate, could they become
+peasant proprietors of it under Lord Ashbourne's Act, provided they
+increased in numbers, as in that event might be expected. This he
+thought very doubtful so far as a few of the tenants are concerned.
+
+"Would you seek a remedy, then," I asked, "in emigration?"
+
+"No, not in emigration," he replied, "but in migration."
+
+I begged him to explain the difference.
+
+"What I mean," he said, "is, that the people should migrate, not out of
+Ireland, but from those parts of Ireland which cannot support them into
+parts of Ireland which can support them. There is room in Meath, for
+example, for the people of many congested districts."
+
+"You would, then, turn the great cattle farms of Meath," I said, "into
+peasant holdings?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"But would not that involve the expropriation of many people now
+established in Meath, and the disturbance or destruction of a great
+cattle industry for which Ireland has especial advantages?"
+
+To this Father Keller replied that he did not wish to see Ireland
+exporting her cattle, any more than to see Ireland exporting her sons
+and daughters. "I mean," he said, quite earnestly, "when they are forced
+to export them to pay exorbitant rents, and thus deprive themselves of
+their capital or of a fair share of the comforts of life. I should be
+glad to see the Irish people sufficient to themselves by the domestic
+exchange of their own industries and products." At the same time he
+begged me to understand that he had no wish to see this development
+attended by any estrangement or hostile feeling between Ireland and
+Great Britain. "On the contrary," he said, "I have seen with the
+greatest satisfaction the growth of such good feeling towards England as
+I never expected to witness, as the result of the visits here of English
+public men, sympathising with the Irish tenants. I believe their visits
+are opening the way to a real union of the Democracies of the two
+countries, and to an alliance between them against the aristocratic
+classes which depress both peoples." This alliance Father Keller
+believed would be a sufficient guarantee against any religious contest
+between the Catholics of Ireland and the Protestants of Great Britain.
+
+"I was much astounded," he said, "the other day, to hear from an English
+gentleman that he had met a Protestant clergyman who told him he really
+believed that a persecution of the Protestants would follow the
+establishment of Home Rule in Ireland. I begged him to consider that Mr.
+Parnell was a Protestant, and I assured him Protestants would have
+absolutely nothing to fear from Home Rule."
+
+Reverting to his idea of re-distributing the Irish population through
+Ireland, under changed conditions, social and economical, I asked him
+how in Meath, for example, he would meet the difficulty of stocking with
+cattle the peasant holdings of a new set of proprietors not owning
+stock. He thought it would be easily met by advances of money from the
+Treasury to the peasant proprietors, these advances to be repaid, with
+interest, as in the case of Lady Burdett Coutts, and the advances made
+by her to the fishermen now under the direction of Father Davis at
+Baltimore.
+
+I was struck by the resemblance of these views to the Irish policy
+sketched for me by my Nationalist fellow-traveller of the other night
+from London. "The evil that men do lives after them"--and when one
+remembers how only a hundred years ago, and just after the establishment
+of American Independence ought to have taught England a lesson, the
+Irish House of Commons had to deal with the persistent determination of
+the English manufacturers to fight the bogey of Irish competition by
+protective duties in England against imports from Ireland, it is not
+surprising that Irishmen who allow sentiment to get the upper hand of
+sense should now think of playing a return game. England went in fear
+then not only of Irish beasts and Irish butter, but of Irish woollens,
+Irish cottons, Irish leather, Irish glass. Nay, absurd as it may now
+seem, English ironmasters no longer ago than in 1785 testified before a
+Parliamentary Committee that unless a duty was clapped on Irish
+manufactures of iron, the Irish ironmasters had such advantages through
+cheaper labour and through the discrimination in their favour under the
+then existing relations with the new Republic of the United States that
+they would "ruin the ironmasters of England."
+
+In Ireland, as in America, the benign spirit of Free Trade is thwarted
+and intercepted at every turn by the abominable ghost of British
+Protection. What a blessing it would have been if the meddlesome
+palaverers of the Cobden Club, American as well as English, could ever
+have been made to understand the essentially insular character of
+Protection and the essentially continental character of Free Trade!
+
+It should never be forgotten, and it is almost never remembered, that
+when the Treaty of Versailles was making in 1783 the American
+Commissioners offered complete free trade between the United States and
+all parts of the British Dominions save the territories of the East
+India Company. The British Commissioner, David Hartley, saw the value of
+this proposition, and submitted it at London. But King George III. would
+not entertain it.
+
+When I rose to leave him Father Keller courteously insisted on showing
+me the "lions" of Youghal. A most accomplished cicerone he proved to be.
+As we left his house we met in the street two or three of the "evicted"
+tenants, whom he introduced to me. One of these, Mr. Loughlin, was the
+holder of farms representing a rental of £94. A stalwart, hearty,
+rotund, and rubicund farmer he was, and in reply to my query how long
+the holdings he had lost had been in his family, he answered, "not far
+from two hundred years." Certainly some one must have blundered as badly
+as at Balaklava to make it necessary for a tenant with such a past
+behind him to go out of his holdings on arrears of a twelvemonth. Father
+Keller gave me, as we left Mr. Loughlin and his friend, a leaflet in
+which he has printed the story of "the struggle for life on the Ponsonby
+estate," as he understands it.
+
+A minute's walk brought us to Sir Walter Raleigh's house, now the
+property of Sir John Pope Hennessey. It was probably built by Sir Walter
+while he lived here in 1588-89, during the time of the great Armada; for
+it is a typical Elizabethan house, quaintly gabled, with charming Tudor
+windows, and delightfully wainscoted with richly carved black oak. A
+chimney-piece in the library where Sir John's aged mother received us
+most kindly and hospitably is a marvel of Elizabethan woodwork. The
+shelves are filled with a quaint and miscellaneous collection of old and
+rare books. I opened at random one fine old quarto, and found it to
+contain, among other curious tracts, models of typography, a Latin
+critical disquisition by Raphael Regini on the first edition of
+Plutarch's Life of Cicero, "_nuper inventâ diu desideraiâ _"--a
+disquisition quite aglow with the cinquecento delight in discovery and
+adventure. In the grounds of this charming house stand four very fine
+Irish yews forming a little hollow square, within which, according to a
+local legend, Sir Walter sat enjoying the first pipe of tobacco ever
+lighted in Ireland, when his terrified serving-maid espying the smoke
+that curled about her master's head hastily ran up and emptied a pail of
+water over him. In the garden here, too, we are told, was first planted
+the esculent which better deserves to be called the Curse of Ireland
+than does the Nine of Diamonds to be known as the Curse of Scotland. The
+Irish yew must have been indigenous here, for the name of Youghal,
+Father Keller tells me, in Irish signifies "the wood of yew-trees." A
+subterranean passage is said to lead from Sir Walter's dining-room into
+the church, but we preferred the light of day.
+
+The precincts of the church adjoin the grounds and garden, and with
+these make up a most fascinating poem in architecture. The churches of
+St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway have always been cited to
+me as the two most interesting churches in Ireland. Certainly this
+church of St. Mary, as now restored, is worth a journey to see. Its
+massive tower, with walls eight feet thick, its battlemented chancel,
+the pointed arches of its nave and aisles, a curious and, so far as I
+know, unique arch in the north transept, drawn at an obtuse angle and
+demarcating a quaint little side-chapel, and the interesting monuments
+it contains, all were pointed out to me with as much zest and
+intelligent delight by Father Keller as if the edifice were still
+dedicated to the faith which originally called it into existence. It
+contains a fine Jacobean tomb of Richard, the "great Earl of Cork," who
+died here in September 1643. On this monument, which is in admirable
+condition, the effigy of the earl appears between those of his two
+wives, while below them kneel his five sons and seven daughters, their
+names and those of their partners in marriage inscribed upon the marble.
+It was of this earl that Oliver said: "Had there been an Earl of Cork in
+every province, there had been no rebellion in Ireland." Several Earls
+of Desmond are also buried here, including the founder of the church,
+and under a monumental effigy in one of the transepts lies the wonderful
+old Countess of Desmond, who having danced in her youth with Richard
+III. lived through the Tudor dynasty "to the age of a hundred and ten,"
+and, as the old distich tells us, "died by a fall from a cherry-tree
+then."
+
+In the churchyard is a hillock, bare of grass, about a tomb. There lies
+buried, according to tradition, a public functionary who attested a
+statement by exclaiming, "If I speak falsely, may grass never grow on my
+grave." One of his descendants is doubtless now an M.P. Mr. Cameron had
+kindly written from Cork to the officer in charge of the constabulary
+here asking him to get me a good car for Lismore. So Father Keller very
+kindly walked with me through the town to the "Devonshire Arms," a very
+neat and considerable hotel, in quest of him. On the way he pointed out
+to me what remains of a house which is supposed to have served as the
+headquarters of Cromwell while he was here, and a small chapel also in
+which the Protector worshipped after his sort. Off the main street is a
+lane called Windmill Lane, where probably stood the windmill from which
+in 1580 a Franciscan friar, Father David O'Neilan, was hung by the feet
+and shot to death by the soldiers of Elizabeth because he refused to
+acknowledge the spiritual supremacy of the Queen. He had been dragged
+through the main street at the tail of a horse to the place of
+execution. His name is one of many names of confessors of that time
+about to be submitted at Rome for canonisation. We could not find the
+officer I sought at the hotel, but Father Keller took me to a livery-man
+in the main street, who very promptly got out a car with "his best
+horse," and a jarvey who would "surely take me over to Lismore inside of
+two hours and a half." He was as good as his master's word, and a
+delightful drive it was, following the course of Spenser's river, the
+Awniduffe, "which by the Englishman is called Blackwater." Nobody now
+calls it anything else. The view of Youghal Harbour, as we made a great
+circuit by the bridge on leaving the town, was exceedingly fine. Lying
+as it does within easy reach of Cork, this might be made a very pleasant
+summer halting-place for Americans landing at Queenstown, who now go
+further and probably fare worse. One Western wanderer, with his family,
+Father Keller told me, did last year establish himself here, a Catholic
+from Boston, to whom a son was born, and who begged the Father to give
+the lad a local name in baptism, "the oldest he could think of."
+
+I should have thought St. Declan would have been "old" enough, or St.
+Nessan of "Ireland's Eye," or Saint Cartagh, who made Lismore a holy
+city, "into the half of which no woman durst enter," sufficiently
+"local," but Father Keller found in the Calendar a more satisfactory
+saint still in St. Goran or "Curran," known also as St. Mochicaroen _de
+Nona_, from a change he made in the recitation of that part of the Holy
+Office.
+
+The drive from Youghal to Lismore along the Blackwater, begins,
+continues, and ends in beauty. In the summer a steamer makes the trip by
+the river, and it must be as charming in its way as the ascent of the
+Dart from Dartmouth to Totness, or of the Eance from Dinard to St.
+Suliac. My jarvey was rather a taciturn fellow, but by no means
+insensible to the charms of his native region. About the Ponsonby estate
+and its troubles he said very little, but that little was not entirely
+in keeping with what I had heard at Youghal. "It was an old place, and
+there was no grand house on it. But the landlord was a kind-man."
+"Father Keller was a good man too. It was a great pity the people
+couldn't be on their farms; and there was land that was taken on the
+hills. It was a great pity. The people came from all parts to see the
+Blackwater and Lismore; and there was money going." "Yes, he would be
+glad to see it all quiet again. Ah yes! that was a most beautiful place
+there just running out into the Blackwater. It was a gentleman owned it;
+he lived there a good deal, and he fished. Ah! there's no such river in
+the whole world for salmon as the Blackwater; indeed, there is not!
+Everything was better when he was a lad. There was more money going, and
+less talking. Father Keller was a very good man; but he was a new man,
+and came to Youghal from Queenstown."
+
+We passed on our way the ruins of Dromaneen Castle, the birthplace of
+the lively old Countess of Desmond, who lies buried at Youghal. Here,
+too, according to a local tradition, she met her death, having climbed
+too high into a famous cherry-tree at Affane, near Dromaneen, planted
+there by Sir Walter Raleigh, who first introduced this fruit, as well as
+the tobacco plant and the potato, into Ireland. At Cappoquin, which
+stands beautifully on the river, I should have been glad to halt for the
+night, in order to visit the Trappist Monastery there, an offshoot of La
+Meilleraye, planted, I think, by some monks from Santa Susanna, of
+Lulworth, after Charles X. took refuge in the secluded and beautiful
+home of the Welds. The schools of this monastery have been a benediction
+to all this part of Ireland for more than half a century.
+
+Lismore has nothing now to show of its ancient importance save its
+castle and its cathedral, both of them absolutely modern! A hundred
+years ago the castle was simply a ruin overhanging the river. It then
+belonged to the fifth Duke of Devonshire, who had inherited it from his
+mother, the only child and heiress of the friend of Pope, Richard,
+fourth Earl of Cork, and third Earl of Burlington. It had come into the
+hands of the Boyles by purchase from Sir Walter Ealeigh, to whom
+Elizabeth had granted it, with all its appendages and appurtenances. The
+fifth Duke of Devonshire, who was the husband of Coleridge's "lady
+nursed in pomp and pleasure," did little or nothing, I believe, to
+restore the vanished glories of Lismore; and the castle, as it now
+exists, is the creation of his son, the artistic bachelor Duke, to whom
+England owes the Crystal Palace and all the other outcomes of Sir Joseph
+Paxton's industry and enterprise. His kinsman and successor, the present
+Duke, used to visit Lismore regularly down to the time of the atrocious
+murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish, and many of the beautiful walks and
+groves which make the place lovely are due, I believe, to his taste and
+his appreciation of the natural charms of Lismore. I dismissed my car at
+the "Devonshire Arms," an admirable little hotel near the river, and
+having ordered my dinner there, walked down to the castle, almost within
+the grounds of which the hotel stands. It is impossible to imagine a
+more picturesque site for a great inland mansion. The views up and down
+the Blackwater from the drawing-room windows are simply the perfection
+of river landscape. The grounds are beautifully laid out, one secluded
+garden-walk, in particular, taking you back to the inimitable Italian
+garden-walks of the seventeenth century. In the vestibule is the sword
+of state of the Corporation of Youghal, a carved wooden cradle for which
+still stands in the church at that place, and over the great gateway are
+the arms of the great Earl of Cork, but these are almost the only
+outward and visible signs of the historic past about the castle. Seen
+from the graceful stone bridge which spans the river, its grey towers
+and turrets quite excuse the youthful enthusiasm with which the Duke of
+Connaught, who made a visit here when he was Prince Arthur, is said to
+have written to his mother, that Lismore was "a beautiful place, very
+like Windsor Castle, only much finer."
+
+Lismore Cathedral was almost entirely rebuilt by the second Earl of Cork
+three or four years after the Restoration, and has a handsome marble
+spire, but there is little in it to recall the Catholic times in which
+Lismore was a city of churches and a centre of Irish devotion.
+
+The hostess of the "Devonshire Arms" gave me some excellent salmon,
+fresh from the river, and a very good dinner. She bewailed the evil days
+on which she has fallen, and the loss to Lismore of all that the Castle
+used to mean to the people. Lady Edward Cavendish had spent a short time
+here some little time ago, she said, and the people were delighted to
+have her come there. "It would be a great thing for the country if all
+the uproar and quarrelling could be put an end to. It did nobody any
+good, least of all the poor people."
+
+From Lismore I came back by the railway through Fermoy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+PORTUMNA, GALWAY, _Feb. 28._--I left Cork by an early train to-day, and
+passing through the counties of Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen's, and
+King's, reached this place after dark on a car from Parsonstown. The day
+was delightfully cool and bright. I had the carriage to myself almost
+all the way, and gave up all the time I could snatch from the constantly
+varying and often very beautiful scenery to reading a curious pamphlet
+which I picked up in Dublin entitled _Pour I'Irlande._ It purports to
+have been written by a "Canadian priest" living at Lurgan in Ireland,
+and to be a reply to M. de Mandat Grancey's volume, _Chez Paddy._ It is
+adorned with a frontispiece representing a monster of the Cerberus type
+on a monument, with three heads and three collars labelled respectively
+"Flattery," "Famine," and "Coercion." On the pedestal is the
+inscription--"1800 to 1887. Erected by the grateful Irish to the English
+Government." The text is in keeping with the frontispiece. In a passage
+devoted to the "atrocious evictions" of Glenbehy in 1887, the agent of
+the property is represented as "setting fire with petroleum" to the
+houses of two helpless men, and turning out "eighteen human beings into
+the highway in the depth of winter." Not a word is said of the agent's
+flat denial of these charges, nor a word of the advice given to the
+agent by Sir Redvers Buller that the mortgagee ought to level the
+cottages occupied by trespassers, nor a word about Father Quilter's
+letter to Colonel Turner, branding his flock as "poor slaves" of the
+League, and turning them over to "Mr. Roe or any other agent" to do as
+he liked with them, since they could not, or would not, keep their
+plighted faith given through their own priest.
+
+This sort of ostrich fury is common enough among the regular drumbeaters
+of the Irish agitation. But it is not creditable to a "Canadian priest."
+Still less creditable is his direct arraignment of M. de Mandat
+Grancey's good faith and veracity upon the strength of what he describes
+as M. de Mandat Grancey's amplification and distortion of a story told
+by himself. This was a tale of a priest called out to confess one of his
+parishioners. The penitent accused himself of killing one man, and
+trying to kill several others. The priest, as the dreadful tale went on,
+made a tally on his sleeve, with chalk, of the crimes recited. "Good
+heavens! my son," he cried at last, "what had all these men done to you
+that you tried to send them all into eternity? Who were they?"
+
+"Oh, Father, they were all bailiffs or tax-collectors!"
+
+"You idiot!" exclaimed the confessor, angrily rubbing at his sleeve,
+"why didn't ye tell me that before instead of letting me spoil my best
+cassock?"
+
+As I happened to have the book of M. de Mandat Grancey in my
+despatch-box, I compared it with the attack made upon it. The results
+were edifying. In the first place, M. de Mandat Grancey does not
+indicate the Canadian priest as his authority. He says that he heard the
+story, apparently at a dinner-table in France, from a _curé Irlandais_,
+who was endeavouring to impress upon his hearers "the sympathy of the
+clergy with the Land League." The "Canadian priest" now comes forward
+and makes it a count in his indictment against M. de Mandat Grancey that
+he is described as an "Irish curate," when he is in fact neither an
+Irishman nor a curate. What was more natural than that an ecclesiastic,
+claiming to live in Ireland, and telling stories in France about the
+sympathy of the Irish clergy with the Land League, should be taken by
+one of his auditors to be an Irish _curé_, particularly as the French
+_curé_ is, I believe, the equivalent of the Irish "parish priest"?
+
+In the next place, the "Canadian priest" declares that the story "is as
+old as the Round Towers of Ireland," and that M. de Mandat Grancey
+represents him as making himself the hero of the tale. As a matter of
+fact, M. de Mandat Grancey does nothing of the kind. On the contrary, he
+expressly says that the _curé Irlandais_, who told the story, gave it to
+his hearers as having occurred not to himself at all, but "to one of his
+colleagues." Furthermore he is at the pains to add (_Chez Paddy_, p. 43)
+that the story, which was not to the taste of some of the French
+ecclesiastics who heard it, was related "as a simple pleasantry."
+"But," he adds, and this I suspect is the sting which has so exasperated
+the "Canadian priest," "he gave us to understand at the same time that
+this pleasantry struck the keynote of the state of mind of many Irish
+priests, and, he said, that he was himself the President of the League
+in his district."
+
+In connection with Colonel Turner's statements as to the conduct of
+Father White at Milltown Malbay, and with the accounts given me of the
+conduct of Father Sheehan at Lixnaw, this side-light upon the relations
+of a certain class of the Irish clergy with the most violent henchmen of
+the League, is certainly noteworthy. I happen to have had some
+correspondence with friends of mine in Paris, who are friends also of M.
+de Mandat Grarncey, about his visit to Ireland before he made it, and I
+am quite certain that he went there, to put the case mildly, with no
+prejudices in favour of the English Government or against the
+Nationalists. Perhaps the extreme bitterness shown in the pamphlet of
+the "Canadian priest" may have been born of his disgust at finding that
+the sympathy of French Catholics with Catholic Ireland draws the line at
+priests who regard the assassination of "bailiffs and tax-collectors" as
+a pardonable, if not positively amusing, excess of patriotic zeal.
+
+It was late when I reached Parsonstown, known of old in Irish story as
+Birr, from St. Brendan's Abbey of Biorra, and now a clean prosperous
+place, carefully looked after by the chief landlord of the region, the
+Earl of Rosse, who, while he inherits the astronomical tastes and the
+mathematical ability of his father, is not so absorbed in star-gazing as
+to be indifferent to his terrestrial duties and obligations. I have
+heard nothing but good of him, and of his management of his estates,
+from men of the most diverse political views. But I think it more
+important to get a look at the Clanricarde property, about which I have
+heard little but evil from anybody. The strongest point I have heard
+made in favour of the owner is, that he is habitually described by that
+dumb organ of a down-trodden people, _United Ireland_, as "the most vile
+Clanricarde."
+
+I found a good car at the railway station, and set off at once for
+Portumna. Parsonstown was called by Sir William Petty, in his _Survey of
+Ireland_, the _umbilicus Hiberniæ_. It is the centre of Ireland, as a
+point near Newnham Paddox is of England, and the famous or infamous "Bog
+of Allan" stretches hence to Athlone. Our way fortunately took us
+westward. A light railway was laid down some years ago from Parsonstown
+to Portumna, but it did not pay, and it has now been abandoned.
+
+"What has become of the road?" I asked my jarvey.
+
+"Oh! they just take up the rails when they like, the people do."
+
+"And what do they do with them?"
+
+"Is it what they do with them? Oh; they make fences of them for the
+beasts."
+
+He was a dry, shrewd old fellow, not very amiably disposed, I was sorry
+to find, towards my own country.
+
+"Ah! it's America, sorr, that's been the ruin of us entirely."
+
+"Pray, how is that?"
+
+"It's the storms they send; and then the grain; and now they tell me
+it's the American beasts that's spoiling the market altogether for
+Ireland."
+
+"Is that what your member tells you?"
+
+"The member, sorr? which member?"
+
+"The member of Parliament for your district, I mean. What is his name?"
+
+"His name? Well, I'm not sure; and I don't know that I know the man at
+all. But I believe his name is Mulloy."
+
+"Does he live in Portumna?"
+
+"Oh no, not at all. I don't know at all where he lives, but I believe
+it's in Tullamore. But what would he know about America? Sure, any one
+can see it's the storms and the grain that is the death of us in
+Ireland."
+
+"But I thought it was the landlords and the rents?"
+
+"Oh, that's in Woodford and Loughrea; not here at all. There'll be no
+good till we get a war."
+
+"Get a war? with whom? What do you want a war for?"
+
+"Ah! it was the good time when we had the Crimean war--with the wheat
+all about Portumna. I'll show you the great store there was built. It's
+no use now. But we'll have a war. My son, he's a soldier now. He went
+out to America. But he didn't like it."
+
+"Why not?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, he didn't like it. He could get no work, but to be a porter, and it
+was too hard. So he came back in three months' time, and then he 'listed
+for a soldier. He's over in England now. He likes it very well. He's
+getting very good pay. They pay the soldiers well. There's a troop of
+Hussars here now. They bring a power of money to the place."
+
+"What do they do with the wheat lands now?"
+
+"Oh, they're for sheep; they do very well. Were you ever in Australia,
+sorr?" pointing to a place we were passing. "There was a man came here
+from Australia with a pot of money, and he bought that place; but he
+thought he was a bigger man than he was, and now he's found himself out.
+I think he would have done as well to stay in Australia where he was."
+
+In quite a different vein he spoke of the landlord of another large
+seat, and of the way in which the people, some of them, had
+misbehaved--breaking open the graves of the family on the place, "and
+tossing the coffins and the bones about, and all for what?"
+
+The view as we crossed the long and very fine bridge over the Shannon
+after dusk was very striking. It was not too dark to make out the course
+of the broad gleaming river, and the lights of the town made it seem
+larger, I daresay, than it really is. As we drove up the main street I
+told my jarvey to take me to the Castle.
+
+"To the Castle, is it?" he replied, looking around at me with an
+astonished air.
+
+"Yes," I said, "I am going to see Mr. Tener, the agent, who lives there,
+doesn't he?"
+
+"Oh, the new agent? Oh yes; I believe he's a very good man."
+
+"You don't expect to be 'boycotted' for going to the Castle, do you?"
+
+"And why should I be? But I haven't been inside of the Castle gates for
+twenty years. And--here they are!" he cried out suddenly, pulling up his
+horse just in time to avoid driving him up against a pair of iron gates
+inhospitably closed. It was by this time pitch dark. Not a light could
+we see within the enclosure. But presently a couple of shadowy forms
+appeared behind the iron gates; the iron gates creaked on their hinges,
+a masculine voice bade us drive in, and a policeman with a lantern
+advanced from a thicket of trees. All this had a fine martial and
+adventurous aspect, and my jarvey seemed to enjoy it as much as I.
+
+We got directions from the friendly policeman as to the roads and the
+landmarks, and after once nearly running into a clump of trees found
+ourselves at last in an open courtyard, where men appeared and took
+charge of the car, the horse, and my luggage. We were in a quadrangle of
+the out-buildings attached to the old residence of the Clanricardes,
+which had escaped the fire of 1826. The late Marquis for a long time
+hesitated whether to reconstruct the castle on the old site (the walls
+are still standing), or to build an entirely new house on another site.
+He finally chose the latter alternative, chiefly, I am told, under the
+advice of his oldest son, the late Lord Dunkellin, one of the most
+charming and deservedly popular men of his time. He was a great friend
+and admirer of Father Burke, whom he used to claim as a Galway cousin,
+and with whom I met him in Rome not long before his death in the summer
+of 1867. His brother, the present Marquis, I have never met, but Mr.
+Tener, his present agent here, who passed some time in America several
+years ago, learning from him that I wished to see this place, very
+courteously wrote to me asking me to make his house my headquarters. I
+found my way through queer passages to a cheery little hall where my
+host met me, and taking me into a pleasant little parlour, enlivened by
+flowers, and a merrily blazing fire, presented me to Mrs. Tener.
+
+Mr. Tener is an Ulster man from the County Cavan. He went with his wife
+on their bridal trip to America, and what he there saw of the peremptory
+fashion in which the authorities deal with conspiracies to resist the
+law seems not unnaturally to have made him a little impatient of the
+dilatory, not to say dawdling, processes of the law in his own country.
+He gave me a very interesting account after dinner this evening of the
+situation in which he found affairs on this property, an account very
+different from those which I have seen in print. He is himself the owner
+of a small landed property in Cavan, and he has had a good deal of
+experience as an agent for other properties. "I have a very simple
+rule," he said to me, "in dealing with Irish tenants, and that is
+neither to do an injustice nor to submit to one." It was only, he said,
+after convincing himself that the Clanricarde tenants had no legitimate
+ground of complaint against the management of the estate, not removable
+upon a fair and candid discussion of all the issues involved between
+them and himself, that he consented to take charge of the property. That
+to do this was to run a certain personal risk, in the present state of
+the country, he was quite aware.
+
+But he takes this part of the contract very coolly, telling me that the
+only real danger, he thinks, is incurred when he makes a journey of
+which he has to send a notice by telegraph--a remark which recalled to
+me the curious advice given me in Dublin to seal my letters, as a
+protection against "the Nationalist clerks in the post-offices." The
+park of Portumua Castle, which is very extensive, is patrolled by armed
+policemen, and whenever Mr. Tener drives out he is followed by a police
+car carrying two armed men.
+
+"Against whom are all these precautions necessary?" I asked. "Against
+the evicted tenants, or against the local agents of the League?"
+
+"Not at all against the tenants," he replied, "as you can satisfy
+yourself by talking with them. The trouble comes not from the tenants at
+all, nor from the people here at Portumna, but from mischievous and
+dangerous persons at Loughrea and Woodford. Woodford, mind you, not
+being Lord Clanricarde's place at all, though all the country has been
+roused about the cruel Clanricarde and his wicked Woodford evictions.
+Woodford was simply the headquarters of the agitation against Lord
+Clanricarde and my predecessor, Mr. Joyce, and it has got the name of
+the 'cockpit of Ireland,' because it was there that Mr. Dillon, in
+October 1886, opened the 'war against the landlords' with the 'Plan of
+Campaign.' It is an odd circumstance, by the way, worth noting, that
+when these apostles of Irish agitation went to Lord Clanricarde's
+property nearer the city of Gralway, and tried to stir the people up,
+they failed dismally, because the people there could understand no
+English, and the Irish agitators could speak no Irish! Nobody has ever
+had the face to pretend that the Clanricarde estates were 'rack-rented.'
+There have been many personal attacks made upon Mr. Joyce and upon Lord
+Clanricarde, and Mr. Joyce has brought that well-known action against
+the Marquis for libel, and all this answers with the general public as
+an argument to show that the tenants on the Clanricarde property must
+have had great grievances, and must have been cruelly ground down and
+unable to pay their way. I will introduce you, if you will allow me, to
+the Catholic Bishop here, and to the resident Protestant clergyman, and
+to the manager of the bank, and they can help you to form your own
+judgment as to the state of the tenants. You will find that whatever
+quarrels they may have had with their landlord or his agent, they are
+now, and always have been, quite able to pay their rents, and I need not
+tell you that it is no longer in the power of a landlord or an agent to
+say what these rents shall be."[10]
+
+"Mr. Dillon in that speech of his at Woodford (I have it here as
+published in _United Ireland_), you will see, openly advised, or rather
+ordered, the tenants here to club their rents, or, in plain English, the
+money due to their landlord, with the deliberate intent to confiscate to
+their own use, or, in their own jargon, 'grab,' the money of any one of
+their number who, after going into this dishonest combination, might
+find it working badly and wish to get out of it. Here is his own
+language:"--
+
+I took the speech as reported in the _United Ireland_ of October 23rd,
+1886, and therein found Mr. Dillon, M.P., using these words:--"If you
+mean to fight really, you must put the money aside for two
+reasons--first of all because you want the means to support the men who
+are hit first; and, secondly, because you want to prohibit traitors
+going behind your back. There is no way to deal with a traitor except to
+get his money under lock and key, and if you find that he pays his rent,
+and betrays the organisation, what will you do with him? I will tell you
+what to do with him. _Close upon his money, and use it for the
+organisation_. I have always opposed outrages. _This is a legal plan,
+and it is ten times more effective_."
+
+Not a word here as to the morality of the proceeding thus recommended;
+but almost in the same breath in which he bade his ignorant hearers
+regard his plan as "legal," Mr. Dillon said to them, "_this must be done
+privately, and you must not inform the public where the money is
+placed_!"
+
+Why not, if the plan was "legal"? Mr. Dillon, I believe, is not a
+lawyer, but he can hardly have deluded himself into thinking his plan of
+campaign "legal" in the face of the particular pains taken by his
+leader, Mr. Parnell, to disclaim all participation in any such plans. A
+year before Mr. Dillon made this curious speech, Mr. Parnell, I
+remember, on the 11th of October 1885, speaking at Kildare, declared
+that he had "in no case during the last few years advised any
+combination among tenants against even rack-rents," and insisted that
+any combination of the sort which might exist should be regarded as an
+"isolated" combination, "confined to the tenants of individual estates,
+who, of their own accord, without any incitement from us, on the
+contrary, kept back by us, without any urging on our part, without any
+advice on our part, but stung by necessity, and the terrible realities
+of their position, may have formed such a combination among themselves
+to secure such a reduction of rent as will enable them to live in their
+own homes." From this language of Mr. Parnell in October 1885 to Mr.
+Dillon's speech in October 1886, urging and advising the tenants to
+organise, exact contributions from every member of the organisation, and
+put these contributions under the control of third parties determined to
+confiscate the money subscribed by any member who might not find the
+organisation working to his advantage, is a rather long step! It covers
+all the distance between a cunning defensive evasion of the law, and an
+open aggressive violation of the law--not of the land only, but of
+common honesty. One of two things is clear: either these combinations
+are voluntary and "isolated," and intended, as Mr. Parnell asserts, to
+secure such a reduction of rents as will enable the tenants, and each of
+them, to live peacefully and comfortably at home, and in that case any
+member of the combination who finds that he can attain his object better
+by leaving it has an absolute right to do this, and to demand the return
+of his money; or they are part of a system imposed upon the tenants by a
+moral coercion inconsistent with the most elementary ideas of private
+right and personal freedom. This makes the importance of Mr. Dillon's
+speech, that by his denunciation of any member who wishes to withdraw
+from this "voluntary" combination as a "traitor," and by his order to
+"close upon the money" of any such member, "and use it for the
+organisation," he brands the "organisation" as a subterranean despotism
+of a very cheap and nasty kind. The Government which tolerates the
+creation of such a Houndsditch tyranny as this within its dominions
+richly deserves to be overthrown. As for the people who submit
+themselves to it, I do not wonder that in his more lucid moments a
+Catholic priest like Father Quilter feels himself moved to denounce them
+as "poor slaves." Of course with a benevolent neutral like myself, the
+question always recurs, Who trained them to submit to this sort of
+thing? But I really am at a loss to see why a parcel of conspirators
+should be encouraged in the nineteenth century to bully Irish farmers
+out of their manhood and their money, because in the seventeenth century
+it pleased the stupid rulers of England, as the great Duke of Ormond
+indignantly said, to "put so general a discountenance upon the
+improvement of Ireland, as if it were resolved that to keep it low is to
+keep it safe."
+
+On going back to the little drawing-room after dinner we found Mrs.
+Tener among her flowers, busy with some literary work. It is not a gay
+life here, she admits, her nearest visiting acquaintance living some
+seven or eight miles away--but she takes long walks with a couple of
+stalwart dogs in her company, and has little fear of being molested.
+"The tenants are in more danger," she thinks, "than the landlords or the
+agents"--nor do I see any reason to doubt this, remembering the Connells
+whom I saw at Edenvale, and the story of the "boycotted" Fitzmaurice
+brutally murdered in the presence of his daughter at Lixnaw on the 31st
+of January, as if by way of welcome to Lord Ripon and Mr. Morley on
+their arrival at Dublin.
+
+
+PORTUMNA, _Feb. 29th._--Early this morning two of the "evicted" tenants,
+and an ex-bailiff of the property here, came by appointment to discuss
+the situation with Mr. Tener. He asked me to attend the conference, and
+upon learning that I was an American, they expressed their perfect
+willingness that I should do so. The tenants were quiet, sturdy,
+intelligent-looking men. I asked one of them if he objected to telling
+me whether he thought the rent he had refused to pay excessive, or
+whether he was simply unable to pay it.
+
+"I had the money, sir, to pay the rent," he replied, "and I wanted to
+pay the rent--only I wouldn't be let."
+
+"Who wouldn't let you?" I asked.
+
+"The people that were in with the League."
+
+"Was your holding worth anything to you?" I asked.
+
+"It was indeed. Two or three years ago I could have sold my right for a
+matter of three hundred pounds."
+
+"Yes!" interrupted the other tenant, "and a bit before that for six
+hundred pounds."
+
+"Is it not worth three hundred pounds to you now?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Tener, "for he has lost it by refusing the settlement I
+offered to make, and driving us into proceedings against him, and
+allowing his six months' equity of redemption to lapse."
+
+"And sure, if we had it, no one would be let to buy it now, sir," said
+the tenant. "But it's we that hope Mr. Tener here will let us come back
+on the holdings--that is, if we'd be protected coming back."
+
+"Now, do you see," said Mr. Tener, "what it is you ask me to do? You ask
+me to make you a present outright of the property you chose foolishly to
+throw away, and to do this after you have put the estate to endless
+trouble and expense; don't you think that is asking me to do a good
+deal?"
+
+The tenants looked at one another, at Mr. Tener, and at me, and the
+ex-bailiff smiled.
+
+"You must see this," said Mr. Tener, "but I am perfectly willing now to
+say to you, in the presence of this gentleman, that in spite of all, I
+am quite willing to do what you ask, and to let you come back into the
+titles you have forfeited, for I would rather have you back on the
+property than strangers--"
+
+"And, indeed, we're sure you would."
+
+"But understand, you must pay down a year's rent and the costs you have
+put us to."
+
+"Ah! sure you wouldn't have us to pay the costs?"
+
+"But indeed I will," responded Mr. Tener; "you mustn't for a moment
+suppose I will have any question about that. You brought all this
+trouble on yourselves, and on us; and while I am ready and willing to
+deal more than fairly, to deal liberally with you about the arrears--and
+to give you time--the costs you must pay."
+
+"And what would they be, the costs?" queried one of the tenants
+anxiously.
+
+"Oh, that I can't tell you, for I don't know," said Mr. Tener, "but they
+shall not be anything beyond the strict necessary costs."
+
+"And if we come back would we be protected?"
+
+"Of course you will have protection. But why do you want protection?
+Here you are, a couple of strong grown men, with men-folk of your
+families. See here! why don't you go to such an one, and such an one,"
+naming other tenants; "you know them well. Go to them quietly and sound
+them to see if they will come back on the same terms with you; form a
+combination to be honest and to stand by your rights, and defy and break
+up the other dishonest combination you go in fear of! Is it not a shame
+for men like you to lie down and let those fellows walk over you, and
+drive you out of your livelihood and your homes?"
+
+The tenants looked at each other, and at the rest of us. "I think," said
+one of them at last, "I think ---- and ----," naming two men, "would come
+with us. Of course," turning to Mr. Tener, "you wouldn't discover on us,
+sir."
+
+"Discover on you! Certainly not," said Mr. Tener. "But why don't you
+make up your minds to be men, and 'discover' on yourselves, and defy
+these fellows?"
+
+"And the cattle, sir? would we get protection for the cattle? They'd be
+murdered else entirely."
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Tener, "the police would endeavour to protect the
+cattle."
+
+Then, turning to me, he said, "That is a very reasonable question. These
+scoundrels, when they are afraid to tackle the men put under their ban,
+go about at night, and mutilate and torture and kill the poor beasts. I
+remember a case," he went on, "in Roscommon, where several head of
+cattle mysteriously disappeared. They could be found nowhere. No trace
+of them could be got. But long weeks after they vanished, some lads in a
+field several miles away saw numbers of crows hovering over a particular
+point. They went there, and there at the bottom of an abandoned
+coal-shaft lay the shattered remains of these lost cattle. The poor
+beasts had been driven blindfold over the fields and down into this pit,
+where, with broken limbs, and maimed, they all miserably died of
+hunger."
+
+"Yes," said one of the tenants, "and our cattle'd be driven into the
+Shannon, and drownded, and washed away."
+
+"You must understand," interposed Mr. Tener "that when cattle are thus
+maliciously destroyed the owners can recover nothing unless the remains
+of the poor beasts are found and identified within three days."
+
+The disgust which I felt and expressed at these revelations seemed to
+encourage the tenants. One of them said that before the evictions came
+off certain of the National Leaguers visited him, and told him he must
+resist the officers. "I consulted my sister," he said, "and she said,
+'Don't you be such a fool as to be doing that; we'll all be ruined
+entirely by those rascals and rogues of the League.' And I didn't
+resist. But only the other day I went to a priest in the trouble we are
+in, and what do you think he said to me? He said, 'Why didn't you do as
+you were bid? then you would be helped,' and he would do nothing for us!
+Would you think that right, sir, in your country?"
+
+"I should think in my country," I replied, "that a priest who behaved in
+that way ought to be unfrocked."
+
+"Did you pay over all your rent into the hands of the trustees of the
+League?" I asked of one of these tenants.
+
+"I paid over money to them, sir," he replied.
+
+"Yes," I said, "but did you pay over all the amount of the rent, or how
+much of it?"
+
+"Oh! I paid as much as I thought they would think I ought to pay!" he
+responded, with that sly twinkle of the peasant's eye one sees so often
+in rural France.
+
+"Oh! I understand," I said, laughing. "But if you come to terms now with
+Mr. Tener here, will you get that money back again?"
+
+"Divil a penny of it!" he replied, with much emphasis.
+
+Finally they got up together to take their leave, after a long whispered
+conversation together.
+
+"And if we made it half the costs?"
+
+"No!" said Mr. Tener good-naturedly but firmly; "not a penny off the
+costs."
+
+"Well, we'll see the men, sir, just quietly, and we'll let you know what
+can be done"; and with that they wished us, most civilly, good-morning,
+and went their way.
+
+We walked in the park for some time, and a wild, beautiful park it is,
+not the less beautiful for being given up, as it is, very much to the
+Dryads to deal with it as they list. It is as unlike a trim English park
+as possible; but it contains many very fine trees, and grand open sweeps
+of landscape. In a tangled copse are the ruins of an ancient Franciscan
+abbey, in one corner of which lie buried together, under a monumental
+mound of brickwork, the late Marquis of Clanricarde and his wife. The
+walls of the Castle, burned in 1826, are still standing, and so perfect
+that the building might easily enough have been restored. A keen-eyed,
+wiry old household servant, still here, told us the house was burned in
+the afternoon of January 6, 1826. There were three women-servants in the
+house--"Anna and Mary Meehan, and Mrs. Underwood, the housekeeper"; and
+they were getting the Castle ready for his Lordship's arrival, so little
+of an "absentee" was the late Lord Clanricarde, then only one year
+married to the daughter of George Canning. The fires were laid on in the
+upper rooms, and Mrs. Underwood went off upon an errand. When she came
+back all was in flames.
+
+The deer-park is full of deer, now become quite wild. We heard them
+crashing through the undergrowth on all sides. There must be capital
+fishing, too, in the lake, and in the river of which it is an expansion.
+
+While they were getting the cars ready for a drive, came up another son
+of the soil. This man I found had only a small interest in the battle on
+the Clanricarde estates, holding his homestead of another landlord. But
+he admitted he had gone in a manner into the "combination," in that he
+had paid a certain, not very large, sum, which he named, to the
+trustees, "just for peace and quiet." He considered it gone, past
+recovery; and he named another man with a small holding, but doing a
+considerable business in other ways, who had "paid £10 or more just not
+to be bothered." Upon this Mr. Tener told me of a shopkeeper at Loughrea
+in a large way of business, a man with seven or eight thousand pounds,
+who, finding his goods about to be seized after the agent had turned a
+sharp strategic corner on him, and unexpectedly got into his shop, was
+about to own up to his defeat, and make a fair settlement, when the
+secretary of the League appeared, and requested a private talk with him.
+In a quarter of an hour the tradesman reappeared looking rather sullen
+and crestfallen. He said he couldn't pay, and must let the goods be
+taken. So taken they were, and duly put up under the process and sold.
+He bought them in himself, paying all the costs.
+
+Presently two cars appeared. We got upon one, Mr. Tener driving a
+spirited nag, and taking on the seat with him a loaded carbine-rifle.
+Two armed policeman followed us upon the other, keeping at such a
+distance as would enable them easily to cover any one approaching from
+either side of the roadway. It quite took me back to the delightful days
+of 1866 in Mexico, when we used to ride out to picnics at the Rincon at
+Orizaba armed to the teeth, and ready at a moment's notice to throw the
+four-in-hand mule-wagons into a hollow square, and prepare to receive
+cavalry. As it seems to be perfectly well understood that the regular
+price paid for shooting a designated person (they call it "knocking" him
+in these parts) is the ridiculously small sum of four pounds, and that
+two persons who divide this sum are always detailed by the organisers of
+outrage to "knock" an objectionable individual, it is obvious that too
+much care can hardly be taken by prudent people in coming and going
+through such a country. Fortunately for the people most directly
+concerned to avoid these unpleasantnesses a systematic leakage seems to
+exist in the machinery of mischief. The places where the oaths of this
+local "Mafia" are administered, for instance, are well known. A roadside
+near a chapel is frequently selected--and this for two or three obvious
+reasons. The sanctity of the spot may be supposed to impress the
+neophyte; and if the police or any other undesirable people should
+suddenly come upon the officiating adepts and the expectant acolyte, a
+group on the roadside is not necessarily a criminal gathering--though I
+do not see why, in such times, our old American college definition of a
+"group" as a gathering of "three or more persons" should not be adopted
+by the authorities, and held to make such a gathering liable to
+dispersion by the police, as our "groups" used to be subject to
+proctorial punishment. Mills are another favourite resort of the
+law-breakers. Mr. Tener tells me that a large mill between this place
+and Loughrea is a great centre of trouble, not wholly to the
+disadvantage of the astute miller, who finds it not only brings grist to
+his mill, but takes away grist from another mill belonging to a couple
+of worthy ladies, and once quite prosperous. It is no uncommon thing, it
+appears, for the same person to be put through the ceremony of swearing
+fidelity more than once, and at more than one place, with the not
+unnatural result, however, of diminishing the pressure of the oath upon
+his conscience or his fears, and also of alienating his affections, as
+he is expected to pay down two shillings on each occasion. Once a
+member, he contributes a penny a week to the general fund. It seems also
+to be an open secret who the disbursing treasurers are of this fund,
+from whom the members, detailed to do the dark bidding of the
+"organisation," receive their wage. "A stout gentleman with sandy hair
+and wearing glasses" was the description given to me of one such
+functionary. When so much is known of the methods and the men, why is it
+that so many crimes are committed with virtual impunity? For two
+sufficient reasons. Witnesses cannot be got to testify, or trusted, if
+they do testify, to speak the truth; and it is idle to expect juries of
+the vicinage in nine cases out of ten will do their duty. Political
+cowardice having made it impossible to transfer the venue in cases of
+Irish crime, as to which all the authorities were agreed about these
+points, from Ireland into Great Britain, it is found that even to
+transfer the trial of "Moonlighters" from Clare or Kerry into Wicklow,
+for example, has a most instructive effect, opening the eyes of the
+people of Wicklow to a state of things in their own island, of which
+happily for themselves they were previously as ignorant as the people of
+Surrey or of Middlesex. This explains the indignant wish expressed to me
+some time ago in a letter from a priest in another part of Ireland, that
+"martial law" might be proclaimed in Clare and Kerry to "stamp out the
+Moonlighters, those pests of society." That in Clare and Kerry priests
+should be found not only disposed to wink at and condone the proceedings
+of these "pests of society," but openly to co-operate with them under
+the pretext of a "national" movement, is surely a thing equally
+intolerable by the Church and dangerous to the cause of Irish autonomy.
+This I am glad to say is strongly felt, and has been on more than one
+occasion very vigorously stated by one of the most eminent and estimable
+of Irish ecclesiastics, the Bishop-Coadjutor of Clonfert, upon whom I
+called this morning. Dr. Healy, who is a senator of the Royal University
+of Ireland, and a member of the Royal Irish Academy, presides over that
+part of the diocese of Clonfort which includes Portumna and Woodford. He
+lives in a handsome and commodious, but simple and unpretentious house,
+set in ample grounds well-planted, and commanding a wide view of a most
+agreeable country. We were ushered into a well-furnished study, and the
+bishop came in at once to greet us with the most cordial courtesy. He is
+a frank, dignified, unaffected man, and in his becoming episcopal
+purple, with the gold chain and cross, looked every inch a bishop. I was
+particularly anxious to see Dr. Healy, as a type of the high-minded and
+courageous ecclesiastics who, in Ireland, have resolutely refused to
+subordinate their duties and their authority as ecclesiastics to the
+convenience and the policy of an organisation absolutely controlled by
+Mr. Parnell, who not only is not a Catholic, but who is an open ally and
+associate of the bitterest enemies of the Catholic Church in France and
+in England. Protestant historians affirm that Pope Innocent was one of
+the financial backers of William of Orange when he set sail from Holland
+to crush the Catholic faith in Great Britain and Ireland, and drive the
+Catholic house of Stuart into exile. But it was reserved for the
+nineteenth century to witness the strange spectacle of men, calling
+themselves Irishmen and Catholics, deliberately slandering and assailing
+in concord with a non-Catholic political leader the consecrated pastors
+and masters of the Church in Ireland. When in order to explain what they
+themselves concede to be "the absence from the popular ranks of the best
+of the priesthood," Nationalist writers find it necessary to denounce
+Cardinal Cullen and Cardinal M'Cabe as "anti-Irish "; and to sneer at
+men like Dr. Healy as "Castle Bishops," it is impossible not to be
+reminded of the three "patriotic" tailors of Tooley Street.
+
+Bishop Healy looks upon the systematic development of a substantial
+peasant proprietary throughout Ireland as the economic hope of the
+country, and he regards therefore the actual "campaigning" of the
+self-styled "Nationalists" as essentially anti-national, inasmuch as its
+methods are demoralising the people of Ireland, and destroying that
+respect for law and for private rights which lies at the foundation of
+civil order and of property. In his opinion, "Home Rule," to the people
+in general, means simply ownership of the land which they are to live
+on, and to live by. How that ownership shall be brought about peaceably,
+fairly, and without wrong or outrage to any man or class of men is a
+problem of politics to be worked out by politicians, and by public men.
+That men, calling themselves Catholics, should be led on to attempt to
+bring this or any other object about by immoral and criminal means is
+quite another matter, and a matter falling within the domain, not of the
+State primarily, but of the Church.
+
+As to this, Bishop Healy, who was in Rome not very long ago, and who,
+while in Rome, had more than one audience of His Holiness by command,
+has no doubt whatever that the Vatican will insist upon the abandonment
+and repudiation by Catholics of boycotting, and "plans of campaign," and
+all such devices of evil. Nor has the Bishop any doubt that whenever the
+Holy Father speaks the priests and the people of Ireland will obey.
+
+To say this, of course, is only to say that the Bishop believes the
+priests of Ireland to be honest priests, and the people of Ireland to be
+good Catholics.
+
+If he is mistaken in this it will be a doleful thing, not for the
+Church, but for the Irish priests, and for the Irish people. No Irishman
+who witnessed the magnificent display made at Rome this year, of the
+scope and power of the Catholic Church, can labour under any delusions
+on that point.
+
+From the Bishop's residence we went to call upon the Protestant rector
+of Portumna, Mr. Crawford. The handsome Anglican church stands within an
+angle of the park, and the parsonage is a very substantial mansion. Mr.
+Crawford, the present rector, who is a man of substance, holds a fine
+farm of the Clanricarde estate, at a peppercorn rent, and he is tenant
+also of another holding at £118 a year, as to which he has brought the
+agent into Court, with the object, as he avers, of setting an example to
+the other tenants, and inducing them, like himself, to fight under the
+law instead of against it. He is not, however, in arrears, and in that
+respect sets a better example, I am sorry to say, than the Catholic
+priest, Father Coen, who made himself so conspicuous here on the
+occasion of the much bewritten Woodford evictions. The case of Father
+Coen is most instructive, and most unpleasant. He occupies an excellent
+house on a holding of twenty-three acres of good laud, with a garden--in
+short, a handsome country residence, which was provided by the late Lord
+Clanricarde, expressly for the accommodation of whoever might be the
+Catholic priest in that part of his estate. For all this the rent is
+fixed at the absurd and nominal sum of two guineas a year! Yet Father
+Coen, who now enjoys the mansion, and has a substantial income from the
+parish, is actually two years and a half in arrears with this rent! This
+fact Mr. Tener mentioned to the Bishop, whose countenance naturally
+darkened. "What am I to do in such a case, my lord?" asked Mr. Tener.
+"Do?" said the Bishop, "do your plain duty, and proceed against him
+according to law." But suppose he were proceeded against and evicted, as
+in America he certainly would be, who can doubt that he would instantly
+be paraded, before the world, on both sides of the Atlantic as a
+"martyr," suffering for the holy cause of an oppressed and down-trodden
+people, at the hands of a "most vile" Marquis, and of a remorse-less and
+blood-thirsty agent?[11] Mr. Crawford, a tall, fine-looking man, talked
+very fully and freely about the situation here. He came to Portumna
+about eight years ago; one of his reasons for accepting the position
+here offered him being that he wished to take over a piece of property
+near Woodford from his brother-in-law, who found he could not manage it.
+As a practical farmer, and a straightforward capable man of business, he
+has gradually acquired the general confidence of the tenants here. That
+they are, as a rule, quite able to pay the rents which they have been
+"coerced" into refusing to pay, he fully believes. He told me of cases
+in which Catholic tenants of Lord Clanricarde came to him when the
+agitation began about the Plan of Campaign, and begged him privately to
+take the money for their rents, and hold it for them till the time
+should come for a settlement.
+
+The reason for this was that they did not wish to be obliged to give
+over the money into the "Trust" created by the Campaigners, and wanted
+it to be safely put beyond the reach of these obliging "friends." One
+very shrewd tenant came to him and begged him to buy some beasts, in
+order that he might pay his rent out of the proceeds. The man owed £15
+to the Clanricarde property. Mr. Crawford did not particularly want to
+buy his beasts, but eventually agreed to do so, and gave him £50 for
+them. The man went off with the money, but he never paid the rent! Mr.
+Crawford discovering this called him to account, and refused to grant
+him some further favour which he asked. The result is that the
+"distressed tenant" now cuts Mr. Crawford when he meets him, and is the
+prosperous owner of quite a small herd of cattle.
+
+Mr. Crawford's opinion of the mischief done by the methods and spirit of
+the National League in this place is quite in accord with the opinions
+of the Bishop-Coadjutor. Power without responsibility, which made the
+Cæesars madmen, easily turns the heads of village tyrants, and there is
+something positively grotesque in the excesses of this subterranean
+"Home Rule." Mr. Crawford told me of a case here, in which a tenant
+farmer, whom he named, came to him in great wrath, not unmingled with
+terror, to say that the League had ordered him, on pain of being
+boycotted, to give up his holding to the heirs of a woman from whom,
+twenty years ago, he had bought, for £100 in cash, the tenant-right of
+her deceased husband! There was no question of refunding the £100. He
+was merely to consider himself a "land-grabber," and evict himself for
+the benefit of those heirs who had never done a stroke of work on the
+property for twenty years, and who had no shadow of a legal or moral
+claim on it, except that the oldest of them was an active member of the
+local League!
+
+Nor was this unique.
+
+In another case, the children of a tenant, who died forty years ago,
+came forward and called upon the League to boycott an old man who had
+been in possession of the holding during nearly half a century. In a
+third case, a tenant-farmer, some ten years ago, had in his employ as
+herd a man who fell ill and died. He put into the vacant place an
+honest, capable young fellow, who still holds it, and has faithfully and
+efficiently served him. Only the other day this tenant-farmer was warned
+by the League to expect trouble, unless he dismissed this herd, and put
+into his place the son, now grown to man's estate, of the herd who died
+ten years ago!
+
+It is amusing, if not instructive, to find the hereditary principle,
+just now threatened in its application to the British Senate, cropping
+out afresh as an element in the regeneration of Irish agriculture and
+the land tenure of Ireland!
+
+On our way back to the Castle we called on Mr. Place, the manager of the
+Portumna Branch of the Hibernian Bank, who lives in the town. He was
+amusing himself, after the labour of the day in the bank, with some
+amateur work as a carpenter, but received us very cordially. He said
+there was no doubt that the deposits in the bank had increased
+considerably since the adoption of the Plan of Campaign on the
+Clanricarde property. Money was paid into the bank continually by
+persons who wished the fact of their payments kept secret; and he knew
+of more than one case in which tenants, whose stock had been seized by
+the agent for the rents, were much delighted at the seizure, since it
+had paid off their rents, and so enabled them to retain their holdings
+and keep out of the grasp of the League, even though to do this they had
+undergone a forced sale and been muleted in costs.
+
+It was his opinion that the tenants on the Clanricarde property, who are
+not in arrears, would gladly accept a twenty-five per cent. reduction,
+and do very well by accepting it. But they are constrained into a
+hostile attitude by the tenants who are in arrears, some of them for
+several years (as, for example, Father Coen), although I find, to my
+astonishment, that in Ireland the landlord has no power to distrain for
+more than a twelvemonth's rent, no matter how far back the arrears may
+run.
+
+Mr. Place seems to think it would be well to put all the creditors of
+the tenants on one footing with the landlords. The shopkeepers and other
+creditors, he thinks, in that event would see many things in quite a new
+light.
+
+What is called the new Castle of Portumna is a large and handsome
+building of the Mansard type, standing on an eminence in the park, at
+some distance from the original seat. The building was finished not long
+before the death of his father, the late Marquis. It has never been
+occupied, save by a large force of police quartered in it not very long
+ago by Mr. Tener in readiness for an expedition against the Castle of
+Cloondadauv, to the scene of which he promises to drive me to-morrow on
+my way back to Dublin. It is thoroughly well built, and might easily be
+made a most delightful residence. The views which it commands of the
+Shannon are magnificent, and there are many fine trees about it.
+
+The old man who has charge of it is a typical Galway retainer of the old
+school. The "boys," he says, once tried to "boycott" him because he was
+the pound-master; but he showed fight, and they let him alone. He
+pointed out to me from the top of the house, in the distance, the
+residences of Colonel Hickie, and of the young Lord Avonmore, who lately
+succeeded on the death of his brother in the recent Egyptian expedition.
+The place is now shut up, and the owners live in France.
+
+We visited too the Portumna Union before driving home. The buildings of
+this Union are extensive for the place, and well built, and it seems to
+be well-ordered and neatly kept--thanks, in no small degree, I suspect,
+to the influence of the Sisters who have charge of the hospital, but
+whose benign spirit shows itself not only in the flower-garden which
+they have called into being, but in many details of the administration
+beyond their special control.
+
+The contrast was very striking between the atmosphere of this
+unpretending refuge of the helpless and that of certain of the
+"laicised" hospitals of France, which I not long ago visited, from which
+the devoted nuns have been expelled to make way for hired nurses. I made
+a remark to this effect to the clerk of the Union, Mr. Lavan, whom we
+found in his office.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said, "I have no doubt of that. We owe more than I can say
+to the Sisters, but I don't know how long we should have them here if
+the local guardians could have their way."
+
+In explanation of this, he went on to tell me that these local
+guardians, who are elected, are hostile to the whole administration,
+because of its relations with the Local Government Board at Dublin,
+which controls their generous tendency to expend the money of the
+ratepayers. By way of expressing their feelings, therefore, they have
+been trying to cut down, not only the salary of the clerk, but that of
+the Catholic chaplain of the Union; and as there is a good deal of
+irreligious feeling among the agitators here, it is his impression that
+they would make things disagreeable for the Sisters also were they in
+any way to get the management into their own hands. That there cannot be
+much real distress in this neighbourhood appears from two facts. There
+are now but 130 inmates of this Union, out of a population of 12,900,
+and the outlay for out-of-door relief averages between eight and ten
+pounds a week.
+
+In the quiet, neat chapel two or three of the inmates were kneeling at
+prayers; and others whom we saw in the kitchen and about the offices had
+nothing of the "workhouse" look which is so painful in the ordinary
+inmates of an English or American almshouse.
+
+"The trouble with the place," said Mr. Lavan, "is that they like it too
+well. It takes an eviction almost to get them out of it."
+
+We sat down with Mr. Lavan in his office, and had an interesting talk
+with him.
+
+He is the agent of Mr. Mathews, who lives between Woodford and Portumna.
+Mr. Mathews is a resident landlord, he says, who has constantly employed
+and has lived on friendly terms with his tenants, numbering twenty, who
+hold now under judicial rents. On these judicial rents two years ago
+they were allowed a further reduction of 15 per cent. Last year they
+were allowed 20 per cent. This year he offered them a reduction of 25
+per cent., which they rejected, demanding 35 per cent.
+
+This demand Mr. Lavan considers to be unreasonable in the extreme, and
+he attributes it to the influence of the National Leaguers here, whose
+representatives among the local guardians constantly vote away the money
+of the ratepayers in "relief to evicted tenants who have ample means and
+can in no respect be called destitute." In his opinion the effect of the
+Nationalist agitation here has been to upset all ideas of right and
+wrong in the minds of the people where any question arises between
+tenants and landlords. He told a story, confirmed by Mr. Tener, of a
+bailiff, whom he named, on the Clanricarde property here, who was
+compelled two years ago to resign his place in order to prevent the
+"boycotting" of his mother who keeps a shop on the farm. He was
+familiar, too, with the details of a story told me by one of the
+Clanricarde tenants, a farmer near Loughrea who holds a farm at £90 a
+year. This man was forced to subscribe to the Plan of Campaign. The
+agent proceeded against him for the rent due, and he incurred costs of
+£10. His sheep and crop were then seized.
+
+He begged the local leaders to "permit" him to pay his rent, as he was
+able to do it _without drawing out the funds in their hands_! They
+refused, and so compelled him to allow his property to be publicly sold,
+and to incur further costs of £10. "His farm lies so near the town that
+he did not dare to risk the vengeance of the local ruffians."
+
+Mr. Lavan gave me the name also of another man who is now actually under
+a "boycott," because he has ventured to resist the modest demand made by
+the son of a man whose tenant-right he bought, paying him £100 for it,
+twenty years ago, that he shall give up his farm without being
+reimbursed for his outlay made to purchase it! In other words, after
+twenty years' peaceable possession of a piece of property, bought and
+paid for, this tenant-farmer is treated as a "land-grabber" by the
+self-installed "Nationalist" government of Ireland, because he will not
+submit to be robbed both of the money which he paid for his
+tenant-right, and of his tenant-right!
+
+Obviously in such a case as this the "war against landlordism" is simply
+a war against property and against private rights. Priests of the
+Catholic Church who not only countenance but aid and abet such
+proceedings certainly go even beyond Dr. M'Glynn. Dr. M'Glynn, so far as
+I know, stops at the confiscation of all private property in rent by the
+State for the State. But here is simply a confiscation of the property
+of A for the benefit of B, such as might happen if B, being armed and
+meeting A unarmed in a forest, should confiscate the watch and chain of
+A, bought by A of B's lamented but unthrifty father twenty years before!
+
+After dinner to-night Mr. Tener gave me some interesting and edifying
+accounts of his experience in other parts of Ireland.
+
+Some time ago, before the Plan of Campaign was adopted, one of his
+tenants in Cavan came to him with a doleful story of the bad times and
+the low prices, and wound up by saying he could pay no more than half a
+year's rent.
+
+"Now his rent had been reduced under the Land Act," said Mr, Tener, "and
+I had voluntarily thrown off a lot of arrears, so I looked at him
+quietly and said, 'Mickey, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have
+been very well treated, and you can perfectly well pay your rent. Your
+wife would be ashamed of you if she knew you were trying to get out of
+it.'"
+
+"Ah no, your honour!" he briskly replied; "indade she would approve it.
+If you won't discover on me, I'll tell you the truth. It was the wife
+herself, she's a great schollard, and reads the papers, that tould me
+not to pay you more than half the rent--for she says there's a new Act
+coming to wipe it all out. Will you take the half-year?"
+
+"No, I will not. Don't be afraid of your wife, but pay what you owe,
+like a man. You've got the money there in your pocket."
+
+This was a good shot. Mickey couldn't resist it, and his countenance
+broke into a broad smile.
+
+"Ah no! I've got it in two pockets. Begorra, it was the wife herself
+made up the money in two parcels, and she put one into each pocket, to
+be sure--and I wasn't to give your honour but one, if you would take it.
+But there's the money, and I daresay it's all for the best."
+
+On another occasion, when he was collecting the rents of a property in
+the county of Longford, one tenant came forward as the spokesman of the
+rest, admitted that the rents had been accepted fairly after a reduction
+under the Land Act, expressed the general wish of the tenants to meet
+their obligations, and wound up by asking a further abatement, "the
+times were so bad, and the money couldn't be got, it couldn't indeed!"
+
+Mr. Tener listened patiently--to listen patiently is the most essential
+quality of an agent in Ireland--and finally said:--
+
+"Very well, if you haven't got the money to pay in full, pay
+three-quarters of it, and I'll give you time for the rest."
+
+"Thank your honour!" said Pat, "and that'll be thirty pounds--and here
+it is in one pound notes, and hard enough to get they are, these times!"
+
+So Mr. Tener took the money, counted the notes twice over, and then,
+writing out a receipt, handed it to the tenant.
+
+"All right, Pat, there's your receipt for thirty-nine pounds, and I'm
+glad to see ten-pound notes going about the country in these hard
+times!"
+
+By mistake the "distressful" orator had put one ten-pound note into his
+parcel! He took his receipt, and went off without a word. But the
+combination to get an "abatement" broke down then and there, and the
+other tenants came forward and put down their money.
+
+These incidents occurred to Mr. Tener himself. Not less amusing and
+instructive was a similar mistake on a larger scale made by an
+over-crafty tenant in dealing with one of Mr. Tener's friends a few
+years ago in the county of Leitrim. This tenant, whom we will call
+Denis, was the fugleman also of a combination. He was a cattle dealer as
+well as a farmer, and having spent a couple of hours in idly eloquent
+attempts to bring about a general abatement of the rents, he lost his
+patience.
+
+"Ah, well, your honour!" he said, "I can't stay here all day talking
+like these men, I must go to the fair at Boyle. Will you take a
+deposit-receipt of the bank for ten pounds and give me the pound change?
+that'll just be the nine pounds for the half-year's rent. But all the
+same, yer honour, those men are all farmers, and it's not out of the
+farm at all I made the ten pounds, it's out of the dealing!"
+
+"But you couldn't deal without a farm, Denis, for the stock," said the
+agent, as he glanced at the receipt. He hastily turned it over, and went
+on, "Just indorse the receipt, and I'll consider your proposition."
+
+The receipt was indorsed, and at once taken off by the agent's clerk to
+the bank to bring back pound-notes for it, while the agent quietly
+proceeded to fill out the regular form of receipt for a full year's
+rent, eighteen pounds. Denis noted what he supposed of course to be the
+agent's blunder, but like an astute person held his peace. The clerk
+came back with the notes. Denis took up his receipt, and the agent
+quietly began handing him note after note across the table.
+
+"But, your honour!" exclaimed Denis, "what on earth are ye giving me all
+this money for?"
+
+"It's your change," said the agent, quite imperturbably. "You gave me a
+bank receipt for one hundred pounds. I have given you a receipt for your
+full year's rent, and here are eighty-two pounds in notes, and with it
+eighteen shillings in silver--that's five per cent. reduction. I would
+have made it ten per cent., only you were so very sharp, first about not
+having the money, and then about the full receipt!"
+
+In an instant all eyes were fastened upon Denis. Ichabod! the glory had
+departed. The chorus went up from his disenchanted followers:--
+
+"Ah, glory be to God, you were not bright enough for the agent, Denis!"
+
+And so that day the agent made a very full and handsome collection--and
+there was a slight reduction in the deposit-accounts of the local bank!
+
+In the evening Mr. Tener gave me the details of some cases of direct
+intimidation with the names of the tenants concerned. One man, whose
+farm he visited, told him he had paid his rent not long before to the
+previous agent. "Well," said Mr. Tener, "show me your receipt!" On this
+the tenant said that he dare not keep the receipt about him, nor even in
+the house, lest it should be demanded by the emissaries of the League,
+who went round to keep the tenants up to the "Plan of Campaign," and
+that it was hidden in his stable. And he went out to the stable and
+brought it in.
+
+This, he had reason to believe, was not an uncommon case.[12] The same
+man, wishing to take a grass farm which the people hoped the agent would
+consent to have "cut up" was asked to give two names on a
+promissory-note to pay the rent. He demurred to this, and after a parley
+said, "Would a certificate do?" upon which he pulled out an old
+tobacco-box, and carefully unfolded from it a bank certificate of
+deposit for a hundred pounds sterling! This tenant held eleven Irish, or
+more than seventeen English, acres, and his yearly rent was £11, 16s.
+6d.
+
+The people before this agitation began were generally quiet, thrifty,
+and industrious. They were great sheep-raisers. An old law of the Irish
+Parliament had exempted sheep, but not cattle or crops, from distraint,
+with an eye to encouraging the woollen interest in Ireland.
+
+As to the sale of tenant-right in Ireland, he told me a curious story.
+One woman, a widow, whom he named, owed two year' rent on a holding in
+Ulster at £4 a year. She was abundantly able to pay, but for her own
+reasons preferred to be evicted, and, finally, by an understanding with
+him, offered her tenant-right for sale. A man who had made money in
+iron-mines in the County of Durham was a bidder, and finally offered
+£240 for the holding. It was knocked down to him. He then saw the agent,
+who told him he had paid too much. The woman was then appealed to, and
+she admitted that the agent was right. But it was shown that others had
+offered £200, and the woman finally agreed to take, and received, that
+amount in gold, being fifty years' purchase!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Thursday, March 1._--This has been a crowded day. I left
+Portumna very early on a car with Mr. Tener, intending to visit the
+scene of his latest collision with the "National" government of Ireland,
+on my way to Loughrea. It was a bright spring morning, more like April
+in Italy than like March in America, and the country is full of natural
+beauty. We made our first halt at the derelict house of Martin Kenny,
+one of the "victims" of the famous "Woodford evictions," so called, as I
+have said, because Woodford is the nearest town.[13] The eviction here
+took place October 21st, 1887. The house has been dismantled by the
+neighbours since that time, each man carrying off a door, or a shutter,
+or whatever best suited him. One of the constables who followed us as
+Mr. Tener's body-guard had been present at the eviction. He came into
+the house with us, and very graphically described the performance. The
+house was still full of heavy stones taken into it, partly to block the
+entrances, and partly as ammunition; and trunks of trees used as
+_chevaux defrise_ still protruded through the door and the window. These
+trees had been cut down by the garrison in the woodlands here and there
+all over the property. I asked if the law in Ireland punished
+depredations of this sort, and was informed that trees planted by
+tenants, if registered by them within a certain time, are the property
+of the tenants. This would astonish our landlords in America, where the
+tenant who sticks so much as a sunflower into his garden-patch makes a
+present of it to his landlord.[14]
+
+I asked if the place made a long defence. Mr. Tener and the constable
+both laughed, and the former told me that when the storming party
+arrived shortly after daybreak, they found the house garrisoned only by
+some small boys, who had been left there to keep watch. The men were
+fast asleep at some other place. The small boys ran away as fast as
+possible to give the alarm, but the police went in, and in a jiffey
+pulled to pieces the elaborate defences prepared to repel them. Father
+Coen, the constable said, got to Kenny's house an hour after it was all
+over, with a mob of people howling and groaning. But the work had been
+done, and other work also at the Castle of Cloondadauv, to which we next
+drove.
+
+This place takes its truly awe-inspiring name from a ruined Norman tower
+standing on a picturesque promontory of no great height, which juts out
+into the lovely lake here made by the Shannon. At no great expense this
+tower might be so restored as to make an ideal fishing-box. It now
+simply adorns the holding formerly occupied by Mr. John Stanislaus
+Burke, a former tenant of Lord Clanricarde. The story of its capture on
+the 17th of September is worth telling.
+
+Some days before the evictions were to come off, a meeting was held at
+Woodford or Loughrea, at which one of the speakers, the patriotic Dr.
+Tully, rather incautiously and exultingly told his hearers that the
+defence in 1886 of the tenant's house known as "Fort Saunders" had been
+a grand and gallant affair indeed, but that next time "the exterminators
+would have to storm a castle"!
+
+This put Mr. Tener at once on the alert, and as Mr. Burke of Cloondadauv
+was set down for eviction, it didn't require much cogitation to fix upon
+the fortress destined to be "stormed." So he set about the campaign. The
+County Inspector of the constabulary, who had made a secret
+reconnaissance, reported that he found the place too strong to be taken
+if defended, except "by artillery." So it was determined to take it by
+surprise.
+
+When the previous evictions were made, the agent and the public forces
+had marched from Portumna by the highway to Woodford, so that, of
+course, their advent was announced by the scouts and sentinels of the
+League from hill to hill long before they reached the scene of action,
+and abundant time was given to the agitators for organising a
+"reception." Mr. Tener profited by the experience of his predecessors.
+He contrived to get his force of constabulary through the town of
+Portumna without attracting any popular attention. And as early rising
+is not a popular virtue here, he resolved to steal a march on the
+defenders of Cloondadauv.
+
+He had brought up certain large boats to Portumna, and put them on the
+lake. Rousing his men before dawn, he soon had them all embarked, and on
+their way swiftly and silently by the river and the lake to Cloondadauv.
+They reached the promontory by daybreak, and as soon as the hour of
+legal action had arrived they were landed, and surrounded the "castle."
+The ancient portal was found to be blocked with heavy stones and trunks
+of trees, nor did any adit appear to be available, till a young
+gentleman who had accompanied the party as a volunteer, discovered in
+one wall of the tower, at some little height from the ground, the vent
+of one of those conduits not infrequently found running down through the
+walls of old castles, which were used sometimes as waste-ways for
+rubbish from above, and sometimes to receive water-pipes from below.
+Looking up into this vent, he saw a rope hanging free within it. Upon
+this he hauled resolutely, and finding it firmly attached above, came to
+the conclusion that it must have been fixed there by the garrison as a
+means of access to the interior.
+
+Like an adventurous young tar, he bade his comrades stand by, and nimbly
+"swarmed" up the rope, without thought or care of what might await him
+at the top. In a few moments his shouts from above proclaimed the
+capture of the stronghold. It was absolutely deserted; the garrison,
+confident that no attack would that day be made, had gone off to the
+nearest village. The interior of the castle was found filled with
+munitions of war, in the shape of huge beams and piles of stones
+laboriously carried up the winding stairs, and heaped on all the
+landing-places in readiness for use. On the flat roof of the castle was
+established a sort of furnace for heating water or oil, to be poured
+down upon the besiegers; and crowbars lay there in readiness to loosen
+out and dislodge the battlements, and topple them over upon the
+assailants.
+
+The officers soon made their way all over the building, and thence
+proceeded to the residence of Mr. Burke near by, a large and very
+commodious house. All the formalities were gone through with, a
+detachment of policemen was put in charge, and the rest of the forces
+set out on their return to Portumna, before the organised "defenders" of
+Cloondadauv, hastily called out of their comfortable beds or from their
+breakfast-tables had realised the situation, and got the populace into
+motion. A mass meeting was held in the neighbourhood, and many speeches
+were made. But the castle and the farm-house and the holding all remain
+in the hands of a cool, quiet, determined-looking young Ulsterman, who
+tells me that he is getting on very well, and feels quite able with his
+police-guard to protect himself. "Once in a while," he said, "they come
+here from Loughrea with English Parliament-men, and stand outside of the
+gate, and call me 'Clanricarde's dog,' and make like speeches at me; but
+I don't mind them, and they see it, and go away again."
+
+Of Mr. Burke, the evicted tenant here, Mr. Crawford, the Protestant
+clergyman at Portumna, told me that he was abundantly able to pay his
+rent. The whole debt for which Burke was evicted was £115; and Mr.
+Crawford said he had himself offered Burke £300 for the holding. Burke
+would have gladly taken this, but "the League wouldn't let him." When
+his right was put up for sale at Galway for £5, he did not dare to buy
+it in, and he is now living with his wife and children on the League
+funds. Lord Clanricarde's agent offered to take him back and restore his
+right if he would pay what he owed; but he dared not accept. This farm
+comprises over one hundred and ten English acres, which Burke held at a
+rent--fixed by the Land Court--of £77, the valuation for taxes being
+£83.
+
+To call the eviction of such a tenant in such circumstances from such a
+holding a "sentence of death," is making ducks and drakes of the English
+language. Mr. Crawford's opinion, founded upon a thorough personal
+knowledge of the region, is that there is no exceptional distress in
+this part of Ireland, and that over-renting has nothing to do with such
+distress as does exist here. The case of a man named Egan, one of the
+"victims" of the Woodford evictions of 1886, certainly bears out this
+view of the matter. Egan, who was a tenant, not at all of Lord
+Clanricarde, but of a certain Mrs. Lewis, had occupied for twenty years
+a holding of about sixteen Irish acres, or more than twenty English
+acres. This he held at a yearly rental of £8, 15s., being 9d. over the
+valuation.
+
+In August 1886 he was evicted for refusing to pay one year's rent then
+due. At that time the crops standing on the land were valued by him at
+£60, 13s. He also owned six beasts. In other words, this man, when he
+was called upon to pay a debt of £8, 15s. had in his own possession,
+beside the valuable tenant-right of his holding, more than a hundred
+pounds sterling of merchantable assets. He refused to pay, and he was
+evicted.
+
+This was in August 1886. But such are the ideas now current in Ireland
+as to the relations of landlord and tenant, that immediately after his
+eviction Egan sent his daughter to gather some cabbages off the farm as
+if nothing had happened. The Emergency men in charge actually objected,
+and sent the damsel away. Thereupon Egan, on the 6th of September,
+served a legal notice on Mrs. Lewis, his landlady, requiring her either
+to let him take all the crops on the farm, or to pay him their value,
+estimated by him, as I have said, at £60, 13s. Two days after this, on
+the 8th of September, more than a hundred men came to the place by night
+and removed the greater portion of the crops. Not wishing a return of
+these visitors, Mrs. Lewis, on the 16th of September, sent word to Egan
+to come and take away what was left of the crops; one of the horses
+employed in the nocturnal harvest of September 8th having been seized by
+the police and identified as belonging to Egan. Egan did not respond;
+but in July 1887 he brought an action against his landlady to recover
+£100 sterling for her "detention of his goods," and her "conversion of
+the same to her own use "!
+
+The case was heard by the Recorder at Kilmainham, and the facts which I
+have briefly recited were established by the evidence. The daughter of
+this extraordinary "victim" Egan appeared as a witness, so "fashionably
+dressed" as to attract a remark on the subject from the defendant's
+counsel. To this she replied that "her brothers in America sent her
+money."
+
+"If your brothers in America sent you money for such purposes," not
+unnaturally observed the Recorder, "why did they allow your father to
+sacrifice crops worth £60 for the non-payment of £8, 15s.?"
+
+"They were tired of that," said the young lady airily; "the land wasn't
+worth the rent!"
+
+That is to say, a farm which yielded a crop of £60, and pastured several
+head of cattle, was not worth £8, 15s. a year. Certainly it was not
+worth £8, 15s. a year if the tenant under the operation of the existing
+or the impending laws of Great Britain in Ireland could get, or hope to
+get it for the half of that rent, or for no rent at all.
+
+But this being thus, on what grounds are the rest of mankind invited to
+regard this excellent man as a "victim" worthy of sympathy and of
+material aid? How had he come to be in arrears of a year in August 1886?
+The proceedings at Kilmainham tell us this.
+
+In November 1885 he had demanded, with other tenants of Mrs. Lewis, a
+reduction of 50 per cent. This would have given him his holding at a
+rental of £4, 7s. 6d. Mrs. Lewis refused the concession, and a month
+afterwards an attempt was made to blow up her son's house with dynamite.
+Between that time and August 1886, all the efforts of her son, who was
+also her agent, to collect her dues by seizing beasts, were defeated by
+the driving away of the cattle, so that no remedy but an eviction was
+left to her. I take it for granted that Mrs. Lewis had a family to
+maintain, and debts of one sort and another to pay, as well as Mr.
+Egan--but I observe this material difference between her position and
+his during the whole of this period of "strained relations" between
+herself and her tenant, that whereas she lay completely out of the
+enjoyment of the rent due her, being the interest on her capital,
+represented in her title to the land, Mr. Egan remained in the complete
+enjoyment and use of the land. Clearly the tenant was in a better
+position than the landlord, and as we are dealing not with the history
+of Ireland in the past, but with the condition of Ireland at present, it
+appears to me to be quite beside the purpose to ask my sympathies for
+Mr. Egan on the ground that a century or half a century ago the
+ancestors of Mr. Egan may have been at the mercy of the ancestors of
+Mrs. Lewis. However that may have been, Mr. Egan seems to me now to have
+had legally much the advantage of Mrs. Lewis. Not only this. Both
+legally and materially Mr. Egan, the tenant-farmer at Woodford, seems to
+me to have had much the advantage of thousands of his countrymen living
+and earning their livelihood by their daily labour in such a typical
+American commonwealth, for example, as Massachusetts. I have here with
+me the Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of
+Massachusetts. From this I learn that in 1876 the average yearly wages
+earned by workmen in Massachusetts were $482.72, or in round numbers
+something over £96. Out of this amount the Massachusetts workman had to
+feed, clothe, and house himself, and those dependent on him.
+
+His outlay for rent alone was on the average $109.07, or in round
+numbers rather less than £22, making 22-1/2 per cent, of his earnings.
+
+How was it with Mr. Egan? Out of his labour on his holding he got
+merchantable crops worth £60 sterling, or in round numbers $300, besides
+producing in the shape of vegetables and dairy stuff, pigs and poultry,
+certainly a very large proportion of the food necessary for his
+household, and raising and fattening beasts, worth at a low estimate £20
+or $100 more. And while thus engaged, his outlay for rent, which
+included not only the house in which he lived, but the land out of which
+he got the returns of his labour expended upon it, was £8, 15s., or
+considerably less than one-half the outlay of the Massachusetts workman
+upon the rent of nothing more than a roof to shelter himself and his
+family. Furthermore, the money thus paid out by the Massachusetts
+workman for rent was simply a tribute paid for accommodation had and
+enjoyed, while out of every pound sterling paid as rent by the Irish
+tenant there reverted to his credit, so long as he continued to fulfil
+his legal obligations, a certain proportion, calculable, valuable, and
+saleable, in the form of his tenant-right.
+
+I am not surprised to learn that the Recorder dismissed the suit brought
+by Mr. Egan, and gave costs against him. But the mere fact that in such
+circumstances it was possible for Egan to bring such a suit, and get a
+hearing for it, makes it quite clear that Americans of a sympathetic
+turn of mind can very easily find much more meritorious objects of
+sympathy than the Irish tenant-farmers of Galway without crossing the
+Atlantic in quest of them.
+
+From Cloondadauv to Loughrea we had a long but very interesting drive,
+passing on the way, and at no great distance from each other, Father
+Coen's neat, prosperous-looking presbytery of Ballinakill, and the shop
+and house of a local boat-builder named Tully, who is pleasantly known
+in the neighbourhood as "Dr. Tully," by reason of his recommendation of
+a very particular sort of "pills for landlords." The presbytery is now
+occupied by Father Coen, who finds it becoming his position as the moral
+teacher and guide of his people to be in arrears of two and a half years
+with the rent of his holding, and who is said to have entertained Mr.
+Blunt and other sympathising statesmen very handsomely on their visit to
+Loughrea and Woodford,[15] "Dr." Tully being one of the guests invited
+to meet them.[16] Not far from this presbytery, Mr. Tener showed me the
+scene of one of the most cowardly murders which have disgraced this
+region. Of Loughrea, the objective of our drive this morning, Sir George
+Trevelyan, I am told, during his brief rule in Ireland, found it
+necessary to say that murder had there become an institution. Woodford,
+previously a dull and law-abiding spot, was illuminated by a lurid light
+of modern progress about three years ago, upon the transfer thither in
+the summer of 1885 of a priest from Loughrea, familiarly known as "the
+firebrand priest."
+
+In November of that year, as I have already related, Mr. Egan and other
+tenants of Mrs. Lewis of Woodford made their demand for a 50 per cent.
+reduction of their rents, upon the refusal of which an attempt was made
+with dynamite on the 18th December to blow up the house of Mrs. Lewis's
+son and agent. All the bailiffs in the region round about were warned to
+give up serving processes, and many of them were cowed into doing so.
+One man, however, was not cowed. This was a gallant Irish soldier,
+discharged with honour after the Crimean war, and known in the country
+as "Balaklava," because he was one of the "noble six hundred," who there
+rode "into the jaws of death, into the valley of hell." His name was
+Finlay, and he was a Catholic. At a meeting in Woodford, Father Coen
+(the priest now in arrears), it is said, looked significantly at Finlay,
+and said, "no process-server will be got to serve processes for Sir
+Henry Burke of Marble Hill." The words and the look were thrown away on
+the veteran who had faced the roar and the crash of the Russian guns,
+and later on, in December 1885, Finlay did his duty, and served the
+processes given to him. From that moment he and his wife were
+"boycotted." His own kinsfolk dared not speak to him. His house was
+attacked by night. He was a doomed man. On the 3d March 1886, about 2
+o'clock P.M., he left his house--which Mr. Tener pointed out to me--to
+cut fuel in a wood belonging to Sir Henry Burke, at no great distance.
+Twice he made the journey between his house and the wood. The third time
+he went and returned no more. His wife growing uneasy at his prolonged
+absence went out to look for him. She found his body riddled with
+bullets lying lifeless in the highway. The police who went into Woodford
+with the tale report the people as laughing and jeering at the agony of
+the widowed woman. She was with them, and, maddened by the savage
+conduct of these wretched creatures, she knelt down over-against the
+house of Father Egan, and called down the curse of God upon him.
+
+On the next day things were worse. No one could be found to supply a
+coffin for the murdered man.[17] When the police called upon the priests
+to exert their influence and enforce some semblance at least of
+Christian and Catholic decency upon the people confided to their charge,
+the priests not only refused to do their duty, but floutingly referred
+the police to Lady Mary Burke. "He did her work," they said, "let her
+send a hearse now to bury him." The lady thus insolently spoken of is
+one of the best of the Catholic women of Ireland. At her summons Father
+Burke, a few years only before his death, I remember, made a long winter
+journey, though in very bad health, from Dublin to Marble Hill to soothe
+the last hours and attend the death-bed of her husband.
+
+No one who knew and loved him can wish him to have lived to hear from
+her lips such a tale of the degradation of Catholic priests in his own
+land of Galway.
+
+Mr. Tener pointed out to me, at another place on the road, near
+Ballinagar, the deserted burying-ground in which, after much trouble, a
+grave was found for the brave old soldier who had escaped the Russian
+cannon-balls to be so foully done to death by felons of his own race.
+There the last rites were performed by Father Callaghy, a priest who was
+himself "boycotted" for resigning the presidency of the League in his
+parish, and for the still graver offence of paying his rent. For weeks
+it was necessary to guard the grave![18]
+
+From that day to this no one has been brought to justice for this crime,
+committed in broad daylight, and within sight of the highway. Mr. Place,
+whom I saw at Portumna, told me that he believed the police had no moral
+doubt as to the murderer of Finlay, but that it was useless to think of
+getting legal evidence to convict him.
+
+Mr. Tener tells me that when Mr. Wilfrid Blunt came to Woodford he went
+with Father Egan, and accompanied by the police, to see the widow of
+this murdered man, heard from her own lips the sickening story, and took
+notes of it. But when Mr. Rowlands, M.P., an English "friend of Home
+Rule," was examined the other day during the trial of Mr. Blunt, he was
+obliged to confess that though he had visited Woodford more than once,
+and conversed freely with Mr. Blunt about it, he had "never heard of the
+murder of Finlay."
+
+Such an incident is apparently of little interest to politicians at
+Westminster. Fortunately for Ireland, it is of a nature to command more
+attention at the Vatican.
+
+Nature has sketched the scenery of this part of Ireland with a free,
+bold hand. It is not so grand or so wild as the scenery of Western
+Donegal, but it has both a wildness and a grandeur of its own. Sir Henry
+Burke's seat of Marble Hill, as seen in the distance from the road,
+stands superbly, high up on a lofty range of wooded hills, from which it
+commands the country for miles. And no town I have seen in Ireland is
+more picturesquely placed than Loughrea. It has an almost Italian aspect
+as you approach it from Woodford. But no lake in Lombardy or Piedmont is
+so peculiarly and exquisitely tinted as the lough on which it stands.
+The delicate grey-green of the sparkling waters reminded me of the
+singular and well-defined belts and stretches of chrysoprase upon which
+you sometimes come in sailing through the dark azure of the Southern
+Seas. I have never before seen precisely such a hue in any body of fresh
+water. The lake is incorrectly described, Mr. Tener tells me, in the
+guide-books, as being one of the many curious developments of the Lower
+Shannon. It is fed by springs, but if, like the river-lakes, it was
+formed by a solution of the limestone, this fact may have some chemical
+relation with its very peculiar colour. It contains three picturesque
+islands. No stream flows into it, but two streams issue from it. The
+town of Loughrea is an ancient holding of the De Burghs, and the
+estate-office of Lord Clanricarde is here in one wing of a great
+barrack, standing, as I understood Mr. Tener to say, on the site of a
+former fortress of the family. Lord Clanricarde's property here is put
+down by Mr. Hussey de Burgh at 49,025 acres in County Galway, valued at
+£19,634, and at 3576 acres in the county of the City of Galway, valued
+at £1202. These, I believe, are statute acres, and in estimating the
+relation of Irish rentals to Irish land this fact must be always
+ascertained. Of the so-called "Woodford" property the present rental is
+no more than £1900, payable by 260 tenants. The Poor-Law valuation for
+taxes is £2400. There was a revision of the whole Galway property made
+by the father of the present Marquis. Of the 260 Woodford holdings only
+twelve were increased, in no case more than 6-1/4 per cent, over the
+valuation. In 1882 six of these twelve tenants applied to the Land
+Court. The rents were in no case restored to the figures before 1872,
+but about 7 per cent. was taken off the increased rental. The assertion
+repeatedly made that in 1882 rents were reduced by the Land Court 50 per
+cent. on the Clanricarde estates, Mr. Tener tells me, is absolutely
+false. In the first year of the Court no reduction went beyond 10 per
+cent., and in later years, even under the panic of low prices, the
+average has not exceeded 20 per cent.
+
+After making arrangements for a car to take me on to Woodlawn, where I
+was to catch the Dublin train, I went out with Mr. Tener to look at the
+town.
+
+My drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn was delightful. It took me over a
+long stretch of the best hunting country of Galway, and my jarvey was a
+Galwegian of the type dear to the heart of Lever. He was a "Nationalist"
+after his fashion, but he did not hesitate to come rattling up through
+the town to the Estate Office to take me up; and after we got fairly off
+upon the highway, he spoke with more freedom than respect of all sorts
+and conditions of men in and about Loughrea.
+
+"He's a sharp little man, that Mr. Tener," he said, "and he gave the
+boys a most beautiful beating at Burke's place."
+
+This was said with genuine gusto, and not at all in the querulous spirit
+of the delightful member of Parliament who complained at Westminster
+with unconscious humour that the agent and the police in that case had
+"dishonourably" stolen a march on the defenders of Cloondadauv!
+
+"But we've beaten them entirely," he said, with equal zest, "at Marble
+Hill. Sir Henry has agreed to pay all the costs, and the living expenses
+too, of the poor men that were put out.[19] I didn't ever think we'd get
+that; but ye see the truth is," he added confidentially, "he must have
+the money, Sir Henry--he's lying out of a deal, and then there's heavy
+charges on the property. A fine property it is indeed!"
+
+"In fact," I said, "you put Sir Henry to the wall. Is that it?"
+
+"Well, it's like that. But we shan't get that out of Clanricarde, I'm
+thinking. He's got a power o' money they tell me; and he's that of the
+ould Burke blood, he won't mind fighting just as long as you like!"
+
+As we drove along, he pointed out to me several fine stretches of
+hunting country, and, to my surprise, informed me that only the other
+day "there was as fine a meet as ever you saw, more than a hundred
+ladies and gentlemen--a grand sight it was."
+
+I asked if the hunting had not been "put down by the League."
+
+"Oh, now then, sir, who'd be wanting to put down the hunting here in
+Galway?--and Ballinasloe? Were you ever at Ballinasloe? just the
+grandest horse fair there is in the whole wide world!"
+
+I insisted that I had always heard a great deal about the opposition of
+the League to hunting.
+
+"Oh, that'll be some little lawyer fellow," he replied, "like that
+Healy, that can't sit on a horse! It's the grandest country in all the
+world for riding over. What for wouldn't they ride over it?"
+
+"Were there many went out to America from about Loughrea?"
+
+"Oh, yes; they were always coming and going. But as many came back."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Oh, they didn't like the country. It wasn't as good a country, was it,
+as old Ireland? And they had to work too hard; and then some of them got
+money, and they'd like to spend it in the old place."
+
+The country about Woodlawn is very picturesque and well wooded, and for
+a long distance we followed the neatly-kept stone walls of the large and
+handsome park of Lord Ashtown.
+
+"The most beautiful and biggest trees in all Ireland, sorr," said the
+jarvey, "and it's a great pity, it is, ye can't stay to let me drive you
+all over it, for the finest part of the park is just what you can't see
+from this road. Oh, her ladyship would never object to any gentleman
+driving about to see the beauties of the place. She is a very good
+woman, is her ladyship. She gave work the last Christmas to thirty-two
+men, and there wasn't another house in the country there that had work
+for more than ten or twelve. A very good woman she is, indeed."
+
+"Yes, that is a very handsome church, it is indeed. It is the Protestant
+Church. Lord Ashtown built it; he was a very good man too, and did a
+power of good--building and making roads, and giving work to the people.
+He was buried there in that Castle, over the station--Trench's Castle,
+they called it."
+
+"All that lumber there by the station?"
+
+"That came out of the Ashtown woods. They were always cutting down the
+trees; there was so many of them you might be cutting for years--you
+would never get to the end of them."
+
+Woodlawn Station is one of the neatest and prettiest railway stations I
+have seen in Ireland--more like a picturesque stone cottage, green and
+gay with flowers, than like a station. The station-master's family of
+cheery well-dressed lads and lasses went and came about the bright fire
+in the waiting-room in a friendly unobtrusive fashion, chatting with the
+policeman and the porter and the passengers. It was hard to believe
+one's-self within an easy drive of the "cockpit of Ireland."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+BORRIS, _Friday, March 2d._--This is the land of the Kavanaghs, and a
+lovely, picturesque, richly-wooded land it is. I left Dublin with Mr.
+Gyles by an afternoon train; the weather almost like June. We ran from
+the County of Dublin into Kildare, and from Kildare into Carlow, through
+hills; rural scenery quite unlike anything I have hitherto seen in
+Ireland. At Bagnalstown, a very pretty place, with a spire which takes
+the eye, our host joined us, and came on with us to this still more
+attractive spot. Borris has been the seat of his family for many
+centuries. The MacMorroghs of Leinster, whom the Kavanaghs lineally
+represent, dwelt here long before Dermot MacMorrogh, finding his
+elective throne in Leinster too hot to hold him, went off into
+Aquitaine, to get that famous "letter of marque" from Henry II. of
+England, with the help of which this king without a kingdom induced
+Richard de Clare, an earl without an earldom, to lend him a hand and
+bring the Normans into Ireland. Many of this race lie buried in the
+ruins of St. Mullen's Abbey, on the Barrow, in this county. But none of
+them, I opine, ever did such credit to the name as its present
+representative, Arthur MacMorrogh Kavanagh.
+
+I had some correspondence with Mr. Kavanagh several years ago, when he
+sent me, through my correspondent for publication in New York, a very
+striking statement of his views on the then condition of Irish
+affairs--views since abundantly vindicated; and like most people who
+have paid any attention to the recent history of Ireland, I knew how
+wonderful an illustration his whole career has been of what philosophers
+call the superiority of man to his accidents, and plain people the power
+of the will. But I knew this only imperfectly. His servant brought him
+up to the carriage and placed him in it. This it was impossible not to
+see. But I had not talked with him for five minutes before it quite
+passed out of my mind. Never was there such a justification of the
+paradoxical title which Wilkinson gave to his once famous book, _The
+Human Body, and its Connexion with Man_,--never such a living refutation
+of the theory that it is the thumb which differentiates man from the
+lower animals. Twenty times this evening I have been reminded of the
+retort I heard made the other day at Cork by a lawyer, who knows Mr.
+Kavanagh well, to a priest of "Nationalist" proclivities, who knows him
+not at all. Some allusion having been made to Borris, the lawyer said to
+me, "You will see at Borris the best and ablest Irishman alive." On this
+the priest testily and tartly broke in, "Do you mean the man without
+hands or feet?"
+
+"I mean," replied the lawyer, very quietly, "the man in whom all that
+has gone in you or me to arms and legs has gone to heart and head!"
+
+Borris House stands high in the heart of an extensive and nobly wooded
+park, and commands one of the finest landscapes I have seen in Ireland.
+As we stood and gazed upon it from the hall door, the distant hills were
+touched with a soft purple light such as transfigures the Apennines at
+sunset.
+
+"You should see this view in June," said Mrs, Kavanagh, "we are all
+brown and bare now."
+
+Brown and bare, like most other terms, are relative. To the eye of an
+American this whole region now seems a sea of verdure, less clear and
+fresh, I can easily suppose, than it may be in the early summer, but
+verdure still. And one must get into the Adirondacks, or up among the
+mountains of Western Virginia, to find on our Atlantic slope such trees
+as I have this evening seen. One grand ilex near the house could hardly
+be matched in the Villa d'Este.
+
+The house is stately and commodious, and more ancient than it appears to
+be,--so many additions have been made to it at different times. It has
+passed through more than one siege, and in the '98 Mr. Kavanagh tells me
+the townspeople of Borris came up here and sought refuge. There are vast
+caverns under the house and grounds, doubtless made by taking out from
+the hill the stone used in building this house, and the fortresses which
+stood here before it. In these all sorts of stores were kept, and many
+of the people found shelter.
+
+I need not say that there is a banshee at Borris--though no living
+witness, I believe, has heard its warning wail. But as we sat in the
+beautiful library, and watched the dying light of day, a lady present
+told us a tale more gruesome than many of those in which the "psychical"
+inquirers delight. She was sitting, she said, in an upper room of an
+ancient mansion here in Carlow, in which she lives, when, from the lawn
+below, there came up to her a low, sad, shrill cry--the croon of a
+woman, such as one hears from the mourners sitting among the turbaned
+tombstones of the hill of Eyoub at Constantinople. It startled her, and
+she held her breath and listened. She was alone, as she knew, in that
+part of the house, and the hall door below was unlocked, as is the
+fashion still in Ireland, despite all the troubles and turmoils. Again
+the sound came, and this time nearer to the house. Could it be the
+banshee? Again and again it rose and died away, each time nearer and
+nearer. Then, as she listened, all her nerves strung to the keenest
+sensibility, it came again, and now, beyond a doubt, within the hall
+below.
+
+With an effort she rose from her chair, opened a door leading into a
+corridor running aside from the main stairway, and fled at full speed
+towards the wing in which she knew that she would find some of the
+maids. As she sped along she heard the cry again and again far behind
+her, as from a creature slowly and steadily mounting the grand stairway
+towards the room which she had just quitted.
+
+She found the maids, who fell into a terrible fright when she told her
+story and dared not budge. So the bells were violently rung till the
+butler and footman appeared. To the first she said simply, "There is a
+mad woman in this house--go and find her!"
+
+"The man looked at me," she said, "as I spoke with a curious expression
+in his face as of one who thought, 'yes, there is a mad woman in the
+house, and she is not far to seek!'"
+
+But the lady insisted, and the men finally went off on their quest. In
+the course of half an hour it was rewarded. The mad woman--a dangerous
+creature--who had wandered away from an asylum in the neighbourhood, was
+found curled up and fast asleep in the lady's own bed!
+
+Fancy a delicate woman going alone into her bedroom at midnight to be
+suddenly confronted by an apparition of that sort!
+
+
+BORRIS, _March 3d._--After a stroll on the lawn this morning, the wide
+and glorious prospect bathed in the light of a really soft spring day, I
+had a conversation with Mr. Kavanagh about the Land Corporation, of
+which he is the guiding spirit. This is a defensive organisation of the
+Irish landlords against the Land League. When a landlord has been driven
+into evicting his tenants, the next step, in the "war against
+landlordism," is to prevent other tenants from taking the vacated lands
+and cultivating them. This is accomplished by "boycotting" any man who
+does this as a "land-grabber."
+
+The ultimate sanction of the "boycott" being "murder," derelict farms
+increased under this system very rapidly; and the Eleventh Commandment
+of the League, "Thou shalt not pay the rent which thy neighbour hath
+refused to pay," was in a fair way to dethrone the Ten Commandments of
+Sinai throughout Ireland, even before the formal adoption in 1886 of the
+"Plan of Campaign."
+
+Mr. Gladstone would perhaps have hit the facts more accurately, if,
+instead of calling an eviction in Ireland a "sentence of death," he had
+called the taking of a tenancy a sentence of death. Mr. Hussey at Lixnaw
+had two tenants, Edmond and James Fitzmaurice. Edmond Fitzmaurice was
+"evicted" in May 1887; but he was taken into the house of a neighbour,
+made very comfortable, and still lives. James Fitzmaurice took, for the
+sake of the family, the land from which Edmond was evicted, and for this
+he was denounced as a "land-grabber," boycotted, and finally shot dead
+in the presence of his daughter.
+
+At a meeting in Dublin in the autumn of 1885, a parish priest, the Rev.
+Mr. Cantwell, described it as a "cardinal virtue" that "no one should
+take a farm from which another had been evicted," and called upon the
+people who heard him to "pass any such man by unnoticed, and treat him
+as an enemy in their midst." Public opinion and the law, if not the
+authorities of his church would make short work of any priest who talked
+in this fashion in New York. But in Ireland, and under the British
+Government, it seems they order things differently. So it occurred one
+day to the landlords thus assailed, as it did to the sea-lions of the
+Cape of Good Hope when the French sailors attacked them, that they might
+defend themselves.
+
+To this end the Land Corporation was instituted, with a considerable
+capital at its back, and Mr. Kavanagh at its head. The "plan of
+campaign" of this Corporation is to take over from the landlords
+derelict lands and cultivate them, stocking them where that is
+necessary.
+
+It is in this way that the derelict lands on the Ponsonby property at
+Youghal are now worked. But Mr. Kavanagh tells me that the men employed
+by the Corporation, of whom Father Keller spoke as a set of desperadoes
+or "_enfants perdus_," are really a body of resolute and capable working
+men farmers. Many, but by no means all of them, are Protestants and
+Ulstermen; and that they are up to their work would seem to be shown by
+the fact stated to me, that in no case so far have any of them been
+deterred and driven off from the holdings confided to them. A great part
+of the Luggacurren property of Lord Lansdowne is now worked by the
+Corporation; and Mr. Kavanagh was kind enough to let me see the
+accounts, which indicate a good business result for the current year on
+that property. This is all very interesting. But what a picture it
+presents of social demoralisation! And what is to be the end of it all?
+Can a country be called civilised in which a farmer with a family to
+maintain, having the capital and the experience necessary to manage
+successfully a small farm, is absolutely forbidden, on pain of social
+ostracism, and eventually on pain of death, by a conspiracy of his
+neighbours, to take that farm of its lawful owner at what he considers
+to be a fair rent? And how long can any civilisation of our complex
+modern type endure in a country in which such a state of things
+tolerated by the alleged Government of that country has to be met, and
+more or less partially mitigated, by deviating to the cultivation of
+farms rendered in this way derelict large amounts of capital which might
+be, and ought to be, far more profitably employed in other ways?
+
+Mr. Kavanagh, after serving the office of High Sheriff thirty years ago,
+first for Kilkenny, and then for Carlow, sat in Parliament for fourteen
+years, from 1866 to 1880, as an Irish county member. He has a very large
+property here in Carlow, and property also in Wexford, and in Kilkenny,
+and was sworn into the Privy Council two years ago. If the personal
+interests and the family traditions of any man alive can be said to be
+rooted in the Irish soil, this is certainly true of his interests and
+his traditions. How can the peace and prosperity of Ireland be served by
+a state of things which condemns an Irishman of such ties and such
+training to expend his energies and his ability in defending the
+elementary right of Paddy O'Rourke to take stock and work a ten-acre
+farm on terms that suit himself and his landlord?
+
+In the afternoon we took a delightful walk through the woods, Mr.
+Kavanagh going with us on horseback. Every hill and clump of trees on
+this large domain he knows, and he led us like a master of woodcraft
+through all manner of leafy byways to the finest points of view. The
+Barrow flows past Borris, making pictures at every turn, and the banks
+on both sides are densely and beautifully wooded. We came in one place
+upon a sawmill at work in the forest, and Mr. Kavanagh showed us with
+pride the piles of excellent timber which he turns out here. But he took
+a greater pride in a group, sacred from the axe, of really magnificent
+Scotch firs, such as I had certainly not expected to find in Ireland.
+Nearer the mansion are some remarkable Irish yews. The gardens are of
+all sorts and very extensive, but we found the head-gardener bitterly
+lamenting the destruction by a fire in one of the conservatories of more
+than six thousand plants just prepared for setting out.
+
+There are many curious old books and papers here, and a student of early
+Irish history might find matter to keep him well employed for a long
+time in this region. It was from this region and the race which ruled
+it, of which race Mr. Kavanagh is the actual representative, that the
+initiative came of the first Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. Strongbow
+made what, from the Anglo-Norman point of view, was a perfectly
+legitimate bargain, with a dispossessed prince to help him to the
+recovery of his rights on the understanding that these rights, when
+recovered, should pass in succession to himself through the only
+daughter of the prince, whom he proposed to marry. It does not appear
+that Strongbow knew, or that Dermot MacMorrogh cared to tell him, how
+utterly unlike the rights of an Anglo-Norman prince were those of the
+elective life-tenant of an Irish principality. FitzStephen, the son by
+her second marriage of Nesta, the Welsh royal mistress of Henry
+Beauclerk, and his cousin, Maurice Fitzgerald, the leaders into Ireland
+of the Geraldines, were no more clear in their minds about this than
+Strongbow, and it is to the original muddle thus created that Professor
+Richey doubtless rightly refers the worst and most troublesome
+complications of the land question in Ireland. The distinction between
+the King's lieges and the "mere Irish," for example, is unquestionably a
+legal distinction, though it is continually and most mischievously used
+as if it were a proof of the race-hatred borne by the Normans and Saxons
+in Ireland from the first against the Celts. The O'Briens, the O'Neills,
+the O'Mullaghlins, the O'Connors, and the M'Morroghs, "the five bloods,"
+as they are called, were certainly Celts, but whether in virtue of their
+being, or claiming to be, the royal races respectively of Minister, of
+Ulster, of Meath, of Connaught, and of Leinster, or from whatever other
+reason, these races were "within the king's law," and were never "mere
+Irish" from the first planting of the Anglo-Norman power in Ireland. The
+case of a priest, Shan O'Kerry, "an Irish enemy of the king," presented
+"contrary to the form of statute" to the vicarage of Lusk, in the reign
+of Edward IV. (1465), illustrates this. An Act of Parliament was passed
+to declare the aforesaid "Shan O'Kerry," or "John of Kevernon," to be
+"English born, and of English nation," and that he might "hold and enjoy
+the said benefice."
+
+There is a genealogy here of the M'Morroghs and Kavanaghs, most
+gorgeously and elaborately gotten up many years ago for Mr. Kavanagh's
+grandfather, which shows how soon the Norman and the native strains of
+blood become commingled. When one remembers how much Norman blood must
+have gone even into far-off Connaught when King John, in the early part
+of the thirteenth century, coolly gave away that realm of the O'Connors
+to the De Burgos, and how continually the English of the Pale fled from
+the exactions inflicted upon them by their own people, and sought refuge
+"among the savage and mere Irish," one cannot help thinking that the"
+Race Question" has been "worked for at least all it is worth" by
+philosophers bent on unravelling the 'snarl' of Irish affairs. If this
+genealogy may be trusted, there was little to choose between the ages
+which immediately preceded and the ages which followed the Anglo-Norman
+invasion in the matter of respect for human life. Celtic chiefs and
+Norman knights "died in their boots" as regularly as frontiersmen in
+Texas. One personage is designated in the genealogy as "the murderer,"
+for the truly Hibernian reason, so far as appears, that he was himself
+murdered while quite a youth, and before he had had a chance to murder
+more than three or four of his immediate relatives. It was as if the son
+of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Lady Constance should be branded in
+history as "Arthur, the Assassin."
+
+
+BORRIS, _March 4th._--This is a staunch Protestant house, and Mr.
+Kavanagh himself reads a Protestant service every morning. But there is
+little or nothing apparently in this part of Ireland of the bitter
+feeling about and against the Catholics which exists in the North. A
+very lively and pleasant Catholic gentleman came in to-day informally
+and joined the house party at luncheon. We all walked out over the
+property afterwards, visiting quite a different region from that which
+we saw yesterday--different but equally beautiful and striking, and this
+Catholic gentleman cited several cases which had fallen within his own
+knowledge of priests who begin to feel their moral control of the people
+slipping away from them through the operation of the "Plan of Campaign."
+I told him what I had heard in regard to one such priest from my
+ecclesiastical friend in Cork. "It does not surprise me at all," he
+said, "and, indeed, I not very long ago read precisely such another
+letter from a priest in a somewhat similar position. I read it with pain
+and shame as a Catholic," he continued, "for it was simply a complete
+admission that the priest, although entirely convinced that his
+parishioners were making most unfair demands upon their landlord to whom
+the letter was addressed, felt himself entirely powerless to bring them
+to a sense of their misconduct." "Had this priest given in his adhesion
+to the Plan of Campaign?" I asked. "Yes," was the reply, "and it was
+this fact which had broken his hold on the people when he tried to bring
+them to abandon their attitude under the Plan. His letter was really
+nothing more nor less than an appeal to the landlord, and that landlord
+a Protestant, to help him to get out of the hole into which he had put
+himself."
+
+Of the tenants and their relation to the village despots who administer
+the Plan of Campaign, this gentleman had many stories also to tell of
+the same tenor with all that I have hitherto heard on this subject.
+Everywhere it is the same thing. The well-to-do and well-disposed
+tenants are coerced by the thriftless and shiftless. "I have the
+agencies of several properties," he said, "and in some of the best parts
+of Ireland. I have had little or no trouble on any of them, for I have
+one uniform method. I treat every tenant as if he were the only man I
+had to deal with, study his personal ways and character, humour him, and
+get him on my side against himself. You can always do this with an
+Irishman if you will take the trouble to do it. Within the past years I
+have had tenants come and tell me they were in fear the Plan of Campaign
+would be brought upon them, just as if it were a kind of potato disease,
+and beg me to agree to take the rent from them in that case, and just
+not discover on them that they had paid it before it was due!"
+
+This gentleman is a pessimist as to the future. "I am a youngish man
+still," he said, "and a single man, and I am glad of it. I don't believe
+the English will ever learn how to govern this country, and I am sure it
+can never govern itself. Would your people make a State of it?"
+
+To this I replied that with Cuba and Canada and Mexico, all still to be
+digested and assimilated, I thought the deglutition of Ireland by the
+great Republic must be remitted to a future much too remote to interest
+either of us.
+
+"I suppose so," he said in a humorously despondent tone; "and so I see
+nothing for people who think as I do, but Australia or New Zealand!"
+
+Mr. Kavanagh sees the future, I think, in colouring not quite so dark.
+As a public man, familiar for years with the method and ways of British
+Parliaments, he seems to regard the possible future legislation of
+Westminster with more anxiety and alarm than the past or present
+agitations in Ireland. The business of banishing political economy to
+Jupiter and Saturn, however delightful it may be to the people who make
+laws, is a dangerous one to the people for whom the laws are made. While
+he has very positive opinions as to the wisdom of the concession made in
+the successive Land Acts for Ireland, which have been passed since 1870,
+he is much less disquieted, I think, by those concessions, than by the
+spirit by which the legislation granting them has been guided. He thinks
+great good has been already done by Mr. Balfour, and that much more good
+will be done by him if the Irish people are made to feel that clamorous
+resistance to the law will no longer be regarded at Westminster as a
+sufficient reason for changing the law. That is as much as to say that
+party spirit in Great Britain is the chief peril of Ireland to-day. And
+how can any Irishman, no matter what his state in his own country may
+be, or his knowledge of Irish affairs, or his patriotic earnestness and
+desire for Irish prosperity, hope to control the tides of party spirit
+in England or Scotland?
+
+Of the influence upon the people in Ireland of the spirit of recent
+legislation for Ireland, the story of the troubles on the O'Grady
+estate, as Mr. Kavanagh tells it to me, is a most striking illustration.
+"The O'Grady of Kilballyowen," as his title shows, is the direct
+representative, not of any Norman invader, but of an ancient Irish race.
+The O'Gradys were the heads of a sept of the "mere Irish"; and if there
+be such a thing--past, present, or future--as an "Irish nation," the
+place of the O'Gradys in that nation ought to be assumed. Mr. Thomas De
+Courcy O'Grady, who now wears the historic designation, owns and lives
+on an estate of a little more than 1000 acres, in the Golden Vein of
+Ireland, at Killmallock, in the county of Limerick. The land is
+excellent, and for the last half-century certainly it has been let to
+the tenants at rents which must be considered fair, since they have
+never been raised. In 1845, two years before the great famine, the
+rental was £2142. This rental was paid throughout the famine years
+without difficulty; and in 1881 the rental stood at £2108.
+
+There has never been an eviction on the estate until last year, when six
+tenants were evicted. All of these lived in good comfortable houses, and
+were prosperous dairy-farmers. Why were they evicted?
+
+In October 1886, during the candidacy at New York of the Land Reformer,
+Mr. George, Mr. Dillon, M.P., propounded the "Plan of Campaign" at
+Portumna in Galway. The March rents being then due on the estate of The
+O'Grady in Limerick, his agent, Mr. Shine, was directed to continue the
+abatements of 15 per cent, on the judicial rents, and of 25 per cent, on
+all other rents, which had been cheerfully accepted in 1885. But there
+was a priest at Kilballyowen, Father Ryan, who wrought upon the tenants
+until they demanded a general abatement of 40 per cent. This being
+refused, they asked for 30 per cent. on the judicial rents, and 40 per
+cent. on the others. This also being refused, Father Ryan had his way,
+and the "Plan of Campaign" was adopted. The O'Grady's writs issued
+against several of the tenants were met by a "Plan of Campaign" auction
+of cattle at Herbertstown in December 1886, the returns of which were
+paid into "the Fund." For this, one of the tenants, Thomas Moroney, who
+held, besides a a farm of 37 Irish acres, a "public," and five small
+houses, at Herbertstown, and the right to the tolls on cattle at the
+Herbertstown farm, valued at from £50 to £60 a year, and who held all
+these at a yearly rent of £85, was proceeded against. Judge Boyd
+pronounced him a bankrupt.
+
+In the spring of 1887, after The O'Grady had been put to great costs and
+trouble, the tenants made a move. They offered to accept a general
+abatement of 17-1/2 per cent., "The O'Grady to pay all the costs."
+
+Here is the same story again of the small solicitors behind the "Plan of
+Campaign" promoting the strife, and counting on the landlords to defray
+the charges of battle!
+
+The O'Grady responded with the following circular:--
+
+ KlLLBALLYOWEN, BRUFF, CO. LlMERICK,
+
+ _13th August 1877_.
+
+ To my Tenants on Kilballyowen and Herbertstown Estate, Co.
+ Limerick.
+
+ MY FRIENDS,--Pending the evictions by the Sheriff on my estate,
+ caused by your refusal to pay judicial rents on offers of liberal
+ abatements, I desire to remind you of the following facts:--
+
+ I am a resident landlord; my ancestors have dwelt amongst you for
+ over 400 years; every tenant is personally known to me, and the
+ most friendly relations have always existed between us.
+
+ I am not aware of there ever having been an eviction by the Sheriff
+ on my estate.
+
+ Farming myself over 400 acres, and my late agent (Mr. Shine), a
+ tenant farmer living within four miles of my property, I have every
+ opportunity of realising and knowing your wants.
+
+ On the passing of the Land Act of 1881, I desired you to have any
+ benefit it could afford you, and as you nearly all held under
+ lease--which precluded you from going into court--I intimated to
+ you my wish, and offered you to allow your lands to be valued at my
+ expense, or to let you go into court and get your rents fixed by
+ the sub-commissioners.
+
+ You elected to have a valuation made, and Mr. Edmond Moroney was
+ agreed on as a land-valuer, possessing the confidence of tenants
+ and landlord.
+
+ I may mention, up to then I had not known Mr. Moroney personally.
+
+ In 1883 Mr. Moroney valued your holdings, and, as a result, his
+ valuation was accepted (except in three or four cases), and
+ judicial agreements signed by you, at rents ascertained by Mr.
+ Moroney's valuation.
+
+ The late Patrick Hogan objected to Mr. Moroney's valuation of his
+ farm, and went into court, and had his rent fixed by the County
+ Court Judge.
+
+ Thomas Moroney would not allow Mr. Edmond Moroney to value his
+ holding, nor would he go into court, his reason no doubt being he
+ should disclose the receipts of the amount of the tolls of the
+ fairs.
+
+ The rents were subsequently paid on Mr. Moroney's valuation with
+ punctuality.
+
+ In 1885, recognising the fall in prices of stock and produce, and
+ at the request of my late agent, Mr. Shine, I directed him to allow
+ you 15 per cent. on all judicial rents, or rents abated on Mr.
+ Moroney's valuation, and 25 per cent. on all other rents, when you
+ paid punctually and with thanks.
+
+ In October last, when calling in the March 1886 rents, at the
+ instance of Mr. Shine, I agreed to continue the abatement of 15 per
+ cent, and 25 per cent., which, when intimated to you, were refused,
+ and a meeting held, demanding an all-round abatement of 40 per
+ cent.
+
+ This I considered unreasonable and unjust, and I refused to give
+ it.
+
+ The Plan of Campaign was then most unjustly adopted on the estate,
+ and you refused to pay your rents.
+
+ Thomas Moroney was elected as a test case to try the legality of
+ the sale and removal of your property to avoid payment of your
+ rent. His tenancy was a mixed holding of house property in the
+ village of Herbertstown, the tolls of the fairs, and 37 acres of
+ land, at a rent of £85, and a Poor-Law valuation of £73, 5s., made
+ as follows:--
+
+ Land valued at £42 5 0
+ Tolls of fair at 17 0 0
+ Public house and yard at 11 0 0
+ Five small houses and forge at 3 0 0
+ --------
+ £73 5 0
+
+ I always was led to believe the tolls of the fair averaged from £50
+ to £60 a year, there being four fairs in the year; and I believe
+ his reason for refusing to allow Mr. E. Moroney to value his
+ holding, or to go into court, was that he should disclose the
+ amount of the tolls, and in consequence I never considered he was
+ entitled to any abatement; but still I gave it to him, and was
+ prepared to do so. The result of his case was that his conduct in
+ making away with his property was unjustifiable, and his farm and
+ holding was sold out for the benefit of his creditors, and he is no
+ longer a tenant on the estate.
+
+ I subsequently took proceedings against six other tenants, who
+ refused payment of rent, and removed their cattle off the land to
+ avoid payment, and having got judgment against them, the Sheriff
+ sold out four of their farms, and writs of possession on the title
+ were taken out against them, and are now lodged with the Sheriff
+ for execution. I have also got judgments for possession against two
+ other tenants for non-payment of rent, also lodged with the
+ Sheriff. One the widow of Patrick Hogan, who got his rent fixed in
+ the County Court, and the other Mrs. Denis Ryan, whose farm on her
+ marriage I assented to be put in settlement for her protection, Mr.
+ Shine, my agent, consenting to act as one of her trustees, whose
+ name, with his co-trustee, Mr. Thomas FitzGerald, appear as
+ defendants, they having signed her judicial agreement.
+
+ The following are the names of the above tenants, the extent of
+ their holdings, the rent, the Poor-Law valuation, and the average
+ rent per Irish acre:--
+
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | Acreage in | Judicial | Rent | |
+ | TENANT. | Irish | Rent Less 20| per | Poor Law |
+ | | Measure. | per cent. | acre[A]| Valuation |
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | A. R. P. | £ s. d. | | £ s. d. |
+ |John Carroll, | 87 3 38 | 132 4 0 | 30/- | 127 10 0 |
+ |Honora Crimmins, | 35 0 27 | 64 5 6 | 36/6 | 52 15 0 |
+ |James Baggott, | 18 0 0 | 37 16 10 | 42/- | 22 5 0 |
+ |Margaret Moloney, | 23 2 9 | 46 2 8 | 39/2 | 44 15 0 |
+ |Mrs. Denis Ryan, | 66 2 3 | 93 2 5 | 28/- | 96 0 0 |
+ |Maryanne Hogan, | 53 2 33 | 112 0 0 | 41/8 | 117 15 0 |
+ | +------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | 294 3 30 | 485 11 5 | ... | 461 0 0 |
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+
+ [A] Rent per Irish acre after abatement of 20 per cent.
+
+ This represents an average of 34s. the Irish acre, for some of the
+ best land in Ireland, and shows a difference of only £24, 11s. 5d.
+ between the rent, less 20 per cent. now offered, and Poor-Law
+ valuation.
+
+ After putting me to the cost of these proceedings, and giving me
+ every opposition and annoyance, amongst such, compelling my agent
+ (by threats of boycotting) to resign, boycotting myself and
+ household, preventing my servants from attending chapel, and
+ driving my labourers away, negotiations for a settlement were
+ opened, and you offered to accept an all-round abatement of 17-1/2
+ per cent. and to pay up one year's rent, provided I paid all costs,
+ including the costs in Moroney's case; this of course I refused,
+ but with a desire to aid you in coming to a settlement, and to
+ prevent the loss to the tenants of the farms under eviction on the
+ Title, I offered to allow the 17-1/2 per cent. all round on payment
+ of one year's rent and costs, and to give time for payment of the
+ costs as stated in my Solicitor's letter of the 2d June 1887 to
+ Canon Scully.
+
+ This offer was refused, and the writs for possession have been
+ lodged with the Sheriff.
+
+ I never commenced these proceedings in a vindictive spirit, or with
+ any desire to punish any of you for your ungracious conduct, but
+ simply to protect my property from unjust and unreasonable demands.
+
+ You will owe two years' rent next month (September), and I now
+ write you this circular letter to point out to each, individually,
+ the position of the tenants under eviction, and even at this late
+ hour to give them an opportunity of saving their holdings, to
+ enable them to do so, and with a view to settlement, I am now
+ prepared to allow 20 per cent. all round, on payment of a year's
+ rent and costs.
+
+ Under no circumstance will I forego payment of costs, as they must
+ be paid in full.
+
+ If this money be paid forthwith, I will arrange with my brother,
+ the purchaser, to restore the four holdings purchased by him at
+ sheriff's sale to the late tenants.
+
+ After this offer I disclaim any responsibility for the result of
+ the evictions, and the loss attendant thereon, as it now remains
+ with you to avert same.
+
+
+All the evictions have since been carried out, and the Land Corporation
+men are at work upon the estate! Whom has all this advantaged? The
+tenants?--Certainly not. The O'Grady?--Certainly not. The peace and
+order of Ireland?--Certainly not. But it has given the National League
+another appeal to the intelligent "sympathies" of England and America.
+It has strengthened the revolutionary element in Irish society. It has
+"driven another nail into the coffin" of Irish landlordism and of the
+private ownership of land throughout Great Britain.
+
+
+Such at least is the opinion of Mr. Kavanagh. If I were an Englishman or
+a Scotchman, I should be strongly inclined to take very serious account
+of this opinion in forecasting the future of landed property in England
+or Scotland.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+GREENANE HOUSE, THOMASTOWN, _March 5th._--The breakfast-room at Borris
+this morning was gay with pink coats. A meet was to come off at a place
+between Borris and Thomastown, and bidding fare-well to my cordial host
+and hostess, I set out at 11 o'clock for a flying visit to this quaint
+and charming house of Mr. Seigne, one of the best known and most highly
+esteemed agents in this part of Ireland.
+
+My jarvey from Borris had an unusually neat and well-balanced car. When
+I praised it he told me it was "built by an American," not an Irish
+American, I understood him to say, but a genuine Yankee, who, for some
+mysterious reason, has established himself in this region, where he has
+prospered as a cart and car builder ever since. "Just the best cars in
+all Ireland he builds, your honour!" Why don't he naturalise them in
+America?
+
+All the way was charming, the day very bright, and even warm, and the
+hill scenery picturesque at every turn. We looked out sharply for the
+hunt, but in vain. My jarvey, who knew the whole country, said they must
+have broken cover somewhere on the upper road, and we should miss them
+entirely. And so we did.
+
+The silting up of the river Nore has reduced Thomastown or
+Ballymacanton, which was its Irish name, from its former importance as
+an emporium for the country about Kilkenny. The river now is not
+navigable above Inistiogue. But two martial square towers, one at either
+end of a fine bridge which spans the stream here, speak of the good old
+times when the masters of Thomastown took toll and tribute of traders
+and travellers. The lands about the place then belonged to the great
+monastery of Jerpoint, the ruins of which are still the most interesting
+of their kind in this part of Ireland. They have long made a part of the
+estate of the Butlers. We rattled rapidly through the quiet little town,
+and whisking out of a small public square into a sort of wynd between
+two houses, suddenly found ourselves in the precincts of Grenane House.
+The house takes its name from the old castle of Grenane, an Irish
+fortress established here by some native despot long before Thomas
+Fitz-Anthony the Norman came into the land. The ruins of this castle
+still stand some half a mile away. "We call the place Candahar," said
+Mr. Seigne, as he came up with two ladies from the meadows below the
+house, "because you come into it so suddenly, just as you do into that
+Oriental town." But what a charming occidental place it is! It stands
+well above the river, the slope adorned with many fine old trees, some
+of which grow, and grow prosperously, in the queerest and most
+improbable forms, bent double, twisted, but still most green and
+vigorous. They have no business under any known theory of arboriculture
+to be beautiful, but beautiful they are. The views of the bridge, of the
+towers, and of the river, from this slope would make the fortune of the
+place in a land of peace and order.
+
+A most original and delightful lady of the country lunched with
+us,--such a character as Miss Edgeworth or Miss Austen might have drawn.
+Shrewd, humorous, sensible, fearless, and ready with impartial hand to
+box the ears alike of Trojan and of Tyrian. She not only sees both sides
+of the question in Ireland as between the landlords and the tenants, but
+takes both sides of the question. She holds lands by inheritance, which
+make her keenly alive to the wrongs of the landlords, and she holds
+farms as a tenant, which make her implacably critical as to their
+claims. She mercilessly demolished in one capacity whatever she advanced
+in the other, and all with the most perfect nonchalance and good faith.
+This curiously dual attitude reminded me of the confederate General,
+Braxton Bragg, of whom his comrades in the old army of the United States
+used to say that he once had a very sharp official correspondence with
+himself. He happened to hold a staff appointment, being also a line
+officer. So in his quality of a staff officer, he found fault with
+himself in his capacity as a line officer, reprimanded himself sharply,
+replied defiantly to the reprimand, and eventually reported himself to
+himself for discipline at head-quarters. She told an excellent story of
+a near kinsman of hers who, holding a very good living in the Protestant
+Irish Church, came rather unexpectedly by inheritance into a baronetcy,
+upon which his women-folk insisted that it would be derogatory to a
+baronet to be a parson. "Would you believe it, the poor man was silly
+enough to listen to their cackle, and resign seven hundred a year!"
+
+"That didn't clear him," I said, "of the cloth, did it?"
+
+"Not a bit, of course, poor foolish man. He was just as much a parson as
+ever, only without a parsonage. Men are fools enough of themselves,
+don't you think, without needing to listen to women?"
+
+Mr. Seigne comes of a French Protestant stock long ago planted in
+Ireland, and his Gallic blood doubtless helps him to handle the
+practical problems daily submitted in these days to an Irish
+land-agent--problems very different, as he thinks, from those with which
+an Irish agent had to deal in the days before 1870. The Irish tenant has
+a vantage-ground now in his relations with his landlord which he never
+had in the olden time, and this makes it more important than it ever was
+that the agent should have what may be called a diplomatic taste for
+treating with individuals, finding out the bent of mind of this man and
+of that, and negotiating over particulars, instead of insisting, in the
+English fashion, on general rules, without regard to special cases. I
+have met no one who has seemed to me so cool and precise as Mr. Seigne
+in his study of the phenomena of the present situation. I asked him
+whether he could now say, as Mr. Senior did a quarter of century ago,
+that the Irish tenants were less improvident, and more averse from
+running into debt than the English.
+
+"I think not," he replied; "on the contrary, in some parts of Ireland
+now the shopkeepers are kept on the verge of bankruptcy by the
+recklessness with which the tenants incurred debts immediately after the
+passing of the Land Act of 1870--a time when shopkeepers, and bankers
+also, almost forced credit upon the farmers, and made thereby 'bad
+debts' innumerable. Farmers rarely keep anything like an account of
+their receipts and expenses. I know only one tenant-farmer in this
+neighbourhood who keeps what can be called an account, showing what he
+takes from his labour and spends on his living."[20] "They save a great
+deal of money often," he says, "but almost never in any systematic way.
+They spend much less on clothes and furniture, and the outward show of
+things, than English people of the same condition do, and they do not
+stint themselves in meat and drink as the French peasants do. In fact,
+under the operation of existing circumstances, they are getting into the
+way of improving their condition, not so much by sacrifices and savings,
+as by an insistence on rent being fixed low enough to leave full margin
+for improved living."
+
+"I had a very frank statement on this point," said Mr. Seigne, "not long
+ago from a Tipperary man. When I tried to show him that his father had
+paid a good many years ago the very same rent which he declares himself
+unable to pay now, he admitted this at once. But it was a confession and
+avoidance. 'My father could pay the rent, and did pay the rent,' he
+said, 'because he was content to live so that he could pay it. He sat on
+a boss of straw, and ate out of a bowl. He lived in a way in which I
+don't intend to live, and so he could pay the rent. Now, I must have,
+and I mean to have, out of the land, before I pay the rent, the means of
+living as I wish to live; and if I can't have it, I'll sell out and go
+away; but I'll be--if I don't fight before I do that same!'"
+
+"What could you reply to that?" I asked.
+
+"Oh," I said, "'that's square and straightforward. Only just let me know
+the point at which you mean to fight, and then we'll see if we can agree
+about something.'"
+
+"The truth is," said Mr. Seigne, "that there is a pressure upward now
+from below. The labourers don't want to live any longer as the farmers
+have always made them live; and so the farmers, having to consider the
+growing demands of the labourers, and meaning to live better themselves,
+push up against the landlord, and insist that the means of the
+improvement shall come out of him."
+
+He then told me an instructive story of his calling upon a
+tenant-farmer, at whose place he found the labourers sitting about their
+meal of pork and green vegetables. The farmer asked him into another
+room, where he saw the farmer's family making their meal of stirabout
+and milk and potatoes.
+
+"I asked you in here," said the farmer, "because we keep in here to
+ourselves. I don't want those fellows to see that we can't afford to
+give ourselves what we have to give them,"--this with strong language
+indicating that he must himself be given a way to advance equally with
+the progressive labourer, or he would know the reason why!
+
+This afternoon Mr. Seigne drove me over through a beautiful country to
+Woodstock, near Inistiogue, the seat of the late Colonel Tighe, the head
+of the family of which the authoress of "Psyche" was an ornament.
+
+It is the finest place in this part of Ireland, and one of the finest I
+have seen in the three kingdoms, a much more picturesque and more nobly
+planted place indeed than its namesake in England. The mansion has no
+architectural pretensions, being simply a very large and, I should
+think, extremely comfortable house of the beginning of this century. The
+library is very rich, and there are some good pictures, as well as
+certain statues in the vestibule, which would have no interest for the
+Weissnichtwo professor of _Sartor Resartus_, but are regarded with some
+awe by the good people of Inistiogue.
+
+The park would do no discredit to a palace, and if the vague project of
+establishing a royal residence in Ireland for one of the British Princes
+should ever take shape, it would not be easy, I should say, to find a
+demesne more befitting the home of a prince than this of the Tighes. At
+present it serves the State at least as usefully, being the "pleasaunce"
+of the people for miles around, who come here freely to walk and drive.
+
+It stretches for miles along the Nore, and is crowned by a gloriously
+wooded hill nearly a thousand feet in height. The late Colonel Tighe, a
+most accomplished man, and a passionate lover of trees, made it a kind
+of private Kew Gardens. He planted long avenues of the rarest and finest
+trees, araucarias, Scotch firs, oaks, beeches, cedars of Lebanon; laid
+out miles of the most varied and delightful drives, and built the most
+extensive conservatories in Ireland.
+
+The turfed and terraced walks among those conservatories are
+indescribably lovely, and the whole place to-day was vocal with
+innumerable birds. Picturesque little cottages and arbours are to be
+found in unexpected nooks all through the woodlands, each commanding
+some green vista of forest aisles, or some wide view of hill and
+champaign, enlivened by the winding river. From one of those to-day we
+looked out over a landscape to which Turner alone or Claude could have
+done justice, the river, spanned by a fine bridge, in the middle
+distance, and all the region wooded as in the days of which Edmund
+Spenser sings, when Ireland
+
+ "Flourished in fame,
+ Of wealth and goodnesse far above the rest
+ Of all that bears the British Islands' name."
+
+Over the whole place broods an indefinable charm. You feel that this was
+the home at once and the work of a refined and thoughtful spirit. And so
+indeed it was. Here for the greater part of the current century the
+owner lived, making the development of the estate and of this demesne
+his constant care and chief pleasure. And here still lives his widow,
+with whom we took tea in a stately quiet drawing-room. Lady Louisa Tighe
+was in Brussels with her mother, the Duchess of Richmond, on the eve of
+Waterloo. She was a child then of ten years old, and her mother bade
+them bring her down into the historic ball-room before the Duke of
+Wellington left it. The duke took up his sword. "Let Louisa buckle it
+for you," said her mother, and when the little girl had girded it on,
+the great captain stooped, took her up in his arms, and kissed her. "One
+never knows what may happen, child," he said good-naturedly; and taking
+his small gold watch out of his fob, he bade her keep it for him.
+
+She keeps it still. For more than sixty years it has measured out in
+this beautiful Irish home the hours of a life given to good works and
+gracious usefulness. To-day, with all the vivacity of interest in the
+people and the place which one might look for in a woman of twenty, this
+charming old lady of eighty-three, showing barely threescore years in
+her carriage, her countenance, and her voice, entertained us with minute
+and most interesting accounts of the local industries which flourish
+here mainly through her sympathetic and intelligent supervision. We
+seemed to be in another world from the Ireland of Chicago or
+Westminster!
+
+Mr. Seigne drove me back here by a most picturesque road leading along
+the banks of the Nore, quite overhung with trees, which in places dip
+their branches almost into the swift deep stream. "This is the favourite
+drive of all the lovers hereabouts," he said, "and there is a spice of
+danger in it which makes it more romantic. Once, not very long ago, a
+couple of young people, too absorbed in their love-making to watch their
+horse, drove off the bank. Luckily for them they fell into the branches
+of one of these overhanging trees, while the horse and car went plunging
+into the water. There they swung, holding each other hand in hand,
+making a pretty and pathetic tableau, till their cries brought some
+anglers in a boat on the river to the rescue."
+
+We spoke of Lady Louisa, and of the watch of Waterloo. "That watch had a
+wonderful escape a few years ago," said Mr. Seigne.
+
+Lady Louisa, it seems, had a confidential butler whom she most
+implicitly trusted. One day it was found that a burglary had apparently
+been committed at Woodstock, and that with a quantity of jewelry the
+priceless watch had vanished. The butler was very active about the
+matter, and as no trace could be found leading out of the house, he
+intimated a suspicion that the affair might possibly have some
+connection with a guest not long before at the house. This angered Lady
+Louisa, who thereupon consulted the agent, who employed a capable
+detective from Dublin. The detective came down to Inistiogue as a
+commercial traveller, wandered about, made the acquaintance of Lady
+Louisa's maid, of the butler, and of other people about the house, and
+formed his own conclusions. Two or three days after his arrival he
+walked into the shop of a small jeweller in a neighbouring town, and
+affecting a confidential manner, told the jeweller he wanted to buy
+"some of those things from Woodstock." The man was taken by surprise,
+and going into a backshop produced one very fine diamond, and a number
+of pieces of silver plate, of the disappearance of which the butler had
+said nothing to his mistress. This led to the arrest of the butler, and
+to the discovery that for a long time he had been purloining property
+from the house and selling it. Many cases of excellent claret had found
+their way in this fashion to a public-house which had acquired quite a
+reputation for its Bordeaux with the officers quartered in its
+neighbourhood. The wine-bins at Woodstock were found full of bottles of
+water. Much of the capital port left by Colonel Tighe had gone--but the
+hock was untouched. "Probably the butler didn't care for hock," said Mr.
+Seigne. The Waterloo watch was recovered from a very decent fellow, a
+travelling dealer, to whom it had been sold: and many pieces of jewelry
+were traced up to London. But Lady Louisa could not be induced to go up
+to London to identify them or testify.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Tuesday, March 6._--It is a curious fact, which I learned
+to-day from the Registrar-General, that the deposits in the Post-office
+Savings Banks have never diminished in Ireland since these banks were
+established.[21] These deposits are chiefly made, I understand, by the
+small tenants, who are less represented by the deposits in the General
+Savings Banks than are the shopkeepers and the cattle-drovers. In the
+General Savings Banks the deposit line fluctuates more; though on the
+whole there has been a steady increase in these deposits also throughout
+Ireland.
+
+Of the details of the dealings of the private banks it is very hard to
+get an accurate account. One gentleman, the manager of a branch of one
+important bank, tells me that a great deal of money is made by usurers
+out of the tenants, by backing their small bills. This practice goes
+back to the first establishment of banks in Ireland. Formerly it was not
+an uncommon thing for a landlord to offer his tenants a reduction, say,
+of twenty per cent., on condition of their paying the rent when it fell
+due. Such were the relations then between landlord and tenants, and so
+little was punctuality expected in such payments that this might be
+regarded as a sort of discount arrangement. The tenant who wished to
+avail himself of such an offer would go to some friendly local usurer
+and ask for a loan that he might avail himself of it. "One of these
+usurers, whom I knew very well," said the manager, "told me long ago
+that he found these operations very profitable. His method of procedure
+was to agree to advance the rent to the tenant at ten per cent., payable
+at a near and certain date. This would reduce the landlord's reduction
+at once, of course, for the tenant, to ten per cent., but that was not
+to be disdained; and so the bargain would be struck. If the money was
+repaid at the fixed date, it was not a bad thing for the usurer. But it
+was almost never so repaid; and with repeated renewals the usurer, by
+his own showing, used to receive eventually twenty, fifty, and, in some
+cases, nearly a hundred per cent, for his loan."
+
+It is the opinion of this gentleman that, under the "Plan of Campaign,"
+a good deal of money-making is done in a quiet way by some of the
+"trustees," who turn over at good interest, with the help of friendly
+financiers, the funds lodged with them, being held to account to the
+tenants only for the principal. "Of course," he said, "all this is
+doubtless at least as legitimate as any other part of the 'Plan,' and I
+daresay it all goes for 'the good of the cause.' But neither the tenants
+nor the landlords get much by it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Thursday, March 8._--At eight o'clock this morning I left the
+Harcourt Street station for Inch, to take a look at the scene of the
+Coolgreany evictions of last summer. These evictions came of the
+adoption of the Plan of Campaign, under the direction of Mr. Dillon,
+M.P., on the Wexford property of Mr. George Brooke of Dublin. The agent
+of Mr. Brooke's estate, Captain Hamilton, is the honorary director of
+the Property Defence Association, so that we have here obviously a
+grapple between the National League doing the work, consciously or
+unconsciously, of the agrarian revolutionists, and a combination of
+landed proprietors fighting for the rights of property as they
+understand them.
+
+We ran through a beautiful country for the greater part of the way. At
+Bray, which is a favourite Irish watering-place, the sea broke upon us
+bright and full of life; and the station itself was more like a
+considerable English station than any I have seen. Thence we passed into
+a richly-wooded region, with neat, well-kept hedges, as far as Rathdrum
+and the "Sweet Vale of Avoca." The hills about Shillelagh are
+particularly well forested, though, as the name suggests, they must have
+been cut for cudgels pretty extensively for now a great many years. We
+came again on the sea at the fishing port of Arklow, where the stone
+walls about the station were populous with small ragamuffins, and at the
+station of Inch I found a car waiting for me with Mr. Holmes, a young
+English Catholic officer, who had most obligingly offered to show me the
+place and the people. We had hardly got into the roadway when we
+overtook a most intelligent-looking, energetic young priest, walking
+briskly on in the direction of our course. This was Dr. Dillon, the
+curate of Arklow. We pulled up at once, and Mr. Holmes, introducing me
+to him, we begged him to take a seat with us. He excused himself as
+having to join another priest with whom he was going to a function at
+Inch; but he was good enough to walk a little way with us, and gave me
+an appointment for 2 P.M. at his own town of Arklow, where I could catch
+the train back to Dublin. We drove on rapidly and called on Father
+O'Neill, the parish priest. We found him in full canonicals, as he was
+to officiate at the function this morning, and with him were Father
+Dunphy, the parish priest of Arklow, and two or three more robed
+priests.
+
+Father O'Neill, whose face and manner are those of the higher order of
+the continental clergy, briefly set forth to me his view of the
+transactions at Coolgreany. He said that before the Plan of Campaign was
+adopted by the tenants, Mr. William O'Brien, M.P., had written to him
+explaining what the effect of the Plan would be, and urging him to take
+whatever steps he could to obviate the necessity of adopting it, as it
+might eventually result to the disadvantage of the tenants. "To that
+end," said Father O'Neill, "I called upon Captain Hamilton, the agent,
+with Dr. Dillon of Arklow, but he positively refused to listen to us,
+and in fact ordered us, not very civilly, to leave his office."
+
+It was after this he said that he felt bound to let the tenants take
+their own way. Eighty of them joined in the "Plan of Campaign" and paid
+the amount of the rent due, less a reduction of 30 per cent., which they
+demanded of the agent, into the hands of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., Sir
+Thomas being a resident in the country, and Mr. Mayne, M.P. Writs of
+ejectment were obtained against them afterwards, and in July last
+sixty-seven of them were evicted, who are now living in "Laud League
+huts," put up on the holdings of three small tenants who were exempted
+from the Plan of Campaign, and allowed to pay their rents subject to a
+smaller reduction made by the agent, in order that they might retain
+their land as a refuge for the rest.
+
+All this Father O'Neill told us very quietly, in a gentle,
+undemonstrative way, but he was much interested when I told him I had
+recently come from Rome, where these proceedings, I was sure, were
+exciting a good deal of serious attention. "Yes," he said, "and Father
+Dunphy who is here in the other room, has just got back from Rome, where
+he had two audiences of the Holy Father."
+
+"Doubtless, then," I said, "he will have given his Holiness full
+particulars of all that took place here."
+
+"No doubt," responded Father O'Neill, "and he tells me the Holy Father
+listened with great attention to all he had to say--though of course, he
+expressed no opinion about it to Father Dunphy."
+
+As the time fixed for the function was at hand, we were obliged to leave
+without seeing Father Dunphy.
+
+From the Presbytery we drove to the scene of the evictions. These
+evictions were in July. Mr. Holmes witnessed them, and gave me a lively
+account of the affair. The "battle" was not a very tough one. Mr.
+Davitt, who was present, stood under a tree very quietly watching it
+all. "He looked very picturesque," said Mr. Holmes, "in a light grey
+suit, with a broad white beaver shading his dark Spanish face; and
+smoked his cigar very composedly." After it was over, Dr. Dillon brought
+up one of the tenants, and presented him to Mr. Davitt as "the man who
+had resisted this unjust eviction." Mr. Davitt took his cigar from his
+lips, and in the hearing of all who stood about sarcastically said,
+"Well, if he couldn't make a better resistance than that he ought to go
+up for six months!" The first house we came upon was derelict--all
+battered and despoiled, the people in the neighbourhood here, as
+elsewhere, regarding such houses as free spoil, and carrying off from
+time to time whatever they happen to fancy. Near this house we met an
+emergency man, named Bolton, an alert, energetic-looking native of
+Wicklow. He has four brothers; and is now at work on one of the
+"evicted" holdings.
+
+I asked if he was "boycotted," and what his relations were with the
+people.
+
+He laughed in a shrewd, good-natured way. "Oh, I'm boycotted, of
+course," he said; "but I don't care a button for any of these people,
+and I'd rather they wouldn't speak to me. They know I can take care of
+myself, and they give me a good wide berth. All I have to object to is
+that they set fire to an outhouse of mine, and cut the ears of one of my
+heifers, and for that I want damages. Otherwise I'm getting on very
+well; and I think this will be a good year, if the law is enforced, and
+these fellows are made to behave themselves."
+
+Near Bolton's farm we passed the holding of a tenant named Kavanagh, one
+of the three who were "allowed" to pay their rents. Several Land League
+huts are on his place, and the evicted people who occupy them put their
+cattle with his. He is a quiet, cautious man, and very reticent. But it
+seemed to me that he was not entirely satisfied with the "squatters" who
+have been quartered upon him. And it appears that he has taken another
+holding in Carlow. From his place we drove to Ballyfad, where a large
+house, at the end of a good avenue of trees, once the mansion of a
+squire, but now much dilapidated, is occupied as headquarters by the
+police. Here we found Mr. George Freeman, the bailiff of the Coolgreany
+property, a strong, sturdy man, much disgusted at finding it necessary
+to go about protected by two policemen. That this was necessary,
+however, he admitted, pointing out to us the place where one Kinsella
+was killed not very long ago. The son of this man Kinsella was formerly
+one of Mr. Brooke's gamekeepers, and is now, Mr. Freeman thinks, in
+concert with another man named Ryan, the chief stay of the League in
+keeping up its dominion over the evicted tenants.
+
+Many of these tenants, he believes, would gladly pay their rents now,
+and come back if they dared.
+
+"Every man, sir," he said, "that has anything to lose, would be glad to
+come back next Monday if he thought his life would be safe. But all the
+lazy and thriftless ones are better off now than they ever were; they
+get from £4 to £6 a month, with nothing to do, and so they're in clover,
+and they naturally don't like to have the industrious, well-to-do
+tenants spoil their fun by making a general settlement."
+
+"Besides that," he added, "that man Kinsella and his comrade Ryan are
+the terror of the whole of them. Kinsella always was a curious, silent,
+moody fellow. He knows every inch of the country, going over it all the
+time by night and day as a gamekeeper, and I am quite sure the
+Parnellite men and the Land Leaguers are just as much afraid of him and
+Ryan as the tenants are. He don't care a bit for them; and they've no
+control of him at all."
+
+Mr. Freeman said he remembered very well the occasion referred to by
+Father O'Neill, when Captain Hamilton refused to confer with Dr. Dillon
+and himself.
+
+"Did Father O'Neill tell you, sir," he said, "that Captain Hamilton was
+quite willing to talk with him and Father O'Donel, the parish priests,
+and with the Coolgreany people, but he would have nothing to say to any
+one who was not their priest, and had no business to be meddling with
+the matter at all?"
+
+"No; he did not tell me that."
+
+"Ah! well, sir, that made all the difference. Father Dunphy, who was
+there, is a high-tempered man, and he said he had just as much right to
+represent the tenants as Captain Hamilton to represent the landlord, and
+that Captain Hamilton wouldn't allow. It was the outside people made all
+the trouble. In June of last year there was a conference at my house,
+and all that time there was a Committee sitting at Coolgreany, and the
+tenants would not be allowed to do anything without the Committee."
+
+"And who made the Committee?"
+
+"Oh, they made themselves, I suppose, sir. There was Sir Thomas
+Esmonde--he was a convert, you know, of Father O'Neill--and Mr. Mayne
+and Mr. John Dillon. And Dr. Dillon of Arklow, he was as busy as he
+could be till the evictions were made in July. And then he was in
+retreat. And I believe, sir, it is quite true that he wanted the Bishop
+to let him come out of the retreat just to have a hand in the business."
+
+The police sergeant, a very cool, sensible man, quite agreed with the
+bailiff as to the influence upon the present situation of the
+ex-gamekeeper Kinsella, and his friend Eyan. "If they were two
+Invincibles, sir," he said, "these member fellows of the League couldn't
+be in greater fear of them than they are. They say nothing, and do just
+as they please. That Kinsella, when Mr. John Dillon was down here, just
+told him before a lot of people that he 'wanted no words and no advice
+from him,' and he's just in that surly way with all the people about."
+
+As to the Brooke estate, I am told here it was bought more than twenty
+years ago with a Landed Estates Court title from Colonel Forde, by the
+grandfather of Mr. Brooke. He paid about £75,000 sterling for it. His
+son died young, and the present owner came into it as a child, Mr. Vesey
+being then the agent, who, during the minority, spent a great deal on
+improving the property. Captain Hamilton came in as agent only a few
+years ago. While the Act of 1881 was impending, an abatement was granted
+of more than twenty per cent. In 1882 the tenants all paid except
+eleven, who went into Court and got their rents cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners. There were appeals; and in 1885, after Court
+valuations, the rents cut down by the Sub-Commissioners were restored in
+several cases. There never was any rack-renting on the estate at all.
+There are upon it in all more than a hundred tenants, twelve of whom are
+Protestants, holding a little less in all than one-fourth of the
+property.
+
+There are fifteen judicial tenants, twenty-one lease-holders, and
+seventy-seven hold from year to year.
+
+The gross rental is a little over £2000 a year of which one-half goes to
+Mr. Brooke's mother. Mr. Brooke himself is a wealthy man, at the head of
+the most important firm of wine-merchants in Ireland, and he has
+repeatedly spent on the property more than he took out of it.
+
+The house of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., was pointed out to me from the
+road. "Sir Thomas is to marry an heiress, sir, isn't he, in America?"
+asked an ingenuous inquirer. I avowed my ignorance on this point. "Oh,
+well, they say so, for anyway the old house is being put in order for
+now the first time in forty years."
+
+We reached Arklow in time for luncheon, and drove to the large police
+barracks there. These were formerly the quarters of the troops. Arklow
+was one of the earliest settlements of the Anglo-Normans in Ireland
+under Henry II., and once rejoiced in a castle and a monastery both now
+obliterated; though a bit of an old tower here is said to have been
+erected in his time. The town lives by fishing, and by shipping copper
+and lead ore to South Wales. The houses are rather neat and well kept;
+but the street was full of little ragged, merry mendicants.
+
+We went into a small branch of the Bank of Ireland, and asked where we
+should find the hotel. We were very civilly directed to "The Register's
+Office over the way." This seemed odd enough. But reaching it we were
+further puzzled to see the sign over the doorway of a "coach-builder"!
+However, we rang the bell, and presently a maid-servant appeared, who
+assured us that this was really the hotel, and that we could have
+"whatever we liked" for luncheon. We liked what we found we could
+get--chops, potatoes, and parsnips; and without too much delay these
+were neatly served to us in a most remarkable room, ablaze with mural
+ornaments and decorations, upon which every imaginable pigment of the
+modern palette seemed to have been lavished, from a Nile-water-green
+dado to a scarlet and silver frieze. There were five times as many
+potatoes served to us as two men could possibly eat, and not one of them
+was half-boiled. But otherwise the meal was well enough, and the service
+excellent. Beer could be got for us, but the house had no licence, Lord
+Carysfort, the owner of the property, thinking, so our hostess said,
+that "there were too many licences in the town already." Lord Carysfort
+is probably right; but it is not every owner of a house, or even of a
+lease in Ireland, I fear, who would take such a view and act on it to
+the detriment of his own property.
+
+Dr. Dillon lives in the main square of Arklow in a very neat house. He
+was absent at a funeral in the handsome Catholic church near by when we
+called, but we were shown into his study, and he presently came in.
+
+His study was that of a man of letters and of politics. Blue-books and
+statistical works lay about in all directions, and on the table were the
+March numbers of the _Nineteenth Century_, and the _Contemporary
+Review_.
+
+"You are abreast of the times, I see," I said to him, pointing to these
+periodicals.
+
+"Yes," he replied, "they have just come in; and there is a capital paper
+by Mr. John Morley in this _Nineteenth Century_."
+
+Nothing could be livelier than Dr. Dillon's interest in all that is
+going on on both sides of the Atlantic, more positive than his opinions,
+or more terse and clear than his way of putting them. He agreed entirely
+with Father O'Neill as to the pressure put upon the Coolgreany tenants,
+not so much by Mr. Brooke as by the agent, Captain Hamilton; but he
+thought Mr. Brooke also to blame for his treatment of them.
+
+"Two of the most respectable of them," said Dr. Dillon, "went to see Mr.
+Brooke in Dublin, and he wouldn't listen to them. On the contrary, he
+absolutely put them out of his office without hearing a word they had to
+say."[22]
+
+I found Dr. Dillon a strong disciple of Mr. Henry George, and a firm
+believer in the doctrine of the "nationalisation of the land." "It is
+certain to come," he said, "as certain to come in Great Britain as in
+Ireland, and the sooner the better. The movement about the sewerage
+rates in London," he added, "is the first symptom of the land war in
+London. It is the thin edge of the wedge to break down landlordism in
+the British metropolis."
+
+He is watching American politics, too, very closely, and inclines to
+sympathise with President Cleveland. Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia, he
+tells me, in his passage through Ireland the other day, did not hesitate
+to express his conviction that President Cleveland would be re-elected.
+
+Dr. Dillon was so earnest and so interesting that the time slipped by
+very fast, until a casual glance at my watch showed me that we must make
+great haste to catch the Dublin train.
+
+We left therefore rather hurriedly, but before reaching the station we
+saw the Dublin train go careering by, its white pennon of smoke and
+vapour curling away along the valley.
+
+I made the best of it, however, and letting Mr. Holmes depart by a train
+which took him home, I found a smart jarvey with a car, and drove out to
+Glenart Castle, the beautiful house of the Earl of Carysfort. This is a
+very handsome modern house, built in a castellated style of a very good
+whitish grey marble, with extensive and extremely well-kept terraced
+gardens and conservatories.
+
+It stands very well on one high bank of the river, a residence of the
+Earl of Wicklow occupying the other bank. My jarvey called my attention
+to the excellence of the roads, on which he said Lord Carysfort has
+spent "a deal of money," as well as upon the gardens of the new Castle.
+The head-gardener, an Englishman, told me he found the native labourers
+very intelligent and willing both to learn and to work. Evidently here
+is another centre of useful and civilising influences, not managed by an
+"absentee."[23]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Friday, March 9th._--At 7.40 this morning I took the train for
+Athy to visit the Luggacurren estates of Lord Lansdowne. Mr. Lynch, a
+resident magistrate here, some time ago kindly offered to show me over
+the place, but I thought it as well to take my chance with the people of
+Athy who are reported to have been very hot over the whole matter here,
+and so wrote to Mr. Lynch that I would find him at the Lodge, which is
+the headquarters of the property.
+
+Athy is a neat, well-built little town, famous of old as a frontier
+fortress of Kildare. An embattled tower, flanked by small square
+turrets, guards a picturesque old bridge here over the Barrow, the
+bridge being known in the country as "Crom-a-boo," from the old war-cry
+of the Fitz-Geralds. It is a busy place now; and there was quite a
+bustle at the very pretty little station. I asked a friendly old porter
+which was the best hotel in the town. "The best? Ah! there's only one,
+and it's not the best--but there are worse--and it's Kavanagh's." I
+found it easily enough, and was ushered by a civil man, who emerged from
+the shop which occupies part of it, into a sort of reading-room with a
+green table. A rather slatternly but very active girl soon converted
+this into a neat breakfast-table, and gave me an excellent breakfast.
+The landlord found me a good car, and off I set for the residence of
+Father Maher, the curate of whom I had heard as one of the most fiery
+and intractable of the National League priests in this part of Ireland.
+
+
+My jarvey was rather taciturn at first, but turned out to be something
+of a politician. He wanted Home Rule, one of his reasons being that then
+they "wouldn't let the Americans come and ruin them altogether, driving
+out the grain from the markets." About this he was very clear and
+positive. "Oh, it doesn't matter now whether the land is good or bad,
+America has just ruined the farmers entirely."
+
+I told him I had always heard this achievement attributed to England.
+"Oh! that was quite a mistake! What the English did was to punish the
+men that stood up for Ireland. There was Mr. O'Brien. But for him there
+wasn't a man of Lord Lansdowne's people would have had the heart to
+stand up. He did it all; and now, what were they doing to him? They were
+putting him on a cold plank-bed on a stone floor in a damp cell!"
+
+"But the English put all their prisoners in those cells, don't they?" I
+asked.
+
+"And what of it, sir?" he retorted. "They're good enough for most of
+them, but not for a gentleman like Mr. O'Brien, that would spill the
+last drop of his heart's blood for Ireland!"
+
+"But," I said, "they're doing just the same thing with Mr. Gilhooly, I
+hear."
+
+"And who is Mr. Gilhooly, now? And it's not for the likes of him to
+complain and be putting on airs as if he was Mr. O'Brien!"
+
+"Yes, it is a fine country for hunting!"
+
+"Was it ever put down here, the hunting?"
+
+"No, indeed! Sure, the people wouldn't let it be!"
+
+"Not if Mr. O'Brien told them they must?" I queried.
+
+"Mr. O'Brien; ah, he wouldn't think of such a thing! It brings money all
+the time to Athy, and sells the horses."
+
+As to the troubles at Luggacurren, he was not very clear. "It was a
+beautiful place, Mr. Dunne's; we'd see it presently. And Mr. Dunne, he
+was a good one for sport. It was that, your honour, that got him into
+the trouble"--
+
+"And Mr. Kilbride?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Kilbride's place was a very good place too, but not like Mr.
+Dunne's. And he was doing very well, Mr. Kilbride. He was getting a good
+living from the League, and he was a Member of Parliament. Oh, yes, he
+wasn't the only one of the tenants that was doing good to himself. There
+was more of them that was getting more than ever they made out of the
+land."[24]
+
+"Was the land so bad, then?" I asked.
+
+"No, there was as good land at Luggacurren as any there was in all
+Ireland; but," and here he pointed off to the crests of the hills in the
+distance, "there was a deal of land there of the estate on the hills,
+and it was very poor land, but the tenants had to pay as much for that
+as for the good property of Dunne and Kilbride."
+
+"Do you know Mr. Lynch, the magistrate?" I asked. "If you do, look out
+for him, as he has promised to join me and show me the place."
+
+"Oh no, sorr!" the jarvey exclaimed at once; "don't mind about him. Hell
+have his own car, and your honour won't want to take him on ours."
+
+"Why not?" I persisted, "there's plenty of room."
+
+"Oh! but indeed, sir, if it wasn't that you were going to the priest's,
+Father Maher, you wouldn't get a car at Athy--no, not under ten pounds!"
+
+"Not under ten pounds," I replied. "Would I get one then for ten
+pounds?"
+
+"It's a deal of money, ten pounds, sorr, and you wouldn't have a poor
+man throw away ten pounds?"
+
+"Certainly not, nor ten shillings either. Is it a question of principle,
+or a question of price?"
+
+The man looked around at me with a droll glimmer in his eye: "Ah, to be
+sure, your honour's a great lawyer; but he'll come pounding along with
+his big horse in his own car, Mr. Lynch; and sure it'll be quicker for
+your honour just driving to Father Maher's."
+
+There was no resisting this, so I laughed and bade him drive on.
+
+"Whose house is that?" I asked, as we passed a house surrounded with
+trees.
+
+"Oh! that's the priest, Father Keogh--a very good man, but not so much
+for the people as Father Maher, who has everything to look after about
+them."
+
+We came presently within sight of a handsome residence, Lansdowne Lodge,
+the headquarters of the estate. Many fine cattle were grazing in the
+fields about it.
+
+"They are Lord Lansdowne's beasts," said my jarvey; "and it's the
+emergency men are looking after them."
+
+Nearly opposite were the Land League huts erected on the holding of an
+unevicted tenant--a small village of neat wooden "shanties." On the
+roadway in front of these half-a-dozen men were lounging about. They
+watched us with much curiosity as we drove up, and whispered eagerly
+together.
+
+"They're some of the evicted men, your honour," said my jarvey, with a
+twinkle in his eye; and then under his breath, "They'll be thinking your
+honour's came down to arrange it all. They think everybody that comes is
+come about an arrangement."
+
+"Oh, then, they all want it arranged!"
+
+"No; not all, but many of them do. Some of them like it well enough
+going about like gentlemen with nothing to do, only their hands in their
+pockets."
+
+We turned out of the highway here and passed some very pretty cottages.
+
+"No, they're not for labourers, your honour," said my jarvey; "the
+estate built them for mechanics. It's the tenants look after the
+labourers, and little it is they do for them."
+
+Then, pointing to a ridge of hills beyond us, he said: "It was
+Kilbride's father, sir, evicted seventeen tenants on these hills--poor
+labouring men, with their families, many years ago,--and now he's
+evicted himself, and a Member of Parliament!"
+
+Father Maher's house stands well off from the highway. He was not at
+home, being "away at a service in the hills," but would be back before
+two o'clock. I left my name for him, with a memorandum of my purpose in
+calling, and we drove on to see the bailiff of the estate, Mr. Hind. On
+the way we met Father Norris, a curate of the parish, in a smart trap
+with a good horse, and had a brief colloquy with him. Mr. Hind we found
+busy afield; a quiet, staunch sort of man. He spoke of the situation
+very coolly and dispassionately. "The tenants in the main were a good
+set of men--as they had reason to be, Lord Lansdowne having been not
+only a fair landlord, but a liberal and enterprising promoter of local
+improvements." I had been told in Dublin that Lord Lansdowne had offered
+a subscription of £200 towards establishing creameries, and providing
+high-class bulls for this estate. Similar offers had been cordially met
+by Lord Lansdowne's tenants in Kerry, and with excellent results. But
+here they were rejected almost scornfully, though accompanied by offers
+of abatement on the rents, which, in the case of Mr. Kilbride, for
+example, amounted to 20 per cent.
+
+"How did this happen, the tenants being good men as you say?" I asked of
+Mr. Hind.
+
+"Because they were unable to resist the pressure put on them by the two
+chief tenants, Kilbride and Dunne, with the help of the League. Kilbride
+and Dunne both lived very well." My information at Dublin was that Mr.
+Kilbride had a fine house built by Lord Lansdowne, and a farm of seven
+hundred acres, at a rent of £760, 10s. Mr. Dunne, who co-operated with
+him, held four town lands comprising 1304 acres, at a yearly rent of
+£1348, 15s. Upon this property Lord Lansdowne had expended in drainage
+and works £1993, 11s. 9d., and in buildings £631, 15s. 4d., or in all
+very nearly two years' rental. On Mr. Kilbride's holdings Lord Lansdowne
+had expended in drainage works £1931, 6s. 3d., and in buildings £1247,
+19s. 5d., or in all more than four years' rental. Mr. Kilbride held his
+lands on life leases. Mr. Dunne held his smallest holding of 84 acres on
+a yearly tenure; his two largest holdings, one on a lease for 31 years
+from 1874, and the other on a life lease, and his fourth holding of 172
+acres on a life lease.
+
+Where does the hardship appear in all this to Mr. Dunne or Mr. Kilbride?
+
+On Mr. Kilbride's holdings, for instance, Lord Lansdowne expended over
+£3000, for which he added to the rent £130 a year, or about 4 per cent.,
+while he himself stood to pay 6-1/2 per cent, on the loans he made from
+the Board of Works for the expenditure. In the same way it was with Mr.
+Dunne's farms. They were mostly in grass, and Lord Lansdowne laid out
+more than £2500 on them, borrowed at the same rate from the Board, for
+which he added to the rent only £66 a year, or about 2-1/2 per cent. Mr.
+Kilbride was a Poor-Law Guardian, and Mr. Dunne a Justice of the Peace.
+The leases in both of these cases, and in those of other large tenants,
+seem to have been made at the instance of the tenants themselves, and
+afforded security against any advance in the rental during a time of
+high agricultural prices. And it would appear that for the last quarter
+of a century there has been no important advance in the rental. In 1887
+the rental was only £300 higher than in 1862, though during the interval
+the landlord had laid out £20,000 on improvements in the shape of
+drainage, roads, labourers' cottages, and other permanent works.
+Moreover, in fifteen years only one tenant has been evicted for
+non-payment of rent.
+
+"Was there any ill-feeling towards the Marquis among the tenants?" I
+asked of Mr. Hind.
+
+"Certainly not, and no reason for any. They were a good set of men, and
+they would never have gone into this fight, only for a few who were in
+trouble, and I'm sure that to-day most of them would be thankful if they
+could settle and get back. The best of them had money enough, and didn't
+like the fight at all."
+
+All the trouble here seems to have originated with the adoption of the
+Plan of Campaign.
+
+Lord Lansdowne, besides this estate in Queen's County, owns property in
+a wild, mountainous part of the county of Kerry. On this property the
+tenants occupy, for the most part, small holdings, the average rental
+being about £10, and many of the rentals much lower. They are not
+capitalist farmers at all, and few of them are able to average the
+profits of their industry, setting the gains of a good, against the
+losses of a bad, season. In October 1886, while Mr. Dillon was
+organising his Plan of Campaign, Lord Lansdowne visited his Kerry
+property to look into the condition of the people. The local Bank had
+just failed, and the shopkeepers and money-lenders were refusing credit
+and calling in loans. The pressure they put upon these small farmers,
+together with the fall in the price of dairy produce and of young stock
+at that time, caused real distress, and Lord Lansdowne, after looking
+into the situation, offered, of his own motion, abatements varying from
+25 to 35 per cent, to all of them whose rents had not been judicially
+fixed under the Act of 1881, for a term of fifteen years.
+
+As to these, Lord Lansdowne wrote a letter on the 21st of October 1886
+(four days after the promulgation of the Plan of Campaign at Portumna on
+the Clanricarde property), to his agent, Mr. Townsend Trench. This
+letter was published. I have a copy of it given to me in Dublin, and it
+states the case as between the landlords and the tenants under judicial
+rents most clearly and temperately.
+
+"It might, I think," says the Marquis, "be very fairly argued, that the
+State having imposed the terms of a contract on landlord and tenant,
+that contract should not be interfered with except by the State.
+
+"The punctual payment of the 'judicial rent' was the one advantage to
+which the landlords were desired to look when, in 1881, they were
+deprived of many of the most valuable attributes of ownership.
+
+"It was distinctly stipulated that the enormous privileges which were
+suddenly and unexpectedly conferred upon the tenants were to be enjoyed
+by them conditionally upon the fulfilment on their part of the statutory
+obligations specified in the Act. Of those, by far the most important
+was the punctual payment of the rent fixed by the Court for the judicial
+term.
+
+"This obligation being unfulfilled, the landlord might reasonably claim
+that he should be free to exercise his own discretion in determining
+whether any given tenancy should or should not be perpetuated.
+
+"In many cases [such cases are probably not so numerous on my estate as
+upon many others] the resumption of the holding, and the consolidation
+of adjoining farms, would be clearly advantageous to the whole
+community. In the congested districts the consolidation of farms is the
+only solution that I have seen suggested for meeting a chronic
+difficulty.
+
+"I have no reason to believe that the Judicial Rents in force on my
+estate are such that, upon an average of the yield and prices of
+agricultural produce, my tenants would find it difficult to pay them."
+
+In spite of all these considerations Lord Lansdowne instructed Mr.
+Trench to grant to these tenants under judicial leases an abatement of
+20 per cent. on the November gale of 1886. This abatement, freely
+offered, was gladly accepted. There had been no outrages or disturbances
+on the Kerry properties, and the relations of the landlord with his
+tenants, before and after this visit of Lord Lansdowne to Kerry, and
+these reductions which followed it, had been, and continued to be,
+excellent.
+
+But the tale of Kerry reached Luggacurren; and certain of the tenants on
+the latter estate were moved by it to demand for the Queen's County
+property identical treatment with that accorded to the very differently
+situated property in Kerry.
+
+The leaders of the Luggacurren movement, I gather from Mr. Hind, never
+pretended inability to pay their rents. They simply demanded abatements
+of 35 per cent. on non-judicial, and 25 per cent. on judicial, rents as
+their due, on the ground that they should be treated like the tenants in
+Kerry: and the Plan of Campaign being by this time in full operation in
+more than one part of Ireland, they threatened to resort to it if their
+demand was refused. Lord Lansdowne at once declared that he would not
+repeat at Luggacurren his concession made in Kerry as to the rents
+judicially fixed; but he offered on a fair consideration of the
+non-judicial rents to make abatements on them ranging from 15 to 25 per
+cent.
+
+The offer was refused, and the war began. On the 23d of March 1887 Mr.
+Kilbride was evicted. One week afterwards, on the 29th of March, he got
+up in the rooms of the National League in Dublin, and openly declared
+that "the Luggacurren evictions differed from most other evictions in
+this, that they were able to pay the rent. It was a fight," he
+exultingly exclaimed, "of intelligence against intelligence; it was
+diamond cut diamond!" In other words, it was a struggle, not for
+justice, but for victory.
+
+On all these points, and others furnished to me at Dublin touching this
+estate, much light was thrown by the bailiff, who had not been concerned
+in the evictions. He told me what he knew, and then very obligingly
+offered to conduct me to the lodge, where we should find Mr. Hutchins,
+who has charge now of the properties taken up by Mr. Kavanagh's Land
+Corporation. My patriotic jarvey from Athy made no objection to my
+giving the bailiff a lift, and we drove off to the lodge. On the way the
+jarvey good-naturedly exclaimed, "Ah! there comes Mr. Lynch," and even
+offered to pull up that the magistrate might overtake us.
+
+We found Mr. Hutchins at home, a cool, quiet, energetic, northern man,
+who seems to be handling the difficult situation here with great
+firmness and prudence. Mrs. Hutchins, who has lived here now for nearly
+a year--a life not unlike that of the wife of an American officer on the
+Far Western frontier--very amicably asked me to lunch, and Mr. Hutchins
+offered to show me the holdings of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride. Mr. Lynch
+proposed that we should all go on my car, but I remembered the protest
+of the jarvey, and sending him to await me at Father Maher's, I drove
+off with Mr. Hutchins. As we drove along, he confirmed the jarvey's hint
+as to the difference between the views and conduct of the parish priest
+and the views and conduct of his more fiery curate. This is a very
+common state of affairs, I find, all over Ireland.
+
+The house of Mr. Dunne is that of a large gentleman farmer. It is very
+well fitted up, but it was plain that the tenants had done little or
+nothing to make or keep it a "house beautiful." The walls had never been
+papered, and the wood-work showed no recent traces of the brush. "He
+spent more money on horse-racing than on housekeeping," said a shrewd
+old man who was in the house. In fact, Mr. Dunne, I am told, entered a
+horse for the races at the Curragh after he had undergone what Mr.
+Gladstone calls "the sentence of death" of an eviction!
+
+Some of the doors bore marks of the crowbar but no great mischief had
+been done to them or to the large fine windows. The only serious damage
+done during the eviction was the cutting of a hole through the roof. An
+upper room had been provisioned to stand a siege, and so scientifically
+barricaded with logs and trunks of trees that after several vain
+attempts to break through the door the assailants climbed to the roof,
+and in twenty minutes cut their way in from without. The dining and
+drawing rooms were those of a gentleman's residence, and one of the
+party remembered attending here a social festivity got up with much
+display.
+
+A large cattle-yard has been established on this place, with an
+original, and, as I was assured, most successful weighing-machine by the
+Land Corporation. We found it full of very fine-looking cattle, and Mr.
+Hutchins seems to think the operation of managing the estate as a kind
+of "ranch" decidedly promising. "I am not a bit sorry for Mr. Dunne," he
+said, "but I am very sorry for other quiet, good tenants who have been
+deluded or driven into giving up valuable holdings to keep him and Mr.
+Kilbride company, and give colour to the vapourings of Mr. William
+O'Brien."
+
+The cases of some of these tenants were instructive. One poor man,
+Knowles, had gone out to America, and regularly sent home money to his
+family to pay the rent. They found other uses for it, and when the storm
+came he was two years and a half in arrears. In another instance, two
+brothers held contiguous holdings, and were in a manner partners. One
+was fonder of Athy than of agriculture; the other a steady husbandman.
+Four years' arrears had grown up against the one; only a half-year's
+gale against the other. Clearly this difference originated outside of
+the fall of prices! In a third case, a tenant wrote to Mr. Trench
+begging to have something done, as he had the money to pay, and wanted
+to pay, but "didn't dare."
+
+From Mr. Dunne's we drove to Mr. Kilbride's, another ample, very
+comfortable house--not so thoroughly well fitted up with bathroom and
+other modern appurtenances as Mr. Dunne's perhaps--but still a very good
+house. It stands on a large green knoll, rather bare of trees, and
+commands a fine sweep of landscape.
+
+Mr. Hutchins drove me to the little road which leads up past the "Land
+League village" to the house of Father Maher, and there set me down.
+
+I walked up and found the curate at home--a tall, slender, well-made
+young priest, with a keen, intelligent face. He received me very
+politely, and, when I showed him the card of an eminent dignitary of the
+Church, with cordiality.
+
+I found him full of sympathy with the people of his parish, but neither
+vehement nor unfair. He did not deny that there were tenants on Lord
+Lansdowne's estate who were amply able to pay their rents; but he did
+most emphatically assert that there were not a few of them who really
+could not pay their rents.
+
+"I assure you," he said, "there are some of them who cannot even pay
+their dues to their priest, and when I say that, you will know how
+pinched and driven they must indeed be." It was in view of these tenants
+that he seemed to justify the course of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride.
+"They must all stand or fall together." He had nothing to say to the
+discredit of Lord Lansdowne; but he spoke with some bitterness of the
+agent, Mr. Townsend Trench, as having protested against Lord Lansdowne's
+making reductions here while he had himself made the same reductions on
+the neighbouring estate of Mrs. Adair.
+
+"In truth," he said, "Mr. Trench has made all this trouble worse all
+along. He is too much of a Napoleon"--and with a humorous twinkle in his
+eye as he spoke--"too much of a Napoleon the Third.
+
+"I was just reading his father's book when you came in. Here it is," and
+he handed me a copy of Trench's _Realities of Irish Life_.
+
+"Did you ever read it? This Mr. Trench, the father, was a kind of
+Napoleon among agents in his own time, and the son, you see, thinks it
+ought to be understood that he is quite as great a man as his father.
+Did you never hear how he found a lot of his father's manuscripts once,
+and threw them all in the fire, calling out as he did so, 'There goes
+some more of my father's vanity?'"
+
+About his people, and with his people, Father Maher said he "felt most
+strongly." How could he help it? He was himself the son of an evicted
+father.
+
+"Of course, Father Maher," I said, "you will understand that I wish to
+get at both sides of this question and of all questions here. Pray tell
+me then, where I shall find the story of the Luggacurren property most
+fully and fairly set forth in print?"
+
+Without a moment's hesitation he replied, "By far the best and fairest
+account of the whole matter you will get in the Irish correspondence of
+the London _Times_."
+
+How the conflict would end he could not say. But he was at a loss to see
+how it could pay Lord Lansdowne to maintain it.
+
+He very civilly pressed me to stay and lunch with him, but when I told
+him I had already accepted an invitation from Mr. Hutchins, he very
+kindly bestirred himself to find my jarvey.
+
+I hastened back to the lodge, where I found a very pleasant little
+company. They were all rather astonished, I thought, by the few words I
+had to say of Father Maher, and especially by his frank and sensible
+recommendation of the reports in the London _Times_ as the best account
+I could find of the Luggacurren difficulty. To this they could not
+demur, but things have got, or are getting, in Ireland, I fear, to a
+point at which candour, on one side or the other of the burning
+questions here debated, is regarded with at least as much suspicion as
+the most deliberate misrepresentation. As to Mr. Town send Trench, what
+Father Maher failed to tell me, I was here told: That down to the time
+of the actual evictions he offered to take six months' rent from the
+tenants, give them a clean book, and pay all the costs. To refuse this
+certainly looks like a "war measure."
+
+But for the loneliness of her life here, Mrs. Hutchins tells me she
+would find it delightful. The country is exceedingly lovely in the
+summer and autumn months.
+
+When my car came out to take me back to Athy, I found my jarvey in
+excellent spirits, and quite friendly even with Mr. Hutchins himself. He
+kept up a running fire of lively commentaries upon the residents whose
+estates we passed.
+
+"Would you think now, your honour," he said, pointing with his whip to
+one large mansion standing well among good trees, "that that's the
+snuggest man there is about Athy? But he is; and it's no wonder! Would
+you believe it, he never buys a newspaper, but he walks all the way into
+Athy, and goes about from the bank to the shops till he finds one, and
+picks it up and reads it. He's mighty fond of the news, but he's fonder,
+you see, of a penny!
+
+"There now, your honour, just look at that house! It's a magistrate he
+is that lives there; and why? Why, just to be called 'your honour,' and
+have the people tip their hats to him. Oh! he delights in that, he does.
+Why, you might knock a man, or put him in the water, you might, indeed,
+but if you came before Mr.----, and you just called him 'your honour'
+often enough, and made up to him, you'd be all right! You've just to go
+up to him with your hat in your hand, looking up at him, and to say,
+'Ah! now, your honour'" (imitating the wheedling tone to perfection),
+"and indeed you'd get anything out of him--barring a sixpence, that is,
+or a penny!
+
+"Ah! he's a snug one, too!" And with that he launched a sharp thwack of
+the whip at the grey mare, and we went rattling on apace.
+
+At the very pretty station of Athy we parted the best of friends. "Wish
+you safe home, your honour." The kindly railway porter, also, who had
+recommended Kavanagh's Hotel, was anxious to know how I found it, and so
+busied himself to get me a good carriage when the train came in, that I
+feel bound to exempt Athy from the judgment passed by Sir James
+Allport's committee against the "amenities of railway travelling in
+Ireland."
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Saturday, March 10._--I called by appointment to-day upon Mr.
+Brooke, the owner of the Coolgreany estate, at his counting-house in
+Gardiner's Row. It is one of the spacious old last-century houses of
+Dublin; the counting-room is installed with dark, old-fashioned mahogany
+fittings, in what once was, and might easily again be made, a
+drawing-room. Pictures hang on the walls, and the atmosphere of the
+whole place is one of courtesy and culture rather than of mere modern
+commerce. One of the portraits here is that of Mr. Brooke's
+granduncle--a handsome, full-blooded, rather testy-looking old warrior,
+in the close-fitting scarlet uniform of the Prince Regent's time.
+
+"He ought to have been called Lord Baltimore," said Mr. Brooke
+good-naturedly; "for he fought against your people for that city at
+Bladensburg with Ross."
+
+"That was the battle," I said, "in which, according to a popular
+tradition in my country, the Americans took so little interest that they
+left the field almost as soon as it began."
+
+Another portrait is of a kinsman who was murdered in the highway here in
+Ireland many years ago, under peculiarly atrocious circumstances, and
+with no sort of provocation or excuse.
+
+Mr. Brooke confirmed Dr. Dillon's statement that he had ordered out of
+his counting-house two tenants who came into it with a peculiarly brazen
+proposition, of which I must presume Dr. Dillon was ignorant when he
+cited the fact as a count against the landlord of Coolgreany. I give the
+story as Mr Brooke tells it. "The Rent Audit," he says, "at which my
+tenants were idiots enough to join the Plan of Campaign occurred about
+the 12th December 1886, when, as you know, I refused to accept the terms
+which they proposed to me. I heard nothing more from them till about the
+middle of February 1887, when coming to my office one day I found two
+tenants waiting for me. One was Stephen Maher, a mountain man, and the
+other Patrick Kehoe. 'What do you want?' I asked. Whereupon they both
+arose, and Pat Kehoe pointed to Maher. Maher fumbled at his clothes, and
+rubbed himself softly for a bit, and then produced a scrap of paper.
+'It's a bit of paper from the tenants, sir,' he said. A queer bit of
+paper it was to look at--ruled paper, with a composition written upon it
+which might have been the work of a village schoolmaster. It was neither
+signed nor addressed! The pith of it was in these words,--'in
+consequence of the manner in which we have been harassed, our cattle
+driven throughout the country, and our crops not sown, we shall be
+unable to pay the half-year's rent due in March, in addition to the
+reduction already claimed!' I own I rather lost my temper at this!
+Remember I had already plainly refused to give 'the reduction already
+claimed,' and had told them not once, but twenty times, that I would
+never surrender to the 'Plan of Campaign'! I am afraid my language was
+Pagan rather than Parliamentary--but I told them plainly, at least, that
+if they did not break from the Plan of Campaign, and pay their debts,
+they might be sure I would turn the whole of them out! I gave them back
+their precious bit of paper and sent them packing.
+
+"One of them, I have told you, was a mountain man, Stephen Maher. He is
+commonly known among the people as 'the old fox of the mountain,' and he
+is very proud of it!
+
+"This old Stephen Maher," said Mr. Brooke, "is renowned in connection
+with a trial for murder, at which he was summoned as a witness. When he
+was cross-examined by Mr. Molloy, Q.C., he fenced and dodged about with
+that distinguished counsellor for a long time, until getting vexed by
+the lawyer's persistency, he exclaimed, 'Now thin, Mr. Molloy, I'd have
+ye to know that I had a cliverer man nor iver you was, Mr. Molloy, at
+me, and I had to shtan' up to him for three hours before the Crowner,
+an' he was onable to git the throoth out of me, so he was! so he was!'"
+
+
+Neither did Dr. Dillon mention the fact that one of the demands made of
+Captain Hamilton, Mr. Brooke's agent, in December 1886, was that a
+Protestant tenant named Webster should be evicted by Mr. Brooke from a
+farm for which he had paid his rent, to make room for the return thither
+of a Roman Catholic tenant named Lenahan, previously evicted for
+non-payment of his rent.
+
+When Mr. Brooke's grandfather bought the Coolgreany property in 1864, he
+adopted a system of betterments, which has been ever since kept up on
+the estate. Nearly every tenant's house on the property has been slated,
+and otherwise repaired by the landlord, nor has one penny ever been
+added on that account to the rents.
+
+In the village of Coolgreany all the houses on one side of the main
+street were built in this way by the landlord, and the same thing was
+done in the village of Croghan, where twenty tenants have a grazing
+right of three sheep for every acre held on the Croghan Mountain,
+pronounced by the valuers of the Land Court to be one of the best
+grazing mountains in Ireland.
+
+Captain Hamilton became the agent of the property in 1879, on the death
+of Mr. Vesey. One of his earliest acts was to advise Mr. Brooke to grant
+an abatement of 25 per cent. in June 1881, while the Land Act was
+passing. At the same time, he cautioned the tenants that this was only a
+temporary reduction, and advised them to get judicial rents fixed.
+
+The League advised them not to do this, but to demand 25 per cent.
+reduction again in December 1881. This demand was rejected, and forty
+writs were issued. The tenants thereupon in January 1882 came in and
+paid the full rent, with the costs.
+
+Eleven tenants after this went into Court, and in 1883 the
+Sub-Commissioners cut down their rents. In five cases Mr. Brooke
+appealed. What was the result before the Chief Commissioner? The rent of
+Mary Green, which had been £43, and had been cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners to £39, was restored to £43; the rent of Mr. Kavanagh,
+cut down from £57 to £52, was restored to £55; the rent of Pat Kehoe
+(one of the two tenants "ejected" from Mr. Brooke's office as already
+stated), cut down from £81 to £70, was restored to £81; the rent of
+Graham, cut down from £38 to £32, 10s., was restored to £38. Other
+reductions were maintained.
+
+This appears to be the record of "rack-renting" on the Coolgreany
+property.
+
+There are 114 tenants, of whom 15 hold under judicial rents; 22 are
+leaseholders, and 77 are non-judicial yearly tenants. There are 12
+Protestants holding in all a little more than 1200 acres. All the rest
+are Catholics, 14 of these being cottier tenants. The estate consists of
+5165 acres. The average is about £24, and the average rental about £26,
+10s. The gross rental is £2614, of which £1000 go to the jointure of Mr.
+Brooke's mother, and £800 are absorbed by the tithe charges, half
+poor-rates and other taxes. During the year 1886, in which this war was
+declared against him, Mr. Brooke spent £714 in improvements upon the
+property: so in that year his income from Coolgreany was practically
+_nil_.
+
+What in these circumstances would have been the position of this
+landlord had he not possessed ample means not invested in this
+particular estate? And what has been the result to the tenants of this
+conflict into which it seems clear that they were led, less to protect
+any direct interest of their own than to jeopardise their homes and
+their livelihood for the promotion of a general agrarian agitation? It
+is not clear that they are absolutely so far out of pocket, for I find
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Inch and Gorey rose from
+£3699, 5s. 4d. in 1880 to £5308, 13s. in 1887, showing an increase of
+£1609, 7s. 8d. But they are out of house and home and work, entered
+pupils in that school of idleness and iniquity which has been kept by
+one Preceptor from the beginning of time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.[25]
+
+
+* * * *--Mrs. Kavanagh was quite right when she told me at Borris in
+March that this country should be seen in June! The drive to this lovely
+place this morning was one long enchantment of verdure and hawthorn
+blossoms and fragrance.
+
+I came over from London to bring to a head some inquiries which have too
+long delayed the publication of this diary. My intention had been to go
+directly to Thurles, but a telegram which I received from the Archbishop
+of Cashel just before I left telling me that he could not be at home for
+the last three days of the week, I came directly here. Nothing can be
+more utterly unlike the popular notions of Ireland and of Irish life
+than the aspect of this most smiling and beautiful region: nothing more
+thoroughly Irish than its people.
+
+* * * who is one of the most active and energetic of Irish landlords,
+lives part of the year abroad, but keeps up his Irish property with
+care, at the expense, I suspect, of his estates elsewhere.
+
+From a noble avenue of trees, making the highway like the main road of a
+private park, we turned into a literal paradise of gardens. The air was
+balmy with their wealth of odours. "Oh! yes, sir," said the coachman,
+with an air of sympathetic pride, "our lady is just the greatest lady in
+all this land for flowers!"
+
+And for ivy, he might have added. We drove between green walls of ivy up
+to a house which seemed itself to be built of ivy, like that wonderful
+old mansion of Castle Leod in Scotland. Here, plainly, is another centre
+of "sweetness and light," the abolition of which must make, not this
+region alone, but Ireland poorer in that precise form of wealth, which,
+as Laboulaye has shown in one of the best of his lectures, is absolutely
+identical with civilisation. It is such places as this, which, in the
+interest of the people, justify the exemption from redistribution and
+resettlement, made in one of a series of remarkable articles on Ireland
+recently published in the _Birmingham Post_, of lands, the "breaking up
+of which would interfere with the amenity of a residence."
+
+* * * relations with all classes of the people here are so cordial and
+straightforward that he has been easily able to give me to-day, what I
+have sought in vain elsewhere in Ireland, an opportunity of conversing
+frankly and freely with several labouring men. For obvious reasons these
+men, as a rule, shrink from any expression of their real feelings. Their
+position is apparently one of absolute dependence either upon the
+farmers or the landlords, there being no other local market for their
+labour, which is their only stock-in-trade. As one of them said to me
+to-day, "The farmers will work a man just as long as they can't help it,
+and then they throw him away."
+
+I asked if there were no regular farm-labourers hired at fixed rates by
+the year?
+
+"Oh! very few--less now than ever; and there'll be fewer before there'll
+be more. The farmers don't want to pay the labourers or to pay the
+landlords; they want the land and the work for nothing, sir,--they do
+indeed!"
+
+"What does a farm-hand get," I asked, "if he is hired for a long time?"
+
+"Well, permanent men, they'll get 6s. a week with breakfast and dinner,
+or 7s. maybe, with one meal; and a servant-boy, sir, he'll get 2s. a
+week or may be 3s. with his board; but it's seldom he gets it."
+
+"And what has he for his board?"
+
+"Oh, stirabout; and then twice a week coorse Russian or American meat,
+what they call the 'kitchen,' and they like it better than good meat,
+sir, because it feeds the pot more."
+
+By this I found he meant that the "coorse meat" gave out more
+"unctuosity" in the boiling--the meat being always served up boiled in a
+pot with vegetables, like the "bacon and greens" of the "crackers" in
+the South.
+
+"And nothing else?"
+
+"Yes; buttermilk and potatoes."
+
+"And these wages are the highest?"
+
+"Oh, I know a boy got 5s., but by living in his father's house, and
+working out it was he got it. And then they go over to England to work."
+
+"What wages do they get there?"
+
+"Oh, it differs, but they do well; 9s. a week, I think, and their board,
+and straw to sleep on in the stables."
+
+"But doesn't it cost them a good deal to go and come?"
+
+"Oh no; they get cheap rates. They send them from Galway to Dublin like
+cattle, at £2, 5s. a car, and that makes about 1s. 6d. a head; and then
+they are taken over on the steamers very cheap. Often the graziers that
+do large business with the companies, will have a right to send over a
+number of men free; and they stowaway too; and then on the railways in
+England they get passes free often from cattle-dealers, specially when
+they are coming back, and the dealers don't want their passes. They do
+very well. They'll bring back £7 and £10. I was on a boat once, and
+there was a man; he was drunk; he was from Galway somewhere, and they
+took away and kept for him £18, all in good golden sovereigns; that was
+the most I ever saw. And he was drunk, or who'd ever have known he had
+it?"
+
+"Do the farmers build houses for the labourers?"
+
+"Build houses, is it! Glory be to God! who ever heard of such a thing?
+The farmers are a poor proud lot. They'd let a labourer die in the
+ditch!"
+
+All that this poor man said was corroborated by another man of a higher
+class, very familiar with the conditions of life and labour here, and
+indeed one of the most interesting men I have met in Ireland. Born the
+son of a labouring man, he was educated by a priest and educated
+himself, till he fitted himself for the charge of a small school, which
+he kept to such good purpose that in eighteen years he saved £1100, with
+which capital he resolved to begin life as a small farmer and
+shopkeeper. He had studied all the agricultural works he could get, and
+before he went fairly into the business, he travelled on the Continent,
+looking carefully into the methods of culture and manner of life of the
+people, especially in Italy and in Belgium. The Belgian farming gave him
+new ideas of what might be done in Ireland, and those ideas he has put
+into practice, with the best results.
+
+"On the same land with my neighbours," he said, "I double their
+production. Where they get two tons of hay I get four or four and a
+half, where they get forty-five barrels of potatoes I get a hundred.
+Only the other day I got £20 for a bullock I had taken pains with to
+fatten him up scientifically. Of course I had a small capital to start
+with: but where did I get that? Not from the Government. I earned and
+saved it myself; and then I wasn't above learning how best to use it."
+
+He thinks the people here--though by no means what they might be with
+more thrift and knowledge--much better off than the same class in many
+other parts of Ireland. There are no "Gombeen men" here, he says, and no
+usurious shopkeepers. "The people back each other in a friendly way when
+they need help." Many of the labourers, he says, are in debt to him, but
+he never presses them, and they are very patient with each other. They
+would do much better if any pains were taken to teach them. It is his
+belief that agricultural schools and model farms would do more than
+almost any measure that could be devised for bringing up the standard of
+comfort and prosperity here, and making the country quiet.
+
+It is the opinion of this man that the people of this place have been
+led to regard the Papal Decree as a kind of attack on their liberties,
+and that they are quite as likely to resist as to obey it. For his own
+part, he thinks Ireland ought to have her own parliament, and make her
+own laws. He is not satisfied with the laws actually made, though he
+admits they are better than the older laws were. "The tenants get their
+own improvements now," he said, "and in old times the more a man
+improved the worse it was for him, the agent all the while putting up
+the rents."
+
+But he does not want Irish independence. "The people that talk that
+way," he said, "have never travelled. They don't see how idle it is for
+Ireland to talk about supporting herself. She just can't do it."
+
+Not less interesting was my talk to-day with quite a different person.
+This was a keen-eyed, hawk-billed, wiry veteran of the '48. As a youth
+he had been out with "Meagher of the Sword," and his eyes glowed when he
+found that I had known that champion of Erin. "I was out at Ballinagar,"
+he said; "there were five hundred men with guns, and five hundred
+pikemen." It struck me he would like to be going "out" again in the same
+fashion, but he had little respect for the "Nationalists."
+
+"There's too many lawyers among them," he said, "too many lawyers and
+too many dealers. The lawyers are doing well, thanks to the League. Oh
+yes!" with a knowing chuckle, and a light of mischief in his eye; "the
+lawyers are doing very well! There's one little bit of a solicitor not
+far from here was of no good at all four years ago, and now they tell me
+he's made four thousand pounds in three years' time, good money, and got
+it all in hand! And there's another, I hear, has made six thousand. The
+lawyers that call themselves Nationalists, they just keep mischief
+agoing to further themselves. What do they care for the labourers? Why,
+no more than the farmers do--and what would become of the poor men! * *
+* * here, he is making * * * * * * * and he keeps more poor men going
+than all the lawyers and all the farmers in the place a good part of the
+year."
+
+"Are the labourers," I asked, "Nationalists?"
+
+"They don't know what they are," he answered. "They hate the farmers,
+but they love Ireland, and they all stand together for the counthry!"
+
+"How is it with the Plan of Campaign and the Boycotting?"
+
+"Now what use have the labourers got for the Plan of Campaign? No more
+than for the moon! And for the Boycotting, I never liked it--but I was
+never afraid of it--and there's not been much of it here."
+
+"Will the Papal Decree put a stop to what there is of it?"
+
+"I wouldn't mind the Pope's Decree no more than that door!" he exclaimed
+indignantly. "Hasn't he enough, sure, to mind in Rome? Why didn't he
+defend his own country, not bothering about Ireland!"
+
+"Are you not a Catholic, then?" I asked.
+
+"Oh yes, I'm a Catholic, but I wouldn't mind the Decree. Only remember,"
+he added, after a pause, "just this: it don't trouble me, for I've
+nothing to do with the Plan of Campaign--only I don't want the Pope to
+be meddlin' in matters that don't concern him."
+
+"It's out of respect, then, for the Pope that you wouldn't mind the
+Decree?"
+
+"Just that, intirely! It was some of them Englishmen wheedled it out of
+him, you may be sure, sir."
+
+"I am told you went out to America once."
+
+"Yes, I went there in '48, and I came back in '51."
+
+"What made you go?" I asked.
+
+"Is it what made me go?" he replied, with a sudden fierceness in his
+voice. "It was the evictions made me go; that we was put out of the good
+holding my father had, and his father before him; and I can never
+forgive it, never! But I came back; and it was * * * father that was the
+good man to me and to mine, else where would I be?"
+
+I afterwards learned from * * * * that the evictions of which the old
+man spoke with so much bitterness were made in carrying out important
+improvements, and that it was quite true that his father had greatly
+befriended the emigrant when he got enough of the New World and came
+home.
+
+It was curious to see the old grudge fresh and fierce in the old man's
+heart, but side by side with it the lion lying down with the lamb--a
+warm and genuine recognition of the kindness and help bestowed on
+himself. His resentment against the landlord's action in one generation
+did not in the least interfere with his recognition of the landlord's
+usefulness and liberality in the next generation.
+
+"You didn't like America?" I said. "Where did you live there?"
+
+"I lived at North Brookfield in Massachusetts, a year or two," he
+replied, "with Governor Amasa Walker. Did you know him? He was a good
+man; he was fond of the people, but he thought too much of the nagurs."
+
+"Yes," I answered; "I know all about him, and he was, as you say, a very
+good man, even if he was an abolitionist. But why didn't you stay in
+North Brookfield?"
+
+"Oh, it was a poor country indeed! A blast of wind would blow all the
+ground away there was! It does no good to the people, going to America,"
+he said; "they come back worse than they went!"
+
+He is at work now in some quarries here.
+
+"The quarrymen get six shillings a week," he said, "with bread and tea
+and butter and meat three times a week. With nine shillings a week and
+board, a man'll make himself bigger than * * *!"
+
+"Was the country quiet now?"
+
+"This country here? Oh! it's very quiet; with potatoes at 3s. 6d. a
+barrel, it's a good year for the people. They're a very quiet
+people,"--in corroboration apparently of which statement he told me a
+story of a coroner's jury called to sit on the body of a man found on
+the highway shot through the head, which returned an unanimous verdict
+of "Died by the visitation of God."
+
+This country is dominated by the Rocky Hills climbing up to Cullenagh,
+which divides the Barrow valley from the Nore. We drove this afternoon
+to * a most lovely place. The mansion there is now shut up and
+dismantled, but the park and the grounds are very beautiful, with a
+beauty rather enhanced than diminished by the somewhat unkempt
+luxuriance of the vegetation. We passed a now well-grown tree planted by
+the Prince of Wales * * * * * * and drove over many miles of excellent
+road made by * * * * * * * * employs * * * * * * * * regularly, * * *
+men as labourers, cartmen and masons, to whom he pays out annually the
+sum of * * Mr. * * who, by the way, rather resented my asking him if he
+came of one of the Cromwellian English families so numerous here, and
+informed me that his people came over with Strongbow--assures me that
+but for these works of * * * * these men under him would be literally
+without occupation. In addition to these there are about a dozen more
+men employed * * as gamekeepers and plantation-men. At the * * places
+belonging to * * * * * * * * * * above eighty men find constant
+employment, and receive regular wages amounting to over £4000. Were * *
+* * dispossessed or driven out of Ireland, all this outlay would come to
+an end, and with what result to these working-men? As things now are,
+while * * * working-men receive a regular wage of five shillings, the
+same men, as farmers' labourers, would receive, now and then, five
+shillings a week, and that without food! I saw enough in the course of
+our afternoon's drive to satisfy me that my informant of the morning had
+probably not overstated matters when he told me that for at least
+seventy per cent. of the work done by the labourers here, from November
+to May, they have to look to the landlords. On the property of * * as
+well as on the neighbouring properties * * * * * * * the houses have
+been generally put up by the landlords. We called in the course of the
+afternoon upon a labouring man who lives with his wife in a very neat,
+cozy, and quite new house, built recently for him by * *. These good
+people have been living on this property for now nearly half a century.
+Their new house having been built for them, * * has had an agreement
+prepared, under which it may be secured to them. The terms have all been
+discussed and found satisfactory, but the old labourer now hesitates
+about signing the agreement. He gives, and can be got to give, no reason
+for this; but when we drove up he came out to greet us in the most
+friendly manner. We went in and found his wife, a shrewd, sharp-eyed,
+little old dame, with whom * * * * fell into a confabulation, while I
+went into the next room with the labourer himself. The house was neatly
+furnished--with little ornaments and photographs on the mantel-shelf,
+and nothing of the happy-go-lucky look so common about the houses of the
+working people in Ireland, as well as about the houses of the lesser
+squires.
+
+I paid him a compliment on the appearance of his house and grounds.
+"Yes, sir!" he answered: "it's a very good place it is, and * * * * has
+built it just to please us."
+
+"But I am told you want to leave it?"
+
+"Ah, no, that is not so, sir, indeed at all! We've three children you
+see, sir, in America--two girls and a boy we have."
+
+"And where are they?"
+
+"Ah, the girls they're not in any factory at all. They're like leddies,
+living out in a place they call * * in Massachusetts; and the lad, he
+was on a farm there. But we don't know where he is nor his sisters any
+more just now. And the wife, she thinks she would like to go out to
+America and see the children."
+
+"Do you hear from them regularly?"
+
+"Well, it's only a few pounds they send, but they're doing very well.
+Domestics they are, quite like leddies; there's their pictures on the
+shelf."
+
+"But what would you do there?"
+
+"Ah! we'd have lodgings, the wife says, sir. But I like the ould place
+myself."
+
+"I think you are quite right there," I replied. "And do you get work
+here from the farmers as the labourers do in my country?"
+
+"Work from the farmers, sir?" he answered, rather sharply. "What they
+can't help we get, but no more! If the farmers in America is like them,
+it's not I would be going there! The farmers! For the farmers, a
+labourer, sir, is not of the race of Adam! They think any place good
+enough for a labourer--any place and any food! Is the farmers that way
+in America?"
+
+"Well, I don't know that they are so very much more liberal than your
+farmers are," I replied; "but I think they'd have to treat you as being
+of the race of Adam! But are not the farmers here, or the Guardians,
+obliged to build houses for the labourers? I thought there was an Act of
+Parliament about that?"
+
+"And so there is but what's the good of it? It's just to get the
+labourers' votes, and then they fool the labourers, just making them
+quarrel about where the cottages shall be, what they call the 'sites';
+and then there's no cottages built at all, at all. It's the lawyers, you
+see, sir, gets in with the farmers--the strongest farmers--and then they
+just make fools of the labourers as if there was no Act of Parliament at
+all."
+
+"But if the labourers want to go away, to emigrate," I said, "as you
+want to do, to America, don't the farmers, or the Government, or the
+landlords, help them to get away and make a start?"
+
+"Not a bit of it, sir," he replied; "not a bit of it. I believe,
+though," he added after a moment; "I believe they do get some help to go
+to Australia. But they're mostly no good that goes that way. The best is
+them that go for themselves, or their friends help them. But there's not
+so many going this year."
+
+When we drove away I asked * * if he had made any progress towards a
+signature of the agreement with the labourer's wife.
+
+"No; she couldn't be got to say yes or no. I asked her," said * * "what
+reason they had for imagining that after all these years I would try to
+do them an injury? She protested they never thought of such a thing; but
+she couldn't be brought to say she wished her husband to sign the paper.
+It's very odd, indeed."
+
+I couldn't help suspecting that the _materfamilias_ was at the bottom of
+it all, and that she was bent upon going out to America to participate
+in the prosperity of her two daughters, who were living "like leddies"
+at * * in Massachusetts.
+
+The incident recalled to me something which happened years ago when I
+was returning with the Storys from Rome to Boston. Our Cunarder, in the
+middle of the night, off the Irish coast, ran down and instantly sank a
+small schooner.
+
+In a wonderfully short time we had come-to, and a boat's crew had
+succeeded in picking up and bringing all the poor people on board. Among
+them was a wizened old woman, upon whom all sorts of kind attentions
+were naturally lavished by the ship's company. She could not be
+persuaded to go into a cabin after she had recovered from the shock and
+the fright of the accident, but, comforted and clothed with new and dry
+garments, she took refuge under one of the companion-ways, and there,
+sitting huddled up, with her arms about her knees, she crooned and
+moaned to herself, "I was near being in a wetter and a warmer place; I
+was near being in a wetter and a warmer place!" by the half hour
+together. We found that the poor old soul had been to Liverpool to see
+her son off on a sailing ship as an emigrant to America. So a
+subscription was soon made up to send her on our arrival to New York
+there to await her son. We had some trouble in making her understand
+what was to be done with her, but when she finally got it fairly into
+her head, gleams of mingled surprise and delight came over her withered
+face, and she finally broke out, "Oh, then, glory be to God! it's a
+mercy that I was drownded! glory be to God! and it's the proud boy
+Terence will be when he gets out to America to find his poor ould mother
+waiting for him there that he left behind him in Liverpool, and quite
+the leddy with all this good gold money in her hand, glory be to God!"
+
+On our way back to * * we passed through * * a very neat
+prosperous-looking town, which * * tells me is growing up on the heels
+of * *. * * * was one of the few places at which the "no rent"
+manifesto, issued by Mr. Parnell and his colleagues from their prison in
+Kilmainham, during the confinement of Mr. Davitt at Portland, and
+without concert with him, was taken up by a village curate and commended
+to the people. He was arrested for it by Mr. Gladstone's Government, and
+locked up for six weeks.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Saturday, June 23d._--I left * * * yesterday morning early on
+an "outside car," with one of my fellow-guests in that "bower of
+beauty," who was bent on killing a salmon somewhere in the Nore * * We
+drove through a most varied and picturesque country, viewing on the way
+the seats of Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, both finely
+situated in well-wooded parks. Mr. Stubber was formerly master of the
+Queen's County hounds, a famous pack, which, as our jarvey put it,
+"brought a power of money into the county, and made it aisy for a poor
+man." But the local agitations wore out his patience, and he put the
+pack down some years ago. Not far from his house is an astonishing
+modern "tumulus," or mound of hewn and squared stones. These it seems
+were quarried and brought here by him, with the intention of building a
+new and handsome residence. This intention he abandoned under the same
+annoyance.
+
+"They call it Mr. Stubber's Cairn," said the jarvey; "and a sorrowful
+sight it is, to think of the work it would have given the people,
+building the big house that'll never be built now, I'm thinking." If Mr.
+Stubber should become an "absentee," he can hardly, I think, be blamed
+for it.
+
+His property marches with that of Mr. Robert Staples, who comes of a
+Gloucestershire family planted in Ireland under Charles I.
+
+"Mr. Staples is farming his own lands," said our jarvey, when I
+commented on the fine appearance of some fields as we drove by; "and
+he'll be doing very well this year. Ah! he comes and goes, but he's here
+a great deal, and he looks after everything himself; that's the reason
+the fields is good."
+
+This is a property of some 1500 statute acres. Only last March the
+landlord took over from one tenant, who was in arrears of two years and
+a half and owed him some £300, a farm of 90 acres, giving the man fifty
+pounds to boot, and bidding him go in peace. I wonder whether this
+proceeding would make the landlord a "land-grabber," and expose him to
+the pains and penalties of "boycotting"?
+
+On this place, too, it seems that Mr. Staples's grandfather put up many
+houses for the tenants; a thing worth noting, as one of not a few
+instances I have come upon to show that it will not do to accept without
+examination the sweeping statements so familiar to us in America, that
+improvements have never been made by the landlord upon Irish estates.
+
+My companion had meant to put me down at the railway station of
+Attanagh, there to catch a good train to Kilkenny.
+
+But we had a capital nag, and reached Attanagh so early that we
+determined to drive on to Ballyragget.
+
+From Attanagh to Ballyragget the road ran along a plateau which
+commanded the most beautiful views of the valley of the Nore and of the
+finely wooded country beyond. Ballyragget itself is a brisk little
+market town, the American influence showing itself here, as in so many
+other places, in such trifles as the signs on the shops which describe
+them as "stores." My salmon-fishing companion put me down at the station
+and went off to the river, which flows through the town, and is here a
+swift and not inconsiderable stream.
+
+An hour in the train took me to Kilkenny, where I met by appointment
+several persons whom I had been unable to see during my previous visit
+in March.
+
+These gentlemen, experienced agents, gave me a good deal of information
+as to the effect of the present state of things upon the "_moral_" of
+the tenantry in different parts of Ireland. On one estate, for example,
+in the county of Longford, a tenant has been doing battle for the cause
+of Ireland in the following extraordinary fashion.
+
+He held certain lands at a rental of £23, 4s. Being, to use the
+picturesque language of the agent, a "little good for tenant," he fell
+into arrears, and on the 1st of May 1885 owed nearly three years' rent,
+or £63, 12s., in addition to a sum of £150 which he had borrowed of his
+amiable landlord three or four years before to enable him to work his
+farm. Of this total sum of £213, 12s. he positively refused to pay one
+penny. Proceedings were accordingly taken against him, and he was
+evicted. By this eviction his title to the tenancy was broken. The
+landlord nevertheless, for the sake of peace and quiet, offered to allow
+him to sell, to a man who wished to take the place, any interest he
+might have had in the holding, and to forgive both the arrears of the
+rent and the £150 which had been borrowed by him. The ex-tenant flatly
+refused to accept this offer, became a weekly pensioner upon the
+National League, and declared war. The landlord was forced to get a
+caretaker for the place from the Property Defence Association at a cost
+of £1 per week, to provide a house for a police protection party, and to
+defray the expenses of that party upon fuel and lights. Nor was this
+all. The landlord found himself further obliged to employ men from the
+same Property Defence Association to cut and save the hay-crop on the
+land, and when this had been done no one could be found to buy the crop.
+The crop and the lands were "boycotted." It was only in May last that a
+purchaser could be found for the hay cut and saved two years ago--this
+purchaser being himself a "boycotted" man on an adjoining property. He
+bought the hay, paying for it a price which did not quite cover one-half
+the cost of sowing it!
+
+"No one denies for a moment," said the agent, "that the tenant in all
+this business has been more than fairly, even generously, treated by the
+estate; yet no one seems to think it anything but natural and reasonable
+that he should demand, as he now demands, to be put back into the
+possession of his forfeited tenancy at a certain rent fixed by himself,"
+which he will obligingly agree to pay, "provided that the hay cut and
+saved on the property two years ago is accounted for to him by the
+estate!"
+
+In another case an agent, Mr. Ivough, had to deal with a body of five
+hundred tenants on a considerable estate. Of these tenants, two hundred
+settled their rents with the landlord before the passing of the Land Act
+of 1881, and valuations made by the landlord's valuer, with their full
+assent. There was no business for the lawyers, so far as they were
+concerned, and no compulsion of any sort was put on them. Among them was
+a man who had married the daughter of an old tenant on the estate, and
+so came into a holding of 12 Irish, or more than 20 statute, acres, at a
+rental of £18 a year. The valuer reduced this to £14, 10s., which
+satisfied the tenant, and as the agent agreed to make this reduced
+valuation retroactive, all went as smoothly as possible for two years,
+when the tenant began to fall into arrears. When the Sub-Commissioners,
+between 1885 and 1887, took to making sweeping reductions, the tenants
+who had settled freely under the recent valuation grumbled bitterly. As
+one of them tersely put it to the agent, "We were a parcel of bloody
+fools, and you ought to have told us these Sub-Commissioners were
+coming!" Mr. Sweeney, the tenant by marriage already mentioned, was not
+content to express his particular dissatisfaction in idle words, but
+kept on going into arrears. In May 1888 things came to a crisis. The
+agent refused to accept a settlement which included the payment by him
+of the costs of the proceedings forced upon him by his tenant. "You have
+had a good holding," said the agent, "with plenty of water and good
+land. In this current year two acres of your wheat will pay the whole
+rent. You have broken up and sold bit by bit a mill that was on the
+place; and above all, when Mr. Gladstone made us accept the judicial
+rents, he told us we might be sure, if we did this, of punctual payment.
+That was the one consideration held out to us. And we are entitled to
+that!"
+
+The tenant being out of his holding, the agent wishes to put another
+tenant into it. But the holding is "boycotted." Several tenants are
+anxious for it, and would gladly take it, but they dare not The great
+evicted will neither sell any tenant-right he may have, nor pay his
+arrears and costs, nor give up the place to another tenant. To put
+Property Defence men on the holding would cost the landlord £2, 10s. a
+week, and do him no great good, as the evicted man "holds the fort,"
+being established in a house which he occupies on an adjoining property,
+and for which presumably he pays his rent. It seems as if Mr. Sweeney
+were inspired by the example of another tenant, named Barry, who, before
+the passing of the Land Act of 1881, gave up freely a holding of 20
+acres, on a property managed by Mr. Kough; but as he was on such good
+terms with the agent that he could borrow money of him, he begged the
+agent to let him retain at a low rent a piece of this surrendered land
+directly adjoining his house. He asked this in the name of his eight or
+nine children, and it was granted him. The agent afterwards found that
+the piece of land in question was by far the best of the surrendered
+holding. But that is a mere detail. This ingenious tenant Barry, living
+now on another estate just outside the grasp of the agent, has
+systematically "boycotted" for the last nine years the land which he
+gave up, feeding his own cattle upon it freely meanwhile, and keeping
+all would-be tenants at a distance! "He is now," said the agent, "quite
+a wealthy man in his way, jobbing cattle at all the great markets!"
+
+"When the eviction of Sweeney took place," said the agent, "I was
+present in person, as I thought I ought to be, and the result is that I
+have been held up to the execration of mankind as a monster for putting
+out a child in a cradle into a storm. As a matter of fact," he said,
+"there was a cradle in the way, which the sheriff-Officer gently took
+up, and by direction of the tenant's wife removed. I made no remark
+about it at all, but a local paper published a lying story, which the
+publisher had to retract, that I had said 'Throw out the child!'"
+
+"Two priests," he said, "came quite uninvited and certainly without
+provocation, to see me, and one of them shouted out, 'Ah! we know you'll
+be making another Coolgreany,' which was as much as to say there 'would
+be bloodshed.' This was the more intolerable," he added, "that, as I
+afterwards found, I had already done for the sake of the tenants
+precisely what these ecclesiastics professed that they had come to ask
+me to do!
+
+"For thirty years," said this gentleman, "I have lived in the midst of
+these people--and in all that time I have never had so much as a
+threatening letter. But after this story was published of my throwing
+out a cradle with a child in it, I was insulted in the street by a woman
+whom I had never seen before. Two girls, too, called out at the
+eviction, 'You've bad pluck; why didn't you tell us you were coming down
+the day?' and another woman made me laugh by crying after me, 'You've
+two good-looking daughters, but you're a bad man yourself.'"
+
+Quite as instructive is the story given me on this occasion of the
+Tyaquin estate in the county of Galway. This estate is managed by an
+agent, Mr. Eichardson of Castle Coiner, in this county of Kilkenny.
+
+The rents on this Galway estate, as Mr. Richardson assures me, have been
+unaltered for between thirty and forty years, and some of them for even
+a longer period. For the last twenty-five years certainty, during which
+Mr. Richardson has been the agent of the estate, and probably, he
+thinks, for many years previous, there has never been a case of the
+non-payment of rent, except in recent years when rents were withheld for
+a time for political reasons.
+
+Large sums of money have been laid out in various useful improvements.
+Constant occupation was given to those requiring it, until the agrarian
+agitation became fully developed. On the demesne and the home farms the
+best systems of reclaiming waste lands and the best systems of
+agriculture were practically exhibited, so that the estate was an
+agricultural free school for all who cared to learn.
+
+When the Land Act of 1881 was passed, almost all the tenants applied,
+and had judicial rents fixed, many of them by consent of the agent.
+
+In 1887 the tenants were called on as usual to pay these judicial rents.
+A large minority refused to do so except on certain terms, which were
+refused. The dispute continued for many months, but as the charges on
+the estate had to be met, the agent was obliged to give way, and allow
+an abatement of four shillings in the pound on these judicial rents.
+Some of these charges, to meet which the agent gave way, were for money
+borrowed from the Commissioners of Public Works to _improve the holdings
+of the tenants_. For these improvements thus thrown entirely upon the
+funds of the estate no increase of rent or charge of any kind had been
+laid upon the tenants.
+
+When a settlement was agreed on, those of the tenants who had adopted
+the Plan came in a body to pay their rents on 3d January 1888. They
+stated that they were unable to pay more than the rent due up to
+November 1886, and that they would never have adopted the Plan had they
+not been driven into it by _sheer distress_. After which they handed Mr.
+Richardson a cheque drawn by John T. Dillon, Esq., M.P., for the amount
+banked with the National League.
+
+An article appeared shortly afterwards in a League newspaper, loudly
+boasting of the great victory won by Mr. Dillon, M.P., for the starving
+and poverty-stricken tenants. Two of these tenants (brothers) were under
+a yearly rent of £7, 10s. They declared they could only pay £3, 15s., or
+a half-year's rent, and this only if they got an abatement of 15s. Yet
+these same tenants were then paying Mr. Richardson £50 a year for a
+grass farm, and about £12 for meadows, as well as £30 a year more for a
+grass farm to an adjoining landlord.
+
+Another tenant who held a farm at £13, 5s. a year declared he could only
+pay £6, 12s. 6d., or a half-year's rent, if he got an abatement of £1,
+6s. 6d. A very short time before, this tenant had taken a grass farm
+from an adjoining landlord, and he was so anxious to get it that he
+showed the landlord a bundle of large notes, amounting to rather more
+than £300 sterling, in order to prove his solvency! The same tenant has
+since written a letter to Mr. Richardson offering £50 a year for a grass
+farm!
+
+All these campaigners, Mr. Richardson says, "with one noble exception,
+the wife of a tenant who was ill, declined to pay a penny of rent beyond
+November 1st, 1886," stating that they were "absolutely unable" to do
+more. So they all left the May 1887 rent unpaid, and the hanging gale to
+November 1887, which, however, they were not even asked to pay.
+
+The morning after the settlement many of the tenants who, when they were
+all present in a body on the previous evening, had declared their
+"inability" to pay the half-year's rent due down to May 1887,
+individually came to Mr. Richardson unasked, and paid it, some saying
+they had "borrowed the money that night," but others frankly declaring
+that they dared not break the rule publicly, having been ordered by the
+League only to pay to November 1886, for fear of the consequences. These
+would have been injury to their cattle, or the burning of their hay, or
+possibly murder.
+
+Of the country about Kilkenny, I am told, as of the country about
+Carlow, that nearly or quite seventy per cent, of the labourers are
+dependent upon the landlords from November to May for such employment as
+they get.
+
+The shopkeepers, too, are in a bad way, being in many cases reduced to
+the condition of mere agents of the great wholesale houses elsewhere,
+and kept going by these houses mainly in the hope of recovering old
+debts. There is a severe pressure of usury, too, upon the farmers. "If a
+farmer," said one resident to me, "wants to borrow a small sum of the
+Loan Fund Bank, he must have two securities--one of them a substantial
+man good for the debt. These two indorsers must be 'treated' by the
+borrower whom they back; and he must pay them a weekly sum for the
+countenance they have given him, which not seldom amounts, before he
+gets through with the matter, to a hundred per cent, on the original
+loan."
+
+I am assured too that the consumption of spirits all through this region
+has greatly increased of late years. "The official reports will show
+you," said one gentleman, "that the annual outlay upon whisky in Ireland
+equals the sum saved to the tenants by the reductions in rent." This is
+a proposition so remarkable that I simply record it for future
+verification, as having been made by a very quiet, cool, and methodical
+person, whose information on other points I have found to be correct. He
+tells me too, as of his own knowledge, that in going over some financial
+matters with a small farmer in his neighbourhood, he ascertained, beyond
+a peradventure, that this farmer annually spent in whisky, for the use
+of his family, consisting of himself, his wife and three adult children,
+nearly, or quite, _seventy pounds a year_! "You won't believe this," he
+said to me; "and if you print the statement nobody else will believe it;
+but for all that it is the simple unexaggerated truth."
+
+Falstaff's reckoning at Dame Quickly's becomes a moderate score in
+comparison with this!
+
+I spent half an hour again in the muniment-room at Kilkenny Castle,
+where, in the Expense-Book of the second Duke of Ormond, I found a
+supper _menu_ worthy of record, as illustrating what people meant by
+"keeping open house" in the great families of the time of Queen
+Anne.[Note L.]
+
+Taking a train early in the afternoon, I came on here in time to dine
+last night with Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, an uncompromising Protestant
+"Home Ruler"--as Protestant and as uncompromising as John Mitchel--whose
+recent pamphlet on "Boycotting" has deservedly attracted so much
+attention on both sides of the Irish Sea.
+
+I was first led into a correspondence with Mr. Rolleston by a remarkable
+article of his published in the _Dublin University Review_ for February
+1886, on "The Archbishop in Politics." In that article, Mr. Rolleston,
+while avowing himself to be robust enough to digest without much
+difficulty the _ex officio_ franchise conferred upon the Catholic clergy
+by Mr. Parnell to secure the acceptance of his candidates at
+Parliamentary conventions, made a very firm and fearless protest against
+the attempt of the Archbishops of Dublin and Cashel to "boycott"
+Catholic criticism of the National League and its methods, by declaring
+such criticism to be "a public insult" offered, not to the Archbishops
+of Cashel and Dublin personally, or as political supporters of the
+National League, but to the Archbishops as dignitaries of the Catholic
+Church, and to their Archiepiscopal office. The "boycotting," by
+clerical machinery, of independent lay opinion in civil matters, is to
+the body politic of a Catholic country what the germ of cancer is to the
+physical body. And though Mr. Rolleston, in this article, avowed himself
+to be a hearty supporter of the "political programme of the National
+League," and went so far even as to maintain that the social boycotting,
+"which makes the League technically an illegal conspiracy against law
+and individual liberty," might be "in many cases justified by the
+magnitude of the legalised crime against which it was directed," it was
+obvious to me that he could not long remain blind to the true drift of
+things in an organisation condemned, by the conditions it has created
+for itself, to deal with the thinkers of Ireland as it deals with the
+tenants of Ireland. His recent pamphlet on "Boycotting" proves that I
+was right. What he said to me the other day in a letter about the
+pamphlet may be said as truly of the article. It was "a shaft sunk into
+the obscure depths of Irish opinion, to bring to light and turn to
+service whatever there may be in those depths of sound and healthy;" and
+one of my special objects in this present visit to Ireland was to get a
+personal touch of the intellectual movement which is throwing such
+thinkers as Mr. Rolleston to the front.
+
+We were five at table, Mr. Rolleston's other guests being Mr. John
+O'Leary, whose name is held in honour for his courage and honesty by all
+who know anything of the story of Ireland in our times, and who was sent
+a quarter of a century ago as a Fenian patriot--not into seclusion with
+sherry and bitters, at Kilmainham, like Mr. Gladstone's "suspects" of
+1881--but like Michael Davitt, into the stern reality of penal
+servitude; Dr. Sigerson, Dean of the Faculty of Science of the Boyal
+University, and an authority upon the complicated question of Irish Land
+Tenures; and Mr. John F. Taylor, a leading barrister of Dublin, an ally
+on the Land Question of Mr. Davitt, and an outspoken Repealer of the
+Union of 1800.
+
+I have long wished to meet Mr. O'Leary, who sent me, through a
+correspondent of mine, two years ago, one of the most thoughtful and
+well-considered papers I have ever read on the possibilities and
+impossibilities of Home Rule for Ireland; and it was a great pleasure to
+find in the man the elevation of tone, the breadth of view, and the
+refined philosophic perception of the strong and weak points in the
+Irish case, which had charmed me in. the paper. Now that "Conservative"
+Englishmen have come to treat the main points of Chartism almost as
+commonplaces in politics, it is surely time for them to recognise the
+honesty and integrity of the spirit which revolted in the Ireland of
+1848 against the then seemingly hopeless condition of that country. Of
+that spirit Mr. O'Leary is a living, earnest, and most interesting
+incarnation. He strikes one at once as a much younger man in all that
+makes the youth of the intellect and the emotions than any Nationalist
+M.P. of half his years whom I have ever met. No Irishman living has
+dealt stronger or more open blows than he against the English dominion
+in Ireland. Born in Tipperary, where he inherited a small property in
+houses, he was sent to Trinity College in Dublin, and while a student
+there was drawn into the "Young Ireland" party mainly by the poems of
+Thomas Davis. Late in the electrical year of the "battle summer," 1848,
+he was arrested on suspicion of being concerned in a plot to rescue
+Smith O'Brien and other state prisoners. The suspicion was well founded,
+but could not be established, and after a day or two he was liberated.
+From Trinity, after this, he went to the Queen's College in Cork, where
+he took his degree, and studied medicine. When the Fenian movement
+became serious, after the close of our American Civil War, O'Leary threw
+himself into it with Stephens, Luby, and Charles Kickham. Stephens
+appointed him one of the chief organisers of the I.E.B. with Luby and
+Kickham, and he took charge of the _Irish People_--the organ of the
+Fenians of 1865. It was as a subordinate contributor to this journal
+that Sir William Harcourt's familiar Irish bogy, O'Donovan Rossa[26],
+was arrested together with his chief, Mr. O'Leary, and with Kickham in
+1865, and found guilty, with them, after a trial before Mr. Justice
+Keogh, of treason-felony. The speech then delivered by Mr. O'Leary in
+the dock made a profound impression upon the public mind in America. It
+was the speech, not of a conspirator, but of a patriot. The indignation
+with which he repelled for himself and for his associate Luby the
+charges levelled at them both, without a particle of supporting
+evidence, by the prosecuting counsel, of aiming at massacre and plunder,
+was its most salient feature. The terrible sentence passed upon him, of
+penal servitude for twenty years, Mr. O'Leary accepted with a calm
+dignity, which I am glad, for the sake of Irish manhood, to find that
+his friends here now recall with pride, when their ears are vexed by the
+shrill and clamorous complaints of more recent "patriots," under the
+comparatively trivial punishments which they invite.
+
+In 1870, Mr. O'Leary and his companions were released and pardoned on
+condition of remaining beyond the British dominions until the expiration
+of their sentences. Mr. O'Leary fixed his residence for a time in Paris,
+and thence went to America, where he and Kickham were regarded as the
+leaders of the American branch of the I. R. B. He returned to Ireland in
+1885, his term of sentence having then expired, and it was shortly after
+his return that he gave to my correspondent the letter upon Irish
+affairs to which I have already referred. He had been chosen President
+of the "Young Ireland Society" of Dublin before he returned, and in that
+capacity delivered at the Rotunda, in the Irish capital, before a vast
+crowd assembled to welcome him back, an address which showed how
+thoughtfully and calmly he had devoted himself during his long years of
+imprisonment and exile to the cause of Ireland. Mr. William O'Brien,
+M.P., and Mr. Redmond, M.P., took part in this reception, but their
+subsequent course shows that they can hardly have relished Mr. O'Leary's
+fearless and outspoken protests against the intolerance and injustice of
+the agrarian organisation which controls their action. In England, as
+well as well as in Ireland, Mr. O'Leary spoke to great multitudes of his
+countrymen, and always in the same sense. Mr. Rolleston tells me that
+Mr. O'Leary's denunciations of "the dynamite section of the Irish
+people," to use the euphemism of an American journal, "are the only ones
+ever uttered by an Irish leader, lay or clerical." The day must come, if
+it be not already close at hand, when the Irish leader of whom this can
+be truly said, must be felt by his own people to be the one man worthy
+of their trust. The thing that has been shall be, and there is nothing
+new under the sun. The Marats and the Robespierres, the Barères and the
+Collots, are the pallbearers, not the standard-bearers of liberty.
+
+Towards the National League, as at present administered on the lines of
+the agrarian agitation, Mr. O'Leary has so far preserved an attitude of
+neutrality, though he has never for a moment hesitated either in public
+or in private most vehemently to condemn such sworn Fenians as have
+accepted seats in the British Parliament, speaking his mind freely and
+firmly of them as "double-oathed men" playing a constitutional part with
+one hand, and a treasonable part with the other.
+
+Yet he is not at one with the extreme and fanatical Fenians who oppose
+constitutional agitation simply because it is constitutional. His
+objection to the existing Nationalism was exactly put, Mr. Rolleston
+tells me, by a clever writer in the Dublin _Mail_, who said that
+O'Connell having tried "moral force" and failed, and the Fenians having
+tried "physical force" and failed, the Leaguers were now trying to
+succeed by the use of "immoral force."
+
+Dr. Sigerson, who, as a man of science, must necessarily revolt from the
+coarse and clumsy methods of the blunderers who have done so much since
+1885 to discredit the cause of Ireland, evidently clings to the hope
+that something may still be saved from the visible wreck of what has
+come, even in Ireland, to be called "Parnellism," and he good-naturedly
+persisted in speaking of our host last night and of his friends as
+"mugwumps." For the "mugwumps" of my own country I have no particular
+admiration, being rather inclined, with my friend Senator Conkling (now
+gone to his rest from the racket of American politics), to regard them
+as "Madonnas who wish it to be distinctly understood that they might
+have been Magdalens." But these Irish "mugwumps" seem to me to earn
+their title by simply refusing to believe that two and two, which make
+four in France or China, can be bullied into making five in Ireland.
+"What certain 'Parnellites' object to," said one of the company, "is
+that we can't be made to go out gathering grapes of thorns or figs of
+thistles. Some of them expect to found an Irish republic on robbery, and
+to administer it by falsehood. We don't."[27] This is precisely the
+spirit in which Mr. Rolleston wrote to me not long before I left England
+this week. "I have been slowly forced," he wrote, "to the conclusion
+that the National League is a body which deserves nothing but
+reprobation from all who wish well to Ireland. It has plunged this
+country into a state of moral degradation, from which it will take us at
+least a generation to recover. It is teaching the people that no law of
+justice, of candour, of honour, or of humanity can be allowed to
+interfere with the political ends of the moment. It is, in fact,
+absolutely divorcing morality from politics. The mendacity of some of
+its leaders is shameless and sickening, and still more sickening is the
+complete indifference with which this mendacity is regarded in Ireland."
+
+
+It is the spirit, too, of a letter which I received not long ago from
+the west of Ireland, in which my correspondent quoted the bearer of one
+of the most distinguished of Irish names, and a strong "Home Ruler," as
+saying to him, "These Nationalists are stripping Irishmen as bare of
+moral sense as the Bushmen of South Africa."
+
+This very day I find in one of the leading Nationalist journals here
+letters from Mr. Davitt, Mr. O'Leary, and Mr. Taylor himself, which
+convict that journal of making last week a statement about Mr. Taylor
+absolutely untrue, and, so far as appears, absolutely without the shadow
+of a foundation. These letters throw such a curious light on passing
+events here at this moment that I shall preserve them.[28] The statement
+to which they refer was thus put in the journal which made it: "We have
+absolute reason to know that when the last Coercion Act was in full
+swing this pure-souled and disinterested patriot (Mr. John F. Taylor)
+begged for, received, and accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship
+under a Coercion Government. As was wittily said at the time, He sold
+his principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+stirred the mess." This is no assertion "upon hearsay"--no publication of
+a rumour or report. It is an assertion made, not upon belief even, but
+upon a claim of "absolute knowledge."
+
+Yet to-day, in the same journal, I find Mr. Taylor declaring this
+statement, made upon a claim of "absolute knowledge," to be "absolutely
+untrue," and appealing in support of this declaration to Mr. Walker, the
+host of Lord Riand Mr. Morley, and to The M'Dermot, Q.C., a conspicuous
+Home Ruler; to which Mr. Davitt adds: "Mr. Taylor, on my advice,
+declined the Crown Prosecutorship for King's County, a post afterwards
+applied for by, and granted to, a near relative of one of the most
+prominent members of the Irish Party,"--meaning Mr. Luke Dillon, a
+cousin of Mr. John Dillon, M.P.!
+
+We had much interesting conversation last night about the relations of
+the Irish leaders here with public and party questions in America, as to
+which I find Mr. O'Leary unusually well and accurately informed.
+
+I am sorry that I must get off to-morrow into Mayo to see Lord Lucan's
+country there, for I should have been particularly pleased to look more
+closely with Mr. Rolleston into the intellectual revolt against
+"Parnellism" and its methods, of which his attitude and that of his
+friends here is an unmistakable symptom. As he tersely puts it, he sees
+"no hope in Irish politics, except a reformation of the League, a return
+to the principles of Thomas Davis."
+
+The lines for a reformation or transformation of the League, as it now
+exists, appear to have been laid down in the original constitution of
+the body. Under that constitution, it seems, the League was meant to be
+controlled by a representative committee chosen annually, open to public
+criticism, and liable to removal by a new election. As things now are,
+the officers of this alleged democratic organisation are absolutely
+self-elected, and wield the wide and indefinite power they possess over
+the people of Ireland in a perfectly unauthorised, irresponsible way. It
+is a curious illustration of the autocratic or bureaucratic system under
+which the Irish movement is now conducted, that Mr. Davitt, who does not
+pretend to be a Parliamentarian, and owes indeed much of his authority
+to his refusal to enter Parliament and take oaths of allegiance, does
+not hesitate for a moment to discipline any Irish member of Parliament
+who incurs his disapprobation. Sir Thomas Esmonde, for example, was
+severely taken to task by him the other day in the public prints for
+venturing to put a question, in his place at Westminster, to the
+Government about a man-of-war stationed in Kingstown harbour. Mr. Davitt
+very peremptorily ordered Sir Thomas to remember that he is not sent to
+Westminster to recognise the British Government, or concern himself
+about British regiments or ships, and Sir Thomas accepts the rebuke in
+silence. Whom does such a member of Parliament represent--the
+constituents who nominally elect him, or the leader who cracks the whip
+over him so sharply?
+
+I have to-day been looking through a small and beautifully-printed
+volume of poems just issued here by Gill and Son, Nationalist
+publishers, I take it, who have the courage of their convictions, since
+their books bear the imprint of "O'Connell," and not of Sackville
+Street. This little book of the _Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland _is
+a symptom too. It is dedicated in a few brief but vigorous stanzas to
+John O'Leary, as one who
+
+ "Hated all things base,
+ And held his country's honour high."
+
+And the spirit of all the poems it contains is the spirit of '48, or of
+that earlier Ireland of Robert Emmet, celebrated in some charming verses
+by "Rose Kavanagh" on "St. Michan's Churchyard," where the
+
+ "sunbeam went and came
+ Above the stone which waits the name
+ His land must write with freedom's flame."
+
+It interests an American to find among these poems and ballads a
+striking threnody called "The Exile's Return," signed with the name of
+"Patrick Henry"; and it is noteworthy, for more reasons than one, that
+the volume winds up with a "Marching Song of the Gaelic Athletes,"
+signed "An Chraoibhin Aoibbinn." These Athletes are numbered now, I am
+assured, not by thousands, but by myriads, and their organisation covers
+all parts of Ireland. If the spirit of '48 and of '98 is really moving
+among them, I should say they are likely to be at least as troublesome
+in the end to the "uncrowned king" as to the crowned Queen of Ireland.
+
+As for the literary merit of these _Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland_,
+it strikes one key with their political quality. One exquisite ballad of
+"The Stolen Child," by W. B. Yeats, might have been sung in the
+moonlight on a sylvan lake by the spirit of Heinrich Heine.
+
+I spent an hour or two this morning most agreeably in the libraries of
+the Law Courts and of Trinity College: the latter one of the stateliest
+most academic "halls of peace" I have ever seen; and this afternoon I
+called upon Dr. Sigerson, a most patriotic Irishman, of obviously Danish
+blood, who has his own ideas as to Clontarf and Brian Boru; and who gave
+me very kindly a copy of his valuable report on that Irish Crisis of
+1879-80, out of which Michael Davitt so skilfully developed the agrarian
+movement whereof "Parnellism" down to this time has been the not very
+well adjusted instrument. The report was drawn up after a thorough
+inspection by Dr. Sigerson and his associate, Dr. Kenny, visiting
+physicians to the North Dublin Union, of some of the most distressed
+districts of Mayo, Sligo, and Galway; and a more interesting,
+intelligent, and impressive picture of the worst phases of the social
+conditions of Ireland ten years ago is not to be found. I have just been
+reading it over carefully in conjunction with my memoranda made from the
+Emigration and Seed Potato Fund Reports, which Mr. Tuke gave me some
+time ago, and it strongly reinforces the evidence imbedded in those
+reports, which goes to show that agitation for political objects in
+Ireland has perhaps done as much as all other causes put together to
+depress the condition of the poor in Ireland, by driving and keeping
+capital out of the country. The worst districts visited in 1879 by Dr.
+Sigerson and Dr. Kenny do not appear to have been so completely cut off
+from civilisation as was the region about Gweedore before the purchase
+of his property there by Lord George Hill, and the remedies suggested by
+Dr. Sigerson for the suffering in these districts are all in the
+direction of the remedies applied by Lord George Hill to the condition
+in which he found Gweedore. After giving full value to the stock
+explanations of Irish distress in the congested districts, such as
+excessive rents, penal laws, born of religious or "racial" animosity,
+and a defective system of land tenure, it seems to be clear that the
+main difficulties have arisen from the isolation of these districts, and
+from the lack of varied industries. Political agitation has checked any
+flow of capital into these districts, and a flow of capital into them
+would surely have given them better communications and more varied
+industries. Dr. Sigerson states that some of the worst of these regions
+in the west of Ireland are as well adapted to flax-culture as Ulster,
+and Napoleon III. showed what could be done for such wastes as La
+Sologne and the desert of the Landes by the intelligent study of a
+country and the judicious development of such values as are inherent in
+it. The loss of population in Ireland is not unprecedented. The State of
+New Hampshire, in America, one of the original thirteen colonies which
+established the American Union, has twice shown an actual loss in
+population during the past century. The population of the State declined
+during the decade between 1810 and 1820, and again during the decade
+between 1860 and 1870. This phenomenon, unique in American history, is
+to be explained only by three causes, all active in the case of
+congested Ireland,--a decaying agriculture, lack of communications, and
+the absence of varied industries. During the decade from 1860 to 1870
+the great Civil War was fought out. Yet, despite the terrible waste of
+life and capital in that war, especially at the South, the Northern
+State of New Hampshire, peopled by the energetic English adventurers who
+founded New England, was actually the only State which came out of the
+contest with a positive decline in population. Virginia (including West
+Virginia, which seceded from that Commonwealth in 1861) rose from
+1,596,318 inhabitants in 1860 to 1,667,177 in 1870. South Carolina,
+which was ravaged by the war more severely than any State except
+Virginia, and upon which the Republican majority at Washington pressed
+with such revengeful hostility after the downfall of the Confederacy,
+showed in 1870 a positive increase in population, as compared with 1860,
+from 703,708 to 705,606. But New Hampshire, lying hundreds of miles
+beyond the area of the conflict, showed a positive decrease from 326,073
+to 318,300. During my college days at Cambridge the mountain regions of
+New Hampshire were favourite "stamping grounds" in the vacations, and I
+exaggerate nothing when I say that in the secluded nooks and corners of
+the State, the people cut off from communication with the rest of New
+England, and scratching out of a rocky land an inadequate subsistence,
+were not much, if at all, in advance of the least prosperous dwellers in
+the most remote parts of Ireland which I have visited. They furnished
+their full contingent to that strange American exodus, which, about a
+quarter of a century ago, was led out of New England by one Adams to the
+Holy Land, in anticipation of the Second Advent, a real modern crusade
+of superstitious land speculators, there to perish, for the most part,
+miserably about Jaffa--leaving houses and allotments to pass into the
+control of a more practical colony of Teutons, which I found
+establishing itself there in 1869.
+
+Since 1870 a change has come over New Hampshire. The population has
+risen to 346,984. In places waste and fallen twenty years ago brisk and
+smiling villages have sprung up along lines of communication established
+to carry on the business of thriving factories.
+
+What reason can there be in the nature of things to prevent the
+development of analogous results, through the application of analogous
+forces, in the case of "congested" Ireland? A Nationalist friend, to
+whom I put this question this afternoon, answers it by alleging that so
+long as fiscal laws for Ireland are made at Westminster, British capital
+invested in Great Britain will prevent the application of these
+analogous forces to "congested" Ireland. His notion is that were Ireland
+as independent of Great Britain, for example, in fiscal matters as is
+Canada, Ireland might seek and secure a fiscal union with the United
+States, such as was partially secured to Canada under the Reciprocity
+Treaty denounced by Mr. Seward.
+
+"Give us this," he said, "and take us into your system of American
+free-trade as between the different States of your American Union, and
+no end of capital will soon be coming into Ireland, not only from your
+enormously rich and growing Republic, but from Great Britain too. Give
+us the American market, putting Great Britain on a less-favoured
+footing, just as Mr. Blake and his party wish to do in the case of
+Canada, and between India doing her own manufacturing on the one side,
+and Ireland becoming a manufacturing centre on the other, and a mart in
+Europe for American goods, we'll get our revenge on Elizabeth and
+Cromwell in a fashion John Bull has never dreamt of in these times,
+though he used to be in a mortal funk of it a hundred years ago, when
+there wasn't nearly as much danger of it!"
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Sunday, June 24._--"Put not your faith in porters!" I had
+expected to pass this day at Castlebar, on the estate of Lord Lucan, and
+I exchanged telegrams to that effect yesterday with Mr. Harding, the
+Earl's grandson, who, in the absence of his wonderfully energetic
+grandsire, is administering there what Lord Lucan, with pardonable
+pride, declares to be the finest and most successful dairy-farm in all
+Ireland. I asked the porter to find the earliest morning train; and
+after a careful search he assured me that by leaving Dublin just after 7
+A.M. I could reach Castlebar a little after noon.
+
+Upon this I determined to dine with Mr. Colomb, and spend the night in
+Dublin. But when I reached the station a couple of hours ago, it was to
+discover that my excellent porter had confounded 7 A.M. with 7 P.M.
+
+There is no morning train to Castlebar! So here I am with no recourse,
+my time being short, but to give up the glimpse I had promised myself of
+Mayo, and go on this afternoon to Belfast on my way back to London.
+
+At dinner last night Mr. Colomb gave me further and very interesting
+light upon the events of 1867, of which he had already spoken with me at
+Cork, as well as upon the critical period of Mr. Gladstone's experiments
+of 1881-82 at "Coercion" in Ireland.
+
+Mr. Colomb lives in a remarkably bright and pleasant suburb of Dublin,
+which not only is called a "park," as suburbs are apt to be, but really
+is a park, as suburbs are less apt to be. His house is set near some
+very fine old trees, shading a beautiful expanse of turf. He is an
+amateur artist of much more than ordinary skill. His walls are gay, and
+his portfolios filled, with charming water-colours, sketches, and
+studies made from Nature all over the United Kingdom. The grand
+coast-scenery of Cornwall and of Western Ireland, the lovely lake
+landscapes of Killarney, sylvan homes and storied towers, all have been
+laid under contribution by an eye quick to seize and a hand prompt to
+reproduce these most subtle and transient atmospheric effects of light
+and colour which are the legitimate domain of the true water-colourist.
+With all these pictures about us--and with Mr. Colomb's workshop fitted
+up with Armstrong lathes and all manner of tools wherein he varies the
+routine of official life by making all manner of instruments, and
+wreaking his ingenuity upon all kinds of inventions--and with the
+pleasant company of Mr. Davies, the agreeable and accomplished official
+secretary of Sir West Ridgway, the evening wore quickly away. In the
+course of conversation the question of the average income of the Irish
+priests arose, and I mentioned the fact that Lord Lucan, whose knowledge
+of the smallest details of Irish life is amazingly thorough, puts it
+down at about ten shillings a year per house in the average Irish
+parish.
+
+He rated Father M'Fadden and his curate of Gweedore, for example,
+without a moment's hesitation, at a thousand pounds a year in the whole,
+or very nearly the amount stated to me by Sergeant Mahony at Baron's
+Court. This brought from Mr. Davies a curious account of the proceedings
+in a recent case of a contested will before Judge Warren here in Dublin.
+The will in question was made by the late Father M'Garvey of Milford, a
+little village near Mulroy Bay in Donegal, notable chiefly as the scene
+of the murder of the late Earl of Leitrim. Father M'Garvey, who died in
+March last, left by this will to religious and charitable uses the whole
+of his property, save £800 bequeathed in it to his niece, Mrs. O'Connor.
+It was found that he died possessed not only of a farm at Ardara, but of
+cash on deposit in the Northern Bank to the very respectable amount of
+£23,711. Mrs. O'Connor contested the will. The Archbishop of Armagh, and
+Father Sheridan, C.C. of Letterkenny, instituted an action against her
+to establish the will. Father M'Fadden of Gweedore, lying in Londonderry
+jail as a first-class misdemeanant, was brought from Londonderry as a
+witness for the niece. But on the trial of the case it appeared that
+there was actually no evidence to sustain the plea of the niece that
+"undue influence" had been exerted upon her uncle by the Archbishop, who
+at the time of the making of the will was Bishop of Raphoe, or by
+anybody else; so the judge instructed the jury to find on all the issues
+for the plaintiffs, which was done. The judge declared the conduct of
+the defendant in advancing a charge of "undue influence" in such
+circumstances against ecclesiastics to be most reprehensible; but the
+Archbishop very graciously intimated through his lawyer his intention of
+paying the costs of the niece who had given him all this trouble,
+because she was a poor woman who had been led into her course by
+disappointment at receiving so small a part of so large an inheritance.
+Had the priest's property come to him in any other way than through his
+office as a priest her claim might have been more worthy of
+consideration, but Mr. M'Dermot, Q.C., who represented the Archbishop,
+took pains to make it clear that as an ecclesiastic his client, who had
+nothing to do with the making of the will, was bound to regard it "as
+proper and in accordance with the fitness of things that what had been
+received from the poor should be given back to the poor."
+
+I see no adequate answer to this contention of the Archbishop. But it
+certainly goes to confirm the estimates given me by Sergeant Mahony of
+Father M'Fadden's receipts at Gweedore, and the opinion expressed to me
+by Lord Lucan as to the average returns of an average Catholic parish,
+that the priest of Milford, a place hardly so considerable as Gweedore,
+should have acquired so handsome a property in the exercise there of his
+parochial functions.
+
+One form in which the priests in many parts of Ireland collect dues is
+certainly unknown to the practice of the Church elsewhere, I believe,
+and it must tend to swell the incomes of the priests at the expense,
+perhaps, of their legitimate influence. This is the custom of personal
+collections by the priests. In many parishes the priest stands by the
+church-door, or walks about the church--not with a bag in his hand, as
+is sometimes done in France on great occasions when a _quéle_ is made by
+the _curé_ for some special object,--but with an open plate in which the
+people put their offerings. I have heard of parishes in which the priest
+sits by a table near the church-door, takes the offerings from the
+parishioners as they pass, and comments freely upon the ratio of the
+gift to the known or presumed financial ability of the giver.
+
+We had some curious stories, too, from a gentleman present of the
+relation of the priests in wild, out-of-the-way corners of Ireland to
+the people, stories which take one back to days long before Lever. One,
+for example, of a delightful and stalwart old parish priest of eighty,
+upon whom an airy young patriot called to propose that he should accept
+the presidency of a local Land League. The veteran, whose only idea of
+the Land League was that it had used bad language about Cardinal Cullen,
+no sooner caught the drift of the youth than he snatched up a huge
+blackthorn, fell upon him, and "boycotted" him head-foremost out of a
+window. Luckily it was on the ground floor.
+
+Another strenuous spiritual shepherd came down during the distribution
+of potato-seed to the little port in which it was going on, and took up
+his station on board of the distributing ship. One of his parishioners,
+having received his due quota, made his way back again unobserved on
+board of the ship. As he came up to receive a second dole, the good
+father spied him, and staying not "to parley or dissemble," simply
+fetched him a whack over the sconce with a stick, which tumbled him out
+of the ship, head-foremost, into the hooker riding beside her! Quite of
+another drift was a much more astonishing tale of certain proceedings
+had here in February last before the Lord Chief-Justice. These took
+place in connection with a motion to quash the verdict of a coroner's
+jury, held in August 1887, on the body of a child named Ellen Gaffney,
+at Philipstown, in King's County, which preserves the memory of the
+Spanish sovereign of England, as Maryborough in Queen's preserves the
+memory of his Tudor consort. Cervantes never imagined an Alcalde of the
+quality of the "Crowner"' who figures in this story. Were it not that
+his antics cost a poor woman her liberty from August 1887 till December
+of that year, when the happy chance of a winter assizes set her free,
+and might have cost her her life, the story of this ideal magistrate
+would be extremely diverting.
+
+A child was born to Mrs. Gaffney at Philipstown on the 23d of July, and
+died there on the 25th of August 1887, Mrs. Gaffney being the wife of a
+"boycotted" man.
+
+A local doctor named Clarke came to the police and asked the Sergeant to
+inspect the body of the child, and call for an inquest. The sergeant
+inspected the body, and saw no reason to doubt that the child had died a
+natural death. This did not please the doctor, so the Coroner was sent
+for. He came to Philipstown the next day, conferred there with the
+doctor, and with a priest, Father Bergin, and proceeded to hold an
+inquest on the child in a public-house, "a most appropriate place," said
+Sir Michael Morris from the bench, "for the transactions which
+subsequently occurred." Strong depositions were afterwards made by the
+woman Mrs. Gaffney, by her husband, and by the police authorities, as to
+the conduct of this "inquest." She and her husband were arrested on a
+verbal order of the Coroner on the day when the inquest was held, August
+27th, and the woman was kept in prison from that time till the assizes
+in December. The "inquest" was not completed on the 27th of August, and
+after the Coroner adjourned it, two priests drove away on a car from the
+"public-house" in which it had been held. That night, or the next day, a
+man came to a magistrate with a bundle of papers which he had found in
+the road near Philipstown. The magistrate examined them, and finding
+them to be the depositions taken before the Coroner in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney, handed them to the police. How did they come to be in the road?
+On the 1st of September the Coroner resumed his inquest, this time in
+the Court-House at Philipstown, and one of the police, with the
+depositions in his pocket, went to hear the proceedings. Great was his
+amazement to see certain papers produced, and calmly read, as being the
+very original depositions which at that moment were in his own custody!
+He held his peace, and let the inquest go on. A letter was read from the
+Coroner, to the effect that he saw no ground for detaining the husband,
+Gaffney--but the woman was taken before a justice of the peace, and
+committed to prison on this finding by the Coroner's jury: "That Mary
+Anne Gaffney came by her death; and that the mother of the child, Ellen
+Gaffney, is guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food
+and care to sustain the life of this child "!
+
+It is scarcely credible, but it is true, that upon this extraordinary
+finding the Coroner issued a warrant for "murder" against this poor
+woman, on which she was actually locked up for more than three months!
+The jury which made this unique finding consisted of nineteen persons,
+and it was in evidence that their foreman reported thirteen of the jury
+to be for finding one way and six for finding another, whereupon a
+certain Mr. Whyte, who came into the case as the representative of
+Father Bergin, President of the local branch of the National
+League--nobody can quite see on what colourable pretext--was allowed by
+the Coroner to write down the finding I have quoted, and hand it to the
+Coroner. The Coroner read it over. He and Mr. Whyte then put six of the
+jury in one place, and thirteen in another; the Coroner read the finding
+aloud to the thirteen, and said to them, "Is that what you agree to?"
+and so the inquest was closed, and the warrant issued--for murder--and
+the woman, this poor peasant mother sent off to jail with the brand upon
+her of infanticide.[29]
+
+Where would that poor woman be now were there no "Coercion" in Ireland
+to protect her against "Crowner's quest law" thus administered? And what
+is to be thought of educated and responsible public men in England who,
+as recent events have shown, are not ashamed to go to "Crowner's quest
+Courts" of this sort for weapons of attack, not upon the administration
+only of their own Government, but upon the character and the motives of
+their political opponents?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+BELFAST, _Monday, June 25._--I left Dublin yesterday at 4 P.M., in a
+train which went off at high pressure as an "express," but came into
+Belfast panting and dilatory as an "excursion." The day was fine, and
+the line passes through what is reputed to be the most prosperous part
+of Ireland. In this part of Ireland, too, the fate of the island has
+been more than once settled by the arbitrament of arms; and if
+Parliamentary England throws up the sponge in the wrestle with the
+League, it is probable enough that the old story will come to be told
+over again here.
+
+At Dundalk the Irish monarchy of the Braces was made and unmade. The
+plantation of Ulster under James I. clinched the grasp not so much of
+England as of Scotland upon Ireland, and determined the course of events
+here through the Great Rebellion. The landing of the Duke of Schomberg
+at Carrickfergus opened the way for the subjugation of Jacobite Ireland
+by William of Orange. The successful descent of the French upon the same
+place in February 1760, after the close of "the Great Year," in which
+Walpole tells us he came to expect a new victory every morning with the
+rolls for breakfast, and after Hawke had broken the strength of the
+great French Armada off Belleisle, and done for England the service
+which Nelson did for her again off Trafalgar in 1805, shows what might
+have happened had Thurot commanded the fleet of Conflans. In this same
+region, too, the rout of Munro by Nugent at Ballinahinch practically
+ended the insurrection of 1798.
+
+There are good reasons in the physical geography of the British Islands
+for this controlling influence of Ulster over the affairs of Ireland,
+which it seems to me a serious mistake to overlook.
+
+The author of a brief but very hard-headed and practical letter on the
+pacification of Ireland, which appeared in the _Times_ newspaper in
+1886, while the air was thrilling with rumours of Mr. Gladstone's
+impending appearance as the champion of "Home Rule," carried, I
+remember, to the account of St. George's Channel "nine-tenths of the
+troubles, religious, political, and social, under which Ireland has
+laboured for seven centuries." I cannot help thinking he hit the nail on
+the head; and St. George's Channel does not divide Ulster from Scotland.
+From Donaghadee, which has an excellent harbour, the houses on the
+Scottish coast can easily be made out in clear weather. A chain is no
+stronger than its weakest link, and it is as hard to see how, even with
+the consent of Ulster, the independence of Ireland could be maintained
+against the interests and the will of Scotland, as it is easy to see why
+Leinster, Munster, and Connaught have been so difficult of control and
+assimilation by England. To dream of establishing the independence of
+Ireland against the will of Ulster appears to me to be little short of
+madness.
+
+At Moira, which stands very prettily above the Ulster Canal, a small
+army of people returning from a day in the country to Belfast came upon
+us and trebled the length of our train. We picked up more at Lisburn,
+where stands the Cathedral Church of Jeremy Taylor, the "Shakespeare of
+divines." Here my only companion in the compartment from Dublin left me,
+a most kindly, intelligent Ulster man, who had very positive views as to
+the political situation. He much commended the recent discourse in
+Scotland of a Presbyterian minister, who spoke of the Papal Decree as
+"pouring water on a drowned mouse," a remark which led me to elicit the
+fact that he had never seen either Clare or Kerry; and he was very warm
+in his admiration of Mr. Chamberlain. He told me, what I had heard from
+many other men of Ulster, that the North had armed itself thoroughly
+when the Home Rule business began with Mr. Gladstone. "I am a Unionist,"
+he said, "but I think the Union is worth as much to England as it is to
+Ireland, and if England means to break it up it is not the part of
+Irishmen who think and feel as I do to let her choose her own time for
+doing it, and stand still while she robs us of our property and turns us
+out defenceless to be trampled under foot by the most worthless
+vagabonds in our own island." He thinks the National League has had its
+death-blow. "What I fear now," he said, "is that we are running straight
+into a social war, and that will never be a war against the landlords in
+Ireland; it'll be a war against the Protestants and all the decent
+people there are among the Catholics."
+
+He was very cordial when he found I was an American, and with that
+offhand hospitality which seems to know no distinctions of race or
+religion in Ireland urged me to come and make him a visit at a place he
+has nearer the sea-coast. "I'll show you Downpatrick," he said, "where
+the tombs of St. Patrick and St. Bridget and St. Columb are, the saints
+sleeping quite at their ease, with a fine prosperous Presbyterian town
+all about them. And I'll drive you to Tullymore, where you'll see the
+most beautiful park, and the finest views from it all the way to the
+Isle of Man, that are to be seen in all Ireland." He was very much
+interested in the curious story of the sequestration of the remains of
+Mr. Stewart of New York, who was born, he tells me, at Lisburn, where
+the wildest fabrications on the subject seem to have got currency. That
+this feat of body-snatching is supposed to have been performed by a
+little syndicate of Italians, afterwards broken up by the firmness of
+Lady Crawford in resisting the ghastly pressure to which the widow and
+the executors of Mr. Stewart are believed to have succumbed, was quite a
+new idea to him.
+
+From Moira to Belfast the scenery along the line grows in beauty
+steadily. If Belfast were not the busiest and most thriving city in
+Ireland, it would still be well worth a visit for the picturesque charms
+of its situation and of the scenery which surrounds it. At some future
+day I hope to get a better notion both of its activity and of its
+attractions than it would be possible for me to attempt to get in this
+flying visit, made solely to take the touch of the atmosphere of the
+place at this season of the year; for we are on the very eve of the
+battle month of the Boyne.
+
+Mr. Cameron, the Town Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary, met me
+at the station, in accordance with a promise which he kindly made when I
+saw him several weeks ago at Cork; and this morning he took me all over
+the city. It is very well laid out, in the new quarters especially, with
+broad avenues and spacious squares. In fact, as a local wag said to me
+to-day at the Ulster Club, "You can drive through Belfast without once
+going into a street"--most of the thoroughfares which are not called
+"avenues" or "places" being known as "roads." It is, of course, an
+essentially modern city. When Boate made his survey of Ireland two
+centuries ago, Belfast was so small a place that he took small note of
+it, though it had been incorporated by James I. in 1613 in favour of the
+Chichester family, still represented here. In a very careful _Tour in
+Ireland_, published at Dublin in 1780, the author says of Belfast, "I
+could not help remarking the great number of Scots who reside in this
+place, and who carry on a good trade with Scotland." It seems then to
+have had a population of less than 20,000 souls, as it only touched that
+number at the beginning of this century. It has since then advanced by
+"leaps and bounds," after an almost American fashion, till it has now
+become the second, and bids fair at no distant day to become the first,
+city in Ireland. Few of the American cities which are its true
+contemporaries can be compared with Belfast in beauty. The quarter in
+which my host lives was reclaimed from the sea marshes not quite so long
+ago, I believe, as was the Commonwealth Avenue quarter of Boston, and
+though it does not show so many costly private houses perhaps as that
+quarter of the New England capital, its "roads" and "avenues" are on the
+whole better built, and there is no public building in Boston so
+imposing as the Queen's College, with its Tudor front six hundred feet
+in length, and its graceful central tower. The Botanic Gardens near by
+are much prettier and much better equipped for the pleasure and
+instruction of the people than any public gardens in either Boston or
+New York. These American comparisons make themselves, all the conditions
+of Belfast being rather of the New World than of the Old. The oldest
+building pointed out to me to-day is the whilom mansion of the Marquis
+of Donegal, now used as offices, and still called the Castle.
+
+This stands near Donegal Square, a fine site, disfigured by a quadrangle
+of commonplace brick buildings, occupied as a sort of Linen Exchange,
+concerning which a controversy rages, I am told. They are erected on
+land granted by Lord Donegal to encourage the linen trade, and the
+buildings used to be leased at a rental of £1 per window. The present
+holders receive £10 per window, and are naturally loath to part with so
+good a thing, though there is an earnest desire in the city to see these
+unsightly structures removed, and their place taken by stately municipal
+buildings more in key with the really remarkable and monumental private
+warehouses which already adorn this Square. Mr. Robinson, one of the
+partners of a firm which has just completed one of these warehouses, was
+good enough to show us over it. It is built of a warm grey stone, which
+lends itself easily to the chisel, and it is decorated with a wealth of
+carving and of architectural ornaments such as the great burghers of
+Flanders lavished on their public buildings. The interior arrangements
+are worthy of the external stateliness of the warehouse. Pneumatic tubes
+for the delivery of cash--a Scottish invention--electric lights, steam
+lifts, a kitchen at the top of the lofty edifice heated by steam from
+the great engine-room in the cellars, and furnishing meals to the
+employees, attest the energy and enterprise of the firm. The most
+delicate of the linen fabrics sold here are made, I was informed, all
+over the north country. The looms, three or four of which are kept going
+here in a great room to show the intricacy and perfection of the
+processes, are supplied by the firm to the hand-workers on a system
+which enables them, while earning good wages from week to week, to
+acquire the eventual ownership of the machines. The building is crowned
+by a sort of observatory, from which we enjoyed a noble prospect
+overlooking the whole city and miles of the beautiful country around. A
+haze on the horizon hid the coast of Scotland, which is quite visible
+under a clear sky. The Queen's Bridge over the Lagan, built in 1842
+between Antrim and Down, was a conspicuous feature in the panorama. Its
+five great arches of hewn granite span the distance formerly traversed
+by an older bridge of twenty-one arches 840 feet in length, which was
+begun in 1682, and finished just in time to welcome Schomberg and King
+William.
+
+The not less imposing warehouse of Richardson and Co., built of a
+singularly beautiful brown stone, and decorated with equal taste and
+liberality, adjoins that of Robinson and Cleaver. The banks, the public
+offices, the clubs, the city library, the museum, the Presbyterian
+college, the principal churches, all of them modern, all alike bear
+witness to the public spirit and pride in their town of the good people
+of Belfast. With more time at my disposal I would have been very glad to
+visit some of the flax-mills called into being by the great impulse
+which the cotton famine resulting from our Civil War gave to the linen
+manufactures of Northern Ireland, and the famous shipyards of the Woolfs
+on Queen's Island, As things are, it was more to my purpose to see some
+of the representative men of this great Protestant stronghold.
+
+I passed a very interesting hour with the Rev. Dr. Hanna, who is reputed
+to be a sort of clerical "Lion of the North," and whom I found to be in
+almost all respects a complete antitype of Father M'Fadden of Gweedore.
+
+
+Dr. Hanna is not unjustly proud of being at the head of the most
+extensive Sunday-school organisation in Ireland, if not in the world;
+and I find that the anniversary parade of his pupils, appointed for
+Saturday, June 30th, is looked forward to with some anxiety by the
+authorities here. He tells me that he expects to put two thousand
+children that day into motion for a grand excursion to Moira; but
+although he speaks very plainly as to the ill-will with which a certain
+class of the Catholics here regard both himself and his organisation, he
+does not anticipate any attack from them. With what seems to me very
+commendable prudence, he has resolved this year to put this procession
+into the streets without banners and bands, so that no charge of
+provocation may be even colourably advanced against it. This is no
+slight concession from a man so determined and so outspoken, not to say
+aggressive, in his Protestantism as Dr. Hanna; and the Nationalist
+Catholics will be very ill-advised, it strikes me, if they misinterpret
+it.
+
+He spoke respectfully of the Papal decree against Boycotting and the
+Plan of Campaign; but he seems to think it will not command the respect
+of the masses of the Catholic population, nor be really enforced by the
+clergy. Like most of the Ulstermen I have met, he has a firm faith, not
+only in the power of the Protestant North to protect itself, but in its
+determination to protect itself against the consequences which the
+northern Protestants believe must inevitably follow any attempt to
+establish an Irish nationality. Dr. Hanna is neither an Orangeman nor a
+Tory. He says there are but three known Orangemen among the clerical
+members of the General Assembly of the Irish Presbyterian Church, which
+unanimously pronounced against Mr. Gladstone's scheme of Home Rule, and
+not more than a dozen Tories. Of the 550 members of the Assembly, 538,
+he says, were followers of Mr. Gladstone before he adopted the politics
+of Mr. Parnell; and only three out of the whole number have given him
+their support. In the country at large, Dr. Hanna puts down the
+Unionists at two millions, of whom 1,200,000 are Protestants, and
+800,000 Catholics; and he maintains that if the Parliamentary
+representatives were chosen by a general vote, the Parnellite 80 would
+be cut down to 62; while the Unionists would number 44. He regards the
+Parnellite policy as "an organised imposture," and firmly believes that
+an Irish Parliament in Dublin would now mean civil war in Ireland. He
+had a visit here last week, he says, from an American Presbyterian
+minister, who came out to Ireland a month ago a "Home Ruler"; but, as
+the result of a trip through North-Western Ireland, is going back to
+denounce the Home Rule movement as a mischievous fraud.
+
+When I asked him what remedy he would propose for the discontent stirred
+up by the agitation of Home Rule, this Presbyterian clergyman replied
+emphatically, "Balfour, Balfour, and more Balfour!"
+
+This on the ground, as I understood, that Mr. Balfour's administration
+of the law has been the firmest, least wavering, and most equitable
+known in Ireland for many a day.
+
+Later in the day I had the pleasure of a conversation with the Rev. Dr.
+Kane, the Grand Master of the Orangemen at Belfast. Dr. Kane is a tall,
+fine-looking, frank, and resolute man, who obviously has the courage of
+his opinions. He thinks there will be no disturbances this year on the
+12th of July, but that the Orange demonstrations will be on a greater
+scale and more imposing than ever. He derides the notion that
+"Parnellism" is making any progress in Ulster. On the contrary, the
+concurrence this year of the anniversary of the defeat of the Great
+Armada with the anniversary of the Revolution of 1688 has aroused the
+strongest feelings of enthusiasm among the Protestants of the North, and
+they were never so determined as they now are not to tolerate anything
+remotely looking to the constitution of a separate and separatist
+Government at Dublin.
+
+BELFAST, _Tuesday, June 26._--Sir John Preston, the head of one of the
+great Belfast houses, and a former Mayor of the city, dined with us last
+night, and in the evening Sir James Haslett, the actual Mayor, came in.
+
+I find that in Belfast the office of Mayor is served without a salary,
+and is consequently filled as a rule by citizens of "weight and
+instance." In Dublin the Lord Mayor receives £3000 a year, with a
+contingent fund of £1500, and the office is becoming a distinctly
+political post. The face of Belfast is so firmly set against the
+tendency to subordinate municipal interests to general party exigencies,
+that the Corporation compelled Mr. Cobain, M.P., who sits at Westminster
+now for this constituency, to resign the post which he held as treasurer
+and cashier of the Corporation when he became a candidate for a seat in
+Parliament. I am not surprised, therefore, to learn that the city rates
+and taxes are much lower in the commercial than they are in the
+political capital of Ireland.
+
+Both Sir John Preston and Sir James Haslett have visited America. Sir
+John went there to represent the linen industries of Ireland, and to
+urge upon Congress the propriety of reducing our import duties upon
+fabrics which the American climate makes it practically imposssible to
+manufacture on our side of the water. Senator Sherman, who twenty years
+ago had the candour to admit that the wit of man could not devise a
+tariff so adjusted as to raise the revenue necessary for the Government
+which should not afford adequate incidental protection to all legitimate
+American industries, gave Sir John reason to hope that something might
+be done in the direction of a more liberal treatment of the linen
+industries. But nothing practical came of it. Sir John ought to have
+known that our typical American Protectionist, the late Horace Greeley,
+really persuaded himself, and tried to persuade other people, that with
+duties enough clapped on the Asiatic production, excellent tea might be
+grown on the uplands of South Carolina!
+
+In former years Sir John Preston used to visit Gweedore every year for
+sport and recreation. He knew Lord George Hill very well, "as true and
+noble a man as ever lived, who stinted himself to improve the state of
+his tenants." He threw an odd light on the dreamy desire which had so
+much amused me of the "beauty of Gweedore" to become "a dressmaker at
+Derry," by telling me that long ago the gossips there used to tell
+wonderful stories of a Gweedore girl who had made her fortune as a
+milliner in the "Maiden City."
+
+This morning Mr. Cameron, who as Town Inspector of the Royal Irish
+Constabulary will be responsible for public peace and order here during
+the next critical fortnight, held a review of his men on a common beyond
+the Theological College. About two hundred and fifty of the force were
+paraded, with about twenty mounted policemen, and for an hour and a
+half, under a tolerably warm sun, they were put through a regular
+military drill. A finer body of men cannot be seen, and in point of
+discipline and training they can hold their own, I should say, with the
+best of her Majesty's regiments. Without such discipline and training it
+would not be easy for any such body of men to pass with composure
+through the ordeal of insults and abuse to which the testimony of
+trustworthy eye-witnesses compels me to believe they are habitually
+subjected in the more disturbed districts of Ireland. As to the
+immediate outlook here, Mr. Cameron seems quite at his ease. Even if
+ill-disposed persons should set about provoking a collision between "the
+victors and the vanquished of the Boyne" his arrangements are so made,
+he says, as to prevent the development of anything like the outbreaks of
+former years.
+
+On the advice of Sir John Preston I shall take the Fleetwood route on my
+return to London to-night.
+
+This secures one a comfortable night on board of a very good and
+well-equipped boat, from which you go ashore, he tells me, into an
+excellent station of the London and North-Western Railway at Fleetwood,
+on the mouth of the Wyre on the Lancashire coast. Twenty years ago this
+was a small bathing resort called into existence chiefly by the
+enterprise of a local baronet whose name it bears. Its present
+prosperity and prospective importance are another illustration of the
+vigour and vitality of the North of Ireland, which is connected through
+Fleetwood with the great manufacturing regions of middle and northern
+England, as it is through Larne with the heart of Scotland.
+
+While it is as true now of the predominantly Catholic south of Ireland
+as it was when Sir Robert Peel made the remark forty years ago, that it
+stands "with its back to England and its face to the West," this
+Protestant Ireland of the North faces both ways, drawing Canada and the
+United States to itself through Moville and Derry and Belfast, and
+holding fast at the same time upon the resources of Great Britain
+through Glasgow and Liverpool. One of the best informed bankers in
+London told me not long ago, that pretty nearly all the securities of
+the great company which has recently taken over the business of the
+Guinnesses have already found their way into the North of Ireland and
+are held here. With such resources in its wealth and industry, better
+educated, better equipped, and holding a practically impregnable
+position in the North of Ireland, with Scotland and the sea at its back,
+Ulster is very much stronger relatively to the rest of Ireland than La
+Vendée was relatively to the rest of the French Republic in the last
+century. In a struggle for independence against the rest of Ireland it
+would have nothing to fear from the United States, where any attempt to
+organise hostilities against it would put the Irish-American population
+in serious peril, not only from the American Government, but from
+popular feeling, and force home upon the attention of the
+quickest-witted people in the world the significant fact that while the
+chief contributions, so far, of America to Southern Ireland, have been
+alms and agitation, the chief contributions of Scotland to Northern
+Ireland have been skilled agriculture and successful activity. It is
+surely not without meaning that the only steamers of Irish build which
+now traverse the Atlantic come from the dockyards, not of Galway nor of
+Cork, the natural gateways of Ireland to the west, but of Belfast, the
+natural gateway of Ireland to the north.
+
+
+
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+Not once, but a hundred times, during the visits to Ireland recorded in
+this book, I have been reminded of the state of feeling and opinion
+which existed in the Border States, as they were called, of the American
+Union, after the invasion of Virginia by a piratical band under John
+Brown, and before the long-pending issues between the South, insisting
+upon its constitutional rights, and the North, restive under its
+constitutional obligations, were brought to a head by the election of
+President Lincoln.
+
+All analogies, I know, are deceptive, and I do not insist upon this
+analogy. But it has a certain value here. For to-day in Ireland, as then
+in America, we find a grave question of politics, in itself not
+unmanageable, perhaps, by a race trained to self-government, seriously
+complicated and aggravated, not only by considerations of moral right
+and moral wrong, but by a profound perturbation of the material
+interests of the community.
+
+I well remember that after a careful study of the situation in America
+at the time of which I speak, Mr. Nassau Senior, a most careful and
+competent observer, frankly told me that he saw no possible way in which
+the problem could be worked out peacefully. The event justified this
+gloomy forecast.
+
+It would be presumptuous in me to say as much of the actual situation in
+Ireland; but it would be uncandid not to say that the optimists of
+Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee had greater
+apparent odds in their favour in 1861 than the optimists of Ireland seem
+to me to have in 1888.
+
+Ireland stands to-day between Great Britain and the millions of the
+Irish race in America and Australia very much as the Border States of
+the American Union stood in 1861 between the North and the South. There
+was little either in the Tariff question or in the Slavery question to
+shake the foundations of law and order in the Border States, could they
+have been left to themselves; and the Border States enjoyed all the
+advantages and immunities of "Home Rule" to an extent and under
+guarantees never yet openly demanded for Ireland by any responsible
+legislator within the walls of the British Parliament. But so powerful
+was the leverage upon them of conflicting passions and interests beyond
+their own borders that these sovereign states, well organised,
+homogeneous, prosperous communities, much more populous and richer in
+the aggregate in 1861 than Ireland is to-day, practically lost the
+control of their own affairs, and were swept helplessly into a terrific
+conflict, which they had the greatest imaginable interest in avoiding,
+and no interest whatever in promoting.
+
+I have seen and heard nothing in Ireland to warrant the very common
+impression that the country, as a whole, is either misgoverned or
+ungovernable; nothing to justify me in regarding the difficulties which
+there impede the maintenance of law and order as really indigenous and
+spontaneous. The "agitated" Ireland of 1888 appears to me to be almost
+as clearly and demonstrably the creation of forces not generated in, but
+acting upon, a country, as was the "bleeding Kansas" of 1856. But the
+"bleeding Kansas" of 1856 brought the great American Union to the verge
+of disruption, and the "agitated Ireland" of 1888 may do as much, or
+worse, for the British Empire. There is, no doubt, a great deal of
+distress in one or another part of Ireland, though it has not been my
+fortune to come upon any outward and visible signs of such grinding
+misery as forces itself upon you in certain of the richest provinces of
+that independent, busy, prosperous, Roman Catholic kingdom of Belgium,
+which on a territory little more than one-third as large as the
+territory of Ireland, maintains nearly a million more inhabitants, and
+adds to its population, on an average, in round numbers, as many people
+in four years as Ireland loses in five.
+
+I have seen peasant proprietors in Flanders and Brabant who could give
+the ideal Irish agent of the Nationalist newspapers lessons in
+rack-renting, though I am not at all sure that they might not get a hint
+or two themselves from some of the small farmers who came in my way in
+Ireland.
+
+Like all countries, mainly agricultural, too, Ireland has suffered a
+great deal of late years from the fall in prices following upon a period
+of intoxicating prosperity. Whether she has suffered more relatively
+than we should have suffered from the same cause in America, had we been
+foolish enough to imitate the monometallic policy of Germany in 1873, is
+however open to question; and I have an impression, which it will
+require evidence to remove, that the actual organisation known as the
+National Land League could never have been called into being had the
+British Government devoted to action upon the Currency Question, before
+1879, the time and energy which it has expended before and since that
+date in unsettling the principles of free contract, and tinkering at the
+relations of landlord and tenant in Ireland.
+
+But I am trenching upon inquiries here beyond the province of this book.
+
+Fortunately it is not necessary to my object in printing these volumes
+that I should either form or formulate any positive opinions as to the
+origin of the existing crisis in Ireland. Nor need I volunteer any
+suggestions of my own as to the methods by which order may best be
+maintained and civil government carried on in Ireland. It suffices for
+me that I close this self-imposed survey of men and things in that
+country with a conviction, as positive as it is melancholy, that the
+work which Mr. Redmond, M.P., informed us at Chicago that he and his
+Nationalist colleagues had undertaken, of "making the government of
+Ireland by England impossible," has been so far achieved, and by such
+methods as to make it extremely doubtful whether Ireland can be governed
+by anybody at all in accordance with any of the systems of government
+hitherto recognised in or adopted for that country. I certainly can see
+nothing in the organisation and conduct, down to this time, of the party
+known as the party of the Irish Nationalists, I will not say to
+encourage, but even to excuse, a belief that Ireland could be governed
+as a civilised country were it turned over to-morrow to their control. A
+great deal has been done by them to propagate throughout Christendom a
+general impression that England has dismally failed to govern Ireland in
+the past, and is unlikely hereafter to succeed in governing Ireland. But
+even granting this impression to be absolutely well founded, it by no
+means follows that Ireland is any more capable of governing herself than
+England is of governing her. The Russians have not made a brilliant
+success of their administration in Poland, but the Poles certainly
+administered Poland no better than the Russians have done. With an Irish
+representation in an Imperial British Parliament at Westminster,
+Ireland, under Mr. Gladstone's "base and blackguard" Union of 1800, has
+at least succeeded in shaking off some of the weightiest of the burdens
+by which, in the days of Swift, of Grattan, and of O'Connell, she most
+loudly declared herself to be oppressed. Whether with a Parliament at
+Dublin she would have fared as well in this respect since 1800 must be a
+matter of conjecture merely--and it must be equally a matter of
+conjecture also whether she would fare any better in this respect with a
+Parliament at Dublin hereafter. I am in no position to pronounce upon
+this--but it is quite certain that nothing is more uncommon than to find
+an educated and intelligent man, not an active partisan, in Ireland
+to-day, who looks forward to the reestablishment, in existing
+circumstances, of a Parliament at Dublin with confidence or hope.
+
+How the establishment of such a Parliament would affect the position of
+Great Britain as a power in Europe, and how it would affect the fiscal
+policy, and with the fiscal policy the well-being of the British people,
+are questions for British subjects to consider, not for me.
+
+That the processes employed during the past decade, and now employed to
+bring about the establishment of such a Parliament, have been, and are
+in their nature, essentially revolutionary, subversive of all sound and
+healthy relations between man and man, inconsistent with social
+stability, and therefore with social progress and with social peace,
+what I have seen and heard in Ireland during the past six months compels
+me to feel. Of the "Coercion," under which the Nationalist speakers and
+writers ask us in America to believe that the island groans and
+travails, I have seen literally nothing.
+
+Nowhere in the world is the press more absolutely free than to-day in
+Ireland. Nowhere in the world are the actions of men in authority more
+bitterly and unsparingly criticised. If public men or private citizens
+are sent to prison in Ireland, they are sent there, not as they were in
+America during the civil war, or in Ireland under the "Coercion Act" of
+1881, on suspicion of something they may have done, or may have intended
+to do, but after being tried for doing, and convicted of having done,
+certain things made offences against the law by a Parliament in which
+they are represented, and of which, in some cases, they are members.
+
+To call this "Coercion" is, from the American point of view, simply
+ludicrous. What it may be from the British or the Irish point of view is
+another affair, and does not concern me. I may be permitted, however, I
+hope without incivility, to say that if this be "Coercion" from the
+British or the Irish point of view, I am well content to be an American
+citizen. Ours is essentially a government not of emotions, but of
+statutes, and most Americans, I think, will agree with me that the sage
+was right who declared it to be better to live where nothing is lawful
+than where all things are lawful.
+
+The "Coercion" which I have found established in Ireland, and which I
+recognise in the title of this book, is the "Coercion," not of a
+government, but of a combination to make a particular government
+impossible. It is a "Coercion" applied not to men who break a public
+law, or offend against any recognised code of morals, but to men who
+refuse to be bound in their personal relations and their business
+transactions by the will of other men, their equals only, clothed with
+no legal authority over them. It is a "Coercion" administered not by
+public and responsible functionaries, but by secret tribunals. Its
+sanctions are not the law and honest public opinion, but the base
+instinct of personal cowardice, and the instinct, not less base, of
+personal greed. Whether anything more than a steady, firm administration
+of the law is needed to abolish this "Coercion" is a matter as to which
+authorities differ. I should be glad to believe with Colonel Saunderson
+that "the Leaguers would not hold up the 'land-grabber' to execration,
+and denounce him as they do, unless they knew in fact that the moment
+the law is made supreme in Ireland the tenants would become just as
+amenable to it as any other subjects of the Queen." But some recent
+events suggest a doubt whether these "other subjects of the Queen" are
+as amenable to the law as my own countrymen are.
+
+That the Church to which the great majority of the Irish people have for
+so many ages, and through so many tribulations, borne steadfast
+allegiance, has been shaken in its hold upon the conscience of Ireland
+by the machinery of this odious and ignoble "Coercion," appears to me to
+be unquestionable. That the head of that Church, being compelled by
+evidence to believe this, has found it necessary to intervene for the
+restoration of the just spiritual authority of the Church over the Irish
+people all the world now knows--nor can I think that his intervention
+has come a day or an hour too soon, to arrest the progress in Ireland of
+a social disease which threatens, not the political interests of the
+empire of which Ireland is a part alone, but the character of the Irish
+people themselves, and the very existence among them of the elementary
+conditions of a Christian civilisation.
+
+It would be unjust to the Irish people to forget that this demoralising
+"Coercion" against which the Head of the Catholic Church has declared
+war, seems to me to have been seriously reinforced by the Land
+Legislation of the Imperial Parliament.
+
+No one denies that great reforms and readjustments of the Land Tenure in
+Ireland needed to be made long before any serious attempt was made to
+make them.
+
+But that such reforms and readjustments might have been made without
+cutting completely loose from the moorings of political economy, appears
+pretty clearly, not only from examples on the continent of Europe, and
+in my own country, but from the Rent and Tenancy Acts carried out in
+India under the viceroyalty of Lord Dufferin since 1885. The conditions
+of these measures were different, of course, in each of the cases of
+Oudh, Bengal, and the Punjab, and in none of these cases were they
+nearly identical with the conditions of any practicable land measure for
+Ireland. But two great characteristics seem to me to mark the Indian
+legislation, which are not conspicuous in the legislation for Ireland.
+
+These are a spirit of equity as between the landlords and the tenants,
+and finality. I do not see how it can be questioned that the landlords
+of Ireland have been dealt with by recent British legislation as if they
+were offenders to be mulcted, and that the tenants in Ireland have been
+encouraged by recent British legislation to anticipate an eventual
+transfer to them, on steadily improving terms, of the land-ownership of
+the island. Mr. Davitt is perhaps the most popular Irishman living, and
+I believe him to be sincerely convinced that the ownership of the land
+of Ireland (and of all other countries) ought to be vested in the State.
+But if the independence of Ireland were acknowledged by Great Britain
+to-morrow, and all the actual landlords of Ireland were compelled
+to-morrow to part with their ownership, such as it is, of the land, I
+believe Mr. Davitt would be further from the recognition and triumph of
+his principle of State-ownership than he is to-day with a British
+Parliament hostile to "Home Rule," but apparently not altogether
+unwilling to make the landlords of Ireland an acceptable burnt-offering
+upon the altar of imperial unity. Probably he sees this himself, and the
+existing state of things may not be wholly displeasing to him, as
+holding out a hope that the flame which he has been helped by British
+legislation to kindle in Ireland may already be taking hold upon the
+substructions and outworks of the edifice of property in Great Britain
+also.
+
+One thing at least is clear.
+
+The two antagonistic principles which confront each other in Ireland
+to-day are the principles of the Agrarian Revolution represented by Mr.
+Davitt, and the principle of Authority, represented in the domain of
+politics by the British Government, and in the domain of morals by the
+Vatican. With one or the other of these principles the victory must
+rest. If the Irish people of all classes who live in Ireland could be
+polled to-day, it is likely enough that a decisive majority of them
+would declare for the principle of Authority in the State and in the
+Church, could that over-riding issue be made perfectly plain and
+intelligible to them. But how is that possible? In what country of the
+world, and in what age of the world, has it ever been possible to get
+such an issue made perfectly plain and intelligible to any people?
+
+In the domain of morals the principle of Authority, so far as concerns
+Catholic Ireland, rests with a power which is not likely to waver or
+give way. The Papal Decree has gone forth. Those who profess to accept
+it will be compelled to obey it. Those who reject it, whatever their
+place in the hierarchy of the Church may be, must sooner or later find
+themselves where Dr. M'Glynn of New York now is. Catholic Ireland can
+only continue to be Catholic on the condition of obedience, not formal
+but real, not in matters indifferent, but in matters vital and
+important, to the Head of the Catholic Church.
+
+In the domain of politics the principle of Authority rests with an
+Administration which is at the mercy of the intelligence or the
+ignorance, the constancy or the fickleness, the weakness or the
+strength, of constituencies in Great Britain, not necessarily familiar
+with the facts of the situation in Ireland, not necessarily enlightened
+as to the real interests either of Great Britain or of Ireland, nor even
+necessarily awake, with Cardinal Manning, to the truth that upon the
+future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.
+
+With two, three, four, or five years of a steady and cool administration
+of the laws in Ireland, by an executive officer such as Mr. Balfour
+seems to me to have shown himself to be--with a judicious abstinence of
+the British Legislature from feverish and fussy legislation about
+Ireland, with a prudent and persistent development of the material
+resources of Ireland, and with a genuine co-operation of the people who
+own land in Ireland with the people who wish to own land in Ireland, for
+the readjustment of land-ownership, the principle of Authority in the
+domain of politics may doubtless win in the conflict with the principle
+of the Agrarian revolution.
+
+But how many contingencies are here involved! Meanwhile the influences
+which imperil in Ireland the principle of Authority, in the domains
+alike of politics and of morals, are at work incessantly, to undermine
+and deteriorate the character of the Irish people, to take the vigour
+and the manhood out of them, to unfit them day by day, not only for good
+citizenship in the British Empire or the United States, but for good
+citizenship in any possible Ireland under any possible form of
+government. To arrest these influences before they bring on in Ireland a
+social crash, the effects of which must be felt far beyond the
+boundaries of that country, is a matter of primary importance,
+doubtless, to the British people. It is a matter, too, of hardly less
+than primary importance to the people of my own country. Unfortunately
+it does not rest with us to devise or to apply an efficient check to
+these influences.
+
+That rests with the people of Great Britain, so long as they insist that
+Ireland shall remain an integral portion of the British dominions. I do
+not see how they can acquit themselves of this responsibility, or escape
+the consequences of evading it, solely by devising the most ingenious
+machinery of local administration for Ireland, or the most liberal
+schemes for fostering the material interests of the Irish people. Such
+things, of course, must in due time be attended to. But the first duty
+of a government is to govern; and I believe that Earl Grey has summed up
+the situation in Ireland more concisely and more courageously than any
+other British statesman in his outspoken declaration, that "in order to
+avert the wreck of the nation, it is absolutely necessary that some
+means or other should be found for securing to Ireland during the
+present crisis a wiser and more stable administration of its affairs
+than can be looked for under its existing institutions."
+
+I have heard and read a good deal in the past of the "Three F's" thought
+a panacea for Irish discontent. Three other F's seem to me quite as
+important to the future of Irish content and public order. These are,
+Fair Dealing towards Landlords as well as Tenants; Finality of Agrarian
+Legislation at Westminster; and last and most essential of all, Fixity
+of Executive Tenure.
+
+The words I have just quoted of Earl Grey, show it to be the conviction
+of the oldest living leader of English Liberalism that this last is the
+vital point, the key of the situation. Let me bracket with his words,
+and leave to the consideration of my readers, the following pregnant
+passage from a letter written to me by an Irish correspondent who is as
+devoted to Irish independence as is Earl Grey to imperial unity:--
+
+"If the present Nationalist movement succeeds, it will have the effect
+of putting the worst elements of the Irish nation in power, and keeping
+them there irremoveably. We are to have an Executive at the mercy of a
+House of Representatives, and the result will be a government, or series
+of governments, as weak and vicious as those of France, with this
+difference, that here all purifying changes such as seem imminent in
+France will be absolutely prevented by the irresistible power of
+England. The true model for us would be a constitution like yours in the
+United States, with an Executive responsible to the nation at large, and
+irremoveable for a term of years. But this we shall never get from
+England. Shall we make use of Home Rule to take it for ourselves?
+
+"Many earnest and active Irish Unionists now say that if any bill
+resembling Mr. Gladstone's passes, they will make separation, their
+definite policy. If Home Rule comes without the landlords having been
+bought out on reasonable terms, a class will be created in Ireland full
+of bitter and most just hatred of England--a class which may very likely
+one day play the part here which the persecuted Irish Presbyterians who
+fled from the tyranny of the English Church in Ireland played in your
+own Revolution beyond the Atlantic."
+
+
+<p><hr /></p>
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+NOTE F.
+
+THE "MOONLIGHTERS" AND "HOME RULE."
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 38.)
+
+
+On Monday, the 1st of February 1886, the _Irish Times_ published the
+following story from Tralee, near the scene of the "boycotting,"
+temporal and spiritual, of the unfortunate daughters of Mr. Jeremiah
+Curtin, murdered in his own house by "moonlighters":--
+
+ "TRALEE, _Sunday_.
+
+ "It was stated that the bishop had ordered Mass to be celebrated
+ for them--the Curtins--but this did not take place. At the village
+ of Firies a number of people had assembled. They stopped loitering
+ about the place in the forenoon, waiting for a meeting of the
+ National League, which was subsequently held. A threatening notice
+ was discovered posted up on the door of a house formerly used as a
+ forge. It ran as follows:--
+
+ "'NOTICE.--If we are honoured by the presence of the bloodthirsty
+ perjurers at Mass on any of the forthcoming Sundays, take good care
+ you'll stand up very politely and walk out. Don't be under the
+ impression that all the Moonlighters are dead, and that this notice
+ is a child's play, as Shawn Nelleen titled the last one. I'll be
+ sure to keep my word, as you will see before long, so have no
+ welcome for the Curtins, and, above all, let no one work for them
+ in any way. As you respect the Captain, and as you value your own
+ life, abide by this notice.'--Signed, 'A MOONLIGHTER.'
+
+ "The above notice was written on tea paper in large legible style,
+ and evidently by an intelligent person. Groups were perusing it
+ during the day. A force of police marched through the village and
+ back, but did not observe this document, as it is still posted on
+ the door of the house."
+
+The "bloodthirsty perjurers" here mentioned were the daughters who had
+dared to demand and to promote the punishment of the assassins of their
+father! For this crime these daughters were to be excommunicated by the
+people of Firies, and denied the consolations of religion in their deep
+sorrow, even in defiance of the order of the Catholic bishop.
+
+As the advent of Mr. Gladstone to power in alliance with Mr. Parnell was
+then imminent, Mr. Sheehan, M.P., wrote a letter to the parish priest of
+Firies, the Rev. Mr. O'Connor, begging him in substance to put the
+brakes--for a time--upon the wheels of the local rack, lest the outcries
+of the young women subjected to this moral torture should interfere with
+the success of the new alliance. This, in plain English, is the only
+possible meaning of the letter which I here reprint from a leaflet
+issued by an Irish society:--
+
+ "The Rev. Father O'Connor, P.P., has received the following letter
+ from Mr. Sheehau, M.P., in reference to this matter, under date
+
+ "'House of Commons, _January 26th._
+
+ "'REV. DEAR SIR,--At this important juncture in our history, I am
+ sorry to see reports of the Firies display. Nothing that has taken
+ place yet in the South of Ireland has done so much harm to the
+ National cause. If they persist they will ruin us. To-morrow
+ evening will be most important in Parliamentary history. Our party
+ expect the defeat of the Government and resumption of power by Mr.
+ Gladstone. If we succeed in this, which we are confident of, the
+ future of our country will be great, and, although an appeal to the
+ constituencies must be made, the Irish party in those few days have
+ made an impression in future that no Government can withstand. The
+ Salisbury Government want to appeal to the country on the integrity
+ of the empire, and, of course, for the last few days have tried all
+ means to lead to this by raking up the Curtin case and all judicial
+ cases, which _must be avoided for a short time_, as our stoppage to
+ the Eviction Act will cover all this.--Yours faithfully, J.D.
+ SHEEHAN.'"
+
+This letter was read, the leaflet informs us, by the Rev. Mr. O'Connor,
+at the National Schools and other places.
+
+
+
+NOTE G.
+
+THE PONSONBY PROPERTY.
+
+(Vol. ii. pp. 59-66.)
+
+
+The account which the Rev. Canon Keller gave me of "The Struggle for
+Life on the Ponsonby Estate," in a tract bearing that title, and
+authorised by him to be published by the National League, is so
+circumstantial and elaborate that, after reading it carefully, I took
+unusual pains to obtain some reply to it from the representatives of the
+landlord implicated. These finally led to a visit from Mr. Ponsonby
+himself, who was so kind as to call upon me in London on the 15th of
+May, with papers and documents. I give in the following colloquy the
+results of this interview, putting together with the allegations of
+Canon Keller the answers of Mr. Ponsonby, and leave the matter in this
+form to the judgment of my readers.
+
+_Q_. Canon Keller, I see, describes you, Mr. Ponsonby, as "a retired
+navy officer, and an absentee Irish landlord." He says your estate is
+now "universally known as the famous Ponsonby Estate," and that it is
+occupied "by from 300 to 400 tenants, holding farms varying in extent
+from an acre and a half to over two hundred acres." Are these statements
+correct?
+
+_A_. I am a retired navy officer certainly, and perhaps I may be called
+an "absentee Irish landlord." I lived on my property for some time, and
+I have always attended to it. I succeeded to the estate in 1868, and
+almost my first act was to borrow £2000 of the Board of Works for
+drainage purposes--the tenants agreeing to pay half the interest. As a
+matter of fact some never paid at all, and I afterwards wiped out the
+claims against them. There are about 300 tenants on the property, and
+the average holdings are of about 36 acres, at an average rental of £30
+a holding. There are, however, not a few large farms.
+
+_Q_. Canon Keller says that "in the memory of living witnesses, and far
+beyond it, the Ponsonby tenants have been notoriously rack-rented and
+oppressed"; and that they have been committed to the "tender mercies of
+agents, seeing little or nothing of their landlord, and experiencing no
+practical sympathy from that quarter." How is this?
+
+_A_. I wish to believe Canon Keller truthful when he knows the truth. He
+certainly does not know the truth here. He is a newcomer at Youghal,
+having come there in November 1885, and hardly so much of an authority
+about "the memory of living witnesses and far beyond it" as the tenants
+on the estate, who, when I went there first with my wife, presented to
+me, May 25, 1868, an address of welcome, referring in very different
+terms to the history of the estate and of my family connection with it.
+Here is the original address, and a copy of it--the latter being quite
+at your service.
+
+This original address is very handsomely engrossed, and is signed by
+fifty tenants. Among the names I observed those of Martin Loughlin,
+Peter McDonough, Michael Gould, William Forrest, and John Heaphey, all
+of whom are cited by Canon Keller in his tract as conspicuous victims of
+the oppression and rack-renting which he says have prevailed upon the
+Ponsonby estates time out of mind. It was rather surprising, therefore,
+to find them joining with more than forty other tenants to sign an
+address, of which I here print the text:--
+
+ To C.W. TALBOT PONSONBY, Esq.
+
+ Honoured Sir,--The Tenantry of your Estates near Youghal have heard
+ with extreme pleasure of the arrival of yourself and lady in the
+ neighbourhood, and have deputed us to address you on their behalf.
+
+ Through us they bid you and Mrs. Ponsonby welcome, and respectfully
+ congratulate you on your accession to the Estates.
+
+ The name of Ponsonby is traditionally revered in this part of the
+ country, being associated in the recollections and impressions of
+ the people with all that is exalted, honourable, and generous. It
+ has been matter of regret that the heads of the family have not
+ (probably from uncontrollable causes) visited these Estates for
+ many years, but the tenantry have never wavered in their sentiments
+ of respect towards them.
+
+ We will not disguise from you the conviction generally entertained
+ that the improvement of landed property, and the condition of its
+ occupiers, is best promoted under the personal observation and
+ supervision of the proprietor, and your tenantry on that account
+ hail with satisfaction the promise your presence affords of future
+ intercourse between you and them.
+
+ Again, on the part of your Tenants and all connected with your
+ Estates, tendering you and your lady a most hearty welcome, and
+ sincerely wishing you and her a long and happy career--We subscribe
+ ourselves, Honoured Sir, Respectfully yours,
+
+ YOUGHAL, _May_ 1868.
+
+_Q_. Did Canon Keller ever see this address, may I ask, Mr. Ponsonby?
+
+_A_. I believe not; and I may as well say at once that I suppose he has
+taken for gospel all the stories which any of the tenants under the
+terrorism which has been established on the place think it best to pour
+into his listening ear. As I have said, he is quite a new man at
+Youghal, and when he first came there he was a quiet and not at all
+revolutionary priest. You saw him, and saw how good his manners are, and
+that he is a well-educated man. But on Sunday, November 7, 1886, a great
+meeting was held at Youghal. It was a queer meeting for a Sunday, being
+openly a political meeting, with banners and bands, to hear speeches
+from Mr. Lane, M.P., Mr. Flynn, M.P., and others. The Rev. Mr. Keller
+presided, and a priest from America, Father Hayes of Georgetown, Iowa,
+in the United States, was present. It was ostensibly a Home Rule
+meeting, but the burden of the speeches was agrarian. Mr. Lane, M.P.,
+made a bitter personal attack on another Nationalist member, Sir Joseph
+M'Kenna of Killeagh, calling him a "heartless and inhuman landlord;" and
+my property was also attended to by Mr. Lane, who advised my tenants
+openly not to accept my offer of 20 per cent. reduction, but to demand
+40 per cent. Father Hayes in his speech bade "every man stand to his
+guns," and wound up by declaring that if England and the landlords
+behaved in America as they behaved in Ireland, the Americans "would pelt
+them not only with dynamite, but with the lightnings of Heaven and the
+fires of hell, till every British bull-dog, whelp, and cur would be
+pulverised and made top-dressing for the soil." Canon Keller afterwards
+expressed disapproval of this speech of Hayes, and this coming to the
+knowledge of Hayes in America, Hayes denounced Keller for not daring to
+do this at the time in his presence. Since then Canon Keller has been
+much more violent in tone.
+
+_Q_. I don't want to carry you through a long examination, Mr. Ponsonby,
+but I see typical cases here, about which I should like to ask a
+question or two. Here, is Callaghan Flavin, for instance, described by
+Canon Keller as one of eight tenants who "had to retreat before the
+crowbar brigade," and who "deserved a better fate." Canon Keller says he
+is assured by a competent judge that Flavin's improvements, "full value
+for £341, 10s.," are now "the landlord's property." What are the facts
+about Mr. Flavin?
+
+_A_. Mr. Flavin's farm was held by his cousin, Ellen Flavin of Gilmore,
+who, on the 7th of February 1872, surrendered it to the landlord on
+receiving from me a sum of £172, 10s. 6d. I obtained a charging order
+under section 27 of the Land Act, entitling me to an annuity of £8, 12s.
+6d. for thirty-five years from July 3, 1872. It was let to Callaghan
+Flavin in preference to other applicants, July 3, 1872; and in 1873, at
+his request, I obtained a loan from the Board of Works for the thorough
+draining of a portion of the farm. Thirteen acres were drained at a cost
+of £84, 6s. 3d., for which the tenant promised to pay 5 per cent.
+interest, which I eventually forgave him. There was no house on the
+farm. He took it without one, and I did not want one there. He built a
+house himself without consulting my agent, and then wanted me to make
+him an allowance for it. I told him he had thirty-one years to enjoy it
+in, and must be content with that. About the same time he took another
+farm of mine at a rent of £35. Since I came into my property in 1868 I
+have laid out upon it in drainage, buildings, and planting--here are the
+accounts, which you may look at--over £15,000, including about £8000 of
+loans from the Board of Works. In the drainage the tenants got work for
+which they were paid. I gave them slates for the buildings, with timber
+and stone from the estate, and they supplied the labour. There is no
+case in which the outlays for improvements came from the tenants--not a
+single one. I repeat it, Canon Keller's tract is a tissue of fictions.
+
+What nonsense it is to talk about the "traditional rack-renting" of a
+property held by the Ponsonbys for two hundred years, the tenants on
+which could welcome me when I came into it with the language of the
+address you have here seen!
+
+I never evicted tenants for less than three years' arrears, till what
+Canon Keller calls the "crowbar brigade," by which he means the officers
+of the law, had to be put into action to meet the "Plan of Campaign" in
+May last. I did not proceed against the tenants because they could not
+pay. I selected the tenants who could pay, and who were led, or, I
+believe in most cases, "coerced," into refusing to pay by agitators with
+Mr. Lane, M.P., to inspire them, and Canon Keller, P.P., to glorify them
+in a tract.
+
+_Q_. What were your personal relations with the tenants when you were at
+Inchiquin?
+
+_A_. Always most friendly; and even the other day when I was there,
+while none of them would speak to me when they were all together, those
+I met individually touched their hats, and were as civil as ever. I
+believe they would all be thankful to have things as they were, and I
+have never refused to meet and treat with them on fair individual terms.
+
+In November 1885 my offer of an abatement of 15 per cent. being refused,
+a few tenants, I believe, clubbed their rents, and for the sake of peace
+I then offered 20 per cent., which they accepted and paid. In October
+1886 I hoped to prevent trouble by making the same offer of 20 per cent.
+abatement on non-judicial and 10 per cent. on judicial rents. One man
+took the latter abatement and paid. Then another tenant demanded 40 per
+cent. My agent said he would give them time, and also take money on
+account, the effect of which would be to put me out of court, and
+prevent my getting an order of ejectment if I wanted to for the balance.
+I thought this fair, and approved it, but I refused to make a 40 per
+cent. all-round abatement, authorising my agent, however, to make what
+abatements he liked in special cases. My words were, "I don't limit you
+on the amount of abatement you give, or as to the number of tenants you
+may choose so to treat." If this was not a fair free hand, what would
+be? My agent afterwards told me he had no chance to make this known. The
+fact is they meant to force the Plan on the tenants and me, and to
+prevent any settlement but a "victory for the League!"
+
+In my original notes of my conversation with Father Keller at Youghal, I
+found the name of one tenant whom he introduced to me, and who certainly
+told me that his holdings amounted to some £300 a year, and that they
+had been in his family for "two hundred years," set down as Doyle--I so
+printed it with the statements made. But Father Keller, to whom I
+submitted my proofs, and who was so good as to revise them, struck out
+the name of Doyle, and inserted that of Loughlin, putting the rental
+down at £94 (vol. ii. p. 71). Of course I accept this correction. But on
+my mentioning the matter to Mr. Ponsonby by letter, he replies to me
+(July 27th) as follows:--
+
+ "Maurice Doyle is a son of Richard Doyle, who died in 1876, leaving
+ his widow to carry on his farm of 74 acres 1 rood, in the townland
+ of Ballykitty, which he held in 1858 at a rental of £50, 11s. In
+ 1868 this was reduced to £48, 11s. In September 1871 he took in
+ addition a farm of 159 acres 2 roods at £130, in Burgen and
+ Ballykitty. He afterwards got a lease for thirty-one years of this
+ larger farm, with a portion of his earlier holding, for £155. This
+ left him to pay £21, 11s. for the residue of the earlier holding as
+ in 1858. But at his request, in 1876, the year of his death, I
+ reduced this to £17.
+
+ "In March 1879, by the death of Mr. Henry Hall, in whose family it
+ had been for certainly a century, the Inchiquin farm of 213 acres,
+ valued at £258, 10s., came on my hands. This farm was valued in
+ 1873 by one valuer at £384, 10s., and by another at £390, 10s. In
+ an old lease I find that this farm was let at £3 an acre. Mr. Henry
+ Hall to the day of his death held it at £306, 7s. 6d., under a
+ lease which I made a lease for life. For this farm Mrs. Richard
+ Doyle applied, agreeing to take it on a 31 years' lease, at £370 a
+ year. I let it to her, and she became the lease-holder, putting in
+ her son Maurice Doyle to take charge of it, though not as the
+ tenant. He was an active Land Leaguer from the moment he got into
+ the place, and in 1886 he was a leader in promoting the Plan of
+ Campaign. Proceedings had to be taken against his mother in order
+ to eject him, as she was the tenant, not he. I objected to this,
+ for I always have had the greatest regard for her. Had she been let
+ alone she would have paid her rent as she had always done. But Mr.
+ Lane and his allies saw it would never do to let Maurice Doyle
+ retain his place on his mother's holding. All this will show you
+ that Maurice Doyle did not inherit the Inchiquin farm. The only
+ inherited holding of his mother is the farm of 74 acres 1 rood in
+ the townland of Ballykitty, held by his father in 1858. I have no
+ doubt you saw Doyle at Youghal, by the description you gave me, and
+ you remembered his name at once. He was a thickset heavy-looking
+ man, florid, with a military moustache, the last time I saw him.
+ His mother is one of the 'rack-rented' tenants you hear of, having
+ been able in ten years to increase her acreage from 74 acres to 376
+ acres, and her rental from £48, 11s. to £542!"
+
+
+As to the general effect of all this business upon the tenants, and upon
+himself, Mr. Ponsonby spoke most feelingly. "The tenants are ruined
+where they might have been thriving. My means of being useful to them or
+to myself are taken away. My charges, though, all remain. I have to pay
+tithes for Protestant Church service, of which I can't have the benefit,
+the churches being closed; and the other day I had a notice that any
+property I had in England would be held liable for quit-rents to the
+Crown on my property in Ireland, of which the Government denies me
+practically any control or use!"
+
+
+
+NOTE G2.
+
+THE GLENBEHY EVICTION FUND.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 12.)
+
+
+In the _London Times_ of September 15 appears the following letter from
+the Land Agent whom I saw at Glenbehy, setting forth the effect of this
+"Glenbehy Eviction Fund" upon the morals of the tenants and the peace of
+the place:--
+
+ _To the Editor of the Times._
+
+ "Sir,--Although nearly eighteen months have elapsed since the
+ evictions on the Glenbehy estate, after which the above-named fund
+ was started and largely subscribed to by the sympathetic British
+ public, I think it only fair to throw a little light on the manner
+ in which this fund has been expended, and the effects which are
+ still felt in consequence of the money not yet being exhausted.
+
+ "It was generally supposed that the tenants then evicted were in
+ such poor circumstances as to be unable to settle, whereas, as a
+ matter of fact, they were, and are, with a few exceptions, the most
+ well-to-do on the estate, having, for the most part, from five to
+ fifteen head of cattle, in addition to sheep, pigs, etc.
+
+ "Among the tenants evicted at that time many had not paid rents
+ since 1879, and had been in illegal occupation since 1884, from
+ which latter date the landlord was responsible for taxes, provided
+ it is proved that sufficient distress cannot be made of the lands.
+ These tenants were offered a clear receipt to May 1, 1886, if they
+ paid half a year's rent, which would scarcely have paid the cost of
+ proceedings, and the landlord would therefore have been put to
+ actual loss. These people, though well able to settle, are given to
+ understand that as soon as they do so their participation in the
+ eviction fund will cease, and thus it will be seen that a direct
+ premium is being paid to dishonesty.
+
+ "In one case a widow woman was summoned for being on the farm from
+ which she was at that time evicted. Finding out that one of her
+ children was ill, I applied to the magistrate at the hearing of the
+ case only to impose a nominal fine. In consequence she was fined
+ one penny, but sooner than pay this she went to gaol, though she
+ had several head of cattle and, prior to her eviction, a very nice
+ farm. The case of this woman fairly illustrates the combination
+ which has existed to avoid the fulfilment of obligations.
+
+ "The amount of fines paid for similar offences comes, in several
+ instances, to nearly what I require to effect a settlement. Some of
+ the tenants actually wrote to the late agent on this estate begging
+ him to evict them in order that they might come in for a share of
+ the money raised for the relief of distress, and this clearly shows
+ beyond dispute that the well-meaning subscribers to the fund will
+ be more or less responsible for any further evictions to which it
+ may be necessary to resort. I may mention that the parish priest is
+ one of the trustees for the money which is thus being used for the
+ purpose of preventing settlements and keeping the place in a
+ continual state of turmoil.
+
+ "Judge Currane, at the January sessions held at Killarney this
+ year, ruled in about fifty ejectment cases on this estate that
+ tenants owing one and a half to nine years' rent should pay half a
+ year's rent and costs within a week, a quarter of a year's rent by
+ June 1, and a quarter of a year's rent by October 1; arrears to be
+ cancelled. Some of these, owing to non-compliance with the Judge's
+ ruling, may have to be evicted, and their eviction will be what is
+ termed the unrooting of peasants' houses and the ejectment of
+ overburdened tenants for not paying impossible rents.
+
+ "I confess I am at a loss to understand how Mr. Parnell's Arrears
+ Act would have improved matters or have averted what one of your
+ contemporaries calls a "painful scandal."--I am, Sirs, yours, &c.,
+
+ "D. TODD-THORNTON, J.P., Land Agent.
+
+ "Glenbehy, Killarney."
+
+
+
+NOTE G.
+
+HOME RULE AND PROTESTANTISM.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 68.)
+
+
+I fear that all the "Nationalist" clergy in Ireland are not as careful
+as Father Keller to avoid giving occasion for this impression that Irish
+autonomy would be followed by a persecution of the Protestants. But a
+little more than three years ago, for example, the following circular
+was issued by the Bishop of Ossory, and affixed to the door of the
+churches in his diocese. Who can wonder that it should have been
+regarded by Protestants in that diocese as a direct stirring up of
+bitter religious animosities against them? Or that, emanating directly
+as it did from a bishop of the Church, it should be represented as
+emanating indirectly from the Head of the Church himself at Rome?
+
+ "_Kilkenny, April 16th, 1885._
+
+ "REV. DEAR SIR,--May I ask you to read the following circular for
+ the people at each of the Masses on Sunday, 19th April?
+
+ "The course to be adopted for the future by the Priest of the Parish
+ to whom notice of a Mixed Marriage is given by the Minister, or the
+ Registrar, is as follows:--he makes the following entry on the book
+ of Parochial announcements, and reads it three consecutive Sundays
+ from the Altar:--
+
+ "'The Priests of the Parish have received the following notice of a
+ marriage to be celebrated between a Catholic and a Protestant. [Here
+ read Registrar's notice in full.] We have now to inform you that the
+ law of the Catholic Church regarding such marriages is: that the
+ Catholic party contracting marriage before a Registrar or other
+ unauthorised person is, by the very fact of so doing,
+ Excommunicated; and the witnesses to such marriage are also
+ Excommunicated.'
+
+ "I should be very much obliged if, as occasion may require, you
+ would explain the effects of this Excommunication from the Altar.
+
+ "You will please take notice that the Registrar or Minister is bound
+ legally to send the notice of marriage referred to above, and also,
+ that in reading it out _in the form, and with the accompanying
+ remarks above_, you incur no legal penalty.
+
+ "I feel sure that with your accustomed zeal you will do everything
+ in your power to prevent abuses in regard to the Sacrament of
+ Matrimony, which is great in Christ and the Church, and to induce
+ the faithful to prepare for receiving it by Prayer, by works of
+ Charity, and by approaching the Sacrament of Penance to purify their
+ souls.--Yours faithfully in Christ,
+
+ [Image: Cross] A. BROWNRIGG."
+
+
+ "MY DEAR BRETHREN,--We have been very much pained to learn, within
+ the past month, that marriages between Catholics and non-Catholics
+ have increased very much in this city of Kilkenny. Many
+ _evil-disposed_ persons, utterly unmindful of the prohibitions of
+ the Church, and regardless of the dreadful consequences they bring
+ on themselves, have not hesitated to enter into those _unholy
+ matrimonial alliances_ called "Mixed Marriages," which the Catholic
+ Church has always _hated and detested_. Those misguided Catholics,
+ who do not deserve the name, have not blushed to go, in some
+ instances, before the Protestant Minister, in other instances,
+ before the Public Registrar, to ask them to assist at their marriage
+ with a Protestant. By contracting marriage in this way, they run a
+ great risk of bringing on themselves and on their children, should
+ they have any, the _maledictions_ of Heaven instead of the blessings
+ of religion. In order to put a stop to this growing abuse, and to
+ prevent it from spreading like a contagion to other parts of the
+ Diocese, we beg to remind the faithful of certain regulations which,
+ for the future, shall have force in the Diocese of Ossory in
+ reference to the Catholics, who so far forget themselves as to
+ contract such marriages.
+
+ "1. In the first place, any one who contracts a "Mixed Marriage"
+ without a dispensation from the Holy See and before a Protestant
+ Minister or a Registrar is, by the very fact, guilty of a most
+ grievous mortal sin by violating a solemn law of the Church in a
+ most grave matter.
+
+ "2. The Catholic who assists as witness at such marriage also
+ commits a most grievous sin by co-operating in an unlawful act.
+
+ "3. Both the Catholic party contracting the marriage and the
+ Catholic witnesses to it cannot be absolved by any priest in the
+ Diocese of Ossory, unless by the Bishop or by those to whom he
+ grants special faculties.
+
+ "4. In order more effectually to deter people from entering into
+ _those detestable marriages_, the penalty of _Excommunication_
+ is hereby attached to that sin both for the Catholic _contracting_
+ party as also for the Catholic _witnesses_ to such marriage.
+
+ "5. The notice which the Protestant Rector or the Registrar is
+ legally bound in such cases to send to the Parish Priest of the
+ Catholic party, will be read from the Altar for three consecutive
+ Sundays, and thus the _crime_ of the offending party brought out
+ into open light before his or her fellow-parishioners.
+
+ "6. For the rest, we hope the sense of decency and religion of the
+ Catholic people and their Pastors shall be no more hurt by any
+ Catholic entering into those marriages, so full of, misery and evil
+ of every kind for themselves, their children, and society at
+ large.--Yours faithfully in Christ,
+
+ [Image: Cross] ABRAHAM, Bishop of Ossory.
+
+
+
+NOTE H.
+
+TULLY AND THE WOODFORD EVICTIONS.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 149.)
+
+
+Since the first edition of this book was published certain "evictions"
+mentioned in it as impending on the Clanricarde estates have been
+carried out. I have no reason to suppose that there was more or less
+reason for carrying out these evictions than there usually is, not in
+Ireland only, but all over the civilised world, for a resort by the
+legal owners of property to legal means of recovering the possession of
+it from persons who fail to comply with the terms on which it was put
+into their keeping. Whether this failure results from dishonesty or from
+misfortune is a consideration not often allowed, I think, to affect the
+right of the legal owner of the property concerned to his legal remedy
+in any other country but Ireland, nor even in Ireland in the case of any
+property other than property in land. But as what I learned on the spot
+touching the general condition of the Clanricarde tenants, and touching
+the conduct and character of Lord Clanricarde's agent, Mr. Tener, led me
+to take a special interest in these evictions, I asked him to send me
+some account of them. In reply he gave me a number of interesting
+details.
+
+The only serious attempt at resisting the execution of the law was made
+by "Dr." Tully, one of the leading local "agitators," to the tendency of
+whose harangues judicial reference was made during the investigation
+into the case of Mr. Wilfrid Blunt. Tully had a holding of seventeen
+acres at a rent of £2, 10s., the Government valuation being £4. He
+earned a good livelihood as a boat-builder, and he had put up a slated
+house on his holding. But in November 1884 he chose to stop paying the
+very low rent at which he held his place, and he has paid no rent since
+that time. As is stated in a footnote on page 153, vol. ii. of this
+book, a decree was granted against Tully by Judge Henn for three years'
+rent due in May 1887, and his equity of redemption having expired July
+9, 1888, this recourse was had to the law against him.
+
+As the leading spirit of the agitation, Tully had put a garrison into
+his house of twelve men and two women. He had dug a ditch around it,
+taken out the window-sashes, filled up the casements and the doorways
+with stones and trunks of trees. Portholes had been pierced under the
+roof, through which the defenders might thrust red-hot pikes,
+pitchforks, and other weapons, and empty pails of boiling water upon the
+assailants. A brief parley took place. Tully refused to make any offer
+of a settlement unless the agent would agree to reinstate all the
+evicted tenants, to which Mr. Tener replied that he would recognise no
+"combination," but was ready to deal with every tenant fairly and
+individually. Finally the Sheriff ordered his men to take the place.
+Ladders were planted, and while some of the constables, under the
+protection of a shield covered with zinc, a sort of Roman _testudo_,
+worked at removing the earthern ramparts, others nimbly climbed to the
+roof and began to break in from above. In their excitement the garrison
+helped this forward by breaking holes through the roof themselves to get
+at the attacking party, and in about twenty minutes the fortress was
+captured, and the inmates were prisoners. Two constables were burned by
+the red-hot pikes, the gun of another was broken to pieces by a huge
+stone, and a fourth was slightly wounded by a fork. One of the defenders
+got a sword-cut; and Tully was brought forth as one too severely wounded
+to walk. Upon investigation, however, the surgeon refused to certify
+that he was unable to undergo the ordinary imprisonment in such cases
+made and provided.
+
+The collapse of the resistance at this central point was followed by a
+general surrender.
+
+After the capture of Tully's house, Mr. Tener writes to me, "I found it
+being gutted by his family, who would have carried it away piecemeal.
+They had already taken away the flooring of one of the rooms." Thereupon
+Mr. Tener had the house pulled down, with the result of seeing a
+statement made in a leading Nationalist paper that he was "evicting the
+tenants and pulling down their houses."
+
+"Yesterday," Mr. Tener writes to me on the 9th of September, "I walked
+twenty-five miles, visiting thirty farms about Portumna. Except in two
+or three cases, the tenants have ample means, and part of the live stock
+alone on the farms, exclusive of the crops, would suffice to pay all the
+rents I had demanded. On the farms recently 'evicted,' I found treble
+the amount of the rent due in live stock alone."
+
+As to one case of these recent evictions, I found it stated in an Irish
+journal that a young man, who had been ill of consumption for two years,
+the son of a tenant, was removed from the house, the local physician
+refusing to certify that he was unfit for removal, and that he died a
+few days afterwards. The implication was obvious, and I asked Mr. Tener
+for the facts.
+
+He replied, "This young man, John Fahey, was in consumption, but did not
+appear to be in any danger. Dr. Carte, an Army surgeon, examined him,
+and said there was no immediate danger. The day was fine and he walked
+about wrapped in a comfortable coat, and talked with me and others. His
+father, a respectable man, made no attempt to defend his house; and at
+his request, after the crowd had gone away, my man in charge permitted
+the invalid and the family to reoccupy the house temporarily because of
+his illness. There was no inquest, and no need of any, after his death.
+His father, Patrick Fahey, had means to pay, but told me he 'could not,'
+which meant he 'dared not.' I went to him personally twice, and sent him
+many messages. But the terror of the League was upon the poor man.
+
+"An interesting case is that of Michael Fahey, of Dooras. In 1883 his
+rent was judicially reduced about 5 per cent., from £33 to £31, 5s. His
+house and all about it is substantial and comfortable. His father, about
+thirty years ago, fought for a whole night and bravely beat off a party
+of 'Terry-Alts,' the 'Moonlighters' of that day. For his courage the
+Government presented him with a gun, of which the son is very proud.
+Pity he did not inherit the pluck with the gun of his parent!
+
+"I had been privately told that this tenant would pay; but that he would
+first produce a doctor's certificate that his old mother could not be
+moved. He did give the Sheriff a carefully worded document to show this,
+but it was so vague that I objected to its being received by the
+Sheriff. Upon this (not before! mark the craft of even a well-disposed
+Irish tenant in those evil days), I was asked to go into the house. I
+went in and entered the parlour. There the tenant told me he would pay
+the year's rent and the costs, amounting to £50. He had risen from his
+seat to fetch the money, when, lo! Father Egan (the priest upon whose
+head the widow of the murdered Finlay called down the curse of God in
+the open street of Woodford) appeared in the doorway. He had come in on
+a pretence of seeing the old mother of the tenant, who had (for that
+occasion) taken to her bed. The bedroom lay beyond the parlour, and was
+entered from it. The tenant actually shook with fear as Father Egan
+passed through, and I thought all hope of a settlement gone, when
+suddenly the officer of the police came in, passed into the bedroom, and
+told Father Egan he must withdraw. This Father Egan refused to do,
+whereupon the officer said very quietly, 'I shall remove you forthwith
+if you do not go out quietly.' Upon this Father Egan hastily left. The
+tenant then went into the bedroom and soon reappeared with the £50 in
+bank-notes, which he paid me. All this was dramatic enough. But the
+comedy was next performed in front of the house, where all could see it,
+of handing to the Sheriff the alleged doctor's certificate, and of my
+saying aloud that 'in the circumstances' I had no objection to his
+receiving it! After this all the forces proceeded to take their luncheon
+on the green bank sloping down to the Shannon in front of the
+farm-house. There is a fine orchard on the place, and it recalled to me
+some of the farms I saw in Virginia.
+
+"I had gone into the house again, and was standing near the fire in the
+kitchen, where some of my escort were taking their luncheon. It is a
+large kitchen, and perhaps a dozen people were in it, when in came
+Father Egan again and called to the tenant Fahey, 'Put out those
+policemen, and do not suffer one of them to remain.'
+
+"The sergeant instantly said, 'We are here on duty, Father Egan, and if
+you dare to try to intimidate this tenant, I shall either put you out or
+arrest you.'
+
+"'Yes,' I interposed, looking at the sergeant, 'you are certainly here
+on duty, and in the name of the law, and it is sad to see a clergyman
+here in the interest of an illegal, criminal, and rebellious movement,
+and of the immoral Plan of Campaign.'
+
+"'Oh!' exclaimed Father Egan, 'the opinion of the agent of the Marquis
+of Clanricarde is valuable, truly!'
+
+"'I give you,' I said, 'not my opinion, but the opinion of Dr. Healy and
+Dr. O'Dwyer, bishops of your Church, and men worthy of all respect and
+reverence. And I am sorry to know that some ecclesiastics deserve no
+respect, but that at their doors lies the main responsibility for the
+misery and the crime which afflict our unhappy country. I feel sure a
+just God will punish them in due time.'
+
+"Father Egan made no reply, but paused a moment, and then walked out of
+the house.
+
+"At the next house, that of Dennis Fahey, we found a still better
+dwelling. Here we had another mock certificate, but we received the rent
+with the costs."
+
+
+
+NOTE H2.
+
+BOYCOTTING THE DEAD.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 151.)
+
+
+The following official account sent to me (July 24) of an affair in
+Donegal, the result of the gospel of "Boycotting" taught in that region,
+needs and will bear no comment.
+
+Patrick Cavanagh came to reside at Clonmany, County Donegal, about two
+months ago, as caretaker on some evicted farms. He died on Wednesday
+evening, June 20th, having received the full rites of the Roman Catholic
+Church. The people had displayed no ill-will towards him during his
+brief residence at Clonmany, and on the evening of his death his body
+was washed and laid out by some women. On Thursday two townsmen dug his
+grave, where pointed out by Father Doherty, P.P.
+
+The first symptom of change of feeling was that on Thursday every
+carpenter applied to had some excuse for not making a coffin for the
+body of deceased. On Friday morning the grave was found to be filled
+with stones, and a deputation waited on Father Doherty to protest
+against Cavanagh's burial in the chapel graveyard. He told them to go
+home and mind their business. About 10.30 A.M. on Friday the chapel bell
+was rung--not tolled or rung as for service, but faster. The local
+sergeant of police went to the cemetery; when he arrived there the
+tolling ceased. He then went to Father Doherty, who told those present
+that their conduct was such as to render them unfit for residence
+anywhere but in a savage country. He told them to go to their homes, and
+advised them to allow the corpse to be buried in the grave he had marked
+out. After Father Doherty had left, the people condemned his
+interference, and said they would not allow any stranger to be buried in
+the graveyard. When Constable Brady put it to those present that their
+real objection did not lie in the fact that Cavanagh had been a
+stranger, he was not contradicted.
+
+The body was ultimately buried at Carndonagh on Saturday, several people
+remaining in the graveyard at Clonmany all through the night (Friday)
+till the body was taken to Carndonagh for burial.
+
+At Carndonagh Petty Sessions, on the 18th July 1888, Con. Doherty and
+Owen Doherty, with five others, were prosecuted for unlawful assembly on
+the occasion above referred to. The first two named, who were the
+ringleaders, were convicted, and sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment
+each with hard labour; the charges against the remainder were dismissed.
+
+
+
+NOTE I.
+
+POST-OFFICE SAVINGS BANKS.
+
+(Vol. i. p. 117; vol. ii. pp. 5, 12, 66, 95, 200, 248.)
+
+
+As the Post-Office Savings Banks represent the smaller depositors, and
+command special confidence among them even in the disturbed districts, I
+print here an official statement showing the balances due to depositors
+in the undermentioned offices, situated in certain of the most disturbed
+regions I visited, on the 31st December of the years 1880 and 1887
+respectively:--
+
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ | OFFICE. | 1880. | 1887. |
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ | | £ s. d. | £ s. d. |
+ | Bunbeg, | 1,270 6 7 | 1,206 18 2 |
+ | Falcarragh, | 62 15 10 | 494 10 8 |
+ | Gorey, | 3,690 14 4 | 5,099 5 7 |
+ | Inch, |[A] 8 11 0 | 209 7 5 |
+ | Killorglin, | 282 15 9 | 1,299 2 6 |
+ | Loughrea, | 5,500 19 9 | 6,311 4 11 |
+ | Mitchelstown, | 1,387 13 2 | 2,846 9 3 |
+ | Portumna, | 2,539 10 11 | 3,376 5 4 |
+ | Sixmilebridge, | 382 17 10 | 934 13 4 |
+ | Stradbally, | 1,812 14 8 | 2,178 18 2 |
+ | Woodford, | 259 14 6 | 1,350 17 11 |
+ | Youghal, | 3,031 0 7 | 7,038 7 2 |
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ [A] This Office was not opened for Savings Bank
+ business until the year 1881, the amount shown
+ being balance due on the 31st December 1882.
+
+It appears from this table that the deposits in these Savings Banks
+increased in the aggregate from £20,329, 15s. 11d. in 1880 to £32,347,
+9s. 7d. in 1887, or almost 60 per cent, in seven years. They fell off in
+only one case, at Bunbeg, and there only to a nominal amount. At Youghal
+they much more than doubled, increasing about 133 per cent. Yet in all
+these places the Plan of Campaign has been invoked "because the people
+were penniless and could not pay their debts!"
+
+
+
+NOTE K.
+
+THE COOLGREANY EVICTIONS.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 216.)
+
+
+Captain Hamilton sends me the following graphic account of this affair
+at Coolgreany:--
+
+In the _Freeman's Journal_ of the 16th December 1886, it is reported
+that a meeting of the Brooke tenantry, the Rev. P. O'Neill in the chair,
+was held at Coolgreany on the Sunday previous to the 15th December 1886,
+the date on which the "Plan of Campaign" was adopted on the estate, at
+which it was resolved that if I refused the terms offered they would
+join the "Plan."
+
+I had no conference at Freeman's house or anywhere else at any time with
+two parish priests. On the 15th December 1886, when seated in Freeman's
+house waiting to receive the rents, four priests, a reporter of the
+_Freeman's Journal_, some local reporters, and four of the tenants
+rushed into the room; and the priests in the rudest possible manner (the
+Rev. P. Farrelly, one of them, calling me "Francy Hyne's hangman," and
+other terms of abuse) informed me that unless I re-instated a former
+Roman Catholic tenant in a farm which he had previously held, and which
+was then let to a Protestant, and gave an abatement of 30 per cent., no
+rent would be paid _me_ that day. Dr. Dillon, C.C., was not present on
+this occasion, or, if so, I do not remember seeing him.
+
+On my asking if I had no alternative but to concede to their demand, the
+Rev. Mr. Dunphy, parish priest, replied, "None other; do not think, sir,
+we have come here to-day to do honour to you."
+
+The Rev. P. O'Neill spoke as he always does, in a more gentlemanly and
+conciliatory manner, and I therefore, as the confusion in the room was
+great, offered to discuss the matter with him, the Rev. O'Donel, C.C.,
+and the tenants, if the other priests, who were strangers to me, and the
+reporters would leave the room. This the Rev. Mr. Dunphy declared they
+would not do, and I accordingly refused further to discuss the matter.
+
+After they left the house, one of the tenants, Mick Darcy, stepped
+forward and said, "Settle with us, Captain." I replied, "Certainly, if
+you come back with me into the house." The Rev. Mr. Dunphy took him by
+the collar of his coat and threw him against the wall of the house, then
+turning to me with his hand raised said, "You shall not do so; we, who
+claim the temporal as well as spiritual power over _you_ as well as
+these poor creatures, will settle this matter with you."
+
+The tenants were then taken down to the League rooms, where two M.P.s,
+Sir Thomas Esmonde and Mr. Mayne, were waiting to receive the rents,
+which, one by one, they were ordered in to pay into the war-chest of the
+"Plan of Campaign."
+
+I have I fear written too much of this commencement of the war on the
+estate which has since led to over seventy of the tenants and their
+families being ejected, and has brought ruin on nearly all who joined
+it. I have considerable experience as a land agent, but I know of no
+estate where the tenants were more respectable, better housed, or, as a
+body, in better circumstances than on the Brooke estate. They had a
+kind, indulgent landlord, and they knew it; and nothing but the belief
+that, led by their clergy, they were foremost in a battle fighting for
+their country and religion, would have induced them to put up with the
+great hardships and loss they have undoubtedly had to suffer.
+
+
+
+NOTE L.
+
+A DUCAL SUPPER IN IRELAND IN 1711.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 283.)
+
+
+The following entry I take from the Expense-Book of the Duke of Ormond,
+under date of August 23, 1711:--
+
+His Grace came to Kilkenny, half an hour after 10 at night.
+
+HIS GRACE'S TABLE.
+
+Pottage. Sautee Veal.
+5 Pullets, Bacon and Collyflowers.
+Pottage Meagre.
+Pikes with White Sauce.
+A Turbot with Lobster Sauce.
+Umbles.
+A Hare Hasht.
+Buttered Chickens, G.
+Hasht Veal and New Laid Eggs.
+Removes.
+A Shoulder and Neck of Mutton.
+Haunch of Venison.
+
+_Second Course._
+
+Lobsters.
+Tarts, an Oval Dish.
+Crabbs Buttered.
+4 Pheasants, 4 Partridges, 4 Turkeys.
+Ragoo Mushrooms.
+Kidney Beans. Ragoo Oysters.
+Fritters.
+Two Sallets.
+
+
+
+NOTE M.
+
+LETTER FROM MR. O'LEARY.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 291.)
+
+
+In the first edition of this book I credited Mr. O'Leary with making
+this pungent remark about figs and grapes, because I found it jotted
+down in my original memoranda as coming from him. In a private note he
+assures me that he does not think it was made by him, and though this
+does not agree with my own recollection, I defer, of course, to his
+impression. And this I do the more readily that it affords me an
+opportunity for printing the following very characteristic and
+interesting letter sent to me by him for publication should I think fit
+to use it.
+
+As the most important support given by the Irish in America to the
+Nationalists is solicited by their agents on the express ground that
+they are really labouring to establish an Irish Republic, this outspoken
+declaration of Mr. O'Leary, that he does not believe they "expect or
+desire" the establishment of an Irish Republic, will be of interest on
+my side of the water:--
+
+ "DUBLIN, _Sept._ 9, '88.
+
+ "My Dear Sir,--I am giving more bother about what you make me say
+ in your book than the thing is probably worth, especially seeing
+ that what you say about me and my present attitude towards men and
+ things here is almost entirely correct.
+
+ "It is proverbially hard to prove a negative, and my main reason
+ for believing I did not say the thing about figs and grapes is that
+ I never could remember the whole of any proverb in conversation;
+ but I am absolutely certain I never said that 'some of them (the
+ National Leaguers) expect to found an Irish republic on robbery,
+ and to administer it by falsehood. We don't.' Most certainly I do
+ not expect to found anything on robbery, or administer anything by
+ falsehood, but I do not in the least believe that the National
+ League either expects or desires to found an Irish republic at all!
+ Neither do I believe that the Leaguers will long retain the
+ administration of such small measure of Home Rule, as I now (since
+ the late utterances of Mr. Parnell and Mr. Gladstone) believe we
+ are going to get. My fault with the present people is not that they
+ are looking, or mean to look, for too much, but that they may be
+ induced, by pressure from their English Radical allies, to be
+ content with too little. It is only a large and liberal measure of
+ Home Rule which will ever satisfy the Irish people, and I fear
+ that, if the smaller fry of Radical M.P.'s are allowed to have a
+ strong voice in a matter of which they know next to nothing, the
+ settlement of the Irish question will be indefinitely postponed.--I
+ remain, faithfully yours,
+
+ "JOHN O'LEARY."
+
+
+
+NOTE N
+
+BOYCOTTING PRIVATE OPINION.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 293.)
+
+
+This case of Mr. Taylor is worth preserving _in extenso_ as an
+illustration of that spirit in the Irish journalism of the day, against
+which Mr. Rolleston and his friends protest as fatal to independence,
+manliness, and truth. I simply cite the original attack made upon Mr.
+Taylor, the replies made by himself and his friends, and the comments
+made upon those replies by the journal which assailed him. They all tell
+their own story.
+
+ (_UNITED IRELAND_, JUNE 16.)
+
+ Mr. John F. Taylor owes everything he has or is to the Irish
+ National Party; nor is he slow to confess it where the
+ acknowledgment will serve his personal interests. His sneers are
+ all anonymous, and, like Mr. Fagg, the grateful and deferential
+ valet in _The Rivals_, "it hurts his conscience to be found out."
+ There is no honesty or sincerity in the man. His covert gibes are
+ the spiteful emanation of personal disappointment; his lofty
+ morality is a cloak for unscrupulous self-seeking. He has always
+ shown himself ready to say anything or do anything that may serve
+ his own interests. In the general election of 1885 he made frantic
+ efforts to get into Parliament as a member of the Irish Party. He
+ ghosted every member of the party whose influence he thought might
+ help him--notably the two men, Mr. Dillon and Mr. O'Brien, at whom
+ he now sneers, as he fondly believes, in the safe seclusion of an
+ anonymous letter of an English newspaper. During the period of
+ probation his hand was incessant on Mr. Dillon's door-knocker. The
+ most earnest supplications were not spared. All in vain. Either his
+ character or his ability failed to satisfy the Irish leader, and
+ his claim was summarily rejected. Since then his wounded vanity has
+ found vent in spiteful calumny of almost every member of the Irish
+ Party--whenever he found malice a luxury that could be safely
+ indulged in.
+
+ "His next step was a startling one. We have absolute reason to
+ know, when the last Coercion Act was in full swing, this
+ pure-souled and disinterested patriot begged for, received, and
+ accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship under a Coercion
+ Government. As was wittily said at the time, he sold his
+ principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+ stirred the mess. Strong pressure was brought to bear on him, and
+ he was induced for his own sake, after many protests and with much
+ reluctance, to publicly refuse the office he had already privately
+ accepted. Mr. Taylor professes to model himself on Robert Emmet and
+ Thomas Davis; it is hard to realise Thomas Davis or Robert Emmet as
+ a Coercion Crown Prosecutor in the pay of Dublin Castle. Since then
+ there has been no more persistent caviller at the Irish policy and
+ the Irish Party in company where he believed such cavilling paid.
+ When Home Rule was proposed by Mr. Gladstone, he had a thousand
+ foolish sneers for the measure and its author. When the Bill was
+ defeated, he elected Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Goschen, and Mr. T.W.
+ Russell as the gods of his idolatry. Such a nature needs a patron,
+ and Mr. Webb, Q.C., the Tory County Court Judge who doubled the
+ sentence on Father M'Fadden, was the patron to be selected. It is
+ shrewdly suspected that he supplied most of the misguiding
+ information for Dr. Webb's coercion pamphlet, and it is probable
+ that Dr. Webb gives him a lift with his weekly letter to the
+ _Manchester Guardian._
+
+
+ (_UNITED IRELAND_, JUNE 23.)
+
+ MR. JOHN F. TAYLOR.
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Sir,--You would not, I am sure, allow intentional misstatements to
+ appear in your columns, and I ask you to allow me space to correct
+ three erroneous observations made about myself in your current
+ issue--
+
+ 1. The first statement is to the effect that I owe everything I
+ have, or that I am, to the Irish National Party. I owe absolutely
+ nothing to the Irish Party, except an attempt to boycott me on my
+ circuit, which, fortunately for me, has failed.
+
+ 2. The second is to the effect that I made "frantic efforts" (these
+ are the words, I think) to enter Parliament, and besieged Mr.
+ Dillon's house during the time when candidates were being chosen. I
+ saw Mr. Dillon exactly twice, both occasions at Mr. Davitt's
+ request. Mr. Davitt urged me to allow my name to go forward as a
+ candidate, and it was at his wish and solicitation that I saw Mr.
+ Dillon.
+
+ 3. It is further said that I begged a Crown Prosecutorship.
+ Fortunately, Mr. Walker and The M'Dermot are living men, and they
+ know this to be absolutely untrue. I was offered such an
+ appointment, and, contrary to my own judgment, I allowed myself to
+ be guided by Mr. Davitt, who thought the matter would be
+ misunderstood in the state of things then existing. I believe I am
+ the only person that ever declined such an offer.
+
+ As to general statements, these are of no importance, and I shall
+ not trouble you about them.--Yours very truly,
+
+ JOHN F. TAYLOR.
+
+ _P.S._--The introduction of Dr. Webb's name was a gratuitous
+ outrage, Dr. Webb and I never assisted each other in anything
+ except in the defence of P.N. Fitzgerald. J.F.T.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Dear Sir,--As my name has been introduced into the controversy
+ between yourself and Mr. Taylor, I feel called upon to substantiate
+ the two statements wherein my name occurs in Mr. Taylor's letter of
+ last week. It was at my request that he called upon Mr. John
+ Dillon, M.P. I think I accompanied him on the occasion, and unless
+ my memory is very much at fault, Mr. Dillon was not unfriendly to
+ Mr. Taylor's proposed candidature. This visit occurred some three
+ months after Mr. Taylor had, on my advice, declined the Crown
+ Prosecutorship for King's County, a post afterwards applied for by
+ and granted to a near relative of one of the most prominent members
+ of the Irish Party. With Mr. Taylor's general views on the present
+ situation, or opinions upon parties or men, I have no concern. But,
+ in so far as the circumstances related above are dealt with in your
+ issue of last week, I think an unjust imputation has been made
+ against him, and in the interests of truth and fair play I feel
+ called upon to adduce the testimony of facts as they
+ occurred.--Yours truly,
+
+ MICHAEL DAVITT.
+
+ Ballybrack, Co. Dublin,
+
+ June 19, 1888.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Sir,--As this is, I believe, the first time I have sought to
+ intrude upon your columns, I hope you will allow me some slight
+ space in the interests of fair-play and freedom of speech. Those
+ interests seem to me to have been quite set at naught in the
+ attack, or rather series of attacks, upon Mr. Taylor in your last
+ issue. Mr. Taylor's views upon many matters are not mine. He is far
+ more democratic in his opinions than I see any sufficient reason
+ for being, and he is very much more of what is called a land
+ reformer than I am; but on an acquaintance of some years I have
+ ever found him an honourable and high-minded gentleman, and as good
+ a Nationalist, from my point of view, as most of the members of the
+ Irish Parliamentary Party whom I either know or know of. Of some of
+ the charges made against Mr. Taylor, such as the seeking for Crown
+ Prosecutorships and the like, I am in no position to speak, save
+ from my knowledge of his character, but I understand Mr. Davitt
+ knows all about these things, and I suppose he will tell what he
+ knows. But of the main matter, and I think the chief cause of your
+ ire, I am quite in a position to speak. I have read at least a
+ score of Mr. Taylor's letters to the _Manchester Guardian_, and I
+ have always found them very intelligently written, and invariably
+ characterised by a spirit of fairness and moderation; indeed, the
+ chief fault I found with them was that they took too favourable a
+ view of the motives, if not the acts, of many of our public men,
+ but notably of Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien. You may, of course,
+ fairly say that I am not the best judge of either the acts or the
+ motives of these gentlemen, and I freely grant you that I may not,
+ for my way of looking upon the Irish question is quite other than
+ theirs; but what I must be excused for holding is that both I and
+ Mr. Taylor have quite as good a right to our opinions as either of
+ these gentlemen, or as any other member of the Irish Parliamentary
+ Party. But this is the very last right that people are inclined to
+ grant to each other in Ireland just now. Personally I care very
+ little for this, but for Ireland's sake I care much. Some twenty
+ years ago or so I was sent into penal servitude with the almost
+ entire approval, expressed or implied, of the Irish Press. Some
+ short time after the same Press found out that I and my friends had
+ not sinned so grievously in striving to free Ireland. But men and
+ times and things may change again, and, though I am growing old, I
+ hope still to live long enough to be forgiven for my imperfect
+ appreciation of the blessings of Boycotting, and the Plan of
+ Campaign, and many similar blessings. It matters little indeed how
+ or when I die, so that Ireland lives, but her life can only be a
+ living death if Irishmen are not free to say what they believe, and
+ to act as they deem right.--Your obedient servant,
+
+ JOHN O'LEARY.
+
+ June 18, 1888.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Dear Sir,--I observe that in your last issue, amongst other things,
+ you state that Mr. Taylor accepted a Crown Prosecutorship in 1885.
+ I happen to know the precise facts. Mr. Taylor was offered the
+ Crown Prosecutorship of the King's County, and some of us strongly
+ advised him to accept it. There were no political prosecutions
+ impending at the time, and it seemed to me that a Nationalist who
+ would do his work honestly in prosecuting offenders against the
+ ordinary law might strike a blow against tyranny by refusing to
+ accept a brief, if offered, against men accused of political
+ offences or prosecuted under a Coercion Act. I know that a similar
+ view was entertained by the late Very Rev. Dr. Kavanagh of Kildare,
+ and many others. However, we failed to influence Mr. Taylor further
+ than to make him say that he would do nothing in the matter until
+ Mr. Davitt was consulted. I, for one, called on Mr. Davitt, and
+ pressed my views upon him; but he was decided that no Nationalist
+ could identify himself in the smallest way with Castle rule in
+ Ireland. This settled the question, and Mr. Taylor declined the
+ post, which was subsequently applied for by Mr. Luke Dillon, who
+ now holds it.--Faithfully yours,
+
+ JAMES A. POOLE.
+
+ 29 Harcourt Street.
+
+
+
+ EDITORIAL NOTE.
+
+ _"United Ireland," June 23._
+
+ We devote a large portion of our space to-day to the apparently
+ organised defence of Mr. J.F. Taylor and his friends, and we are
+ quite content to rest upon their letters the justification for our
+ comments. When a gentleman who avows himself a disappointed
+ aspirant for Parliamentary honours, and who owns his regret that he
+ did not become a petty Castle placeman, is discovered writing in an
+ important English Liberal paper, venomous little innuendos at the
+ expense of sorely attacked Irish leaders which excite the
+ enthusiasm of the _Liarish Times_, it was high time to intimate to
+ the _Manchester Guardian_ the source from which its Irish
+ information is derived. The case against Mr. Taylor as a
+ criticaster is clinched by the fact that his cause is espoused by
+ Mr. John O'Leary. The Irish public are a little weary of Mr.
+ O'Leary's querulous complaints as an _homme incompris_. So far as
+ we are aware, the only ground he himself has for complaining of
+ want of toleration is that he possibly considers the good-humoured
+ toleration for years invariably extended to his opinions on men and
+ things savours of neglect. His idea of toleration with respect to
+ others seems to be toleration for everybody except the unhappy
+ wretches who may happen to be for the moment doing any practicable
+ service in the Irish cause.
+
+
+
+
+NOTE O.
+
+BOYCOTTING BY "CROWNER'S QUEST LAW."
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 312.)
+
+
+The following circumstantial account of this deplorable case of Ellen
+Gaffney preserved here, as I find it printed in the _Irish Times_ of
+February 27, 1888.
+
+"In the Court of Queen's Bench, on Saturday, the Lord Chief-Justice (Sir
+Michael Morris, Bart.), Mr. Justice O'Brien, Mr. Justice Murphy, and Mr.
+Justice Gibson presiding, judgment was delivered in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney. The original motion was to quash the verdict of a coroner's
+jury held at Philipstown on August 27th and September 1st last, on the
+body of a child named Mary Anne Gaffney.
+
+"The Lord Chief-Justice said it appeared that Mary Anne Gaffney, the
+child on whose body the inquest was held, was born on the 23d July, and
+that she died on the 25th August, 1887. A Dr. Clarke, who had been very
+much referred to in the course of the proceedings, called upon the local
+sergeant of the police, and directed his attention to the body, but the
+sergeant having inspected the body, came to the conclusion that there
+was no need for an inquest. The doctor considered differently, and the
+sergeant communicated with the Coroner on the 26th August, and on the
+next day that gentleman arrived in Philipstown. He had a conference
+there with Dr. Clarke and with a reverend gentleman named Father Bergin,
+and subsequently proceeded to hold an inquest upon the child in a
+public-house--a most appropriate place apparently for the transactions
+which afterwards occurred there. The investigation, if it might be so
+called, was proceeded with upon that 27th of August. Very strong
+affidavits had been made on the part of Mrs. Gaffney--who applied to
+have the inquisition quashed--her husband, and some of the constabulary
+authorities as to the line of conduct pursued upon that occasion. Ellen
+Gaffney and her husband were taken into custody on the day the inquest
+opened by the verbal direction of the Coroner, who refused to complete
+the depositions given by the former on the ground that she was not
+sworn. That did not take him out of the difficulty, for if she was not
+sworn she had a right to be sworn, and the Coroner had no right to
+prevent her. The inquest was resumed on the 1st September in the
+court-house at Philipstown--the proper place--and a curious letter was
+read from the Coroner, the effect of which was that he did not consider
+that there was any ground for detaining the man Gaffney in custody, but
+the woman was brought before a justice of the peace and committed for
+trial. She was in prison from August 27th until the month of December,
+when the lucky accident of a winter assize occurred, else she might be
+there still. At the adjourned inquest the Coroner proceeded to read over
+the depositions taken on the former day, and it was sworn by four
+witnesses, whom he (the Lord Chief-Justice) entirely credited, that the
+Coroner read these depositions as if they were originals, whereas an
+unprecedented transaction had occurred. The Coroner had given the
+original depositions out of his own custody, and given them to a
+reverend gentleman who was rather careless of them, as was shown by the
+evidence of a witness named Greene, who deposed that he saw a car on the
+road upon which sat two clergymen, and he found on the road the original
+depositions which, presumably, one of the clergymen had dropped. The
+depositions were handed to a magistrate and afterwards returned to the
+police at Philipstown, who had possession of them on the resumption of
+the inquest. If the case stood alone there it was difficult to
+understand how a Coroner could come into court and appear by counsel to
+resist the quashing of an inquisition in regard to which at the very
+door such gross personal misconduct was demonstrated. No doubt, he said,
+he did not read them as originals but as copies, and it was strange,
+that being so, that he did not inform the jury of what had become of
+them, and he complained now of not being told by the police of their
+recovery--not told of his own misconduct. On the 1st September, Ellen
+Gaffney applied by a solicitor--Mr. Disdall, and as a set-off the
+Coroner permitted a gentleman named O'Kearney Whyte to appear--for whom?
+Was it for the constituted authorities or for the next-of-kin? No, but
+for the Rev. Father Bergin, who was described as president of the local
+branch of the National League, and the Coroner (Mr. Gowing) alleged as
+the reason why he allowed him to appear and cross-examine the witnesses
+and address the jury and give him the right of reply like Crown counsel
+was, that Ellen Gaffney stated that she had been so much annoyed by
+Father Bergin that she attributed the loss of her child to him--that it
+was he who had murdered the child. It was asserted that Father Bergin
+sat on the bench with the Coroner and interfered during the conduct of
+the inquest, and having to give some explanation of that Mr. Gowing's
+version was certainly a most amusing one. He said it was the habit to
+invite to a seat on the bench people of a respectable position in
+life--which, of course, a clergyman should be in--and that he asked
+Father Bergin to sit beside him in that capacity. But see the dilemma
+the Coroner put himself in. According to his own statement he had
+previously allowed this reverend gentleman to interfere, and to be
+represented by a solicitor because he was incriminated, inculpated, or
+accused, and it certainly was not customary to invite any one so
+situated to occupy a seat on the bench. He (the Lord Chief Baron) did
+not believe that Father Bergin was incriminated in any way, but that was
+the Coroner's allegation, and such was his peculiar action thereafter.
+The Coroner further stated that no matter whether he read the originals
+or the copies of the first day's depositions, it was on the evidence of
+September 1st that the jury acted. If that was so he placed himself in a
+further dilemma, for there was no evidence before the jury at all on the
+second day upon which they could bring a verdict against Ellen Gaffney.
+In regard to the recording and announcing of the verdict it appeared
+that the jury were 19 in number, and after their deliberations the
+foreman declared that 13 were for finding a verdict one way and 6 for
+another; that Mr. Whyte dictated the verdict to the Coroner, and the
+Coroner asked the 13 men if that was what they agreed to. Mr. Whyte's
+statement was that the jury, through the foreman, stated what their
+verdict was; that he wrote it down, and that the Coroner asked him for
+what he had written, and used it himself. But in addition to that, when
+the jury came in the Coroner and Mr. Whyte divided them--placed them
+apart while the verdict was being written--and then said to the 13 men,
+"Is that what you agree to?" Such apparent misconduct it was hardly
+possible to conceive in anybody occupying a judicial position as did the
+Coroner, and especially a Coroner who had an inquisition quashed before.
+What he had mentioned was sufficient to call forth the emphatic decision
+of the court quashing the proceedings, which, however, were also
+impeached on the grounds of its insufficiency and irregularity, and of
+the character of the finding itself. It was not until the Coroner had
+been threatened with the consequences of his contempt that he made a
+return to the visit of _certiorari_, and it was then found that out of
+ten so-called depositions only one contained any signature--that of Dr.
+Clarke's, which was one of those lost by the clergyman, and not before
+the jury on the 1st September. He (the Lord Chief-Justice) had tried to
+read the documents, but in vain--they were of such a scrawling and
+scribbling character, but, as he had said, all were incomplete and
+utterly worthless except the one which was not properly before the jury.
+Then, what was the finding on this inquisition, which should have been
+substantially as perfect as an indictment? "That Mary Anne Gaffney came
+by her death, and that the mother of this child, Ellen Gaffney, is
+guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food and care to
+sustain the life of this child." Upon what charge could the woman have
+been implicated on that vague finding? He (his Lordship) could
+understand its being contended that that amounted argumentatively to a
+verdict of manslaughter; but the Coroner issued his warrant and sent
+this woman to prison as being guilty of murder, and she remained in
+custody, as he had already remarked, until discharged by the learned
+judge who went the Winter Assizes in December. Upon all of these grounds
+they were clearly of opinion that this inquisition should be quashed,
+and Mr. Coroner Gowing having had the self-possession to come there to
+show cause against the conditional order, under such circumstances, must
+bear the costs of that argument.
+
+Mr. Fred. Moorhead, who, instructed by Mr. O'Kearney Whyte, appeared for
+the Coroner, asked whether the Court would require, as was usual when
+costs were awarded against a magistrate, an undertaking from the other
+side--
+
+The Lord Chief-Justice.--That is not to bring an action against the
+Coroner, you mean?
+
+Mr. Moorhead.--Yes, my Lord. I think it is a usual undertaking when
+costs are awarded in such a case. I think you ought--
+
+The Lord Chief-Justice.--Well, I don't know that we ought, but we most
+certainly will not. (Laughter.)
+
+Mr. David Sherlock, who (instructed by Mr. Archibald W. Disdall)
+appeared for Ellen Gaffney.--Rest assured, we certainly will bring an
+action.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] I have the authority of Mr. Hennessey, "the best living
+Irish scholar, and a Kerryman to boot," for this spelling. I am quite
+right, he says, in stating that the people there pronounce the names of
+Glenbeigh and Rossbeigh as Glenbéhy and Rossbéhy in three syllables.
+"Bethe," pronounced "behy," is the genitive of "beith," the birch, of
+which there were formerly large woods in Ireland. Glenbehy and Rossbehy
+mean the "Glen," and the "Ross" or "wooded point" of the birch.
+
+[2] A letter received by me from a Protestant Irish gentleman,
+long an ardent Nationalist, seems to confirm this. He writes to me (June
+15),
+
+ "There is a noble river here, with a convenient line of quays for
+ unloading merchandise. But every sack that is landed must be carried
+ out of the ship on men's backs. The quay labourers won't allow a
+ steam crane to be set up. If it is tried there is a riot and a
+ tumult, and no Limerick tradesman can purchase anything from a
+ vessel that uses it, on pain of being boycotted. The result is that
+ the labourers are masters of the situation, and when they catch a
+ vessel with a cargo which it is imperative to land quickly, they
+ wait till the work is half done, and then strike for 8s. a day! If
+ other labourers are imported, they are boycotted for 'grabbing
+ work,' and any one who sells provisions to them is boycotted."
+
+[3] An interesting account of this gentleman, and of his
+connection with the earlier developments of the Irish agitation, given
+to me by Mr. Colomb of the R.I.C., will be found at p.38, and in the
+Appendix, Note F.
+
+[4] See Appendix, Note F.
+
+[5] The name of this blacksmith's son learned in the Law of the
+League is given in Lord Cowper's Report (2. 18,370) as Michael Healy.
+While these pages are in the printer's hands the London papers chronicle
+(May 25, 1888) the arrest of a person described to me as this
+magistrate's brother, Jeremiah Healy, on a charge of robbing and setting
+fire to the Protestant church at Killarney!
+
+[6] Mr. Colomb sends me, June 30, the following interesting
+note:--The letter of which I gave you a copy was produced in evidence at
+Kerry Summer Assizes, 1867. J. D. Sheehan, Esq., M.P., is the same man
+who was arrested on the 12th February 1867, and to whom the foregoing
+letter, ordering the rising in Killarney, is addressed. He was kept in
+custody for some time, and eventually released, it is believed, on the
+understanding that he was to keep out of Ireland. He came back in 1873
+or 1874 and married the proprietress of a Hotel at Killarney. His
+connection with the Glenbehy evictions is referred to on page 10, and in
+Note F of the Appendix I give an interesting account, furnished me by
+Mr. Colomb, of his activity in connection with the case of the Misses
+Curtin at Firies.
+
+[7] In the time of Henry VIII. these cities waged actual war
+with each other, like Florence and Pisa, by sea and land. Limerick was
+then called "Little London."
+
+[8] It was on the 17th October 1886 that Mr. Dillon first
+promulgated the Plan of Campaign at all at Portumna.
+
+[9] Mr. Ponsonby's account of this affair will be found in the
+Appendix, Note G. The Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Youghal,
+which were £3031, 0s. 7d. in 1880, rose to £7038, 7s. 2d. in 1887.
+
+[10] As to the ability of these tenants to pay their way, one
+fact which I have since ascertained sufficiently supports Mr. Tener's
+contention. The deposits in the Postal Savings Banks of the three purely
+agricultural towns of Portumna, Woodford, and Loughrea, which in 1880,
+throwing off the shillings and pence, were respectively, £2539, £259,
+and £5500, rose in 1887 to £3376, £1350, and £6311, an increase of
+nearly £3000.
+
+[11] Mr. Tener, to whom I sent proofs of these pages, writes to
+me (July 18): "I shall soon execute the decree of the County-Court Judge
+Henn against Father Coen for £5, 5s., being two and a half year's
+rent."
+
+[12] At a hearing of cases before Judge Henn some time after I
+left Portumna, the Judge was reported in the papers as "severely"
+commenting upon the carelessness with which the estate-books were kept,
+tenants who were proceeded against for arrears producing "receipts" in
+court. I wrote to Mr. Tener on this subject. Under date of June 5th he
+replied to me: "Judge Henn did not use the severe language reported.
+There was no reporter present but a local man, and I have reason to
+believe the report in the _Freeman's Journal_ came from the lawyer of
+the tenants, who is on the staff of that journal. But the tenants are
+drilled not to show the receipts they hold, and to take advantage of
+every little error which they might at once get corrected by calling at
+the estate office. In no case, however, did any wrong occur to any
+tenant."
+
+[13] The town and estate proper of Woodford belong to Sir Henry
+Burke, Bart. The nearest point to Woodford of Lord Clamicarde's property
+is distant one mile from the town. And on the so-called Woodford estate
+there are not "316 tenants," as stated in publications I have seen, but
+260.
+
+[14] Martin Kenny, the "victim" of this eviction, is the tenant
+to whom the Rev. Mr. Crawford (_vide_ page 118) gave £50 for certain
+cattle, in order that he (Kenny) might pay his rent But, although he got
+the £50, he nevertheless suffered himself to be evicted; no doubt
+fearing the vengeance of the League should he pay.
+
+[15] The valuation for taxes of this holding is £7, 15s. for
+the land, and £5 for the presbytery house. The church is exempt.
+
+[16] Of "Dr." Tully Mr. Tener wrote to me (July 18):
+
+ "Tully has the holding at £2, 10s. a year, being 50 per cent, under
+ the valuation of the land for taxes, which is £3, 15s. As the total
+ valuation with the house (built by him) is only £4, he pays no
+ poor-rates. He was in arrears May 1, 1887, of three years for £7,
+ 10s. Lord Clanricarde offered him, with others, 20 per cent,
+ abatement, making for him 70 per cent, under the valuation--and he
+ refused!"
+
+Since then (on Saturday Sept. 1), Tully has been evicted after a
+dramatic "resistance," of which, with instructive incidents attending
+it, Mr. Tener sends me an account, to be found in the Appendix, Note H.
+
+[17] Note H2.
+
+[18] Mr. Tener writes to me (July 18):
+
+ "At Allendarragh, near the scene of Finlay's murder, Thomas Noonan,
+ who lately was brave enough to accept the post of process-server
+ vacated by that murder, was shot at on the 13th instant. It was on
+ the highway. He heard a heavy stone fall from a wall on the road and
+ turned to see what caused it. He distinctly saw two men behind the
+ wall with guns, and saw them fire. One shot struck a stone in the
+ road very near him--the other went wide. His idea is that one gun
+ dislodged the stone on which it had been laid for an aim, and that
+ its fall disturbed the aim and saved him. He fully identifies one of
+ the men as Henry Bowles, a nephew of 'Dr.' Tully, who lives with
+ Tully, and Bowles, after being arrested and examined at Woodford,
+ has been remanded, bail being refused, to Galway Jail. Before this
+ shooting Noonan had served a notice from me upon Tully, against whom
+ I have Judge Henn's decree for three years' rent, and whose equity
+ of redemption expired July 9th."
+
+[19] I have since learned that my jarvey was well informed. Sir
+Henry Burke actually paid Mr. Dillon £160 for the maintenance of his
+tenants while out of their farms. This, two other landlords, Lords
+Dunsandle and Westmeath, refused to do, but, like Sir Henry, they both
+paid all the costs, and accepted a "League" reduction of 5s. 6d. and 6s.
+in the pound (June 9, 1888).
+
+[20] Down to the date at which I write this note (June 9), Mr.
+Seigne has kindly, but without results, endeavoured to get for me some
+authentic return made by a small tenant-farmer of his incomings and
+outgoings.
+
+[21] Note I.
+
+[22] Note K.
+
+[23] While these pages are going through the press a Scottish
+friend sends me the following extract from a letter published in the
+_Scotsman_ of July 25:--
+
+ "In the same way I, in August last, when in Wicklow, ascertained as
+ carefully as I could the facts as to the Bodyke evictions; and being
+ desirous to learn now if that estate was still out of cultivation,
+ as I had found it in August, I wrote the gentleman I have referred
+ to above. His reply is as follows:--
+
+ "'I can answer your question as far as the Brooke estate is
+ concerned. None of the tenants are back in their farms, nor
+ are they likely to be. The landlord has the land partly
+ stocked with cattle; but I may say the land is nearly waste;
+ the gates, fences, and farmsteads partly destroyed. I was at
+ the fair of Coolgreany about three weeks ago, and the country
+ looked quite changed; the weeds predominating in the land
+ that the tenantry had under cultivation when they were
+ evicted from their farms. The landlord has done nothing to
+ lay the land down with grass seed, consequently the land is
+ waste. The village of Coolgreany is on the property, and
+ there was a good monthly fair held there, but it is very much
+ gone down since the disagreement between the landlord and
+ tenant. The tenants, speaking generally, in allowing
+ themselves to be evicted and not redeeming before six months,
+ are giving up all their improvements to the landlord, no
+ matter what they may be worth. I have got quite tired of the
+ vexed question, and may say I have given up reading about
+ evictions, and pity the tenant who is foolish enough to allow
+ any party to advise him so badly as to allow himself to be
+ evicted.'
+
+ "Those who read this testimony of a candid witness, and remember the
+ cordial footing on which Mr. Brooke stood with his tenantry in
+ Bodyke before Mr. Billon appeared amongst them, may well ask what
+ good his interference did to the now impoverished tenantry of
+ Bodyke, or to the district now deserted or laid waste.--I am, etc.,
+
+ A RADICAL UNIONIST."
+
+[24] In curious confirmation of this opinion expressed to me by
+a man of the country in March, I find in the _Dublin Express_ of July
+19th this official news from the Athy Vice-Guardians:
+
+ "At the meeting of the Vice-Guardians of the Athy Union yesterday, a
+ letter was read from Mr. G. Finlay, Auditor, in which he stated that
+ the two sureties of Collector Kealy, of the Luggacurren district,
+ had been evicted from their holdings by Lord Lansdowne, and were not
+ now in possession of any lands there. They were allowed outdoor
+ relief to the extent of £1 a week each on the ground of destitution.
+ The Auditor continued: 'The Collector tells me that they both
+ possess other lands, and have money in bank. The Collector is
+ satisfied that they are as good, if not better, securities for the
+ amount of his bond now than at the time they became sureties for
+ him. The Clerk of the Union concurs in this opinion.'
+
+ "It was ordered to bring the matter under the notice of the Board."
+
+[25] _Explanatory Note attached to First Edition._--After this
+chapter had actually gone to press, I received a letter from the friend
+who had put me into communication with the labourers referred to in it,
+begging me to strike out all direct indications of their whereabouts, on
+the ground that these might lead to grave annoyance and trouble for
+these poor men from the local tyrants.
+
+I do not know that I ought to regret the annoyance thus caused to my
+publisher and to me, as no words of mine could emphasise so clearly the
+nature and the scope of the odious, illegal, or anti-legal "coercion"
+established in certain parts of Ireland as the asterisks which mark my
+compliance with my friend's request. What can be said for the freedom of
+a country in which a man of character and position honestly believes it
+to be "dangerous" for poor men to say the things recorded in the text of
+this chapter about their own feelings, wishes, opinions, and interests?
+
+[26] It may be well to say here that whatever prominence Mr.
+O'Donovan Rossa has had among the Irish in America has been largely, if
+not chiefly, due to the curious persistency of Sir William Harcourt,
+when a Minister, in making him the ideal Irish-American leader. In and
+out of Parliament, Sir William Harcourt continually spoke of Mr. Rossa
+as of a kind of Irish Jupiter Tonans, wielding all the terrors of
+dynamite from beyond the Atlantic. This was a source of equal amusement
+to the Irish-American organisers in America and satisfaction to Mr.
+Rossa himself. I remember that when a question arose of excluding Mr.
+Rossa from an important Irish-American convention at Philadelphia, as
+not being the delegate of any recognised Irish-American body, Mr.
+Sullivan told me that he should recommend the admission of Mr. Rossa to
+the floor without a right to deliberative action, expressly because his
+presence, when reported, would be a cause of terror to Sir William
+Harcourt.
+
+[27] See Appendix, Note M.
+
+[28] Note N.
+
+[29] Note O.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of
+2) (1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2)
+(1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2) (1888)
+
+Author: William Henry Hurlbert
+
+Release Date: December 29, 2004 [EBook #14511]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRELAND, VOL. 2 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Robert Ledger and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
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+
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+
+
+
+<h1>IRELAND UNDER COERCION</h1>
+
+<h2>THE DIARY OF AN AMERICAN</h2>
+
+<h1>BY<br />WILLIAM HENRY HURLBERT</h1>
+
+<h2>VOL. II.</h2>
+
+<h3><i>SECOND EDITION.</i></h3>
+
+<h2>1888</h2>
+
+
+<h3>&ldquo;Upon the future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.&rdquo;<br />CARDINAL MANNING TO EARL GREY, 1868</h3>
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h2>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER VII.</p>
+<ul class="TOC">
+<li>Rossbehy, Feb. 21, <a href="#page1">1</a></li>
+<li>The latest eviction at Glenbehy, <a href="#page1">1</a></li>
+<li>Trafalgar Square, <a href="#page1">1</a>, <a href="#page2">2</a></li>
+<li>Father Little, <a href="#page3">3</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Frost, <a href="#page3">3</a>, <a href="#page4">4</a></li>
+<li>Priest and landlord, <a href="#page3">3</a></li>
+<li>Savings Banks&rsquo; deposits at Six-mile Bridge, <a href="#page5">5</a></li>
+<li>Drive through Limerick, <a href="#page5">5</a></li>
+<li>Population and trade, <a href="#page5">5</a>, <a href="#page6">6</a></li>
+<li>Boycotting and commerce, <a href="#page6">6</a>, <a href="#page7">7</a></li>
+<li>Shores of the Atlantic, <a href="#page7">7</a></li>
+<li>Tralee, <a href="#page7">7</a></li>
+<li>Killorglin, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+<li>Hostelry in the hills, <a href="#page8">8</a></li>
+<li>Facts of the eviction, <a href="#page9">9</a>-<a href="#page13">13</a></li>
+<li>Glenbehy Eviction Fund (see Note <a href="#noteG2">G2</a>), <a href="#page12">12</a></li>
+<li>A walk on Washington&rsquo;s birthday, <a href="#page13">13</a></li>
+<li>A tenant at Glenbehy offers &pound;13 in two instalments in full for &pound;240 arrears, <a href="#page13">13</a></li>
+<li>English and Irish members, <a href="#page14">14</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Winn&rsquo;s Folly,&rdquo; <a href="#page15">15</a></li>
+<li>Acreage and rental of the Glenbehy estate, <a href="#page16">16</a></li>
+<li>Work of eviction begun, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+<li>Patience of officers, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+<li>American and Irish evictions contrasted, <a href="#page17">17</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s quite familiar,&rdquo; <a href="#page18">18</a></li>
+<li>A modest Poor Law Guardian, <a href="#page18">18</a>, <a href="#page19">19</a></li>
+<li>Moonlighters&rsquo; swords, <a href="#page20">20</a></li>
+<li>Father Quilter and the &ldquo;poor slaves,&rdquo; his people, <a href="#page21">21</a>,<a href="#page22">22</a></li>
+<li>Beauty of Lough Caragh, <a href="#page23">23</a></li>
+<li>Difficulty of getting evidence, <a href="#page25">25</a></li>
+<li>Effects of terrorism in Kerry, <a href="#page25">25</a></li>
+<li>Singular identification of a murderer, <a href="#page26">26</a></li>
+<li>Local administration in Tralee, <a href="#page28">28</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">
+CHAPTER VIII.</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Cork, Feb. 23, <a href="#page30">30</a></li>
+<li>Press accounts of Glenbehy evictions astonish an eye-witness, <a href="#page30">30</a></li>
+<li>Castle Island, <a href="#page31">31</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Roche and Mr. Gladstone, <a href="#page31">31</a></li>
+<li>Opinions of a railway traveller, <a href="#page31">31</a>, <a href="#page32">32</a></li>
+<li>Misrepresentations of evictions, <a href="#page32">32</a></li>
+<li>Cork, past and present, <a href="#page34">34</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Gladstone and the Dean, <a href="#page35">35</a></li>
+<li>League Courts in Kerry, <a href="#page36">36</a></li>
+<li>Local Law Lords, <a href="#page36">36</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Colomb and the Fenian rising in 1867, <a href="#page37">37</a></li>
+<li>Remarkable letter of an M.P., <a href="#page38">38</a></li>
+<li>Irish Constabulary, <i>morale</i> of the force, <a href="#page40">40</a></li>
+<li>The clergy and the Plan of Campaign, <a href="#page41">41</a></li>
+<li>Municipal history, <a href="#page43">43</a></li>
+<li>Increase of public burdens, <a href="#page44">44</a></li>
+<li>Tralee Board of Guardians, <a href="#page46">46</a></li>
+<li>Labourers and tenants, <a href="#page46">46</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 25, <a href="#page47">47</a></li>
+<li>Boycotting, <a href="#page47">47</a>-<a href="#page49">49</a></li>
+<li>Land law and freedom of contract, <a href="#page49">49</a></li>
+<li>Rivalry between Limerick and Cork, <a href="#page50">50</a></li>
+<li>Henry VIII. and the Irish harp, <a href="#page50">50</a></li>
+<li>Municipal Parliamentary franchise, <a href="#page51">51</a></li>
+<li>Environs of Cork, <a href="#page52">52</a></li>
+<li>Churches and chapels, <a href="#page53">53</a></li>
+<li>Attractive home at Belmullet, <a href="#page54">54</a></li>
+<li>Lord Carnarvon and the Priest, <a href="#page55">55</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 26, <a href="#page56">56</a></li>
+<li>Blarney Castle, 56, <a href="#page57">57</a></li>
+<li>St. Anne&rsquo;s Hill, <a href="#page56">56</a>, <a href="#page57">57</a></li>
+<li>An evicted woman on &ldquo;the Plan,&rdquo; <a href="#page59">59</a></li>
+<li>The Ponsonby estate, <a href="#page59">59</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 27&mdash;A day at Youghal, <a href="#page60">60</a></li>
+<li>Father Keller, <a href="#page61">61</a>-<a href="#page76">76</a></li>
+<li>On emigration and migration, <a href="#page66">66</a></li>
+<li>Protestants and Catholics (see Note <a href="#noteG3">G3</a>), <a href="#page68">68</a></li>
+<li>Meath as a field for peasant proprietors, <a href="#page69">69</a></li>
+<li>Ghost of British protection, <a href="#page70">70</a></li>
+<li>A farmer evicted from a tenancy of <a href="#page200">200</a> years, <a href="#page71">71</a></li>
+<li>Sir Walter Raleigh&rsquo;s house and garden, <a href="#page71">71</a>-<a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+<li>Churches of St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway, <a href="#page73">73</a></li>
+<li>Monument and churchyard, <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page74">74</a></li>
+<li>An Elizabethan candidate for canonisation, <a href="#page75">75</a></li>
+<li>Drive to Lismore, <a href="#page76">76</a></li>
+<li>Driver&rsquo;s opinions on the Ponsonby estates, <a href="#page77">77</a></li>
+<li>Dromaneen Castle and the Countess of Desmond, <a href="#page78">78</a></li>
+<li>Trappist Monastery at Cappoquin, <a href="#page78">78</a></li>
+<li>Lismore, <a href="#page78">78</a>, <a href="#page79">79</a></li>
+<li>Castle grounds and cathedral, <a href="#page79">79</a>, <a href="#page80">80</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER IX.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Feb. 28, <a href="#page82">82</a></li>
+<li>Portumna, Galway, <a href="#page82">82</a></li>
+<li>Run through Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen&rsquo;s and King&rsquo;s County to Parsonstown, <a href="#page82">82</a></li>
+<li>A Canadian priest on the situation, <a href="#page83">83</a></li>
+<li>His reply to M. de Mandat Grancey, <a href="#page83">83</a></li>
+<li>Relations of priests with the League, <a href="#page83">83</a>-<a href="#page85">85</a></li>
+<li>Parsonstown and Lord Rosse, <a href="#page86">86</a></li>
+<li>Drive to Portumna, <a href="#page87">87</a></li>
+<li>An abandoned railway, <a href="#page88">88</a></li>
+<li>American storms, grain, and beasts, <a href="#page88">88</a>, <a href="#page89">89</a></li>
+<li>Portumna Castle, <a href="#page90">90</a>, <a href="#page91">91</a></li>
+<li>Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s estate, <a href="#page92">92</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Tener, <a href="#page92">92</a>-<a href="#page128">128</a></li>
+<li>Plan of Campaign, <a href="#page94">94</a>-<a href="#page99">99</a></li>
+<li>Ability of tenants to pay their rents, <a href="#page95">95</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Dillon in 1886, <a href="#page96">96</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Parnell in 1885, <a href="#page97">97</a></li>
+<li>Tenants in greater danger than landlords and agents, <a href="#page100">100</a></li>
+<li>Feb. 29, <a href="#page100">100</a></li>
+<li>Conference between evicted tenants and agent, <a href="#page100">100</a>-<a href="#page106">106</a></li>
+<li>Castle and park, <a href="#page107">107</a></li>
+<li>The League shopkeeper and tenant, <a href="#page108">108</a></li>
+<li>Under police escort, <a href="#page109">109</a></li>
+<li>Cost of &lsquo;knocking&rsquo; a man, <a href="#page109">109</a></li>
+<li>What constitutes a group, <a href="#page110">110</a></li>
+<li>Favourite spots for administering a League oath, <a href="#page110">110</a></li>
+<li>Disbursing treasurers, <a href="#page111">111</a></li>
+<li>Change of venue, <a href="#page111">111</a></li>
+<li>Bishop of Clonfert, <a href="#page112">112</a>-<a href="#page115">115</a></li>
+<li>Bector of Portumna, <a href="#page115">115</a></li>
+<li>Father Coen, <a href="#page116">116</a></li>
+<li>Coercion on the part of the League, <a href="#page118">118</a>-<a href="#page121">121</a></li>
+<li>Deposits in banks, <a href="#page120">120</a></li>
+<li>Should landlords and shopkeepers be placed on one footing? <a href="#page121">121</a></li>
+<li>New Castle of Portumna, <a href="#page122">122</a></li>
+<li>Portumna Union, <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href="#page124">124</a></li>
+<li>Troubles of resident landlords, <a href="#page125">125</a>-<a href="#page127">127</a></li>
+<li>Effects of the agitation on the people, <a href="#page124">124</a></li>
+<li>War against property and private rights, <a href="#page127">127</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Tener&rsquo;s experiences in Cavan, <a href="#page127">127</a>-<a href="#page130">130</a></li>
+<li>Similar cases in Leitrim, <a href="#page130">130</a>-<a href="#page132">132</a></li>
+<li>Sale of rents and value of tenant-right, <a href="#page133">133</a>, <a href="#page134">134</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER X.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Dublin, March 1, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+<li>Portumna to Woodford, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+<li>Evictions of October 1887, <a href="#page135">135</a></li>
+<li>Capture of Cloondadauv Castle, <a href="#page137">137</a>-<a href="#page141">141</a></li>
+<li>A tenant and a priest, <a href="#page141">141</a>-<a href="#page144">144</a></li>
+<li>Workmen&rsquo;s wages in Massachusetts compared with the profits of a tenant farmer in Ireland, <a href="#page146">146</a></li>
+<li>Loughrea, <a href="#page148">148</a>, <a href="#page149">149</a></li>
+<li>Murder of Finlay, <a href="#page150">150</a>, <a href="#page151">151</a></li>
+<li>The chrysoprase Lake of Loughrea, <a href="#page154">154</a></li>
+<li>Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s estate office, acreage, and rental, <a href="#page155">155</a></li>
+<li>Woodford acreage and rental, <a href="#page155">155</a>,<a href="#page156">156</a></li>
+<li>Drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn, <a href="#page156">156</a>-<a href="#page160">160</a></li>
+<li>A Galway &ldquo;jarvey&rdquo; on the situation, <a href="#page156">156</a>-<a href="#page159">159</a></li>
+<li>Woodlawn and the Ashtown property, <a href="#page160">160</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XI.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Borris, March 2, <a href="#page161">161</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kavanagh, <a href="#page161">161</a>-<a href="#page163">163</a></li>
+<li>Borris House, <a href="#page163">163</a>-<a href="#page167">167</a></li>
+<li>A living Banshee, <a href="#page165">165</a>, <a href="#page166">166</a></li>
+<li>Land Corporation&mdash;its mode of working, <a href="#page167">167</a></li>
+<li>Meeting in Dublin, 1885, <a href="#page168">168</a></li>
+<li>Rev. Mr. Cantwell, <a href="#page168">168</a></li>
+<li>Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s property at Luggacurren, <a href="#page169">169</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kavanagh&rsquo;s career, <a href="#page170">170</a></li>
+<li>Books and papers at Borris, <a href="#page171">171</a></li>
+<li>Strongbow, <a href="#page172">172</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;The five bloods,&rdquo; <a href="#page172">172</a>, <a href="#page173">173</a></li>
+<li>Genealogy of M&lsquo;Morroghs and Kavanaghs, <a href="#page173">173</a></li>
+<li>March 4, <a href="#page174">174</a></li>
+<li>Protestant service read every morning, <a href="#page174">174</a></li>
+<li>A Catholic gentleman&rsquo;s views, <a href="#page175">175</a></li>
+<li>Relation of tenants to village despots, <a href="#page176">176</a></li>
+<li>Would America make a State of Ireland? <a href="#page177">177</a></li>
+<li>Land Acts since 1870, <a href="#page178">178</a></li>
+<li>The O&rsquo;Grady of Kilballyowen and his rental, <a href="#page179">179</a></li>
+<li>Dispute with his tenants: its cause and effect, <a href="#page180">180</a></li>
+<li>His circular to his tenantry, <a href="#page181">181</a>-<a href="#page186">186</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XII.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Grenane House, March 5, <a href="#page187">187</a></li>
+<li>Visit to Mr. Seigne, <a href="#page187">187</a></li>
+<li>Beautiful situation of Grenane, <a href="#page189">189</a></li>
+<li>A lady of the country, <a href="#page189">189</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Seigne&rsquo;s experience of the tenants, <a href="#page191">191</a>-<a href="#page194">194</a></li>
+<li>The beauty of Woodstock, <a href="#page194">194</a>-<a href="#page198">198</a></li>
+<li>The watch of Waterloo, <a href="#page197">197</a>-<a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+<li>Curious discovery of stolen property, <a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, March 6, <a href="#page200">200</a></li>
+<li>State of deposits in the Savings Banks, <a href="#page200">200</a>-<a href="#page201">201</a></li>
+<li>Interest on &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; funds, <a href="#page202">202</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XIII.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Dublin, March 8, <a href="#page203">203</a></li>
+<li>Inch and the Coolgreany evictions, <a href="#page203">203</a></li>
+<li>Sweet vale of Avoca, <a href="#page204">204</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Dillon of Arklow, <a href="#page204">204</a></li>
+<li>Fathers O&rsquo;Neill and Dunphy, <a href="#page205">205</a>, <a href="#page206">206</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Davitt watching the evictions, <a href="#page207">207</a></li>
+<li>Lazy and thriftless tenants better off than before, <a href="#page209">209</a></li>
+<li>A self-made committee, <a href="#page211">211</a></li>
+<li>The Brooke estate, <a href="#page212">212</a></li>
+<li>Sir Thomas Esmonde&rsquo;s house, <a href="#page213">213</a></li>
+<li>An Arklow dinner, <a href="#page214">214</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Dillon in his study, <a href="#page215">215</a>-<a href="#page217">217</a></li>
+<li>Visit to Glenart Castle, <a href="#page217">217</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XIV.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Dublin, March 9, <a href="#page219">219</a></li>
+<li>Athy, <a href="#page219">219</a></li>
+<li>A political jarvey, <a href="#page220">220</a>-<a href="#page225">225</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Who is Mr. Gilhooly?&rdquo; <a href="#page221">221</a></li>
+<li>Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s offer refused through pressure of the League, <a href="#page226">226</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kilbride, M.P., and Mr. Dunne, <a href="#page226">226</a>-<a href="#page228">228</a></li>
+<li>Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s estate in Kerry, <a href="#page228">228</a>-<a href="#page231">231</a></li>
+<li>Plan of Campaign at Luggacurren, <a href="#page231">231</a>-<a href="#page236">236</a></li>
+<li>Interview with Father Maher, <a href="#page236">236</a>-<a href="#page239">239</a></li>
+<li>A &ldquo;jarvey&rdquo; on a J.P., <a href="#page240">240</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Railway amenities,&rdquo; <a href="#page241">241</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, March 10, <a href="#page242">242</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Brooke, <a href="#page242">242</a>-<a href="#page248">248</a></li>
+<li>Unreasonable tenants, <a href="#page243">243</a>, <a href="#page244">244</a></li>
+<li>Size and rental of estate, <a href="#page246">246</a></li>
+<li>Sub-commissioner&rsquo;s reduction reversed, <a href="#page246">246</a>, <a href="#page247">247</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XV.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Maryborough, <a href="#page249">249</a></li>
+<li>Archbishop Croke, <a href="#page249">249</a></li>
+<li>Interviews with labourers, <a href="#page251">251</a>-<a href="#page253">253</a></li>
+<li>Views of a successful country teacher, <a href="#page254">254</a>, <a href="#page255">255</a></li>
+<li>A veteran of the &rsquo;48, <a href="#page256">256</a>-<a href="#page260">260</a></li>
+<li>Amount of wages to men, <a href="#page261">261</a></li>
+<li>The farmers and labourers and lawyers, <a href="#page264">264</a>, <a href="#page265">265</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, June 23, <a href="#page268">268</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, <a href="#page268">268</a>-<a href="#page270">270</a></li>
+<li>From Attanagh to Ballyragget, <a href="#page270">270</a></li>
+<li>Case of &ldquo;a little-good-for tenant,&rdquo; <a href="#page271">271</a>, <a href="#page272">272</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Kough and his tenants, <a href="#page273">273</a>-<a href="#page277">277</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Richardson of Castle Comer, <a href="#page277">277</a></li>
+<li>Position of the tenants, <a href="#page282">282</a></li>
+<li>&pound;70 a year for whisky, <a href="#page282">282</a></li>
+<li>Kilkenny Castle, <a href="#page282">282</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, <a href="#page283">283</a>-<a href="#page292">292</a></li>
+<li>John O&rsquo;Leary, <a href="#page285">285</a>-<a href="#page292">292</a></li>
+<li>Boycotting private opinion, <a href="#page292">292</a></li>
+<li>The League as now conducted, <a href="#page295">295</a></li>
+<li>Poems and Ballads of &ldquo;Young Ireland,&rdquo; <a href="#page296">296</a></li>
+<li>Law Courts and Trinity College, <a href="#page297">297</a></li>
+<li>American Civil War, <a href="#page299">299</a>-<a href="#page302">302</a></li>
+<li>Dublin, June 24, <a href="#page302">302</a></li>
+<li>A dinner with officials, <a href="#page303">303</a>-<a href="#page306">306</a></li>
+<li>A priest earns over &pound;20,000, <a href="#page305">305</a>, <a href="#page306">306</a></li>
+<li>&ldquo;Crowner&rsquo;s Quest Law,&rdquo; <a href="#page309">309</a>-<a href="#page311">311</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">CHAPTER XVI.
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+<li>Belfast, June 25, <a href="#page313">313</a></li>
+<li>Ulster in Irish history, <a href="#page313">313</a></li>
+<li>Moira, <a href="#page315">315</a></li>
+<li>Views of an Ulsterman, <a href="#page315">315</a>, <a href="#page316">316</a></li>
+<li>Beauty of Belfast, <a href="#page317">317</a>, <a href="#page318">318</a></li>
+<li>Its buildings, <a href="#page319">319</a>-<a href="#page321">321</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Hanna, <a href="#page322">322</a>-<a href="#page324">324</a></li>
+<li>Dr. Kane, <a href="#page325">325</a></li>
+<li>June 26, <a href="#page326">326</a></li>
+<li>Sir John Preston, <a href="#page326">326</a>-<a href="#page328">328</a></li>
+<li>Mr. Cameron, of Royal Irish Constabulary, <a href="#page328">328</a></li>
+<li>Police parade, <a href="#page328">328</a></li>
+<li>Belfast steamers, <a href="#page329">329</a></li>
+<li>Scotland and America at work on Ireland, <a href="#page330">330</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="i0">EPILOGUE, p. <a href="#page333">333</a>-<a href="#page349">349</a></p>
+
+<p class="i0">
+APPENDIX.<br /><br />NOTES&mdash;
+</p><ul class="TOC">
+
+<li><a href="#noteF">F.</a> The Moonlighters and Home Rule (pp. <a href="#page10">10</a>, <a href="#page38">38</a>), <a href="#page351">351</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteG">G.</a> The Ponsonby Property (pp. <a href="#page59">59</a>-<a href="#page66">66</a>), <a href="#page353">353</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteG2">G2.</a> The Glenbehy Eviction Fund (p. <a href="#page12">12</a>), <a href="#page360">360</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteG3">G3.</a> Home Rule and Protestantism (p. <a href="#page68">68</a>), <a href="#page362">362</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteH">H.</a> Tully and the Woodford Evictions (p. <a href="#page149">149</a>), <a href="#page364">364</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteH2">H2.</a> Boycotting the Dead (p. <a href="#page151">151</a>), <a href="#page370">370</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteI">I.</a> The Savings Banks (P.O.) (vol. i. p. <a href="#page39">39</a>, vol. ii. pp. <a href="#page5">5</a> and <a href="#page200">200</a>), <a href="#page371">371</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteK">K.</a> The Coolgreany Evictions (p. <a href="#page216">216</a>), <a href="#page372">372</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteL">L.</a> A Ducal Supper in 1711 (p. <a href="#page283">283</a>), <a href="#page374">374</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteM">M.</a> Letter from Mr. O&rsquo;Leary (p. <a href="#page291">291</a>), <a href="#page375">375</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteN">N.</a> Boycotting Private Opinion (p. <a href="#page293">293</a>), <a href="#page377">377</a></li>
+<li><a href="#noteO">O.</a> Boycotting by Crowner&rsquo;s Quest Law (p. <a href="#page312">312</a>), <a href="#page382">382</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 1]
+</span>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">ROSSBEHY,<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> <i>Feb. 21.</i>&mdash;</span>We are here on the eve of battle! An &ldquo;eviction&rdquo;
+is to be made to-morrow on the Glenbehy
+<a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> estate of Mr. Winn, an uncle
+of Lord Headley, so upon the invitation of Colonel Turner, who has come
+to see that all is done decently and in order, I left Ennis with him at
+7.40 A.M. for Limerick; the &ldquo;city of the Liberator&rdquo; for &ldquo;the city of the
+Broken Treaty.&rdquo; There we breakfasted at the Artillery Barracks.</p>
+
+<p>The officers showed us there the new twelve-pounder gun with its
+elaborately scientific machinery, its Scotch sight, and its four-mile
+range. I compared notes about the Trafalgar Square riots of February
+1886 with an Irish officer who happened to have <a name="page2" id="page2"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 2]
+</span>been on the opposite
+side of Pall Mall from me at the moment when the mob, getting out of the
+hand of my socialistic friend Mr. Hyndman, and advancing towards St.
+James&rsquo; Street and Piccadilly was broken by a skilful and very spirited
+charge of the police. He gave a most humorous account of his own
+sensations when he first came into contact with the multitude after
+emerging from St. Paul&rsquo;s, where, as he put it, he had left the people
+&ldquo;all singing away like devils.&rdquo; But I found he quite agreed with me in
+thinking that there was a visible nucleus of something like military
+organisation in the mob of that day, which was overborne and, as it
+were, smothered by the mere mob element before it came to trying
+conclusions with the police.</p>
+
+<p>On our way to Limerick, Colonel Turner caught sight, at a station, of
+Father Little, the parish priest of Six Mile Bridge, in County Clare,
+and jumping out of the carriage invited him to get in and pursue his
+journey with us, which he very politely did. Father Little is a tall
+fine-looking man of a Saxon rather than a Celtic type, and I daresay
+comes of the Cromwellian stock. He is a staunch and outspoken
+Nationalist, and has been made rather prominent of late by his
+championship of certain of his <a name="page3" id="page3"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 3]
+</span>parishioners in their contest with their
+landlord, Mr. H.V. D&rsquo;Esterre, who lives chiefly at Bournemouth in
+England, but owns 2833 acres in County Clare at Rosmanagher, valued at
+&pound;1625 a year. More than a year ago one of Father Little&rsquo;s parishioners,
+Mr. Frost, successfully resisted a large force of the constabulary bent
+on executing a process of ejectment against him obtained by Mr.
+D&rsquo;Esterre.</p>
+
+<p>Frost&rsquo;s holding was of 33 Irish, or, in round numbers, about 50 English,
+acres, at a rental of &pound;117, 10s., on which he had asked but had not
+obtained an abatement. The Poor-Law valuation of the holding was &pound;78,
+and Frost estimated the value of his and his father&rsquo;s improvements,
+including the homestead and the offices, or in other words his
+tenant-right, at &pound;400. The authorities sent a stronger body of
+constables and ejected Frost. But as soon as they had left the place
+Frost came back with his family, on the 28th Jan. 1887, and reoccupied
+it. Of course proceedings were taken against him immediately, and a
+small war was waged over the Frost farm until the 5th of September last,
+when an expedition was sent against it, and it was finally captured, and
+Frost evicted with <a name="page4" id="page4"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 4]
+</span>his family. Upon this last occasion Father Little
+(who gave me a very temperate but vigorous account of the whole affair)
+distinguished himself by a most ingenious and original attempt to &ldquo;hold
+the fort.&rdquo; He chained himself to the main doorway, and stretching the
+chains right and left secured them to two other doors. It was of this
+refreshing touch of humour that I heard the other day at Abbeyleix as
+happening not in Clare but in Kerry.</p>
+
+<p>Since his eviction Frost has been living, Father Little tells me, in a
+wooden hut put up for him on the lands of a kinsman of the same name,
+who is also a tenant of Mr. D&rsquo;Esterre, and who has since been served by
+his landlord with a notice of ejectment for arrears, although he had
+paid up six months&rsquo; dues two months only before the service. Father
+Little charged the landlord in this case with prevarication and other
+evasive proceedings in the course of his negotiations with the tenants;
+and Colonel Turner did not contest the statements made by him in support
+of his contention that the Rosmanagher difficulty might have been
+avoided had the tenants been more fairly and more considerately dealt
+with. It is strong presumptive evidence against the landlord that a
+kinsman, Mr. Robert <a name="page5" id="page5"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 5]
+</span>D&rsquo;Esterre, is one of the subscribers to a fund
+raised by Father Little in aid of the evicted man Frost. On the other
+hand, as illustrating the condition of the tenants, it is noteworthy
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank&rsquo;s deposits at Six-Mile Bridge rose
+from &pound;382, 17s. 10d. in 1880 to &pound;934, 13s. 4d. in 1887.
+
+After breakfast we took a car and drove rapidly about the city for an
+hour. With its noble river flowing through the very heart of the place,
+and broadening soon into an estuary of the Atlantic, Limerick ought long
+ago to have taken its place in the front rank of British ports dealing
+with the New World. In the seventeenth century it was the fourth city of
+Ireland, Boate putting it then next after Dublin, Galway, and Waterford.
+Belfast at that time, he describes as a place hardly comparable &ldquo;to a
+small market-town in England.&rdquo; To-day Limerick has a population of some
+forty thousand, and Belfast a population of more than two hundred
+thousand souls. This change cannot be attributed solely, if at all, to
+the &ldquo;Protestant ascendency,&rdquo; nor yet to the alleged superiority of the
+Northern over the Southern Irish in energy and thrift, For in the
+seventeenth century Limerick <a name="page6" id="page6"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 6]
+</span>was more important than Cork, whereas it
+had so far fallen behind its Southern competitor in the eighteenth
+century that it contained in 1781 but 3859 houses, while Cork contained
+5295. To-day its population is about half as large as that of Cork. It
+is a very well built city, its main thoroughfare, George Street, being
+at least a mile in length, and a picturesque city also, thanks to the
+island site of its most ancient quarter, the English Town, and to the
+hills of Clare and Killaloe, which close the prospect of the surrounding
+country. But the streets, though many of them are handsome, have a
+neglected look, as have also the quays and bridges. One of my
+companions, to whom I spoke of this, replied, &ldquo;if they look neglected,
+it&rsquo;s because they are neglected. Politics are the death of the place,
+and the life of its publics.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>As we approached the shores of the Atlantic from Limerick, the scenery
+became very grand and <a name="page7" id="page7"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 7]
+</span>beautiful. On the right of the railway the country
+rolled and undulated away towards the Stacks, amid the spurs and slopes
+of which, in the wood of Clonlish, Sanders, the Nuncio sent over to
+organise Catholic Ireland against Elizabeth, miserably perished of want
+and disease six years before the advent of the great Armada. To the
+south-west rose the grand outlines of the Macgillicuddy&rsquo;s Reeks, the
+highest points, I believe, in the South of Ireland. We established
+ourselves at the County Kerry Club on our arrival in Tralee, which I
+found to be a brisk prosperous-looking town, and quite well built. A
+Nationalist member once gave me a gloomy notion of Tralee, by telling
+me, when I asked him whether he looked forward with longing to a seat in
+the Parliament of Ireland, that &ldquo;when he was in Dublin now he always
+thought of London, just as when he used to be in Tralee he always
+thought of Dublin.&rdquo; But he did less than justice to the town upon the
+Lee. We left it at half-past <a name="page8" id="page8"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 8]
+</span>four in the train for Killorglin. The
+little station there was full of policemen and soldiers, and knots of
+country people stood about the platform discussing the morrow. There had
+been some notion that the car-drivers at Killorglin might &ldquo;boycott&rdquo; the
+authorities. But they were only anxious to turn an honest penny by
+bringing us on to this lonely but extremely neat and comfortable
+hostelry in the hills.</p>
+
+<p>We left the Sheriff and the escort to find their way as best they could
+after us.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Shee, the landlady here, ushered us into a very pretty room hung
+with little landscapes of the country, and made cheery by a roaring
+fire. Two or three officers of the soldiers sent on here to prevent any
+serious uproar to-morrow dined with us.</p>
+
+<p>The constabulary are in force, but in great good humour. They have no
+belief that there will be any trouble, though all sorts of wild tales
+were flying about Tralee before we left, of English members of
+Parliament coming down to denounce the &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; law, and of risings in
+the hills, and I know not what besides. The agent of the Winn property,
+or of Mr. Head of Reigate in Surrey, the mortgagee of the estate, who
+holds a power of attorney from Mr. Winn, is here, a quiet, intelligent
+<a name="page9" id="page9"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 9]
+</span>young man, who has given me the case in a nut-shell.</p>
+
+<p>The tenant to be evicted, James Griffin, is the son and heir of one Mrs.
+Griffin, who on the 5th of April 1854 took a lease of the lands known as
+West Lettur from the then Lord Headley and the Hon. R. Winn, at the
+annual rent of &pound;32, 10s. This rent has since been reduced by a judicial
+process to &pound;26. In 1883 James Griffin, who was then, as he is now, an
+active member of the local branch of the National League, and who was
+imprisoned under Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s Act of 1881 as a &ldquo;suspect,&rdquo; was
+evicted, being then several years in arrears. He re-entered unlawfully
+immediately afterwards, and has remained in West Lettur unlawfully ever
+since, actively deterring and discouraging other tenants from paying
+their rents. He took a great part in promoting the refusal to pay which
+led to the famous evictions of last year. As to these, it seems the
+tenants had agreed, in 1886, to accept a proposition from Mr. Head,
+remitting four-fifths of all their arrears upon payment of one year&rsquo;s
+rent and costs. Mr. Sheehan, M.P., a hotel-keeper in Killarney,
+intervened, advising the tenants that the Dublin Parliament would soon
+be established, and would abolish &ldquo;landlordism,&rdquo; whereupon they <a name="page10" id="page10"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 10]</span>refused
+to keep their agreement.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a> Sir Redvers Buller, who then filled the post
+now held by Sir West Ridgway, seeing this alarming deadlock, urged Mr.
+Head to go further, and offer to take a half-year&rsquo;s rent and costs. If
+the tenants refused this Sir Redvers advised Mr. Head to destroy all
+houses occupied by mere trespassers, such as Griffin, who, if they could
+hold a place for twelve years, would acquire a title under the Statute
+of Limitations. A negotiation conducted by Sir Redvers and Father
+Quilter, P.P., followed, and Father Quilter, for the tenants, finally,
+in writing, accepted Mr. Head&rsquo;s offer, under which, by the payment of
+&pound;865, they would be rid of a legal liability for &pound;6177. The League again
+intervened with bribes and threats, and Father Quilter found himself
+obliged to write to Colonel Turner a letter in which he said, &ldquo;Only
+seventeen of the seventy tenants have sent on their rents to Mr. Roe
+(the agent). Though promising that they would accept the terms, they
+have withdrawn at the last moment from fulfilment.... I shall never
+again during my time in Glenbehy <a name="page11" id="page11"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 11]
+</span>interfere between a landlord and his
+tenants. I have poor slaves who will not keep their word. Now let Mr.
+Roe or any other agent in future deal with Glenbeighans as he likes.&rdquo;
+The farms lie at a distance even from this inn, and very far therefore
+from Killorglin, and the agent, knowing that the tenants would be
+encouraged by Griffin and by Mr. Harrington, M.P., and others, to come
+back into their holdings as soon as the officers withdrew, ordered the
+woodwork of several cottages to be burned in order to prevent this. This
+burning of the cottages, which were the lawful property of the
+mortgagee, made a great figure in the newspaper reports, and
+&ldquo;scandalised the civilised world.&rdquo; The present agent thinks it was
+impolitic on that account, but he has no doubt it was a good thing
+financially for the evicted tenants. &ldquo;You will see the shells of the
+cottages to-morrow,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you will judge for yourself what they
+were worth.&rdquo; But the sympathy excited by the illustrations of the cruel
+conflagration and the heartrending descriptions of the reporters,
+resulted in a very handsome subscription for the benefit of the tenants
+of Glenbehy. General Sir William Butler, whose name came so prominently
+before the public in connection with <a name="page12" id="page12"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 12]
+</span>his failure to appear and give
+evidence in a recent <i>cause c&eacute;l&egrave;bre</i>, and whose brother is a Resident
+Magistrate in Kerry, was one of the subscribers. The fund thus raised
+has been since administered by two trustees, Father Quilter, P.P., and
+Mr. Shee, a son of our brisk little landlady here, who maintain out of
+it very comfortably the evicted tenants. Not long ago a man in Tralee
+tried to bribe the agent into having him evicted, that he might make a
+claim on this fund! At Killorglin the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits,
+which stood at &pound;282, 15s. 9d. in 1880, rose in 1887 to &pound;1299, 2s. 6d.
+James Griffin, despite, or because, of the two evictions through which
+he has passed, is very well off. He owns a very good horse and cart, and
+seven or eight head of cattle. His arrears now amount to about &pound;240, and
+on being urged yesterday to make a proposition which might avoid an
+eviction, he gravely offered to pay &pound;8 of the current half-year&rsquo;s rent
+in cash, and the remaining &pound;5 in June, the landlord taking on himself
+all the costs and giving him a clean receipt! This liberal proposition
+was declined. The zeal of her son in behalf of the evicted tenants does
+not seem to affect the amiable anxiety of our trim and energetic hostess
+to make things agreeable here to the minions of the alien <a name="page13" id="page13"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 13]
+</span>despotism. The
+officers both of the police and of the military appear to be on the best
+of terms with the whole household, and everything is going as merrily as
+marriage bells on this eve of an eviction.</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">TRALEE, <i>Wednesday evening, Feb. 22.</i>&mdash;</span>We rose early at Mrs. Shee&rsquo;s,
+made a good breakfast, and set out for the scene of the day&rsquo;s work. It
+was a glorious morning for Washington&rsquo;s birthday, and I could not help
+imagining the amazement with which that stern old Virginian landlord
+would have regarded the elaborate preparations thought necessary here in
+Ireland in the year of our Lord 1888, to eject a tenant who owes two
+hundred and forty pounds of arrears on a holding at twenty-six pounds a
+year, and offers to settle the little unpleasantness by paying thirteen
+pounds in two instalments!</p>
+
+<p>We had a five miles&rsquo; march of it through a singularly wild and
+picturesque region, the hills which lead up to the Macgillicuddy&rsquo;s Reeks
+on our left, and on the right the lower hills trending to the salt water
+of Dingle Bay. Our start had been delayed by the non-appearance of the
+Sheriff, in aid of whom all this parade of power was made; but it turned
+out afterwards that he had gone on without stopping to let Colonel
+Turner know it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 14]
+</span>The air was so bracing and the scenery so fine that we walked most of
+the way. Two or three cars drove past us, the police and the troops
+making way for them very civilly, though some of the officers thought
+they were taking some Nationalist leaders and some English
+&ldquo;sympathisers&rdquo; to Glenbehy. One of the officers, when I commented upon
+this, told me they never had much trouble with the Irish members. &ldquo;Some
+of them,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;talk more than is necessary, and flourish about; but
+they have sense enough to let us go about our work without foolishly
+trying to bother us. The English are not always like that.&rdquo; And he then
+told me a story of a scene in which an English M.P., we will call Mr.
+Gargoyle, was a conspicuous actor. Mr. Gargoyle being present either at
+an eviction or a prohibited meeting, I didn&rsquo;t note which, with two or
+three Irish members, all of them were politely requested to step on one
+side and let the police march past. The Irish members touched their hats
+in return to the salute of the officer, and drew to one side of the
+road. But Mr. Gargoyle defiantly planted himself in the middle of the
+road. The police, marching four abreast, hesitated for a moment, and
+then suddenly dividing into two columns <a name="page15" id="page15"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 15]
+</span>marched on. The right-hand man
+of the first double file, as he went by, just touched the M.P. with his
+shoulder, and thereby sent him up against the left-hand man of the
+corresponding double file, who promptly returned the attention. And in
+this manner the distinguished visitor went gyrating through the whole
+length of the column, to emerge at the end of it breathless, hatless,
+and bewildered, to the intense and ill-suppressed delight of his Irish
+colleagues.</p>
+
+<p>Our hostess&rsquo;s son, the trustee of the Eviction Fund, was on one of the
+cars which passed us, with two or three companions, who proved to be
+&ldquo;gentlemen of the Press.&rdquo; We passed a number of cottages and some larger
+houses on the way, the inmates of which seemed to be minding their own
+business and taking but a slight interest in the great event of the day.
+We made a little detour at one of the finest points on the road to visit
+&ldquo;Winn&rsquo;s Folly,&rdquo; a modern medi&aelig;val castle of considerable size, upon a
+most enchanting site, with noble views on every side, quite impossible
+to be seen through its narrow loopholed and latticed windows. The castle
+is extremely well built, of a fine stone from the neighbourhood, and
+with a very small expenditure might <a name="page16" id="page16"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 16]
+</span>be made immediately habitable. But
+no one has ever lived in it. It has only been occupied as a temporary
+barrack by the police when sent here, and the largest rooms are now
+littered with straw for the use of the force. At the beginning of the
+century, and for many years afterwards, Lord and Lady Headley lived on
+the estate, and kept a liberal house. Their residence was on a fine
+point running out into the bay, but, I am told, the sea has now invaded
+it, and eaten it away. In 1809 the acreage of this Glenbehy property was
+8915 Irish acres or 14,442 English acres, set down under Bath&rsquo;s
+valuation at &pound;2299, 17s. 6d. Between 1830 and 1860 the rental averaged
+&pound;5000 a year, and between these years &pound;17,898, 14s. 5d. were expended by
+the landlord in improvements upon the property. This castle, which we
+visited, must have involved since then an outlay of at least &pound;10,000 in
+the place.</p>
+
+<p>The present Lord Headley, only a year or two ago, went through the
+Bankruptcy Court, and the Hon. Rowland Winn, his uncle, the titular
+owner of Glenbehy, is set down among the Irish landlords as owning
+13,932 Irish acres at a rental of &pound;1382.</p>
+
+<p>After we passed the castle we began to hear the blowing of rude horns
+from time to time on the <a name="page17" id="page17"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 17]
+</span>distant hills. These were signals to the people
+of our approach, and gave quite the air of an invasion to our
+expedition. We passed the burned cottages of last year just before
+reaching Mr. Griffin&rsquo;s house at West Lettur. They were certainly not
+large cottages, and I saw but three of them. We found the Sheriff at
+West Lettur. The police and the soldiers drew a cordon around the place,
+within which no admittance was to be had except on business; and the
+myrmidons of the law going into the house with the agent held a final
+conference with the tenant, of which nothing came but a renewal of his
+previous offer. Then the work of eviction began. There was no attempt at
+a resistance, and but for the martial aspect of the forces, and an
+occasional blast of a horn from the hills, or the curious noises made
+from time to time by a small concourse of people, chiefly women,
+assembled on the slope of an adjoining tenancy, the proceedings were as
+dull as a parish meeting. What most struck me about the affair was the
+patience and good-nature of the officers. In the two hours and a half
+which we spent at West Lettur a New York Sheriff&rsquo;s deputies would have
+put fifty tenants with all their bags and baggage out of as many houses <a name="page18" id="page18"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 18]
+</span>
+into the street. In fact it is very likely that at least that number of
+New York tenants were actually so ousted from their houses during this
+very time.</p>
+
+<p>The evicted Mr. Griffin was a stout, stalwart man of middle age,
+comfortably dressed, with the air rather of a citizen than of a farmer,
+who took the whole thing most coolly, as did also his women-kind. All of
+them were well dressed, and they superintended the removal and piling up
+of their household goods as composedly as if they were simply moving out
+of one house into another. The house itself was a large comfortable
+house of the country, and it was amply furnished.</p>
+
+<p>I commented on Griffin&rsquo;s indifference to the bailiff, a quiet,
+good-natured man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s quite familiar,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s the third time he&rsquo;s been
+evicted! I believe&rsquo;s going to America.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! he will do very well,&rdquo; said a gentleman who had joined the
+expedition like myself to see the scene. &ldquo;He is a shrewd chap, and not
+troubled by bashfulness. He sat on a Board of Guardians with a man I
+knew four years ago, and one day he read out his own name, &lsquo;James
+Griffin,&rsquo; among a list of applicants for relief at Cahirciveen. The <a name="page19" id="page19"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 19]
+</span>
+chairman looked up, and said, &lsquo;Surely that is not your name you are
+reading, is it?&rsquo; &lsquo;It is, indeed,&rsquo; replied Griffin, &lsquo;and I am as much in
+need of relief as any one!&rsquo; Perhaps you&rsquo;ll be surprised to hear he
+didn&rsquo;t get it. This is a good holding he had, and he used to do pretty
+well with it&mdash;not in his mother&rsquo;s time only of the flush prices, but in
+his own. It was the going to Kilmainham that spoiled him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How did that spoil him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it made a great man of him, being locked up. He was too well
+treated there. He got a liking for sherry and bitters, and he&rsquo;s never
+been able to make his dinner since without a nip of them. Mrs. Shee
+knows that well.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To make an eviction complete and legal here, everything belonging to the
+tenant, and every live creature must be taken out of the house. A cat
+may save a house as a cat may save a derelict ship. Then the Sheriff
+must &ldquo;walk&rdquo; over the whole holding. All this takes time. There was an
+unobtrusive search for arms too going on all the time. Three ramrods
+were found hidden in a straw-bed&mdash;two of which showed signs of recent
+use. But the guns had vanished. An officer told me that not long ago two
+revolvers were found in a corner of the <a name="page20" id="page20"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 20]
+</span>thatch of a house; but the
+cartridges for them were only some time afterwards discovered neatly
+packed away in the top of a bedroom wall. It is not the ownership of
+these arms, it is the careful concealment of them which indicates
+sinister intent. One of the constables brought out three &ldquo;Moonlighters&rsquo;
+swords&rdquo; found hidden away in the house. One of these Colonel Turner
+showed me. It was a reversal of the Scriptural injunction, being a
+ploughshare beaten into a weapon, and a very nasty weapon of offence,
+one end of it sharpened for an ugly thrust, the other fashioned into
+quite a fair grip. While I was examining this trophy there was a stir,
+and presently two of the gentlemen who had passed us on Mr. Shee&rsquo;s car
+came rather suddenly out of the house in company with two or three
+constables.</p>
+
+<p>They were representatives, they said, of the Press, and as such desired
+to be allowed to remain. Colonel Turner replied that this could not be,
+and, in fact, no one had been suffered to enter the house except the
+law-officers, the agent, and the constables. So the representatives of
+the Press were obliged to pass outside of the lines, one of the
+constables declaring that they had got into the house through a hole in
+the back wall!</p>
+
+<p><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 21]
+</span>Shortly after this incident there arose a considerable noise of groaning
+and shouting from the hill-side beyond the highway, and presently a
+number of people, women and children predominating, appeared coming down
+towards the precincts of the house. They were following a person in a
+clerical dress, who proved to be Father Quilter, the parish priest, who
+had denounced his people to Colonel Turner as &ldquo;poor slaves&rdquo; of the
+League! A colloquy followed between Father Quilter and the policemen of
+the cordon. This was brought to a close by Mr. Roche, the resident
+magistrate, who went forward, and finding that Father Quilter wished to
+pass the cordon, politely but firmly informed him that this could not be
+done. &ldquo;Not if I am the bearer of a telegram for the lawyer?&rdquo; asked
+Father Quilter, in a loud and not entirely amiable tone. &ldquo;Not on any
+terms whatever,&rdquo; responded the magistrate. Father Quilter still
+maintaining his ground, the women crowded in around and behind him, the
+men bringing up the rear at a respectable distance, and the small boys
+shouting loudly. For a moment faint hopes arose within me that I was
+about to witness one of the .exciting scenes of which I have more than
+once <a name="page22" id="page22"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 22]
+</span>read. But only for a moment. The magistrate ordered the police to
+advance. As they drew near the wall with an evident intention of going
+over it into the highway, Father Quilter and the women fell back, the
+boys and men retreated up the opposite hill, and the brief battle of
+Glenbehy was over.</p>
+
+<p>A small messenger bearing a telegram then emerged from the crowd, and
+showing his telegram, was permitted to pass. Father Quilter, in a loud
+voice, commented upon this, crying out, &ldquo;See now your consistency! You
+said no one should pass, and you let the messenger come in!&rdquo; To this
+sally no reply was returned. After a little the priest, followed by most
+of the people, went up the hill to the holding of another tenant, and
+there, as the police came in and reported, held a meeting. From time to
+time cries were heard in the distance, and ever and anon the blast of a
+horn came from some outlying hill.</p>
+
+<p>But no notice was taken of these things by the police, and when the
+tedious formalities of the law had all been gone through with, a squad
+of men were put in charge of the house and the holding, the rest of the
+army re-formed for the march back, our cars came up, and we left West
+Lettur. <a name="page23" id="page23"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 23]
+</span>Seeing a number of men come down the hill, as the column
+prepared to move, Mr. Roche, making his voice tremendous, after the
+fashion of a Greek chorus, commanded the police to arrest and handcuff
+any riotous person making provocative noises. This had the desired
+effect, and the march back began in silence. When the column was fairly
+in the road, &ldquo;boos&rdquo; and groans went up from knots of men higher up the
+hill, but no heed was taken of these, and no further incident occurred.
+I shall be curious to see whether the story of this affair can possibly
+be worked up into a thrilling narrative.</p>
+
+<p>We lunched at Mrs. Shee&rsquo;s, where no sort of curiosity was manifested
+about the proceedings at West Lettur, and I came back here with Colonel
+Turner by another road, which led us past one of the loveliest lakes I
+have ever seen&mdash;Lough Caragh. Less known to fame than the much larger
+Lake of Killarney, it is in its way quite worthy of comparison with any
+of the lesser lakes of Europe. It is not indeed set in a coronal of
+mountains like Orta, but its shores are well wooded, picturesque, and
+enlivened by charming seats&mdash;now, for the most part, alas!--abandoned by
+their owners. We had a pleasant club dinner here this evening, after
+which <a name="page24" id="page24"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 24]
+</span>came in to see me Mr. Hussey, to whom I had sent a letter from Mr.
+Froude. Few men, I imagine, know this whole region better than Mr.
+Hussey. Some gentlemen of the country joined in the conversation, and
+curious stories were told of the difficulty of getting evidence in
+criminal cases. What Froude says of the effect of the prohibitive and
+protection policy in Ireland upon the morals of the people as to
+smuggling must be said, I fear, of the effect of the Penal Laws against
+Catholics upon their morals as to perjury. It is not surprising that the
+peasants should have been educated into the state of mind of the
+Irishman in the old American story, who, being solicited to promise his
+vote when he landed in New York, asked whether the party which sought it
+was for the Government or against it. Against it, he was told, &ldquo;Then
+begorra you shall have my vote, for I&rsquo;m agin the Government whatever it
+is.&rdquo; One shocking case was told of a notorious and terrible murder here
+in Kerry. An old man and his son, so poor that they lay naked in their
+beds, were taken out and shot by a party of Moonlighters for breaking a
+boycott. They were left for dead, and their bodies thrown upon a
+dunghill. The boy, however, was <a name="page25" id="page25"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 25]
+</span>still alive when they were found, and it
+was thought he might recover. The magistrates questioned him as to his
+knowledge of the murderers. The boy&rsquo;s mother stood behind the
+magistrate, and when the question was put, held up her finger in a
+warning manner at the poor lad. She didn&rsquo;t wish him to &ldquo;peach,&rdquo; as, if
+he lived, the friends of the murderers would make it impossible for them
+to keep their holding and live on it. The lad lied, and died with the
+lie on his lips. Who shall sit in judgment on that wretched mother and
+her son? But what rule can possibly be too stern to crush out the
+terrorism which makes such things possible?</p>
+
+<p>And what right have Englishmen to expect their dominion to stand in
+Ireland when their party leaders for party ends shake hands with men who
+wink at and use this terrorism? It has so wrought upon the population
+here, that in another case, in which the truth needed by justice and the
+fears of a poor family trembling for their substance and their lives
+came thus into collision, an Irish Judge did not hesitate to warn the
+jury against allowing themselves to be influenced by &ldquo;the usual family
+lie&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>A magistrate told us a curious story, which <a name="page26" id="page26"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 26]
+</span>recalls a case noted by Sir
+Walter Scott, about the detection of a murderer, who lay long in wait
+for a certain police sergeant, obnoxious to the &ldquo;Moonlighters,&rdquo; and
+finally shot him dead in the public street of Loughrea, after dark on a
+rainy night, as he was returning from the Post-Office on one side of the
+street to the Police Barracks on the other. The town and the
+neighbouring country were all agog about the matter, but no trace could
+be got until the Dublin detectives came down three days after the
+murder. It had rained more or less every one of these days, and the
+pools of water were still standing in the street, as on the night of the
+murder. One of the Dublin officers closely examining the highway saw a
+heavy footprint in the coarse mud at the bottom of one of these pools.
+He had the water drawn off, and made out clearly, from the print in the
+mud, that the brogan worn by the foot which made it had a broken
+sole-piece turned over under the foot. By this the murderer was
+eventually traced, captured, tried, and found guilty.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Morphy, I find, is coming down from Dublin to conduct the
+prosecution in the case of the Crown against the murderers of
+Fitzmaurice, the old man, <a name="page27" id="page27"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 27]
+</span>so brutally slain the other day near Lixnaw,
+in the presence of his daughter, for taking and farming a farm given up
+by his thriftless brother. &ldquo;He will find,&rdquo; said one of the company,
+&ldquo;the mischief done in this instance also by prematurely pressing for
+evidence. The girl Honora, who saw her father murdered, never ought to
+have been subjected to any inquiry at first by any one, least of all by
+the local priest. Her first thought inevitably was that if she intimated
+who the men were, they would be screened, and she would suffer. Now she
+is recovering her self-possession and coming round, and she will tell
+the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Meanwhile,&rdquo; said a magistrate, &ldquo;the girl and her family are all
+&lsquo;boycotted,&rsquo; and that, mark you, by the priest, as well as by the
+people. The girl&rsquo;s life would be in peril were not these scoundrels
+cowards as well as bullies. Two staunch policemen&mdash;Irishmen and
+Catholics both of them&mdash;are in constant attendance, with orders to
+prevent any one from trying to intimidate or to tamper with her. A
+police hut is putting up close to the Fitzmaurice house. The Nationalist
+papers haven&rsquo;t a word to say for this poor girl or her murdered father.
+But they are always putting in some sly word in behalf <a name="page28" id="page28"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 28]
+</span>of Moriarty and
+Hayes, the men accused of the murder.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Furthermore,&rdquo; said another guest, &ldquo;these two men are regularly supplied
+while in prison with special meals by Mrs. Tangney. Who foots the bills?
+That is what she won&rsquo;t tell, nor has the Head-Constable so far been able
+accurately to ascertain. All we know is that the friends of the
+prisoners haven&rsquo;t the money to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Late in the evening came in a tall fine-looking Kerry squire, who told
+us, <i>&agrave; propos</i> of the Fitzmaurice murder, that only a day or two ago a
+very decent tenant of his, who had taken over a holding from a
+disreputable kinsman, intending to manage it for the benefit of this
+kinsman&rsquo;s family, came to him and said he must give it up, as the
+Moonlighters had threatened him if he continued to hold it.</p>
+
+<p>A man of substance in Tralee gave me some startling facts as to the
+local administration here. In Tralee Union, he said, there were in 1879
+eighty-seven persons receiving outdoor relief, at a cost to the Union of
+&pound;30, 17s. 11d., being an average per head of 7s. 1d., and 1879 was a
+very bad year, the worst since the great famine year, 1847. A
+Nationalist Board was elected in 1880, <a name="page29" id="page29"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 29]
+</span>and a Nationalist chairman in
+1884. 1884 was a very good year, but in that year no fewer than 3434
+persons received outdoor relief, at a cost of &pound;2534, 13s. 10d., making
+an average per head of 14s. 9d.! And at the present time &pound;5000 nominal
+worth of dishonoured cheques of the authorities were flying all over the
+county!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;On whom,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;does the burden fall of these levies and
+extravagances?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;On the landlords, not on the tenants,&rdquo; he promptly replied. &ldquo;The
+landlord pays the whole of the rates on all holdings of less than &pound;4 a
+year, and on all land which is either really or technically in his own
+possession. He also pays one-half of the rates on all the rest of his
+property.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then, in a case like that of Griffin&rsquo;s, evicted at Glenbehy, with
+arrears going back to 1883, who would pay the rates?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The landlord of course!&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 30]
+</span>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Thursday, Feb. 23d.</i>&mdash;</span>We left Tralee this morning. It was
+difficult to recognise the events yesterday witnessed by us at Glenbehy
+in the accounts which we read of them to-day when we got the newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>As these accounts are obviously intended to be read, not in Ireland,
+where nobody seems to take the least interest in Irish affairs beyond
+his own bailiwick, but in England and America, it is only natural, I
+suppose, that they should be coloured to suit the taste of the market
+for which they are destined. It is astonishing how little interest the
+people generally show in the newspapers. The Irish make good journalists
+as they make good soldiers; but most of the journalists who now
+represent Irish constituencies at Westminster find their chief field of
+activity, I am told, not in Irish but in British or in American
+journals. Mr. Roche, R.M., who travelled with us as far as Castle
+Island, where we <a name="page31" id="page31"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 31]
+</span>left him, was much less moved by the grotesque accounts
+given in the local journals of his conduct yesterday than by Mr.
+Gladstone&rsquo;s &ldquo;retractation&rdquo; of the extraordinary attack which he made the
+other day upon Mr. Roche himself, and four other magistrates by name.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The retractation aggravates the attack,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>When one sees what a magistrate now represents in Ireland, it certainly
+is not easy to reconcile an inconsiderate attack upon the character and
+conduct of such an officer with the most elementary ideas of good
+citizenship.</p>
+
+<p>After Mr. Roche left us, a gentleman in the carriage, who is interested
+in some Castle Island property, told us that nothing could be worse than
+the state of that region. Open defiance of the moral authority of the
+clergy is as rife there, he says, as open defiance of the civil
+authorities. The church was not long ago broken into, and the sacred
+vestments were defiled; and, but the other day, a young girl of the
+place came to a magistrate and asked him to give her a summons against
+the parish priest &ldquo;for assaulting her.&rdquo; The magistrate, a Protestant,
+but a personal friend of the priest, esteeming him for his fidelity to
+his duties, asked the girl what <a name="page32" id="page32"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 32]
+</span>on earth she meant. She proceeded with
+perfect coolness to say that the priest had impertinently interfered
+with her, &ldquo;assaulted her,&rdquo; and told her to &ldquo;go home,&rdquo; when he found her
+sitting in a lonely part of the road with her young man, rather late at
+night! For this, the girl, professing to be a Catholic, actually wanted
+the Protestant magistrate to have her parish priest brought into his
+court! He told the girl plainly what he thought of her conduct,
+whereupon she went away, very angry, and vowing vengeance both against
+the priest and against him.</p>
+
+<p>This same gentleman said that at the Bodyke evictions, of which so much
+has been heard, the girls and women swarmed about the police using
+language so revoltingly obscene that the policemen blushed&mdash;such
+language, he said, as was never heard from decent Irishwomen in the days
+of his youth.</p>
+
+<p>Of this business of evictions, he said, the greatest imaginable
+misrepresentations are made in the press and by public speakers. &ldquo;You
+have just seen one eviction yourself,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you can judge for
+yourself whether that can be truly described in Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s language
+as a &lsquo;sentence of death.&rsquo; The people that were put out of these burned
+houses <a name="page33" id="page33"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 33]
+</span>you saw, houses that never would have needed to be burned, had
+Harrington and the other Leaguers allowed the people to keep their
+pledges given Sir Redvers Buller, those very people are better off now
+than they were before they were evicted, in so far as this, that they
+get their food and drink and shelter without working for it, and I&rsquo;m
+sorry to say that the Government and the League, between them, have been
+soliciting half of Ireland for the last six or eight years to think that
+sort of thing a heaven upon earth. An eviction in Ireland in these days
+generally means just this, that the fight between a landlord and the
+League has come to a head. If the tenant wants to be rid of his holding,
+or if he is more afraid of the League than of the law, why, out he goes,
+and then he is a victim of heartless oppression; but if he is
+well-to-do, and if he thinks he will be protected, he takes the eviction
+proceedings just for a notice to stop palavering and make a settlement,
+and a settlement is made. The ordinary Irish tenant don&rsquo;t think anything
+more of an eviction than Irish gentlemen used to think of a duel; but
+you can never get English people to understand the one any more than the
+other!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 34]
+</span>The fine broad streets which Cork owes to the filling up and bridging
+over of the canals which in the last century made her a kind of Irish
+Venice, give the city a comely and even stately aspect. But they are not
+much better kept and looked after than the streets of New York. And they
+are certainly less busy and animated than when I last was here, five
+years ago. All the canals, however, are not filled up or bridged over.
+From my windows, in a neat comfortable little private hotel on
+Morrison&rsquo;s Quay, I look down upon the deck of a small barque, moored
+well up among the houses. The hospitable and dignified County Club is
+within two minutes&rsquo; walk of my hostelry, and the equally hospitable and
+more bustling City Club, but a little farther off, at the end of the
+South Mall. At luncheon to-day a gentleman who was at Kilkenny with Mr.
+Gladstone on the occasion of his visit to that city told me a story too
+good to be lost. The party were eight in number, and on their return to
+Abbeyleix they naturally looked out for an empty railway carriage. The
+train was rather full, but in one compartment my informant descried a
+dignitary, whom he knew, of the Protestant Church of Ireland, its only
+occupant. <a name="page35" id="page35"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 35]
+</span>He went up and saluted the Dean, and, pointing to his
+companions, asked if he would object to changing his place in the train,
+which would give them a compartment to themselves. The Dean courteously,
+and indeed briskly, assented, when he saw that Mr. Gladstone was one of
+the party.</p>
+
+<p>After the train moved off, Mr. Gladstone said, &ldquo;Was not that gentleman
+who so kindly vacated his place for us a clergyman?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; &ldquo;I hope he won&rsquo;t think I have disestablished him again!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>At the next station, my informant getting out for a moment to thank the
+Dean again for his civility, and chat with him, repeated Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s
+remark.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said the Dean; &ldquo;you may tell him I don&rsquo;t mind his disestablishing
+me again; for he didn&rsquo;t disendow me; he didn&rsquo;t confiscate my ticket!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>With this gentleman was another from Kerry, who tells me there is a
+distinct change for the better already visible in that county, which he
+attributes to the steady action of the Dublin authorities in enforcing
+the law.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The League Courts,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;are ceasing to be the terror they used to
+be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I asked what he meant by the &ldquo;League Courts,&rdquo; <a name="page36" id="page36"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 36]
+</span>when he expressed his
+astonishment at my not knowing that it was the practice of the League to
+hold regular Courts, before which the tenants are summoned, as if by a
+process of the law, to explain their conduct, when they are charged with
+paying their rents without the permission of the Local League. In his
+part of Kerry, he tells me, these Courts used not very long ago to sit
+regularly every Sunday. The idea, he says, is as old as the time of the
+United Irishmen, who used to terrorise the country just in the same way.
+A man whom he named, a blacksmith, acted as a kind of &ldquo;Law Lord,&rdquo; and to
+him the chairmen of the different local &ldquo;Courts&rdquo; used to refer cases
+heard before them!<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>All this was testified to openly two years ago, before Lord Cowper&rsquo;s
+Commission, but no decisive action has ever been taken by the Government
+to put a stop to the scandal, and relieve the tenants from this open
+tyranny. These Courts enforced, and still enforce, their decrees by
+various forms of outrage, <a name="page37" id="page37"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 37]
+</span>ranging &ldquo;from the boycott,&rdquo; in its simplest
+forms up to direct outrages upon property and the person.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This dual Government business,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;can only end in a duel
+between the two Governments, and it must be a duel to the death of one
+or the other.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To-night at dinner I had a most interesting conversation with Mr.
+Colomb, Assistant Inspector-General of the Constabulary, who is here
+engaged with Mr. Cameron of Belfast, and Colonel Turner, in
+investigating the affair at Mitchelstown. Mr. Colomb was at Killarney at
+the time of the Fenian rising under &ldquo;General O&rsquo;Connor&rdquo; in 1867&mdash;a rising
+which was undoubtedly an indirect consequence of our own Civil War in
+America. Warning came to two magistrates, of impending trouble from
+Cahirciveen. Upon this Mr. Colomb immediately ordered the arrest of all
+passengers to arrive that day at Killarney by the &ldquo;stage-car&rdquo; from that
+place. When the car came in at night, it brought only one person&mdash;&ldquo;an
+awful-looking ruffian he was,&rdquo; said Mr. Colomb, &ldquo;whom, by his
+square-toed shoes, we knew to be just arrived from your side of the
+water.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was examined, and said he was a commercial traveller, and that he had
+only one letter about him, a business letter, addressed to &ldquo;J. D.
+Sheehan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 38]
+</span>&ldquo;Have you any objection to show us that letter?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; he replied very coolly, and, taking it out of his
+pocket, he walked toward a table on which stood a candle, as if to read
+it. A gentleman who was closely watching him, caught him by the wrist,
+just as he was putting the letter to the flame, and saved it. It was
+addressed to J. D. Sheehan, Esq., Killarney [Present], and ran as
+follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;<i>Feb. 12th, Morning</i>.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;MY DEAR SHEEHAN,&mdash;I have the honour to introduce to you Captain
+ Mortimer Moriarty. He will be of great assistance to you, and I
+ have told him all that is to be done until I get to your place. The
+ Private <i>Spys</i> are very active this morning. Unless they smell a
+ rat all will be done without any trouble.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Success to you. Hoping to meet soon,&mdash;Yours as ever.</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> &ldquo;(Signed) JOHN J. O&rsquo;CONNOR.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 39]
+</span>Despatches were at once sent off to the authorities at different points.
+They were all transmitted, except to Cahirciveen, the wires to which
+place were found to have been cut. Mr. Colomb&mdash;who had a force of but
+seventeen men in the town of Killarney&mdash;saw the uselessness of trying to
+communicate with the officer at Cahirciveen, but was so strongly urged
+by the magistrates that he unwillingly consented to endeavour to do so,
+and a mounted orderly was sent. Just after this unfortunate officer had
+passed Glenbehy (the scene of the eviction I have just witnessed) he was
+shot by some of O&rsquo;Connor&rsquo;s party, whom he tried to pass in the dark, and
+who were marching on Killarney, and fell from his horse, which galloped
+off. He managed to crawl to a neighbouring cottage, where he was not
+long after found by &rdquo;General O&rsquo;Connor&ldquo; and some of his followers. The
+wounded man was kindly treated by O&rsquo;Connor, who had him examined for
+despatches, but prevented one of his men from shooting him dead, as he
+lay on the ground, and had his wounds as well attended to as was
+possible. There was no response in the country to the Kerry rising, such
+as it was, because the intended seizure of Chester Castle by the Fenians
+failed, but O&rsquo;Connor <a name="page40" id="page40"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 40]
+</span>was not captured, though great efforts were made to
+seize him. How he escaped is not known to this day.</p>
+
+<p>At that time, as always in emergencies, Mr. Colomh says the Constabulary
+behaved with exemplary coolness, courage, and fidelity. His position
+gives him a very thorough knowledge of the force, which is almost
+entirely recruited from the body of the Irish people. Of late years not
+a few men of family, reduced in fortune, have taken service in it. Among
+these has been mentioned to me a young Irishman of title, and of an
+ancient race, who is a sergeant in the force, and who recently declined
+to accept a commission, as his increased expenses would make it harder
+for him to support his two sisters. Another constable in the ranks
+represents a family illustrious in the annals of England four centuries
+ago.</p>
+
+<p>As to the <i>morale</i> of the force, he cites one eloquent fact. Out of a
+total of more than 13,000 men, the cases of drunkenness, proved or
+admitted, average no more than fourteen a week! On many days absolutely
+no such cases occur. This is really amazing when one thinks how many of
+the men are isolated on lonely posts all over the island, exposed to all
+sorts of weather, and cut off from the ordinary resources and amusements
+of social life.</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Friday, Feb. 24th.</i>&mdash;</span>This morning after breakfast I met in the
+South Mall a charming ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance I made in Rome
+while I was attending the great celebration there in 1867 of St. Peter&rsquo;s
+Day. Father Burke introduced me to him after the Pontifical Mass at San
+Paolo fuori le Mure; and we had a delightful symposium that afternoon. I
+walked with him to his lodgings, talking over those &rdquo;days long
+vanished,&ldquo; and the friend whose genius made them, like the suppers of
+Plato, &rdquo;a joy for ever.&ldquo; He is sorely troubled now by the attitude of a
+portion of the clergy in his part of Ireland, which is one almost of
+open hostility, he says, to the moral authority of the Church, and
+indicates the development of a class of priests moving in the direction
+of the &rdquo;conventional priests,&ldquo; by whom the Church was disgraced during
+the darkest days of the French Revolution of 1793.</p>
+
+<p>Almost more mischievous than these men, he thinks, who must eventually
+go the way of their kind in times past, are the timid priests, for the
+most part parish priests, who go in fear of their violent curates, and
+of the politicians who tyrannise their <a name="page41" id="page41"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 41]
+</span>flocks. He showed me a letter
+written to him last week by one of these, whose parish is just now in a
+tempest over the Plan of Campaign. Certainly a most remarkable letter.
+In it the writer frankly says, &rdquo;There is no justification for the Plan
+of Campaign on this property.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I assented to putting it in force here,&rdquo; he goes on, &ldquo;because I did not
+at the time know the facts of the case, and took them on trust from
+persons who, I find, have practised upon my confidence. What am I to do?
+I am made to appear as a consenting party now, and, indeed, an assisting
+agent in action, which I certainly was led to believe right and
+necessary, but which upon the facts I now see involves much injustice
+to &mdash;&mdash; (naming the landlord), and I fear positive ruin to worthy men and
+families of my people. I shall be grateful and glad of your counsel in
+these most distressing circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What can any one do to help such a man?&rdquo; said my friend. &ldquo;The
+rebellious and unruly in the Church, be they priests or laymen, can only
+in the end damage themselves. <i>Tu es Petrus</i>; and revolt, like schism,
+is a devil which only carries away those of whom it gets possession out
+of the Church and <a name="page42" id="page42"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 42]
+</span>into the sea. But a weak sentinel on the wall or at
+the gate who drops his musket to wipe his eyes, that is a thing for
+tears!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He asked me to come and see him if possible in his own county, and he
+has promised to send me letters to-day for priests who will he glad to
+tell me what they know only too well of the pressure put upon the better
+sort of the people by the organised idlers and mischief-makers in Clare
+and Kerry.</p>
+
+<p>To-day at the City Club, I made the acquaintance of the Town-Clerk of
+Cork, Mr. Alexander M&lsquo;Carthy, a staunch Nationalist and Home Ruler, who
+holds his office almost by a sort of hereditary tenure, having been
+appointed to it in 1859 in succession to his father. He gave me many
+interesting particulars as to the municipal history and administration
+of Cork, and showed me some of the responses he is receiving to a kind
+of circular letter sent by the municipality to the town governments of
+England, touching the recent proceedings against the Mayor. So far these
+responses have not been very sympathetic. He invited me to lunch here
+with him to-morrow, and visit some of the most interesting points in and
+around the city. Here, too, I met Colonel Spaight, Inspector <a name="page43" id="page43"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 43]
+</span>of the
+Local Government Board, who gives me a startling account of the increase
+of the public burdens. Twenty years ago there were no persons whatever
+seeking outdoor relief in Cork. This year, out of a total population of
+145,216, there are 3775 persons here receiving indoor relief, and 4337
+receiving outdoor relief, making in all 8112, or nearly 6 per cent. of
+the inhabitants. This proportion is swelled by the influx of people from
+other regions seeking occupation here, which they do not find, or simply
+coming here because they are sure of relief. This state of things
+illustrates not so much the decay of industry in Cork as the development
+of a spirit of mendicancy throughout Ireland. In the opinion of many
+thoughtful people, this began with the Duchess of Marlborough&rsquo;s Fund,
+and with the Mansion House Fund. Colonel Spaight remembers that in
+Strokestown Union, Roscommon, when the guardians there received a supply
+of one hundred tons of seed potatoes, they distributed eighty tons, and
+were then completely at a loss what to do with the remaining twenty
+tons. Mr. Parnell and Mr. O&rsquo;Kelly, however, came to Roscommon, and the
+latter made a speech out of the hotel window to the people, advising
+them to apply for more, and <a name="page44" id="page44"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 44]
+</span>take all they could get. &ldquo;With a stroke of a
+pen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll wipe out the seed rate!&rdquo; Whereupon the
+applications for seed rose to six hundred tons!</p>
+
+<p>The Labourers Act, passed by the British Parliament for the benefit of
+the Irish labourers, who get but scant recognition of their wants and
+wishes from the tenant farmers, is not producing the good results
+expected from it, mainly because it is perverted <a name="page45" id="page45"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 45]
+</span>to all sorts of
+jobbery. Only last week Colonel Spaight had to hand in to the Local
+Government Board a report on certain schemes of expenditure under this
+Act, prepared by the Board of Guardians of Tralee. These schemes
+contemplated the erection of 196 cottages in 135 electoral divisions of
+the Union. This meant, of course, so much money of the ratepayers to be
+turned over to local contractors. Colonel Spaight on inspection found
+that of the 196 proposed cottages, the erection of 61 had been forbidden
+by the sanitary authorities, the notices for the erection of 23 had been
+wrongly served, 20 were proposed to be erected on sites not adjoining a
+public road, and no necessity had been shown for erecting 40 of the
+others. He accordingly recommended that only 32 be allowed to be
+erected! For a small town like Tralee this proposition to put <a name="page46" id="page46"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 46]
+</span>up 196
+buildings at the public expense where only 32 were needed is not bad. It
+has the right old Tammany Ring smack, and would have commanded, I am
+sure, the patronising approval of the late Mr. Tweed.</p>
+
+<p>I mentioned it to-night at the County Club, when a gentleman said that
+this morning at Macroom a serious &ldquo;row&rdquo; had occurred between the local
+Board of Guardians there and a great crowd of labourers. The labourers
+thronged the Board-room, demanding the half-acre plots of land which had
+been promised them. The Guardians put them off, promising to attend to
+them when the regular business of the meeting was over. So the poor
+fellows were kept waiting for three mortal hours, at the end of which
+time they espied the elected Nationalist members of the Board subtly
+filing out of the place. This angered them. They stopped the fugitives,
+blockaded the Board-room, and forced the Guardians to appoint a
+committee to act upon their demands.</p>
+
+<p>It is certainly a curious fact that, so far, in Ireland I have seen no
+decent cottages for labourers, excepting those put up at their own
+expense on their own property by landlords.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 47]
+</span>I dined to-night at the County Club with Captain Plunkett, a most
+energetic, spirited, and well-informed resident magistrate, a brother of
+the late Lord Louth,&mdash;still remembered, I dare say, at the New York
+Hotel as the only Briton who ever really mastered the mystery of
+concocting a &ldquo;cocktail,&rdquo;&mdash;and an uncle of the present peer. We had a
+very cheery dinner, and a very clever lawyer, Mr. Shannon, gave us an
+irresistible reproduction of a charge delivered by an Irish judge famous
+for shooting over the heads of juries, who sent twelve worthy citizens
+of Galway out of their minds by bidding them remember, in a case of
+larceny, that they could not find the prisoner guilty unless they were
+quite sure &ldquo;as to the <i>animus furandi</i> and the <i>asportavit</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary"><i>Saturday, Feb. 25.</i>&mdash;</span>I had an interesting talk this morning at the
+County Club with a gentleman from Limerick on the subject of
+&ldquo;boycotting.&rdquo; I told him what I had seen at Edenvale of the practice as
+applied to a forlorn and helpless old woman, for the crime of standing
+by her &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; son. &ldquo;You think this an extreme case,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but
+you are quite mistaken. It is a typical case certainly, but it gives you
+only an inadequate idea of <a name="page48" id="page48"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 48]
+</span>the scope given to this infernal machinery.
+The &lsquo;boycott&rsquo; is now used in Ireland as the Inquisition was used in
+Spain,&mdash;to stifle freedom of thought and action. It is to-day the chief
+reliance of the National League for keeping up its membership, and
+squeezing subscriptions out of the people. If you want proof of this,&rdquo;
+he added, &ldquo;ask any Nationalist you know whether members of the League in
+the country allow farmers who are not members to associate with them in
+any way. I can cite you a case at Ballingarry, in my county, where last
+summer a resolution of the League was published and put on the Chapel
+door, that members of the National League were thenceforth to have no
+dealings or communication with any person not a member. This I saw with
+my own eyes, and it was matter of public notoriety.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I lunched at the City Club with Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy. Sir Daniel O&rsquo;Sullivan,
+formerly Mayor of Cork, whose views of Home Rule seem to differ widely
+from those of his successor, now incarcerated here, was one of the
+company. In the course of an animated but perfectly good-natured
+discussion of the Land Law question between two other gentlemen present,
+one of them, a strong Nationalist, <a name="page49" id="page49"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 49]
+</span>smote his Unionist opponent very
+neatly under the fifth rib. The latter contending that it was monstrous
+to interfere by law with the principle of freedom of contract, the
+Nationalist responded, &ldquo;That cannot be; it must be right and legitimate
+to do it, for the Imperial Parliament has done it four times within
+seventeen years!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I walked with Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy to his apartments, where he showed me many
+curious papers and volumes bearing on municipal law and municipal
+history in Ireland. Among these, two most elaborate and interesting
+volumes, being the Council Books of Cork, Youghal, and Kinsale, from
+1610 to 1659, 1666 to 1687, and 1690 to 1800. The records for the years
+not enumerated have perished, that is, for the first five or six years
+after the Restoration, and for the years just preceding and just
+following the fall of James II. These volumes take one back to the
+condition of Southern Ireland immediately after English greed and
+intrigue had sapped the foundations of the peace which followed the
+submission of the great Earl of Tyrone, and brought about the flight to
+the Continent of that chieftain, and of his friend and ally, the Earl of
+Tyrconnell.</p>
+
+<p>They give us no picture, unfortunately, of the <a name="page50" id="page50"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 50]
+</span>closing years of
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s long struggle to establish the English power, or of the
+occupation of Kinsale by the Spanish in the name of the Pope. But there
+is abundant evidence in them of the theological hatred which so
+embittered the conflict of races in Ireland during the seventeenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>It was a relief to turn from these to a solemn controversy waged in our
+own times between Cork and Limerick over a question of municipal
+precedence, in which Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy did battle for the City of the Galley
+and the Towers<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a> against the City of the Gateway and Cathedral dome.
+The truth seems to be that King John gave charters to both cities, but
+to Cork twelve years earlier than to Limerick. Speaking of this contest,
+by the way, with a loyalist of Cork to-night, I observed that it was
+almost as odd to find such a question hotly disputed between two
+Nationalist cities as to see the champions of Irish independence
+marching under the banner of the harp, which was invented for Ireland by
+Henry VIII.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know why you call Cork a Nationalist <a name="page51" id="page51"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 51]
+</span>city,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;for
+Parnell and Maurice Healy were returned for it by a clear minority of
+the voters. If all the voters had gone to the polls, they would both
+have been beaten.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A curious statement certainly, and worth looking into. Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy gave
+me also much information as to the working of the municipal system here,
+and a copy of the rules which govern the debates of the Town Council.
+One of these might be adopted with advantage in other assemblies, to
+wit, &ldquo;that no member be permitted to occupy the time of the Council for
+more than ten minutes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There is an important difference between the parliamentary and the
+municipal constituencies of Cork. The former constituency comprises all
+residents within the borough boundaries occupying premises of the
+rateable value of &pound;10 a year. The municipal constituency consists of no
+more than 1800 voters, divided among the seven wards which make up the
+city under the &ldquo;3d and 4th Victoria,&rdquo; and which contain about 13,000 of
+the 15,116 Parliamentary voters of the borough. The same thing is true
+in the main of nine out of the eleven municipal boroughs of Ireland
+including Dublin. The 3d and 4th Victoria was amended for Dublin in
+<a name="page52" id="page52"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 52]
+</span>1849, so as to give that city the municipal franchise then existing in
+England, but no move in that direction was made for Cork, Waterford,
+Limerick, or any other municipal borough. The Nationalists have taken no
+interest in the question. Perhaps they have good reason for this, as in
+Belfast, where the municipal franchise has been widely extended since
+the present Government came into power, the democratic electorate has
+put the whole municipal government into the hands of the Unionists. The
+day being cool, though fine, Mr. M&lsquo;Carthy got an &ldquo;inside car,&rdquo; and we
+went off for a drive about the city. The environs of Cork are very
+attractive. We visited the new cemetery grounds which are very neatly
+and tastefully laid out. There was a conflict over them, the owners of
+family vaults staunchly standing out against the &ldquo;levelling&rdquo; tendency of
+a harmonious city of the dead. But all is well that ends well, and now
+two handsome stone chapels, one Catholic and one Protestant, keep watch
+and ward over the silent sleepers, standing face to face near the grand
+entrance, and exactly alike in their architecture. A very pretty drive
+took us to the water-works, which are extensive, well planned, and
+exceedingly well <a name="page53" id="page53"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 53]
+</span>kept. They are awaiting now the arrival from America of
+some great turbine wheels, but the engines are of English make. In the
+city we visited the new Protestant cathedral of St. Finbar, a very fine
+church, which advantageously replaces a &ldquo;spacious structure of the Doric
+order,&rdquo; built here in the reign of George II., with the proceeds of a
+parliamentary tax on coals. Despite his name, I imagine that admirable
+prelate, Dr. England, the first Catholic bishop of my native city in
+America, must have been a Corkonian, for he it was, I believe, who put
+the cathedral of Charleston under the invocation of St. Finbar, the
+first bishop of Cork. The church stands charmingly amid fine trees on a
+southern branch of the river Lea. We visited also two fine Catholic
+churches, one of St. Vincent de Paul, and the other the Church of St.
+Peter and St. Paul, a grandly proportioned and imposing edifice.</p>
+
+<p>It was at vespers that we entered it, and found it filled with the
+kneeling people. This noble church is rather ignobly hidden away behind
+crowded houses and shops, and the contrast was very striking when we
+emerged from its dim religious space and silence into the thronged and
+rather noisy streets. There is a statue here of Father Mathew; but what
+<a name="page54" id="page54"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 54]
+</span>I have seen to-night makes me doubt whether the present generation of
+Corkonians would have erected it.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner a gentleman gave us a most interesting account of the
+picturesque home which a man of taste, and a lover of natural history,
+has made for himself at the remote seaside village of Belmullet, in
+Mayo, the seat of the Mayo quarries, in which Mr. Davitt takes so much
+interest. The sea brings in there all sorts of wreckage, and the house
+is beautifully finished with mahogany and other rare woods, just as I
+remember finding in a noble mansion in South Wales, near a dangerous
+head-land, some magnificent doors and wainscotings made of that most
+beautiful of the Central American woods, nogarote, which I never saw in
+the United States, excepting in a superb specimen of it sent home by
+myself from Corinto. This colonist of Mayo employs all the people he can
+get in the fisheries there, which are very rich; and the ducks and wild
+geese are so numerous that he sometimes sends as far as to Wicklow for
+men to capture and sell them for him. He was once fortunate enough to
+trap a pair of the snow geese of the Arctic region, but Belmullet, in
+other respects a <a name="page55" id="page55"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 55]
+</span>primeval paradise, is cursed with the small boy of
+civilisation; and one of these pests of society slew the goose with a
+stone. The widowed gander consoled himself by contracting family ties
+with the common domestic goose of the parish, and all his progeny, in
+other particulars indistinguishable from that familiar bird, bear the
+black marks distinctive of the Arctic tribe.</p>
+
+<p>Belmullet, this gentleman tells me, boasts a very good little inn, kept
+by a Mrs. Deehan, which was honoured by a visit from Lord Carnarvon with
+his wife and daughters during the Earl&rsquo;s Viceroyalty. This was in the
+course of a private and personal, not official tour, during which, Lord
+Carnarvon says, he was everywhere received with the greatest courtesy by
+all sorts and conditions of the people. It is an interesting
+illustration of the temper in which certain priests in Ireland deal with
+matters of State, that when Lord Carnarvon politely invited the parish
+priest of Belmullet to come to see him, that functionary declined to do
+so. Upon this the placable Viceroy sent to know whether the priest would
+receive the visit he refused to pay. The priest replied that he never
+declined to receive any gentleman who wished to see him; and the Vice<a name="page56" id="page56"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 56]
+</span>roy
+accordingly called upon him, to the edification of the people, who
+afterwards listened very respectfully to a little speech which His
+Excellency made to them from a car. It is rather surprising that these
+incidents have never been adduced in proof of Lord Carnarvon&rsquo;s
+determination to take the Home Rule wind out of the sails of the
+Liberals!</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Sunday, Feb. 26.</i>&mdash;</span>I went out to-day with Mr. Cameron to see
+Blarney Castle and St. Anne&rsquo;s Hill. Nothing can be lovelier than the
+country around Cork and the valley of the Lea. A &ldquo;light railway,&rdquo; of the
+sort authorised by the Act of 1883, takes you out quickly enough to
+Blarney, and the train was well filled. The construction of these
+railways is found fault with as aggravating instead of relieving those
+defects in the organisation and management of the Irish railways, which
+are so thoroughly and intelligently exposed in the Public Works Report
+of Sir James Allport and his fellow-commissioners. A morning paper
+to-day points this out sharply.</p>
+
+<p>In the days of King William III. Blarney Castle must have been a
+magnificent stronghold. It stands very finely on a well-wooded height,
+and <a name="page57" id="page57"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 57]
+</span>dominates the land for miles around. But it held out against the
+victor of the Boyne so long that, when he captured it, he thought it
+best, in the expressive phrase of the Commonwealth, to &ldquo;slight&rdquo; it,
+little now remaining of it but the gigantic keep, the walls of which are
+some six yards thick, and a range of ruined outworks stretching along
+and above a line of caverns, probably the work of the quarrymen who got
+out the stone for the Castle ages ago. The legend of the Blarney Stone
+does not seem to be a hundred years old, but the stone itself is one of
+the front battlements of the grand old tower, which has more than once
+fallen to the ground from the giddy height at which it was originally
+set. It is now made fast there by iron clamps, in such a position that
+to kiss it one should be a Japanese acrobat, or a volunteer rifleman
+shooting for the championship of the world. There are many and very fine
+trees in the grounds about the Castle, and there is a charming garden,
+now closed against the casual tourist, as it has been leased with the
+modern house to a tenant who lives here. In the leafy summer the place
+must be a dream of beauty. An avenue of stately trees quite overarching
+the highway leads from Blarney to St. Anne&rsquo;s Hill, the <a name="page58" id="page58"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 58]
+</span>site of which, at
+least, is that of an ideal sanatorium. We walked thither over hill and
+dale. The panorama commanded by the buildings of the sanatorium is one
+of the widest and finest imaginable, worthy to be compared with the
+prospect from the Star and Garter at Richmond, or with that from the
+terrace at St. Germain.</p>
+
+<p>Several handsome lodges or cottages have been built about the extensive
+grounds. These are comfortably furnished and leased to people who prefer
+to bring their households here rather than take up their abode in the
+hotel, which, however, seems to be a very well kept and comfortable sort
+of place, with billiard and music rooms, a small theatre, and all kinds
+of contrivances for making the country almost as tedious as the town.
+The establishment is directed now by a German resident physician, but
+belongs to an Irish gentleman, Mr. Barter, who lives here himself, and
+here manages what I am told is one of the finest dairy farms and dairies
+in Ireland. Our return trip to Cork on the &ldquo;light railway,&rdquo; with a warm
+red sunset lighting up the river Lea, and throwing its glamour over the
+varied and picturesque scenery through which we ran, was not the least
+delightful part of a very delightful excursion.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 59]
+</span>After we got back I spent half-an-hour with a gentleman who knows the
+country about Youghal, which I propose to visit to-morrow, and who saw
+something of the recent troubles there arising out of the Plan of
+Campaign, as put into effect on the Ponsonby property.</p>
+
+<p>He is of the opinion that the Nationalists were misled into this contest
+by bad information as to Mr. Ponsonby&rsquo;s resources and relations. They
+expected to drive him to the wall, but they will fail to do this, and
+failing to do this they will be left in the vocative. He showed me a
+curious souvenir of the day of the evictions, in the shape of a
+quatrain, written by the young wife of an evicted tenant. This young
+woman, Mrs. Mahoney, was observed by one of the officers, as the
+eviction went on, to go apart to a window, where she stood for a while
+apparently writing something on a wooden panel of the shutter. After the
+eviction was over the officer remembered this, and going up to the
+window found these lines pencilled upon the panel:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&ldquo;We&nbsp;are&nbsp;evicted&nbsp;from&nbsp;this&nbsp;house,<br />
+<span class="i2">Me&nbsp;and&nbsp;my&nbsp;loving&nbsp;man;</span><br />
+We&rsquo;re&nbsp;homeless&nbsp;now&nbsp;upon&nbsp;the&nbsp;world!<br />
+<span class="i2">May&nbsp;the&nbsp;divil&nbsp;take&nbsp;&lsquo;the&nbsp;Plan&rsquo;!&rdquo;</span>
+</p>
+<p class="diary"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 60]
+</span><span class="diary">CORK, <i>Monday, Feb. 27.</i>&mdash;</span>A most interesting day. I left alone and early
+by the train for Youghal, having sent before me a letter of introduction
+to Canon Keller, the parish priest, who has recently become a
+conspicuous person through his refusal to give evidence about matters,
+his knowledge of which he conceives to be &ldquo;privileged,&rdquo; as acquired in
+his capacity as a priest.</p>
+
+<p>I had many fine views of the shore and the sea as we ran along, and the
+site of Youghal itself is very fine. It is an old seaport town, and once
+was a place of considerable trade, especially in wool.</p>
+
+<p>Oliver dwelt here for a while, and from Youghal he embarked on his
+victorious return to England. He seems to have done his work while he
+was here &ldquo;not negligently,&rdquo; like Harrison at Naseby Field, for when he
+departed he left Youghal a citadel of Protestant intolerance. Even under
+Charles II they maintained an ordinance forbidding &ldquo;any Papist to buy or
+barter anything in the public markets,&rdquo; which may be taken as a piece of
+cold-blooded and statutory &ldquo;boycotting.&rdquo; Then there was no parish priest
+in Youghal; now it may almost be said there is nobody in Youghal but the
+<a name="page61" id="page61"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 61]
+</span>parish priest! So does &ldquo;the whirligig of time bring in his revenges&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>At Youghal station a very civil young man came up, calling me by name,
+and said Father Keller had sent him with a car to meet me. We drove up
+past some beautiful grounds into the main street. A picturesque
+waterside town, little lanes and narrow streets leading out of the main
+artery down to the bay, and a savour of the sea in the place, grateful
+doubtless to the souls of Raleigh and the west country folk he brought
+over here when he became lord of the land, just three hundred years ago.
+Edmund Spenser came here in those days to see him, and talk over the
+events of that senseless rising of the Desmonds, which gave the poet of
+the &ldquo;Faerie Queen&rdquo; his awful pictures of the desolation of Ireland, and
+made the planter of Virginia master of more than forty thousand acres of
+Irish land.</p>
+
+<p>We turned suddenly into a little narrow wynd, and pulled up, the driver
+saying, &ldquo;There is the Father, yer honour!&rdquo; In a moment up came a tall,
+very fine-looking ecclesiastic, quite the best dressed and most
+distinguished-looking priest I have yet seen in Ireland, with features
+of a fine Teutonic <a name="page62" id="page62"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 62]
+</span>type, and the erect bearing of a soldier. I jumped
+down to greet him, and he proposed that we should walk together to his
+house near by. An extremely good house I found it to be, well placed in
+the most interesting quarter of the town. Having it in my mind to drive
+on from Youghal to Lismore, there to make an early dinner, see the
+castle of the Duke of Devonshire, and return to Cork by an evening
+train, I had to decline Father Keller&rsquo;s cordial hospitalities, but he
+gave me a most interesting hour with him in his comfortable study.
+Father Keller stands firmly by the position which earned for him a
+sentence of imprisonment last year, when he refused to testify before a
+court of justice in a bankruptcy case, on the ground that it might
+&ldquo;drift him into answers which would disclose secrets he was bound in
+honour not to disclose.&rdquo; He does not accept the view taken of his
+conduct, however, by Lord Selborne, that, in the circumstances, his
+refusal is to be regarded as the act of his ecclesiastical superiors
+rather than his own. He maintains it as his own view of the sworn duty
+of a priest, and not unnaturally therefore he looks upon his sentence as
+a blow levelled at the clergy; nor, as I understood him, has he
+abandoned his original contention, that the Court had no right to <a name="page63" id="page63"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 63]
+</span>summon
+him as a witness. It was impossible to listen to him on this subject,
+and doubt his entire good faith, nor do I see that he ought to be held
+responsible for the interpretation put by Mr. Lane, M.P., and others
+upon his attitude as a priest, in a sense going to make him merely a
+&ldquo;martyr&rdquo; of Home Rule. I did not gather from what he said that, in his
+mind, the question of his relations with the Nationalists or the Plan of
+Campaign entered into that affair at all, but simply that he believed
+the right and the duty of a priest to protect, no matter at what cost to
+himself, secrets confided to him as a priest, was really involved in his
+consent or refusal to answer, when he was asked whether he was or was
+not on a certain day at the &ldquo;Mall House&rdquo; in Youghal. Of course from the
+connection of this refusal in this particular case with the Nationalist
+movement, Nationalists would easily glide into the idea that he refused
+to testify in order to serve their cause.</p>
+
+<p>As to the troubles on the Ponsonby estate, Father Keller spoke very
+freely. He divided the responsibility for them between the
+untractableness of the agent, and the absenteeism of the owner. It was
+only since the troubles began, he said, that he <a name="page64" id="page64"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 64]
+</span>had ever seen Mr.
+Ponsonby, who lived in Hampshire, and was therefore out of touch with
+the condition and the feelings of the people here. In a personal
+interview with him he had found Mr. Ponsonby a kindly disposed
+Englishman, but the estate is heavily encumbered, and the agent who has
+had complete control of it forced the tenants, by his hard and fast
+refusal of a reasonable reduction more than two years ago, into an
+initial combination to defend themselves by &ldquo;clubbing&rdquo; their rents. That
+was before Mr. Dillon announced the Plan of Campaign at all.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was not till the autumn of 1886,&rdquo; said Father Keller, &ldquo;that any
+question arose of the Plan of Campaign here,<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> and it was by the
+tenants themselves that the determination was taken to adopt it. My part
+has been that of a peace-maker throughout, and we should have had peace
+if Mr. Ponsonby would have listened to me; we should have had peace, and
+he would have received a reasonable rental for his property. Instead of
+this, look at the law costs arising out of bankruptcy proceedings and
+sheriff&rsquo;s sales and writs and <a name="page65" id="page65"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 65]
+</span>processes, and the whole district thrown
+into disorder and confusion, and the industrious people now put out of
+their holdings, and forced into idleness.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the recent evictions which had taken place, Father Keller said
+they had taken him as well as the people by surprise, and had thus led
+to greater agitation and excitement. &ldquo;But the unfortunate incident of
+the loss of Hanlon&rsquo;s life,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;would never have occurred had I
+been duly apprised of what was going on in the town. I had come home
+into my house, having quieted the people, and left all in order, as I
+thought, when that charge of the police, for which there was no
+occasion, and which led to the killing of Hanlon, was ordered. I made my
+way rapidly to the people, and when I appeared they were brought to
+patience and to good order with astonishing ease, despite all that had
+occurred.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the present outlook, it was his opinion that Mr. Ponsonby, even
+with the Cork Defence Union behind him, could not hold out. &ldquo;The Land
+Corporation were taking over some parts of the estate, and putting
+Emergency men on them&mdash;a set of desperate men, a kind of <i>enfants
+perdus</i>,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to work and manage the land;&rdquo; but he did not believe
+the operation could be successfully <a name="page66" id="page66"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 66]
+</span>carried out. Meanwhile he
+confidently counted upon seeing &ldquo;the present Tory Government give way,
+and go out, when it would become necessary for the landlords to do
+justice to the rack-rented people. Pray understand,&rdquo; said Father Keller,
+&ldquo;that I do not say all landlords stand at all where Mr. Ponsonby has
+been put by his agent, for that is not the case; but the action of many
+landlords in the county Cork in sustaining Mr. Ponsonby, whose estate is
+and has been as badly rack-rented an estate as can be found, is, in my
+judgment, most unwise, and threatening to the peace and happiness of
+Ireland.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag9"
+ name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I asked whether, in his opinion, it would be possible for the Ponsonby
+tenants to live and prosper here on this estate, could they become
+peasant proprietors of it under Lord Ashbourne&rsquo;s Act, provided they
+increased in numbers, as in that event might be expected. This he
+thought very doubtful so far as a few of the tenants are concerned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would you seek a remedy, then,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;in emigration?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 67]
+</span>&ldquo;No, not in emigration,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;but in migration.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I begged him to explain the difference.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What I mean,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is, that the people should migrate, not out of
+Ireland, but from those parts of Ireland which cannot support them into
+parts of Ireland which can support them. There is room in Meath, for
+example, for the people of many congested districts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You would, then, turn the great cattle farms of Meath,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;into
+peasant holdings?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But would not that involve the expropriation of many people now
+established in Meath, and the disturbance or destruction of a great
+cattle industry for which Ireland has especial advantages?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To this Father Keller replied that he did not wish to see Ireland
+exporting her cattle, any more than to see Ireland exporting her sons
+and daughters. &ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; he said, quite earnestly, &ldquo;when they are forced
+to export them to pay exorbitant rents, and thus deprive themselves of
+their capital or of a fair share of the comforts of life. I should be
+glad to see the Irish people sufficient to themselves by the domestic
+exchange of their own industries and <a name="page68" id="page68"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 68]
+</span>products.&rdquo; At the same time he
+begged me to understand that he had no wish to see this development
+attended by any estrangement or hostile feeling between Ireland and
+Great Britain. &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have seen with the
+greatest satisfaction the growth of such good feeling towards England as
+I never expected to witness, as the result of the visits here of English
+public men, sympathising with the Irish tenants. I believe their visits
+are opening the way to a real union of the Democracies of the two
+countries, and to an alliance between them against the aristocratic
+classes which depress both peoples.&rdquo; This alliance Father Keller
+believed would be a sufficient guarantee against any religious contest
+between the Catholics of Ireland and the Protestants of Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was much astounded,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the other day, to hear from an English
+gentleman that he had met a Protestant clergyman who told him he really
+believed that a persecution of the Protestants would follow the
+establishment of Home Rule in Ireland. I begged him to consider that Mr.
+Parnell was a Protestant, and I assured him Protestants would have
+absolutely nothing to fear from Home Rule.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reverting to his idea of re-distributing the Irish <a name="page69" id="page69"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 69]
+</span>population through
+Ireland, under changed conditions, social and economical, I asked him
+how in Meath, for example, he would meet the difficulty of stocking with
+cattle the peasant holdings of a new set of proprietors not owning
+stock. He thought it would be easily met by advances of money from the
+Treasury to the peasant proprietors, these advances to be repaid, with
+interest, as in the case of Lady Burdett Coutts, and the advances made
+by her to the fishermen now under the direction of Father Davis at
+Baltimore.</p>
+
+<p>I was struck by the resemblance of these views to the Irish policy
+sketched for me by my Nationalist fellow-traveller of the other night
+from London. &ldquo;The evil that men do lives after them&rdquo;&mdash;and when one
+remembers how only a hundred years ago, and just after the establishment
+of American Independence ought to have taught England a lesson, the
+Irish House of Commons had to deal with the persistent determination of
+the English manufacturers to fight the bogey of Irish competition by
+protective duties in England against imports from Ireland, it is not
+surprising that Irishmen who allow sentiment to get the upper hand of
+sense should now think of playing a return game. England <a name="page70" id="page70"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 70]
+</span>went in fear
+then not only of Irish beasts and Irish butter, but of Irish woollens,
+Irish cottons, Irish leather, Irish glass. Nay, absurd as it may now
+seem, English ironmasters no longer ago than in 1785 testified before a
+Parliamentary Committee that unless a duty was clapped on Irish
+manufactures of iron, the Irish ironmasters had such advantages through
+cheaper labour and through the discrimination in their favour under the
+then existing relations with the new Republic of the United States that
+they would &ldquo;ruin the ironmasters of England.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In Ireland, as in America, the benign spirit of Free Trade is thwarted
+and intercepted at every turn by the abominable ghost of British
+Protection. What a blessing it would have been if the meddlesome
+palaverers of the Cobden Club, American as well as English, could ever
+have been made to understand the essentially insular character of
+Protection and the essentially continental character of Free Trade!</p>
+
+<p>It should never be forgotten, and it is almost never remembered, that
+when the Treaty of Versailles was making in 1783 the American
+Commissioners offered complete free trade between the United States and
+all parts of the British Dominions <a name="page71" id="page71"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 71]
+</span>save the territories of the East
+India Company. The British Commissioner, David Hartley, saw the value of
+this proposition, and submitted it at London. But King George III. would
+not entertain it.</p>
+
+<p>When I rose to leave him Father Keller courteously insisted on showing
+me the &ldquo;lions&rdquo; of Youghal. A most accomplished cicerone he proved to be.
+As we left his house we met in the street two or three of the &ldquo;evicted&rdquo;
+tenants, whom he introduced to me. One of these, Mr. Loughlin, was the
+holder of farms representing a rental of &pound;94. A stalwart, hearty,
+rotund, and rubicund farmer he was, and in reply to my query how long
+the holdings he had lost had been in his family, he answered, &ldquo;not far
+from two hundred years.&rdquo; Certainly some one must have blundered as badly
+as at Balaklava to make it necessary for a tenant with such a past
+behind him to go out of his holdings on arrears of a twelvemonth. Father
+Keller gave me, as we left Mr. Loughlin and his friend, a leaflet in
+which he has printed the story of &ldquo;the struggle for life on the Ponsonby
+estate,&rdquo; as he understands it.</p>
+
+<p>A minute&rsquo;s walk brought us to Sir Walter Raleigh&rsquo;s house, now the
+property of Sir John Pope Hennessey. <a name="page72" id="page72"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 72]
+</span>It was probably built by Sir Walter
+while he lived here in 1588-89, during the time of the great Armada; for
+it is a typical Elizabethan house, quaintly gabled, with charming Tudor
+windows, and delightfully wainscoted with richly carved black oak. A
+chimney-piece in the library where Sir John&rsquo;s aged mother received us
+most kindly and hospitably is a marvel of Elizabethan woodwork. The
+shelves are filled with a quaint and miscellaneous collection of old and
+rare books. I opened at random one fine old quarto, and found it to
+contain, among other curious tracts, models of typography, a Latin
+critical disquisition by Raphael Regini on the first edition of
+Plutarch&rsquo;s Life of Cicero, &ldquo;<i>nuper invent&acirc; diu desiderai&acirc; </i>&rdquo;&mdash;a
+disquisition quite aglow with the cinquecento delight in discovery and
+adventure. In the grounds of this charming house stand four very fine
+Irish yews forming a little hollow square, within which, according to a
+local legend, Sir Walter sat enjoying the first pipe of tobacco ever
+lighted in Ireland, when his terrified serving-maid espying the smoke
+that curled about her master&rsquo;s head hastily ran up and emptied a pail of
+water over him. In the garden here, too, we are told, was first planted
+the esculent which better deserves to be called the <a name="page73" id="page73"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 73]
+</span>Curse of Ireland
+than does the Nine of Diamonds to be known as the Curse of Scotland. The
+Irish yew must have been indigenous here, for the name of Youghal,
+Father Keller tells me, in Irish signifies &ldquo;the wood of yew-trees.&rdquo; A
+subterranean passage is said to lead from Sir Walter&rsquo;s dining-room into
+the church, but we preferred the light of day.</p>
+
+<p>The precincts of the church adjoin the grounds and garden, and with
+these make up a most fascinating poem in architecture. The churches of
+St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway have always been cited to
+me as the two most interesting churches in Ireland. Certainly this
+church of St. Mary, as now restored, is worth a journey to see. Its
+massive tower, with walls eight feet thick, its battlemented chancel,
+the pointed arches of its nave and aisles, a curious and, so far as I
+know, unique arch in the north transept, drawn at an obtuse angle and
+demarcating a quaint little side-chapel, and the interesting monuments
+it contains, all were pointed out to me with as much zest and
+intelligent delight by Father Keller as if the edifice were still
+dedicated to the faith which originally called it into existence. It
+contains a fine Jacobean tomb of Richard, the &ldquo;great Earl of Cork,&rdquo; who
+died here in <a name="page74" id="page74"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 74]
+</span>September 1643. On this monument, which is in admirable
+condition, the effigy of the earl appears between those of his two
+wives, while below them kneel his five sons and seven daughters, their
+names and those of their partners in marriage inscribed upon the marble.
+It was of this earl that Oliver said: &ldquo;Had there been an Earl of Cork in
+every province, there had been no rebellion in Ireland.&rdquo; Several Earls
+of Desmond are also buried here, including the founder of the church,
+and under a monumental effigy in one of the transepts lies the wonderful
+old Countess of Desmond, who having danced in her youth with Richard
+III. lived through the Tudor dynasty &ldquo;to the age of a hundred and ten,&rdquo;
+and, as the old distich tells us, &ldquo;died by a fall from a cherry-tree
+then.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the churchyard is a hillock, bare of grass, about a tomb. There lies
+buried, according to tradition, a public functionary who attested a
+statement by exclaiming, &ldquo;If I speak falsely, may grass never grow on my
+grave.&rdquo; One of his descendants is doubtless now an M.P. Mr. Cameron had
+kindly written from Cork to the officer in charge of the constabulary
+here asking him to get me a good car for Lismore. So Father Keller very
+kindly walked with <a name="page75" id="page75"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 75]
+</span>me through the town to the &ldquo;Devonshire Arms,&rdquo; a very
+neat and considerable hotel, in quest of him. On the way he pointed out
+to me what remains of a house which is supposed to have served as the
+headquarters of Cromwell while he was here, and a small chapel also in
+which the Protector worshipped after his sort. Off the main street is a
+lane called Windmill Lane, where probably stood the windmill from which
+in 1580 a Franciscan friar, Father David O&rsquo;Neilan, was hung by the feet
+and shot to death by the soldiers of Elizabeth because he refused to
+acknowledge the spiritual supremacy of the Queen. He had been dragged
+through the main street at the tail of a horse to the place of
+execution. His name is one of many names of confessors of that time
+about to be submitted at Rome for canonisation. We could not find the
+officer I sought at the hotel, but Father Keller took me to a livery-man
+in the main street, who very promptly got out a car with &ldquo;his best
+horse,&rdquo; and a jarvey who would &ldquo;surely take me over to Lismore inside of
+two hours and a half.&rdquo; He was as good as his master&rsquo;s word, and a
+delightful drive it was, following the course of Spenser&rsquo;s river, the
+Awniduffe, &ldquo;which by the Englishman is called Blackwater.&rdquo; <a name="page76" id="page76"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 76]
+</span>Nobody now
+calls it anything else. The view of Youghal Harbour, as we made a great
+circuit by the bridge on leaving the town, was exceedingly fine. Lying
+as it does within easy reach of Cork, this might be made a very pleasant
+summer halting-place for Americans landing at Queenstown, who now go
+further and probably fare worse. One Western wanderer, with his family,
+Father Keller told me, did last year establish himself here, a Catholic
+from Boston, to whom a son was born, and who begged the Father to give
+the lad a local name in baptism, &ldquo;the oldest he could think of.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I should have thought St. Declan would have been &ldquo;old&rdquo; enough, or St.
+Nessan of &ldquo;Ireland&rsquo;s Eye,&rdquo; or Saint Cartagh, who made Lismore a holy
+city, &ldquo;into the half of which no woman durst enter,&rdquo; sufficiently
+&ldquo;local,&rdquo; but Father Keller found in the Calendar a more satisfactory
+saint still in St. Goran or &ldquo;Curran,&rdquo; known also as St. Mochicaroen <i>de
+Nona</i>, from a change he made in the recitation of that part of the Holy
+Office.</p>
+
+<p>The drive from Youghal to Lismore along the Blackwater, begins,
+continues, and ends in beauty. In the summer a steamer makes the trip by
+the river, and it must be as charming in its way <a name="page77" id="page77"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 77]
+</span>as the ascent of the
+Dart from Dartmouth to Totness, or of the Eance from Dinard to St.
+Suliac. My jarvey was rather a taciturn fellow, but by no means
+insensible to the charms of his native region. About the Ponsonby estate
+and its troubles he said very little, but that little was not entirely
+in keeping with what I had heard at Youghal. &ldquo;It was an old place, and
+there was no grand house on it. But the landlord was a kind-man.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Father Keller was a good man too. It was a great pity the people
+couldn&rsquo;t be on their farms; and there was land that was taken on the
+hills. It was a great pity. The people came from all parts to see the
+Blackwater and Lismore; and there was money going.&rdquo; &ldquo;Yes, he would be
+glad to see it all quiet again. Ah yes! that was a most beautiful place
+there just running out into the Blackwater. It was a gentleman owned it;
+he lived there a good deal, and he fished. Ah! there&rsquo;s no such river in
+the whole world for salmon as the Blackwater; indeed, there is not!
+Everything was better when he was a lad. There was more money going, and
+less talking. Father Keller was a very good man; but he was a new man,
+and came to Youghal from Queenstown.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 78]
+</span>We passed on our way the ruins of Dromaneen Castle, the birthplace of
+the lively old Countess of Desmond, who lies buried at Youghal. Here,
+too, according to a local tradition, she met her death, having climbed
+too high into a famous cherry-tree at Affane, near Dromaneen, planted
+there by Sir Walter Raleigh, who first introduced this fruit, as well as
+the tobacco plant and the potato, into Ireland. At Cappoquin, which
+stands beautifully on the river, I should have been glad to halt for the
+night, in order to visit the Trappist Monastery there, an offshoot of La
+Meilleraye, planted, I think, by some monks from Santa Susanna, of
+Lulworth, after Charles X. took refuge in the secluded and beautiful
+home of the Welds. The schools of this monastery have been a benediction
+to all this part of Ireland for more than half a century.</p>
+
+<p>Lismore has nothing now to show of its ancient importance save its
+castle and its cathedral, both of them absolutely modern! A hundred
+years ago the castle was simply a ruin overhanging the river. It then
+belonged to the fifth Duke of Devonshire, who had inherited it from his
+mother, the only child and heiress of the friend of Pope, Richard,
+fourth Earl of Cork, and third Earl of Burlington. <a name="page79" id="page79"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 79]
+</span>It had come into the
+hands of the Boyles by purchase from Sir Walter Ealeigh, to whom
+Elizabeth had granted it, with all its appendages and appurtenances. The
+fifth Duke of Devonshire, who was the husband of Coleridge&rsquo;s &ldquo;lady
+nursed in pomp and pleasure,&rdquo; did little or nothing, I believe, to
+restore the vanished glories of Lismore; and the castle, as it now
+exists, is the creation of his son, the artistic bachelor Duke, to whom
+England owes the Crystal Palace and all the other outcomes of Sir Joseph
+Paxton&rsquo;s industry and enterprise. His kinsman and successor, the present
+Duke, used to visit Lismore regularly down to the time of the atrocious
+murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish, and many of the beautiful walks and
+groves which make the place lovely are due, I believe, to his taste and
+his appreciation of the natural charms of Lismore. I dismissed my car at
+the &ldquo;Devonshire Arms,&rdquo; an admirable little hotel near the river, and
+having ordered my dinner there, walked down to the castle, almost within
+the grounds of which the hotel stands. It is impossible to imagine a
+more picturesque site for a great inland mansion. The views up and down
+the Blackwater from the drawing-room windows are simply the perfection
+of <a name="page80" id="page80"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 80]
+</span>river landscape. The grounds are beautifully laid out, one secluded
+garden-walk, in particular, taking you back to the inimitable Italian
+garden-walks of the seventeenth century. In the vestibule is the sword
+of state of the Corporation of Youghal, a carved wooden cradle for which
+still stands in the church at that place, and over the great gateway are
+the arms of the great Earl of Cork, but these are almost the only
+outward and visible signs of the historic past about the castle. Seen
+from the graceful stone bridge which spans the river, its grey towers
+and turrets quite excuse the youthful enthusiasm with which the Duke of
+Connaught, who made a visit here when he was Prince Arthur, is said to
+have written to his mother, that Lismore was &ldquo;a beautiful place, very
+like Windsor Castle, only much finer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Lismore Cathedral was almost entirely rebuilt by the second Earl of Cork
+three or four years after the Restoration, and has a handsome marble
+spire, but there is little in it to recall the Catholic times in which
+Lismore was a city of churches and a centre of Irish devotion.</p>
+
+<p>The hostess of the &ldquo;Devonshire Arms&rdquo; gave me some excellent salmon,
+fresh from the river, and a <a name="page81" id="page81"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 81]
+</span>very good dinner. She bewailed the evil days
+on which she has fallen, and the loss to Lismore of all that the Castle
+used to mean to the people. Lady Edward Cavendish had spent a short time
+here some little time ago, she said, and the people were delighted to
+have her come there. &ldquo;It would be a great thing for the country if all
+the uproar and quarrelling could be put an end to. It did nobody any
+good, least of all the poor people.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>From Lismore I came back by the railway through Fermoy.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 82]
+</span>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diay"><span class="diary">PORTUMNA, GALWAY, <i>Feb. 28.</i>&mdash;</span>I left Cork by an early train to-day, and
+passing through the counties of Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen&rsquo;s, and
+King&rsquo;s, reached this place after dark on a car from Parsonstown. The day
+was delightfully cool and bright. I had the carriage to myself almost
+all the way, and gave up all the time I could snatch from the constantly
+varying and often very beautiful scenery to reading a curious pamphlet
+which I picked up in Dublin entitled <i>Pour I&rsquo;Irlande.</i> It purports to
+have been written by a &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; living at Lurgan in Ireland,
+and to be a reply to M. de Mandat Grancey&rsquo;s volume, <i>Chez Paddy.</i> It is
+adorned with a frontispiece representing a monster of the Cerberus type
+on a monument, with three heads and three collars labelled respectively
+&ldquo;Flattery,&rdquo; &ldquo;Famine,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Coercion.&rdquo; On the pedestal is the
+inscription&mdash;&ldquo;1800 to 1887. Erected by the grateful Irish to the English
+<a name="page83" id="page83"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 83]
+</span>Government.&rdquo; The text is in keeping with the frontispiece. In a passage
+devoted to the &ldquo;atrocious evictions&rdquo; of Glenbehy in 1887, the agent of
+the property is represented as &ldquo;setting fire with petroleum&rdquo; to the
+houses of two helpless men, and turning out &ldquo;eighteen human beings into
+the highway in the depth of winter.&rdquo; Not a word is said of the agent&rsquo;s
+flat denial of these charges, nor a word of the advice given to the
+agent by Sir Redvers Buller that the mortgagee ought to level the
+cottages occupied by trespassers, nor a word about Father Quilter&rsquo;s
+letter to Colonel Turner, branding his flock as &ldquo;poor slaves&rdquo; of the
+League, and turning them over to &ldquo;Mr. Roe or any other agent&rdquo; to do as
+he liked with them, since they could not, or would not, keep their
+plighted faith given through their own priest.</p>
+
+<p>This sort of ostrich fury is common enough among the regular drumbeaters
+of the Irish agitation. But it is not creditable to a &ldquo;Canadian priest.&rdquo;
+Still less creditable is his direct arraignment of M. de Mandat
+Grancey&rsquo;s good faith and veracity upon the strength of what he describes
+as M. de Mandat Grancey&rsquo;s amplification and distortion of a story told
+by himself. This was a tale of a <a name="page84" id="page84"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 84]
+</span>priest called out to confess one of his
+parishioners. The penitent accused himself of killing one man, and
+trying to kill several others. The priest, as the dreadful tale went on,
+made a tally on his sleeve, with chalk, of the crimes recited. &ldquo;Good
+heavens! my son,&rdquo; he cried at last, &ldquo;what had all these men done to you
+that you tried to send them all into eternity? Who were they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Father, they were all bailiffs or tax-collectors!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You idiot!&rdquo; exclaimed the confessor, angrily rubbing at his sleeve,
+&ldquo;why didn&rsquo;t ye tell me that before instead of letting me spoil my best
+cassock?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As I happened to have the book of M. de Mandat Grancey in my
+despatch-box, I compared it with the attack made upon it. The results
+were edifying. In the first place, M. de Mandat Grancey does not
+indicate the Canadian priest as his authority. He says that he heard the
+story, apparently at a dinner-table in France, from a <i>cur&eacute; Irlandais</i>,
+who was endeavouring to impress upon his hearers &ldquo;the sympathy of the
+clergy with the Land League.&rdquo; The &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; now comes forward
+and makes it a count in his indictment against M. de Mandat Grancey that
+he is described as an &ldquo;Irish <a name="page85" id="page85"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 85]
+</span>curate,&rdquo; when he is in fact neither an
+Irishman nor a curate. What was more natural than that an ecclesiastic,
+claiming to live in Ireland, and telling stories in France about the
+sympathy of the Irish clergy with the Land League, should be taken by
+one of his auditors to be an Irish <i>cur&eacute;</i>, particularly as the French
+<i>cur&eacute;</i> is, I believe, the equivalent of the Irish &ldquo;parish priest&rdquo;?</p>
+
+<p>In the next place, the &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; declares that the story &ldquo;is as
+old as the Round Towers of Ireland,&rdquo; and that M. de Mandat Grancey
+represents him as making himself the hero of the tale. As a matter of
+fact, M. de Mandat Grancey does nothing of the kind. On the contrary, he
+expressly says that the <i>cur&eacute; Irlandais</i>, who told the story, gave it to
+his hearers as having occurred not to himself at all, but &ldquo;to one of his
+colleagues.&rdquo; Furthermore he is at the pains to add (<i>Chez Paddy</i>, p. <a href="#page43">43</a>)
+that the story, which was not to the taste of some of the French
+ecclesiastics who heard it, was related &ldquo;as a simple pleasantry.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;But,&rdquo; he adds, and this I suspect is the sting which has so exasperated
+the &ldquo;Canadian priest,&rdquo; &ldquo;he gave us to understand at the same time that
+this pleasantry struck the keynote of the state of mind of many Irish
+priests, and, he <a name="page86" id="page86"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 86]
+</span>said, that he was himself the President of the League
+in his district.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In connection with Colonel Turner&rsquo;s statements as to the conduct of
+Father White at Milltown Malbay, and with the accounts given me of the
+conduct of Father Sheehan at Lixnaw, this side-light upon the relations
+of a certain class of the Irish clergy with the most violent henchmen of
+the League, is certainly noteworthy. I happen to have had some
+correspondence with friends of mine in Paris, who are friends also of M.
+de Mandat Grarncey, about his visit to Ireland before he made it, and I
+am quite certain that he went there, to put the case mildly, with no
+prejudices in favour of the English Government or against the
+Nationalists. Perhaps the extreme bitterness shown in the pamphlet of
+the &ldquo;Canadian priest&rdquo; may have been born of his disgust at finding that
+the sympathy of French Catholics with Catholic Ireland draws the line at
+priests who regard the assassination of &ldquo;bailiffs and tax-collectors&rdquo; as
+a pardonable, if not positively amusing, excess of patriotic zeal.</p>
+
+<p>It was late when I reached Parsonstown, known of old in Irish story as
+Birr, from St. Brendan&rsquo;s Abbey of Biorra, and now a clean prosperous
+place, <a name="page87" id="page87"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 87]
+</span>carefully looked after by the chief landlord of the region, the
+Earl of Rosse, who, while he inherits the astronomical tastes and the
+mathematical ability of his father, is not so absorbed in star-gazing as
+to be indifferent to his terrestrial duties and obligations. I have
+heard nothing but good of him, and of his management of his estates,
+from men of the most diverse political views. But I think it more
+important to get a look at the Clanricarde property, about which I have
+heard little but evil from anybody. The strongest point I have heard
+made in favour of the owner is, that he is habitually described by that
+dumb organ of a down-trodden people, <i>United Ireland</i>, as &ldquo;the most vile
+Clanricarde.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I found a good car at the railway station, and set off at once for
+Portumna. Parsonstown was called by Sir William Petty, in his <i>Survey of
+Ireland</i>, the <i>umbilicus Hiberni&aelig;</i>. It is the centre of Ireland, as a
+point near Newnham Paddox is of England, and the famous or infamous &ldquo;Bog
+of Allan&rdquo; stretches hence to Athlone. Our way fortunately took us
+westward. A light railway was laid down some years ago from Parsonstown
+to Portumna, but it did not pay, and it has now been abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What has become of the road?&rdquo; I asked my jarvey.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 88]
+</span>&ldquo;Oh! they just take up the rails when they like, the people do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what do they do with them?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is it what they do with them? Oh; they make fences of them for the
+beasts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was a dry, shrewd old fellow, not very amiably disposed, I was sorry
+to find, towards my own country.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! it&rsquo;s America, sorr, that&rsquo;s been the ruin of us entirely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pray, how is that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the storms they send; and then the grain; and now they tell me
+it&rsquo;s the American beasts that&rsquo;s spoiling the market altogether for
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is that what your member tells you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The member, sorr? which member?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The member of Parliament for your district, I mean. What is his name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;His name? Well, I&rsquo;m not sure; and I don&rsquo;t know that I know the man at
+all. But I believe his name is Mulloy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Does he live in Portumna?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, not at all. I don&rsquo;t know at all where he lives, but I believe
+it&rsquo;s in Tullamore. But what would he know about America? Sure, any one
+can <a name="page89" id="page89"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 89]
+</span>see it&rsquo;s the storms and the grain that is the death of us in
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I thought it was the landlords and the rents?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s in Woodford and Loughrea; not here at all. There&rsquo;ll be no
+good till we get a war.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get a war? with whom? What do you want a war for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! it was the good time when we had the Crimean war&mdash;with the wheat
+all about Portumna. I&rsquo;ll show you the great store there was built. It&rsquo;s
+no use now. But we&rsquo;ll have a war. My son, he&rsquo;s a soldier now. He went
+out to America. But he didn&rsquo;t like it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he didn&rsquo;t like it. He could get no work, but to be a porter, and it
+was too hard. So he came back in three months&rsquo; time, and then he &rsquo;listed
+for a soldier. He&rsquo;s over in England now. He likes it very well. He&rsquo;s
+getting very good pay. They pay the soldiers well. There&rsquo;s a troop of
+Hussars here now. They bring a power of money to the place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do they do with the wheat lands now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they&rsquo;re for sheep; they do very well. Were you ever in Australia,
+sorr?&rdquo; pointing to a <a name="page90" id="page90"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 90]
+</span>place we were passing. &ldquo;There was a man came here
+from Australia with a pot of money, and he bought that place; but he
+thought he was a bigger man than he was, and now he&rsquo;s found himself out.
+I think he would have done as well to stay in Australia where he was.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In quite a different vein he spoke of the landlord of another large
+seat, and of the way in which the people, some of them, had
+misbehaved&mdash;breaking open the graves of the family on the place, &ldquo;and
+tossing the coffins and the bones about, and all for what?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The view as we crossed the long and very fine bridge over the Shannon
+after dusk was very striking. It was not too dark to make out the course
+of the broad gleaming river, and the lights of the town made it seem
+larger, I daresay, than it really is. As we drove up the main street I
+told my jarvey to take me to the Castle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;To the Castle, is it?&rdquo; he replied, looking around at me with an
+astonished air.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;I am going to see Mr. Tener, the agent, who lives there,
+doesn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the new agent? Oh yes; I believe he&rsquo;s a very good man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<a name="page91" id="page91"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 91]
+</span>You don&rsquo;t expect to be &lsquo;boycotted&rsquo; for going to the Castle, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And why should I be? But I haven&rsquo;t been inside of the Castle gates for
+twenty years. And&mdash;here they are!&rdquo; he cried out suddenly, pulling up his
+horse just in time to avoid driving him up against a pair of iron gates
+inhospitably closed. It was by this time pitch dark. Not a light could
+we see within the enclosure. But presently a couple of shadowy forms
+appeared behind the iron gates; the iron gates creaked on their hinges,
+a masculine voice bade us drive in, and a policeman with a lantern
+advanced from a thicket of trees. All this had a fine martial and
+adventurous aspect, and my jarvey seemed to enjoy it as much as I.</p>
+
+<p>We got directions from the friendly policeman as to the roads and the
+landmarks, and after once nearly running into a clump of trees found
+ourselves at last in an open courtyard, where men appeared and took
+charge of the car, the horse, and my luggage. We were in a quadrangle of
+the out-buildings attached to the old residence of the Clanricardes,
+which had escaped the fire of 1826. The late Marquis for a long time
+hesitated whether to reconstruct the castle on the old site (the walls
+are <a name="page92" id="page92"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 92]
+</span>still standing), or to build an entirely new house on another site.
+He finally chose the latter alternative, chiefly, I am told, under the
+advice of his oldest son, the late Lord Dunkellin, one of the most
+charming and deservedly popular men of his time. He was a great friend
+and admirer of Father Burke, whom he used to claim as a Galway cousin,
+and with whom I met him in Rome not long before his death in the summer
+of 1867. His brother, the present Marquis, I have never met, but Mr.
+Tener, his present agent here, who passed some time in America several
+years ago, learning from him that I wished to see this place, very
+courteously wrote to me asking me to make his house my headquarters. I
+found my way through queer passages to a cheery little hall where my
+host met me, and taking me into a pleasant little parlour, enlivened by
+flowers, and a merrily blazing fire, presented me to Mrs. Tener.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener is an Ulster man from the County Cavan. He went with his wife
+on their bridal trip to America, and what he there saw of the peremptory
+fashion in which the authorities deal with conspiracies to resist the
+law seems not unnaturally to have made him a little impatient of the
+dilatory, not to say dawdling, processes of the law in his <a name="page93" id="page93"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 93]
+</span>own country.
+He gave me a very interesting account after dinner this evening of the
+situation in which he found affairs on this property, an account very
+different from those which I have seen in print. He is himself the owner
+of a small landed property in Cavan, and he has had a good deal of
+experience as an agent for other properties. &ldquo;I have a very simple
+rule,&rdquo; he said to me, &ldquo;in dealing with Irish tenants, and that is
+neither to do an injustice nor to submit to one.&rdquo; It was only, he said,
+after convincing himself that the Clanricarde tenants had no legitimate
+ground of complaint against the management of the estate, not removable
+upon a fair and candid discussion of all the issues involved between
+them and himself, that he consented to take charge of the property. That
+to do this was to run a certain personal risk, in the present state of
+the country, he was quite aware.</p>
+
+<p>But he takes this part of the contract very coolly, telling me that the
+only real danger, he thinks, is incurred when he makes a journey of
+which he has to send a notice by telegraph&mdash;a remark which recalled to
+me the curious advice given me in Dublin to seal my letters, as a
+protection against &ldquo;the Nationalist clerks in the post-offices.&rdquo; The
+park of Portumua Castle, which is very extensive, is patrolled <a name="page94" id="page94"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 94]
+</span>by armed
+policemen, and whenever Mr. Tener drives out he is followed by a police
+car carrying two armed men.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Against whom are all these precautions necessary?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Against
+the evicted tenants, or against the local agents of the League?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all against the tenants,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;as you can satisfy
+yourself by talking with them. The trouble comes not from the tenants at
+all, nor from the people here at Portumna, but from mischievous and
+dangerous persons at Loughrea and Woodford. Woodford, mind you, not
+being Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s place at all, though all the country has been
+roused about the cruel Clanricarde and his wicked Woodford evictions.
+Woodford was simply the headquarters of the agitation against Lord
+Clanricarde and my predecessor, Mr. Joyce, and it has got the name of
+the &lsquo;cockpit of Ireland,&rsquo; because it was there that Mr. Dillon, in
+October 1886, opened the &lsquo;war against the landlords&rsquo; with the &lsquo;Plan of
+Campaign.&rsquo; It is an odd circumstance, by the way, worth noting, that
+when these apostles of Irish agitation went to Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s
+property nearer the city of Gralway, and tried to stir the people up,
+they failed dismally, because the people there could understand no
+English, and the Irish agitators could <a name="page95" id="page95"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 95]
+</span>speak no Irish! Nobody has ever
+had the face to pretend that the Clanricarde estates were &lsquo;rack-rented.&rsquo;
+There have been many personal attacks made upon Mr. Joyce and upon Lord
+Clanricarde, and Mr. Joyce has brought that well-known action against
+the Marquis for libel, and all this answers with the general public as
+an argument to show that the tenants on the Clanricarde property must
+have had great grievances, and must have been cruelly ground down and
+unable to pay their way. I will introduce you, if you will allow me, to
+the Catholic Bishop here, and to the resident Protestant clergyman, and
+to the manager of the bank, and they can help you to form your own
+judgment as to the state of the tenants. You will find that whatever
+quarrels they may have had with their landlord or his agent, they are
+now, and always have been, quite able to pay their rents, and I need not
+tell you that it is no longer in the power of a landlord or an agent to
+say what these rents shall be.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag10"
+ name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Dillon in that speech of his at Woodford <a name="page96" id="page96"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 96]
+</span>(I have it here as
+published in <i>United Ireland</i>), you will see, openly advised, or rather
+ordered, the tenants here to club their rents, or, in plain English, the
+money due to their landlord, with the deliberate intent to confiscate to
+their own use, or, in their own jargon, &lsquo;grab,&rsquo; the money of any one of
+their number who, after going into this dishonest combination, might
+find it working badly and wish to get out of it. Here is his own
+language:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I took the speech as reported in the <i>United Ireland</i> of October 23rd,
+1886, and therein found Mr. Dillon, M.P., using these words:&mdash;&ldquo;If you
+mean to fight really, you must put the money aside for two
+reasons&mdash;first of all because you want the means to support the men who
+are hit first; and, secondly, because you want to prohibit traitors
+going behind your back. There is no way to deal with a traitor except to
+get his money under lock and key, and if you find that he pays his rent,
+and betrays the organisation, what will you do with him? I will tell you
+what to do with him. <i>Close upon his money, and use it for the
+organisation</i>. I have always opposed outrages. <i>This is a legal plan,
+and it is ten times more effective</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Not a word here as to the morality of the proceeding thus recommended;
+but almost in the <a name="page97" id="page97"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 97]
+</span>same breath in which he bade his ignorant hearers
+regard his plan as &ldquo;legal,&rdquo; Mr. Dillon said to them, &ldquo;<i>this must be done
+privately, and you must not inform the public where the money is
+placed</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Why not, if the plan was &ldquo;legal&rdquo;? Mr. Dillon, I believe, is not a
+lawyer, but he can hardly have deluded himself into thinking his plan of
+campaign &ldquo;legal&rdquo; in the face of the particular pains taken by his
+leader, Mr. Parnell, to disclaim all participation in any such plans. A
+year before Mr. Dillon made this curious speech, Mr. Parnell, I
+remember, on the 11th of October 1885, speaking at Kildare, declared
+that he had &ldquo;in no case during the last few years advised any
+combination among tenants against even rack-rents,&rdquo; and insisted that
+any combination of the sort which might exist should be regarded as an
+&ldquo;isolated&rdquo; combination, &ldquo;confined to the tenants of individual estates,
+who, of their own accord, without any incitement from us, on the
+contrary, kept back by us, without any urging on our part, without any
+advice on our part, but stung by necessity, and the terrible realities
+of their position, may have formed such a combination among themselves
+to secure such a reduction of rent as will enable them to live in their
+own homes.&rdquo; From this language of Mr. Parnell in October 1885 to <a name="page98" id="page98"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 98]
+</span>Mr.
+Dillon&rsquo;s speech in October 1886, urging and advising the tenants to
+organise, exact contributions from every member of the organisation, and
+put these contributions under the control of third parties determined to
+confiscate the money subscribed by any member who might not find the
+organisation working to his advantage, is a rather long step! It covers
+all the distance between a cunning defensive evasion of the law, and an
+open aggressive violation of the law&mdash;not of the land only, but of
+common honesty. One of two things is clear: either these combinations
+are voluntary and &ldquo;isolated,&rdquo; and intended, as Mr. Parnell asserts, to
+secure such a reduction of rents as will enable the tenants, and each of
+them, to live peacefully and comfortably at home, and in that case any
+member of the combination who finds that he can attain his object better
+by leaving it has an absolute right to do this, and to demand the return
+of his money; or they are part of a system imposed upon the tenants by a
+moral coercion inconsistent with the most elementary ideas of private
+right and personal freedom. This makes the importance of Mr. Dillon&rsquo;s
+speech, that by his denunciation of any member who wishes to withdraw
+from this &ldquo;voluntary&rdquo; combination as a &ldquo;traitor,&rdquo; and by his order to
+&ldquo;close upon the <a name="page99" id="page99"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 99]
+</span>money&rdquo; of any such member, &ldquo;and use it for the
+organisation,&rdquo; he brands the &ldquo;organisation&rdquo; as a subterranean despotism
+of a very cheap and nasty kind. The Government which tolerates the
+creation of such a Houndsditch tyranny as this within its dominions
+richly deserves to be overthrown. As for the people who submit
+themselves to it, I do not wonder that in his more lucid moments a
+Catholic priest like Father Quilter feels himself moved to denounce them
+as &ldquo;poor slaves.&rdquo; Of course with a benevolent neutral like myself, the
+question always recurs, Who trained them to submit to this sort of
+thing? But I really am at a loss to see why a parcel of conspirators
+should be encouraged in the nineteenth century to bully Irish farmers
+out of their manhood and their money, because in the seventeenth century
+it pleased the stupid rulers of England, as the great Duke of Ormond
+indignantly said, to &ldquo;put so general a discountenance upon the
+improvement of Ireland, as if it were resolved that to keep it low is to
+keep it safe.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On going back to the little drawing-room after dinner we found Mrs.
+Tener among her flowers, busy with some literary work. It is not a gay
+life here, she admits, her nearest visiting acquaintance living <a name="page100" id="page100"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 100]
+</span>some
+seven or eight miles away&mdash;but she takes long walks with a couple of
+stalwart dogs in her company, and has little fear of being molested.
+&ldquo;The tenants are in more danger,&rdquo; she thinks, &ldquo;than the landlords or the
+agents&rdquo;&mdash;nor do I see any reason to doubt this, remembering the Connells
+whom I saw at Edenvale, and the story of the &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; Fitzmaurice
+brutally murdered in the presence of his daughter at Lixnaw on the 31st
+of January, as if by way of welcome to Lord Ripon and Mr. Morley on
+their arrival at Dublin.</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">PORTUMNA, <i>Feb. 29th.</i>&mdash;</span>Early this morning two of the &ldquo;evicted&rdquo; tenants,
+and an ex-bailiff of the property here, came by appointment to discuss
+the situation with Mr. Tener. He asked me to attend the conference, and
+upon learning that I was an American, they expressed their perfect
+willingness that I should do so. The tenants were quiet, sturdy,
+intelligent-looking men. I asked one of them if he objected to telling
+me whether he thought the rent he had refused to pay excessive, or
+whether he was simply unable to pay it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had the money, sir, to pay the rent,&rdquo; he <a name="page101" id="page101"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 101]
+</span>replied, &ldquo;and I wanted to
+pay the rent&mdash;only I wouldn&rsquo;t be let.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who wouldn&rsquo;t let you?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The people that were in with the League.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was your holding worth anything to you?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was indeed. Two or three years ago I could have sold my right for a
+matter of three hundred pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; interrupted the other tenant, &ldquo;and a bit before that for six
+hundred pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is it not worth three hundred pounds to you now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;for he has lost it by refusing the settlement I
+offered to make, and driving us into proceedings against him, and
+allowing his six months&rsquo; equity of redemption to lapse.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And sure, if we had it, no one would be let to buy it now, sir,&rdquo; said
+the tenant. &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s we that hope Mr. Tener here will let us come back
+on the holdings&mdash;that is, if we&rsquo;d be protected coming back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, do you see,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;what it is you ask me to do? You ask
+me to make you a present outright of the property you chose foolishly to
+throw away, and to do this after you have put <a name="page102" id="page102"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 102]
+</span>the estate to endless
+trouble and expense; don&rsquo;t you think that is asking me to do a good
+deal?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenants looked at one another, at Mr. Tener, and at me, and the
+ex-bailiff smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You must see this,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;but I am perfectly willing now to
+say to you, in the presence of this gentleman, that in spite of all, I
+am quite willing to do what you ask, and to let you come back into the
+titles you have forfeited, for I would rather have you back on the
+property than strangers&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And, indeed, we&rsquo;re sure you would.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But understand, you must pay down a year&rsquo;s rent and the costs you have
+put us to.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! sure you wouldn&rsquo;t have us to pay the costs?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But indeed I will,&rdquo; responded Mr. Tener; &ldquo;you mustn&rsquo;t for a moment
+suppose I will have any question about that. You brought all this
+trouble on yourselves, and on us; and while I am ready and willing to
+deal more than fairly, to deal liberally with you about the arrears&mdash;and
+to give you time&mdash;the costs you must pay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what would they be, the costs?&rdquo; queried one of the tenants
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that I can&rsquo;t tell you, for I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said <a name="page103" id="page103"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 103]
+</span>Mr. Tener, &ldquo;but they
+shall not be anything beyond the strict necessary costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And if we come back would we be protected?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course you will have protection. But why do you want protection?
+Here you are, a couple of strong grown men, with men-folk of your
+families. See here! why don&rsquo;t you go to such an one, and such an one,&rdquo;
+naming other tenants; &ldquo;you know them well. Go to them quietly and sound
+them to see if they will come back on the same terms with you; form a
+combination to be honest and to stand by your rights, and defy and break
+up the other dishonest combination you go in fear of! Is it not a shame
+for men like you to lie down and let those fellows walk over you, and
+drive you out of your livelihood and your homes?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenants looked at each other, and at the rest of us. &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said
+one of them at last, &ldquo;I think &mdash;&mdash; and &mdash;&mdash;,&rdquo; naming two men, &ldquo;would come
+with us. Of course,&rdquo; turning to Mr. Tener, &ldquo;you wouldn&rsquo;t discover on us,
+sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Discover on you! Certainly not,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener. &ldquo;But why don&rsquo;t you
+make up your minds to be men, and &lsquo;discover&rsquo; on yourselves, and defy
+these fellows?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 104]
+</span>&ldquo;And the cattle, sir? would we get protection for the cattle? They&rsquo;d be
+murdered else entirely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;the police would endeavour to protect the
+cattle.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then, turning to me, he said, &ldquo;That is a very reasonable question. These
+scoundrels, when they are afraid to tackle the men put under their ban,
+go about at night, and mutilate and torture and kill the poor beasts. I
+remember a case,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;in Roscommon, where several head of
+cattle mysteriously disappeared. They could be found nowhere. No trace
+of them could be got. But long weeks after they vanished, some lads in a
+field several miles away saw numbers of crows hovering over a particular
+point. They went there, and there at the bottom of an abandoned
+coal-shaft lay the shattered remains of these lost cattle. The poor
+beasts had been driven blindfold over the fields and down into this pit,
+where, with broken limbs, and maimed, they all miserably died of
+hunger.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said one of the tenants, &ldquo;and our cattle&rsquo;d be driven into the
+Shannon, and drownded, and washed away.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You must understand,&rdquo; interposed Mr. Tener <a name="page105" id="page105"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 105]
+</span>&ldquo;that when cattle are thus
+maliciously destroyed the owners can recover nothing unless the remains
+of the poor beasts are found and identified within three days.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The disgust which I felt and expressed at these revelations seemed to
+encourage the tenants. One of them said that before the evictions came
+off certain of the National Leaguers visited him, and told him he must
+resist the officers. &ldquo;I consulted my sister,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and she said,
+&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t you be such a fool as to be doing that; we&rsquo;ll all be ruined
+entirely by those rascals and rogues of the League.&rsquo; And I didn&rsquo;t
+resist. But only the other day I went to a priest in the trouble we are
+in, and what do you think he said to me? He said, &lsquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you do as
+you were bid? then you would be helped,&rsquo; and he would do nothing for us!
+Would you think that right, sir, in your country?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I should think in my country,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;that a priest who behaved in
+that way ought to be unfrocked.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you pay over all your rent into the hands of the trustees of the
+League?&rdquo; I asked of one of these tenants.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I paid over money to them, sir,&rdquo; he replied.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 106]
+</span>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but did you pay over all the amount of the rent, or how
+much of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I paid as much as I thought they would think I ought to pay!&rdquo; he
+responded, with that sly twinkle of the peasant&rsquo;s eye one sees so often
+in rural France.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I understand,&rdquo; I said, laughing. &ldquo;But if you come to terms now with
+Mr. Tener here, will you get that money back again?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Divil a penny of it!&rdquo; he replied, with much emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>Finally they got up together to take their leave, after a long whispered
+conversation together.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And if we made it half the costs?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; said Mr. Tener good-naturedly but firmly; &ldquo;not a penny off the
+costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, we&rsquo;ll see the men, sir, just quietly, and we&rsquo;ll let you know what
+can be done&rdquo;; and with that they wished us, most civilly, good-morning,
+and went their way.</p>
+
+<p>We walked in the park for some time, and a wild, beautiful park it is,
+not the less beautiful for being given up, as it is, very much to the
+Dryads to deal with it as they list. It is as unlike a trim English park
+as possible; but it contains many <a name="page107" id="page107"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 107]
+</span>very fine trees, and grand open sweeps
+of landscape. In a tangled copse are the ruins of an ancient Franciscan
+abbey, in one corner of which lie buried together, under a monumental
+mound of brickwork, the late Marquis of Clanricarde and his wife. The
+walls of the Castle, burned in 1826, are still standing, and so perfect
+that the building might easily enough have been restored. A keen-eyed,
+wiry old household servant, still here, told us the house was burned in
+the afternoon of January 6, 1826. There were three women-servants in the
+house&mdash;&ldquo;Anna and Mary Meehan, and Mrs. Underwood, the housekeeper&rdquo;; and
+they were getting the Castle ready for his Lordship&rsquo;s arrival, so little
+of an &ldquo;absentee&rdquo; was the late Lord Clanricarde, then only one year
+married to the daughter of George Canning. The fires were laid on in the
+upper rooms, and Mrs. Underwood went off upon an errand. When she came
+back all was in flames.</p>
+
+<p>The deer-park is full of deer, now become quite wild. We heard them
+crashing through the undergrowth on all sides. There must be capital
+fishing, too, in the lake, and in the river of which it is an expansion.</p>
+
+<p>While they were getting the cars ready for a <a name="page108" id="page108"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 108]
+</span>drive, came up another son
+of the soil. This man I found had only a small interest in the battle on
+the Clanricarde estates, holding his homestead of another landlord. But
+he admitted he had gone in a manner into the &ldquo;combination,&rdquo; in that he
+had paid a certain, not very large, sum, which he named, to the
+trustees, &ldquo;just for peace and quiet.&rdquo; He considered it gone, past
+recovery; and he named another man with a small holding, but doing a
+considerable business in other ways, who had &ldquo;paid &pound;10 or more just not
+to be bothered.&rdquo; Upon this Mr. Tener told me of a shopkeeper at Loughrea
+in a large way of business, a man with seven or eight thousand pounds,
+who, finding his goods about to be seized after the agent had turned a
+sharp strategic corner on him, and unexpectedly got into his shop, was
+about to own up to his defeat, and make a fair settlement, when the
+secretary of the League appeared, and requested a private talk with him.
+In a quarter of an hour the tradesman reappeared looking rather sullen
+and crestfallen. He said he couldn&rsquo;t pay, and must let the goods be
+taken. So taken they were, and duly put up under the process and sold.
+He bought them in himself, paying all the costs.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 109]
+</span>Presently two cars appeared. We got upon one, Mr. Tener driving a
+spirited nag, and taking on the seat with him a loaded carbine-rifle.
+Two armed policeman followed us upon the other, keeping at such a
+distance as would enable them easily to cover any one approaching from
+either side of the roadway. It quite took me back to the delightful days
+of 1866 in Mexico, when we used to ride out to picnics at the Rincon at
+Orizaba armed to the teeth, and ready at a moment&rsquo;s notice to throw the
+four-in-hand mule-wagons into a hollow square, and prepare to receive
+cavalry. As it seems to be perfectly well understood that the regular
+price paid for shooting a designated person (they call it &ldquo;knocking&rdquo; him
+in these parts) is the ridiculously small sum of four pounds, and that
+two persons who divide this sum are always detailed by the organisers of
+outrage to &ldquo;knock&rdquo; an objectionable individual, it is obvious that too
+much care can hardly be taken by prudent people in coming and going
+through such a country. Fortunately for the people most directly
+concerned to avoid these unpleasantnesses a systematic leakage seems to
+exist in the machinery of mischief. The places where the oaths of this
+local &ldquo;Mafia&rdquo; are admin<a name="page110" id="page110"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 110]
+</span>istered, for instance, are well known. A roadside
+near a chapel is frequently selected&mdash;and this for two or three obvious
+reasons. The sanctity of the spot may be supposed to impress the
+neophyte; and if the police or any other undesirable people should
+suddenly come upon the officiating adepts and the expectant acolyte, a
+group on the roadside is not necessarily a criminal gathering&mdash;though I
+do not see why, in such times, our old American college definition of a
+&ldquo;group&rdquo; as a gathering of &ldquo;three or more persons&rdquo; should not be adopted
+by the authorities, and held to make such a gathering liable to
+dispersion by the police, as our &ldquo;groups&rdquo; used to be subject to
+proctorial punishment. Mills are another favourite resort of the
+law-breakers. Mr. Tener tells me that a large mill between this place
+and Loughrea is a great centre of trouble, not wholly to the
+disadvantage of the astute miller, who finds it not only brings grist to
+his mill, but takes away grist from another mill belonging to a couple
+of worthy ladies, and once quite prosperous. It is no uncommon thing, it
+appears, for the same person to be put through the ceremony of swearing
+fidelity more than once, and at more than one place, with the not
+unnatural result, however, of <a name="page111" id="page111"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 111]
+</span>diminishing the pressure of the oath upon
+his conscience or his fears, and also of alienating his affections, as
+he is expected to pay down two shillings on each occasion. Once a
+member, he contributes a penny a week to the general fund. It seems also
+to be an open secret who the disbursing treasurers are of this fund,
+from whom the members, detailed to do the dark bidding of the
+&ldquo;organisation,&rdquo; receive their wage. &ldquo;A stout gentleman with sandy hair
+and wearing glasses&rdquo; was the description given to me of one such
+functionary. When so much is known of the methods and the men, why is it
+that so many crimes are committed with virtual impunity? For two
+sufficient reasons. Witnesses cannot be got to testify, or trusted, if
+they do testify, to speak the truth; and it is idle to expect juries of
+the vicinage in nine cases out of ten will do their duty. Political
+cowardice having made it impossible to transfer the venue in cases of
+Irish crime, as to which all the authorities were agreed about these
+points, from Ireland into Great Britain, it is found that even to
+transfer the trial of &ldquo;Moonlighters&rdquo; from Clare or Kerry into Wicklow,
+for example, has a most instructive effect, opening the eyes of the
+people of Wicklow to a state of things <a name="page112" id="page112"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 112]
+</span>in their own island, of which
+happily for themselves they were previously as ignorant as the people of
+Surrey or of Middlesex. This explains the indignant wish expressed to me
+some time ago in a letter from a priest in another part of Ireland, that
+&ldquo;martial law&rdquo; might be proclaimed in Clare and Kerry to &ldquo;stamp out the
+Moonlighters, those pests of society.&rdquo; That in Clare and Kerry priests
+should be found not only disposed to wink at and condone the proceedings
+of these &ldquo;pests of society,&rdquo; but openly to co-operate with them under
+the pretext of a &ldquo;national&rdquo; movement, is surely a thing equally
+intolerable by the Church and dangerous to the cause of Irish autonomy.
+This I am glad to say is strongly felt, and has been on more than one
+occasion very vigorously stated by one of the most eminent and estimable
+of Irish ecclesiastics, the Bishop-Coadjutor of Clonfert, upon whom I
+called this morning. Dr. Healy, who is a senator of the Royal University
+of Ireland, and a member of the Royal Irish Academy, presides over that
+part of the diocese of Clonfort which includes Portumna and Woodford. He
+lives in a handsome and commodious, but simple and unpretentious house,
+set in ample grounds well-planted, and commanding a wide view <a name="page113" id="page113"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 113]
+</span>of a most
+agreeable country. We were ushered into a well-furnished study, and the
+bishop came in at once to greet us with the most cordial courtesy. He is
+a frank, dignified, unaffected man, and in his becoming episcopal
+purple, with the gold chain and cross, looked every inch a bishop. I was
+particularly anxious to see Dr. Healy, as a type of the high-minded and
+courageous ecclesiastics who, in Ireland, have resolutely refused to
+subordinate their duties and their authority as ecclesiastics to the
+convenience and the policy of an organisation absolutely controlled by
+Mr. Parnell, who not only is not a Catholic, but who is an open ally and
+associate of the bitterest enemies of the Catholic Church in France and
+in England. Protestant historians affirm that Pope Innocent was one of
+the financial backers of William of Orange when he set sail from Holland
+to crush the Catholic faith in Great Britain and Ireland, and drive the
+Catholic house of Stuart into exile. But it was reserved for the
+nineteenth century to witness the strange spectacle of men, calling
+themselves Irishmen and Catholics, deliberately slandering and assailing
+in concord with a non-Catholic political leader the consecrated pastors
+and masters of the Church in Ireland. When in <a name="page114" id="page114"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 114]
+</span>order to explain what they
+themselves concede to be &ldquo;the absence from the popular ranks of the best
+of the priesthood,&rdquo; Nationalist writers find it necessary to denounce
+Cardinal Cullen and Cardinal M&lsquo;Cabe as &ldquo;anti-Irish &rdquo;; and to sneer at
+men like Dr. Healy as &ldquo;Castle Bishops,&rdquo; it is impossible not to be
+reminded of the three &ldquo;patriotic&rdquo; tailors of Tooley Street.</p>
+
+<p>Bishop Healy looks upon the systematic development of a substantial
+peasant proprietary throughout Ireland as the economic hope of the
+country, and he regards therefore the actual &ldquo;campaigning&rdquo; of the
+self-styled &ldquo;Nationalists&rdquo; as essentially anti-national, inasmuch as its
+methods are demoralising the people of Ireland, and destroying that
+respect for law and for private rights which lies at the foundation of
+civil order and of property. In his opinion, &ldquo;Home Rule,&rdquo; to the people
+in general, means simply ownership of the land which they are to live
+on, and to live by. How that ownership shall be brought about peaceably,
+fairly, and without wrong or outrage to any man or class of men is a
+problem of politics to be worked out by politicians, and by public men.
+That men, calling themselves Catholics, should be led on to attempt <a name="page115" id="page115"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 115]
+</span>to
+bring this or any other object about by immoral and criminal means is
+quite another matter, and a matter falling within the domain, not of the
+State primarily, but of the Church.</p>
+
+<p>As to this, Bishop Healy, who was in Rome not very long ago, and who,
+while in Rome, had more than one audience of His Holiness by command,
+has no doubt whatever that the Vatican will insist upon the abandonment
+and repudiation by Catholics of boycotting, and &ldquo;plans of campaign,&rdquo; and
+all such devices of evil. Nor has the Bishop any doubt that whenever the
+Holy Father speaks the priests and the people of Ireland will obey.</p>
+
+<p>To say this, of course, is only to say that the Bishop believes the
+priests of Ireland to be honest priests, and the people of Ireland to be
+good Catholics.</p>
+
+<p>If he is mistaken in this it will be a doleful thing, not for the
+Church, but for the Irish priests, and for the Irish people. No Irishman
+who witnessed the magnificent display made at Rome this year, of the
+scope and power of the Catholic Church, can labour under any delusions
+on that point.</p>
+
+<p>From the Bishop&rsquo;s residence we went to call upon the Protestant rector
+of Portumna, Mr. Crawford. <a name="page116" id="page116"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 116]
+</span>The handsome Anglican church stands within an
+angle of the park, and the parsonage is a very substantial mansion. Mr.
+Crawford, the present rector, who is a man of substance, holds a fine
+farm of the Clanricarde estate, at a peppercorn rent, and he is tenant
+also of another holding at &pound;118 a year, as to which he has brought the
+agent into Court, with the object, as he avers, of setting an example to
+the other tenants, and inducing them, like himself, to fight under the
+law instead of against it. He is not, however, in arrears, and in that
+respect sets a better example, I am sorry to say, than the Catholic
+priest, Father Coen, who made himself so conspicuous here on the
+occasion of the much bewritten Woodford evictions. The case of Father
+Coen is most instructive, and most unpleasant. He occupies an excellent
+house on a holding of twenty-three acres of good laud, with a garden&mdash;in
+short, a handsome country residence, which was provided by the late Lord
+Clanricarde, expressly for the accommodation of whoever might be the
+Catholic priest in that part of his estate. For all this the rent is
+fixed at the absurd and nominal sum of two guineas a year! Yet Father
+Coen, who now enjoys the mansion, and has a substantial income from the
+parish, is actually two <a name="page117" id="page117"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 117]
+</span>years and a half in arrears with this rent! This
+fact Mr. Tener mentioned to the Bishop, whose countenance naturally
+darkened. &ldquo;What am I to do in such a case, my lord?&rdquo; asked Mr. Tener.
+&ldquo;Do?&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;do your plain duty, and proceed against him
+according to law.&rdquo; But suppose he were proceeded against and evicted, as
+in America he certainly would be, who can doubt that he would instantly
+be paraded, before the world, on both sides of the Atlantic as a
+&ldquo;martyr,&rdquo; suffering for the holy cause of an oppressed and down-trodden
+people, at the hands of a &ldquo;most vile&rdquo; Marquis, and of a remorse-less and
+blood-thirsty agent?<a id="footnotetag11"
+ name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> Mr. Crawford, a tall, fine-looking man, talked
+very fully and freely about the situation here. He came to Portumna
+about eight years ago; one of his reasons for accepting the position
+here offered him being that he wished to take over a piece of property
+near Woodford from his brother-in-law, who found he could not manage it.
+As a practical farmer, and a straightforward capable man of business, he
+has gradually acquired the general confidence of the tenants here. That
+<a name="page118" id="page118"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 118]
+</span>they are, as a rule, quite able to pay the rents which they have been
+&ldquo;coerced&rdquo; into refusing to pay, he fully believes. He told me of cases
+in which Catholic tenants of Lord Clanricarde came to him when the
+agitation began about the Plan of Campaign, and begged him privately to
+take the money for their rents, and hold it for them till the time
+should come for a settlement.</p>
+
+<p>The reason for this was that they did not wish to be obliged to give
+over the money into the &ldquo;Trust&rdquo; created by the Campaigners, and wanted
+it to be safely put beyond the reach of these obliging &ldquo;friends.&rdquo; One
+very shrewd tenant came to him and begged him to buy some beasts, in
+order that he might pay his rent out of the proceeds. The man owed &pound;15
+to the Clanricarde property. Mr. Crawford did not particularly want to
+buy his beasts, but eventually agreed to do so, and gave him &pound;50 for
+them. The man went off with the money, but he never paid the rent! Mr.
+Crawford discovering this called him to account, and refused to grant
+him some further favour which he asked. The result is that the
+&ldquo;distressed tenant&rdquo; now cuts Mr. Crawford when he meets him, and is the
+prosperous owner of quite a small herd of cattle.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 119]
+</span>Mr. Crawford&rsquo;s opinion of the mischief done by the methods and spirit of
+the National League in this place is quite in accord with the opinions
+of the Bishop-Coadjutor. Power without responsibility, which made the
+C&aelig;esars madmen, easily turns the heads of village tyrants, and there is
+something positively grotesque in the excesses of this subterranean
+&ldquo;Home Rule.&rdquo; Mr. Crawford told me of a case here, in which a tenant
+farmer, whom he named, came to him in great wrath, not unmingled with
+terror, to say that the League had ordered him, on pain of being
+boycotted, to give up his holding to the heirs of a woman from whom,
+twenty years ago, he had bought, for &pound;100 in cash, the tenant-right of
+her deceased husband! There was no question of refunding the &pound;100. He
+was merely to consider himself a &ldquo;land-grabber,&rdquo; and evict himself for
+the benefit of those heirs who had never done a stroke of work on the
+property for twenty years, and who had no shadow of a legal or moral
+claim on it, except that the oldest of them was an active member of the
+local League!</p>
+
+<p>Nor was this unique.</p>
+
+<p>In another case, the children of a tenant, who died forty years ago,
+came forward and called upon the <a name="page120" id="page120"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 120]
+</span>League to boycott an old man who had
+been in possession of the holding during nearly half a century. In a
+third case, a tenant-farmer, some ten years ago, had in his employ as
+herd a man who fell ill and died. He put into the vacant place an
+honest, capable young fellow, who still holds it, and has faithfully and
+efficiently served him. Only the other day this tenant-farmer was warned
+by the League to expect trouble, unless he dismissed this herd, and put
+into his place the son, now grown to man&rsquo;s estate, of the herd who died
+ten years ago!</p>
+
+<p>It is amusing, if not instructive, to find the hereditary principle,
+just now threatened in its application to the British Senate, cropping
+out afresh as an element in the regeneration of Irish agriculture and
+the land tenure of Ireland!</p>
+
+<p>On our way back to the Castle we called on Mr. Place, the manager of the
+Portumna Branch of the Hibernian Bank, who lives in the town. He was
+amusing himself, after the labour of the day in the bank, with some
+amateur work as a carpenter, but received us very cordially. He said
+there was no doubt that the deposits in the bank had increased
+considerably since the adoption of the Plan of Campaign on the
+Clanricarde property. <a name="page121" id="page121"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 121]
+</span>Money was paid into the bank continually by
+persons who wished the fact of their payments kept secret; and he knew
+of more than one case in which tenants, whose stock had been seized by
+the agent for the rents, were much delighted at the seizure, since it
+had paid off their rents, and so enabled them to retain their holdings
+and keep out of the grasp of the League, even though to do this they had
+undergone a forced sale and been muleted in costs.</p>
+
+<p>It was his opinion that the tenants on the Clanricarde property, who are
+not in arrears, would gladly accept a twenty-five per cent. reduction,
+and do very well by accepting it. But they are constrained into a
+hostile attitude by the tenants who are in arrears, some of them for
+several years (as, for example, Father Coen), although I find, to my
+astonishment, that in Ireland the landlord has no power to distrain for
+more than a twelvemonth&rsquo;s rent, no matter how far back the arrears may
+run.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Place seems to think it would be well to put all the creditors of
+the tenants on one footing with the landlords. The shopkeepers and other
+creditors, he thinks, in that event would see many things in quite a new
+light.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 122]
+</span>What is called the new Castle of Portumna is a large and handsome
+building of the Mansard type, standing on an eminence in the park, at
+some distance from the original seat. The building was finished not long
+before the death of his father, the late Marquis. It has never been
+occupied, save by a large force of police quartered in it not very long
+ago by Mr. Tener in readiness for an expedition against the Castle of
+Cloondadauv, to the scene of which he promises to drive me to-morrow on
+my way back to Dublin. It is thoroughly well built, and might easily be
+made a most delightful residence. The views which it commands of the
+Shannon are magnificent, and there are many fine trees about it.</p>
+
+<p>The old man who has charge of it is a typical Galway retainer of the old
+school. The &ldquo;boys,&rdquo; he says, once tried to &ldquo;boycott&rdquo; him because he was
+the pound-master; but he showed fight, and they let him alone. He
+pointed out to me from the top of the house, in the distance, the
+residences of Colonel Hickie, and of the young Lord Avonmore, who lately
+succeeded on the death of his brother in the recent Egyptian expedition.
+The place is now shut up, and the owners live in France.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 123]
+</span>We visited too the Portumna Union before driving home. The buildings of
+this Union are extensive for the place, and well built, and it seems to
+be well-ordered and neatly kept&mdash;thanks, in no small degree, I suspect,
+to the influence of the Sisters who have charge of the hospital, but
+whose benign spirit shows itself not only in the flower-garden which
+they have called into being, but in many details of the administration
+beyond their special control.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast was very striking between the atmosphere of this
+unpretending refuge of the helpless and that of certain of the
+&ldquo;laicised&rdquo; hospitals of France, which I not long ago visited, from which
+the devoted nuns have been expelled to make way for hired nurses. I made
+a remark to this effect to the clerk of the Union, Mr. Lavan, whom we
+found in his office.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have no doubt of that. We owe more than I can say
+to the Sisters, but I don&rsquo;t know how long we should have them here if
+the local guardians could have their way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In explanation of this, he went on to tell me that these local
+guardians, who are elected, are hostile to the whole administration,
+because of its <a name="page124" id="page124"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 124]
+</span>relations with the Local Government Board at Dublin,
+which controls their generous tendency to expend the money of the
+ratepayers. By way of expressing their feelings, therefore, they have
+been trying to cut down, not only the salary of the clerk, but that of
+the Catholic chaplain of the Union; and as there is a good deal of
+irreligious feeling among the agitators here, it is his impression that
+they would make things disagreeable for the Sisters also were they in
+any way to get the management into their own hands. That there cannot be
+much real distress in this neighbourhood appears from two facts. There
+are now but 130 inmates of this Union, out of a population of 12,900,
+and the outlay for out-of-door relief averages between eight and ten
+pounds a week.</p>
+
+<p>In the quiet, neat chapel two or three of the inmates were kneeling at
+prayers; and others whom we saw in the kitchen and about the offices had
+nothing of the &ldquo;workhouse&rdquo; look which is so painful in the ordinary
+inmates of an English or American almshouse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The trouble with the place,&rdquo; said Mr. Lavan, &ldquo;is that they like it too
+well. It takes an eviction almost to get them out of it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 125]
+</span>We sat down with Mr. Lavan in his office, and had an interesting talk
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>He is the agent of Mr. Mathews, who lives between Woodford and Portumna.
+Mr. Mathews is a resident landlord, he says, who has constantly employed
+and has lived on friendly terms with his tenants, numbering twenty, who
+hold now under judicial rents. On these judicial rents two years ago
+they were allowed a further reduction of 15 per cent. Last year they
+were allowed 20 per cent. This year he offered them a reduction of 25
+per cent., which they rejected, demanding 35 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>This demand Mr. Lavan considers to be unreasonable in the extreme, and
+he attributes it to the influence of the National Leaguers here, whose
+representatives among the local guardians constantly vote away the money
+of the ratepayers in &ldquo;relief to evicted tenants who have ample means and
+can in no respect be called destitute.&rdquo; In his opinion the effect of the
+Nationalist agitation here has been to upset all ideas of right and
+wrong in the minds of the people where any question arises between
+tenants and landlords. He told a story, confirmed by Mr. Tener, of a
+bailiff, whom he named, on the <a name="page126" id="page126"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 126]
+</span>Clanricarde property here, who was
+compelled two years ago to resign his place in order to prevent the
+&ldquo;boycotting&rdquo; of his mother who keeps a shop on the farm. He was
+familiar, too, with the details of a story told me by one of the
+Clanricarde tenants, a farmer near Loughrea who holds a farm at &pound;90 a
+year. This man was forced to subscribe to the Plan of Campaign. The
+agent proceeded against him for the rent due, and he incurred costs of
+&pound;10. His sheep and crop were then seized.</p>
+
+<p>He begged the local leaders to &ldquo;permit&rdquo; him to pay his rent, as he was
+able to do it <i>without drawing out the funds in their hands</i>! They
+refused, and so compelled him to allow his property to be publicly sold,
+and to incur further costs of &pound;10. &ldquo;His farm lies so near the town that
+he did not dare to risk the vengeance of the local ruffians.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lavan gave me the name also of another man who is now actually under
+a &ldquo;boycott,&rdquo; because he has ventured to resist the modest demand made by
+the son of a man whose tenant-right he bought, paying him &pound;100 for it,
+twenty years ago, that he shall give up his farm without being
+reimbursed for his outlay made to purchase it! In other words, after
+twenty years&rsquo; peaceable <a name="page127" id="page127"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 127]
+</span>possession of a piece of property, bought and
+paid for, this tenant-farmer is treated as a &ldquo;land-grabber&rdquo; by the
+self-installed &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo; government of Ireland, because he will not
+submit to be robbed both of the money which he paid for his
+tenant-right, and of his tenant-right!</p>
+
+<p>Obviously in such a case as this the &ldquo;war against landlordism&rdquo; is simply
+a war against property and against private rights. Priests of the
+Catholic Church who not only countenance but aid and abet such
+proceedings certainly go even beyond Dr. M&lsquo;Glynn. Dr. M&lsquo;Glynn, so far as
+I know, stops at the confiscation of all private property in rent by the
+State for the State. But here is simply a confiscation of the property
+of A for the benefit of B, such as might happen if B, being armed and
+meeting A unarmed in a forest, should confiscate the watch and chain of
+A, bought by A of B&rsquo;s lamented but unthrifty father twenty years before!</p>
+
+<p>After dinner to-night Mr. Tener gave me some interesting and edifying
+accounts of his experience in other parts of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Some time ago, before the Plan of Campaign was adopted, one of his
+tenants in Cavan came to him with a doleful story of the bad times and
+the low <a name="page128" id="page128"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 128]
+</span>prices, and wound up by saying he could pay no more than half a
+year&rsquo;s rent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now his rent had been reduced under the Land Act,&rdquo; said Mr, Tener, &ldquo;and
+I had voluntarily thrown off a lot of arrears, so I looked at him
+quietly and said, &lsquo;Mickey, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have
+been very well treated, and you can perfectly well pay your rent. Your
+wife would be ashamed of you if she knew you were trying to get out of
+it.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah no, your honour!&rdquo; he briskly replied; &ldquo;indade she would approve it.
+If you won&rsquo;t discover on me, I&rsquo;ll tell you the truth. It was the wife
+herself, she&rsquo;s a great schollard, and reads the papers, that tould me
+not to pay you more than half the rent&mdash;for she says there&rsquo;s a new Act
+coming to wipe it all out. Will you take the half-year?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I will not. Don&rsquo;t be afraid of your wife, but pay what you owe,
+like a man. You&rsquo;ve got the money there in your pocket.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was a good shot. Mickey couldn&rsquo;t resist it, and his countenance
+broke into a broad smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah no! I&rsquo;ve got it in two pockets. Begorra, it was the wife herself
+made up the money in two <a name="page129" id="page129"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 129]
+</span>parcels, and she put one into each pocket, to
+be sure&mdash;and I wasn&rsquo;t to give your honour but one, if you would take it.
+But there&rsquo;s the money, and I daresay it&rsquo;s all for the best.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On another occasion, when he was collecting the rents of a property in
+the county of Longford, one tenant came forward as the spokesman of the
+rest, admitted that the rents had been accepted fairly after a reduction
+under the Land Act, expressed the general wish of the tenants to meet
+their obligations, and wound up by asking a further abatement, &ldquo;the
+times were so bad, and the money couldn&rsquo;t be got, it couldn&rsquo;t indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener listened patiently&mdash;to listen patiently is the most essential
+quality of an agent in Ireland&mdash;and finally said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, if you haven&rsquo;t got the money to pay in full, pay
+three-quarters of it, and I&rsquo;ll give you time for the rest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thank your honour!&rdquo; said Pat, &ldquo;and that&rsquo;ll be thirty pounds&mdash;and here
+it is in one pound notes, and hard enough to get they are, these times!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So Mr. Tener took the money, counted the notes twice over, and then,
+writing out a receipt, handed it to the tenant.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 130]
+</span>&ldquo;All right, Pat, there&rsquo;s your receipt for thirty-nine pounds, and I&rsquo;m
+glad to see ten-pound notes going about the country in these hard
+times!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>By mistake the &ldquo;distressful&rdquo; orator had put one ten-pound note into his
+parcel! He took his receipt, and went off without a word. But the
+combination to get an &ldquo;abatement&rdquo; broke down then and there, and the
+other tenants came forward and put down their money.</p>
+
+<p>These incidents occurred to Mr. Tener himself. Not less amusing and
+instructive was a similar mistake on a larger scale made by an
+over-crafty tenant in dealing with one of Mr. Tener&rsquo;s friends a few
+years ago in the county of Leitrim. This tenant, whom we will call
+Denis, was the fugleman also of a combination. He was a cattle dealer as
+well as a farmer, and having spent a couple of hours in idly eloquent
+attempts to bring about a general abatement of the rents, he lost his
+patience.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, well, your honour!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t stay here all day talking
+like these men, I must go to the fair at Boyle. Will you take a
+deposit-receipt of the bank for ten pounds and give me the pound change?
+that&rsquo;ll just be the nine pounds for the half-year&rsquo;s rent. But all the
+same, yer honour, <a name="page131" id="page131"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 131]
+</span>those men are all farmers, and it&rsquo;s not out of the
+farm at all I made the ten pounds, it&rsquo;s out of the dealing!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you couldn&rsquo;t deal without a farm, Denis, for the stock,&rdquo; said the
+agent, as he glanced at the receipt. He hastily turned it over, and went
+on, &ldquo;Just indorse the receipt, and I&rsquo;ll consider your proposition.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The receipt was indorsed, and at once taken off by the agent&rsquo;s clerk to
+the bank to bring back pound-notes for it, while the agent quietly
+proceeded to fill out the regular form of receipt for a full year&rsquo;s
+rent, eighteen pounds. Denis noted what he supposed of course to be the
+agent&rsquo;s blunder, but like an astute person held his peace. The clerk
+came back with the notes. Denis took up his receipt, and the agent
+quietly began handing him note after note across the table.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, your honour!&rdquo; exclaimed Denis, &ldquo;what on earth are ye giving me all
+this money for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s your change,&rdquo; said the agent, quite imperturbably. &ldquo;You gave me a
+bank receipt for one hundred pounds. I have given you a receipt for your
+full year&rsquo;s rent, and here are eighty-two pounds in notes, and with it
+eighteen shillings in <a name="page132" id="page132"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 132]
+</span>silver&mdash;that&rsquo;s five per cent. reduction. I would
+have made it ten per cent., only you were so very sharp, first about not
+having the money, and then about the full receipt!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In an instant all eyes were fastened upon Denis. Ichabod! the glory had
+departed. The chorus went up from his disenchanted followers:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, glory be to God, you were not bright enough for the agent, Denis!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And so that day the agent made a very full and handsome collection&mdash;and
+there was a slight reduction in the deposit-accounts of the local bank!</p>
+
+<p>In the evening Mr. Tener gave me the details of some cases of direct
+intimidation with the names of the tenants concerned. One man, whose
+farm he visited, told him he had paid his rent not long before to the
+previous agent. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Tener, &ldquo;show me your receipt!&rdquo; On this
+the tenant said that he dare not keep the receipt about him, nor even in
+the house, lest it should be demanded by the emissaries of the League,
+who went round to keep the tenants up to the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign,&rdquo; and
+that it was hidden in his stable. And he went out to the stable and
+brought it in.</p>
+
+<p>This, he had reason to believe, was not an uncom<a name="page133" id="page133"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 133]
+</span>mon case.<a id="footnotetag12"
+ name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a> The same
+man, wishing to take a grass farm which the people hoped the agent would
+consent to have &ldquo;cut up&rdquo; was asked to give two names on a
+promissory-note to pay the rent. He demurred to this, and after a parley
+said, &ldquo;Would a certificate do?&rdquo; upon which he pulled out an old
+tobacco-box, and carefully unfolded from it a bank certificate of
+deposit for a hundred pounds sterling! This tenant held eleven Irish, or
+more than seventeen English, acres, and his yearly rent was &pound;11, 16s.
+6d.</p>
+
+<p>The people before this agitation began were generally quiet, thrifty,
+and industrious. They were great sheep-raisers. An old law of the Irish
+Parliament had exempted sheep, but not cattle or <a name="page134" id="page134"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 134]
+</span>crops, from distraint,
+with an eye to encouraging the woollen interest in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>As to the sale of tenant-right in Ireland, he told me a curious story.
+One woman, a widow, whom he named, owed two year&rsquo; rent on a holding in
+Ulster at &pound;4 a year. She was abundantly able to pay, but for her own
+reasons preferred to be evicted, and, finally, by an understanding with
+him, offered her tenant-right for sale. A man who had made money in
+iron-mines in the County of Durham was a bidder, and finally offered
+&pound;240 for the holding. It was knocked down to him. He then saw the agent,
+who told him he had paid too much. The woman was then appealed to, and
+she admitted that the agent was right. But it was shown that others had
+offered &pound;200, and the woman finally agreed to take, and received, that
+amount in gold, being fifty years&rsquo; purchase!</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 135]
+</span>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Thursday, March 1.</i>&mdash;</span>This has been a crowded day. I left
+Portumna very early on a car with Mr. Tener, intending to visit the
+scene of his latest collision with the &ldquo;National&rdquo; government of Ireland,
+on my way to Loughrea. It was a bright spring morning, more like April
+in Italy than like March in America, and the country is full of natural
+beauty. We made our first halt at the derelict house of Martin Kenny,
+one of the &ldquo;victims&rdquo; of the famous &ldquo;Woodford evictions,&rdquo; so called, as I
+have said, because Woodford is the nearest town.<a id="footnotetag13"
+ name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a> The eviction here
+took place October 21st, 1887. The house has been dismantled by the
+neighbours since that time, each man carrying off a door, or a shutter,
+<a name="page136" id="page136"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 136]
+</span>or whatever best suited him. One of the constables who followed us as
+Mr. Tener&rsquo;s body-guard had been present at the eviction. He came into
+the house with us, and very graphically described the performance. The
+house was still full of heavy stones taken into it, partly to block the
+entrances, and partly as ammunition; and trunks of trees used as
+<i>chevaux defrise</i> still protruded through the door and the window. These
+trees had been cut down by the garrison in the woodlands here and there
+all over the property. I asked if the law in Ireland punished
+depredations of this sort, and was informed that trees planted by
+tenants, if registered by them within a certain time, are the property
+of the tenants. This would astonish our landlords in America, where the
+tenant who sticks so much as a sunflower into his garden-patch makes a
+present of it to his landlord.<a id="footnotetag14"
+ name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I asked if the place made a long defence. Mr. Tener and the constable
+both laughed, and the <a name="page137" id="page137"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 137]
+</span>former told me that when the storming party
+arrived shortly after daybreak, they found the house garrisoned only by
+some small boys, who had been left there to keep watch. The men were
+fast asleep at some other place. The small boys ran away as fast as
+possible to give the alarm, but the police went in, and in a jiffey
+pulled to pieces the elaborate defences prepared to repel them. Father
+Coen, the constable said, got to Kenny&rsquo;s house an hour after it was all
+over, with a mob of people howling and groaning. But the work had been
+done, and other work also at the Castle of Cloondadauv, to which we next
+drove.</p>
+
+<p>This place takes its truly awe-inspiring name from a ruined Norman tower
+standing on a picturesque promontory of no great height, which juts out
+into the lovely lake here made by the Shannon. At no great expense this
+tower might be so restored as to make an ideal fishing-box. It now
+simply adorns the holding formerly occupied by Mr. John Stanislaus
+Burke, a former tenant of Lord Clanricarde. The story of its capture on
+the 17th of September is worth telling.</p>
+
+<p>Some days before the evictions were to come off, a meeting was held at
+Woodford or Loughrea, at <a name="page138" id="page138"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 138]
+</span>which one of the speakers, the patriotic Dr.
+Tully, rather incautiously and exultingly told his hearers that the
+defence in 1886 of the tenant&rsquo;s house known as &ldquo;Fort Saunders&rdquo; had been
+a grand and gallant affair indeed, but that next time &ldquo;the exterminators
+would have to storm a castle&rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>This put Mr. Tener at once on the alert, and as Mr. Burke of Cloondadauv
+was set down for eviction, it didn&rsquo;t require much cogitation to fix upon
+the fortress destined to be &ldquo;stormed.&rdquo; So he set about the campaign. The
+County Inspector of the constabulary, who had made a secret
+reconnaissance, reported that he found the place too strong to be taken
+if defended, except &ldquo;by artillery.&rdquo; So it was determined to take it by
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>When the previous evictions were made, the agent and the public forces
+had marched from Portumna by the highway to Woodford, so that, of
+course, their advent was announced by the scouts and sentinels of the
+League from hill to hill long before they reached the scene of action,
+and abundant time was given to the agitators for organising a
+&ldquo;reception.&rdquo; Mr. Tener profited by the experience of his predecessors.
+He contrived to get his force of constabulary through the town of
+Portumna <a name="page139" id="page139"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 139]
+</span>without attracting any popular attention. And as early rising
+is not a popular virtue here, he resolved to steal a march on the
+defenders of Cloondadauv.</p>
+
+<p>He had brought up certain large boats to Portumna, and put them on the
+lake. Rousing his men before dawn, he soon had them all embarked, and on
+their way swiftly and silently by the river and the lake to Cloondadauv.
+They reached the promontory by daybreak, and as soon as the hour of
+legal action had arrived they were landed, and surrounded the &ldquo;castle.&rdquo;
+The ancient portal was found to be blocked with heavy stones and trunks
+of trees, nor did any adit appear to be available, till a young
+gentleman who had accompanied the party as a volunteer, discovered in
+one wall of the tower, at some little height from the ground, the vent
+of one of those conduits not infrequently found running down through the
+walls of old castles, which were used sometimes as waste-ways for
+rubbish from above, and sometimes to receive water-pipes from below.
+Looking up into this vent, he saw a rope hanging free within it. Upon
+this he hauled resolutely, and finding it firmly attached above, came to
+the <a name="page140" id="page140"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 140]
+</span>conclusion that it must have been fixed there by the garrison as a
+means of access to the interior.</p>
+
+<p>Like an adventurous young tar, he bade his comrades stand by, and nimbly
+&ldquo;swarmed&rdquo; up the rope, without thought or care of what might await him
+at the top. In a few moments his shouts from above proclaimed the
+capture of the stronghold. It was absolutely deserted; the garrison,
+confident that no attack would that day be made, had gone off to the
+nearest village. The interior of the castle was found filled with
+munitions of war, in the shape of huge beams and piles of stones
+laboriously carried up the winding stairs, and heaped on all the
+landing-places in readiness for use. On the flat roof of the castle was
+established a sort of furnace for heating water or oil, to be poured
+down upon the besiegers; and crowbars lay there in readiness to loosen
+out and dislodge the battlements, and topple them over upon the
+assailants.</p>
+
+<p>The officers soon made their way all over the building, and thence
+proceeded to the residence of Mr. Burke near by, a large and very
+commodious house. All the formalities were gone through with, a
+detachment of policemen was put in charge, and the rest of the forces
+set out on their return to <a name="page141" id="page141"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 141]
+</span>Portumna, before the organised &ldquo;defenders&rdquo; of
+Cloondadauv, hastily called out of their comfortable beds or from their
+breakfast-tables had realised the situation, and got the populace into
+motion. A mass meeting was held in the neighbourhood, and many speeches
+were made. But the castle and the farm-house and the holding all remain
+in the hands of a cool, quiet, determined-looking young Ulsterman, who
+tells me that he is getting on very well, and feels quite able with his
+police-guard to protect himself. &ldquo;Once in a while,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;they come
+here from Loughrea with English Parliament-men, and stand outside of the
+gate, and call me &lsquo;Clanricarde&rsquo;s dog,&rsquo; and make like speeches at me; but
+I don&rsquo;t mind them, and they see it, and go away again.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Of Mr. Burke, the evicted tenant here, Mr. Crawford, the Protestant
+clergyman at Portumna, told me that he was abundantly able to pay his
+rent. The whole debt for which Burke was evicted was &pound;115; and Mr.
+Crawford said he had himself offered Burke &pound;300 for the holding. Burke
+would have gladly taken this, but &ldquo;the League wouldn&rsquo;t let him.&rdquo; When
+his right was put up for sale at Galway for &pound;5, he did not dare to buy
+it in, <a name="page142" id="page142"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 142]
+</span>and he is now living with his wife and children on the League
+funds. Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s agent offered to take him back and restore his
+right if he would pay what he owed; but he dared not accept. This farm
+comprises over one hundred and ten English acres, which Burke held at a
+rent&mdash;fixed by the Land Court&mdash;of &pound;77, the valuation for taxes being
+&pound;83.</p>
+
+<p>To call the eviction of such a tenant in such circumstances from such a
+holding a &ldquo;sentence of death,&rdquo; is making ducks and drakes of the English
+language. Mr. Crawford&rsquo;s opinion, founded upon a thorough personal
+knowledge of the region, is that there is no exceptional distress in
+this part of Ireland, and that over-renting has nothing to do with such
+distress as does exist here. The case of a man named Egan, one of the
+&ldquo;victims&rdquo; of the Woodford evictions of 1886, certainly bears out this
+view of the matter. Egan, who was a tenant, not at all of Lord
+Clanricarde, but of a certain Mrs. Lewis, had occupied for twenty years
+a holding of about sixteen Irish acres, or more than twenty English
+acres. This he held at a yearly rental of &pound;8, 15s., being 9d. over the
+valuation.</p>
+
+<p>In August 1886 he was evicted for refusing to <a name="page143" id="page143"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 143]
+</span>pay one year&rsquo;s rent then
+due. At that time the crops standing on the land were valued by him at
+&pound;60, 13s. He also owned six beasts. In other words, this man, when he
+was called upon to pay a debt of &pound;8, 15s. had in his own possession,
+beside the valuable tenant-right of his holding, more than a hundred
+pounds sterling of merchantable assets. He refused to pay, and he was
+evicted.</p>
+
+<p>This was in August 1886. But such are the ideas now current in Ireland
+as to the relations of landlord and tenant, that immediately after his
+eviction Egan sent his daughter to gather some cabbages off the farm as
+if nothing had happened. The Emergency men in charge actually objected,
+and sent the damsel away. Thereupon Egan, on the 6th of September,
+served a legal notice on Mrs. Lewis, his landlady, requiring her either
+to let him take all the crops on the farm, or to pay him their value,
+estimated by him, as I have said, at &pound;60, 13s. Two days after this, on
+the 8th of September, more than a hundred men came to the place by night
+and removed the greater portion of the crops. Not wishing a return of
+these visitors, Mrs. Lewis, on the 16th of September, sent word to Egan
+to come and take away what was left of the crops; one of <a name="page144" id="page144"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 144]
+</span>the horses
+employed in the nocturnal harvest of September 8th having been seized by
+the police and identified as belonging to Egan. Egan did not respond;
+but in July 1887 he brought an action against his landlady to recover
+&pound;100 sterling for her &ldquo;detention of his goods,&rdquo; and her &ldquo;conversion of
+the same to her own use &rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>The case was heard by the Recorder at Kilmainham, and the facts which I
+have briefly recited were established by the evidence. The daughter of
+this extraordinary &ldquo;victim&rdquo; Egan appeared as a witness, so &ldquo;fashionably
+dressed&rdquo; as to attract a remark on the subject from the defendant&rsquo;s
+counsel. To this she replied that &ldquo;her brothers in America sent her
+money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If your brothers in America sent you money for such purposes,&rdquo; not
+unnaturally observed the Recorder, &ldquo;why did they allow your father to
+sacrifice crops worth &pound;60 for the non-payment of <a name="page145" id="page145"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 145]
+</span>&pound;8, 15s.?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They were tired of that,&rdquo; said the young lady airily; &ldquo;the land wasn&rsquo;t
+worth the rent!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>That is to say, a farm which yielded a crop of &pound;60, and pastured several
+head of cattle, was not worth &pound;8, 15s. a year. Certainly it was not
+worth &pound;8, 15s. a year if the tenant under the operation of the existing
+or the impending laws of Great Britain in Ireland could get, or hope to
+get it for the half of that rent, or for no rent at all.</p>
+
+<p>But this being thus, on what grounds are the rest of mankind invited to
+regard this excellent man as a &ldquo;victim&rdquo; worthy of sympathy and of
+material aid? How had he come to be in arrears of a year in August 1886?
+The proceedings at Kilmainham tell us this.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1885 he had demanded, with other tenants of Mrs. Lewis, a
+reduction of 50 per cent. This would have given him his holding at a
+rental of &pound;4, 7s. 6d. Mrs. Lewis refused the concession, and a month
+afterwards an attempt was made to blow up her son&rsquo;s house with dynamite.
+Between that time and August 1886, all the efforts of her son, who was
+also her agent, to collect her dues by seizing beasts, were defeated by
+the driving away of the cattle, so that no remedy but an eviction was
+left to her. I take it for granted that Mrs. Lewis had a family to
+maintain, and debts of one sort and another to pay, as well as Mr.
+Egan&mdash;but I observe this material difference between her position and
+his during the whole of this period of &ldquo;strained <a name="page146" id="page146"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 146]
+</span>relations&rdquo; between
+herself and her tenant, that whereas she lay completely out of the
+enjoyment of the rent due her, being the interest on her capital,
+represented in her title to the land, Mr. Egan remained in the complete
+enjoyment and use of the land. Clearly the tenant was in a better
+position than the landlord, and as we are dealing not with the history
+of Ireland in the past, but with the condition of Ireland at present, it
+appears to me to be quite beside the purpose to ask my sympathies for
+Mr. Egan on the ground that a century or half a century ago the
+ancestors of Mr. Egan may have been at the mercy of the ancestors of
+Mrs. Lewis. However that may have been, Mr. Egan seems to me now to have
+had legally much the advantage of Mrs. Lewis. Not only this. Both
+legally and materially Mr. Egan, the tenant-farmer at Woodford, seems to
+me to have had much the advantage of thousands of his countrymen living
+and earning their livelihood by their daily labour in such a typical
+American commonwealth, for example, as Massachusetts. I have here with
+me the Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of
+Massachusetts. From this I learn that in 1876 the average yearly wages
+earned by workmen in Massachusetts were <a name="page147" id="page147"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 147]
+</span>$482.72, or in round numbers
+something over &pound;96. Out of this amount the Massachusetts workman had to
+feed, clothe, and house himself, and those dependent on him.</p>
+
+<p>His outlay for rent alone was on the average $109.07, or in round
+numbers rather less than &pound;22, making 22-1/2 per cent, of his earnings.</p>
+
+<p>How was it with Mr. Egan? Out of his labour on his holding he got
+merchantable crops worth &pound;60 sterling, or in round numbers $300, besides
+producing in the shape of vegetables and dairy stuff, pigs and poultry,
+certainly a very large proportion of the food necessary for his
+household, and raising and fattening beasts, worth at a low estimate &pound;20
+or $100 more. And while thus engaged, his outlay for rent, which
+included not only the house in which he lived, but the land out of which
+he got the returns of his labour expended upon it, was &pound;8, 15s., or
+considerably less than one-half the outlay of the Massachusetts workman
+upon the rent of nothing more than a roof to shelter himself and his
+family. Furthermore, the money thus paid out by the Massachusetts
+workman for rent was simply a tribute paid for accommodation had and
+enjoyed, while out of every pound sterling paid as rent by <a name="page148" id="page148"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 148]
+</span>the Irish
+tenant there reverted to his credit, so long as he continued to fulfil
+his legal obligations, a certain proportion, calculable, valuable, and
+saleable, in the form of his tenant-right.</p>
+
+<p>I am not surprised to learn that the Recorder dismissed the suit brought
+by Mr. Egan, and gave costs against him. But the mere fact that in such
+circumstances it was possible for Egan to bring such a suit, and get a
+hearing for it, makes it quite clear that Americans of a sympathetic
+turn of mind can very easily find much more meritorious objects of
+sympathy than the Irish tenant-farmers of Galway without crossing the
+Atlantic in quest of them.</p>
+
+<p>From Cloondadauv to Loughrea we had a long but very interesting drive,
+passing on the way, and at no great distance from each other, Father
+Coen&rsquo;s neat, prosperous-looking presbytery of Ballinakill, and the shop
+and house of a local boat-builder named Tully, who is pleasantly known
+in the neighbourhood as &ldquo;Dr. Tully,&rdquo; by reason of his recommendation of
+a very particular sort of &ldquo;pills for landlords.&rdquo; The presbytery is now
+occupied by Father Coen, who finds it becoming his position as the moral
+teacher and guide of his people to be in arrears of two and a half years
+with the rent of his holding, and who is said to <a name="page149" id="page149"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 149]
+</span>have entertained Mr.
+Blunt and other sympathising statesmen very handsomely on their visit to
+Loughrea and Woodford,<a id="footnotetag15"
+ name="footnotetag15"></a><a href="#footnote15"><sup>15</sup></a> &ldquo;Dr.&rdquo; Tully being one of the guests invited
+to meet them.<a id="footnotetag16"
+ name="footnotetag16"></a><a href="#footnote16"><sup>16</sup></a> Not far from this presbytery, Mr. Tener showed me the
+scene of one of the most cowardly murders which have disgraced this
+region. Of Loughrea, the objective of our drive this morning, Sir George
+Trevelyan, I am told, during his brief rule in Ireland, found it
+necessary to say that murder had there become an institution. Woodford,
+previously a dull and law-abiding spot, was illuminated by a lurid light
+of modern progress about three years ago, upon the transfer thither in
+the summer of 1885 of a priest from Loughrea, familiarly known as &ldquo;the
+firebrand priest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In November of that year, as I have already related, Mr. Egan and other
+tenants of Mrs. Lewis of <a name="page150" id="page150"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 150]
+</span>Woodford made their demand for a 50 per cent.
+reduction of their rents, upon the refusal of which an attempt was made
+with dynamite on the 18th December to blow up the house of Mrs. Lewis&rsquo;s
+son and agent. All the bailiffs in the region round about were warned to
+give up serving processes, and many of them were cowed into doing so.
+One man, however, was not cowed. This was a gallant Irish soldier,
+discharged with honour after the Crimean war, and known in the country
+as &ldquo;Balaklava,&rdquo; because he was one of the &ldquo;noble six hundred,&rdquo; who there
+rode &ldquo;into the jaws of death, into the valley of hell.&rdquo; His name was
+Finlay, and he was a Catholic. At a meeting in Woodford, Father Coen
+(the priest now in arrears), it is said, looked significantly at Finlay,
+and said, &ldquo;no process-server will be got to serve processes for Sir
+Henry Burke of Marble Hill.&rdquo; The words and the look were thrown away on
+the veteran who had faced the roar and the crash of the Russian guns,
+and later on, in December 1885, Finlay did his duty, and served the
+processes given to him. From that moment he and his wife were
+&ldquo;boycotted.&rdquo; His own kinsfolk dared not speak to him. His house was
+attacked by night. He was a doomed man. On the 3d March 1886, about 2
+o&rsquo;clock P.M., <a name="page151" id="page151"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 151]
+</span>he left his house&mdash;which Mr. Tener pointed out to me&mdash;to
+cut fuel in a wood belonging to Sir Henry Burke, at no great distance.
+Twice he made the journey between his house and the wood. The third time
+he went and returned no more. His wife growing uneasy at his prolonged
+absence went out to look for him. She found his body riddled with
+bullets lying lifeless in the highway. The police who went into Woodford
+with the tale report the people as laughing and jeering at the agony of
+the widowed woman. She was with them, and, maddened by the savage
+conduct of these wretched creatures, she knelt down over-against the
+house of Father Egan, and called down the curse of God upon him.</p>
+
+<p>On the next day things were worse. No one could be found to supply a
+coffin for the murdered man.<a id="footnotetag17"
+ name="footnotetag17"></a><a href="#footnote17"><sup>17</sup></a> When the police called upon the priests
+to exert their influence and enforce some semblance at least of
+Christian and Catholic decency upon the people confided to their charge,
+the priests not only refused to do their duty, but floutingly referred
+the police to Lady Mary Burke. &ldquo;He did her work,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;let her
+send a hearse now to bury him.&rdquo; <a name="page152" id="page152"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 152]
+</span>The lady thus insolently spoken of is
+one of the best of the Catholic women of Ireland. At her summons Father
+Burke, a few years only before his death, I remember, made a long winter
+journey, though in very bad health, from Dublin to Marble Hill to soothe
+the last hours and attend the death-bed of her husband.</p>
+
+<p>No one who knew and loved him can wish him to have lived to hear from
+her lips such a tale of the degradation of Catholic priests in his own
+land of Galway.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener pointed out to me, at another place on the road, near
+Ballinagar, the deserted burying-ground in which, after much trouble, a
+grave was found for the brave old soldier who had escaped the Russian
+cannon-balls to be so foully done to death by felons of his own race.
+There the last rites were performed by Father Callaghy, a priest who was
+himself &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; for resigning the presidency of the League in his
+parish, and for the still graver offence of paying his rent. For weeks
+it was necessary to guard the grave!<a id="footnotetag18"
+ name="footnotetag18"></a><a href="#footnote18"><sup>18</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 153]
+</span>From that day to this no one has been brought to justice for this crime,
+committed in broad daylight, and within sight of the highway. Mr. Place,
+whom I saw at Portumna, told me that he believed the police had no moral
+doubt as to the murderer of Finlay, but that it was useless to think of
+getting legal evidence to convict him.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tener tells me that when Mr. Wilfrid Blunt came to Woodford he went
+with Father Egan, and accompanied by the police, to see the widow of
+this murdered man, heard from her own lips the sickening story, and took
+notes of it. But when Mr. Rowlands, M.P., an English &ldquo;friend of Home
+Rule,&rdquo; was examined the other day during the trial of Mr. Blunt, he was
+obliged to confess that though he had visited Woodford more than once,
+and conversed <a name="page154" id="page154"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 154]
+</span>freely with Mr. Blunt about it, he had &ldquo;never heard of the
+murder of Finlay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Such an incident is apparently of little interest to politicians at
+Westminster. Fortunately for Ireland, it is of a nature to command more
+attention at the Vatican.</p>
+
+<p>Nature has sketched the scenery of this part of Ireland with a free,
+bold hand. It is not so grand or so wild as the scenery of Western
+Donegal, but it has both a wildness and a grandeur of its own. Sir Henry
+Burke&rsquo;s seat of Marble Hill, as seen in the distance from the road,
+stands superbly, high up on a lofty range of wooded hills, from which it
+commands the country for miles. And no town I have seen in Ireland is
+more picturesquely placed than Loughrea. It has an almost Italian aspect
+as you approach it from Woodford. But no lake in Lombardy or Piedmont is
+so peculiarly and exquisitely tinted as the lough on which it stands.
+The delicate grey-green of the sparkling waters reminded me of the
+singular and well-defined belts and stretches of chrysoprase upon which
+you sometimes come in sailing through the dark azure of the Southern
+Seas. I have never before seen precisely such a hue in any body of fresh
+water. The lake <a name="page155" id="page155"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 155]
+</span>is incorrectly described, Mr. Tener tells me, in the
+guide-books, as being one of the many curious developments of the Lower
+Shannon. It is fed by springs, but if, like the river-lakes, it was
+formed by a solution of the limestone, this fact may have some chemical
+relation with its very peculiar colour. It contains three picturesque
+islands. No stream flows into it, but two streams issue from it. The
+town of Loughrea is an ancient holding of the De Burghs, and the
+estate-office of Lord Clanricarde is here in one wing of a great
+barrack, standing, as I understood Mr. Tener to say, on the site of a
+former fortress of the family. Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s property here is put
+down by Mr. Hussey de Burgh at 49,025 acres in County Galway, valued at
+&pound;19,634, and at 3576 acres in the county of the City of Galway, valued
+at &pound;1202. These, I believe, are statute acres, and in estimating the
+relation of Irish rentals to Irish land this fact must be always
+ascertained. Of the so-called &ldquo;Woodford&rdquo; property the present rental is
+no more than &pound;1900, payable by 260 tenants. The Poor-Law valuation for
+taxes is &pound;2400. There was a revision of the whole Galway property made
+by the father of the present Marquis. Of the 260 Woodford holdings <a name="page156" id="page156"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 156]
+</span>only
+twelve were increased, in no case more than 6-1/4 per cent, over the
+valuation. In 1882 six of these twelve tenants applied to the Land
+Court. The rents were in no case restored to the figures before 1872,
+but about 7 per cent. was taken off the increased rental. The assertion
+repeatedly made that in 1882 rents were reduced by the Land Court 50 per
+cent. on the Clanricarde estates, Mr. Tener tells me, is absolutely
+false. In the first year of the Court no reduction went beyond 10 per
+cent., and in later years, even under the panic of low prices, the
+average has not exceeded 20 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>After making arrangements for a car to take me on to Woodlawn, where I
+was to catch the Dublin train, I went out with Mr. Tener to look at the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>My drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn was delightful. It took me over a
+long stretch of the best hunting country of Galway, and my jarvey was a
+Galwegian of the type dear to the heart of Lever. He was a &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo;
+after his fashion, but he did not hesitate to come rattling up through
+the town to the Estate Office to take me up; and after we got fairly off
+upon the highway, he spoke with more freedom than respect of all sorts
+and conditions of men in and about Loughrea.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 157]
+</span>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a sharp little man, that Mr. Tener,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and he gave the
+boys a most beautiful beating at Burke&rsquo;s place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was said with genuine gusto, and not at all in the querulous spirit
+of the delightful member of Parliament who complained at Westminster
+with unconscious humour that the agent and the police in that case had
+&ldquo;dishonourably&rdquo; stolen a march on the defenders of Cloondadauv!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But we&rsquo;ve beaten them entirely,&rdquo; he said, with equal zest, &ldquo;at Marble
+Hill. Sir Henry has agreed to pay all the costs, and the living expenses
+too, of the poor men that were put out.<a id="footnotetag19"
+ name="footnotetag19"></a><a href="#footnote19"><sup>19</sup></a> I didn&rsquo;t ever think we&rsquo;d get
+that; but ye see the truth is,&rdquo; he added confidentially, &ldquo;he must have
+the money, Sir Henry&mdash;he&rsquo;s lying out of a deal, and then there&rsquo;s heavy
+charges on the property. A fine property it is indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In fact,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;you put Sir Henry to the wall. Is that it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s like that. But we shan&rsquo;t get that out <a name="page158" id="page158"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 158]
+</span>of Clanricarde, I&rsquo;m
+thinking. He&rsquo;s got a power o&rsquo; money they tell me; and he&rsquo;s that of the
+ould Burke blood, he won&rsquo;t mind fighting just as long as you like!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As we drove along, he pointed out to me several fine stretches of
+hunting country, and, to my surprise, informed me that only the other
+day &ldquo;there was as fine a meet as ever you saw, more than a hundred
+ladies and gentlemen&mdash;a grand sight it was.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I asked if the hunting had not been &ldquo;put down by the League.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, now then, sir, who&rsquo;d be wanting to put down the hunting here in
+Galway?&mdash;and Ballinasloe? Were you ever at Ballinasloe? just the
+grandest horse fair there is in the whole wide world!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I insisted that I had always heard a great deal about the opposition of
+the League to hunting.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;ll be some little lawyer fellow,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;like that
+Healy, that can&rsquo;t sit on a horse! It&rsquo;s the grandest country in all the
+world for riding over. What for wouldn&rsquo;t they ride over it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Were there many went out to America from about Loughrea?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes; they were always coming and going. But as many came back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 159]
+</span>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they didn&rsquo;t like the country. It wasn&rsquo;t as good a country, was it,
+as old Ireland? And they had to work too hard; and then some of them got
+money, and they&rsquo;d like to spend it in the old place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The country about Woodlawn is very picturesque and well wooded, and for
+a long distance we followed the neatly-kept stone walls of the large and
+handsome park of Lord Ashtown.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The most beautiful and biggest trees in all Ireland, sorr,&rdquo; said the
+jarvey, &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s a great pity, it is, ye can&rsquo;t stay to let me drive you
+all over it, for the finest part of the park is just what you can&rsquo;t see
+from this road. Oh, her ladyship would never object to any gentleman
+driving about to see the beauties of the place. She is a very good
+woman, is her ladyship. She gave work the last Christmas to thirty-two
+men, and there wasn&rsquo;t another house in the country there that had work
+for more than ten or twelve. A very good woman she is, indeed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, that is a very handsome church, it is indeed. It is the Protestant
+Church. Lord Ashtown built it; he was a very good man too, and did a
+power of good&mdash;building and making roads, and giving work to the people.
+He was buried there in <a name="page160" id="page160"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 160]
+</span>that Castle, over the station&mdash;Trench&rsquo;s Castle,
+they called it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All that lumber there by the station?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That came out of the Ashtown woods. They were always cutting down the
+trees; there was so many of them you might be cutting for years&mdash;you
+would never get to the end of them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Woodlawn Station is one of the neatest and prettiest railway stations I
+have seen in Ireland&mdash;more like a picturesque stone cottage, green and
+gay with flowers, than like a station. The station-master&rsquo;s family of
+cheery well-dressed lads and lasses went and came about the bright fire
+in the waiting-room in a friendly unobtrusive fashion, chatting with the
+policeman and the porter and the passengers. It was hard to believe
+one&rsquo;s-self within an easy drive of the &ldquo;cockpit of Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 161]
+</span>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BORRIS, <i>Friday, March 2d.</i>&mdash;</span>This is the land of the Kavanaghs, and a
+lovely, picturesque, richly-wooded land it is. I left Dublin with Mr.
+Gyles by an afternoon train; the weather almost like June. We ran from
+the County of Dublin into Kildare, and from Kildare into Carlow, through
+hills; rural scenery quite unlike anything I have hitherto seen in
+Ireland. At Bagnalstown, a very pretty place, with a spire which takes
+the eye, our host joined us, and came on with us to this still more
+attractive spot. Borris has been the seat of his family for many
+centuries. The MacMorroghs of Leinster, whom the Kavanaghs lineally
+represent, dwelt here long before Dermot MacMorrogh, finding his
+elective throne in Leinster too hot to hold him, went off into
+Aquitaine, to get that famous &ldquo;letter of marque&rdquo; from Henry II. of
+England, with the help of which this king without a kingdom induced
+Richard de Clare, an earl without an earldom, to lend him a <a name="page162" id="page162"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 162]
+</span>hand and
+bring the Normans into Ireland. Many of this race lie buried in the
+ruins of St. Mullen&rsquo;s Abbey, on the Barrow, in this county. But none of
+them, I opine, ever did such credit to the name as its present
+representative, Arthur MacMorrogh Kavanagh.</p>
+
+<p>I had some correspondence with Mr. Kavanagh several years ago, when he
+sent me, through my correspondent for publication in New York, a very
+striking statement of his views on the then condition of Irish
+affairs&mdash;views since abundantly vindicated; and like most people who
+have paid any attention to the recent history of Ireland, I knew how
+wonderful an illustration his whole career has been of what philosophers
+call the superiority of man to his accidents, and plain people the power
+of the will. But I knew this only imperfectly. His servant brought him
+up to the carriage and placed him in it. This it was impossible not to
+see. But I had not talked with him for five minutes before it quite
+passed out of my mind. Never was there such a justification of the
+paradoxical title which Wilkinson gave to his once famous book, <i>The
+Human Body, and its Connexion with Man</i>,&mdash;never such a living refutation
+of the theory that it is the <a name="page163" id="page163"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 163]
+</span>thumb which differentiates man from the
+lower animals. Twenty times this evening I have been reminded of the
+retort I heard made the other day at Cork by a lawyer, who knows Mr.
+Kavanagh well, to a priest of &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo; proclivities, who knows him
+not at all. Some allusion having been made to Borris, the lawyer said to
+me, &ldquo;You will see at Borris the best and ablest Irishman alive.&rdquo; On this
+the priest testily and tartly broke in, &ldquo;Do you mean the man without
+hands or feet?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; replied the lawyer, very quietly, &ldquo;the man in whom all that
+has gone in you or me to arms and legs has gone to heart and head!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Borris House stands high in the heart of an extensive and nobly wooded
+park, and commands one of the finest landscapes I have seen in Ireland.
+As we stood and gazed upon it from the hall door, the distant hills were
+touched with a soft purple light such as transfigures the Apennines at
+sunset.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You should see this view in June,&rdquo; said Mrs, Kavanagh, &ldquo;we are all
+brown and bare now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Brown and bare, like most other terms, are relative. To the eye of an
+American this whole region now seems a sea of verdure, less clear and
+fresh, I can easily suppose, than it may be in the early <a name="page164" id="page164"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 164]
+</span>summer, but
+verdure still. And one must get into the Adirondacks, or up among the
+mountains of Western Virginia, to find on our Atlantic slope such trees
+as I have this evening seen. One grand ilex near the house could hardly
+be matched in the Villa d&rsquo;Este.</p>
+
+<p>The house is stately and commodious, and more ancient than it appears to
+be,&mdash;so many additions have been made to it at different times. It has
+passed through more than one siege, and in the &rsquo;98 Mr. Kavanagh tells me
+the townspeople of Borris came up here and sought refuge. There are vast
+caverns under the house and grounds, doubtless made by taking out from
+the hill the stone used in building this house, and the fortresses which
+stood here before it. In these all sorts of stores were kept, and many
+of the people found shelter.</p>
+
+<p>I need not say that there is a banshee at Borris&mdash;though no living
+witness, I believe, has heard its warning wail. But as we sat in the
+beautiful library, and watched the dying light of day, a lady present
+told us a tale more gruesome than many of those in which the &ldquo;psychical&rdquo;
+inquirers delight. She was sitting, she said, in an upper room of an
+ancient mansion here in Carlow, in which she <a name="page165" id="page165"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 165]
+</span>lives, when, from the lawn
+below, there came up to her a low, sad, shrill cry&mdash;the croon of a
+woman, such as one hears from the mourners sitting among the turbaned
+tombstones of the hill of Eyoub at Constantinople. It startled her, and
+she held her breath and listened. She was alone, as she knew, in that
+part of the house, and the hall door below was unlocked, as is the
+fashion still in Ireland, despite all the troubles and turmoils. Again
+the sound came, and this time nearer to the house. Could it be the
+banshee? Again and again it rose and died away, each time nearer and
+nearer. Then, as she listened, all her nerves strung to the keenest
+sensibility, it came again, and now, beyond a doubt, within the hall
+below.</p>
+
+<p>With an effort she rose from her chair, opened a door leading into a
+corridor running aside from the main stairway, and fled at full speed
+towards the wing in which she knew that she would find some of the
+maids. As she sped along she heard the cry again and again far behind
+her, as from a creature slowly and steadily mounting the grand stairway
+towards the room which she had just quitted.</p>
+
+<p>She found the maids, who fell into a terrible fright when she told her
+story and dared not budge. <a name="page166" id="page166"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 166]
+</span>So the bells were violently rung till the
+butler and footman appeared. To the first she said simply, &ldquo;There is a
+mad woman in this house&mdash;go and find her!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The man looked at me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;as I spoke with a curious expression
+in his face as of one who thought, &lsquo;yes, there is a mad woman in the
+house, and she is not far to seek!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the lady insisted, and the men finally went off on their quest. In
+the course of half an hour it was rewarded. The mad woman&mdash;a dangerous
+creature&mdash;who had wandered away from an asylum in the neighbourhood, was
+found curled up and fast asleep in the lady&rsquo;s own bed!</p>
+
+<p>Fancy a delicate woman going alone into her bedroom at midnight to be
+suddenly confronted by an apparition of that sort!</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BORRIS, <i>March 3d.</i>&mdash;</span>After a stroll on the lawn this morning, the wide
+and glorious prospect bathed in the light of a really soft spring day, I
+had a conversation with Mr. Kavanagh about the Land Corporation, of
+which he is the guiding spirit. This is a defensive organisation of the
+Irish landlords against the Land League. When a landlord has been driven
+into <a name="page167" id="page167"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 167]
+</span>evicting his tenants, the next step, in the &ldquo;war against
+landlordism,&rdquo; is to prevent other tenants from taking the vacated lands
+and cultivating them. This is accomplished by &ldquo;boycotting&rdquo; any man who
+does this as a &ldquo;land-grabber.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The ultimate sanction of the &ldquo;boycott&rdquo; being &ldquo;murder,&rdquo; derelict farms
+increased under this system very rapidly; and the Eleventh Commandment
+of the League, &ldquo;Thou shalt not pay the rent which thy neighbour hath
+refused to pay,&rdquo; was in a fair way to dethrone the Ten Commandments of
+Sinai throughout Ireland, even before the formal adoption in 1886 of the
+&ldquo;Plan of Campaign.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Gladstone would perhaps have hit the facts more accurately, if,
+instead of calling an eviction in Ireland a &ldquo;sentence of death,&rdquo; he had
+called the taking of a tenancy a sentence of death. Mr. Hussey at Lixnaw
+had two tenants, Edmond and James Fitzmaurice. Edmond Fitzmaurice was
+&ldquo;evicted&rdquo; in May 1887; but he was taken into the house of a neighbour,
+made very comfortable, and still lives. James Fitzmaurice took, for the
+sake of the family, the land from which Edmond was evicted, and for this
+he was denounced as a &ldquo;land-grabber,&rdquo; boycotted, and finally shot dead
+in the presence of his daughter.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 168]
+</span>At a meeting in Dublin in the autumn of 1885, a parish priest, the Rev.
+Mr. Cantwell, described it as a &ldquo;cardinal virtue&rdquo; that &ldquo;no one should
+take a farm from which another had been evicted,&rdquo; and called upon the
+people who heard him to &ldquo;pass any such man by unnoticed, and treat him
+as an enemy in their midst.&rdquo; Public opinion and the law, if not the
+authorities of his church would make short work of any priest who talked
+in this fashion in New York. But in Ireland, and under the British
+Government, it seems they order things differently. So it occurred one
+day to the landlords thus assailed, as it did to the sea-lions of the
+Cape of Good Hope when the French sailors attacked them, that they might
+defend themselves.</p>
+
+<p>To this end the Land Corporation was instituted, with a considerable
+capital at its back, and Mr. Kavanagh at its head. The &ldquo;plan of
+campaign&rdquo; of this Corporation is to take over from the landlords
+derelict lands and cultivate them, stocking them where that is
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>It is in this way that the derelict lands on the Ponsonby property at
+Youghal are now worked. But Mr. Kavanagh tells me that the men employed
+by the Corporation, of whom Father Keller spoke <a name="page169" id="page169"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 169]
+</span>as a set of desperadoes
+or &ldquo;<i>enfants perdus</i>,&rdquo; are really a body of resolute and capable working
+men farmers. Many, but by no means all of them, are Protestants and
+Ulstermen; and that they are up to their work would seem to be shown by
+the fact stated to me, that in no case so far have any of them been
+deterred and driven off from the holdings confided to them. A great part
+of the Luggacurren property of Lord Lansdowne is now worked by the
+Corporation; and Mr. Kavanagh was kind enough to let me see the
+accounts, which indicate a good business result for the current year on
+that property. This is all very interesting. But what a picture it
+presents of social demoralisation! And what is to be the end of it all?
+Can a country be called civilised in which a farmer with a family to
+maintain, having the capital and the experience necessary to manage
+successfully a small farm, is absolutely forbidden, on pain of social
+ostracism, and eventually on pain of death, by a conspiracy of his
+neighbours, to take that farm of its lawful owner at what he considers
+to be a fair rent? And how long can any civilisation of our complex
+modern type endure in a country in which such a state of things
+tolerated by the alleged Government of that country <a name="page170" id="page170"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 170]
+</span>has to be met, and
+more or less partially mitigated, by deviating to the cultivation of
+farms rendered in this way derelict large amounts of capital which might
+be, and ought to be, far more profitably employed in other ways?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Kavanagh, after serving the office of High Sheriff thirty years ago,
+first for Kilkenny, and then for Carlow, sat in Parliament for fourteen
+years, from 1866 to 1880, as an Irish county member. He has a very large
+property here in Carlow, and property also in Wexford, and in Kilkenny,
+and was sworn into the Privy Council two years ago. If the personal
+interests and the family traditions of any man alive can be said to be
+rooted in the Irish soil, this is certainly true of his interests and
+his traditions. How can the peace and prosperity of Ireland be served by
+a state of things which condemns an Irishman of such ties and such
+training to expend his energies and his ability in defending the
+elementary right of Paddy O&rsquo;Rourke to take stock and work a ten-acre
+farm on terms that suit himself and his landlord?</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon we took a delightful walk through the woods, Mr.
+Kavanagh going with us on horseback. Every hill and clump of trees on
+this <a name="page171" id="page171"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 171]
+</span>large domain he knows, and he led us like a master of woodcraft
+through all manner of leafy byways to the finest points of view. The
+Barrow flows past Borris, making pictures at every turn, and the banks
+on both sides are densely and beautifully wooded. We came in one place
+upon a sawmill at work in the forest, and Mr. Kavanagh showed us with
+pride the piles of excellent timber which he turns out here. But he took
+a greater pride in a group, sacred from the axe, of really magnificent
+Scotch firs, such as I had certainly not expected to find in Ireland.
+Nearer the mansion are some remarkable Irish yews. The gardens are of
+all sorts and very extensive, but we found the head-gardener bitterly
+lamenting the destruction by a fire in one of the conservatories of more
+than six thousand plants just prepared for setting out.</p>
+
+<p>There are many curious old books and papers here, and a student of early
+Irish history might find matter to keep him well employed for a long
+time in this region. It was from this region and the race which ruled
+it, of which race Mr. Kavanagh is the actual representative, that the
+initiative came of the first Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. Strongbow
+made what, from the Anglo-Norman point of view, <a name="page172" id="page172"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 172]
+</span>was a perfectly
+legitimate bargain, with a dispossessed prince to help him to the
+recovery of his rights on the understanding that these rights, when
+recovered, should pass in succession to himself through the only
+daughter of the prince, whom he proposed to marry. It does not appear
+that Strongbow knew, or that Dermot MacMorrogh cared to tell him, how
+utterly unlike the rights of an Anglo-Norman prince were those of the
+elective life-tenant of an Irish principality. FitzStephen, the son by
+her second marriage of Nesta, the Welsh royal mistress of Henry
+Beauclerk, and his cousin, Maurice Fitzgerald, the leaders into Ireland
+of the Geraldines, were no more clear in their minds about this than
+Strongbow, and it is to the original muddle thus created that Professor
+Richey doubtless rightly refers the worst and most troublesome
+complications of the land question in Ireland. The distinction between
+the King&rsquo;s lieges and the &ldquo;mere Irish,&rdquo; for example, is unquestionably a
+legal distinction, though it is continually and most mischievously used
+as if it were a proof of the race-hatred borne by the Normans and Saxons
+in Ireland from the first against the Celts. The O&rsquo;Briens, the O&rsquo;Neills,
+the O&rsquo;Mullaghlins, the O&rsquo;Connors, and the M&lsquo;Morroghs, <a name="page173" id="page173"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 173]
+</span>&ldquo;the five bloods,&rdquo;
+as they are called, were certainly Celts, but whether in virtue of their
+being, or claiming to be, the royal races respectively of Minister, of
+Ulster, of Meath, of Connaught, and of Leinster, or from whatever other
+reason, these races were &ldquo;within the king&rsquo;s law,&rdquo; and were never &ldquo;mere
+Irish&rdquo; from the first planting of the Anglo-Norman power in Ireland. The
+case of a priest, Shan O&rsquo;Kerry, &ldquo;an Irish enemy of the king,&rdquo; presented
+&ldquo;contrary to the form of statute&rdquo; to the vicarage of Lusk, in the reign
+of Edward IV. (1465), illustrates this. An Act of Parliament was passed
+to declare the aforesaid &ldquo;Shan O&rsquo;Kerry,&rdquo; or &ldquo;John of Kevernon,&rdquo; to be
+&ldquo;English born, and of English nation,&rdquo; and that he might &ldquo;hold and enjoy
+the said benefice.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There is a genealogy here of the M&lsquo;Morroghs and Kavanaghs, most
+gorgeously and elaborately gotten up many years ago for Mr. Kavanagh&rsquo;s
+grandfather, which shows how soon the Norman and the native strains of
+blood become commingled. When one remembers how much Norman blood must
+have gone even into far-off Connaught when King John, in the early part
+of the thirteenth century, coolly gave away that realm of the O&rsquo;Connors
+to the <a name="page174" id="page174"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 174]
+</span>De Burgos, and how continually the English of the Pale fled from
+the exactions inflicted upon them by their own people, and sought refuge
+&ldquo;among the savage and mere Irish,&rdquo; one cannot help thinking that the&ldquo;
+Race Question&rdquo; has been &ldquo;worked for at least all it is worth&rdquo; by
+philosophers bent on unravelling the &lsquo;snarl&rsquo; of Irish affairs. If this
+genealogy may be trusted, there was little to choose between the ages
+which immediately preceded and the ages which followed the Anglo-Norman
+invasion in the matter of respect for human life. Celtic chiefs and
+Norman knights &ldquo;died in their boots&rdquo; as regularly as frontiersmen in
+Texas. One personage is designated in the genealogy as &ldquo;the murderer,&rdquo;
+for the truly Hibernian reason, so far as appears, that he was himself
+murdered while quite a youth, and before he had had a chance to murder
+more than three or four of his immediate relatives. It was as if the son
+of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Lady Constance should be branded in
+history as &ldquo;Arthur, the Assassin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BORRIS, <i>March 4th.</i>&mdash;</span>This is a staunch Protestant house, and Mr.
+Kavanagh himself reads a Protestant service every morning. But there is
+little or <a name="page175" id="page175"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 175]
+</span>nothing apparently in this part of Ireland of the bitter
+feeling about and against the Catholics which exists in the North. A
+very lively and pleasant Catholic gentleman came in to-day informally
+and joined the house party at luncheon. We all walked out over the
+property afterwards, visiting quite a different region from that which
+we saw yesterday&mdash;different but equally beautiful and striking, and this
+Catholic gentleman cited several cases which had fallen within his own
+knowledge of priests who begin to feel their moral control of the people
+slipping away from them through the operation of the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign.&rdquo;
+I told him what I had heard in regard to one such priest from my
+ecclesiastical friend in Cork. &ldquo;It does not surprise me at all,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;and, indeed, I not very long ago read precisely such another
+letter from a priest in a somewhat similar position. I read it with pain
+and shame as a Catholic,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;for it was simply a complete
+admission that the priest, although entirely convinced that his
+parishioners were making most unfair demands upon their landlord to whom
+the letter was addressed, felt himself entirely powerless to bring them
+to a sense of their misconduct.&rdquo; &ldquo;Had this priest given in his ad<a name="page176" id="page176"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 176]
+</span>hesion
+to the Plan of Campaign?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;and it was
+this fact which had broken his hold on the people when he tried to bring
+them to abandon their attitude under the Plan. His letter was really
+nothing more nor less than an appeal to the landlord, and that landlord
+a Protestant, to help him to get out of the hole into which he had put
+himself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Of the tenants and their relation to the village despots who administer
+the Plan of Campaign, this gentleman had many stories also to tell of
+the same tenor with all that I have hitherto heard on this subject.
+Everywhere it is the same thing. The well-to-do and well-disposed
+tenants are coerced by the thriftless and shiftless. &ldquo;I have the
+agencies of several properties,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and in some of the best parts
+of Ireland. I have had little or no trouble on any of them, for I have
+one uniform method. I treat every tenant as if he were the only man I
+had to deal with, study his personal ways and character, humour him, and
+get him on my side against himself. You can always do this with an
+Irishman if you will take the trouble to do it. Within the past years I
+have had tenants come and tell me they were in fear the Plan of Campaign
+<a name="page177" id="page177"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 177]
+</span>would be brought upon them, just as if it were a kind of potato disease,
+and beg me to agree to take the rent from them in that case, and just
+not discover on them that they had paid it before it was due!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This gentleman is a pessimist as to the future. &ldquo;I am a youngish man
+still,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and a single man, and I am glad of it. I don&rsquo;t believe
+the English will ever learn how to govern this country, and I am sure it
+can never govern itself. Would your people make a State of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To this I replied that with Cuba and Canada and Mexico, all still to be
+digested and assimilated, I thought the deglutition of Ireland by the
+great Republic must be remitted to a future much too remote to interest
+either of us.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; he said in a humorously despondent tone; &ldquo;and so I see
+nothing for people who think as I do, but Australia or New Zealand!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Kavanagh sees the future, I think, in colouring not quite so dark.
+As a public man, familiar for years with the method and ways of British
+Parliaments, he seems to regard the possible future legislation of
+Westminster with more anxiety and alarm than the past or present
+agitations in Ireland. <a name="page178" id="page178"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 178]
+</span>The business of banishing political economy to
+Jupiter and Saturn, however delightful it may be to the people who make
+laws, is a dangerous one to the people for whom the laws are made. While
+he has very positive opinions as to the wisdom of the concession made in
+the successive Land Acts for Ireland, which have been passed since 1870,
+he is much less disquieted, I think, by those concessions, than by the
+spirit by which the legislation granting them has been guided. He thinks
+great good has been already done by Mr. Balfour, and that much more good
+will be done by him if the Irish people are made to feel that clamorous
+resistance to the law will no longer be regarded at Westminster as a
+sufficient reason for changing the law. That is as much as to say that
+party spirit in Great Britain is the chief peril of Ireland to-day. And
+how can any Irishman, no matter what his state in his own country may
+be, or his knowledge of Irish affairs, or his patriotic earnestness and
+desire for Irish prosperity, hope to control the tides of party spirit
+in England or Scotland?</p>
+
+<p>Of the influence upon the people in Ireland of the spirit of recent
+legislation for Ireland, the story of the troubles on the O&rsquo;Grady
+estate, as Mr. <a name="page179" id="page179"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 179]
+</span>Kavanagh tells it to me, is a most striking illustration.
+&ldquo;The O&rsquo;Grady of Kilballyowen,&rdquo; as his title shows, is the direct
+representative, not of any Norman invader, but of an ancient Irish race.
+The O&rsquo;Gradys were the heads of a sept of the &ldquo;mere Irish&rdquo;; and if there
+be such a thing&mdash;past, present, or future&mdash;as an &ldquo;Irish nation,&rdquo; the
+place of the O&rsquo;Gradys in that nation ought to be assumed. Mr. Thomas De
+Courcy O&rsquo;Grady, who now wears the historic designation, owns and lives
+on an estate of a little more than 1000 acres, in the Golden Vein of
+Ireland, at Killmallock, in the county of Limerick. The land is
+excellent, and for the last half-century certainly it has been let to
+the tenants at rents which must be considered fair, since they have
+never been raised. In 1845, two years before the great famine, the
+rental was &pound;2142. This rental was paid throughout the famine years
+without difficulty; and in 1881 the rental stood at &pound;2108.</p>
+
+<p>There has never been an eviction on the estate until last year, when six
+tenants were evicted. All of these lived in good comfortable houses, and
+were prosperous dairy-farmers. Why were they evicted?</p>
+
+<p><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 180]
+</span>In October 1886, during the candidacy at New York of the Land Reformer,
+Mr. George, Mr. Dillon, M.P., propounded the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; at
+Portumna in Galway. The March rents being then due on the estate of The
+O&rsquo;Grady in Limerick, his agent, Mr. Shine, was directed to continue the
+abatements of 15 per cent, on the judicial rents, and of 25 per cent, on
+all other rents, which had been cheerfully accepted in 1885. But there
+was a priest at Kilballyowen, Father Ryan, who wrought upon the tenants
+until they demanded a general abatement of 40 per cent. This being
+refused, they asked for 30 per cent. on the judicial rents, and 40 per
+cent. on the others. This also being refused, Father Ryan had his way,
+and the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; was adopted. The O&rsquo;Grady&rsquo;s writs issued
+against several of the tenants were met by a &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; auction
+of cattle at Herbertstown in December 1886, the returns of which were
+paid into &ldquo;the Fund.&rdquo; For this, one of the tenants, Thomas Moroney, who
+held, besides a a farm of 37 Irish acres, a &ldquo;public,&rdquo; and five small
+houses, at Herbertstown, and the right to the tolls on cattle at the
+Herbertstown farm, valued at from &pound;50 to &pound;60 a year, and who held all
+these at a <a name="page181" id="page181"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 181]
+</span>yearly rent of &pound;85, was proceeded against. Judge Boyd
+pronounced him a bankrupt.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1887, after The O&rsquo;Grady had been put to great costs and
+trouble, the tenants made a move. They offered to accept a general
+abatement of 17-1/2 per cent., &ldquo;The O&rsquo;Grady to pay all the costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Here is the same story again of the small solicitors behind the &ldquo;Plan of
+Campaign&rdquo; promoting the strife, and counting on the landlords to defray
+the charges of battle!</p>
+
+<p>The O&rsquo;Grady responded with the following circular:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> KlLLBALLYOWEN, BRUFF, CO. LlMERICK,<br />
+<i>13th August 1877</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center">To my Tenants on Kilballyowen and Herbertstown Estate, Co.
+ Limerick.</p>
+
+<p> MY FRIENDS,&mdash;Pending the evictions by the Sheriff on my estate,
+ caused by your refusal to pay judicial rents on offers of liberal
+ abatements, I desire to remind you of the following facts:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> I am a resident landlord; my ancestors have dwelt amongst you for
+ over 400 years; every tenant is personally known to me, and the
+ most friendly relations have always existed between us.</p>
+
+<p> I am not aware of there ever having been an eviction by the Sheriff
+ on my estate.</p>
+
+<p> Farming myself over 400 acres, and my late agent (Mr. Shine), a
+ tenant farmer living within four miles <a name="page182" id="page182"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 182]
+</span>of my property, I have every
+ opportunity of realising and knowing your wants.</p>
+
+<p> On the passing of the Land Act of 1881, I desired you to have any
+ benefit it could afford you, and as you nearly all held under
+ lease&mdash;which precluded you from going into court&mdash;I intimated to
+ you my wish, and offered you to allow your lands to be valued at my
+ expense, or to let you go into court and get your rents fixed by
+ the sub-commissioners.</p>
+
+<p> You elected to have a valuation made, and Mr. Edmond Moroney was
+ agreed on as a land-valuer, possessing the confidence of tenants
+ and landlord.</p>
+
+<p> I may mention, up to then I had not known Mr. Moroney personally.</p>
+
+<p> In 1883 Mr. Moroney valued your holdings, and, as a result, his
+ valuation was accepted (except in three or four cases), and
+ judicial agreements signed by you, at rents ascertained by Mr.
+ Moroney&rsquo;s valuation.</p>
+
+<p> The late Patrick Hogan objected to Mr. Moroney&rsquo;s valuation of his
+ farm, and went into court, and had his rent fixed by the County
+ Court Judge.</p>
+
+<p> Thomas Moroney would not allow Mr. Edmond Moroney to value his
+ holding, nor would he go into court, his reason no doubt being he
+ should disclose the receipts of the amount of the tolls of the
+ fairs.</p>
+
+<p> The rents were subsequently paid on Mr. Moroney&rsquo;s valuation with
+ punctuality.</p>
+
+<p> In 1885, recognising the fall in prices of stock and produce, and
+ at the request of my late agent, Mr. Shine, I directed him to allow
+ you 15 per cent. on all judicial rents, or rents abated on Mr.
+ Moroney&rsquo;s valuation, and 25 per cent. on all other rents, when you
+ paid punctually and with thanks.</p>
+
+<p> In October last, when calling in the March 1886 rents, at the
+ instance of Mr. Shine, I agreed to con<a name="page183" id="page183"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 183]
+</span>tinue the abatement of 15 per
+ cent, and 25 per cent., which, when intimated to you, were refused,
+ and a meeting held, demanding an all-round abatement of 40 per
+ cent.</p>
+
+<p> This I considered unreasonable and unjust, and I refused to give
+ it.</p>
+
+<p> The Plan of Campaign was then most unjustly adopted on the estate,
+ and you refused to pay your rents.</p>
+
+<p> Thomas Moroney was elected as a test case to try the legality of
+ the sale and removal of your property to avoid payment of your
+ rent. His tenancy was a mixed holding of house property in the
+ village of Herbertstown, the tolls of the fairs, and 37 acres of
+ land, at a rent of &pound;85, and a Poor-Law valuation of &pound;73, 5s., made
+ as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"> <table><tr><td> Land valued</td><td>at &pound;42 5 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td> Tolls of fair </td><td>at 17 0 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td> Public house and yard </td><td>at 11 0 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td> Five small houses and forge </td><td>at 3 0 0</td></tr>
+ <tr><td></td><td>&pound;73 5 0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p> I always was led to believe the tolls of the fair averaged from &pound;50
+ to &pound;60 a year, there being four fairs in the year; and I believe
+ his reason for refusing to allow Mr. E. Moroney to value his
+ holding, or to go into court, was that he should disclose the
+ amount of the tolls, and in consequence I never considered he was
+ entitled to any abatement; but still I gave it to him, and was
+ prepared to do so. The result of his case was that his conduct in
+ making away with his property was unjustifiable, and his farm and
+ holding was sold out for the benefit of his creditors, and he is no
+ longer a tenant on the estate.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page184" id="page184"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 184]
+</span>I subsequently took proceedings against six other tenants, who
+ refused payment of rent, and removed their cattle off the land to
+ avoid payment, and having got judgment against them, the Sheriff
+ sold out four of their farms, and writs of possession on the title
+ were taken out against them, and are now lodged with the Sheriff
+ for execution. I have also got judgments for possession against two
+ other tenants for non-payment of rent, also lodged with the
+ Sheriff. One the widow of Patrick Hogan, who got his rent fixed in
+ the County Court, and the other Mrs. Denis Ryan, whose farm on her
+ marriage I assented to be put in settlement for her protection, Mr.
+ Shine, my agent, consenting to act as one of her trustees, whose
+ name, with his co-trustee, Mr. Thomas FitzGerald, appear as
+ defendants, they having signed her judicial agreement.</p>
+
+<p> The following are the names of the above tenants, the extent of
+ their holdings, the rent, the Poor-Law valuation, and the average
+ rent per Irish acre:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table>
+<thead><tr>
+<td> TENANT. </td>
+<td> Acreage in Irish&nbsp;Measure.</td>
+<td> Judicial&nbsp;Rent Less 20&nbsp;per&nbsp;cent</td>
+<td> Rent per acre [A] </td>
+<td> Poor Law Valuation </td></tr>
+</thead><tbody>
+ <tr><td> </td><td> A. R. P. </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td><td> </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>John&nbsp;Carroll </td><td> 87&nbsp;3&nbsp;38 </td><td> 132&nbsp;4&nbsp;0 </td><td> 30/- </td><td> 127&nbsp;10&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Honora&nbsp;Crimmins </td><td> 35&nbsp;0&nbsp;27 </td><td> 64&nbsp;5&nbsp;6 </td><td> 36/6 </td><td> 52&nbsp;15&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>James&nbsp;Baggott </td><td> 18&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td><td> 37&nbsp;16&nbsp;10 </td><td> 42/- </td><td> 22&nbsp;5&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Margaret&nbsp;Moloney </td><td> 23&nbsp;2&nbsp;9 </td><td> 46&nbsp;2&nbsp;8 </td><td> 39/2 </td><td> 44&nbsp;15&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Mrs.&nbsp;Denis&nbsp;Ryan </td><td> 66&nbsp;2&nbsp;3 </td><td> 93&nbsp;2&nbsp;5 </td><td> 28/- </td><td> 96&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td>Maryanne&nbsp;Hogan </td><td> 53&nbsp;2&nbsp;33 </td><td> 112&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td><td> 41/8 </td><td> 117&nbsp;15&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+ <tr><td> </td><td> 294&nbsp;3&nbsp;30 </td><td> 485&nbsp;11&nbsp;5 </td><td> ... </td><td> 461&nbsp;0&nbsp;0 </td></tr>
+</tbody></table>
+</div>
+<p>[A] Rent per Irish acre after abatement of 20 per cent.</p>
+
+<p> This represents an average of 34s. the Irish acre, for some of the
+ best land in Ireland, and shows a difference of only &pound;24, 11s. 5d.
+ between the rent, less 20 per cent. now offered, and Poor-Law
+ valuation.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page185" id="page185"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 185]
+</span>After putting me to the cost of these proceedings, and giving me
+ every opposition and annoyance, amongst such, compelling my agent
+ (by threats of boycotting) to resign, boycotting myself and
+ household, preventing my servants from attending chapel, and
+ driving my labourers away, negotiations for a settlement were
+ opened, and you offered to accept an all-round abatement of 17-1/2
+ per cent. and to pay up one year&rsquo;s rent, provided I paid all costs,
+ including the costs in Moroney&rsquo;s case; this of course I refused,
+ but with a desire to aid you in coming to a settlement, and to
+ prevent the loss to the tenants of the farms under eviction on the
+ Title, I offered to allow the 17-1/2 per cent. all round on payment
+ of one year&rsquo;s rent and costs, and to give time for payment of the
+ costs as stated in my Solicitor&rsquo;s letter of the 2d June 1887 to
+ Canon Scully.</p>
+
+<p> This offer was refused, and the writs for possession have been
+ lodged with the Sheriff.</p>
+
+<p> I never commenced these proceedings in a vindictive spirit, or with
+ any desire to punish any of you for your ungracious conduct, but
+ simply to protect my property from unjust and unreasonable demands.</p>
+
+<p> You will owe two years&rsquo; rent next month (September), and I now
+ write you this circular letter to point out to each, individually,
+ the position of the tenants under eviction, and even at this late
+ hour to give them an opportunity of saving their holdings, to
+ enable them to do so, and with a view to settlement, I am now
+ prepared to allow 20 per cent. all round, on payment of a year&rsquo;s
+ rent and costs.</p>
+
+<p> Under no circumstance will I forego payment of costs, as they must
+ be paid in full.</p>
+
+<p> If this money be paid forthwith, I will arrange with my brother,
+ the purchaser, to restore the four holdings purchased by him at
+ sheriff&rsquo;s sale to the late tenants.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page186" id="page186"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 186]
+</span>After this offer I disclaim any responsibility for the result of
+ the evictions, and the loss attendant thereon, as it now remains
+ with you to avert same.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>All the evictions have since been carried out, and the Land Corporation
+men are at work upon the estate! Whom has all this advantaged? The
+tenants?&mdash;Certainly not. The O&rsquo;Grady?&mdash;Certainly not. The peace and
+order of Ireland?&mdash;Certainly not. But it has given the National League
+another appeal to the intelligent &ldquo;sympathies&rdquo; of England and America.
+It has strengthened the revolutionary element in Irish society. It has
+&ldquo;driven another nail into the coffin&rdquo; of Irish landlordism and of the
+private ownership of land throughout Great Britain.</p>
+
+
+<p>Such at least is the opinion of Mr. Kavanagh. If I were an Englishman or
+a Scotchman, I should be strongly inclined to take very serious account
+of this opinion in forecasting the future of landed property in England
+or Scotland.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 187]
+</span>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">GREENANE HOUSE, THOMASTOWN, <i>March 5th.</i>&mdash;</span>The breakfast-room at Borris
+this morning was gay with pink coats. A meet was to come off at a place
+between Borris and Thomastown, and bidding fare-well to my cordial host
+and hostess, I set out at 11 o&rsquo;clock for a flying visit to this quaint
+and charming house of Mr. Seigne, one of the best known and most highly
+esteemed agents in this part of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>My jarvey from Borris had an unusually neat and well-balanced car. When
+I praised it he told me it was &ldquo;built by an American,&rdquo; not an Irish
+American, I understood him to say, but a genuine Yankee, who, for some
+mysterious reason, has established himself in this region, where he has
+prospered as a cart and car builder ever since. &ldquo;Just the best cars in
+all Ireland he builds, your honour!&rdquo; Why don&rsquo;t he naturalise them in
+America?</p>
+
+<p>All the way was charming, the day very bright, and even warm, and the
+hill scenery picturesque at every turn. We looked out sharply for the
+hunt, <a name="page188" id="page188"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 188]
+</span>but in vain. My jarvey, who knew the whole country, said they must
+have broken cover somewhere on the upper road, and we should miss them
+entirely. And so we did.</p>
+
+<p>The silting up of the river Nore has reduced Thomastown or
+Ballymacanton, which was its Irish name, from its former importance as
+an emporium for the country about Kilkenny. The river now is not
+navigable above Inistiogue. But two martial square towers, one at either
+end of a fine bridge which spans the stream here, speak of the good old
+times when the masters of Thomastown took toll and tribute of traders
+and travellers. The lands about the place then belonged to the great
+monastery of Jerpoint, the ruins of which are still the most interesting
+of their kind in this part of Ireland. They have long made a part of the
+estate of the Butlers. We rattled rapidly through the quiet little town,
+and whisking out of a small public square into a sort of wynd between
+two houses, suddenly found ourselves in the precincts of Grenane House.
+The house takes its name from the old castle of Grenane, an Irish
+fortress established here by some native despot long before Thomas
+Fitz-Anthony the Norman came into the <a name="page189" id="page189"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 189]
+</span>land. The ruins of this castle
+still stand some half a mile away. &ldquo;We call the place Candahar,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Seigne, as he came up with two ladies from the meadows below the
+house, &ldquo;because you come into it so suddenly, just as you do into that
+Oriental town.&rdquo; But what a charming occidental place it is! It stands
+well above the river, the slope adorned with many fine old trees, some
+of which grow, and grow prosperously, in the queerest and most
+improbable forms, bent double, twisted, but still most green and
+vigorous. They have no business under any known theory of arboriculture
+to be beautiful, but beautiful they are. The views of the bridge, of the
+towers, and of the river, from this slope would make the fortune of the
+place in a land of peace and order.</p>
+
+<p>A most original and delightful lady of the country lunched with
+us,&mdash;such a character as Miss Edgeworth or Miss Austen might have drawn.
+Shrewd, humorous, sensible, fearless, and ready with impartial hand to
+box the ears alike of Trojan and of Tyrian. She not only sees both sides
+of the question in Ireland as between the landlords and the tenants, but
+takes both sides of the question. She holds lands by inheritance, which
+make her keenly <a name="page190" id="page190"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 190]
+</span>alive to the wrongs of the landlords, and she holds
+farms as a tenant, which make her implacably critical as to their
+claims. She mercilessly demolished in one capacity whatever she advanced
+in the other, and all with the most perfect nonchalance and good faith.
+This curiously dual attitude reminded me of the confederate General,
+Braxton Bragg, of whom his comrades in the old army of the United States
+used to say that he once had a very sharp official correspondence with
+himself. He happened to hold a staff appointment, being also a line
+officer. So in his quality of a staff officer, he found fault with
+himself in his capacity as a line officer, reprimanded himself sharply,
+replied defiantly to the reprimand, and eventually reported himself to
+himself for discipline at head-quarters. She told an excellent story of
+a near kinsman of hers who, holding a very good living in the Protestant
+Irish Church, came rather unexpectedly by inheritance into a baronetcy,
+upon which his women-folk insisted that it would be derogatory to a
+baronet to be a parson. &ldquo;Would you believe it, the poor man was silly
+enough to listen to their cackle, and resign seven hundred a year!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That didn&rsquo;t clear him,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;of the cloth, did it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<a name="page191" id="page191"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 191]
+</span>Not a bit, of course, poor foolish man. He was just as much a parson as
+ever, only without a parsonage. Men are fools enough of themselves,
+don&rsquo;t you think, without needing to listen to women?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Seigne comes of a French Protestant stock long ago planted in
+Ireland, and his Gallic blood doubtless helps him to handle the
+practical problems daily submitted in these days to an Irish
+land-agent&mdash;problems very different, as he thinks, from those with which
+an Irish agent had to deal in the days before 1870. The Irish tenant has
+a vantage-ground now in his relations with his landlord which he never
+had in the olden time, and this makes it more important than it ever was
+that the agent should have what may be called a diplomatic taste for
+treating with individuals, finding out the bent of mind of this man and
+of that, and negotiating over particulars, instead of insisting, in the
+English fashion, on general rules, without regard to special cases. I
+have met no one who has seemed to me so cool and precise as Mr. Seigne
+in his study of the phenomena of the present situation. I asked him
+whether he could now say, as Mr. Senior did a quarter of century ago,
+that the Irish tenants were <a name="page192" id="page192"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 192]
+</span>less improvident, and more averse from
+running into debt than the English.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;on the contrary, in some parts of Ireland
+now the shopkeepers are kept on the verge of bankruptcy by the
+recklessness with which the tenants incurred debts immediately after the
+passing of the Land Act of 1870&mdash;a time when shopkeepers, and bankers
+also, almost forced credit upon the farmers, and made thereby &lsquo;bad
+debts&rsquo; innumerable. Farmers rarely keep anything like an account of
+their receipts and expenses. I know only one tenant-farmer in this
+neighbourhood who keeps what can be called an account, showing what he
+takes from his labour and spends on his living.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag20"
+ name="footnotetag20"></a><a href="#footnote20"><sup>20</sup></a> &ldquo;They save a great
+deal of money often,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;but almost never in any systematic way.
+They spend much less on clothes and furniture, and the outward show of
+things, than English people of the same condition do, and they do not
+stint themselves in meat and drink as the French peasants do. In fact,
+under the operation of existing circumstances, they are getting into the
+way of improving <a name="page193" id="page193"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 193]
+</span>their condition, not so much by sacrifices and savings,
+as by an insistence on rent being fixed low enough to leave full margin
+for improved living.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had a very frank statement on this point,&rdquo; said Mr. Seigne, &ldquo;not long
+ago from a Tipperary man. When I tried to show him that his father had
+paid a good many years ago the very same rent which he declares himself
+unable to pay now, he admitted this at once. But it was a confession and
+avoidance. &lsquo;My father could pay the rent, and did pay the rent,&rsquo; he
+said, &lsquo;because he was content to live so that he could pay it. He sat on
+a boss of straw, and ate out of a bowl. He lived in a way in which I
+don&rsquo;t intend to live, and so he could pay the rent. Now, I must have,
+and I mean to have, out of the land, before I pay the rent, the means of
+living as I wish to live; and if I can&rsquo;t have it, I&rsquo;ll sell out and go
+away; but I&rsquo;ll be&mdash;if I don&rsquo;t fight before I do that same!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What could you reply to that?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;&lsquo;that&rsquo;s square and straightforward. Only just let me know
+the point at which you mean to fight, and then we&rsquo;ll see if we can agree
+about something.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The truth is,&rdquo; said Mr. Seigne, &ldquo;that there is a <a name="page194" id="page194"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 194]
+</span>pressure upward now
+from below. The labourers don&rsquo;t want to live any longer as the farmers
+have always made them live; and so the farmers, having to consider the
+growing demands of the labourers, and meaning to live better themselves,
+push up against the landlord, and insist that the means of the
+improvement shall come out of him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He then told me an instructive story of his calling upon a
+tenant-farmer, at whose place he found the labourers sitting about their
+meal of pork and green vegetables. The farmer asked him into another
+room, where he saw the farmer&rsquo;s family making their meal of stirabout
+and milk and potatoes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I asked you in here,&rdquo; said the farmer, &ldquo;because we keep in here to
+ourselves. I don&rsquo;t want those fellows to see that we can&rsquo;t afford to
+give ourselves what we have to give them,&rdquo;&mdash;this with strong language
+indicating that he must himself be given a way to advance equally with
+the progressive labourer, or he would know the reason why!</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon Mr. Seigne drove me over through a beautiful country to
+Woodstock, near Inistiogue, the seat of the late Colonel Tighe, the head
+of the family of which the authoress of &ldquo;Psyche&rdquo; was an ornament.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 195]
+</span>It is the finest place in this part of Ireland, and one of the finest I
+have seen in the three kingdoms, a much more picturesque and more nobly
+planted place indeed than its namesake in England. The mansion has no
+architectural pretensions, being simply a very large and, I should
+think, extremely comfortable house of the beginning of this century. The
+library is very rich, and there are some good pictures, as well as
+certain statues in the vestibule, which would have no interest for the
+Weissnichtwo professor of <i>Sartor Resartus</i>, but are regarded with some
+awe by the good people of Inistiogue.</p>
+
+<p>The park would do no discredit to a palace, and if the vague project of
+establishing a royal residence in Ireland for one of the British Princes
+should ever take shape, it would not be easy, I should say, to find a
+demesne more befitting the home of a prince than this of the Tighes. At
+present it serves the State at least as usefully, being the &ldquo;pleasaunce&rdquo;
+of the people for miles around, who come here freely to walk and drive.</p>
+
+<p>It stretches for miles along the Nore, and is crowned by a gloriously
+wooded hill nearly a thousand feet in height. The late Colonel Tighe, a
+most accomplished man, and a passionate lover of trees, <a name="page196" id="page196"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 196]
+</span>made it a kind
+of private Kew Gardens. He planted long avenues of the rarest and finest
+trees, araucarias, Scotch firs, oaks, beeches, cedars of Lebanon; laid
+out miles of the most varied and delightful drives, and built the most
+extensive conservatories in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>The turfed and terraced walks among those conservatories are
+indescribably lovely, and the whole place to-day was vocal with
+innumerable birds. Picturesque little cottages and arbours are to be
+found in unexpected nooks all through the woodlands, each commanding
+some green vista of forest aisles, or some wide view of hill and
+champaign, enlivened by the winding river. From one of those to-day we
+looked out over a landscape to which Turner alone or Claude could have
+done justice, the river, spanned by a fine bridge, in the middle
+distance, and all the region wooded as in the days of which Edmund
+Spenser sings, when Ireland</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="i6">&ldquo;Flourished&nbsp;in&nbsp;fame,</span><br />
+ Of&nbsp;wealth&nbsp;and&nbsp;goodnesse&nbsp;far&nbsp;above&nbsp;the&nbsp;rest<br />
+ Of&nbsp;all&nbsp;that&nbsp;bears&nbsp;the&nbsp;British&nbsp;Islands&rsquo;&nbsp;name.&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Over the whole place broods an indefinable charm. You feel that this was
+the home at once and the work of a refined and thoughtful spirit. And so
+<a name="page197" id="page197"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 197]
+</span>indeed it was. Here for the greater part of the current century the
+owner lived, making the development of the estate and of this demesne
+his constant care and chief pleasure. And here still lives his widow,
+with whom we took tea in a stately quiet drawing-room. Lady Louisa Tighe
+was in Brussels with her mother, the Duchess of Richmond, on the eve of
+Waterloo. She was a child then of ten years old, and her mother bade
+them bring her down into the historic ball-room before the Duke of
+Wellington left it. The duke took up his sword. &ldquo;Let Louisa buckle it
+for you,&rdquo; said her mother, and when the little girl had girded it on,
+the great captain stooped, took her up in his arms, and kissed her. &ldquo;One
+never knows what may happen, child,&rdquo; he said good-naturedly; and taking
+his small gold watch out of his fob, he bade her keep it for him.</p>
+
+<p>She keeps it still. For more than sixty years it has measured out in
+this beautiful Irish home the hours of a life given to good works and
+gracious usefulness. To-day, with all the vivacity of interest in the
+people and the place which one might look for in a woman of twenty, this
+charming old lady of eighty-three, showing barely threescore years in
+her carriage, her countenance, and her voice, entertained <a name="page198" id="page198"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 198]
+</span>us with minute
+and most interesting accounts of the local industries which flourish
+here mainly through her sympathetic and intelligent supervision. We
+seemed to be in another world from the Ireland of Chicago or
+Westminster!</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Seigne drove me back here by a most picturesque road leading along
+the banks of the Nore, quite overhung with trees, which in places dip
+their branches almost into the swift deep stream. &ldquo;This is the favourite
+drive of all the lovers hereabouts,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and there is a spice of
+danger in it which makes it more romantic. Once, not very long ago, a
+couple of young people, too absorbed in their love-making to watch their
+horse, drove off the bank. Luckily for them they fell into the branches
+of one of these overhanging trees, while the horse and car went plunging
+into the water. There they swung, holding each other hand in hand,
+making a pretty and pathetic tableau, till their cries brought some
+anglers in a boat on the river to the rescue.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We spoke of Lady Louisa, and of the watch of Waterloo. &ldquo;That watch had a
+wonderful escape a few years ago,&rdquo; said Mr. Seigne.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Louisa, it seems, had a confidential butler <a name="page199" id="page199"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 199]
+</span>whom she most
+implicitly trusted. One day it was found that a burglary had apparently
+been committed at Woodstock, and that with a quantity of jewelry the
+priceless watch had vanished. The butler was very active about the
+matter, and as no trace could be found leading out of the house, he
+intimated a suspicion that the affair might possibly have some
+connection with a guest not long before at the house. This angered Lady
+Louisa, who thereupon consulted the agent, who employed a capable
+detective from Dublin. The detective came down to Inistiogue as a
+commercial traveller, wandered about, made the acquaintance of Lady
+Louisa&rsquo;s maid, of the butler, and of other people about the house, and
+formed his own conclusions. Two or three days after his arrival he
+walked into the shop of a small jeweller in a neighbouring town, and
+affecting a confidential manner, told the jeweller he wanted to buy
+&ldquo;some of those things from Woodstock.&rdquo; The man was taken by surprise,
+and going into a backshop produced one very fine diamond, and a number
+of pieces of silver plate, of the disappearance of which the butler had
+said nothing to his mistress. This led to the arrest of the butler, and
+to the discovery that for a long time <a name="page200" id="page200"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 200]
+</span>he had been purloining property
+from the house and selling it. Many cases of excellent claret had found
+their way in this fashion to a public-house which had acquired quite a
+reputation for its Bordeaux with the officers quartered in its
+neighbourhood. The wine-bins at Woodstock were found full of bottles of
+water. Much of the capital port left by Colonel Tighe had gone&mdash;but the
+hock was untouched. &ldquo;Probably the butler didn&rsquo;t care for hock,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Seigne. The Waterloo watch was recovered from a very decent fellow, a
+travelling dealer, to whom it had been sold: and many pieces of jewelry
+were traced up to London. But Lady Louisa could not be induced to go up
+to London to identify them or testify.</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Tuesday, March 6.</i>&mdash;</span>It is a curious fact, which I learned
+to-day from the Registrar-General, that the deposits in the Post-office
+Savings Banks have never diminished in Ireland since these banks were
+established.<a id="footnotetag21"
+ name="footnotetag21"></a><a href="#footnote21"><sup>21</sup></a> These deposits are chiefly made, I understand, by the
+small tenants, who are less represented by the deposits in the General
+Savings Banks than are the shopkeepers <a name="page201" id="page201"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 201]
+</span>and the cattle-drovers. In the
+General Savings Banks the deposit line fluctuates more; though on the
+whole there has been a steady increase in these deposits also throughout
+Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Of the details of the dealings of the private banks it is very hard to
+get an accurate account. One gentleman, the manager of a branch of one
+important bank, tells me that a great deal of money is made by usurers
+out of the tenants, by backing their small bills. This practice goes
+back to the first establishment of banks in Ireland. Formerly it was not
+an uncommon thing for a landlord to offer his tenants a reduction, say,
+of twenty per cent., on condition of their paying the rent when it fell
+due. Such were the relations then between landlord and tenants, and so
+little was punctuality expected in such payments that this might be
+regarded as a sort of discount arrangement. The tenant who wished to
+avail himself of such an offer would go to some friendly local usurer
+and ask for a loan that he might avail himself of it. &ldquo;One of these
+usurers, whom I knew very well,&rdquo; said the manager, &ldquo;told me long ago
+that he found these operations very profitable. His method of procedure
+was to agree to advance the rent to the tenant at ten per <a name="page202" id="page202"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 202]
+</span>cent., payable
+at a near and certain date. This would reduce the landlord&rsquo;s reduction
+at once, of course, for the tenant, to ten per cent., but that was not
+to be disdained; and so the bargain would be struck. If the money was
+repaid at the fixed date, it was not a bad thing for the usurer. But it
+was almost never so repaid; and with repeated renewals the usurer, by
+his own showing, used to receive eventually twenty, fifty, and, in some
+cases, nearly a hundred per cent, for his loan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is the opinion of this gentleman that, under the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign,&rdquo;
+a good deal of money-making is done in a quiet way by some of the
+&ldquo;trustees,&rdquo; who turn over at good interest, with the help of friendly
+financiers, the funds lodged with them, being held to account to the
+tenants only for the principal. &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;all this is
+doubtless at least as legitimate as any other part of the &lsquo;Plan,&rsquo; and I
+daresay it all goes for &lsquo;the good of the cause.&rsquo; But neither the tenants
+nor the landlords get much by it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 203]
+</span>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Thursday, March 8.</i>&mdash;</span>At eight o&rsquo;clock this morning I left the
+Harcourt Street station for Inch, to take a look at the scene of the
+Coolgreany evictions of last summer. These evictions came of the
+adoption of the Plan of Campaign, under the direction of Mr. Dillon,
+M.P., on the Wexford property of Mr. George Brooke of Dublin. The agent
+of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s estate, Captain Hamilton, is the honorary director of
+the Property Defence Association, so that we have here obviously a
+grapple between the National League doing the work, consciously or
+unconsciously, of the agrarian revolutionists, and a combination of
+landed proprietors fighting for the rights of property as they
+understand them.</p>
+
+<p>We ran through a beautiful country for the greater part of the way. At
+Bray, which is a favourite Irish watering-place, the sea broke upon us
+bright and full of life; and the station itself was more like a
+considerable English station than any <a name="page204" id="page204"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 204]
+</span>I have seen. Thence we passed into
+a richly-wooded region, with neat, well-kept hedges, as far as Rathdrum
+and the &ldquo;Sweet Vale of Avoca.&rdquo; The hills about Shillelagh are
+particularly well forested, though, as the name suggests, they must have
+been cut for cudgels pretty extensively for now a great many years. We
+came again on the sea at the fishing port of Arklow, where the stone
+walls about the station were populous with small ragamuffins, and at the
+station of Inch I found a car waiting for me with Mr. Holmes, a young
+English Catholic officer, who had most obligingly offered to show me the
+place and the people. We had hardly got into the roadway when we
+overtook a most intelligent-looking, energetic young priest, walking
+briskly on in the direction of our course. This was Dr. Dillon, the
+curate of Arklow. We pulled up at once, and Mr. Holmes, introducing me
+to him, we begged him to take a seat with us. He excused himself as
+having to join another priest with whom he was going to a function at
+Inch; but he was good enough to walk a little way with us, and gave me
+an appointment for 2 P.M. at his own town of Arklow, where I could catch
+the train back to Dublin. We drove on rapidly and called on <a name="page205" id="page205"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 205]
+</span>Father
+O&rsquo;Neill, the parish priest. We found him in full canonicals, as he was
+to officiate at the function this morning, and with him were Father
+Dunphy, the parish priest of Arklow, and two or three more robed
+priests.</p>
+
+<p>Father O&rsquo;Neill, whose face and manner are those of the higher order of
+the continental clergy, briefly set forth to me his view of the
+transactions at Coolgreany. He said that before the Plan of Campaign was
+adopted by the tenants, Mr. William O&rsquo;Brien, M.P., had written to him
+explaining what the effect of the Plan would be, and urging him to take
+whatever steps he could to obviate the necessity of adopting it, as it
+might eventually result to the disadvantage of the tenants. &ldquo;To that
+end,&rdquo; said Father O&rsquo;Neill, &ldquo;I called upon Captain Hamilton, the agent,
+with Dr. Dillon of Arklow, but he positively refused to listen to us,
+and in fact ordered us, not very civilly, to leave his office.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was after this he said that he felt bound to let the tenants take
+their own way. Eighty of them joined in the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; and paid
+the amount of the rent due, less a reduction of 30 per cent., which they
+demanded of the agent, into the hands of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., Sir
+Thomas <a name="page206" id="page206"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 206]
+</span>being a resident in the country, and Mr. Mayne, M.P. Writs of
+ejectment were obtained against them afterwards, and in July last
+sixty-seven of them were evicted, who are now living in &ldquo;Laud League
+huts,&rdquo; put up on the holdings of three small tenants who were exempted
+from the Plan of Campaign, and allowed to pay their rents subject to a
+smaller reduction made by the agent, in order that they might retain
+their land as a refuge for the rest.</p>
+
+<p>All this Father O&rsquo;Neill told us very quietly, in a gentle,
+undemonstrative way, but he was much interested when I told him I had
+recently come from Rome, where these proceedings, I was sure, were
+exciting a good deal of serious attention. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and Father
+Dunphy who is here in the other room, has just got back from Rome, where
+he had two audiences of the Holy Father.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doubtless, then,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;he will have given his Holiness full
+particulars of all that took place here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; responded Father O&rsquo;Neill, &ldquo;and he tells me the Holy Father
+listened with great attention to all he had to say&mdash;though of course, he
+expressed no opinion about it to Father Dunphy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 207]
+</span>As the time fixed for the function was at hand, we were obliged to leave
+without seeing Father Dunphy.</p>
+
+<p>From the Presbytery we drove to the scene of the evictions. These
+evictions were in July. Mr. Holmes witnessed them, and gave me a lively
+account of the affair. The &ldquo;battle&rdquo; was not a very tough one. Mr.
+Davitt, who was present, stood under a tree very quietly watching it
+all. &ldquo;He looked very picturesque,&rdquo; said Mr. Holmes, &ldquo;in a light grey
+suit, with a broad white beaver shading his dark Spanish face; and
+smoked his cigar very composedly.&rdquo; After it was over, Dr. Dillon brought
+up one of the tenants, and presented him to Mr. Davitt as &ldquo;the man who
+had resisted this unjust eviction.&rdquo; Mr. Davitt took his cigar from his
+lips, and in the hearing of all who stood about sarcastically said,
+&ldquo;Well, if he couldn&rsquo;t make a better resistance than that he ought to go
+up for six months!&rdquo; The first house we came upon was derelict&mdash;all
+battered and despoiled, the people in the neighbourhood here, as
+elsewhere, regarding such houses as free spoil, and carrying off from
+time to time whatever they happen to fancy. Near this house we met an
+emergency man, named <a name="page208" id="page208"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 208]
+</span>Bolton, an alert, energetic-looking native of
+Wicklow. He has four brothers; and is now at work on one of the
+&ldquo;evicted&rdquo; holdings.</p>
+
+<p>I asked if he was &ldquo;boycotted,&rdquo; and what his relations were with the
+people.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed in a shrewd, good-natured way. &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m boycotted, of
+course,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t care a button for any of these people,
+and I&rsquo;d rather they wouldn&rsquo;t speak to me. They know I can take care of
+myself, and they give me a good wide berth. All I have to object to is
+that they set fire to an outhouse of mine, and cut the ears of one of my
+heifers, and for that I want damages. Otherwise I&rsquo;m getting on very
+well; and I think this will be a good year, if the law is enforced, and
+these fellows are made to behave themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Near Bolton&rsquo;s farm we passed the holding of a tenant named Kavanagh, one
+of the three who were &ldquo;allowed&rdquo; to pay their rents. Several Land League
+huts are on his place, and the evicted people who occupy them put their
+cattle with his. He is a quiet, cautious man, and very reticent. But it
+seemed to me that he was not entirely satisfied with the &ldquo;squatters&rdquo; who
+have been quartered upon him. And it appears that he has taken another
+holding <a name="page209" id="page209"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 209]
+</span>in Carlow. From his place we drove to Ballyfad, where a large
+house, at the end of a good avenue of trees, once the mansion of a
+squire, but now much dilapidated, is occupied as headquarters by the
+police. Here we found Mr. George Freeman, the bailiff of the Coolgreany
+property, a strong, sturdy man, much disgusted at finding it necessary
+to go about protected by two policemen. That this was necessary,
+however, he admitted, pointing out to us the place where one Kinsella
+was killed not very long ago. The son of this man Kinsella was formerly
+one of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s gamekeepers, and is now, Mr. Freeman thinks, in
+concert with another man named Ryan, the chief stay of the League in
+keeping up its dominion over the evicted tenants.</p>
+
+<p>Many of these tenants, he believes, would gladly pay their rents now,
+and come back if they dared.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Every man, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that has anything to lose, would be glad to
+come back next Monday if he thought his life would be safe. But all the
+lazy and thriftless ones are better off now than they ever were; they
+get from &pound;4 to &pound;6 a month, with nothing to do, and so they&rsquo;re in clover,
+and they naturally don&rsquo;t like to have the industrious, well-<a name="page210" id="page210"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 210]
+</span>to-do
+tenants spoil their fun by making a general settlement.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Besides that,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that man Kinsella and his comrade Ryan are
+the terror of the whole of them. Kinsella always was a curious, silent,
+moody fellow. He knows every inch of the country, going over it all the
+time by night and day as a gamekeeper, and I am quite sure the
+Parnellite men and the Land Leaguers are just as much afraid of him and
+Ryan as the tenants are. He don&rsquo;t care a bit for them; and they&rsquo;ve no
+control of him at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Freeman said he remembered very well the occasion referred to by
+Father O&rsquo;Neill, when Captain Hamilton refused to confer with Dr. Dillon
+and himself.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did Father O&rsquo;Neill tell you, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that Captain Hamilton was
+quite willing to talk with him and Father O&rsquo;Donel, the parish priests,
+and with the Coolgreany people, but he would have nothing to say to any
+one who was not their priest, and had no business to be meddling with
+the matter at all?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; he did not tell me that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! well, sir, that made all the difference. Father Dunphy, who was
+there, is a high-tempered <a name="page211" id="page211"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 211]
+</span>man, and he said he had just as much right to
+represent the tenants as Captain Hamilton to represent the landlord, and
+that Captain Hamilton wouldn&rsquo;t allow. It was the outside people made all
+the trouble. In June of last year there was a conference at my house,
+and all that time there was a Committee sitting at Coolgreany, and the
+tenants would not be allowed to do anything without the Committee.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And who made the Committee?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they made themselves, I suppose, sir. There was Sir Thomas
+Esmonde&mdash;he was a convert, you know, of Father O&rsquo;Neill&mdash;and Mr. Mayne
+and Mr. John Dillon. And Dr. Dillon of Arklow, he was as busy as he
+could be till the evictions were made in July. And then he was in
+retreat. And I believe, sir, it is quite true that he wanted the Bishop
+to let him come out of the retreat just to have a hand in the business.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The police sergeant, a very cool, sensible man, quite agreed with the
+bailiff as to the influence upon the present situation of the
+ex-gamekeeper Kinsella, and his friend Eyan. &ldquo;If they were two
+Invincibles, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;these member fellows of the League couldn&rsquo;t
+be in greater fear of them than they are. <a name="page212" id="page212"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 212]
+</span>They say nothing, and do just
+as they please. That Kinsella, when Mr. John Dillon was down here, just
+told him before a lot of people that he &lsquo;wanted no words and no advice
+from him,&rsquo; and he&rsquo;s just in that surly way with all the people about.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the Brooke estate, I am told here it was bought more than twenty
+years ago with a Landed Estates Court title from Colonel Forde, by the
+grandfather of Mr. Brooke. He paid about &pound;75,000 sterling for it. His
+son died young, and the present owner came into it as a child, Mr. Vesey
+being then the agent, who, during the minority, spent a great deal on
+improving the property. Captain Hamilton came in as agent only a few
+years ago. While the Act of 1881 was impending, an abatement was granted
+of more than twenty per cent. In 1882 the tenants all paid except
+eleven, who went into Court and got their rents cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners. There were appeals; and in 1885, after Court
+valuations, the rents cut down by the Sub-Commissioners were restored in
+several cases. There never was any rack-renting on the estate at all.
+There are upon it in all more than a hundred tenants, twelve of whom are
+Protestants, holding a little less in all than one-fourth of the
+property.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 213]
+</span>There are fifteen judicial tenants, twenty-one lease-holders, and
+seventy-seven hold from year to year.</p>
+
+<p>The gross rental is a little over &pound;2000 a year of which one-half goes to
+Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s mother. Mr. Brooke himself is a wealthy man, at the head of
+the most important firm of wine-merchants in Ireland, and he has
+repeatedly spent on the property more than he took out of it.</p>
+
+<p>The house of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., was pointed out to me from the
+road. &ldquo;Sir Thomas is to marry an heiress, sir, isn&rsquo;t he, in America?&rdquo;
+asked an ingenuous inquirer. I avowed my ignorance on this point. &ldquo;Oh,
+well, they say so, for anyway the old house is being put in order for
+now the first time in forty years.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We reached Arklow in time for luncheon, and drove to the large police
+barracks there. These were formerly the quarters of the troops. Arklow
+was one of the earliest settlements of the Anglo-Normans in Ireland
+under Henry II., and once rejoiced in a castle and a monastery both now
+obliterated; though a bit of an old tower here is said to have been
+erected in his time. The town lives by fishing, and by shipping copper
+and lead ore to <a name="page214" id="page214"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 214]
+</span>South Wales. The houses are rather neat and well kept;
+but the street was full of little ragged, merry mendicants.</p>
+
+<p>We went into a small branch of the Bank of Ireland, and asked where we
+should find the hotel. We were very civilly directed to &ldquo;The Register&rsquo;s
+Office over the way.&rdquo; This seemed odd enough. But reaching it we were
+further puzzled to see the sign over the doorway of a &ldquo;coach-builder&rdquo;!
+However, we rang the bell, and presently a maid-servant appeared, who
+assured us that this was really the hotel, and that we could have
+&ldquo;whatever we liked&rdquo; for luncheon. We liked what we found we could
+get&mdash;chops, potatoes, and parsnips; and without too much delay these
+were neatly served to us in a most remarkable room, ablaze with mural
+ornaments and decorations, upon which every imaginable pigment of the
+modern palette seemed to have been lavished, from a Nile-water-green
+dado to a scarlet and silver frieze. There were five times as many
+potatoes served to us as two men could possibly eat, and not one of them
+was half-boiled. But otherwise the meal was well enough, and the service
+excellent. Beer could be got for us, but the house had no licence, Lord
+Carysfort, the owner of the <a name="page215" id="page215"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 215]
+</span>property, thinking, so our hostess said,
+that &ldquo;there were too many licences in the town already.&rdquo; Lord Carysfort
+is probably right; but it is not every owner of a house, or even of a
+lease in Ireland, I fear, who would take such a view and act on it to
+the detriment of his own property.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Dillon lives in the main square of Arklow in a very neat house. He
+was absent at a funeral in the handsome Catholic church near by when we
+called, but we were shown into his study, and he presently came in.</p>
+
+<p>His study was that of a man of letters and of politics. Blue-books and
+statistical works lay about in all directions, and on the table were the
+March numbers of the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, and the <i>Contemporary
+Review</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You are abreast of the times, I see,&rdquo; I said to him, pointing to these
+periodicals.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;they have just come in; and there is a capital paper
+by Mr. John Morley in this <i>Nineteenth Century</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be livelier than Dr. Dillon&rsquo;s interest in all that is
+going on on both sides of the Atlantic, more positive than his opinions,
+or more terse and clear than his way of putting them. He <a name="page216" id="page216"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 216]
+</span>agreed entirely
+with Father O&rsquo;Neill as to the pressure put upon the Coolgreany tenants,
+not so much by Mr. Brooke as by the agent, Captain Hamilton; but he
+thought Mr. Brooke also to blame for his treatment of them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Two of the most respectable of them,&rdquo; said Dr. Dillon, &ldquo;went to see Mr.
+Brooke in Dublin, and he wouldn&rsquo;t listen to them. On the contrary, he
+absolutely put them out of his office without hearing a word they had to
+say.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag22"
+ name="footnotetag22"></a><a href="#footnote22"><sup>22</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>I found Dr. Dillon a strong disciple of Mr. Henry George, and a firm
+believer in the doctrine of the &ldquo;nationalisation of the land.&rdquo; &ldquo;It is
+certain to come,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as certain to come in Great Britain as in
+Ireland, and the sooner the better. The movement about the sewerage
+rates in London,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;is the first symptom of the land war in
+London. It is the thin edge of the wedge to break down landlordism in
+the British metropolis.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He is watching American politics, too, very closely, and inclines to
+sympathise with President Cleveland. Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia, he
+tells me, in his passage through Ireland the other day, did not hesitate
+to express his conviction that President Cleveland would be re-elected.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 217]
+</span>Dr. Dillon was so earnest and so interesting that the time slipped by
+very fast, until a casual glance at my watch showed me that we must make
+great haste to catch the Dublin train.</p>
+
+<p>We left therefore rather hurriedly, but before reaching the station we
+saw the Dublin train go careering by, its white pennon of smoke and
+vapour curling away along the valley.</p>
+
+<p>I made the best of it, however, and letting Mr. Holmes depart by a train
+which took him home, I found a smart jarvey with a car, and drove out to
+Glenart Castle, the beautiful house of the Earl of Carysfort. This is a
+very handsome modern house, built in a castellated style of a very good
+whitish grey marble, with extensive and extremely well-kept terraced
+gardens and conservatories.</p>
+
+<p>It stands very well on one high bank of the river, a residence of the
+Earl of Wicklow occupying the other bank. My jarvey called my attention
+to the excellence of the roads, on which he said Lord Carysfort has
+spent &ldquo;a deal of money,&rdquo; as well as upon the gardens of the new Castle.
+The head-gardener, an Englishman, told me he found the native labourers
+very intelligent and willing both to learn and to work. Evidently here
+is another centre of useful <a name="page218" id="page218"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 218]
+</span>and civilising influences, not managed by an
+&ldquo;absentee.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag23"
+ name="footnotetag23"></a><a href="#footnote23"><sup>23</sup></a></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 219]
+</span>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Friday, March 9th.</i>&mdash;</span>At 7.40 this morning I took the train for
+Athy to visit the Luggacurren estates of Lord Lansdowne. Mr. Lynch, a
+resident magistrate here, some time ago kindly offered to show me over
+the place, but I thought it as well to take my chance with the people of
+Athy who are reported to have been very hot over the whole matter here,
+and so wrote to Mr. Lynch that I would find him at the Lodge, which is
+the headquarters of the property.</p>
+
+<p>Athy is a neat, well-built little town, famous of old as a frontier
+fortress of Kildare. An embattled tower, flanked by small square
+turrets, guards a picturesque old bridge here over the Barrow, the
+bridge being known in the country as &ldquo;Crom-a-boo,&rdquo; from the old war-cry
+of the Fitz-Geralds. It is a busy place now; and there was quite a
+bustle at the very pretty little station. I asked a friendly old porter
+which was the best hotel in the town. &ldquo;The <a name="page220" id="page220"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 220]
+</span>best? Ah! there&rsquo;s only one,
+and it&rsquo;s not the best&mdash;but there are worse&mdash;and it&rsquo;s Kavanagh&rsquo;s.&rdquo; I
+found it easily enough, and was ushered by a civil man, who emerged from
+the shop which occupies part of it, into a sort of reading-room with a
+green table. A rather slatternly but very active girl soon converted
+this into a neat breakfast-table, and gave me an excellent breakfast.
+The landlord found me a good car, and off I set for the residence of
+Father Maher, the curate of whom I had heard as one of the most fiery
+and intractable of the National League priests in this part of Ireland.</p>
+
+
+<p>My jarvey was rather taciturn at first, but turned out to be something
+of a politician. He wanted Home Rule, one of his reasons being that then
+they &ldquo;wouldn&rsquo;t let the Americans come and ruin them altogether, driving
+out the grain from the markets.&rdquo; About this he was very clear and
+positive. &ldquo;Oh, it doesn&rsquo;t matter now whether the land is good or bad,
+America has just ruined the farmers entirely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I told him I had always heard this achievement attributed to England.
+&ldquo;Oh! that was quite a mistake! What the English did was to punish the
+men that stood up for Ireland. There was Mr. O&rsquo;Brien. But for him there
+wasn&rsquo;t a man of Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s <a name="page221" id="page221"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 221]
+</span>people would have had the heart to
+stand up. He did it all; and now, what were they doing to him? They were
+putting him on a cold plank-bed on a stone floor in a damp cell!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But the English put all their prisoners in those cells, don&rsquo;t they?&rdquo; I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what of it, sir?&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re good enough for most of
+them, but not for a gentleman like Mr. O&rsquo;Brien, that would spill the
+last drop of his heart&rsquo;s blood for Ireland!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;they&rsquo;re doing just the same thing with Mr. Gilhooly, I
+hear.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And who is Mr. Gilhooly, now? And it&rsquo;s not for the likes of him to
+complain and be putting on airs as if he was Mr. O&rsquo;Brien!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is a fine country for hunting!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was it ever put down here, the hunting?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, indeed! Sure, the people wouldn&rsquo;t let it be!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not if Mr. O&rsquo;Brien told them they must?&rdquo; I queried.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. O&rsquo;Brien; ah, he wouldn&rsquo;t think of such a thing! It brings money all
+the time to Athy, and sells the horses.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to the troubles at Luggacurren, he was not very clear. &ldquo;It was a
+beautiful place, Mr. Dunne&rsquo;s; we&rsquo;d <a name="page222" id="page222"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 222]
+</span>see it presently. And Mr. Dunne, he
+was a good one for sport. It was that, your honour, that got him into
+the trouble&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And Mr. Kilbride?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s place was a very good place too, but not like Mr.
+Dunne&rsquo;s. And he was doing very well, Mr. Kilbride. He was getting a good
+living from the League, and he was a Member of Parliament. Oh, yes, he
+wasn&rsquo;t the only one of the tenants that was doing good to himself. There
+was more of them that was getting more than ever they made out of the
+land.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag24"
+ name="footnotetag24"></a><a href="#footnote24"><sup>24</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was the land so bad, then?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 223]
+</span>&ldquo;No, there was as good land at Luggacurren as any there was in all
+Ireland; but,&rdquo; and here he pointed off to the crests of the hills in the
+distance, &ldquo;there was a deal of land there of the estate on the hills,
+and it was very poor land, but the tenants had to pay as much for that
+as for the good property of Dunne and Kilbride.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know Mr. Lynch, the magistrate?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;If you do, look out
+for him, as he has promised to join me and show me the place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, sorr!&rdquo; the jarvey exclaimed at once; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t mind about him. Hell
+have his own car, and your honour won&rsquo;t want to take him on ours.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; I persisted, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s plenty of room.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! but indeed, sir, if it wasn&rsquo;t that you were going to the priest&rsquo;s,
+Father Maher, you wouldn&rsquo;t get a car at Athy&mdash;no, not under ten pounds!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not under ten pounds,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;Would I get one then for ten
+pounds?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a deal of money, ten pounds, sorr, and you wouldn&rsquo;t have a poor
+man throw away ten pounds?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not, nor ten shillings either. Is it a question of principle,
+or a question of price?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The man looked around at me with a droll <a name="page224" id="page224"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 224]
+</span>glimmer in his eye: &ldquo;Ah, to be
+sure, your honour&rsquo;s a great lawyer; but he&rsquo;ll come pounding along with
+his big horse in his own car, Mr. Lynch; and sure it&rsquo;ll be quicker for
+your honour just driving to Father Maher&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There was no resisting this, so I laughed and bade him drive on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Whose house is that?&rdquo; I asked, as we passed a house surrounded with
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! that&rsquo;s the priest, Father Keogh&mdash;a very good man, but not so much
+for the people as Father Maher, who has everything to look after about
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We came presently within sight of a handsome residence, Lansdowne Lodge,
+the headquarters of the estate. Many fine cattle were grazing in the
+fields about it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They are Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s beasts,&rdquo; said my jarvey; &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s the
+emergency men are looking after them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nearly opposite were the Land League huts erected on the holding of an
+unevicted tenant&mdash;a small village of neat wooden &ldquo;shanties.&rdquo; On the
+roadway in front of these half-a-dozen men were lounging about. They
+watched us with much curiosity as we drove up, and whispered eagerly
+together.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 225]
+</span>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re some of the evicted men, your honour,&rdquo; said my jarvey, with a
+twinkle in his eye; and then under his breath, &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be thinking your
+honour&rsquo;s came down to arrange it all. They think everybody that comes is
+come about an arrangement.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, then, they all want it arranged!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; not all, but many of them do. Some of them like it well enough
+going about like gentlemen with nothing to do, only their hands in their
+pockets.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>We turned out of the highway here and passed some very pretty cottages.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, they&rsquo;re not for labourers, your honour,&rdquo; said my jarvey; &ldquo;the
+estate built them for mechanics. It&rsquo;s the tenants look after the
+labourers, and little it is they do for them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then, pointing to a ridge of hills beyond us, he said: &ldquo;It was
+Kilbride&rsquo;s father, sir, evicted seventeen tenants on these hills&mdash;poor
+labouring men, with their families, many years ago,&mdash;and now he&rsquo;s
+evicted himself, and a Member of Parliament!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Father Maher&rsquo;s house stands well off from the highway. He was not at
+home, being &ldquo;away at a service in the hills,&rdquo; but would be back before
+two o&rsquo;clock. I left my name for him, with a memo<a name="page226" id="page226"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 226]
+</span>randum of my purpose in
+calling, and we drove on to see the bailiff of the estate, Mr. Hind. On
+the way we met Father Norris, a curate of the parish, in a smart trap
+with a good horse, and had a brief colloquy with him. Mr. Hind we found
+busy afield; a quiet, staunch sort of man. He spoke of the situation
+very coolly and dispassionately. &ldquo;The tenants in the main were a good
+set of men&mdash;as they had reason to be, Lord Lansdowne having been not
+only a fair landlord, but a liberal and enterprising promoter of local
+improvements.&rdquo; I had been told in Dublin that Lord Lansdowne had offered
+a subscription of &pound;200 towards establishing creameries, and providing
+high-class bulls for this estate. Similar offers had been cordially met
+by Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s tenants in Kerry, and with excellent results. But
+here they were rejected almost scornfully, though accompanied by offers
+of abatement on the rents, which, in the case of Mr. Kilbride, for
+example, amounted to 20 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How did this happen, the tenants being good men as you say?&rdquo; I asked of
+Mr. Hind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Because they were unable to resist the pressure put on them by the two
+chief tenants, Kilbride and Dunne, with the help of the League. Kilbride
+and <a name="page227" id="page227"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 227]
+</span>Dunne both lived very well.&rdquo; My information at Dublin was that Mr.
+Kilbride had a fine house built by Lord Lansdowne, and a farm of seven
+hundred acres, at a rent of &pound;760, 10s. Mr. Dunne, who co-operated with
+him, held four town lands comprising 1304 acres, at a yearly rent of
+&pound;1348, 15s. Upon this property Lord Lansdowne had expended in drainage
+and works &pound;1993, 11s. 9d., and in buildings &pound;631, 15s. 4d., or in all
+very nearly two years&rsquo; rental. On Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s holdings Lord Lansdowne
+had expended in drainage works &pound;1931, 6s. 3d., and in buildings &pound;1247,
+19s. 5d., or in all more than four years&rsquo; rental. Mr. Kilbride held his
+lands on life leases. Mr. Dunne held his smallest holding of 84 acres on
+a yearly tenure; his two largest holdings, one on a lease for 31 years
+from 1874, and the other on a life lease, and his fourth holding of 172
+acres on a life lease.</p>
+
+<p>Where does the hardship appear in all this to Mr. Dunne or Mr. Kilbride?</p>
+
+<p>On Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s holdings, for instance, Lord Lansdowne expended over
+&pound;3000, for which he added to the rent &pound;130 a year, or about 4 per cent.,
+while he himself stood to pay 6-1/2 per cent, on the loans he made from
+the Board of Works <a name="page228" id="page228"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 228]
+</span>for the expenditure. In the same way it was with Mr.
+Dunne&rsquo;s farms. They were mostly in grass, and Lord Lansdowne laid out
+more than &pound;2500 on them, borrowed at the same rate from the Board, for
+which he added to the rent only &pound;66 a year, or about 2-1/2 per cent. Mr.
+Kilbride was a Poor-Law Guardian, and Mr. Dunne a Justice of the Peace.
+The leases in both of these cases, and in those of other large tenants,
+seem to have been made at the instance of the tenants themselves, and
+afforded security against any advance in the rental during a time of
+high agricultural prices. And it would appear that for the last quarter
+of a century there has been no important advance in the rental. In 1887
+the rental was only &pound;300 higher than in 1862, though during the interval
+the landlord had laid out &pound;20,000 on improvements in the shape of
+drainage, roads, labourers&rsquo; cottages, and other permanent works.
+Moreover, in fifteen years only one tenant has been evicted for
+non-payment of rent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was there any ill-feeling towards the Marquis among the tenants?&rdquo; I
+asked of Mr. Hind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not, and no reason for any. They were a good set of men, and
+they would never have gone into this fight, only for a few who were in
+<a name="page229" id="page229"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 229]
+</span>trouble, and I&rsquo;m sure that to-day most of them would be thankful if they
+could settle and get back. The best of them had money enough, and didn&rsquo;t
+like the fight at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>All the trouble here seems to have originated with the adoption of the
+Plan of Campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne, besides this estate in Queen&rsquo;s County, owns property in
+a wild, mountainous part of the county of Kerry. On this property the
+tenants occupy, for the most part, small holdings, the average rental
+being about &pound;10, and many of the rentals much lower. They are not
+capitalist farmers at all, and few of them are able to average the
+profits of their industry, setting the gains of a good, against the
+losses of a bad, season. In October 1886, while Mr. Dillon was
+organising his Plan of Campaign, Lord Lansdowne visited his Kerry
+property to look into the condition of the people. The local Bank had
+just failed, and the shopkeepers and money-lenders were refusing credit
+and calling in loans. The pressure they put upon these small farmers,
+together with the fall in the price of dairy produce and of young stock
+at that time, caused real distress, and Lord Lansdowne, after looking
+into the situation, offered, of his own motion, abatements <a name="page230" id="page230"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 230]
+</span>varying from
+25 to 35 per cent, to all of them whose rents had not been judicially
+fixed under the Act of 1881, for a term of fifteen years.</p>
+
+<p>As to these, Lord Lansdowne wrote a letter on the 21st of October 1886
+(four days after the promulgation of the Plan of Campaign at Portumna on
+the Clanricarde property), to his agent, Mr. Townsend Trench. This
+letter was published. I have a copy of it given to me in Dublin, and it
+states the case as between the landlords and the tenants under judicial
+rents most clearly and temperately.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It might, I think,&rdquo; says the Marquis, &ldquo;be very fairly argued, that the
+State having imposed the terms of a contract on landlord and tenant,
+that contract should not be interfered with except by the State.</p>
+
+<p>The punctual payment of the &lsquo;judicial rent&rsquo; was the one advantage to
+which the landlords were desired to look when, in 1881, they were
+deprived of many of the most valuable attributes of ownership.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was distinctly stipulated that the enormous privileges which were
+suddenly and unexpectedly conferred upon the tenants were to be enjoyed
+by them conditionally upon the fulfilment on their part of the statutory
+obligations specified in the Act. <a name="page231" id="page231"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 231]
+</span>Of those, by far the most important
+was the punctual payment of the rent fixed by the Court for the judicial
+term.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This obligation being unfulfilled, the landlord might reasonably claim
+that he should be free to exercise his own discretion in determining
+whether any given tenancy should or should not be perpetuated.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In many cases [such cases are probably not so numerous on my estate as
+upon many others] the resumption of the holding, and the consolidation
+of adjoining farms, would be clearly advantageous to the whole
+community. In the congested districts the consolidation of farms is the
+only solution that I have seen suggested for meeting a chronic
+difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have no reason to believe that the Judicial Rents in force on my
+estate are such that, upon an average of the yield and prices of
+agricultural produce, my tenants would find it difficult to pay them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all these considerations Lord Lansdowne instructed Mr.
+Trench to grant to these tenants under judicial leases an abatement of
+20 per cent. on the November gale of 1886. This abatement, freely
+offered, was gladly accepted. There <a name="page232" id="page232"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 232]
+</span>had been no outrages or disturbances
+on the Kerry properties, and the relations of the landlord with his
+tenants, before and after this visit of Lord Lansdowne to Kerry, and
+these reductions which followed it, had been, and continued to be,
+excellent.</p>
+
+<p>But the tale of Kerry reached Luggacurren; and certain of the tenants on
+the latter estate were moved by it to demand for the Queen&rsquo;s County
+property identical treatment with that accorded to the very differently
+situated property in Kerry.</p>
+
+<p>The leaders of the Luggacurren movement, I gather from Mr. Hind, never
+pretended inability to pay their rents. They simply demanded abatements
+of 35 per cent. on non-judicial, and 25 per cent. on judicial, rents as
+their due, on the ground that they should be treated like the tenants in
+Kerry: and the Plan of Campaign being by this time in full operation in
+more than one part of Ireland, they threatened to resort to it if their
+demand was refused. Lord Lansdowne at once declared that he would not
+repeat at Luggacurren his concession made in Kerry as to the rents
+judicially fixed; but he offered on a fair consideration of the
+non-judicial rents to make abatements on them ranging from 15 to 25 per
+cent.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 233]
+</span>The offer was refused, and the war began. On the 23d of March 1887 Mr.
+Kilbride was evicted. One week afterwards, on the 29th of March, he got
+up in the rooms of the National League in Dublin, and openly declared
+that &ldquo;the Luggacurren evictions differed from most other evictions in
+this, that they were able to pay the rent. It was a fight,&rdquo; he
+exultingly exclaimed, &ldquo;of intelligence against intelligence; it was
+diamond cut diamond!&rdquo; In other words, it was a struggle, not for
+justice, but for victory.</p>
+
+<p>On all these points, and others furnished to me at Dublin touching this
+estate, much light was thrown by the bailiff, who had not been concerned
+in the evictions. He told me what he knew, and then very obligingly
+offered to conduct me to the lodge, where we should find Mr. Hutchins,
+who has charge now of the properties taken up by Mr. Kavanagh&rsquo;s Land
+Corporation. My patriotic jarvey from Athy made no objection to my
+giving the bailiff a lift, and we drove off to the lodge. On the way the
+jarvey good-naturedly exclaimed, &ldquo;Ah! there comes Mr. Lynch,&rdquo; and even
+offered to pull up that the magistrate might overtake us.</p>
+
+<p>We found Mr. Hutchins at home, a cool, quiet, <a name="page234" id="page234"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 234]
+</span>energetic, northern man,
+who seems to be handling the difficult situation here with great
+firmness and prudence. Mrs. Hutchins, who has lived here now for nearly
+a year&mdash;a life not unlike that of the wife of an American officer on the
+Far Western frontier&mdash;very amicably asked me to lunch, and Mr. Hutchins
+offered to show me the holdings of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride. Mr. Lynch
+proposed that we should all go on my car, but I remembered the protest
+of the jarvey, and sending him to await me at Father Maher&rsquo;s, I drove
+off with Mr. Hutchins. As we drove along, he confirmed the jarvey&rsquo;s hint
+as to the difference between the views and conduct of the parish priest
+and the views and conduct of his more fiery curate. This is a very
+common state of affairs, I find, all over Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>The house of Mr. Dunne is that of a large gentleman farmer. It is very
+well fitted up, but it was plain that the tenants had done little or
+nothing to make or keep it a &ldquo;house beautiful.&rdquo; The walls had never been
+papered, and the wood-work showed no recent traces of the brush. &ldquo;He
+spent more money on horse-racing than on housekeeping,&rdquo; said a shrewd
+old man who was in the house. In fact, Mr. Dunne, I am told, entered a
+horse for the <a name="page235" id="page235"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 235]
+</span>races at the Curragh after he had undergone what Mr.
+Gladstone calls &ldquo;the sentence of death&rdquo; of an eviction!</p>
+
+<p>Some of the doors bore marks of the crowbar but no great mischief had
+been done to them or to the large fine windows. The only serious damage
+done during the eviction was the cutting of a hole through the roof. An
+upper room had been provisioned to stand a siege, and so scientifically
+barricaded with logs and trunks of trees that after several vain
+attempts to break through the door the assailants climbed to the roof,
+and in twenty minutes cut their way in from without. The dining and
+drawing rooms were those of a gentleman&rsquo;s residence, and one of the
+party remembered attending here a social festivity got up with much
+display.</p>
+
+<p>A large cattle-yard has been established on this place, with an
+original, and, as I was assured, most successful weighing-machine by the
+Land Corporation. We found it full of very fine-looking cattle, and Mr.
+Hutchins seems to think the operation of managing the estate as a kind
+of &ldquo;ranch&rdquo; decidedly promising. &ldquo;I am not a bit sorry for Mr. Dunne,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;but I am very sorry for other quiet, good tenants who have been
+deluded or driven into giving <a name="page236" id="page236"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 236]
+</span>up valuable holdings to keep him and Mr.
+Kilbride company, and give colour to the vapourings of Mr. William
+O&rsquo;Brien.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The cases of some of these tenants were instructive. One poor man,
+Knowles, had gone out to America, and regularly sent home money to his
+family to pay the rent. They found other uses for it, and when the storm
+came he was two years and a half in arrears. In another instance, two
+brothers held contiguous holdings, and were in a manner partners. One
+was fonder of Athy than of agriculture; the other a steady husbandman.
+Four years&rsquo; arrears had grown up against the one; only a half-year&rsquo;s
+gale against the other. Clearly this difference originated outside of
+the fall of prices! In a third case, a tenant wrote to Mr. Trench
+begging to have something done, as he had the money to pay, and wanted
+to pay, but &ldquo;didn&rsquo;t dare.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>From Mr. Dunne&rsquo;s we drove to Mr. Kilbride&rsquo;s, another ample, very
+comfortable house&mdash;not so thoroughly well fitted up with bathroom and
+other modern appurtenances as Mr. Dunne&rsquo;s perhaps&mdash;but still a very good
+house. It stands on a large green knoll, rather bare of trees, and
+commands a fine sweep of landscape.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 237]
+</span>Mr. Hutchins drove me to the little road which leads up past the &ldquo;Land
+League village&rdquo; to the house of Father Maher, and there set me down.</p>
+
+<p>I walked up and found the curate at home&mdash;a tall, slender, well-made
+young priest, with a keen, intelligent face. He received me very
+politely, and, when I showed him the card of an eminent dignitary of the
+Church, with cordiality.</p>
+
+<p>I found him full of sympathy with the people of his parish, but neither
+vehement nor unfair. He did not deny that there were tenants on Lord
+Lansdowne&rsquo;s estate who were amply able to pay their rents; but he did
+most emphatically assert that there were not a few of them who really
+could not pay their rents.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;there are some of them who cannot even pay
+their dues to their priest, and when I say that, you will know how
+pinched and driven they must indeed be.&rdquo; It was in view of these tenants
+that he seemed to justify the course of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride.
+&ldquo;They must all stand or fall together.&rdquo; He had nothing to say to the
+discredit of Lord Lansdowne; but he spoke with some bitterness of the
+agent, Mr. Townsend Trench, as having protested against Lord Lansdowne&rsquo;s
+mak<a name="page238" id="page238"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 238]
+</span>ing reductions here while he had himself made the same reductions on
+the neighbouring estate of Mrs. Adair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In truth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Mr. Trench has made all this trouble worse all
+along. He is too much of a Napoleon&rdquo;&mdash;and with a humorous twinkle in his
+eye as he spoke&mdash;&ldquo;too much of a Napoleon the Third.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was just reading his father&rsquo;s book when you came in. Here it is,&rdquo; and
+he handed me a copy of Trench&rsquo;s <i>Realities of Irish Life</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever read it? This Mr. Trench, the father, was a kind of
+Napoleon among agents in his own time, and the son, you see, thinks it
+ought to be understood that he is quite as great a man as his father.
+Did you never hear how he found a lot of his father&rsquo;s manuscripts once,
+and threw them all in the fire, calling out as he did so, &lsquo;There goes
+some more of my father&rsquo;s vanity?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>About his people, and with his people, Father Maher said he &ldquo;felt most
+strongly.&rdquo; How could he help it? He was himself the son of an evicted
+father.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, Father Maher,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;you will understand that I wish to
+get at both sides of this <a name="page239" id="page239"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 239]
+</span>question and of all questions here. Pray tell
+me then, where I shall find the story of the Luggacurren property most
+fully and fairly set forth in print?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Without a moment&rsquo;s hesitation he replied, &ldquo;By far the best and fairest
+account of the whole matter you will get in the Irish correspondence of
+the London <i>Times</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How the conflict would end he could not say. But he was at a loss to see
+how it could pay Lord Lansdowne to maintain it.</p>
+
+<p>He very civilly pressed me to stay and lunch with him, but when I told
+him I had already accepted an invitation from Mr. Hutchins, he very
+kindly bestirred himself to find my jarvey.</p>
+
+<p>I hastened back to the lodge, where I found a very pleasant little
+company. They were all rather astonished, I thought, by the few words I
+had to say of Father Maher, and especially by his frank and sensible
+recommendation of the reports in the London <i>Times</i> as the best account
+I could find of the Luggacurren difficulty. To this they could not
+demur, but things have got, or are getting, in Ireland, I fear, to a
+point at which candour, on one side or the other of the burning
+questions here <a name="page240" id="page240"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 240]
+</span>debated, is regarded with at least as much suspicion as
+the most deliberate misrepresentation. As to Mr. Town send Trench, what
+Father Maher failed to tell me, I was here told: That down to the time
+of the actual evictions he offered to take six months&rsquo; rent from the
+tenants, give them a clean book, and pay all the costs. To refuse this
+certainly looks like a &ldquo;war measure.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But for the loneliness of her life here, Mrs. Hutchins tells me she
+would find it delightful. The country is exceedingly lovely in the
+summer and autumn months.</p>
+
+<p>When my car came out to take me back to Athy, I found my jarvey in
+excellent spirits, and quite friendly even with Mr. Hutchins himself. He
+kept up a running fire of lively commentaries upon the residents whose
+estates we passed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would you think now, your honour,&rdquo; he said, pointing with his whip to
+one large mansion standing well among good trees, &ldquo;that that&rsquo;s the
+snuggest man there is about Athy? But he is; and it&rsquo;s no wonder! Would
+you believe it, he never buys a newspaper, but he walks all the way into
+Athy, and goes about from the bank to the shops till he finds one, and
+picks it up and reads it. He&rsquo;s <a name="page241" id="page241"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 241]
+</span>mighty fond of the news, but he&rsquo;s fonder,
+you see, of a penny!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There now, your honour, just look at that house! It&rsquo;s a magistrate he
+is that lives there; and why? Why, just to be called &lsquo;your honour,&rsquo; and
+have the people tip their hats to him. Oh! he delights in that, he does.
+Why, you might knock a man, or put him in the water, you might, indeed,
+but if you came before Mr.&mdash;&mdash;, and you just called him &lsquo;your honour&rsquo;
+often enough, and made up to him, you&rsquo;d be all right! You&rsquo;ve just to go
+up to him with your hat in your hand, looking up at him, and to say,
+&lsquo;Ah! now, your honour&rsquo;&ldquo; (imitating the wheedling tone to perfection),
+&rdquo;and indeed you&rsquo;d get anything out of him&mdash;barring a sixpence, that is,
+or a penny!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! he&rsquo;s a snug one, too!&rdquo; And with that he launched a sharp thwack of
+the whip at the grey mare, and we went rattling on apace.</p>
+
+<p>At the very pretty station of Athy we parted the best of friends. &ldquo;Wish
+you safe home, your honour.&rdquo; The kindly railway porter, also, who had
+recommended Kavanagh&rsquo;s Hotel, was anxious to know how I found it, and so
+busied himself to get me a good carriage when the train came in, that I
+feel bound to exempt Athy from the judgment <a name="page242" id="page242"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 242]
+</span>passed by Sir James
+Allport&rsquo;s committee against the &ldquo;amenities of railway travelling in
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Saturday, March 10.</i>&mdash;</span>I called by appointment to-day upon Mr.
+Brooke, the owner of the Coolgreany estate, at his counting-house in
+Gardiner&rsquo;s Row. It is one of the spacious old last-century houses of
+Dublin; the counting-room is installed with dark, old-fashioned mahogany
+fittings, in what once was, and might easily again be made, a
+drawing-room. Pictures hang on the walls, and the atmosphere of the
+whole place is one of courtesy and culture rather than of mere modern
+commerce. One of the portraits here is that of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s
+granduncle&mdash;a handsome, full-blooded, rather testy-looking old warrior,
+in the close-fitting scarlet uniform of the Prince Regent&rsquo;s time.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He ought to have been called Lord Baltimore,&rdquo; said Mr. Brooke
+good-naturedly; &ldquo;for he fought against your people for that city at
+Bladensburg with Ross.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That was the battle,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;in which, according to a popular
+tradition in my country, the Americans took so little interest that they
+left the field almost as soon as it began.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Another portrait is of a kinsman who was mur<a name="page243" id="page243"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 243]
+</span>dered in the highway here in
+Ireland many years ago, under peculiarly atrocious circumstances, and
+with no sort of provocation or excuse.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brooke confirmed Dr. Dillon&rsquo;s statement that he had ordered out of
+his counting-house two tenants who came into it with a peculiarly brazen
+proposition, of which I must presume Dr. Dillon was ignorant when he
+cited the fact as a count against the landlord of Coolgreany. I give the
+story as Mr Brooke tells it. &ldquo;The Rent Audit,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;at which my
+tenants were idiots enough to join the Plan of Campaign occurred about
+the 12th December 1886, when, as you know, I refused to accept the terms
+which they proposed to me. I heard nothing more from them till about the
+middle of February 1887, when coming to my office one day I found two
+tenants waiting for me. One was Stephen Maher, a mountain man, and the
+other Patrick Kehoe. &lsquo;What do you want?&rsquo; I asked. Whereupon they both
+arose, and Pat Kehoe pointed to Maher. Maher fumbled at his clothes, and
+rubbed himself softly for a bit, and then produced a scrap of paper.
+&lsquo;It&rsquo;s a bit of paper from the tenants, sir,&rsquo; he said. A queer bit of
+paper it was to look at&mdash;ruled paper, with a composition written <a name="page244" id="page244"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 244]
+</span>upon it
+which might have been the work of a village schoolmaster. It was neither
+signed nor addressed! The pith of it was in these words,&mdash;&lsquo;in
+consequence of the manner in which we have been harassed, our cattle
+driven throughout the country, and our crops not sown, we shall be
+unable to pay the half-year&rsquo;s rent due in March, in addition to the
+reduction already claimed!&rsquo; I own I rather lost my temper at this!
+Remember I had already plainly refused to give &lsquo;the reduction already
+claimed,&rsquo; and had told them not once, but twenty times, that I would
+never surrender to the &lsquo;Plan of Campaign&rsquo;! I am afraid my language was
+Pagan rather than Parliamentary&mdash;but I told them plainly, at least, that
+if they did not break from the Plan of Campaign, and pay their debts,
+they might be sure I would turn the whole of them out! I gave them back
+their precious bit of paper and sent them packing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;One of them, I have told you, was a mountain man, Stephen Maher. He is
+commonly known among the people as &lsquo;the old fox of the mountain,&rsquo; and he
+is very proud of it!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This old Stephen Maher,&rdquo; said Mr. Brooke, &ldquo;is renowned in connection
+with a trial for murder, at <a name="page245" id="page245"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 245]
+</span>which he was summoned as a witness. When he
+was cross-examined by Mr. Molloy, Q.C., he fenced and dodged about with
+that distinguished counsellor for a long time, until getting vexed by
+the lawyer&rsquo;s persistency, he exclaimed, &lsquo;Now thin, Mr. Molloy, I&rsquo;d have
+ye to know that I had a cliverer man nor iver you was, Mr. Molloy, at
+me, and I had to shtan&rsquo; up to him for three hours before the Crowner,
+an&rsquo; he was onable to git the throoth out of me, so he was! so he was!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p>Neither did Dr. Dillon mention the fact that one of the demands made of
+Captain Hamilton, Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s agent, in December 1886, was that a
+Protestant tenant named Webster should be evicted by Mr. Brooke from a
+farm for which he had paid his rent, to make room for the return thither
+of a Roman Catholic tenant named Lenahan, previously evicted for
+non-payment of his rent.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s grandfather bought the Coolgreany property in 1864, he
+adopted a system of betterments, which has been ever since kept up on
+the estate. Nearly every tenant&rsquo;s house on the property has been slated,
+and otherwise repaired by the landlord, nor has one penny ever been
+added on that account to the rents.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 246]
+</span>In the village of Coolgreany all the houses on one side of the main
+street were built in this way by the landlord, and the same thing was
+done in the village of Croghan, where twenty tenants have a grazing
+right of three sheep for every acre held on the Croghan Mountain,
+pronounced by the valuers of the Land Court to be one of the best
+grazing mountains in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hamilton became the agent of the property in 1879, on the death
+of Mr. Vesey. One of his earliest acts was to advise Mr. Brooke to grant
+an abatement of 25 per cent. in June 1881, while the Land Act was
+passing. At the same time, he cautioned the tenants that this was only a
+temporary reduction, and advised them to get judicial rents fixed.</p>
+
+<p>The League advised them not to do this, but to demand 25 per cent.
+reduction again in December 1881. This demand was rejected, and forty
+writs were issued. The tenants thereupon in January 1882 came in and
+paid the full rent, with the costs.</p>
+
+<p>Eleven tenants after this went into Court, and in 1883 the
+Sub-Commissioners cut down their rents. In five cases Mr. Brooke
+appealed. What was the result before the Chief Commissioner? The rent <a name="page247" id="page247"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 247]
+</span>of
+Mary Green, which had been &pound;43, and had been cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners to &pound;39, was restored to &pound;43; the rent of Mr. Kavanagh,
+cut down from &pound;57 to &pound;52, was restored to &pound;55; the rent of Pat Kehoe
+(one of the two tenants &ldquo;ejected&rdquo; from Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s office as already
+stated), cut down from &pound;81 to &pound;70, was restored to &pound;81; the rent of
+Graham, cut down from &pound;38 to &pound;32, 10s., was restored to &pound;38. Other
+reductions were maintained.</p>
+
+<p>This appears to be the record of &ldquo;rack-renting&rdquo; on the Coolgreany
+property.</p>
+
+<p>There are 114 tenants, of whom 15 hold under judicial rents; 22 are
+leaseholders, and 77 are non-judicial yearly tenants. There are 12
+Protestants holding in all a little more than 1200 acres. All the rest
+are Catholics, 14 of these being cottier tenants. The estate consists of
+5165 acres. The average is about &pound;24, and the average rental about &pound;26,
+10s. The gross rental is &pound;2614, of which &pound;1000 go to the jointure of Mr.
+Brooke&rsquo;s mother, and &pound;800 are absorbed by the tithe charges, half
+poor-rates and other taxes. During the year 1886, in which this war was
+declared against him, Mr. Brooke spent &pound;714 in improvements upon the
+property: so in <a name="page248" id="page248"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 248]
+</span>that year his income from Coolgreany was practically
+<i>nil</i>.</p>
+
+<p>What in these circumstances would have been the position of this
+landlord had he not possessed ample means not invested in this
+particular estate? And what has been the result to the tenants of this
+conflict into which it seems clear that they were led, less to protect
+any direct interest of their own than to jeopardise their homes and
+their livelihood for the promotion of a general agrarian agitation? It
+is not clear that they are absolutely so far out of pocket, for I find
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Inch and Gorey rose from
+&pound;3699, 5s. 4d. in 1880 to &pound;5308, 13s. in 1887, showing an increase of
+&pound;1609, 7s. 8d. But they are out of house and home and work, entered
+pupils in that school of idleness and iniquity which has been kept by
+one Preceptor from the beginning of time.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 249]
+</span>CHAPTER XV.<a id="footnotetag25"
+ name="footnotetag25"></a><a href="#footnote25"><sup>25</sup></a></h2>
+
+
+<p>* * * *&mdash;Mrs. Kavanagh was quite right when she told me at Borris in
+March that this country should be seen in June! The drive to this lovely
+place this morning was one long enchantment of verdure and hawthorn
+blossoms and fragrance.</p>
+
+<p>I came over from London to bring to a head some inquiries which have too
+long delayed the publication of this diary. My intention had been to go
+directly to Thurles, but a telegram which I received from the Archbishop
+of Cashel just before <a name="page250" id="page250"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 250]
+</span>I left telling me that he could not be at home for
+the last three days of the week, I came directly here. Nothing can be
+more utterly unlike the popular notions of Ireland and of Irish life
+than the aspect of this most smiling and beautiful region: nothing more
+thoroughly Irish than its people.</p>
+
+<p>* * * who is one of the most active and energetic of Irish landlords,
+lives part of the year abroad, but keeps up his Irish property with
+care, at the expense, I suspect, of his estates elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>From a noble avenue of trees, making the highway like the main road of a
+private park, we turned into a literal paradise of gardens. The air was
+balmy with their wealth of odours. &ldquo;Oh! yes, sir,&rdquo; said the coachman,
+with an air of sympathetic pride, &ldquo;our lady is just the greatest lady in
+all this land for flowers!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And for ivy, he might have added. We drove between green walls of ivy up
+to a house which seemed itself to be built of ivy, like that wonderful
+old mansion of Castle Leod in Scotland. Here, plainly, is another centre
+of &ldquo;sweetness and light,&rdquo; the abolition of which must make, not this
+region alone, but Ireland poorer in that precise form of wealth, which,
+as Laboulaye has shown in one of the best of his lectures, is absolutely
+identical with <a name="page251" id="page251"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 251]
+</span>civilisation. It is such places as this, which, in the
+interest of the people, justify the exemption from redistribution and
+resettlement, made in one of a series of remarkable articles on Ireland
+recently published in the <i>Birmingham Post</i>, of lands, the &ldquo;breaking up
+of which would interfere with the amenity of a residence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>* * * relations with all classes of the people here are so cordial and
+straightforward that he has been easily able to give me to-day, what I
+have sought in vain elsewhere in Ireland, an opportunity of conversing
+frankly and freely with several labouring men. For obvious reasons these
+men, as a rule, shrink from any expression of their real feelings. Their
+position is apparently one of absolute dependence either upon the
+farmers or the landlords, there being no other local market for their
+labour, which is their only stock-in-trade. As one of them said to me
+to-day, &ldquo;The farmers will work a man just as long as they can&rsquo;t help it,
+and then they throw him away.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I asked if there were no regular farm-labourers hired at fixed rates by
+the year?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! very few&mdash;less now than ever; and there&rsquo;ll be fewer before there&rsquo;ll
+be more. The farmers don&rsquo;t want to pay the labourers or to pay the
+landlords; <a name="page252" id="page252"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 252]
+</span>they want the land and the work for nothing, sir,&mdash;they do
+indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What does a farm-hand get,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;if he is hired for a long time?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, permanent men, they&rsquo;ll get 6s. a week with breakfast and dinner,
+or 7s. maybe, with one meal; and a servant-boy, sir, he&rsquo;ll get 2s. a
+week or may be 3s. with his board; but it&rsquo;s seldom he gets it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what has he for his board?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, stirabout; and then twice a week coorse Russian or American meat,
+what they call the &lsquo;kitchen,&rsquo; and they like it better than good meat,
+sir, because it feeds the pot more.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>By this I found he meant that the &ldquo;coorse meat&rdquo; gave out more
+&ldquo;unctuosity&rdquo; in the boiling&mdash;the meat being always served up boiled in a
+pot with vegetables, like the &ldquo;bacon and greens&rdquo; of the &ldquo;crackers&rdquo; in
+the South.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And nothing else?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; buttermilk and potatoes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And these wages are the highest?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I know a boy got 5s., but by living in his father&rsquo;s house, and
+working out it was he got it. And then they go over to England to work.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What wages do they get there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 253]
+</span>&ldquo;Oh, it differs, but they do well; 9s. a week, I think, and their board,
+and straw to sleep on in the stables.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But doesn&rsquo;t it cost them a good deal to go and come?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no; they get cheap rates. They send them from Galway to Dublin like
+cattle, at &pound;2, 5s. a car, and that makes about 1s. 6d. a head; and then
+they are taken over on the steamers very cheap. Often the graziers that
+do large business with the companies, will have a right to send over a
+number of men free; and they stowaway too; and then on the railways in
+England they get passes free often from cattle-dealers, specially when
+they are coming back, and the dealers don&rsquo;t want their passes. They do
+very well. They&rsquo;ll bring back &pound;7 and &pound;10. I was on a boat once, and
+there was a man; he was drunk; he was from Galway somewhere, and they
+took away and kept for him &pound;18, all in good golden sovereigns; that was
+the most I ever saw. And he was drunk, or who&rsquo;d ever have known he had
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do the farmers build houses for the labourers?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Build houses, is it! Glory be to God! who ever heard of such a thing?
+The farmers are a poor proud lot. They&rsquo;d let a labourer die in the
+ditch!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 254]
+</span>All that this poor man said was corroborated by another man of a higher
+class, very familiar with the conditions of life and labour here, and
+indeed one of the most interesting men I have met in Ireland. Born the
+son of a labouring man, he was educated by a priest and educated
+himself, till he fitted himself for the charge of a small school, which
+he kept to such good purpose that in eighteen years he saved &pound;1100, with
+which capital he resolved to begin life as a small farmer and
+shopkeeper. He had studied all the agricultural works he could get, and
+before he went fairly into the business, he travelled on the Continent,
+looking carefully into the methods of culture and manner of life of the
+people, especially in Italy and in Belgium. The Belgian farming gave him
+new ideas of what might be done in Ireland, and those ideas he has put
+into practice, with the best results.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;On the same land with my neighbours,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I double their
+production. Where they get two tons of hay I get four or four and a
+half, where they get forty-five barrels of potatoes I get a hundred.
+Only the other day I got &pound;20 for a bullock I had taken pains with to
+fatten him up scientifically. Of course I had a small capital to start
+with: but where did I get that? Not from <a name="page255" id="page255"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 255]
+</span>the Government. I earned and
+saved it myself; and then I wasn&rsquo;t above learning how best to use it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He thinks the people here&mdash;though by no means what they might be with
+more thrift and knowledge&mdash;much better off than the same class in many
+other parts of Ireland. There are no &ldquo;Gombeen men&rdquo; here, he says, and no
+usurious shopkeepers. &ldquo;The people back each other in a friendly way when
+they need help.&rdquo; Many of the labourers, he says, are in debt to him, but
+he never presses them, and they are very patient with each other. They
+would do much better if any pains were taken to teach them. It is his
+belief that agricultural schools and model farms would do more than
+almost any measure that could be devised for bringing up the standard of
+comfort and prosperity here, and making the country quiet.</p>
+
+<p>It is the opinion of this man that the people of this place have been
+led to regard the Papal Decree as a kind of attack on their liberties,
+and that they are quite as likely to resist as to obey it. For his own
+part, he thinks Ireland ought to have her own parliament, and make her
+own laws. He is not satisfied with the laws actually made, though he
+admits they are better than the older laws were. &ldquo;The tenants get their
+own improvements now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and in <a name="page256" id="page256"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 256]
+</span>old times the more a man
+improved the worse it was for him, the agent all the while putting up
+the rents.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But he does not want Irish independence. &ldquo;The people that talk that
+way,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;have never travelled. They don&rsquo;t see how idle it is for
+Ireland to talk about supporting herself. She just can&rsquo;t do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Not less interesting was my talk to-day with quite a different person.
+This was a keen-eyed, hawk-billed, wiry veteran of the &rsquo;48. As a youth
+he had been out with &ldquo;Meagher of the Sword,&rdquo; and his eyes glowed when he
+found that I had known that champion of Erin. &ldquo;I was out at Ballinagar,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;there were five hundred men with guns, and five hundred
+pikemen.&rdquo; It struck me he would like to be going &ldquo;out&rdquo; again in the same
+fashion, but he had little respect for the &ldquo;Nationalists.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s too many lawyers among them,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;too many lawyers and
+too many dealers. The lawyers are doing well, thanks to the League. Oh
+yes!&rdquo; with a knowing chuckle, and a light of mischief in his eye; &ldquo;the
+lawyers are doing very well! There&rsquo;s one little bit of a solicitor not
+far from here was of no good at all four years ago, and now they tell me
+he&rsquo;s made four thousand pounds in three years&rsquo; time, <a name="page257" id="page257"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 257]
+</span>good money, and got
+it all in hand! And there&rsquo;s another, I hear, has made six thousand. The
+lawyers that call themselves Nationalists, they just keep mischief
+agoing to further themselves. What do they care for the labourers? Why,
+no more than the farmers do&mdash;and what would become of the poor men! * *
+* * here, he is making * * * * * * * and he keeps more poor men going
+than all the lawyers and all the farmers in the place a good part of the
+year.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are the labourers,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;Nationalists?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t know what they are,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;They hate the farmers,
+but they love Ireland, and they all stand together for the counthry!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How is it with the Plan of Campaign and the Boycotting?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now what use have the labourers got for the Plan of Campaign? No more
+than for the moon! And for the Boycotting, I never liked it&mdash;but I was
+never afraid of it&mdash;and there&rsquo;s not been much of it here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will the Papal Decree put a stop to what there is of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t mind the Pope&rsquo;s Decree no more than that door!&rdquo; he exclaimed
+indignantly. &ldquo;Hasn&rsquo;t <a name="page258" id="page258"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 258]
+</span>he enough, sure, to mind in Rome? Why didn&rsquo;t he
+defend his own country, not bothering about Ireland!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are you not a Catholic, then?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, I&rsquo;m a Catholic, but I wouldn&rsquo;t mind the Decree. Only remember,&rdquo;
+he added, after a pause, &ldquo;just this: it don&rsquo;t trouble me, for I&rsquo;ve
+nothing to do with the Plan of Campaign&mdash;only I don&rsquo;t want the Pope to
+be meddlin&rsquo; in matters that don&rsquo;t concern him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s out of respect, then, for the Pope that you wouldn&rsquo;t mind the
+Decree?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just that, intirely! It was some of them Englishmen wheedled it out of
+him, you may be sure, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am told you went out to America once.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I went there in &rsquo;48, and I came back in &rsquo;51.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What made you go?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is it what made me go?&rdquo; he replied, with a sudden fierceness in his
+voice. &ldquo;It was the evictions made me go; that we was put out of the good
+holding my father had, and his father before him; and I can never
+forgive it, never! But I came back; and it was * * * father that was <a name="page259" id="page259"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 259]
+</span>the
+good man to me and to mine, else where would I be?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I afterwards learned from * * * * that the evictions of which the old
+man spoke with so much bitterness were made in carrying out important
+improvements, and that it was quite true that his father had greatly
+befriended the emigrant when he got enough of the New World and came
+home.</p>
+
+<p>It was curious to see the old grudge fresh and fierce in the old man&rsquo;s
+heart, but side by side with it the lion lying down with the lamb&mdash;a
+warm and genuine recognition of the kindness and help bestowed on
+himself. His resentment against the landlord&rsquo;s action in one generation
+did not in the least interfere with his recognition of the landlord&rsquo;s
+usefulness and liberality in the next generation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t like America?&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Where did you live there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I lived at North Brookfield in Massachusetts, a year or two,&rdquo; he
+replied, &ldquo;with Governor Amasa Walker. Did you know him? He was a good
+man; he was fond of the people, but he thought too much of the nagurs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;I know all about him, and he was, as you say, a very
+good man, even if he was <a name="page260" id="page260"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 260]
+</span>an abolitionist. But why didn&rsquo;t you stay in
+North Brookfield?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it was a poor country indeed! A blast of wind would blow all the
+ground away there was! It does no good to the people, going to America,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;they come back worse than they went!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He is at work now in some quarries here.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The quarrymen get six shillings a week,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;with bread and tea
+and butter and meat three times a week. With nine shillings a week and
+board, a man&rsquo;ll make himself bigger than * * *!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Was the country quiet now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This country here? Oh! it&rsquo;s very quiet; with potatoes at 3s. 6d. a
+barrel, it&rsquo;s a good year for the people. They&rsquo;re a very quiet
+people,&rdquo;&mdash;in corroboration apparently of which statement he told me a
+story of a coroner&rsquo;s jury called to sit on the body of a man found on
+the highway shot through the head, which returned an unanimous verdict
+of &ldquo;Died by the visitation of God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This country is dominated by the Rocky Hills climbing up to Cullenagh,
+which divides the Barrow valley from the Nore. We drove this afternoon
+to * a most lovely place. The mansion there is now shut <a name="page261" id="page261"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 261]
+</span>up and
+dismantled, but the park and the grounds are very beautiful, with a
+beauty rather enhanced than diminished by the somewhat unkempt
+luxuriance of the vegetation. We passed a now well-grown tree planted by
+the Prince of Wales * * * * * * and drove over many miles of excellent
+road made by * * * * * * * * employs * * * * * * * * regularly, * * *
+men as labourers, cartmen and masons, to whom he pays out annually the
+sum of * * Mr. * * who, by the way, rather resented my asking him if he
+came of one of the Cromwellian English families so numerous here, and
+informed me that his people came over with Strongbow&mdash;assures me that
+but for these works of * * * * these men under him would be literally
+without occupation. In addition to these there are about a dozen more
+men employed * * as gamekeepers and plantation-men. At the * * places
+belonging to * * * * * * * * * * above eighty men find constant
+employment, and receive regular wages amounting to over &pound;4000. Were * *
+* * dispossessed or driven out of Ireland, all <a name="page262" id="page262"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 262]
+</span>this outlay would come to
+an end, and with what result to these working-men? As things now are,
+while * * * working-men receive a regular wage of five shillings, the
+same men, as farmers&rsquo; labourers, would receive, now and then, five
+shillings a week, and that without food! I saw enough in the course of
+our afternoon&rsquo;s drive to satisfy me that my informant of the morning had
+probably not overstated matters when he told me that for at least
+seventy per cent. of the work done by the labourers here, from November
+to May, they have to look to the landlords. On the property of * * as
+well as on the neighbouring properties * * * * * * * the houses have
+been generally put up by the landlords. We called in the course of the
+afternoon upon a labouring man who lives with his wife in a very neat,
+cozy, and quite new house, built recently for him by * *. These good
+people have been living on this property for now nearly half a century.
+Their new house having been built for them, * * has had an agreement
+prepared, under which it may be secured to them. The terms have all been
+discussed and found satisfactory, but the old labourer now hesitates
+<a name="page263" id="page263"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 263]
+</span>about signing the agreement. He gives, and can be got to give, no reason
+for this; but when we drove up he came out to greet us in the most
+friendly manner. We went in and found his wife, a shrewd, sharp-eyed,
+little old dame, with whom * * * * fell into a confabulation, while I
+went into the next room with the labourer himself. The house was neatly
+furnished&mdash;with little ornaments and photographs on the mantel-shelf,
+and nothing of the happy-go-lucky look so common about the houses of the
+working people in Ireland, as well as about the houses of the lesser
+squires.</p>
+
+<p>I paid him a compliment on the appearance of his house and grounds.
+&ldquo;Yes, sir!&rdquo; he answered: &ldquo;it&rsquo;s a very good place it is, and * * * * has
+built it just to please us.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I am told you want to leave it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, no, that is not so, sir, indeed at all! We&rsquo;ve three children you
+see, sir, in America&mdash;two girls and a boy we have.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And where are they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, the girls they&rsquo;re not in any factory at all. They&rsquo;re like leddies,
+living out in a place they call * * in Massachusetts; and the lad, he
+was on a farm there. But we don&rsquo;t know where he is nor <a name="page264" id="page264"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 264]
+</span>his sisters any
+more just now. And the wife, she thinks she would like to go out to
+America and see the children.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you hear from them regularly?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s only a few pounds they send, but they&rsquo;re doing very well.
+Domestics they are, quite like leddies; there&rsquo;s their pictures on the
+shelf.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what would you do there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! we&rsquo;d have lodgings, the wife says, sir. But I like the ould place
+myself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think you are quite right there,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;And do you get work
+here from the farmers as the labourers do in my country?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Work from the farmers, sir?&rdquo; he answered, rather sharply. &ldquo;What they
+can&rsquo;t help we get, but no more! If the farmers in America is like them,
+it&rsquo;s not I would be going there! The farmers! For the farmers, a
+labourer, sir, is not of the race of Adam! They think any place good
+enough for a labourer&mdash;any place and any food! Is the farmers that way
+in America?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know that they are so very much more liberal than your
+farmers are,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;but I think they&rsquo;d have to treat you as being
+of the race of Adam! But are not the farmers here, or <a name="page265" id="page265"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 265]
+</span>the Guardians,
+obliged to build houses for the labourers? I thought there was an Act of
+Parliament about that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And so there is but what&rsquo;s the good of it? It&rsquo;s just to get the
+labourers&rsquo; votes, and then they fool the labourers, just making them
+quarrel about where the cottages shall be, what they call the &lsquo;sites&rsquo;;
+and then there&rsquo;s no cottages built at all, at all. It&rsquo;s the lawyers, you
+see, sir, gets in with the farmers&mdash;the strongest farmers&mdash;and then they
+just make fools of the labourers as if there was no Act of Parliament at
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But if the labourers want to go away, to emigrate,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;as you
+want to do, to America, don&rsquo;t the farmers, or the Government, or the
+landlords, help them to get away and make a start?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not a bit of it, sir,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;not a bit of it. I believe,
+though,&rdquo; he added after a moment; &ldquo;I believe they do get some help to go
+to Australia. But they&rsquo;re mostly no good that goes that way. The best is
+them that go for themselves, or their friends help them. But there&rsquo;s not
+so many going this year.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>When we drove away I asked * * if he had made any progress towards a
+signature of the agreement with the labourer&rsquo;s wife.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 266]
+</span>&ldquo;No; she couldn&rsquo;t be got to say yes or no. I asked her,&rdquo; said * * &ldquo;what
+reason they had for imagining that after all these years I would try to
+do them an injury? She protested they never thought of such a thing; but
+she couldn&rsquo;t be brought to say she wished her husband to sign the paper.
+It&rsquo;s very odd, indeed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I couldn&rsquo;t help suspecting that the <i>materfamilias</i> was at the bottom of
+it all, and that she was bent upon going out to America to participate
+in the prosperity of her two daughters, who were living &ldquo;like leddies&rdquo;
+at * * in Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>The incident recalled to me something which happened years ago when I
+was returning with the Storys from Rome to Boston. Our Cunarder, in the
+middle of the night, off the Irish coast, ran down and instantly sank a
+small schooner.</p>
+
+<p>In a wonderfully short time we had come-to, and a boat&rsquo;s crew had
+succeeded in picking up and bringing all the poor people on board. Among
+them was a wizened old woman, upon whom all sorts of kind attentions
+were naturally lavished by the ship&rsquo;s company. She could not be
+persuaded to go into a cabin after she had recovered from the shock and
+the fright of the accident, but, comforted <a name="page267" id="page267"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 267]
+</span>and clothed with new and dry
+garments, she took refuge under one of the companion-ways, and there,
+sitting huddled up, with her arms about her knees, she crooned and
+moaned to herself, &ldquo;I was near being in a wetter and a warmer place; I
+was near being in a wetter and a warmer place!&rdquo; by the half hour
+together. We found that the poor old soul had been to Liverpool to see
+her son off on a sailing ship as an emigrant to America. So a
+subscription was soon made up to send her on our arrival to New York
+there to await her son. We had some trouble in making her understand
+what was to be done with her, but when she finally got it fairly into
+her head, gleams of mingled surprise and delight came over her withered
+face, and she finally broke out, &ldquo;Oh, then, glory be to God! it&rsquo;s a
+mercy that I was drownded! glory be to God! and it&rsquo;s the proud boy
+Terence will be when he gets out to America to find his poor ould mother
+waiting for him there that he left behind him in Liverpool, and quite
+the leddy with all this good gold money in her hand, glory be to God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On our way back to * * we passed through * * a very neat
+prosperous-looking town, which * * tells me is growing up on <a name="page268" id="page268"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 268]
+</span>the heels
+of * *. * * * was one of the few places at which the &ldquo;no rent&rdquo;
+manifesto, issued by Mr. Parnell and his colleagues from their prison in
+Kilmainham, during the confinement of Mr. Davitt at Portland, and
+without concert with him, was taken up by a village curate and commended
+to the people. He was arrested for it by Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s Government, and
+locked up for six weeks.</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Saturday, June 23d.</i>&mdash;</span>I left * * * yesterday morning early on
+an &ldquo;outside car,&rdquo; with one of my fellow-guests in that &ldquo;bower of
+beauty,&rdquo; who was bent on killing a salmon somewhere in the Nore * * We
+drove through a most varied and picturesque country, viewing on the way
+the seats of Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, both finely
+situated in well-wooded parks. Mr. Stubber was formerly master of the
+Queen&rsquo;s County hounds, a famous pack, which, as our jarvey put it,
+&ldquo;brought a power of money into the county, and made it aisy for a poor
+man.&rdquo; But the local agitations wore out his patience, and he put the
+pack down some years ago. Not far from his house is an astonishing
+modern &ldquo;tumulus,&rdquo; or mound of hewn <a name="page269" id="page269"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 269]
+</span>and squared stones. These it seems
+were quarried and brought here by him, with the intention of building a
+new and handsome residence. This intention he abandoned under the same
+annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They call it Mr. Stubber&rsquo;s Cairn,&rdquo; said the jarvey; &ldquo;and a sorrowful
+sight it is, to think of the work it would have given the people,
+building the big house that&rsquo;ll never be built now, I&rsquo;m thinking.&rdquo; If Mr.
+Stubber should become an &ldquo;absentee,&rdquo; he can hardly, I think, be blamed
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>His property marches with that of Mr. Robert Staples, who comes of a
+Gloucestershire family planted in Ireland under Charles I.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Staples is farming his own lands,&rdquo; said our jarvey, when I
+commented on the fine appearance of some fields as we drove by; &ldquo;and
+he&rsquo;ll be doing very well this year. Ah! he comes and goes, but he&rsquo;s here
+a great deal, and he looks after everything himself; that&rsquo;s the reason
+the fields is good.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This is a property of some 1500 statute acres. Only last March the
+landlord took over from one tenant, who was in arrears of two years and
+a half and owed him some &pound;300, a farm of 90 acres, giving the man fifty
+pounds to boot, and bidding him go in peace. I wonder whether this
+proceeding would <a name="page270" id="page270"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 270]
+</span>make the landlord a &ldquo;land-grabber,&rdquo; and expose him to
+the pains and penalties of &ldquo;boycotting&rdquo;?</p>
+
+<p>On this place, too, it seems that Mr. Staples&rsquo;s grandfather put up many
+houses for the tenants; a thing worth noting, as one of not a few
+instances I have come upon to show that it will not do to accept without
+examination the sweeping statements so familiar to us in America, that
+improvements have never been made by the landlord upon Irish estates.</p>
+
+<p>My companion had meant to put me down at the railway station of
+Attanagh, there to catch a good train to Kilkenny.</p>
+
+<p>But we had a capital nag, and reached Attanagh so early that we
+determined to drive on to Ballyragget.</p>
+
+<p>From Attanagh to Ballyragget the road ran along a plateau which
+commanded the most beautiful views of the valley of the Nore and of the
+finely wooded country beyond. Ballyragget itself is a brisk little
+market town, the American influence showing itself here, as in so many
+other places, in such trifles as the signs on the shops which describe
+them as &ldquo;stores.&rdquo; My salmon-fishing companion put me down at the station
+and went off to the <a name="page271" id="page271"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 271]
+</span>river, which flows through the town, and is here a
+swift and not inconsiderable stream.</p>
+
+<p>An hour in the train took me to Kilkenny, where I met by appointment
+several persons whom I had been unable to see during my previous visit
+in March.</p>
+
+<p>These gentlemen, experienced agents, gave me a good deal of information
+as to the effect of the present state of things upon the &ldquo;<i>moral</i>&rdquo; of
+the tenantry in different parts of Ireland. On one estate, for example,
+in the county of Longford, a tenant has been doing battle for the cause
+of Ireland in the following extraordinary fashion.</p>
+
+<p>He held certain lands at a rental of &pound;23, 4s. Being, to use the
+picturesque language of the agent, a &ldquo;little good for tenant,&rdquo; he fell
+into arrears, and on the 1st of May 1885 owed nearly three years&rsquo; rent,
+or &pound;63, 12s., in addition to a sum of &pound;150 which he had borrowed of his
+amiable landlord three or four years before to enable him to work his
+farm. Of this total sum of &pound;213, 12s. he positively refused to pay one
+penny. Proceedings were accordingly taken against him, and he was
+evicted. By this eviction his title to the tenancy was broken. The
+landlord nevertheless, for the sake of peace and quiet, offered <a name="page272" id="page272"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 272]
+</span>to allow
+him to sell, to a man who wished to take the place, any interest he
+might have had in the holding, and to forgive both the arrears of the
+rent and the &pound;150 which had been borrowed by him. The ex-tenant flatly
+refused to accept this offer, became a weekly pensioner upon the
+National League, and declared war. The landlord was forced to get a
+caretaker for the place from the Property Defence Association at a cost
+of &pound;1 per week, to provide a house for a police protection party, and to
+defray the expenses of that party upon fuel and lights. Nor was this
+all. The landlord found himself further obliged to employ men from the
+same Property Defence Association to cut and save the hay-crop on the
+land, and when this had been done no one could be found to buy the crop.
+The crop and the lands were &ldquo;boycotted.&rdquo; It was only in May last that a
+purchaser could be found for the hay cut and saved two years ago&mdash;this
+purchaser being himself a &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; man on an adjoining property. He
+bought the hay, paying for it a price which did not quite cover one-half
+the cost of sowing it!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No one denies for a moment,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;that the tenant in all
+this business has been more than fairly, even generously, treated by the
+estate; <a name="page273" id="page273"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 273]
+</span>yet no one seems to think it anything but natural and reasonable
+that he should demand, as he now demands, to be put back into the
+possession of his forfeited tenancy at a certain rent fixed by himself,&rdquo;
+which he will obligingly agree to pay, &ldquo;provided that the hay cut and
+saved on the property two years ago is accounted for to him by the
+estate!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In another case an agent, Mr. Ivough, had to deal with a body of five
+hundred tenants on a considerable estate. Of these tenants, two hundred
+settled their rents with the landlord before the passing of the Land Act
+of 1881, and valuations made by the landlord&rsquo;s valuer, with their full
+assent. There was no business for the lawyers, so far as they were
+concerned, and no compulsion of any sort was put on them. Among them was
+a man who had married the daughter of an old tenant on the estate, and
+so came into a holding of 12 Irish, or more than 20 statute, acres, at a
+rental of &pound;18 a year. The valuer reduced this to &pound;14, 10s., which
+satisfied the tenant, and as the agent agreed to make this reduced
+valuation retroactive, all went as smoothly as possible for two years,
+when the tenant began to fall into arrears. When the Sub-Commissioners,
+between 1885 and 1887, took to <a name="page274" id="page274"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 274]
+</span>making sweeping reductions, the tenants
+who had settled freely under the recent valuation grumbled bitterly. As
+one of them tersely put it to the agent, &ldquo;We were a parcel of bloody
+fools, and you ought to have told us these Sub-Commissioners were
+coming!&rdquo; Mr. Sweeney, the tenant by marriage already mentioned, was not
+content to express his particular dissatisfaction in idle words, but
+kept on going into arrears. In May 1888 things came to a crisis. The
+agent refused to accept a settlement which included the payment by him
+of the costs of the proceedings forced upon him by his tenant. &ldquo;You have
+had a good holding,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;with plenty of water and good
+land. In this current year two acres of your wheat will pay the whole
+rent. You have broken up and sold bit by bit a mill that was on the
+place; and above all, when Mr. Gladstone made us accept the judicial
+rents, he told us we might be sure, if we did this, of punctual payment.
+That was the one consideration held out to us. And we are entitled to
+that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenant being out of his holding, the agent wishes to put another
+tenant into it. But the holding is &ldquo;boycotted.&rdquo; Several tenants are
+anxious <a name="page275" id="page275"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 275]
+</span>for it, and would gladly take it, but they dare not The great
+evicted will neither sell any tenant-right he may have, nor pay his
+arrears and costs, nor give up the place to another tenant. To put
+Property Defence men on the holding would cost the landlord &pound;2, 10s. a
+week, and do him no great good, as the evicted man &ldquo;holds the fort,&rdquo;
+being established in a house which he occupies on an adjoining property,
+and for which presumably he pays his rent. It seems as if Mr. Sweeney
+were inspired by the example of another tenant, named Barry, who, before
+the passing of the Land Act of 1881, gave up freely a holding of 20
+acres, on a property managed by Mr. Kough; but as he was on such good
+terms with the agent that he could borrow money of him, he begged the
+agent to let him retain at a low rent a piece of this surrendered land
+directly adjoining his house. He asked this in the name of his eight or
+nine children, and it was granted him. The agent afterwards found that
+the piece of land in question was by far the best of the surrendered
+holding. But that is a mere detail. This ingenious tenant Barry, living
+now on another estate just outside the grasp of the agent, has
+systematically &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; for the last nine years <a name="page276" id="page276"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 276]
+</span>the land which he
+gave up, feeding his own cattle upon it freely meanwhile, and keeping
+all would-be tenants at a distance! &ldquo;He is now,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;quite
+a wealthy man in his way, jobbing cattle at all the great markets!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When the eviction of Sweeney took place,&rdquo; said the agent, &ldquo;I was
+present in person, as I thought I ought to be, and the result is that I
+have been held up to the execration of mankind as a monster for putting
+out a child in a cradle into a storm. As a matter of fact,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;there was a cradle in the way, which the sheriff-Officer gently took
+up, and by direction of the tenant&rsquo;s wife removed. I made no remark
+about it at all, but a local paper published a lying story, which the
+publisher had to retract, that I had said &lsquo;Throw out the child!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Two priests,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;came quite uninvited and certainly without
+provocation, to see me, and one of them shouted out, &lsquo;Ah! we know you&rsquo;ll
+be making another Coolgreany,&rsquo; which was as much as to say there &lsquo;would
+be bloodshed.&rsquo; This was the more intolerable,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that, as I
+afterwards found, I had already done for the sake of the tenants
+precisely what these ecclesiastics professed that they had come to ask
+me to do!</p>
+
+<p><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 277]
+</span>&ldquo;For thirty years,&rdquo; said this gentleman, &ldquo;I have lived in the midst of
+these people&mdash;and in all that time I have never had so much as a
+threatening letter. But after this story was published of my throwing
+out a cradle with a child in it, I was insulted in the street by a woman
+whom I had never seen before. Two girls, too, called out at the
+eviction, &lsquo;You&rsquo;ve bad pluck; why didn&rsquo;t you tell us you were coming down
+the day?&rsquo; and another woman made me laugh by crying after me, &lsquo;You&rsquo;ve
+two good-looking daughters, but you&rsquo;re a bad man yourself.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quite as instructive is the story given me on this occasion of the
+Tyaquin estate in the county of Galway. This estate is managed by an
+agent, Mr. Eichardson of Castle Coiner, in this county of Kilkenny.</p>
+
+<p>The rents on this Galway estate, as Mr. Richardson assures me, have been
+unaltered for between thirty and forty years, and some of them for even
+a longer period. For the last twenty-five years certainty, during which
+Mr. Richardson has been the agent of the estate, and probably, he
+thinks, for many years previous, there has never been a case of the
+non-payment of rent, except in recent years <a name="page278" id="page278"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 278]
+</span>when rents were withheld for
+a time for political reasons.</p>
+
+<p>Large sums of money have been laid out in various useful improvements.
+Constant occupation was given to those requiring it, until the agrarian
+agitation became fully developed. On the demesne and the home farms the
+best systems of reclaiming waste lands and the best systems of
+agriculture were practically exhibited, so that the estate was an
+agricultural free school for all who cared to learn.</p>
+
+<p>When the Land Act of 1881 was passed, almost all the tenants applied,
+and had judicial rents fixed, many of them by consent of the agent.</p>
+
+<p>In 1887 the tenants were called on as usual to pay these judicial rents.
+A large minority refused to do so except on certain terms, which were
+refused. The dispute continued for many months, but as the charges on
+the estate had to be met, the agent was obliged to give way, and allow
+an abatement of four shillings in the pound on these judicial rents.
+Some of these charges, to meet which the agent gave way, were for money
+borrowed from the Commissioners of Public Works to <i>improve the holdings
+of the tenants</i>. For these improvements thus thrown entirely upon the
+funds of the estate no increase of <a name="page279" id="page279"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 279]
+</span>rent or charge of any kind had been
+laid upon the tenants.</p>
+
+<p>When a settlement was agreed on, those of the tenants who had adopted
+the Plan came in a body to pay their rents on 3d January 1888. They
+stated that they were unable to pay more than the rent due up to
+November 1886, and that they would never have adopted the Plan had they
+not been driven into it by <i>sheer distress</i>. After which they handed Mr.
+Richardson a cheque drawn by John T. Dillon, Esq., M.P., for the amount
+banked with the National League.</p>
+
+<p>An article appeared shortly afterwards in a League newspaper, loudly
+boasting of the great victory won by Mr. Dillon, M.P., for the starving
+and poverty-stricken tenants. Two of these tenants (brothers) were under
+a yearly rent of &pound;7, 10s. They declared they could only pay &pound;3, 15s., or
+a <a name="page280" id="page280"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 280]
+</span>half-year&rsquo;s rent, and this only if they got an abatement of 15s. Yet
+these same tenants were then paying Mr. Richardson &pound;50 a year for a
+grass farm, and about &pound;12 for meadows, as well as &pound;30 a year more for a
+grass farm to an adjoining landlord.</p>
+
+<p>Another tenant who held a farm at &pound;13, 5s. a year declared he could only
+pay &pound;6, 12s. 6d., or a half-year&rsquo;s rent, if he got an abatement of &pound;1,
+6s. 6d. A very short time before, this tenant had taken a grass farm
+from an adjoining landlord, and he was so anxious to get it that he
+showed the landlord a bundle of large notes, amounting to rather more
+than &pound;300 sterling, in order to prove his solvency! The same tenant has
+since written a letter to Mr. Richardson offering &pound;50 a year for a grass
+farm!</p>
+
+<p>All these campaigners, Mr. Richardson says, &ldquo;with one noble exception,
+the wife of a tenant who was ill, declined to pay a penny of rent beyond
+November 1st, 1886,&rdquo; stating that they were &ldquo;absolutely unable&rdquo; to do
+more. So they all left the May 1887 rent unpaid, and the hanging gale to
+November 1887, which, however, they were not even asked to pay.</p>
+
+<p>The morning after the settlement many of the tenants who, when they were
+all present in a body on the previous evening, had declared their
+&ldquo;inability&rdquo; to pay the half-year&rsquo;s rent due down to May 1887,
+individually came to Mr. Richardson unasked, and paid it, some saying
+they had &ldquo;borrowed the money that night,&rdquo; but others frankly declaring
+that they dared not break the rule publicly, having been ordered by the
+League only <a name="page281" id="page281"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 281]
+</span>to pay to November 1886, for fear of the consequences. These
+would have been injury to their cattle, or the burning of their hay, or
+possibly murder.</p>
+
+<p>Of the country about Kilkenny, I am told, as of the country about
+Carlow, that nearly or quite seventy per cent, of the labourers are
+dependent upon the landlords from November to May for such employment as
+they get.</p>
+
+<p>The shopkeepers, too, are in a bad way, being in many cases reduced to
+the condition of mere agents of the great wholesale houses elsewhere,
+and kept going by these houses mainly in the hope of recovering old
+debts. There is a severe pressure of usury, too, upon the farmers. &ldquo;If a
+farmer,&rdquo; said one resident to me, &ldquo;wants to borrow a small sum of the
+Loan Fund Bank, he must have two securities&mdash;one of them a substantial
+man good for the debt. These two indorsers must be &lsquo;treated&rsquo; by the
+borrower whom they back; and he must pay them a weekly sum for the
+countenance they have given him, which not seldom amounts, before he
+gets through with the matter, to a hundred per cent, on the original
+loan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I am assured too that the consumption of spirits <a name="page282" id="page282"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 282]
+</span>all through this region
+has greatly increased of late years. &ldquo;The official reports will show
+you,&rdquo; said one gentleman, &ldquo;that the annual outlay upon whisky in Ireland
+equals the sum saved to the tenants by the reductions in rent.&rdquo; This is
+a proposition so remarkable that I simply record it for future
+verification, as having been made by a very quiet, cool, and methodical
+person, whose information on other points I have found to be correct. He
+tells me too, as of his own knowledge, that in going over some financial
+matters with a small farmer in his neighbourhood, he ascertained, beyond
+a peradventure, that this farmer annually spent in whisky, for the use
+of his family, consisting of himself, his wife and three adult children,
+nearly, or quite, <i>seventy pounds a year</i>! &ldquo;You won&rsquo;t believe this,&rdquo; he
+said to me; &ldquo;and if you print the statement nobody else will believe it;
+but for all that it is the simple unexaggerated truth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Falstaff&rsquo;s reckoning at Dame Quickly&rsquo;s becomes a moderate score in
+comparison with this!</p>
+
+<p>I spent half an hour again in the muniment-room at Kilkenny Castle,
+where, in the Expense-Book of the second Duke of Ormond, I found a
+supper <i>menu</i> worthy of record, as illustrating what people meant <a name="page283" id="page283"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 283]
+</span>by
+&ldquo;keeping open house&rdquo; in the great families of the time of Queen
+Anne.[Note <a href="#noteL">L.</a>]</p>
+
+<p>Taking a train early in the afternoon, I came on here in time to dine
+last night with Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, an uncompromising Protestant
+&ldquo;Home Ruler&rdquo;&mdash;as Protestant and as uncompromising as John Mitchel&mdash;whose
+recent pamphlet on &ldquo;Boycotting&rdquo; has deservedly attracted so much
+attention on both sides of the Irish Sea.</p>
+
+<p>I was first led into a correspondence with Mr. Rolleston by a remarkable
+article of his published in the <i>Dublin University Review</i> for February
+1886, on &ldquo;The Archbishop in Politics.&rdquo; In that article, Mr. Rolleston,
+while avowing himself to be robust enough to digest without much
+difficulty the <i>ex officio</i> franchise conferred upon the Catholic clergy
+by Mr. Parnell to secure the acceptance of his candidates at
+Parliamentary conventions, made a very firm and fearless protest against
+the attempt of the Archbishops of Dublin and Cashel to &ldquo;boycott&rdquo;
+Catholic criticism of the National League and its methods, by declaring
+such criticism to be &ldquo;a public insult&rdquo; offered, not to the Archbishops
+of Cashel and Dublin personally, or as political sup<a name="page284" id="page284"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 284]
+</span>porters of the
+National League, but to the Archbishops as dignitaries of the Catholic
+Church, and to their Archiepiscopal office. The &ldquo;boycotting,&rdquo; by
+clerical machinery, of independent lay opinion in civil matters, is to
+the body politic of a Catholic country what the germ of cancer is to the
+physical body. And though Mr. Rolleston, in this article, avowed himself
+to be a hearty supporter of the &ldquo;political programme of the National
+League,&rdquo; and went so far even as to maintain that the social boycotting,
+&ldquo;which makes the League technically an illegal conspiracy against law
+and individual liberty,&rdquo; might be &ldquo;in many cases justified by the
+magnitude of the legalised crime against which it was directed,&rdquo; it was
+obvious to me that he could not long remain blind to the true drift of
+things in an organisation condemned, by the conditions it has created
+for itself, to deal with the thinkers of Ireland as it deals with the
+tenants of Ireland. His recent pamphlet on &ldquo;Boycotting&rdquo; proves that I
+was right. What he said to me the other day in a letter about the
+pamphlet may be said as truly of the article. It was &ldquo;a shaft sunk into
+the obscure depths of Irish opinion, to bring to light and turn to
+service whatever there may be in those depths of <a name="page285" id="page285"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 285]
+</span>sound and healthy;&rdquo; and
+one of my special objects in this present visit to Ireland was to get a
+personal touch of the intellectual movement which is throwing such
+thinkers as Mr. Rolleston to the front.</p>
+
+<p>We were five at table, Mr. Rolleston&rsquo;s other guests being Mr. John
+O&rsquo;Leary, whose name is held in honour for his courage and honesty by all
+who know anything of the story of Ireland in our times, and who was sent
+a quarter of a century ago as a Fenian patriot&mdash;not into seclusion with
+sherry and bitters, at Kilmainham, like Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s &ldquo;suspects&rdquo; of
+1881&mdash;but like Michael Davitt, into the stern reality of penal
+servitude; Dr. Sigerson, Dean of the Faculty of Science of the Boyal
+University, and an authority upon the complicated question of Irish Land
+Tenures; and Mr. John F. Taylor, a leading barrister of Dublin, an ally
+on the Land Question of Mr. Davitt, and an outspoken Repealer of the
+Union of 1800.</p>
+
+<p>I have long wished to meet Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, who sent me, through a
+correspondent of mine, two years ago, one of the most thoughtful and
+well-considered papers I have ever read on the possibilities and
+impossibilities of Home Rule for Ireland; and it was a great pleasure to
+find in the man the eleva<a name="page286" id="page286"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 286]
+</span>tion of tone, the breadth of view, and the
+refined philosophic perception of the strong and weak points in the
+Irish case, which had charmed me in. the paper. Now that &ldquo;Conservative&rdquo;
+Englishmen have come to treat the main points of Chartism almost as
+commonplaces in politics, it is surely time for them to recognise the
+honesty and integrity of the spirit which revolted in the Ireland of
+1848 against the then seemingly hopeless condition of that country. Of
+that spirit Mr. O&rsquo;Leary is a living, earnest, and most interesting
+incarnation. He strikes one at once as a much younger man in all that
+makes the youth of the intellect and the emotions than any Nationalist
+M.P. of half his years whom I have ever met. No Irishman living has
+dealt stronger or more open blows than he against the English dominion
+in Ireland. Born in Tipperary, where he inherited a small property in
+houses, he was sent to Trinity College in Dublin, and while a student
+there was drawn into the &ldquo;Young Ireland&rdquo; party mainly by the poems of
+Thomas Davis. Late in the electrical year of the &ldquo;battle summer,&rdquo; 1848,
+he was arrested on suspicion of being concerned in a plot to rescue
+Smith O&rsquo;Brien and other state prisoners. The suspicion was well founded,
+but could not be estab<a name="page287" id="page287"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 287]
+</span>lished, and after a day or two he was liberated.
+From Trinity, after this, he went to the Queen&rsquo;s College in Cork, where
+he took his degree, and studied medicine. When the Fenian movement
+became serious, after the close of our American Civil War, O&rsquo;Leary threw
+himself into it with Stephens, Luby, and Charles Kickham. Stephens
+appointed him one of the chief organisers of the I.E.B. with Luby and
+Kickham, and he took charge of the <i>Irish People</i>&mdash;the organ of the
+Fenians of 1865. It was as a subordinate contributor to this journal
+that Sir William Harcourt&rsquo;s familiar Irish bogy, O&rsquo;Donovan Rossa<a id="footnotetag26"
+ name="footnotetag26"></a><a href="#footnote26"><sup>26</sup></a>,
+was arrested together with his chief, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, and with Kickham in
+1865, and found guilty, <a name="page288" id="page288"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 288]
+</span>with them, after a trial before Mr. Justice
+Keogh, of treason-felony. The speech then delivered by Mr. O&rsquo;Leary in
+the dock made a profound impression upon the public mind in America. It
+was the speech, not of a conspirator, but of a patriot. The indignation
+with which he repelled for himself and for his associate Luby the
+charges levelled at them both, without a particle of supporting
+evidence, by the prosecuting counsel, of aiming at massacre and plunder,
+was its most salient feature. The terrible sentence passed upon him, of
+penal servitude for twenty years, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary accepted with a calm
+dignity, which I am glad, for the sake of Irish manhood, to find that
+his friends here now recall with pride, when their ears are vexed by the
+shrill and clamorous complaints of more recent &ldquo;patriots,&rdquo; under the
+comparatively trivial punishments which they invite.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary and his companions were released and pardoned on
+condition of remaining beyond the British dominions until the expiration
+of their sentences. Mr. O&rsquo;Leary fixed his residence for a time in Paris,
+and thence went to America, where he and Kickham were regarded as the
+leaders of the American branch of the I. R. B. He returned to <a name="page289" id="page289"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 289]
+</span>Ireland in
+1885, his term of sentence having then expired, and it was shortly after
+his return that he gave to my correspondent the letter upon Irish
+affairs to which I have already referred. He had been chosen President
+of the &ldquo;Young Ireland Society&rdquo; of Dublin before he returned, and in that
+capacity delivered at the Rotunda, in the Irish capital, before a vast
+crowd assembled to welcome him back, an address which showed how
+thoughtfully and calmly he had devoted himself during his long years of
+imprisonment and exile to the cause of Ireland. Mr. William O&rsquo;Brien,
+M.P., and Mr. Redmond, M.P., took part in this reception, but their
+subsequent course shows that they can hardly have relished Mr. O&rsquo;Leary&rsquo;s
+fearless and outspoken protests against the intolerance and injustice of
+the agrarian organisation which controls their action. In England, as
+well as well as in Ireland, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary spoke to great multitudes of his
+countrymen, and always in the same sense. Mr. Rolleston tells me that
+Mr. O&rsquo;Leary&rsquo;s denunciations of &ldquo;the dynamite section of the Irish
+people,&rdquo; to use the euphemism of an American journal, &ldquo;are the only ones
+ever uttered by an Irish leader, lay or clerical.&rdquo; The day must come, if
+it be not already close at hand, when the Irish leader of <a name="page290" id="page290"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 290]
+</span>whom this can
+be truly said, must be felt by his own people to be the one man worthy
+of their trust. The thing that has been shall be, and there is nothing
+new under the sun. The Marats and the Robespierres, the Bar&egrave;res and the
+Collots, are the pallbearers, not the standard-bearers of liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the National League, as at present administered on the lines of
+the agrarian agitation, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary has so far preserved an attitude of
+neutrality, though he has never for a moment hesitated either in public
+or in private most vehemently to condemn such sworn Fenians as have
+accepted seats in the British Parliament, speaking his mind freely and
+firmly of them as &ldquo;double-oathed men&rdquo; playing a constitutional part with
+one hand, and a treasonable part with the other.</p>
+
+<p>Yet he is not at one with the extreme and fanatical Fenians who oppose
+constitutional agitation simply because it is constitutional. His
+objection to the existing Nationalism was exactly put, Mr. Rolleston
+tells me, by a clever writer in the Dublin <i>Mail</i>, who said that
+O&rsquo;Connell having tried &ldquo;moral force&rdquo; and failed, and the Fenians having
+tried &ldquo;physical force&rdquo; and failed, the Leaguers were now trying to
+succeed by the use of &ldquo;immoral force.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page291" id="page291"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 291]
+</span>Dr. Sigerson, who, as a man of science, must necessarily revolt from the
+coarse and clumsy methods of the blunderers who have done so much since
+1885 to discredit the cause of Ireland, evidently clings to the hope
+that something may still be saved from the visible wreck of what has
+come, even in Ireland, to be called &ldquo;Parnellism,&rdquo; and he good-naturedly
+persisted in speaking of our host last night and of his friends as
+&ldquo;mugwumps.&rdquo; For the &ldquo;mugwumps&rdquo; of my own country I have no particular
+admiration, being rather inclined, with my friend Senator Conkling (now
+gone to his rest from the racket of American politics), to regard them
+as &ldquo;Madonnas who wish it to be distinctly understood that they might
+have been Magdalens.&rdquo; But these Irish &ldquo;mugwumps&rdquo; seem to me to earn
+their title by simply refusing to believe that two and two, which make
+four in France or China, can be bullied into making five in Ireland.
+&ldquo;What certain &lsquo;Parnellites&rsquo; object to,&rdquo; said one of the company, &ldquo;is
+that we can&rsquo;t be made to go out gathering grapes of thorns or figs of
+thistles. Some of them expect to found an Irish republic on robbery, and
+to administer it by falsehood. We don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;<a id="footnotetag27"
+ name="footnotetag27"></a><a href="#footnote27"><sup>27</sup></a> This is precisely the
+<a name="page292" id="page292"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 292]
+</span>spirit in which Mr. Rolleston wrote to me not long before I left England
+this week. &ldquo;I have been slowly forced,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;to the conclusion
+that the National League is a body which deserves nothing but
+reprobation from all who wish well to Ireland. It has plunged this
+country into a state of moral degradation, from which it will take us at
+least a generation to recover. It is teaching the people that no law of
+justice, of candour, of honour, or of humanity can be allowed to
+interfere with the political ends of the moment. It is, in fact,
+absolutely divorcing morality from politics. The mendacity of some of
+its leaders is shameless and sickening, and still more sickening is the
+complete indifference with which this mendacity is regarded in Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p>It is the spirit, too, of a letter which I received not long ago from
+the west of Ireland, in which my correspondent quoted the bearer of one
+of the most distinguished of Irish names, and a strong &ldquo;Home Ruler,&rdquo; as
+saying to him, &ldquo;These Nationalists are stripping Irishmen as bare of
+moral sense as the Bushmen of South Africa.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This very day I find in one of the leading Nationalist journals here
+letters from Mr. Davitt, Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, and Mr. Taylor himself, which
+convict <a name="page293" id="page293"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 293]
+</span>that journal of making last week a statement about Mr. Taylor
+absolutely untrue, and, so far as appears, absolutely without the shadow
+of a foundation. These letters throw such a curious light on passing
+events here at this moment that I shall preserve them.<a id="footnotetag28"
+ name="footnotetag28"></a><a href="#footnote28"><sup>28</sup></a> The statement
+to which they refer was thus put in the journal which made it: &ldquo;We have
+absolute reason to know that when the last Coercion Act was in full
+swing this pure-souled and disinterested patriot (Mr. John F. Taylor)
+begged for, received, and accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship
+under a Coercion Government. As was wittily said at the time, He sold
+his principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+stirred the mess.&rdquo; This is no assertion &ldquo;upon hearsay&rdquo;&mdash;no publication of
+a rumour or report. It is an assertion made, not upon belief even, but
+upon a claim of &ldquo;absolute knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Yet to-day, in the same journal, I find Mr. Taylor declaring this
+statement, made upon a claim of &ldquo;absolute knowledge,&rdquo; to be &ldquo;absolutely
+untrue,&rdquo; and appealing in support of this declaration to Mr. Walker, the
+host of Lord Riand Mr. Morley, and to The M&lsquo;Dermot, Q.C., a conspicuous
+Home Ruler; to which Mr. Davitt adds: &ldquo;Mr. Taylor, on my <a name="page294" id="page294"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 294]
+</span>advice,
+declined the Crown Prosecutorship for King&rsquo;s County, a post afterwards
+applied for by, and granted to, a near relative of one of the most
+prominent members of the Irish Party,&rdquo;&mdash;meaning Mr. Luke Dillon, a
+cousin of Mr. John Dillon, M.P.!</p>
+
+<p>We had much interesting conversation last night about the relations of
+the Irish leaders here with public and party questions in America, as to
+which I find Mr. O&rsquo;Leary unusually well and accurately informed.</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry that I must get off to-morrow into Mayo to see Lord Lucan&rsquo;s
+country there, for I should have been particularly pleased to look more
+closely with Mr. Rolleston into the intellectual revolt against
+&ldquo;Parnellism&rdquo; and its methods, of which his attitude and that of his
+friends here is an unmistakable symptom. As he tersely puts it, he sees
+&ldquo;no hope in Irish politics, except a reformation of the League, a return
+to the principles of Thomas Davis.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The lines for a reformation or transformation of the League, as it now
+exists, appear to have been laid down in the original constitution of
+the body. Under that constitution, it seems, the League was meant to be
+controlled by a representative committee chosen annually, open to public
+criticism, <a name="page295" id="page295"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 295]
+</span>and liable to removal by a new election. As things now are,
+the officers of this alleged democratic organisation are absolutely
+self-elected, and wield the wide and indefinite power they possess over
+the people of Ireland in a perfectly unauthorised, irresponsible way. It
+is a curious illustration of the autocratic or bureaucratic system under
+which the Irish movement is now conducted, that Mr. Davitt, who does not
+pretend to be a Parliamentarian, and owes indeed much of his authority
+to his refusal to enter Parliament and take oaths of allegiance, does
+not hesitate for a moment to discipline any Irish member of Parliament
+who incurs his disapprobation. Sir Thomas Esmonde, for example, was
+severely taken to task by him the other day in the public prints for
+venturing to put a question, in his place at Westminster, to the
+Government about a man-of-war stationed in Kingstown harbour. Mr. Davitt
+very peremptorily ordered Sir Thomas to remember that he is not sent to
+Westminster to recognise the British Government, or concern himself
+about British regiments or ships, and Sir Thomas accepts the rebuke in
+silence. Whom does such a member of Parliament represent&mdash;the
+constituents who nominally elect him, or the leader who cracks the whip
+over him so sharply?</p>
+
+<p><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 296]
+</span>I have to-day been looking through a small and beautifully-printed
+volume of poems just issued here by Gill and Son, Nationalist
+publishers, I take it, who have the courage of their convictions, since
+their books bear the imprint of &ldquo;O&rsquo;Connell,&rdquo; and not of Sackville
+Street. This little book of the <i>Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland </i>is
+a symptom too. It is dedicated in a few brief but vigorous stanzas to
+John O&rsquo;Leary, as one who</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="i4">&ldquo;Hated&nbsp;all&nbsp;things&nbsp;base,</span><br />
+ And&nbsp;held&nbsp;his&nbsp;country&rsquo;s&nbsp;honour&nbsp;high.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And the spirit of all the poems it contains is the spirit of &rsquo;48, or of
+that earlier Ireland of Robert Emmet, celebrated in some charming verses
+by &ldquo;Rose Kavanagh&rdquo; on &ldquo;St. Michan&rsquo;s Churchyard,&rdquo; where the</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="i4"> &ldquo;sunbeam&nbsp;went&nbsp;and&nbsp;came</span><br />
+ Above&nbsp;the&nbsp;stone&nbsp;which&nbsp;waits&nbsp;the&nbsp;name<br />
+ His&nbsp;land&nbsp;must&nbsp;write&nbsp;with&nbsp;freedom&lsquo;s&nbsp;flame.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>It interests an American to find among these poems and ballads a
+striking threnody called &ldquo;The Exile&rsquo;s Return,&rdquo; signed with the name of
+&ldquo;Patrick Henry&rdquo;; and it is noteworthy, for more reasons than one, that
+the volume winds up with a &ldquo;Marching Song of the Gaelic Athletes,&rdquo;
+signed &ldquo;An Chraoibhin Aoibbinn.&rdquo; These Athletes are <a name="page297" id="page297"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 297]
+</span>numbered now, I am
+assured, not by thousands, but by myriads, and their organisation covers
+all parts of Ireland. If the spirit of &rsquo;48 and of &rsquo;98 is really moving
+among them, I should say they are likely to be at least as troublesome
+in the end to the &ldquo;uncrowned king&rdquo; as to the crowned Queen of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>As for the literary merit of these <i>Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland</i>,
+it strikes one key with their political quality. One exquisite ballad of
+&ldquo;The Stolen Child,&rdquo; by W. B. Yeats, might have been sung in the
+moonlight on a sylvan lake by the spirit of Heinrich Heine.</p>
+
+<p>I spent an hour or two this morning most agreeably in the libraries of
+the Law Courts and of Trinity College: the latter one of the stateliest
+most academic &ldquo;halls of peace&rdquo; I have ever seen; and this afternoon I
+called upon Dr. Sigerson, a most patriotic Irishman, of obviously Danish
+blood, who has his own ideas as to Clontarf and Brian Boru; and who gave
+me very kindly a copy of his valuable report on that Irish Crisis of
+1879-80, out of which Michael Davitt so skilfully developed the agrarian
+movement whereof &ldquo;Parnellism&rdquo; down to this time has been the not very
+well adjusted instrument. The report was drawn up after a thorough
+inspection by Dr. Siger<a name="page298" id="page298"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 298]
+</span>son and his associate, Dr. Kenny, visiting
+physicians to the North Dublin Union, of some of the most distressed
+districts of Mayo, Sligo, and Galway; and a more interesting,
+intelligent, and impressive picture of the worst phases of the social
+conditions of Ireland ten years ago is not to be found. I have just been
+reading it over carefully in conjunction with my memoranda made from the
+Emigration and Seed Potato Fund Reports, which Mr. Tuke gave me some
+time ago, and it strongly reinforces the evidence imbedded in those
+reports, which goes to show that agitation for political objects in
+Ireland has perhaps done as much as all other causes put together to
+depress the condition of the poor in Ireland, by driving and keeping
+capital out of the country. The worst districts visited in 1879 by Dr.
+Sigerson and Dr. Kenny do not appear to have been so completely cut off
+from civilisation as was the region about Gweedore before the purchase
+of his property there by Lord George Hill, and the remedies suggested by
+Dr. Sigerson for the suffering in these districts are all in the
+direction of the remedies applied by Lord George Hill to the condition
+in which he found Gweedore. After giving full value to the stock
+explanations of Irish distress in the congested districts, such as
+excessive rents, <a name="page299" id="page299"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 299]
+</span>penal laws, born of religious or &ldquo;racial&rdquo; animosity,
+and a defective system of land tenure, it seems to be clear that the
+main difficulties have arisen from the isolation of these districts, and
+from the lack of varied industries. Political agitation has checked any
+flow of capital into these districts, and a flow of capital into them
+would surely have given them better communications and more varied
+industries. Dr. Sigerson states that some of the worst of these regions
+in the west of Ireland are as well adapted to flax-culture as Ulster,
+and Napoleon III. showed what could be done for such wastes as La
+Sologne and the desert of the Landes by the intelligent study of a
+country and the judicious development of such values as are inherent in
+it. The loss of population in Ireland is not unprecedented. The State of
+New Hampshire, in America, one of the original thirteen colonies which
+established the American Union, has twice shown an actual loss in
+population during the past century. The population of the State declined
+during the decade between 1810 and 1820, and again during the decade
+between 1860 and 1870. This phenomenon, unique in American history, is
+to be explained only by three causes, all active in the case of
+congested Ireland,&mdash;a decaying agriculture, lack of communications, and
+the absence of varied <a name="page300" id="page300"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 300]
+</span>industries. During the decade from 1860 to 1870
+the great Civil War was fought out. Yet, despite the terrible waste of
+life and capital in that war, especially at the South, the Northern
+State of New Hampshire, peopled by the energetic English adventurers who
+founded New England, was actually the only State which came out of the
+contest with a positive decline in population. Virginia (including West
+Virginia, which seceded from that Commonwealth in 1861) rose from
+1,596,318 inhabitants in 1860 to 1,667,177 in 1870. South Carolina,
+which was ravaged by the war more severely than any State except
+Virginia, and upon which the Republican majority at Washington pressed
+with such revengeful hostility after the downfall of the Confederacy,
+showed in 1870 a positive increase in population, as compared with 1860,
+from 703,708 to 705,606. But New Hampshire, lying hundreds of miles
+beyond the area of the conflict, showed a positive decrease from 326,073
+to 318,300. During my college days at Cambridge the mountain regions of
+New Hampshire were favourite &ldquo;stamping grounds&rdquo; in the vacations, and I
+exaggerate nothing when I say that in the secluded nooks and corners of
+the State, the people cut off from communication with the rest of New
+England, and scratching out <a name="page301" id="page301"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 301]
+</span>of a rocky land an inadequate subsistence,
+were not much, if at all, in advance of the least prosperous dwellers in
+the most remote parts of Ireland which I have visited. They furnished
+their full contingent to that strange American exodus, which, about a
+quarter of a century ago, was led out of New England by one Adams to the
+Holy Land, in anticipation of the Second Advent, a real modern crusade
+of superstitious land speculators, there to perish, for the most part,
+miserably about Jaffa&mdash;leaving houses and allotments to pass into the
+control of a more practical colony of Teutons, which I found
+establishing itself there in 1869.</p>
+
+<p>Since 1870 a change has come over New Hampshire. The population has
+risen to 346,984. In places waste and fallen twenty years ago brisk and
+smiling villages have sprung up along lines of communication established
+to carry on the business of thriving factories.</p>
+
+<p>What reason can there be in the nature of things to prevent the
+development of analogous results, through the application of analogous
+forces, in the case of &ldquo;congested&rdquo; Ireland? A Nationalist friend, to
+whom I put this question this afternoon, answers it by alleging that so
+long as fiscal laws for Ireland are made at Westminster, British capital
+invested <a name="page302" id="page302"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 302]
+</span>in Great Britain will prevent the application of these
+analogous forces to &ldquo;congested&rdquo; Ireland. His notion is that were Ireland
+as independent of Great Britain, for example, in fiscal matters as is
+Canada, Ireland might seek and secure a fiscal union with the United
+States, such as was partially secured to Canada under the Reciprocity
+Treaty denounced by Mr. Seward.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Give us this,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and take us into your system of American
+free-trade as between the different States of your American Union, and
+no end of capital will soon be coming into Ireland, not only from your
+enormously rich and growing Republic, but from Great Britain too. Give
+us the American market, putting Great Britain on a less-favoured
+footing, just as Mr. Blake and his party wish to do in the case of
+Canada, and between India doing her own manufacturing on the one side,
+and Ireland becoming a manufacturing centre on the other, and a mart in
+Europe for American goods, we&rsquo;ll get our revenge on Elizabeth and
+Cromwell in a fashion John Bull has never dreamt of in these times,
+though he used to be in a mortal funk of it a hundred years ago, when
+there wasn&rsquo;t nearly as much danger of it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">DUBLIN, <i>Sunday, June 24.</i>&mdash;</span>&ldquo;Put not your faith in <a name="page303" id="page303"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 303]
+</span>porters!&rdquo; I had
+expected to pass this day at Castlebar, on the estate of Lord Lucan, and
+I exchanged telegrams to that effect yesterday with Mr. Harding, the
+Earl&rsquo;s grandson, who, in the absence of his wonderfully energetic
+grandsire, is administering there what Lord Lucan, with pardonable
+pride, declares to be the finest and most successful dairy-farm in all
+Ireland. I asked the porter to find the earliest morning train; and
+after a careful search he assured me that by leaving Dublin just after 7
+A.M. I could reach Castlebar a little after noon.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this I determined to dine with Mr. Colomb, and spend the night in
+Dublin. But when I reached the station a couple of hours ago, it was to
+discover that my excellent porter had confounded 7 A.M. with 7 P.M.</p>
+
+<p>There is no morning train to Castlebar! So here I am with no recourse,
+my time being short, but to give up the glimpse I had promised myself of
+Mayo, and go on this afternoon to Belfast on my way back to London.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner last night Mr. Colomb gave me further and very interesting
+light upon the events of 1867, of which he had already spoken with me at
+Cork, as well as upon the critical period of Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s experiments
+of 1881-82 at &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page304" id="page304"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 304]
+</span>Mr. Colomb lives in a remarkably bright and pleasant suburb of Dublin,
+which not only is called a &ldquo;park,&rdquo; as suburbs are apt to be, but really
+is a park, as suburbs are less apt to be. His house is set near some
+very fine old trees, shading a beautiful expanse of turf. He is an
+amateur artist of much more than ordinary skill. His walls are gay, and
+his portfolios filled, with charming water-colours, sketches, and
+studies made from Nature all over the United Kingdom. The grand
+coast-scenery of Cornwall and of Western Ireland, the lovely lake
+landscapes of Killarney, sylvan homes and storied towers, all have been
+laid under contribution by an eye quick to seize and a hand prompt to
+reproduce these most subtle and transient atmospheric effects of light
+and colour which are the legitimate domain of the true water-colourist.
+With all these pictures about us&mdash;and with Mr. Colomb&rsquo;s workshop fitted
+up with Armstrong lathes and all manner of tools wherein he varies the
+routine of official life by making all manner of instruments, and
+wreaking his ingenuity upon all kinds of inventions&mdash;and with the
+pleasant company of Mr. Davies, the agreeable and accomplished official
+secretary of Sir West Ridgway, the evening wore quickly away. In the
+course of conversation the question of the average income of the <a name="page305" id="page305"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 305]
+</span>Irish
+priests arose, and I mentioned the fact that Lord Lucan, whose knowledge
+of the smallest details of Irish life is amazingly thorough, puts it
+down at about ten shillings a year per house in the average Irish
+parish.</p>
+
+<p>He rated Father M&lsquo;Fadden and his curate of Gweedore, for example,
+without a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, at a thousand pounds a year in the whole,
+or very nearly the amount stated to me by Sergeant Mahony at Baron&rsquo;s
+Court. This brought from Mr. Davies a curious account of the proceedings
+in a recent case of a contested will before Judge Warren here in Dublin.
+The will in question was made by the late Father M&lsquo;Garvey of Milford, a
+little village near Mulroy Bay in Donegal, notable chiefly as the scene
+of the murder of the late Earl of Leitrim. Father M&lsquo;Garvey, who died in
+March last, left by this will to religious and charitable uses the whole
+of his property, save &pound;800 bequeathed in it to his niece, Mrs. O&rsquo;Connor.
+It was found that he died possessed not only of a farm at Ardara, but of
+cash on deposit in the Northern Bank to the very respectable amount of
+&pound;23,711. Mrs. O&rsquo;Connor contested the will. The Archbishop of Armagh, and
+Father Sheridan, C.C. of Letterkenny, instituted an action against her
+to establish the will. Father M&lsquo;Fadden of Gweedore, <a name="page306" id="page306"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 306]
+</span>lying in Londonderry
+jail as a first-class misdemeanant, was brought from Londonderry as a
+witness for the niece. But on the trial of the case it appeared that
+there was actually no evidence to sustain the plea of the niece that
+&ldquo;undue influence&rdquo; had been exerted upon her uncle by the Archbishop, who
+at the time of the making of the will was Bishop of Raphoe, or by
+anybody else; so the judge instructed the jury to find on all the issues
+for the plaintiffs, which was done. The judge declared the conduct of
+the defendant in advancing a charge of &ldquo;undue influence&rdquo; in such
+circumstances against ecclesiastics to be most reprehensible; but the
+Archbishop very graciously intimated through his lawyer his intention of
+paying the costs of the niece who had given him all this trouble,
+because she was a poor woman who had been led into her course by
+disappointment at receiving so small a part of so large an inheritance.
+Had the priest&rsquo;s property come to him in any other way than through his
+office as a priest her claim might have been more worthy of
+consideration, but Mr. M&lsquo;Dermot, Q.C., who represented the Archbishop,
+took pains to make it clear that as an ecclesiastic his client, who had
+nothing to do with the making of the will, was bound to regard it &ldquo;as
+proper and in accordance <a name="page307" id="page307"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 307]
+</span>with the fitness of things that what had been
+received from the poor should be given back to the poor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I see no adequate answer to this contention of the Archbishop. But it
+certainly goes to confirm the estimates given me by Sergeant Mahony of
+Father M&lsquo;Fadden&rsquo;s receipts at Gweedore, and the opinion expressed to me
+by Lord Lucan as to the average returns of an average Catholic parish,
+that the priest of Milford, a place hardly so considerable as Gweedore,
+should have acquired so handsome a property in the exercise there of his
+parochial functions.</p>
+
+<p>One form in which the priests in many parts of Ireland collect dues is
+certainly unknown to the practice of the Church elsewhere, I believe,
+and it must tend to swell the incomes of the priests at the expense,
+perhaps, of their legitimate influence. This is the custom of personal
+collections by the priests. In many parishes the priest stands by the
+church-door, or walks about the church&mdash;not with a bag in his hand, as
+is sometimes done in France on great occasions when a <i>qu&eacute;le</i> is made by
+the <i>cur&eacute;</i> for some special object,&mdash;but with an open plate in which the
+people put their offerings. I have heard of parishes in which the priest
+sits by a table near the church-door, takes the offerings <a name="page308" id="page308"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 308]
+</span>from the
+parishioners as they pass, and comments freely upon the ratio of the
+gift to the known or presumed financial ability of the giver.</p>
+
+<p>We had some curious stories, too, from a gentleman present of the
+relation of the priests in wild, out-of-the-way corners of Ireland to
+the people, stories which take one back to days long before Lever. One,
+for example, of a delightful and stalwart old parish priest of eighty,
+upon whom an airy young patriot called to propose that he should accept
+the presidency of a local Land League. The veteran, whose only idea of
+the Land League was that it had used bad language about Cardinal Cullen,
+no sooner caught the drift of the youth than he snatched up a huge
+blackthorn, fell upon him, and &ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; him head-foremost out of a
+window. Luckily it was on the ground floor.</p>
+
+<p>Another strenuous spiritual shepherd came down during the distribution
+of potato-seed to the little port in which it was going on, and took up
+his station on board of the distributing ship. One of his parishioners,
+having received his due quota, made his way back again unobserved on
+board of the ship. As he came up to receive a second dole, the good
+father spied him, and staying not &ldquo;to parley or dissemble,&rdquo; <a name="page309" id="page309"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 309]
+</span>simply
+fetched him a whack over the sconce with a stick, which tumbled him out
+of the ship, head-foremost, into the hooker riding beside her! Quite of
+another drift was a much more astonishing tale of certain proceedings
+had here in February last before the Lord Chief-Justice. These took
+place in connection with a motion to quash the verdict of a coroner&rsquo;s
+jury, held in August 1887, on the body of a child named Ellen Gaffney,
+at Philipstown, in King&rsquo;s County, which preserves the memory of the
+Spanish sovereign of England, as Maryborough in Queen&rsquo;s preserves the
+memory of his Tudor consort. Cervantes never imagined an Alcalde of the
+quality of the &ldquo;Crowner&rdquo;&rsquo; who figures in this story. Were it not that
+his antics cost a poor woman her liberty from August 1887 till December
+of that year, when the happy chance of a winter assizes set her free,
+and might have cost her her life, the story of this ideal magistrate
+would be extremely diverting.</p>
+
+<p>A child was born to Mrs. Gaffney at Philipstown on the 23d of July, and
+died there on the 25th of August 1887, Mrs. Gaffney being the wife of a
+&ldquo;boycotted&rdquo; man.</p>
+
+<p>A local doctor named Clarke came to the police and asked the Sergeant to
+inspect the body of the <a name="page310" id="page310"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 310]
+</span>child, and call for an inquest. The sergeant
+inspected the body, and saw no reason to doubt that the child had died a
+natural death. This did not please the doctor, so the Coroner was sent
+for. He came to Philipstown the next day, conferred there with the
+doctor, and with a priest, Father Bergin, and proceeded to hold an
+inquest on the child in a public-house, &ldquo;a most appropriate place,&rdquo; said
+Sir Michael Morris from the bench, &ldquo;for the transactions which
+subsequently occurred.&rdquo; Strong depositions were afterwards made by the
+woman Mrs. Gaffney, by her husband, and by the police authorities, as to
+the conduct of this &ldquo;inquest.&rdquo; She and her husband were arrested on a
+verbal order of the Coroner on the day when the inquest was held, August
+27th, and the woman was kept in prison from that time till the assizes
+in December. The &ldquo;inquest&rdquo; was not completed on the 27th of August, and
+after the Coroner adjourned it, two priests drove away on a car from the
+&ldquo;public-house&rdquo; in which it had been held. That night, or the next day, a
+man came to a magistrate with a bundle of papers which he had found in
+the road near Philipstown. The magistrate examined them, and finding
+them to be the depositions taken before the Coroner in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney, handed them <a name="page311" id="page311"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 311]
+</span>to the police. How did they come to be in the road?
+On the 1st of September the Coroner resumed his inquest, this time in
+the Court-House at Philipstown, and one of the police, with the
+depositions in his pocket, went to hear the proceedings. Great was his
+amazement to see certain papers produced, and calmly read, as being the
+very original depositions which at that moment were in his own custody!
+He held his peace, and let the inquest go on. A letter was read from the
+Coroner, to the effect that he saw no ground for detaining the husband,
+Gaffney&mdash;but the woman was taken before a justice of the peace, and
+committed to prison on this finding by the Coroner&rsquo;s jury: &ldquo;That Mary
+Anne Gaffney came by her death; and that the mother of the child, Ellen
+Gaffney, is guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food
+and care to sustain the life of this child &rdquo;!</p>
+
+<p>It is scarcely credible, but it is true, that upon this extraordinary
+finding the Coroner issued a warrant for &ldquo;murder&rdquo; against this poor
+woman, on which she was actually locked up for more than three months!
+The jury which made this unique finding consisted of nineteen persons,
+and it was in evidence that their foreman reported thirteen of the jury
+to be for finding one way and six for finding <a name="page312" id="page312"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 312]
+</span>another, whereupon a
+certain Mr. Whyte, who came into the case as the representative of
+Father Bergin, President of the local branch of the National
+League&mdash;nobody can quite see on what colourable pretext&mdash;was allowed by
+the Coroner to write down the finding I have quoted, and hand it to the
+Coroner. The Coroner read it over. He and Mr. Whyte then put six of the
+jury in one place, and thirteen in another; the Coroner read the finding
+aloud to the thirteen, and said to them, &ldquo;Is that what you agree to?&rdquo;
+and so the inquest was closed, and the warrant issued&mdash;for murder&mdash;and
+the woman, this poor peasant mother sent off to jail with the brand upon
+her of infanticide.<a id="footnotetag29"
+ name="footnotetag29"></a><a href="#footnote29"><sup>29</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Where would that poor woman be now were there no &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; in Ireland
+to protect her against &ldquo;Crowner&rsquo;s quest law&rdquo; thus administered? And what
+is to be thought of educated and responsible public men in England who,
+as recent events have shown, are not ashamed to go to &ldquo;Crowner&rsquo;s quest
+Courts&rdquo; of this sort for weapons of attack, not upon the administration
+only of their own Government, but upon the character and the motives of
+their political opponents?</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page313" id="page313"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 313]
+</span>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BELFAST, <i>Monday, June 25.</i>&mdash;</span>I left Dublin yesterday at 4 P.M., in a
+train which went off at high pressure as an &ldquo;express,&rdquo; but came into
+Belfast panting and dilatory as an &ldquo;excursion.&rdquo; The day was fine, and
+the line passes through what is reputed to be the most prosperous part
+of Ireland. In this part of Ireland, too, the fate of the island has
+been more than once settled by the arbitrament of arms; and if
+Parliamentary England throws up the sponge in the wrestle with the
+League, it is probable enough that the old story will come to be told
+over again here.</p>
+
+<p>At Dundalk the Irish monarchy of the Braces was made and unmade. The
+plantation of Ulster under James I. clinched the grasp not so much of
+England as of Scotland upon Ireland, and determined the course of events
+here through the Great Rebellion. The landing of the Duke of Schomberg
+at Carrickfergus opened the way for the subjugation of Jacobite <a name="page314" id="page314"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 314]
+</span>Ireland
+by William of Orange. The successful descent of the French upon the same
+place in February 1760, after the close of &ldquo;the Great Year,&rdquo; in which
+Walpole tells us he came to expect a new victory every morning with the
+rolls for breakfast, and after Hawke had broken the strength of the
+great French Armada off Belleisle, and done for England the service
+which Nelson did for her again off Trafalgar in 1805, shows what might
+have happened had Thurot commanded the fleet of Conflans. In this same
+region, too, the rout of Munro by Nugent at Ballinahinch practically
+ended the insurrection of 1798.</p>
+
+<p>There are good reasons in the physical geography of the British Islands
+for this controlling influence of Ulster over the affairs of Ireland,
+which it seems to me a serious mistake to overlook.</p>
+
+<p>The author of a brief but very hard-headed and practical letter on the
+pacification of Ireland, which appeared in the <i>Times</i> newspaper in
+1886, while the air was thrilling with rumours of Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s
+impending appearance as the champion of &ldquo;Home Rule,&rdquo; carried, I
+remember, to the account of St. George&rsquo;s Channel &ldquo;nine-tenths of the
+troubles, religious, political, and social, under which Ireland has
+<a name="page315" id="page315"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 315]
+</span>laboured for seven centuries.&rdquo; I cannot help thinking he hit the nail on
+the head; and St. George&rsquo;s Channel does not divide Ulster from Scotland.
+From Donaghadee, which has an excellent harbour, the houses on the
+Scottish coast can easily be made out in clear weather. A chain is no
+stronger than its weakest link, and it is as hard to see how, even with
+the consent of Ulster, the independence of Ireland could be maintained
+against the interests and the will of Scotland, as it is easy to see why
+Leinster, Munster, and Connaught have been so difficult of control and
+assimilation by England. To dream of establishing the independence of
+Ireland against the will of Ulster appears to me to be little short of
+madness.</p>
+
+<p>At Moira, which stands very prettily above the Ulster Canal, a small
+army of people returning from a day in the country to Belfast came upon
+us and trebled the length of our train. We picked up more at Lisburn,
+where stands the Cathedral Church of Jeremy Taylor, the &ldquo;Shakespeare of
+divines.&rdquo; Here my only companion in the compartment from Dublin left me,
+a most kindly, intelligent Ulster man, who had very positive views as to
+the political situation. He much commended the recent dis<a name="page316" id="page316"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 316]
+</span>course in
+Scotland of a Presbyterian minister, who spoke of the Papal Decree as
+&ldquo;pouring water on a drowned mouse,&rdquo; a remark which led me to elicit the
+fact that he had never seen either Clare or Kerry; and he was very warm
+in his admiration of Mr. Chamberlain. He told me, what I had heard from
+many other men of Ulster, that the North had armed itself thoroughly
+when the Home Rule business began with Mr. Gladstone. &ldquo;I am a Unionist,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;but I think the Union is worth as much to England as it is to
+Ireland, and if England means to break it up it is not the part of
+Irishmen who think and feel as I do to let her choose her own time for
+doing it, and stand still while she robs us of our property and turns us
+out defenceless to be trampled under foot by the most worthless
+vagabonds in our own island.&rdquo; He thinks the National League has had its
+death-blow. &ldquo;What I fear now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is that we are running straight
+into a social war, and that will never be a war against the landlords in
+Ireland; it&rsquo;ll be a war against the Protestants and all the decent
+people there are among the Catholics.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was very cordial when he found I was an <a name="page317" id="page317"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 317]
+</span>American, and with that
+offhand hospitality which seems to know no distinctions of race or
+religion in Ireland urged me to come and make him a visit at a place he
+has nearer the sea-coast. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show you Downpatrick,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;where
+the tombs of St. Patrick and St. Bridget and St. Columb are, the saints
+sleeping quite at their ease, with a fine prosperous Presbyterian town
+all about them. And I&rsquo;ll drive you to Tullymore, where you&rsquo;ll see the
+most beautiful park, and the finest views from it all the way to the
+Isle of Man, that are to be seen in all Ireland.&rdquo; He was very much
+interested in the curious story of the sequestration of the remains of
+Mr. Stewart of New York, who was born, he tells me, at Lisburn, where
+the wildest fabrications on the subject seem to have got currency. That
+this feat of body-snatching is supposed to have been performed by a
+little syndicate of Italians, afterwards broken up by the firmness of
+Lady Crawford in resisting the ghastly pressure to which the widow and
+the executors of Mr. Stewart are believed to have succumbed, was quite a
+new idea to him.</p>
+
+<p>From Moira to Belfast the scenery along the line grows in beauty
+steadily. If Belfast were not the busiest and most thriving city in
+Ireland, it would <a name="page318" id="page318"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 318]
+</span>still be well worth a visit for the picturesque charms
+of its situation and of the scenery which surrounds it. At some future
+day I hope to get a better notion both of its activity and of its
+attractions than it would be possible for me to attempt to get in this
+flying visit, made solely to take the touch of the atmosphere of the
+place at this season of the year; for we are on the very eve of the
+battle month of the Boyne.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cameron, the Town Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary, met me
+at the station, in accordance with a promise which he kindly made when I
+saw him several weeks ago at Cork; and this morning he took me all over
+the city. It is very well laid out, in the new quarters especially, with
+broad avenues and spacious squares. In fact, as a local wag said to me
+to-day at the Ulster Club, &ldquo;You can drive through Belfast without once
+going into a street&rdquo;&mdash;most of the thoroughfares which are not called
+&ldquo;avenues&rdquo; or &ldquo;places&rdquo; being known as &ldquo;roads.&rdquo; It is, of course, an
+essentially modern city. When Boate made his survey of Ireland two
+centuries ago, Belfast was so small a place that he took small note of
+it, though it had been incorporated by James I. in 1613 in favour of the
+Chichester <a name="page319" id="page319"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 319]
+</span>family, still represented here. In a very careful <i>Tour in
+Ireland</i>, published at Dublin in 1780, the author says of Belfast, &ldquo;I
+could not help remarking the great number of Scots who reside in this
+place, and who carry on a good trade with Scotland.&rdquo; It seems then to
+have had a population of less than 20,000 souls, as it only touched that
+number at the beginning of this century. It has since then advanced by
+&ldquo;leaps and bounds,&rdquo; after an almost American fashion, till it has now
+become the second, and bids fair at no distant day to become the first,
+city in Ireland. Few of the American cities which are its true
+contemporaries can be compared with Belfast in beauty. The quarter in
+which my host lives was reclaimed from the sea marshes not quite so long
+ago, I believe, as was the Commonwealth Avenue quarter of Boston, and
+though it does not show so many costly private houses perhaps as that
+quarter of the New England capital, its &ldquo;roads&rdquo; and &ldquo;avenues&rdquo; are on the
+whole better built, and there is no public building in Boston so
+imposing as the Queen&rsquo;s College, with its Tudor front six hundred feet
+in length, and its graceful central tower. The Botanic Gardens near by
+are much prettier and much better equipped for the pleasure and
+instruction of the <a name="page320" id="page320"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 320]
+</span>people than any public gardens in either Boston or
+New York. These American comparisons make themselves, all the conditions
+of Belfast being rather of the New World than of the Old. The oldest
+building pointed out to me to-day is the whilom mansion of the Marquis
+of Donegal, now used as offices, and still called the Castle.</p>
+
+<p>This stands near Donegal Square, a fine site, disfigured by a quadrangle
+of commonplace brick buildings, occupied as a sort of Linen Exchange,
+concerning which a controversy rages, I am told. They are erected on
+land granted by Lord Donegal to encourage the linen trade, and the
+buildings used to be leased at a rental of &pound;1 per window. The present
+holders receive &pound;10 per window, and are naturally loath to part with so
+good a thing, though there is an earnest desire in the city to see these
+unsightly structures removed, and their place taken by stately municipal
+buildings more in key with the really remarkable and monumental private
+warehouses which already adorn this Square. Mr. Robinson, one of the
+partners of a firm which has just completed one of these warehouses, was
+good enough to show us over it. It is built of a warm grey stone, which
+lends itself easily to the chisel, <a name="page321" id="page321"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 321]
+</span>and it is decorated with a wealth of
+carving and of architectural ornaments such as the great burghers of
+Flanders lavished on their public buildings. The interior arrangements
+are worthy of the external stateliness of the warehouse. Pneumatic tubes
+for the delivery of cash&mdash;a Scottish invention&mdash;electric lights, steam
+lifts, a kitchen at the top of the lofty edifice heated by steam from
+the great engine-room in the cellars, and furnishing meals to the
+employees, attest the energy and enterprise of the firm. The most
+delicate of the linen fabrics sold here are made, I was informed, all
+over the north country. The looms, three or four of which are kept going
+here in a great room to show the intricacy and perfection of the
+processes, are supplied by the firm to the hand-workers on a system
+which enables them, while earning good wages from week to week, to
+acquire the eventual ownership of the machines. The building is crowned
+by a sort of observatory, from which we enjoyed a noble prospect
+overlooking the whole city and miles of the beautiful country around. A
+haze on the horizon hid the coast of Scotland, which is quite visible
+under a clear sky. The Queen&rsquo;s Bridge over the Lagan, built in 1842
+between Antrim and Down, was a conspicuous <a name="page322" id="page322"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 322]
+</span>feature in the panorama. Its
+five great arches of hewn granite span the distance formerly traversed
+by an older bridge of twenty-one arches 840 feet in length, which was
+begun in 1682, and finished just in time to welcome Schomberg and King
+William.</p>
+
+<p>The not less imposing warehouse of Richardson and Co., built of a
+singularly beautiful brown stone, and decorated with equal taste and
+liberality, adjoins that of Robinson and Cleaver. The banks, the public
+offices, the clubs, the city library, the museum, the Presbyterian
+college, the principal churches, all of them modern, all alike bear
+witness to the public spirit and pride in their town of the good people
+of Belfast. With more time at my disposal I would have been very glad to
+visit some of the flax-mills called into being by the great impulse
+which the cotton famine resulting from our Civil War gave to the linen
+manufactures of Northern Ireland, and the famous shipyards of the Woolfs
+on Queen&rsquo;s Island, As things are, it was more to my purpose to see some
+of the representative men of this great Protestant stronghold.</p>
+
+<p>I passed a very interesting hour with the Rev. Dr. Hanna, who is reputed
+to be a sort of clerical <a name="page323" id="page323"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 323]
+</span>&ldquo;Lion of the North,&rdquo; and whom I found to be in
+almost all respects a complete antitype of Father M&lsquo;Fadden of Gweedore.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Hanna is not unjustly proud of being at the head of the most
+extensive Sunday-school organisation in Ireland, if not in the world;
+and I find that the anniversary parade of his pupils, appointed for
+Saturday, June 30th, is looked forward to with some anxiety by the
+authorities here. He tells me that he expects to put two thousand
+children that day into motion for a grand excursion to Moira; but
+although he speaks very plainly as to the ill-will with which a certain
+class of the Catholics here regard both himself and his organisation, he
+does not anticipate any attack from them. With what seems to me very
+commendable prudence, he has resolved this year to put this procession
+into the streets without banners and bands, so that no charge of
+provocation may be even colourably advanced against it. This is no
+slight concession from a man so determined and so outspoken, not to say
+aggressive, in his Protestantism as Dr. Hanna; and the Nationalist
+Catholics will be very ill-advised, it strikes me, if they misinterpret
+it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page324" id="page324"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 324]
+</span>He spoke respectfully of the Papal decree against Boycotting and the
+Plan of Campaign; but he seems to think it will not command the respect
+of the masses of the Catholic population, nor be really enforced by the
+clergy. Like most of the Ulstermen I have met, he has a firm faith, not
+only in the power of the Protestant North to protect itself, but in its
+determination to protect itself against the consequences which the
+northern Protestants believe must inevitably follow any attempt to
+establish an Irish nationality. Dr. Hanna is neither an Orangeman nor a
+Tory. He says there are but three known Orangemen among the clerical
+members of the General Assembly of the Irish Presbyterian Church, which
+unanimously pronounced against Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s scheme of Home Rule, and
+not more than a dozen Tories. Of the 550 members of the Assembly, 538,
+he says, were followers of Mr. Gladstone before he adopted the politics
+of Mr. Parnell; and only three out of the whole number have given him
+their support. In the country at large, Dr. Hanna puts down the
+Unionists at two millions, of whom 1,200,000 are Protestants, and
+800,000 Catholics; and he maintains that if the Parliamentary
+representatives were <a name="page325" id="page325"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 325]
+</span>chosen by a general vote, the Parnellite 80 would
+be cut down to 62; while the Unionists would number 44. He regards the
+Parnellite policy as &ldquo;an organised imposture,&rdquo; and firmly believes that
+an Irish Parliament in Dublin would now mean civil war in Ireland. He
+had a visit here last week, he says, from an American Presbyterian
+minister, who came out to Ireland a month ago a &ldquo;Home Ruler&rdquo;; but, as
+the result of a trip through North-Western Ireland, is going back to
+denounce the Home Rule movement as a mischievous fraud.</p>
+
+<p>When I asked him what remedy he would propose for the discontent stirred
+up by the agitation of Home Rule, this Presbyterian clergyman replied
+emphatically, &ldquo;Balfour, Balfour, and more Balfour!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This on the ground, as I understood, that Mr. Balfour&rsquo;s administration
+of the law has been the firmest, least wavering, and most equitable
+known in Ireland for many a day.</p>
+
+<p>Later in the day I had the pleasure of a conversation with the Rev. Dr.
+Kane, the Grand Master of the Orangemen at Belfast. Dr. Kane is a tall,
+fine-looking, frank, and resolute man, who obviously has the courage of
+his opinions. He thinks there will be no disturbances this year on the
+12th of <a name="page326" id="page326"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 326]
+</span>July, but that the Orange demonstrations will be on a greater
+scale and more imposing than ever. He derides the notion that
+&ldquo;Parnellism&rdquo; is making any progress in Ulster. On the contrary, the
+concurrence this year of the anniversary of the defeat of the Great
+Armada with the anniversary of the Revolution of 1688 has aroused the
+strongest feelings of enthusiasm among the Protestants of the North, and
+they were never so determined as they now are not to tolerate anything
+remotely looking to the constitution of a separate and separatist
+Government at Dublin.</p>
+
+<p class="diary"><span class="diary">BELFAST, <i>Tuesday, June 26.</i>&mdash;</span>Sir John Preston, the head of one of the
+great Belfast houses, and a former Mayor of the city, dined with us last
+night, and in the evening Sir James Haslett, the actual Mayor, came in.</p>
+
+<p>I find that in Belfast the office of Mayor is served without a salary,
+and is consequently filled as a rule by citizens of &ldquo;weight and
+instance.&rdquo; In Dublin the Lord Mayor receives &pound;3000 a year, with a
+contingent fund of &pound;1500, and the office is becoming a distinctly
+political post. The face of Belfast is so firmly set against the
+tendency to <a name="page327" id="page327"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 327]
+</span>subordinate municipal interests to general party exigencies,
+that the Corporation compelled Mr. Cobain, M.P., who sits at Westminster
+now for this constituency, to resign the post which he held as treasurer
+and cashier of the Corporation when he became a candidate for a seat in
+Parliament. I am not surprised, therefore, to learn that the city rates
+and taxes are much lower in the commercial than they are in the
+political capital of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Both Sir John Preston and Sir James Haslett have visited America. Sir
+John went there to represent the linen industries of Ireland, and to
+urge upon Congress the propriety of reducing our import duties upon
+fabrics which the American climate makes it practically imposssible to
+manufacture on our side of the water. Senator Sherman, who twenty years
+ago had the candour to admit that the wit of man could not devise a
+tariff so adjusted as to raise the revenue necessary for the Government
+which should not afford adequate incidental protection to all legitimate
+American industries, gave Sir John reason to hope that something might
+be done in the direction of a more liberal treatment of the linen
+industries. But nothing practical came of it. Sir John ought to <a name="page328" id="page328"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 328]
+</span>have
+known that our typical American Protectionist, the late Horace Greeley,
+really persuaded himself, and tried to persuade other people, that with
+duties enough clapped on the Asiatic production, excellent tea might be
+grown on the uplands of South Carolina!</p>
+
+<p>In former years Sir John Preston used to visit Gweedore every year for
+sport and recreation. He knew Lord George Hill very well, &ldquo;as true and
+noble a man as ever lived, who stinted himself to improve the state of
+his tenants.&rdquo; He threw an odd light on the dreamy desire which had so
+much amused me of the &ldquo;beauty of Gweedore&rdquo; to become &ldquo;a dressmaker at
+Derry,&rdquo; by telling me that long ago the gossips there used to tell
+wonderful stories of a Gweedore girl who had made her fortune as a
+milliner in the &ldquo;Maiden City.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This morning Mr. Cameron, who as Town Inspector of the Royal Irish
+Constabulary will be responsible for public peace and order here during
+the next critical fortnight, held a review of his men on a common beyond
+the Theological College. About two hundred and fifty of the force were
+paraded, with about twenty mounted policemen, and for an hour and a
+half, under a tolerably warm <a name="page329" id="page329"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 329]
+</span>sun, they were put through a regular
+military drill. A finer body of men cannot be seen, and in point of
+discipline and training they can hold their own, I should say, with the
+best of her Majesty&rsquo;s regiments. Without such discipline and training it
+would not be easy for any such body of men to pass with composure
+through the ordeal of insults and abuse to which the testimony of
+trustworthy eye-witnesses compels me to believe they are habitually
+subjected in the more disturbed districts of Ireland. As to the
+immediate outlook here, Mr. Cameron seems quite at his ease. Even if
+ill-disposed persons should set about provoking a collision between &ldquo;the
+victors and the vanquished of the Boyne&rdquo; his arrangements are so made,
+he says, as to prevent the development of anything like the outbreaks of
+former years.</p>
+
+<p>On the advice of Sir John Preston I shall take the Fleetwood route on my
+return to London to-night.</p>
+
+<p>This secures one a comfortable night on board of a very good and
+well-equipped boat, from which you go ashore, he tells me, into an
+excellent station of the London and North-Western Railway at Fleetwood,
+on the mouth of the Wyre on the <a name="page330" id="page330"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 330]
+</span>Lancashire coast. Twenty years ago this
+was a small bathing resort called into existence chiefly by the
+enterprise of a local baronet whose name it bears. Its present
+prosperity and prospective importance are another illustration of the
+vigour and vitality of the North of Ireland, which is connected through
+Fleetwood with the great manufacturing regions of middle and northern
+England, as it is through Larne with the heart of Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>While it is as true now of the predominantly Catholic south of Ireland
+as it was when Sir Robert Peel made the remark forty years ago, that it
+stands &ldquo;with its back to England and its face to the West,&rdquo; this
+Protestant Ireland of the North faces both ways, drawing Canada and the
+United States to itself through Moville and Derry and Belfast, and
+holding fast at the same time upon the resources of Great Britain
+through Glasgow and Liverpool. One of the best informed bankers in
+London told me not long ago, that pretty nearly all the securities of
+the great company which has recently taken over the business of the
+Guinnesses have already found their way into the North of Ireland and
+are held here. With such resources in its wealth and industry, better
+educated, better <a name="page331" id="page331"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 331]
+</span>equipped, and holding a practically impregnable
+position in the North of Ireland, with Scotland and the sea at its back,
+Ulster is very much stronger relatively to the rest of Ireland than La
+Vend&eacute;e was relatively to the rest of the French Republic in the last
+century. In a struggle for independence against the rest of Ireland it
+would have nothing to fear from the United States, where any attempt to
+organise hostilities against it would put the Irish-American population
+in serious peril, not only from the American Government, but from
+popular feeling, and force home upon the attention of the
+quickest-witted people in the world the significant fact that while the
+chief contributions, so far, of America to Southern Ireland, have been
+alms and agitation, the chief contributions of Scotland to Northern
+Ireland have been skilled agriculture and successful activity. It is
+surely not without meaning that the only steamers of Irish build which
+now traverse the Atlantic come from the dockyards, not of Galway nor of
+Cork, the natural gateways of Ireland to the west, but of Belfast, the
+natural gateway of Ireland to the north<a name="page332" id="page332"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 332]
+</span>.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="page333" id="page333"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 333]
+</span>EPILOGUE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Not once, but a hundred times, during the visits to Ireland recorded in
+this book, I have been reminded of the state of feeling and opinion
+which existed in the Border States, as they were called, of the American
+Union, after the invasion of Virginia by a piratical band under John
+Brown, and before the long-pending issues between the South, insisting
+upon its constitutional rights, and the North, restive under its
+constitutional obligations, were brought to a head by the election of
+President Lincoln.</p>
+
+<p>All analogies, I know, are deceptive, and I do not insist upon this
+analogy. But it has a certain value here. For to-day in Ireland, as then
+in America, we find a grave question of politics, in itself not
+unmanageable, perhaps, by a race trained to self-government, seriously
+complicated and aggravated, not only by considerations of moral right
+and moral wrong, but by a profound perturbation of the material
+interests of the community.</p>
+
+<p>I well remember that after a careful study of the <a name="page334" id="page334"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 334]
+</span>situation in America
+at the time of which I speak, Mr. Nassau Senior, a most careful and
+competent observer, frankly told me that he saw no possible way in which
+the problem could be worked out peacefully. The event justified this
+gloomy forecast.</p>
+
+<p>It would be presumptuous in me to say as much of the actual situation in
+Ireland; but it would be uncandid not to say that the optimists of
+Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee had greater
+apparent odds in their favour in 1861 than the optimists of Ireland seem
+to me to have in 1888.</p>
+
+<p>Ireland stands to-day between Great Britain and the millions of the
+Irish race in America and Australia very much as the Border States of
+the American Union stood in 1861 between the North and the South. There
+was little either in the Tariff question or in the Slavery question to
+shake the foundations of law and order in the Border States, could they
+have been left to themselves; and the Border States enjoyed all the
+advantages and immunities of &ldquo;Home Rule&rdquo; to an extent and under
+guarantees never yet openly demanded for Ireland by any responsible
+legislator within the walls of the British Parliament. But so powerful
+was the leverage upon them of conflicting passions and interests beyond
+their own borders that these sovereign states, well organised,
+homogeneous, pros<a name="page335" id="page335"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 335]
+</span>perous communities, much more populous and richer in
+the aggregate in 1861 than Ireland is to-day, practically lost the
+control of their own affairs, and were swept helplessly into a terrific
+conflict, which they had the greatest imaginable interest in avoiding,
+and no interest whatever in promoting.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen and heard nothing in Ireland to warrant the very common
+impression that the country, as a whole, is either misgoverned or
+ungovernable; nothing to justify me in regarding the difficulties which
+there impede the maintenance of law and order as really indigenous and
+spontaneous. The &ldquo;agitated&rdquo; Ireland of 1888 appears to me to be almost
+as clearly and demonstrably the creation of forces not generated in, but
+acting upon, a country, as was the &ldquo;bleeding Kansas&rdquo; of 1856. But the
+&ldquo;bleeding Kansas&rdquo; of 1856 brought the great American Union to the verge
+of disruption, and the &ldquo;agitated Ireland&rdquo; of 1888 may do as much, or
+worse, for the British Empire. There is, no doubt, a great deal of
+distress in one or another part of Ireland, though it has not been my
+fortune to come upon any outward and visible signs of such grinding
+misery as forces itself upon you in certain of the richest provinces of
+that independent, busy, prosperous, Roman Catholic kingdom of Belgium,
+which on a territory little more than one-third as large as the
+territory of Ireland, maintains nearly a <a name="page336" id="page336"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 336]
+</span>million more inhabitants, and
+adds to its population, on an average, in round numbers, as many people
+in four years as Ireland loses in five.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen peasant proprietors in Flanders and Brabant who could give
+the ideal Irish agent of the Nationalist newspapers lessons in
+rack-renting, though I am not at all sure that they might not get a hint
+or two themselves from some of the small farmers who came in my way in
+Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>Like all countries, mainly agricultural, too, Ireland has suffered a
+great deal of late years from the fall in prices following upon a period
+of intoxicating prosperity. Whether she has suffered more relatively
+than we should have suffered from the same cause in America, had we been
+foolish enough to imitate the monometallic policy of Germany in 1873, is
+however open to question; and I have an impression, which it will
+require evidence to remove, that the actual organisation known as the
+National Land League could never have been called into being had the
+British Government devoted to action upon the Currency Question, before
+1879, the time and energy which it has expended before and since that
+date in unsettling the principles of free contract, and tinkering at the
+relations of landlord and tenant in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>But I am trenching upon inquiries here beyond the province of this book.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page337" id="page337"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 337]
+</span>Fortunately it is not necessary to my object in printing these volumes
+that I should either form or formulate any positive opinions as to the
+origin of the existing crisis in Ireland. Nor need I volunteer any
+suggestions of my own as to the methods by which order may best be
+maintained and civil government carried on in Ireland. It suffices for
+me that I close this self-imposed survey of men and things in that
+country with a conviction, as positive as it is melancholy, that the
+work which Mr. Redmond, M.P., informed us at Chicago that he and his
+Nationalist colleagues had undertaken, of &ldquo;making the government of
+Ireland by England impossible,&rdquo; has been so far achieved, and by such
+methods as to make it extremely doubtful whether Ireland can be governed
+by anybody at all in accordance with any of the systems of government
+hitherto recognised in or adopted for that country. I certainly can see
+nothing in the organisation and conduct, down to this time, of the party
+known as the party of the Irish Nationalists, I will not say to
+encourage, but even to excuse, a belief that Ireland could be governed
+as a civilised country were it turned over to-morrow to their control. A
+great deal has been done by them to propagate throughout Christendom a
+general impression that England has dismally failed to govern Ireland in
+the past, and is unlikely hereafter to succeed in <a name="page338" id="page338"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 338]
+</span>governing Ireland. But
+even granting this impression to be absolutely well founded, it by no
+means follows that Ireland is any more capable of governing herself than
+England is of governing her. The Russians have not made a brilliant
+success of their administration in Poland, but the Poles certainly
+administered Poland no better than the Russians have done. With an Irish
+representation in an Imperial British Parliament at Westminster,
+Ireland, under Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s &ldquo;base and blackguard&rdquo; Union of 1800, has
+at least succeeded in shaking off some of the weightiest of the burdens
+by which, in the days of Swift, of Grattan, and of O&rsquo;Connell, she most
+loudly declared herself to be oppressed. Whether with a Parliament at
+Dublin she would have fared as well in this respect since 1800 must be a
+matter of conjecture merely&mdash;and it must be equally a matter of
+conjecture also whether she would fare any better in this respect with a
+Parliament at Dublin hereafter. I am in no position to pronounce upon
+this&mdash;but it is quite certain that nothing is more uncommon than to find
+an educated and intelligent man, not an active partisan, in Ireland
+to-day, who looks forward to the reestablishment, in existing
+circumstances, of a Parliament at Dublin with confidence or hope.</p>
+
+<p>How the establishment of such a Parliament would affect the position of
+Great Britain as a power <a name="page339" id="page339"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 339]
+</span>in Europe, and how it would affect the fiscal
+policy, and with the fiscal policy the well-being of the British people,
+are questions for British subjects to consider, not for me.</p>
+
+<p>That the processes employed during the past decade, and now employed to
+bring about the establishment of such a Parliament, have been, and are
+in their nature, essentially revolutionary, subversive of all sound and
+healthy relations between man and man, inconsistent with social
+stability, and therefore with social progress and with social peace,
+what I have seen and heard in Ireland during the past six months compels
+me to feel. Of the &ldquo;Coercion,&rdquo; under which the Nationalist speakers and
+writers ask us in America to believe that the island groans and
+travails, I have seen literally nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Nowhere in the world is the press more absolutely free than to-day in
+Ireland. Nowhere in the world are the actions of men in authority more
+bitterly and unsparingly criticised. If public men or private citizens
+are sent to prison in Ireland, they are sent there, not as they were in
+America during the civil war, or in Ireland under the &ldquo;Coercion Act&rdquo; of
+1881, on suspicion of something they may have done, or may have intended
+to do, but after being tried for doing, and convicted of having done,
+certain things made offences against the law by a <a name="page340" id="page340"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 340]
+</span>Parliament in which
+they are represented, and of which, in some cases, they are members.</p>
+
+<p>To call this &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; is, from the American point of view, simply
+ludicrous. What it may be from the British or the Irish point of view is
+another affair, and does not concern me. I may be permitted, however, I
+hope without incivility, to say that if this be &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; from the
+British or the Irish point of view, I am well content to be an American
+citizen. Ours is essentially a government not of emotions, but of
+statutes, and most Americans, I think, will agree with me that the sage
+was right who declared it to be better to live where nothing is lawful
+than where all things are lawful.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; which I have found established in Ireland, and which I
+recognise in the title of this book, is the &ldquo;Coercion,&rdquo; not of a
+government, but of a combination to make a particular government
+impossible. It is a &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; applied not to men who break a public
+law, or offend against any recognised code of morals, but to men who
+refuse to be bound in their personal relations and their business
+transactions by the will of other men, their equals only, clothed with
+no legal authority over them. It is a &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; administered not by
+public and responsible functionaries, but by secret tribunals. Its
+sanctions are not the law and honest public opinion, but the base
+instinct of personal <a name="page341" id="page341"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 341]
+</span>cowardice, and the instinct, not less base, of
+personal greed. Whether anything more than a steady, firm administration
+of the law is needed to abolish this &ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; is a matter as to which
+authorities differ. I should be glad to believe with Colonel Saunderson
+that &ldquo;the Leaguers would not hold up the &lsquo;land-grabber&rsquo; to execration,
+and denounce him as they do, unless they knew in fact that the moment
+the law is made supreme in Ireland the tenants would become just as
+amenable to it as any other subjects of the Queen.&rdquo; But some recent
+events suggest a doubt whether these &ldquo;other subjects of the Queen&rdquo; are
+as amenable to the law as my own countrymen are.</p>
+
+<p>That the Church to which the great majority of the Irish people have for
+so many ages, and through so many tribulations, borne steadfast
+allegiance, has been shaken in its hold upon the conscience of Ireland
+by the machinery of this odious and ignoble &ldquo;Coercion,&rdquo; appears to me to
+be unquestionable. That the head of that Church, being compelled by
+evidence to believe this, has found it necessary to intervene for the
+restoration of the just spiritual authority of the Church over the Irish
+people all the world now knows&mdash;nor can I think that his intervention
+has come a day or an hour too soon, to arrest the progress in Ireland of
+a social disease which threatens, not the political interests of the
+<a name="page342" id="page342"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 342]
+</span>empire of which Ireland is a part alone, but the character of the Irish
+people themselves, and the very existence among them of the elementary
+conditions of a Christian civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>It would be unjust to the Irish people to forget that this demoralising
+&ldquo;Coercion&rdquo; against which the Head of the Catholic Church has declared
+war, seems to me to have been seriously reinforced by the Land
+Legislation of the Imperial Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>No one denies that great reforms and readjustments of the Land Tenure in
+Ireland needed to be made long before any serious attempt was made to
+make them.</p>
+
+<p>But that such reforms and readjustments might have been made without
+cutting completely loose from the moorings of political economy, appears
+pretty clearly, not only from examples on the continent of Europe, and
+in my own country, but from the Rent and Tenancy Acts carried out in
+India under the viceroyalty of Lord Dufferin since 1885. The conditions
+of these measures were different, of course, in each of the cases of
+Oudh, Bengal, and the Punjab, and in none of these cases were they
+nearly identical with the conditions of any practicable land measure for
+Ireland. But two great characteristics seem to me to mark the Indian
+legislation, which are not conspicuous in the legislation for Ireland.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page343" id="page343"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 343]
+</span>These are a spirit of equity as between the landlords and the tenants,
+and finality. I do not see how it can be questioned that the landlords
+of Ireland have been dealt with by recent British legislation as if they
+were offenders to be mulcted, and that the tenants in Ireland have been
+encouraged by recent British legislation to anticipate an eventual
+transfer to them, on steadily improving terms, of the land-ownership of
+the island. Mr. Davitt is perhaps the most popular Irishman living, and
+I believe him to be sincerely convinced that the ownership of the land
+of Ireland (and of all other countries) ought to be vested in the State.
+But if the independence of Ireland were acknowledged by Great Britain
+to-morrow, and all the actual landlords of Ireland were compelled
+to-morrow to part with their ownership, such as it is, of the land, I
+believe Mr. Davitt would be further from the recognition and triumph of
+his principle of State-ownership than he is to-day with a British
+Parliament hostile to &ldquo;Home Rule,&rdquo; but apparently not altogether
+unwilling to make the landlords of Ireland an acceptable burnt-offering
+upon the altar of imperial unity. Probably he sees this himself, and the
+existing state of things may not be wholly displeasing to him, as
+holding out a hope that the flame which he has been helped by British
+legislation to kindle in Ireland may already be taking hold upon the
+substructions <a name="page344" id="page344"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 344]
+</span>and outworks of the edifice of property in Great Britain
+also.</p>
+
+<p>One thing at least is clear.</p>
+
+<p>The two antagonistic principles which confront each other in Ireland
+to-day are the principles of the Agrarian Revolution represented by Mr.
+Davitt, and the principle of Authority, represented in the domain of
+politics by the British Government, and in the domain of morals by the
+Vatican. With one or the other of these principles the victory must
+rest. If the Irish people of all classes who live in Ireland could be
+polled to-day, it is likely enough that a decisive majority of them
+would declare for the principle of Authority in the State and in the
+Church, could that over-riding issue be made perfectly plain and
+intelligible to them. But how is that possible? In what country of the
+world, and in what age of the world, has it ever been possible to get
+such an issue made perfectly plain and intelligible to any people?</p>
+
+<p>In the domain of morals the principle of Authority, so far as concerns
+<a name="page345" id="page345"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 345]
+</span>Catholic Ireland, rests with a power which is not likely to waver or
+give way. The Papal Decree has gone forth. Those who profess to accept
+it will be compelled to obey it. Those who reject it, whatever their
+place in the hierarchy of the Church may be, must sooner or later find
+themselves where Dr. M&lsquo;Glynn of New York now is. Catholic Ireland can
+only continue to be Catholic on the condition of obedience, not formal
+but real, not in matters indifferent, but in matters vital and
+important, to the Head of the Catholic Church.</p>
+
+<p>In the domain of politics the principle of Authority rests with an
+Administration which is at the mercy of the intelligence or the
+ignorance, the constancy or the fickleness, the weakness or the
+strength, of constituencies in Great Britain, not necessarily familiar
+with the facts of the situation in Ireland, not necessarily enlightened
+as to the real interests either of Great Britain or of Ireland, nor even
+necessarily awake, with Cardinal Manning, to the truth that upon the
+future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>With two, three, four, or five years of a steady and cool administration
+of the laws in Ireland, by an executive officer such as Mr. Balfour
+seems to me to have shown himself to be&mdash;with a judicious abstinence of
+the British Legislature from feverish and fussy legislation about
+Ireland, with a prudent and persistent development of the material
+resources of Ireland, and with a genuine co-operation of the people who
+own land in Ireland with the people who wish to own land in Ireland, for
+the readjustment of land-ownership, the principle of Authority in the
+domain of politics may doubtless win in the conflict with the principle
+of the Agrarian revolution.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page346" id="page346"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 346]
+</span>But how many contingencies are here involved! Meanwhile the influences
+which imperil in Ireland the principle of Authority, in the domains
+alike of politics and of morals, are at work incessantly, to undermine
+and deteriorate the character of the Irish people, to take the vigour
+and the manhood out of them, to unfit them day by day, not only for good
+citizenship in the British Empire or the United States, but for good
+citizenship in any possible Ireland under any possible form of
+government. To arrest these influences before they bring on in Ireland a
+social crash, the effects of which must be felt far beyond the
+boundaries of that country, is a matter of primary importance,
+doubtless, to the British people. It is a matter, too, of hardly less
+than primary importance to the people of my own country. Unfortunately
+it does not rest with us to devise or to apply an efficient check to
+these influences.</p>
+
+<p>That rests with the people of Great Britain, so long as they insist that
+Ireland shall remain an integral portion of the British dominions. I do
+not see how they can acquit themselves of this responsibility, or escape
+the consequences of evading it, solely by devising the most ingenious
+machinery of local administration for Ireland, or the most liberal
+schemes for fostering the material interests of the Irish people. Such
+things, of course, must <a name="page347" id="page347"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 347]
+</span>in due time be attended to. But the first duty
+of a government is to govern; and I believe that Earl Grey has summed up
+the situation in Ireland more concisely and more courageously than any
+other British statesman in his outspoken declaration, that &ldquo;in order to
+avert the wreck of the nation, it is absolutely necessary that some
+means or other should be found for securing to Ireland during the
+present crisis a wiser and more stable administration of its affairs
+than can be looked for under its existing institutions.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I have heard and read a good deal in the past of the &ldquo;Three F&rsquo;s&rdquo; thought
+a panacea for Irish discontent. Three other F&rsquo;s seem to me quite as
+important to the future of Irish content and public order. These are,
+Fair Dealing towards Landlords as well as Tenants; Finality of Agrarian
+Legislation at Westminster; and last and most essential of all, Fixity
+of Executive Tenure.</p>
+
+<p>The words I have just quoted of Earl Grey, show it to be the conviction
+of the oldest living leader of English Liberalism that this last is the
+vital point, the key of the situation. Let me bracket with his words,
+and leave to the consideration of my readers, the following pregnant
+passage from a letter written to me by an Irish correspondent who is as
+devoted to Irish independence as is Earl Grey to imperial unity:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page348" id="page348"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 348]
+</span>If the present Nationalist movement succeeds, it will have the effect
+of putting the worst elements of the Irish nation in power, and keeping
+them there irremoveably. We are to have an Executive at the mercy of a
+House of Representatives, and the result will be a government, or series
+of governments, as weak and vicious as those of France, with this
+difference, that here all purifying changes such as seem imminent in
+France will be absolutely prevented by the irresistible power of
+England. The true model for us would be a constitution like yours in the
+United States, with an Executive responsible to the nation at large, and
+irremoveable for a term of years. But this we shall never get from
+England. Shall we make use of Home Rule to take it for ourselves?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Many earnest and active Irish Unionists now say that if any bill
+resembling Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s passes, they will make separation, their
+definite policy. If Home Rule comes without the landlords having been
+bought out on reasonable terms, a class will be created in Ireland full
+of bitter and most just hatred of England&mdash;a class which may very likely
+one day play the part here which the persecuted Irish Presbyterians who
+fled from the tyranny of the English Church in Ireland played in your
+own Revolution beyond the Atlantic.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name="page349" id="page349"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 349]
+</span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="page350" id="page350"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 350]
+</span>APPENDIX.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page351" id="page351"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 351]
+</span><a name="noteF" id="noteF" />NOTE F.<br />
+
+THE &ldquo;MOONLIGHTERS&rdquo; AND &ldquo;HOME RULE.&rdquo;<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 38.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>On Monday, the 1st of February 1886, the <i>Irish Times</i> published the
+following story from Tralee, near the scene of the &ldquo;boycotting,&rdquo;
+temporal and spiritual, of the unfortunate daughters of Mr. Jeremiah
+Curtin, murdered in his own house by &ldquo;moonlighters&rdquo;:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;TRALEE, <i>Sunday</i>.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;It was stated that the bishop had ordered Mass to be celebrated
+ for them&mdash;the Curtins&mdash;but this did not take place. At the village
+ of Firies a number of people had assembled. They stopped loitering
+ about the place in the forenoon, waiting for a meeting of the
+ National League, which was subsequently held. A threatening notice
+ was discovered posted up on the door of a house formerly used as a
+ forge. It ran as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote> &ldquo;&lsquo;NOTICE.&mdash;If we are honoured by the presence of the bloodthirsty
+ perjurers at Mass on any of the forthcoming Sundays, take good care
+ you&rsquo;ll stand up very politely and walk out. Don&rsquo;t be under the
+ impression that all the Moonlighters are dead, and that this notice
+ is a child&rsquo;s play, as Shawn Nelleen titled the last one. I&rsquo;ll be
+ sure to keep my word, as you will see before long, so have no
+ welcome for the Curtins, and, above all, let no one work for them
+ in any way. As you respect the Captain, and as you value your own
+ life, abide by this notice.&rsquo;&mdash;Signed,
+ <p class="signed">&lsquo;A MOONLIGHTER.&rsquo;</p></blockquote>
+
+<p> &ldquo;The above notice was written on tea paper in large legible style,
+ and evidently by an intelligent person. Groups were perusing it
+ during the day. A force of police marched through the village and
+ back, but did not observe this document, as it is still posted on
+ the door of the house.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;bloodthirsty perjurers&rdquo; here mentioned were the daughters who had
+dared to demand and to pro<a name="page352" id="page352"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 352]
+</span>mote the punishment of the assassins of their
+father! For this crime these daughters were to be excommunicated by the
+people of Firies, and denied the consolations of religion in their deep
+sorrow, even in defiance of the order of the Catholic bishop.</p>
+
+<p>As the advent of Mr. Gladstone to power in alliance with Mr. Parnell was
+then imminent, Mr. Sheehan, M.P., wrote a letter to the parish priest of
+Firies, the Rev. Mr. O&rsquo;Connor, begging him in substance to put the
+brakes&mdash;for a time&mdash;upon the wheels of the local rack, lest the outcries
+of the young women subjected to this moral torture should interfere with
+the success of the new alliance. This, in plain English, is the only
+possible meaning of the letter which I here reprint from a leaflet
+issued by an Irish society:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p> &ldquo;The Rev. Father O&rsquo;Connor, P.P., has received the following letter
+ from Mr. Sheehau, M.P., in reference to this matter, under date</p>
+
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;&lsquo;House of Commons, <i>January 26th.</i></p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;&lsquo;REV. DEAR SIR,&mdash;At this important juncture in our history, I am
+ sorry to see reports of the Firies display. Nothing that has taken
+ place yet in the South of Ireland has done so much harm to the
+ National cause. If they persist they will ruin us. To-morrow
+ evening will be most important in Parliamentary history. Our party
+ expect the defeat of the Government and resumption of power by Mr.
+ Gladstone. If we succeed in this, which we are confident of, the
+ future of our country will be great, and, although an appeal to the
+ constituencies must be made, the Irish party in those few days have
+ made an impression in future that no Government can withstand. The
+ Salisbury Government want to appeal to the country on the integrity
+ of the empire, and, of course, for the last few days have tried all
+ means to lead to this by raking up the Curtin case and all judicial
+ cases, which <i>must be avoided for a short time</i>, as our stoppage to
+ the Eviction Act will cover all this.&mdash;</p>
+<p class='signed'>Yours faithfully, J.D. SHEEHAN.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class="i0">This letter was read, the leaflet informs us, by the Rev. Mr. O&rsquo;Connor,
+at the National Schools and other places.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page353" id="page353"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 353]
+</span><a name="noteG" id="noteG" />NOTE G.<br />
+
+THE PONSONBY PROPERTY.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. pp. <a href="#page59">59</a>-<a href="#page66">66</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The account which the Rev. Canon Keller gave me of &ldquo;The Struggle for
+Life on the Ponsonby Estate,&rdquo; in a tract bearing that title, and
+authorised by him to be published by the National League, is so
+circumstantial and elaborate that, after reading it carefully, I took
+unusual pains to obtain some reply to it from the representatives of the
+landlord implicated. These finally led to a visit from Mr. Ponsonby
+himself, who was so kind as to call upon me in London on the 15th of
+May, with papers and documents. I give in the following colloquy the
+results of this interview, putting together with the allegations of
+Canon Keller the answers of Mr. Ponsonby, and leave the matter in this
+form to the judgment of my readers.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. Canon Keller, I see, describes you, Mr. Ponsonby, as &ldquo;a retired
+navy officer, and an absentee Irish landlord.&rdquo; He says your estate is
+now &ldquo;universally known as the famous Ponsonby Estate,&rdquo; and that it is
+occupied &ldquo;by from 300 to 400 tenants, holding farms varying in extent
+from an acre and a half to over two hundred acres.&rdquo; Are these statements
+correct?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. I am a retired navy officer certainly, and perhaps I may be called
+an &ldquo;absentee Irish landlord.&rdquo; I lived on my property for some time, and
+I have always attended to it. I succeeded to the estate in 1868, and
+almost my first act was to borrow &pound;2000 of the Board of Works for
+drainage purposes&mdash;the tenants agreeing to pay half the interest. As a
+matter of fact some never paid at all, and I afterwards wiped out the
+claims against them. There are about 300 tenants on the property, and
+the average holdings are of about 36 <a name="page354" id="page354"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 354]
+</span>acres, at an average rental of &pound;30
+a holding. There are, however, not a few large farms.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. Canon Keller says that &ldquo;in the memory of living witnesses, and far
+beyond it, the Ponsonby tenants have been notoriously rack-rented and
+oppressed&rdquo;; and that they have been committed to the &ldquo;tender mercies of
+agents, seeing little or nothing of their landlord, and experiencing no
+practical sympathy from that quarter.&rdquo; How is this?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. I wish to believe Canon Keller truthful when he knows the truth. He
+certainly does not know the truth here. He is a newcomer at Youghal,
+having come there in November 1885, and hardly so much of an authority
+about &ldquo;the memory of living witnesses and far beyond it&rdquo; as the tenants
+on the estate, who, when I went there first with my wife, presented to
+me, May 25, 1868, an address of welcome, referring in very different
+terms to the history of the estate and of my family connection with it.
+Here is the original address, and a copy of it&mdash;the latter being quite
+at your service.</p>
+
+<p>This original address is very handsomely engrossed, and is signed by
+fifty tenants. Among the names I observed those of Martin Loughlin,
+Peter McDonough, Michael Gould, William Forrest, and John Heaphey, all
+of whom are cited by Canon Keller in his tract as conspicuous victims of
+the oppression and rack-renting which he says have prevailed upon the
+Ponsonby estates time out of mind. It was rather surprising, therefore,
+to find them joining with more than forty other tenants to sign an
+address, of which I here print the text:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="center"> To C.W. TALBOT PONSONBY, Esq.</p>
+
+<p> Honoured Sir,&mdash;The Tenantry of your Estates near Youghal have heard
+ with extreme pleasure of the arrival of yourself and lady in the
+ neighbourhood, and have deputed us to address you on their behalf.</p>
+
+<p> <a name="page355" id="page355"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 355]
+</span>Through us they bid you and Mrs. Ponsonby welcome, and respectfully
+ congratulate you on your accession to the Estates.</p>
+
+<p> The name of Ponsonby is traditionally revered in this part of the
+ country, being associated in the recollections and impressions of
+ the people with all that is exalted, honourable, and generous. It
+ has been matter of regret that the heads of the family have not
+ (probably from uncontrollable causes) visited these Estates for
+ many years, but the tenantry have never wavered in their sentiments
+ of respect towards them.</p>
+
+<p> We will not disguise from you the conviction generally entertained
+ that the improvement of landed property, and the condition of its
+ occupiers, is best promoted under the personal observation and
+ supervision of the proprietor, and your tenantry on that account
+ hail with satisfaction the promise your presence affords of future
+ intercourse between you and them.</p>
+
+<p> Again, on the part of your Tenants and all connected with your
+ Estates, tendering you and your lady a most hearty welcome, and
+ sincerely wishing you and her a long and happy career&mdash;We subscribe
+ ourselves, Honoured Sir, Respectfully yours,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> YOUGHAL, <i>May</i> 1868.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Q</i>. Did Canon Keller ever see this address, may I ask, Mr. Ponsonby?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. I believe not; and I may as well say at once that I suppose he has
+taken for gospel all the stories which any of the tenants under the
+terrorism which has been established on the place think it best to pour
+into his listening ear. As I have said, he is quite a new man at
+Youghal, and when he first came there he was a quiet and not at all
+revolutionary priest. You saw him, and saw how good his manners are, and
+that he is a well-educated man. But on Sunday, November 7, 1886, a great
+meeting was held at Youghal. It was a queer meeting for a Sunday, being
+openly a political meeting, with banners and bands, to hear speeches
+from Mr. Lane, M.P., Mr. Flynn, M.P., and others. The Rev. Mr. Keller
+presided, and a priest from America, Father Hayes of Georgetown, Iowa,
+in the United States, was present. It was ostensibly a <a name="page356" id="page356"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 356]
+</span>Home Rule
+meeting, but the burden of the speeches was agrarian. Mr. Lane, M.P.,
+made a bitter personal attack on another Nationalist member, Sir Joseph
+M&lsquo;Kenna of Killeagh, calling him a &ldquo;heartless and inhuman landlord;&rdquo; and
+my property was also attended to by Mr. Lane, who advised my tenants
+openly not to accept my offer of 20 per cent. reduction, but to demand
+40 per cent. Father Hayes in his speech bade &ldquo;every man stand to his
+guns,&rdquo; and wound up by declaring that if England and the landlords
+behaved in America as they behaved in Ireland, the Americans &ldquo;would pelt
+them not only with dynamite, but with the lightnings of Heaven and the
+fires of hell, till every British bull-dog, whelp, and cur would be
+pulverised and made top-dressing for the soil.&rdquo; Canon Keller afterwards
+expressed disapproval of this speech of Hayes, and this coming to the
+knowledge of Hayes in America, Hayes denounced Keller for not daring to
+do this at the time in his presence. Since then Canon Keller has been
+much more violent in tone.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. I don&rsquo;t want to carry you through a long examination, Mr. Ponsonby,
+but I see typical cases here, about which I should like to ask a
+question or two. Here, is Callaghan Flavin, for instance, described by
+Canon Keller as one of eight tenants who &ldquo;had to retreat before the
+crowbar brigade,&rdquo; and who &ldquo;deserved a better fate.&rdquo; Canon Keller says he
+is assured by a competent judge that Flavin&rsquo;s improvements, &ldquo;full value
+for &pound;341, 10s.,&rdquo; are now &ldquo;the landlord&rsquo;s property.&rdquo; What are the facts
+about Mr. Flavin?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. Mr. Flavin&rsquo;s farm was held by his cousin, Ellen Flavin of Gilmore,
+who, on the 7th of February 1872, surrendered it to the landlord on
+receiving from me a sum of &pound;172, 10s. 6d. I obtained a charging order
+under section 27 of the Land Act, entitling me to an annuity of &pound;8, 12s.
+6d. for thirty-five years from <a name="page357" id="page357"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 357]
+</span>July 3, 1872. It was let to Callaghan
+Flavin in preference to other applicants, July 3, 1872; and in 1873, at
+his request, I obtained a loan from the Board of Works for the thorough
+draining of a portion of the farm. Thirteen acres were drained at a cost
+of &pound;84, 6s. 3d., for which the tenant promised to pay 5 per cent.
+interest, which I eventually forgave him. There was no house on the
+farm. He took it without one, and I did not want one there. He built a
+house himself without consulting my agent, and then wanted me to make
+him an allowance for it. I told him he had thirty-one years to enjoy it
+in, and must be content with that. About the same time he took another
+farm of mine at a rent of &pound;35. Since I came into my property in 1868 I
+have laid out upon it in drainage, buildings, and planting&mdash;here are the
+accounts, which you may look at&mdash;over &pound;15,000, including about &pound;8000 of
+loans from the Board of Works. In the drainage the tenants got work for
+which they were paid. I gave them slates for the buildings, with timber
+and stone from the estate, and they supplied the labour. There is no
+case in which the outlays for improvements came from the tenants&mdash;not a
+single one. I repeat it, Canon Keller&rsquo;s tract is a tissue of fictions.</p>
+
+<p>What nonsense it is to talk about the &ldquo;traditional rack-renting&rdquo; of a
+property held by the Ponsonbys for two hundred years, the tenants on
+which could welcome me when I came into it with the language of the
+address you have here seen!</p>
+
+<p>I never evicted tenants for less than three years&rsquo; arrears, till what
+Canon Keller calls the &ldquo;crowbar brigade,&rdquo; by which he means the officers
+of the law, had to be put into action to meet the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; in
+May last. I did not proceed against the tenants because they could not
+pay. I selected the tenants who could pay, and who were led, or, I
+believe <a name="page358" id="page358"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 358]
+</span>in most cases, &ldquo;coerced,&rdquo; into refusing to pay by agitators with
+Mr. Lane, M.P., to inspire them, and Canon Keller, P.P., to glorify them
+in a tract.</p>
+
+<p><i>Q</i>. What were your personal relations with the tenants when you were at
+Inchiquin?</p>
+
+<p><i>A</i>. Always most friendly; and even the other day when I was there,
+while none of them would speak to me when they were all together, those
+I met individually touched their hats, and were as civil as ever. I
+believe they would all be thankful to have things as they were, and I
+have never refused to meet and treat with them on fair individual terms.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1885 my offer of an abatement of 15 per cent. being refused,
+a few tenants, I believe, clubbed their rents, and for the sake of peace
+I then offered 20 per cent., which they accepted and paid. In October
+1886 I hoped to prevent trouble by making the same offer of 20 per cent.
+abatement on non-judicial and 10 per cent. on judicial rents. One man
+took the latter abatement and paid. Then another tenant demanded 40 per
+cent. My agent said he would give them time, and also take money on
+account, the effect of which would be to put me out of court, and
+prevent my getting an order of ejectment if I wanted to for the balance.
+I thought this fair, and approved it, but I refused to make a 40 per
+cent. all-round abatement, authorising my agent, however, to make what
+abatements he liked in special cases. My words were, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t limit you
+on the amount of abatement you give, or as to the number of tenants you
+may choose so to treat.&rdquo; If this was not a fair free hand, what would
+be? My agent afterwards told me he had no chance to make this known. The
+fact is they meant to force the Plan on the tenants and me, and to
+prevent any settlement but a &ldquo;victory for the League!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In my original notes of my conversation with Father <a name="page359" id="page359"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 359]
+</span>Keller at Youghal, I
+found the name of one tenant whom he introduced to me, and who certainly
+told me that his holdings amounted to some &pound;300 a year, and that they
+had been in his family for &ldquo;two hundred years,&rdquo; set down as Doyle&mdash;I so
+printed it with the statements made. But Father Keller, to whom I
+submitted my proofs, and who was so good as to revise them, struck out
+the name of Doyle, and inserted that of Loughlin, putting the rental
+down at &pound;94 (vol. ii. p. <a href="#page71">71</a>). Of course I accept this correction. But on
+my mentioning the matter to Mr. Ponsonby by letter, he replies to me
+(July 27th) as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p> &ldquo;Maurice Doyle is a son of Richard Doyle, who died in 1876, leaving
+ his widow to carry on his farm of 74 acres 1 rood, in the townland
+ of Ballykitty, which he held in 1858 at a rental of &pound;50, 11s. In
+ 1868 this was reduced to &pound;48, 11s. In September 1871 he took in
+ addition a farm of 159 acres 2 roods at &pound;130, in Burgen and
+ Ballykitty. He afterwards got a lease for thirty-one years of this
+ larger farm, with a portion of his earlier holding, for &pound;155. This
+ left him to pay &pound;21, 11s. for the residue of the earlier holding as
+ in 1858. But at his request, in 1876, the year of his death, I
+ reduced this to &pound;17.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;In March 1879, by the death of Mr. Henry Hall, in whose family it
+ had been for certainly a century, the Inchiquin farm of 213 acres,
+ valued at &pound;258, 10s., came on my hands. This farm was valued in
+ 1873 by one valuer at &pound;384, 10s., and by another at &pound;390, 10s. In
+ an old lease I find that this farm was let at &pound;3 an acre. Mr. Henry
+ Hall to the day of his death held it at &pound;306, 7s. 6d., under a
+ lease which I made a lease for life. For this farm Mrs. Richard
+ Doyle applied, agreeing to take it on a 31 years&rsquo; lease, at &pound;370 a
+ year. I let it to her, and she became the lease-holder, putting in
+ her son Maurice Doyle to take charge of it, though not as the
+ tenant. He was an active Land Leaguer from the moment he got into
+ the place, and in 1886 he was a leader in promoting the Plan of
+ Campaign. Proceedings had to be taken against his mother in order
+ to eject him, as she was the tenant, not he. I objected to this,
+ for I always have had the greatest regard for her. Had she been let
+ alone she would have paid her rent as she had always done. But Mr.
+ Lane and his allies saw it would <a name="page360" id="page360"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 360]
+</span>never do to let Maurice Doyle
+ retain his place on his mother&rsquo;s holding. All this will show you
+ that Maurice Doyle did not inherit the Inchiquin farm. The only
+ inherited holding of his mother is the farm of 74 acres 1 rood in
+ the townland of Ballykitty, held by his father in 1858. I have no
+ doubt you saw Doyle at Youghal, by the description you gave me, and
+ you remembered his name at once. He was a thickset heavy-looking
+ man, florid, with a military moustache, the last time I saw him.
+ His mother is one of the &lsquo;rack-rented&rsquo; tenants you hear of, having
+ been able in ten years to increase her acreage from 74 acres to 376
+ acres, and her rental from &pound;48, 11s. to &pound;542!&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>As to the general effect of all this business upon the tenants, and upon
+himself, Mr. Ponsonby spoke most feelingly. &ldquo;The tenants are ruined
+where they might have been thriving. My means of being useful to them or
+to myself are taken away. My charges, though, all remain. I have to pay
+tithes for Protestant Church service, of which I can&rsquo;t have the benefit,
+the churches being closed; and the other day I had a notice that any
+property I had in England would be held liable for quit-rents to the
+Crown on my property in Ireland, of which the Government denies me
+practically any control or use!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteG2" id="noteG2" />NOTE G2.<br />
+
+THE GLENBEHY EVICTION FUND.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page12">12</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the <i>London Times</i> of September 15 appears the following letter from
+the Land Agent whom I saw at Glenbehy, setting forth the effect of this
+&ldquo;Glenbehy Eviction Fund&rdquo; upon the morals of the tenants and the peace of
+the place:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="center"> <i>To the Editor of the Times.</i></p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Sir,&mdash;Although nearly eighteen months have elapsed since the
+ evictions on the Glenbehy estate, after which the above-<a name="page361" id="page361"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 361]
+</span>named fund
+ was started and largely subscribed to by the sympathetic British
+ public, I think it only fair to throw a little light on the manner
+ in which this fund has been expended, and the effects which are
+ still felt in consequence of the money not yet being exhausted.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;It was generally supposed that the tenants then evicted were in
+ such poor circumstances as to be unable to settle, whereas, as a
+ matter of fact, they were, and are, with a few exceptions, the most
+ well-to-do on the estate, having, for the most part, from five to
+ fifteen head of cattle, in addition to sheep, pigs, etc.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Among the tenants evicted at that time many had not paid rents
+ since 1879, and had been in illegal occupation since 1884, from
+ which latter date the landlord was responsible for taxes, provided
+ it is proved that sufficient distress cannot be made of the lands.
+ These tenants were offered a clear receipt to May 1, 1886, if they
+ paid half a year&rsquo;s rent, which would scarcely have paid the cost of
+ proceedings, and the landlord would therefore have been put to
+ actual loss. These people, though well able to settle, are given to
+ understand that as soon as they do so their participation in the
+ eviction fund will cease, and thus it will be seen that a direct
+ premium is being paid to dishonesty.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;In one case a widow woman was summoned for being on the farm from
+ which she was at that time evicted. Finding out that one of her
+ children was ill, I applied to the magistrate at the hearing of the
+ case only to impose a nominal fine. In consequence she was fined
+ one penny, but sooner than pay this she went to gaol, though she
+ had several head of cattle and, prior to her eviction, a very nice
+ farm. The case of this woman fairly illustrates the combination
+ which has existed to avoid the fulfilment of obligations.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;The amount of fines paid for similar offences comes, in several
+ instances, to nearly what I require to effect a settlement. Some of
+ the tenants actually wrote to the late agent on this estate begging
+ him to evict them in order that they might come in for a share of
+ the money raised for the relief of distress, and this clearly shows
+ beyond dispute that the well-meaning subscribers to the fund will
+ be more or less responsible for any further evictions to which it
+ may be necessary to resort. I may mention that the parish priest is
+ one of the trustees for the money which is thus being used for the
+ purpose of preventing settlements and keeping the place in a
+ continual state of turmoil.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;Judge Currane, at the January sessions held at Killarney <a name="page362" id="page362"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 362]
+</span>this
+ year, ruled in about fifty ejectment cases on this estate that
+ tenants owing one and a half to nine years&rsquo; rent should pay half a
+ year&rsquo;s rent and costs within a week, a quarter of a year&rsquo;s rent by
+ June 1, and a quarter of a year&rsquo;s rent by October 1; arrears to be
+ cancelled. Some of these, owing to non-compliance with the Judge&rsquo;s
+ ruling, may have to be evicted, and their eviction will be what is
+ termed the unrooting of peasants&rsquo; houses and the ejectment of
+ overburdened tenants for not paying impossible rents.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;I confess I am at a loss to understand how Mr. Parnell&rsquo;s Arrears
+ Act would have improved matters or have averted what one of your
+ contemporaries calls a &ldquo;painful scandal.&rdquo;&mdash;I am, Sirs, yours, &amp;c.,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> &ldquo;D. TODD-THORNTON, J.P., Land Agent.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> &ldquo;Glenbehy, Killarney.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteG3" id="noteG3" />NOTE G3.<br />
+
+HOME RULE AND PROTESTANTISM.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page68">68</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>I fear that all the &ldquo;Nationalist&rdquo; clergy in Ireland are not as careful
+as Father Keller to avoid giving occasion for this impression that Irish
+autonomy would be followed by a persecution of the Protestants. But a
+little more than three years ago, for example, the following circular
+was issued by the Bishop of Ossory, and affixed to the door of the
+churches in his diocese. Who can wonder that it should have been
+regarded by Protestants in that diocese as a direct stirring up of
+bitter religious animosities against them? Or that, emanating directly
+as it did from a bishop of the Church, it should be represented as
+emanating indirectly from the Head of the Church himself at Rome?</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;<i>Kilkenny, April 16th, 1885.</i></p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;REV. DEAR SIR,&mdash;May I ask you to read the following circular for
+ the people at each of the Masses on Sunday, 19th April?</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;The course to be adopted for the future by the Priest of the Parish
+ to whom notice of a Mixed Marriage is given by the <a name="page363" id="page363"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 363]
+</span>Minister, or the
+ Registrar, is as follows:&mdash;he makes the following entry on the book
+ of Parochial announcements, and reads it three consecutive Sundays
+ from the Altar:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;&lsquo;The Priests of the Parish have received the following notice of a
+ marriage to be celebrated between a Catholic and a Protestant. [Here
+ read Registrar&rsquo;s notice in full.] We have now to inform you that the
+ law of the Catholic Church regarding such marriages is: that the
+ Catholic party contracting marriage before a Registrar or other
+ unauthorised person is, by the very fact of so doing,
+ Excommunicated; and the witnesses to such marriage are also
+ Excommunicated.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;I should be very much obliged if, as occasion may require, you
+ would explain the effects of this Excommunication from the Altar.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;You will please take notice that the Registrar or Minister is bound
+ legally to send the notice of marriage referred to above, and also,
+ that in reading it out <i>in the form, and with the accompanying
+ remarks above</i>, you incur no legal penalty.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;I feel sure that with your accustomed zeal you will do everything
+ in your power to prevent abuses in regard to the Sacrament of
+ Matrimony, which is great in Christ and the Church, and to induce
+ the faithful to prepare for receiving it by Prayer, by works of
+ Charity, and by approaching the Sacrament of Penance to purify their
+ souls.&mdash;Yours faithfully in Christ,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> [Image: Cross] A. BROWNRIGG.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p> &ldquo;MY DEAR BRETHREN,&mdash;We have been very much pained to learn, within
+ the past month, that marriages between Catholics and non-Catholics
+ have increased very much in this city of Kilkenny. Many
+ <i>evil-disposed</i> persons, utterly unmindful of the prohibitions of
+ the Church, and regardless of the dreadful consequences they bring
+ on themselves, have not hesitated to enter into those <i>unholy
+ matrimonial alliances</i> called &ldquo;Mixed Marriages,&rdquo; which the Catholic
+ Church has always <i>hated and detested</i>. Those misguided Catholics,
+ who do not deserve the name, have not blushed to go, in some
+ instances, before the Protestant Minister, in other instances,
+ before the Public Registrar, to ask them to assist at their marriage
+ with a Protestant. By contracting marriage in this way, they run a
+ great risk of bringing on themselves and on their children, should
+ they have any, the <i>maledictions</i> of Heaven instead of the blessings
+ of religion. In order to put a stop to this growing abuse, and to
+ prevent it from spreading like a contagion to other parts of the
+ Diocese, we beg to remind the faithful of certain regulations which,
+ for the future, shall have force in the Diocese of <a name="page364" id="page364"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 364]
+</span>Ossory in
+ reference to the Catholics, who so far forget themselves as to
+ contract such marriages.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;1. In the first place, any one who contracts a &ldquo;Mixed Marriage&rdquo;
+ without a dispensation from the Holy See and before a Protestant
+ Minister or a Registrar is, by the very fact, guilty of a most
+ grievous mortal sin by violating a solemn law of the Church in a
+ most grave matter.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;2. The Catholic who assists as witness at such marriage also
+ commits a most grievous sin by co-operating in an unlawful act.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;3. Both the Catholic party contracting the marriage and the
+ Catholic witnesses to it cannot be absolved by any priest in the
+ Diocese of Ossory, unless by the Bishop or by those to whom he
+ grants special faculties.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;4. In order more effectually to deter people from entering into
+ <i>those detestable marriages</i>, the penalty of <i>Excommunication</i>
+ is hereby attached to that sin both for the Catholic <i>contracting</i>
+ party as also for the Catholic <i>witnesses</i> to such marriage.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;5. The notice which the Protestant Rector or the Registrar is
+ legally bound in such cases to send to the Parish Priest of the
+ Catholic party, will be read from the Altar for three consecutive
+ Sundays, and thus the <i>crime</i> of the offending party brought out
+ into open light before his or her fellow-parishioners.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;6. For the rest, we hope the sense of decency and religion of the
+ Catholic people and their Pastors shall be no more hurt by any
+ Catholic entering into those marriages, so full of, misery and evil
+ of every kind for themselves, their children, and society at
+ large.&mdash;Yours faithfully in Christ,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> [Image: Cross] ABRAHAM, Bishop of Ossory.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteH" id="noteH" />NOTE H.<br />
+
+TULLY AND THE WOODFORD EVICTIONS.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page149">149</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>Since the first edition of this book was published certain &ldquo;evictions&rdquo;
+mentioned in it as impending on the Clanricarde estates have been
+carried out. I have <a name="page365" id="page365"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 365]
+</span>no reason to suppose that there was more or less
+reason for carrying out these evictions than there usually is, not in
+Ireland only, but all over the civilised world, for a resort by the
+legal owners of property to legal means of recovering the possession of
+it from persons who fail to comply with the terms on which it was put
+into their keeping. Whether this failure results from dishonesty or from
+misfortune is a consideration not often allowed, I think, to affect the
+right of the legal owner of the property concerned to his legal remedy
+in any other country but Ireland, nor even in Ireland in the case of any
+property other than property in land. But as what I learned on the spot
+touching the general condition of the Clanricarde tenants, and touching
+the conduct and character of Lord Clanricarde&rsquo;s agent, Mr. Tener, led me
+to take a special interest in these evictions, I asked him to send me
+some account of them. In reply he gave me a number of interesting
+details.</p>
+
+<p>The only serious attempt at resisting the execution of the law was made
+by &ldquo;Dr.&rdquo; Tully, one of the leading local &ldquo;agitators,&rdquo; to the tendency of
+whose harangues judicial reference was made during the investigation
+into the case of Mr. Wilfrid Blunt. Tully had a holding of seventeen
+acres at a rent of &pound;2, 10s., the Government valuation being &pound;4. He
+earned a good livelihood as a boat-builder, and he had put up a slated
+house on his holding. But in November 1884 he chose to stop paying the
+very low rent at which he held his place, and he has paid no rent since
+that time. As is stated in a footnote on page <a href="#page153">153</a>, vol. ii. of this
+book, a decree was granted against Tully by Judge Henn for three years&rsquo;
+rent due in May 1887, and his equity of redemption having expired July
+9, 1888, this recourse was had to the law against him.</p>
+
+<p>As the leading spirit of the agitation, Tully had put <a name="page366" id="page366"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 366]
+</span>a garrison into
+his house of twelve men and two women. He had dug a ditch around it,
+taken out the window-sashes, filled up the casements and the doorways
+with stones and trunks of trees. Portholes had been pierced under the
+roof, through which the defenders might thrust red-hot pikes,
+pitchforks, and other weapons, and empty pails of boiling water upon the
+assailants. A brief parley took place. Tully refused to make any offer
+of a settlement unless the agent would agree to reinstate all the
+evicted tenants, to which Mr. Tener replied that he would recognise no
+&ldquo;combination,&rdquo; but was ready to deal with every tenant fairly and
+individually. Finally the Sheriff ordered his men to take the place.
+Ladders were planted, and while some of the constables, under the
+protection of a shield covered with zinc, a sort of Roman <i>testudo</i>,
+worked at removing the earthern ramparts, others nimbly climbed to the
+roof and began to break in from above. In their excitement the garrison
+helped this forward by breaking holes through the roof themselves to get
+at the attacking party, and in about twenty minutes the fortress was
+captured, and the inmates were prisoners. Two constables were burned by
+the red-hot pikes, the gun of another was broken to pieces by a huge
+stone, and a fourth was slightly wounded by a fork. One of the defenders
+got a sword-cut; and Tully was brought forth as one too severely wounded
+to walk. Upon investigation, however, the surgeon refused to certify
+that he was unable to undergo the ordinary imprisonment in such cases
+made and provided.</p>
+
+<p>The collapse of the resistance at this central point was followed by a
+general surrender.</p>
+
+<p>After the capture of Tully&rsquo;s house, Mr. Tener writes to me, &ldquo;I found it
+being gutted by his family, who would have carried it away piecemeal.
+They had <a name="page367" id="page367"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 367]
+</span>already taken away the flooring of one of the rooms.&rdquo; Thereupon
+Mr. Tener had the house pulled down, with the result of seeing a
+statement made in a leading Nationalist paper that he was &ldquo;evicting the
+tenants and pulling down their houses.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesterday,&rdquo; Mr. Tener writes to me on the 9th of September, &ldquo;I walked
+twenty-five miles, visiting thirty farms about Portumna. Except in two
+or three cases, the tenants have ample means, and part of the live stock
+alone on the farms, exclusive of the crops, would suffice to pay all the
+rents I had demanded. On the farms recently &lsquo;evicted,&rsquo; I found treble
+the amount of the rent due in live stock alone.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As to one case of these recent evictions, I found it stated in an Irish
+journal that a young man, who had been ill of consumption for two years,
+the son of a tenant, was removed from the house, the local physician
+refusing to certify that he was unfit for removal, and that he died a
+few days afterwards. The implication was obvious, and I asked Mr. Tener
+for the facts.</p>
+
+<p>He replied, &ldquo;This young man, John Fahey, was in consumption, but did not
+appear to be in any danger. Dr. Carte, an Army surgeon, examined him,
+and said there was no immediate danger. The day was fine and he walked
+about wrapped in a comfortable coat, and talked with me and others. His
+father, a respectable man, made no attempt to defend his house; and at
+his request, after the crowd had gone away, my man in charge permitted
+the invalid and the family to reoccupy the house temporarily because of
+his illness. There was no inquest, and no need of any, after his death.
+His father, Patrick Fahey, had means to pay, but told me he &lsquo;could not,&rsquo;
+which meant he &lsquo;dared not.&rsquo; I went to him personally twice, and sent him
+many messages. But the terror of the League was upon the poor man.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page368" id="page368"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 368]
+</span>&ldquo;An interesting case is that of Michael Fahey, of Dooras. In 1883 his
+rent was judicially reduced about 5 per cent., from &pound;33 to &pound;31, 5s. His
+house and all about it is substantial and comfortable. His father, about
+thirty years ago, fought for a whole night and bravely beat off a party
+of &lsquo;Terry-Alts,&rsquo; the &lsquo;Moonlighters&rsquo; of that day. For his courage the
+Government presented him with a gun, of which the son is very proud.
+Pity he did not inherit the pluck with the gun of his parent!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had been privately told that this tenant would pay; but that he would
+first produce a doctor&rsquo;s certificate that his old mother could not be
+moved. He did give the Sheriff a carefully worded document to show this,
+but it was so vague that I objected to its being received by the
+Sheriff. Upon this (not before! mark the craft of even a well-disposed
+Irish tenant in those evil days), I was asked to go into the house. I
+went in and entered the parlour. There the tenant told me he would pay
+the year&rsquo;s rent and the costs, amounting to &pound;50. He had risen from his
+seat to fetch the money, when, lo! Father Egan (the priest upon whose
+head the widow of the murdered Finlay called down the curse of God in
+the open street of Woodford) appeared in the doorway. He had come in on
+a pretence of seeing the old mother of the tenant, who had (for that
+occasion) taken to her bed. The bedroom lay beyond the parlour, and was
+entered from it. The tenant actually shook with fear as Father Egan
+passed through, and I thought all hope of a settlement gone, when
+suddenly the officer of the police came in, passed into the bedroom, and
+told Father Egan he must withdraw. This Father Egan refused to do,
+whereupon the officer said very quietly, &lsquo;I shall remove you forthwith
+if you do not go out quietly.&rsquo; Upon this Father Egan hastily left. The
+tenant then went into the bedroom and soon <a name="page369" id="page369"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 369]
+</span>reappeared with the &pound;50 in
+bank-notes, which he paid me. All this was dramatic enough. But the
+comedy was next performed in front of the house, where all could see it,
+of handing to the Sheriff the alleged doctor&rsquo;s certificate, and of my
+saying aloud that &lsquo;in the circumstances&rsquo; I had no objection to his
+receiving it! After this all the forces proceeded to take their luncheon
+on the green bank sloping down to the Shannon in front of the
+farm-house. There is a fine orchard on the place, and it recalled to me
+some of the farms I saw in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had gone into the house again, and was standing near the fire in the
+kitchen, where some of my escort were taking their luncheon. It is a
+large kitchen, and perhaps a dozen people were in it, when in came
+Father Egan again and called to the tenant Fahey, &lsquo;Put out those
+policemen, and do not suffer one of them to remain.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The sergeant instantly said, &lsquo;We are here on duty, Father Egan, and if
+you dare to try to intimidate this tenant, I shall either put you out or
+arrest you.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; I interposed, looking at the sergeant, &lsquo;you are certainly here
+on duty, and in the name of the law, and it is sad to see a clergyman
+here in the interest of an illegal, criminal, and rebellious movement,
+and of the immoral Plan of Campaign.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh!&rsquo; exclaimed Father Egan, &lsquo;the opinion of the agent of the Marquis
+of Clanricarde is valuable, truly!&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I give you,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;not my opinion, but the opinion of Dr. Healy and
+Dr. O&rsquo;Dwyer, bishops of your Church, and men worthy of all respect and
+reverence. And I am sorry to know that some ecclesiastics deserve no
+respect, but that at their doors lies the main responsibility for the
+misery and the crime which afflict our unhappy country. I feel sure a
+just God will punish them in due time.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page370" id="page370"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 370]
+</span>&ldquo;Father Egan made no reply, but paused a moment, and then walked out of
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At the next house, that of Dennis Fahey, we found a still better
+dwelling. Here we had another mock certificate, but we received the rent
+with the costs.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteH2" id="noteH2" />NOTE H2.<br />
+
+BOYCOTTING THE DEAD.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page151">151</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The following official account sent to me (July 24) of an affair in
+Donegal, the result of the gospel of &ldquo;Boycotting&rdquo; taught in that region,
+needs and will bear no comment.</p>
+
+<p>Patrick Cavanagh came to reside at Clonmany, County Donegal, about two
+months ago, as caretaker on some evicted farms. He died on Wednesday
+evening, June 20th, having received the full rites of the Roman Catholic
+Church. The people had displayed no ill-will towards him during his
+brief residence at Clonmany, and on the evening of his death his body
+was washed and laid out by some women. On Thursday two townsmen dug his
+grave, where pointed out by Father Doherty, P.P.</p>
+
+<p>The first symptom of change of feeling was that on Thursday every
+carpenter applied to had some excuse for not making a coffin for the
+body of deceased. On Friday morning the grave was found to be filled
+with stones, and a deputation waited on Father Doherty to protest
+against Cavanagh&rsquo;s burial in the chapel graveyard. He told them to go
+home and mind their business. About 10.30 A.M. on Friday the chapel bell
+was rung&mdash;not tolled or rung as for service, but faster. The local
+sergeant of police went to the cemetery; when he <a name="page371" id="page371"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 371]
+</span>arrived there the
+tolling ceased. He then went to Father Doherty, who told those present
+that their conduct was such as to render them unfit for residence
+anywhere but in a savage country. He told them to go to their homes, and
+advised them to allow the corpse to be buried in the grave he had marked
+out. After Father Doherty had left, the people condemned his
+interference, and said they would not allow any stranger to be buried in
+the graveyard. When Constable Brady put it to those present that their
+real objection did not lie in the fact that Cavanagh had been a
+stranger, he was not contradicted.</p>
+
+<p>The body was ultimately buried at Carndonagh on Saturday, several people
+remaining in the graveyard at Clonmany all through the night (Friday)
+till the body was taken to Carndonagh for burial.</p>
+
+<p>At Carndonagh Petty Sessions, on the 18th July 1888, Con. Doherty and
+Owen Doherty, with five others, were prosecuted for unlawful assembly on
+the occasion above referred to. The first two named, who were the
+ringleaders, were convicted, and sentenced to six weeks&rsquo; imprisonment
+each with hard labour; the charges against the remainder were dismissed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteI" id="noteI" />NOTE I.<br />
+
+POST-OFFICE SAVINGS BANKS.<br />
+
+(Vol. i. p. 117; vol. ii. pp. <a href="#page5">5</a>, <a href="#page12">12</a>, <a href="#page66">66</a>, <a href="#page95">95</a>, <a href="#page200">200</a>, <a href="#page248">248</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>As the Post-Office Savings Banks represent the smaller depositors, and
+command special confidence among them even in the disturbed districts, I
+print here an official statement showing the balances due to depositors
+in the undermentioned offices, situated in certain of the most disturbed
+regions I visited, on the <a name="page372" id="page372"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 372]
+</span>31st December of the years 1880 and 1887
+respectively:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table>
+<thead><tr><td> OFFICE </td><td> 1880 </td><td> 1887 </td></tr></thead><tbody>
+<tr><td> </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td><td> &pound; s. d. </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Bunbeg </td><td> 1,270&nbsp;6&nbsp;7 </td><td> 1,206&nbsp;18&nbsp;2 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Falcarragh </td><td> 62&nbsp;15&nbsp;10 </td><td> 494&nbsp;10&nbsp;8 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Gorey </td><td> 3,690&nbsp;14&nbsp;4 </td><td> 5,099&nbsp;5&nbsp;7 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Inch </td><td>[A] 8&nbsp;11&nbsp;0 </td><td> 209&nbsp;7&nbsp;5 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Killorglin </td><td> 282&nbsp;15&nbsp;9 </td><td> 1,299&nbsp;2&nbsp;6 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Loughrea </td><td> 5,500&nbsp;19&nbsp;9 </td><td> 6,311&nbsp;4&nbsp;11 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Mitchelstown </td><td> 1,387&nbsp;13&nbsp;2 </td><td> 2,846&nbsp;9&nbsp;3 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Portumna </td><td> 2,539&nbsp;10&nbsp;11 </td><td> 3,376&nbsp;5&nbsp;4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Sixmilebridge </td><td> 382&nbsp;17&nbsp;10 </td><td> 934&nbsp;13&nbsp;4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Stradbally </td><td> 1,812&nbsp;14&nbsp;8 </td><td> 2,178&nbsp;18&nbsp;2 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Woodford </td><td> 259&nbsp;14&nbsp;6 </td><td> 1,350&nbsp;17&nbsp;11 </td></tr>
+<tr><td> Youghal </td><td> 3,031&nbsp;0&nbsp;7 </td><td> 7,038&nbsp;7&nbsp;2 </td></tr></tbody>
+</table></div>
+<p>
+ [A] This Office was not opened for Savings Bank
+ business until the year 1881, the amount shown
+ being balance due on the 31st December 1882.</p>
+
+<p>It appears from this table that the deposits in these Savings Banks
+increased in the aggregate from &pound;20,329, 15s. 11d. in 1880 to &pound;32,347,
+9s. 7d. in 1887, or almost 60 per cent, in seven years. They fell off in
+only one case, at Bunbeg, and there only to a nominal amount. At Youghal
+they much more than doubled, increasing about 133 per cent. Yet in all
+these places the Plan of Campaign has been invoked &ldquo;because the people
+were penniless and could not pay their debts!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteK" id="noteK" />NOTE K.<br />
+
+THE COOLGREANY EVICTIONS.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page216">216</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>Captain Hamilton sends me the following graphic account of this affair
+at Coolgreany:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><a name="page373" id="page373"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 373]
+</span>In the <i>Freeman&rsquo;s Journal</i> of the 16th December 1886, it is reported
+that a meeting of the Brooke tenantry, the Rev. P. O&rsquo;Neill in the chair,
+was held at Coolgreany on the Sunday previous to the 15th December 1886,
+the date on which the &ldquo;Plan of Campaign&rdquo; was adopted on the estate, at
+which it was resolved that if I refused the terms offered they would
+join the &ldquo;Plan.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I had no conference at Freeman&rsquo;s house or anywhere else at any time with
+two parish priests. On the 15th December 1886, when seated in Freeman&rsquo;s
+house waiting to receive the rents, four priests, a reporter of the
+<i>Freeman&rsquo;s Journal</i>, some local reporters, and four of the tenants
+rushed into the room; and the priests in the rudest possible manner (the
+Rev. P. Farrelly, one of them, calling me &ldquo;Francy Hyne&rsquo;s hangman,&rdquo; and
+other terms of abuse) informed me that unless I re-instated a former
+Roman Catholic tenant in a farm which he had previously held, and which
+was then let to a Protestant, and gave an abatement of 30 per cent., no
+rent would be paid <i>me</i> that day. Dr. Dillon, C.C., was not present on
+this occasion, or, if so, I do not remember seeing him.</p>
+
+<p>On my asking if I had no alternative but to concede to their demand, the
+Rev. Mr. Dunphy, parish priest, replied, &ldquo;None other; do not think, sir,
+we have come here to-day to do honour to you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. P. O&rsquo;Neill spoke as he always does, in a more gentlemanly and
+conciliatory manner, and I therefore, as the confusion in the room was
+great, offered to discuss the matter with him, the Rev. O&rsquo;Donel, C.C.,
+and the tenants, if the other priests, who were strangers to me, and the
+reporters would leave the room. This the Rev. Mr. Dunphy declared they
+would not do, and I accordingly refused further to discuss the matter.</p>
+
+<p>After they left the house, one of the tenants, Mick <a name="page374" id="page374"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 374]
+</span>Darcy, stepped
+forward and said, &ldquo;Settle with us, Captain.&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;Certainly, if
+you come back with me into the house.&rdquo; The Rev. Mr. Dunphy took him by
+the collar of his coat and threw him against the wall of the house, then
+turning to me with his hand raised said, &ldquo;You shall not do so; we, who
+claim the temporal as well as spiritual power over <i>you</i> as well as
+these poor creatures, will settle this matter with you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tenants were then taken down to the League rooms, where two M.P.s,
+Sir Thomas Esmonde and Mr. Mayne, were waiting to receive the rents,
+which, one by one, they were ordered in to pay into the war-chest of the
+&ldquo;Plan of Campaign.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>I have I fear written too much of this commencement of the war on the
+estate which has since led to over seventy of the tenants and their
+families being ejected, and has brought ruin on nearly all who joined
+it. I have considerable experience as a land agent, but I know of no
+estate where the tenants were more respectable, better housed, or, as a
+body, in better circumstances than on the Brooke estate. They had a
+kind, indulgent landlord, and they knew it; and nothing but the belief
+that, led by their clergy, they were foremost in a battle fighting for
+their country and religion, would have induced them to put up with the
+great hardships and loss they have undoubtedly had to suffer.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page375" id="page375"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 375]
+</span><a name="noteL" id="noteL" />NOTE L.<br />
+
+A DUCAL SUPPER IN IRELAND IN 1711.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page283">283</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The following entry I take from the Expense-Book of the Duke of Ormond,
+under date of August 23, 1711:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<br /><br />
+His Grace came to Kilkenny, half an hour after 10 at night.
+<br /><br />
+HIS GRACE&rsquo;S TABLE.<br /><br />
+
+Pottage.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sautee Veal.<br />
+5 Pullets, Bacon and Collyflowers.<br />
+Pottage Meagre.<br />
+Pikes with White Sauce.<br />
+A Turbot with Lobster Sauce.<br />
+Umbles.<br />
+A Hare Hasht.<br />
+Buttered Chickens, G.<br />
+Hasht Veal and New Laid Eggs.<br />
+Removes.<br />
+A Shoulder and Neck of Mutton.<br />
+Haunch of Venison.<br />
+<br /><br />
+<i>Second Course.</i><br />
+<br />
+Lobsters.<br />
+Tarts, an Oval Dish.<br />
+Crabbs Buttered.<br />
+4 Pheasants, 4 Partridges, 4 Turkeys.<br />
+Ragoo Mushrooms.<br />
+Kidney Beans.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ragoo Oysters.<br />
+Fritters.<br />
+Two Sallets.
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteM" id="noteM" />NOTE M.<br />
+
+LETTER FROM MR. O&rsquo;LEARY.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page291">291</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the first edition of this book I credited Mr. O&rsquo;Leary with making
+this pungent remark about figs and grapes, because I found it jotted
+down in my original memoranda as coming from him. In a private note he
+assures me that he does not think it was made by him, and though this
+does not agree with my own <a name="page376" id="page376"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 376]
+</span>recollection, I defer, of course, to his
+impression. And this I do the more readily that it affords me an
+opportunity for printing the following very characteristic and
+interesting letter sent to me by him for publication should I think fit
+to use it.</p>
+
+<p>As the most important support given by the Irish in America to the
+Nationalists is solicited by their agents on the express ground that
+they are really labouring to establish an Irish Republic, this outspoken
+declaration of Mr. O&rsquo;Leary, that he does not believe they &ldquo;expect or
+desire&rdquo; the establishment of an Irish Republic, will be of interest on
+my side of the water:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="dateline"> &ldquo;DUBLIN, <i>Sept.</i> 9, &rsquo;88.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;My Dear Sir,&mdash;I am giving more bother about what you make me say
+ in your book than the thing is probably worth, especially seeing
+ that what you say about me and my present attitude towards men and
+ things here is almost entirely correct.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;It is proverbially hard to prove a negative, and my main reason
+ for believing I did not say the thing about figs and grapes is that
+ I never could remember the whole of any proverb in conversation;
+ but I am absolutely certain I never said that &lsquo;some of them (the
+ National Leaguers) expect to found an Irish republic on robbery,
+ and to administer it by falsehood. We don&rsquo;t.&rsquo; Most certainly I do
+ not expect to found anything on robbery, or administer anything by
+ falsehood, but I do not in the least believe that the National
+ League either expects or desires to found an Irish republic at all!
+ Neither do I believe that the Leaguers will long retain the
+ administration of such small measure of Home Rule, as I now (since
+ the late utterances of Mr. Parnell and Mr. Gladstone) believe we
+ are going to get. My fault with the present people is not that they
+ are looking, or mean to look, for too much, but that they may be
+ induced, by pressure from their English Radical allies, to be
+ content with too little. It is only a large and liberal measure of
+ Home Rule which will ever satisfy the Irish people, and I fear
+ that, if the smaller fry of Radical M.P.&rsquo;s are allowed to have a
+ strong voice in a matter of which they know next to nothing, the
+ settlement of the Irish question will be indefinitely postponed.&mdash;I
+ remain, faithfully yours,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> &ldquo;JOHN O&rsquo;LEARY.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="page377" id="page377"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 377]
+</span><a name="noteN" id="noteN" />NOTE N.<br />
+
+BOYCOTTING PRIVATE OPINION.<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page293">293</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>This case of Mr. Taylor is worth preserving <i>in extenso</i> as an
+illustration of that spirit in the Irish journalism of the day, against
+which Mr. Rolleston and his friends protest as fatal to independence,
+manliness, and truth. I simply cite the original attack made upon Mr.
+Taylor, the replies made by himself and his friends, and the comments
+made upon those replies by the journal which assailed him. They all tell
+their own story.</p>
+
+<p class="center"> (<i>UNITED IRELAND</i>, JUNE 16.)</p>
+
+<p> Mr. John F. Taylor owes everything he has or is to the Irish
+ National Party; nor is he slow to confess it where the
+ acknowledgment will serve his personal interests. His sneers are
+ all anonymous, and, like Mr. Fagg, the grateful and deferential
+ valet in <i>The Rivals</i>, &ldquo;it hurts his conscience to be found out.&rdquo;
+ There is no honesty or sincerity in the man. His covert gibes are
+ the spiteful emanation of personal disappointment; his lofty
+ morality is a cloak for unscrupulous self-seeking. He has always
+ shown himself ready to say anything or do anything that may serve
+ his own interests. In the general election of 1885 he made frantic
+ efforts to get into Parliament as a member of the Irish Party. He
+ ghosted every member of the party whose influence he thought might
+ help him&mdash;notably the two men, Mr. Dillon and Mr. O&rsquo;Brien, at whom
+ he now sneers, as he fondly believes, in the safe seclusion of an
+ anonymous letter of an English newspaper. During the period of
+ probation his hand was incessant on Mr. Dillon&rsquo;s door-knocker. The
+ most earnest supplications were not spared. All in vain. Either his
+ character or his ability failed to satisfy the Irish leader, and
+ his claim was summarily rejected. Since then his wounded vanity has
+ found vent in spiteful calumny of almost every member of the Irish
+ Party&mdash;whenever he found malice a luxury that could be safely
+ indulged in.</p>
+
+<p> &ldquo;His next step was a startling one. We have absolute <a name="page378" id="page378"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 378]
+</span>reason to
+ know, when the last Coercion Act was in full swing, this
+ pure-souled and disinterested patriot begged for, received, and
+ accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship under a Coercion
+ Government. As was wittily said at the time, he sold his
+ principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+ stirred the mess. Strong pressure was brought to bear on him, and
+ he was induced for his own sake, after many protests and with much
+ reluctance, to publicly refuse the office he had already privately
+ accepted. Mr. Taylor professes to model himself on Robert Emmet and
+ Thomas Davis; it is hard to realise Thomas Davis or Robert Emmet as
+ a Coercion Crown Prosecutor in the pay of Dublin Castle. Since then
+ there has been no more persistent caviller at the Irish policy and
+ the Irish Party in company where he believed such cavilling paid.
+ When Home Rule was proposed by Mr. Gladstone, he had a thousand
+ foolish sneers for the measure and its author. When the Bill was
+ defeated, he elected Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Goschen, and Mr. T.W.
+ Russell as the gods of his idolatry. Such a nature needs a patron,
+ and Mr. Webb, Q.C., the Tory County Court Judge who doubled the
+ sentence on Father M&lsquo;Fadden, was the patron to be selected. It is
+ shrewdly suspected that he supplied most of the misguiding
+ information for Dr. Webb&rsquo;s coercion pamphlet, and it is probable
+ that Dr. Webb gives him a lift with his weekly letter to the
+ <i>Manchester Guardian.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> (<i>UNITED IRELAND</i>, JUNE 23.)</p>
+
+<p class="center"> MR. JOHN F. TAYLOR.</p>
+
+<p class="center"> <i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Sir,&mdash;You would not, I am sure, allow intentional misstatements to
+ appear in your columns, and I ask you to allow me space to correct
+ three erroneous observations made about myself in your current
+ issue&mdash;</p>
+
+<p> 1. The first statement is to the effect that I owe everything I
+ have, or that I am, to the Irish National Party. I owe absolutely
+ nothing to the Irish Party, except an attempt to boycott me on my
+ circuit, which, fortunately for me, has failed.</p>
+
+<p> 2. The second is to the effect that I made &ldquo;frantic efforts&rdquo; (these
+ are the words, I think) to enter Parliament, and besieged Mr.
+ Dillon&rsquo;s house during the time when candidates were being chosen. I
+ saw Mr. Dillon exactly twice, both occasions at Mr. Davitt&rsquo;s
+ request. Mr. Davitt urged me to <a name="page379" id="page379"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 379]
+</span>allow my name to go forward as a
+ candidate, and it was at his wish and solicitation that I saw Mr.
+ Dillon.</p>
+
+<p> 3. It is further said that I begged a Crown Prosecutorship.
+ Fortunately, Mr. Walker and The M&lsquo;Dermot are living men, and they
+ know this to be absolutely untrue. I was offered such an
+ appointment, and, contrary to my own judgment, I allowed myself to
+ be guided by Mr. Davitt, who thought the matter would be
+ misunderstood in the state of things then existing. I believe I am
+ the only person that ever declined such an offer.</p>
+
+<p> As to general statements, these are of no importance, and I shall
+ not trouble you about them.&mdash;Yours very truly,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> JOHN F. TAYLOR.</p>
+
+<p> <i>P.S.</i>&mdash;The introduction of Dr. Webb&rsquo;s name was a gratuitous
+ outrage, Dr. Webb and I never assisted each other in anything
+ except in the defence of P.N. Fitzgerald. J.F.T.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> <i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Dear Sir,&mdash;As my name has been introduced into the controversy
+ between yourself and Mr. Taylor, I feel called upon to substantiate
+ the two statements wherein my name occurs in Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s letter of
+ last week. It was at my request that he called upon Mr. John
+ Dillon, M.P. I think I accompanied him on the occasion, and unless
+ my memory is very much at fault, Mr. Dillon was not unfriendly to
+ Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s proposed candidature. This visit occurred some three
+ months after Mr. Taylor had, on my advice, declined the Crown
+ Prosecutorship for King&rsquo;s County, a post afterwards applied for by
+ and granted to a near relative of one of the most prominent members
+ of the Irish Party. With Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s general views on the present
+ situation, or opinions upon parties or men, I have no concern. But,
+ in so far as the circumstances related above are dealt with in your
+ issue of last week, I think an unjust imputation has been made
+ against him, and in the interests of truth and fair play I feel
+ called upon to adduce the testimony of facts as they
+ occurred.&mdash;Yours truly,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> MICHAEL DAVITT.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> Ballybrack, Co. Dublin,<br /> June 19, 1888.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> <br /><i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Sir,&mdash;As this is, I believe, the first time I have sought to
+ intrude upon your columns, I hope you will allow me some <a name="page380" id="page380"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 380]
+</span>slight
+ space in the interests of fair-play and freedom of speech. Those
+ interests seem to me to have been quite set at naught in the
+ attack, or rather series of attacks, upon Mr. Taylor in your last
+ issue. Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s views upon many matters are not mine. He is far
+ more democratic in his opinions than I see any sufficient reason
+ for being, and he is very much more of what is called a land
+ reformer than I am; but on an acquaintance of some years I have
+ ever found him an honourable and high-minded gentleman, and as good
+ a Nationalist, from my point of view, as most of the members of the
+ Irish Parliamentary Party whom I either know or know of. Of some of
+ the charges made against Mr. Taylor, such as the seeking for Crown
+ Prosecutorships and the like, I am in no position to speak, save
+ from my knowledge of his character, but I understand Mr. Davitt
+ knows all about these things, and I suppose he will tell what he
+ knows. But of the main matter, and I think the chief cause of your
+ ire, I am quite in a position to speak. I have read at least a
+ score of Mr. Taylor&rsquo;s letters to the <i>Manchester Guardian</i>, and I
+ have always found them very intelligently written, and invariably
+ characterised by a spirit of fairness and moderation; indeed, the
+ chief fault I found with them was that they took too favourable a
+ view of the motives, if not the acts, of many of our public men,
+ but notably of Messrs. Dillon and O&rsquo;Brien. You may, of course,
+ fairly say that I am not the best judge of either the acts or the
+ motives of these gentlemen, and I freely grant you that I may not,
+ for my way of looking upon the Irish question is quite other than
+ theirs; but what I must be excused for holding is that both I and
+ Mr. Taylor have quite as good a right to our opinions as either of
+ these gentlemen, or as any other member of the Irish Parliamentary
+ Party. But this is the very last right that people are inclined to
+ grant to each other in Ireland just now. Personally I care very
+ little for this, but for Ireland&rsquo;s sake I care much. Some twenty
+ years ago or so I was sent into penal servitude with the almost
+ entire approval, expressed or implied, of the Irish Press. Some
+ short time after the same Press found out that I and my friends had
+ not sinned so grievously in striving to free Ireland. But men and
+ times and things may change again, and, though I am growing old, I
+ hope still to live long enough to be forgiven for my imperfect
+ appreciation of the blessings of Boycotting, and the Plan of
+ Campaign, and many similar blessings. It matters little indeed how
+ or when I die, so that Ireland lives, but her life can only be a
+ living death if Irishmen are not free to say <a name="page381" id="page381"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 381]
+</span>what they believe, and
+ to act as they deem right.&mdash;Your obedient servant,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> JOHN O&rsquo;LEARY.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> June 18, 1888.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"> <br /><i>To the Editor of &ldquo;United Ireland.&rdquo;</i></p>
+
+<p> Dear Sir,&mdash;I observe that in your last issue, amongst other things,
+ you state that Mr. Taylor accepted a Crown Prosecutorship in 1885.
+ I happen to know the precise facts. Mr. Taylor was offered the
+ Crown Prosecutorship of the King&rsquo;s County, and some of us strongly
+ advised him to accept it. There were no political prosecutions
+ impending at the time, and it seemed to me that a Nationalist who
+ would do his work honestly in prosecuting offenders against the
+ ordinary law might strike a blow against tyranny by refusing to
+ accept a brief, if offered, against men accused of political
+ offences or prosecuted under a Coercion Act. I know that a similar
+ view was entertained by the late Very Rev. Dr. Kavanagh of Kildare,
+ and many others. However, we failed to influence Mr. Taylor further
+ than to make him say that he would do nothing in the matter until
+ Mr. Davitt was consulted. I, for one, called on Mr. Davitt, and
+ pressed my views upon him; but he was decided that no Nationalist
+ could identify himself in the smallest way with Castle rule in
+ Ireland. This settled the question, and Mr. Taylor declined the
+ post, which was subsequently applied for by Mr. Luke Dillon, who
+ now holds it.&mdash;Faithfully yours,</p>
+
+<p class="signed"> JAMES A. POOLE.</p>
+
+<p class="i0"> 29 Harcourt Street.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><br /> EDITORIAL NOTE.<br />
+<i>&ldquo;United Ireland,&rdquo; June 23.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p> We devote a large portion of our space to-day to the apparently
+ organised defence of Mr. J.F. Taylor and his friends, and we are
+ quite content to rest upon their letters the justification for our
+ comments. When a gentleman who avows himself a disappointed
+ aspirant for Parliamentary honours, and who owns his regret that he
+ did not become a petty Castle placeman, is discovered writing in an
+ important English Liberal paper, venomous little innuendos at the
+ expense of sorely attacked Irish leaders which excite the
+ enthusiasm of the <i>Liarish Times</i>, it was high time to intimate to
+ the <i>Manchester Guardian</i> the source from which its Irish
+ information is derived. The case against Mr. Taylor as a
+ criticaster is clinched by the fact that his cause is espoused by
+ Mr. John <a name="page382" id="page382"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 382]
+</span>O&rsquo;Leary. The Irish public are a little weary of Mr.
+ O&rsquo;Leary&rsquo;s querulous complaints as an <i>homme incompris</i>. So far as
+ we are aware, the only ground he himself has for complaining of
+ want of toleration is that he possibly considers the good-humoured
+ toleration for years invariably extended to his opinions on men and
+ things savours of neglect. His idea of toleration with respect to
+ others seems to be toleration for everybody except the unhappy
+ wretches who may happen to be for the moment doing any practicable
+ service in the Irish cause.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr /><h3><a name="noteO" id="noteO" />NOTE O.<br />
+
+BOYCOTTING BY &ldquo;CROWNER&rsquo;S QUEST LAW.&rdquo;<br />
+
+(Vol. ii. p. <a href="#page312">312</a>.)</h3>
+
+
+<p>The following circumstantial account of this deplorable case of Ellen
+Gaffney preserved here, as I find it printed in the <i>Irish Times</i> of
+February 27, 1888.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;In the Court of Queen&rsquo;s Bench, on Saturday, the Lord Chief-Justice (Sir
+Michael Morris, Bart.), Mr. Justice O&rsquo;Brien, Mr. Justice Murphy, and Mr.
+Justice Gibson presiding, judgment was delivered in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney. The original motion was to quash the verdict of a coroner&rsquo;s
+jury held at Philipstown on August 27th and September 1st last, on the
+body of a child named Mary Anne Gaffney.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Lord Chief-Justice said it appeared that Mary Anne Gaffney, the
+child on whose body the inquest was held, was born on the 23d July, and
+that she died on the 25th August, 1887. A Dr. Clarke, who had been very
+much referred to in the course of the proceedings, called upon the local
+sergeant of the police, and directed his attention to the body, but the
+sergeant having inspected the body, came to the conclusion that there
+was no need for an inquest. The doctor considered differently, and the
+sergeant communicated with the Coroner on the 26th August, and <a name="page383" id="page383"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 383]
+</span>on the
+next day that gentleman arrived in Philipstown. He had a conference
+there with Dr. Clarke and with a reverend gentleman named Father Bergin,
+and subsequently proceeded to hold an inquest upon the child in a
+public-house&mdash;a most appropriate place apparently for the transactions
+which afterwards occurred there. The investigation, if it might be so
+called, was proceeded with upon that 27th of August. Very strong
+affidavits had been made on the part of Mrs. Gaffney&mdash;who applied to
+have the inquisition quashed&mdash;her husband, and some of the constabulary
+authorities as to the line of conduct pursued upon that occasion. Ellen
+Gaffney and her husband were taken into custody on the day the inquest
+opened by the verbal direction of the Coroner, who refused to complete
+the depositions given by the former on the ground that she was not
+sworn. That did not take him out of the difficulty, for if she was not
+sworn she had a right to be sworn, and the Coroner had no right to
+prevent her. The inquest was resumed on the 1st September in the
+court-house at Philipstown&mdash;the proper place&mdash;and a curious letter was
+read from the Coroner, the effect of which was that he did not consider
+that there was any ground for detaining the man Gaffney in custody, but
+the woman was brought before a justice of the peace and committed for
+trial. She was in prison from August 27th until the month of December,
+when the lucky accident of a winter assize occurred, else she might be
+there still. At the adjourned inquest the Coroner proceeded to read over
+the depositions taken on the former day, and it was sworn by four
+witnesses, whom he (the Lord Chief-Justice) entirely credited, that the
+Coroner read these depositions as if they were originals, whereas an
+unprecedented transaction had occurred. The Coroner had given the
+original depositions out of his own custody, and given them to a
+<a name="page384" id="page384"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 384]
+</span>reverend gentleman who was rather careless of them, as was shown by the
+evidence of a witness named Greene, who deposed that he saw a car on the
+road upon which sat two clergymen, and he found on the road the original
+depositions which, presumably, one of the clergymen had dropped. The
+depositions were handed to a magistrate and afterwards returned to the
+police at Philipstown, who had possession of them on the resumption of
+the inquest. If the case stood alone there it was difficult to
+understand how a Coroner could come into court and appear by counsel to
+resist the quashing of an inquisition in regard to which at the very
+door such gross personal misconduct was demonstrated. No doubt, he said,
+he did not read them as originals but as copies, and it was strange,
+that being so, that he did not inform the jury of what had become of
+them, and he complained now of not being told by the police of their
+recovery&mdash;not told of his own misconduct. On the 1st September, Ellen
+Gaffney applied by a solicitor&mdash;Mr. Disdall, and as a set-off the
+Coroner permitted a gentleman named O&rsquo;Kearney Whyte to appear&mdash;for whom?
+Was it for the constituted authorities or for the next-of-kin? No, but
+for the Rev. Father Bergin, who was described as president of the local
+branch of the National League, and the Coroner (Mr. Gowing) alleged as
+the reason why he allowed him to appear and cross-examine the witnesses
+and address the jury and give him the right of reply like Crown counsel
+was, that Ellen Gaffney stated that she had been so much annoyed by
+Father Bergin that she attributed the loss of her child to him&mdash;that it
+was he who had murdered the child. It was asserted that Father Bergin
+sat on the bench with the Coroner and interfered during the conduct of
+the inquest, and having to give some explanation of that Mr. Gowing&rsquo;s
+version was certainly a most amusing one. He said it <a name="page385" id="page385"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 385]
+</span>was the habit to
+invite to a seat on the bench people of a respectable position in
+life&mdash;which, of course, a clergyman should be in&mdash;and that he asked
+Father Bergin to sit beside him in that capacity. But see the dilemma
+the Coroner put himself in. According to his own statement he had
+previously allowed this reverend gentleman to interfere, and to be
+represented by a solicitor because he was incriminated, inculpated, or
+accused, and it certainly was not customary to invite any one so
+situated to occupy a seat on the bench. He (the Lord Chief Baron) did
+not believe that Father Bergin was incriminated in any way, but that was
+the Coroner&rsquo;s allegation, and such was his peculiar action thereafter.
+The Coroner further stated that no matter whether he read the originals
+or the copies of the first day&rsquo;s depositions, it was on the evidence of
+September 1st that the jury acted. If that was so he placed himself in a
+further dilemma, for there was no evidence before the jury at all on the
+second day upon which they could bring a verdict against Ellen Gaffney.
+In regard to the recording and announcing of the verdict it appeared
+that the jury were 19 in number, and after their deliberations the
+foreman declared that 13 were for finding a verdict one way and 6 for
+another; that Mr. Whyte dictated the verdict to the Coroner, and the
+Coroner asked the 13 men if that was what they agreed to. Mr. Whyte&rsquo;s
+statement was that the jury, through the foreman, stated what their
+verdict was; that he wrote it down, and that the Coroner asked him for
+what he had written, and used it himself. But in addition to that, when
+the jury came in the Coroner and Mr. Whyte divided them&mdash;placed them
+apart while the verdict was being written&mdash;and then said to the 13 men,
+&ldquo;Is that what you agree to?&rdquo; Such apparent misconduct it was hardly
+possible to conceive in anybody <a name="page386" id="page386"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 386]
+</span>occupying a judicial position as did the
+Coroner, and especially a Coroner who had an inquisition quashed before.
+What he had mentioned was sufficient to call forth the emphatic decision
+of the court quashing the proceedings, which, however, were also
+impeached on the grounds of its insufficiency and irregularity, and of
+the character of the finding itself. It was not until the Coroner had
+been threatened with the consequences of his contempt that he made a
+return to the visit of <i>certiorari</i>, and it was then found that out of
+ten so-called depositions only one contained any signature&mdash;that of Dr.
+Clarke&rsquo;s, which was one of those lost by the clergyman, and not before
+the jury on the 1st September. He (the Lord Chief-Justice) had tried to
+read the documents, but in vain&mdash;they were of such a scrawling and
+scribbling character, but, as he had said, all were incomplete and
+utterly worthless except the one which was not properly before the jury.
+Then, what was the finding on this inquisition, which should have been
+substantially as perfect as an indictment? &ldquo;That Mary Anne Gaffney came
+by her death, and that the mother of this child, Ellen Gaffney, is
+guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food and care to
+sustain the life of this child.&rdquo; Upon what charge could the woman have
+been implicated on that vague finding? He (his Lordship) could
+understand its being contended that that amounted argumentatively to a
+verdict of manslaughter; but the Coroner issued his warrant and sent
+this woman to prison as being guilty of murder, and she remained in
+custody, as he had already remarked, until discharged by the learned
+judge who went the Winter Assizes in December. Upon all of these grounds
+they were clearly of opinion that this inquisition should be quashed,
+and Mr. Coroner Gowing having had the self-possession to come there to
+show cause against the conditional order, <a name="page387" id="page387"></a>
+<span class="pagenum">[pg 387]
+</span>under such circumstances, must
+bear the costs of that argument.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fred. Moorhead, who, instructed by Mr. O&rsquo;Kearney Whyte, appeared for
+the Coroner, asked whether the Court would require, as was usual when
+costs were awarded against a magistrate, an undertaking from the other
+side&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Chief-Justice.&mdash;That is not to bring an action against the
+Coroner, you mean?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Moorhead.&mdash;Yes, my Lord. I think it is a usual undertaking when
+costs are awarded in such a case. I think you ought&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Chief-Justice.&mdash;Well, I don&rsquo;t know that we ought, but we most
+certainly will not. (Laughter.)</p>
+
+<p>Mr. David Sherlock, who (instructed by Mr. Archibald W. Disdall)
+appeared for Ellen Gaffney.&mdash;Rest assured, we certainly will bring an
+action.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">THE END.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 1:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a><p>I have the authority of Mr. Hennessey, &ldquo;the best living
+Irish scholar, and a Kerryman to boot,&rdquo; for this spelling. I am quite
+right, he says, in stating that the people there pronounce the names of
+Glenbeigh and Rossbeigh as Glenb&eacute;hy and Rossb&eacute;hy in three syllables.
+&ldquo;Bethe,&rdquo; pronounced &ldquo;behy,&rdquo; is the genitive of &ldquo;beith,&rdquo; the birch, of
+which there were formerly large woods in Ireland. Glenbehy and Rossbehy
+mean the &ldquo;Glen,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Ross&rdquo; or &ldquo;wooded point&rdquo; of the birch.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a>
+ <span class='fnheader'>Footnote 2:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+<p> A letter received by me from a Protestant Irish gentleman,
+long an ardent Nationalist, seems to confirm this. He writes to me (June
+15),</p>
+<blockquote> &ldquo;There is a noble river here, with a convenient line of quays for
+ unloading merchandise. But every sack that is landed must be carried out
+ of the ship on men&rsquo;s backs. The quay labourers won&rsquo;t allow a steam crane
+ to be set up. If it is tried there is a riot and a tumult, and no
+ Limerick tradesman can purchase anything from a vessel that uses it, on
+ pain of being boycotted. The result is that the labourers are masters of
+ the situation, and when they catch a vessel with a cargo which it is
+ imperative to land quickly, they wait till the work is half done, and
+ then strike for 8s. a day! If other labourers are imported, they are
+ boycotted for &lsquo;grabbing work,&rsquo; and any one who sells provisions to them
+ is boycotted.&rdquo;
+</blockquote>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 3:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a><p> An interesting account of this gentleman, and of his
+connection with the earlier developments of the Irish agitation, given
+to me by Mr. Colomb of the R.I.C., will be found at p.<a href="#page38">38</a>, and in the
+Appendix, <a href="#noteF">Note F.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 4:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a><p> See Appendix, <a href="#noteF">Note F.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 5:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a><p> The name of this blacksmith&rsquo;s son learned in the Law of the
+League is given in Lord Cowper&rsquo;s Report (2. 18,370) as Michael Healy.
+While these pages are in the printer&rsquo;s hands the London papers chronicle
+(May 25, 1888) the arrest of a person described to me as this
+magistrate&rsquo;s brother, Jeremiah Healy, on a charge of robbing and setting
+fire to the Protestant church at Killarney!</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 6:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a><p> Mr. Colomb sends me, June 30, the following interesting
+note:&mdash;The letter of which I gave you a copy was produced in evidence at
+Kerry Summer Assizes, 1867. J. D. Sheehan, Esq., M.P., is the same man
+who was arrested on the 12th February 1867, and to whom the foregoing
+letter, ordering the rising in Killarney, is addressed. He was kept in
+custody for some time, and eventually released, it is believed, on the
+understanding that he was to keep out of Ireland. He came back in 1873
+or 1874 and married the proprietress of a Hotel at Killarney. His
+connection with the Glenbehy evictions is referred to on page <a href="#page10">10</a>, and in
+<a href="#noteF">Note F</a> of the Appendix I give an interesting account, furnished me by
+Mr. Colomb, of his activity in connection with the case of the Misses
+Curtin at Firies.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7"
+ name="footnote7"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 7:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag7">(return)</a><p> In the time of Henry VIII. these cities waged actual war
+with each other, like Florence and Pisa, by sea and land. Limerick was
+then called &ldquo;Little London.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8"
+ name="footnote8"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 8:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag8">(return)</a><p> It was on the 17th October 1886 that Mr. Dillon first
+promulgated the Plan of Campaign at all at Portumna.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote9"
+ name="footnote9"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 9:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag9">(return)</a><p> Mr. Ponsonby&rsquo;s account of this affair will be found in the
+Appendix, <a href="#noteG">Note G.</a> The Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Youghal,
+which were &pound;3031, 0s. 7d. in 1880, rose to &pound;7038, 7s. 2d. in 1887.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote10"
+ name="footnote10"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 10:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag10">(return)</a><p> As to the ability of these tenants to pay their way, one
+fact which I have since ascertained sufficiently supports Mr. Tener&rsquo;s
+contention. The deposits in the Postal Savings Banks of the three purely
+agricultural towns of Portumna, Woodford, and Loughrea, which in 1880,
+throwing off the shillings and pence, were respectively, &pound;2539, &pound;259,
+and &pound;5500, rose in 1887 to &pound;3376, &pound;1350, and &pound;6311, an increase of
+nearly &pound;3000.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote11"
+ name="footnote11"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 11:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag11">(return)</a><p> Mr. Tener, to whom I sent proofs of these pages, writes to
+me (July 18): &ldquo;I shall soon execute the decree of the County-Court Judge
+Henn against Father Coen for &pound;5, 5s., being two and a half year&rsquo;s
+rent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote12"
+ name="footnote12"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 12:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag12">(return)</a><p> At a hearing of cases before Judge Henn some time after I
+left Portumna, the Judge was reported in the papers as &ldquo;severely&rdquo;
+commenting upon the carelessness with which the estate-books were kept,
+tenants who were proceeded against for arrears producing &ldquo;receipts&rdquo; in
+court. I wrote to Mr. Tener on this subject. Under date of June 5th he
+replied to me: &ldquo;Judge Henn did not use the severe language reported.
+There was no reporter present but a local man, and I have reason to
+believe the report in the <i>Freeman&rsquo;s Journal</i> came from the lawyer of
+the tenants, who is on the staff of that journal. But the tenants are
+drilled not to show the receipts they hold, and to take advantage of
+every little error which they might at once get corrected by calling at
+the estate office. In no case, however, did any wrong occur to any
+tenant.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote13"
+ name="footnote13"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 13:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag13">(return)</a><p> The town and estate proper of Woodford belong to Sir Henry
+Burke, Bart. The nearest point to Woodford of Lord Clamicarde&rsquo;s property
+is distant one mile from the town. And on the so-called Woodford estate
+there are not &ldquo;316 tenants,&rdquo; as stated in publications I have seen, but
+260.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote14"
+ name="footnote14"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 14:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag14">(return)</a><p> Martin Kenny, the &ldquo;victim&rdquo; of this eviction, is the tenant
+to whom the Rev. Mr. Crawford (<i>vide</i> page <a href="#page118">118</a>) gave &pound;50 for certain
+cattle, in order that he (Kenny) might pay his rent But, although he got
+the &pound;50, he nevertheless suffered himself to be evicted; no doubt
+fearing the vengeance of the League should he pay.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote15"
+ name="footnote15"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 15:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag15">(return)</a><p> The valuation for taxes of this holding is &pound;7, 15s. for
+the land, and &pound;5 for the presbytery house. The church is exempt.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote16"
+ name="footnote16"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 16:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag16">(return)</a><p> Of &ldquo;Dr.&rdquo; Tully Mr. Tener wrote to me (July 18): &ldquo;Tully has
+the holding at &pound;2, 10s. a year, being 50 per cent, under the valuation
+of the land for taxes, which is &pound;3, 15s. As the total valuation with the
+house (built by him) is only &pound;4, he pays no poor-rates. He was in
+arrears May 1, 1887, of three years for &pound;7, 10s. Lord Clanricarde
+offered him, with others, 20 per cent, abatement, making for him 70 per
+cent, under the valuation&mdash;and he refused!&rdquo; Since then (on Saturday
+Sept. 1), Tully has been evicted after a dramatic &ldquo;resistance,&rdquo; of
+which, with instructive incidents attending it, Mr. Tener sends me an
+account, to be found in the Appendix, <a href="#noteH">Note H.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote17"
+ name="footnote17"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 17:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag17">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteH2">Note H2.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote18"
+ name="footnote18"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 18:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag18">(return)</a><p> Mr. Tener writes to me (July 18): &ldquo;At Allendarragh, near
+the scene of Finlay&rsquo;s murder, Thomas Noonan, who lately was brave enough
+to accept the post of process-server vacated by that murder, was shot at
+on the 13th instant. It was on the highway. He heard a heavy stone fall
+from a wall on the road and turned to see what caused it. He distinctly
+saw two men behind the wall with guns, and saw them fire. One shot
+struck a stone in the road very near him&mdash;the other went wide. His idea
+is that one gun dislodged the stone on which it had been laid for an
+aim, and that its fall disturbed the aim and saved him. He fully
+identifies one of the men as Henry Bowles, a nephew of &lsquo;Dr.&rsquo; Tully, who
+lives with Tully, and Bowles, after being arrested and examined at
+Woodford, has been remanded, bail being refused, to Galway Jail. Before
+this shooting Noonan had served a notice from me upon Tully, against
+whom I have Judge Henn&rsquo;s decree for three years&rsquo; rent, and whose equity
+of redemption expired July 9th.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote19"
+ name="footnote19"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 19:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag19">(return)</a><p> I have since learned that my jarvey was well informed. Sir
+Henry Burke actually paid Mr. Dillon &pound;160 for the maintenance of his
+tenants while out of their farms. This, two other landlords, Lords
+Dunsandle and Westmeath, refused to do, but, like Sir Henry, they both
+paid all the costs, and accepted a &ldquo;League&rdquo; reduction of 5s. 6d. and 6s.
+in the pound (June 9, 1888).</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote20"
+ name="footnote20"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 20:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag20">(return)</a><p> Down to the date at which I write this note (June 9), Mr.
+Seigne has kindly, but without results, endeavoured to get for me some
+authentic return made by a small tenant-farmer of his incomings and
+outgoings.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote21"
+ name="footnote21"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 21:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag21">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteI">Note I.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote22"
+ name="footnote22"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 22:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag22">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteK">Note K.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote23"
+ name="footnote23"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 23:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag23">(return)</a><p> While these pages are going through the press a Scottish
+friend sends me the following extract from a letter published in the
+<i>Scotsman</i> of July 25:&mdash;
+
+&ldquo;In the same way I, in August last, when in
+Wicklow, ascertained as carefully as I could the facts as to the Bodyke
+evictions; and being desirous to learn now if that estate was still out
+of cultivation, as I had found it in August, I wrote the gentleman I
+have referred to above. His reply is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I can answer your question as far as the Brooke estate is concerned.
+None of the tenants are back in their farms, nor are they likely to be.
+The landlord has the land partly stocked with cattle; but I may say the
+land is nearly waste; the gates, fences, and farmsteads partly
+destroyed. I was at the fair of Coolgreany about three weeks ago, and
+the country looked quite changed; the weeds predominating in the land
+that the tenantry had under cultivation when they were evicted from
+their farms. The landlord has done nothing to lay the land down with
+grass seed, consequently the land is waste. The village of Coolgreany is
+on the property, and there was a good monthly fair held there, but it is
+very much gone down since the disagreement between the landlord and
+tenant. The tenants, speaking generally, in allowing themselves to be
+evicted and not redeeming before six months, are giving up all their
+improvements to the landlord, no matter what they may be worth. I have
+got quite tired of the vexed question, and may say I have given up
+reading about evictions, and pity the tenant who is foolish enough to
+allow any party to advise him so badly as to allow himself to be
+evicted.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Those who read this testimony of a candid witness, and remember the
+cordial footing on which Mr. Brooke stood with his tenantry in Bodyke
+before Mr. Billon appeared amongst them, may well ask what good his
+interference did to the now impoverished tenantry of Bodyke, or to the
+district now deserted or laid waste.&mdash;I am, etc.,</p>
+
+<p class="signed">A RADICAL UNIONIST.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote24"
+ name="footnote24"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 24:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag24">(return)</a><p> In curious confirmation of this opinion expressed to me by
+a man of the country in March, I find in the <i>Dublin Express</i> of July
+19th this official news from the Athy Vice-Guardians:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At the meeting of the Vice-Guardians of the Athy Union yesterday, a
+letter was read from Mr. G. Finlay, Auditor, in which he stated that the
+two sureties of Collector Kealy, of the Luggacurren district, had been
+evicted from their holdings by Lord Lansdowne, and were not now in
+possession of any lands there. They were allowed outdoor relief to the
+extent of &pound;1 a week each on the ground of destitution. The Auditor
+continued: &lsquo;The Collector tells me that they both possess other lands,
+and have money in bank. The Collector is satisfied that they are as
+good, if not better, securities for the amount of his bond now than at
+the time they became sureties for him. The Clerk of the Union concurs in
+this opinion.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was ordered to bring the matter under the notice of the Board.&rdquo;</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote25"
+ name="footnote25"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 25:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag25">(return)</a><p> <i>Explanatory Note attached to First Edition.</i>&mdash;After this
+chapter had actually gone to press, I received a letter from the friend
+who had put me into communication with the labourers referred to in it,
+begging me to strike out all direct indications of their whereabouts, on
+the ground that these might lead to grave annoyance and trouble for
+these poor men from the local tyrants.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know that I ought to regret the annoyance thus caused to my
+publisher and to me, as no words of mine could emphasise so clearly the
+nature and the scope of the odious, illegal, or anti-legal &ldquo;coercion&rdquo;
+established in certain parts of Ireland as the asterisks which mark my
+compliance with my friend&rsquo;s request. What can be said for the freedom of
+a country in which a man of character and position honestly believes it
+to be &ldquo;dangerous&rdquo; for poor men to say the things recorded in the text of
+this chapter about their own feelings, wishes, opinions, and interests?</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote26"
+ name="footnote26"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 26:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag26">(return)</a><p> It may be well to say here that whatever prominence Mr.
+O&rsquo;Donovan Rossa has had among the Irish in America has been largely, if
+not chiefly, due to the curious persistency of Sir William Harcourt,
+when a Minister, in making him the ideal Irish-American leader. In and
+out of Parliament, Sir William Harcourt continually spoke of Mr. Rossa
+as of a kind of Irish Jupiter Tonans, wielding all the terrors of
+dynamite from beyond the Atlantic. This was a source of equal amusement
+to the Irish-American organisers in America and satisfaction to Mr.
+Rossa himself. I remember that when a question arose of excluding Mr.
+Rossa from an important Irish-American convention at Philadelphia, as
+not being the delegate of any recognised Irish-American body, Mr.
+Sullivan told me that he should recommend the admission of Mr. Rossa to
+the floor without a right to deliberative action, expressly because his
+presence, when reported, would be a cause of terror to Sir William
+Harcourt.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote27"
+ name="footnote27"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 27:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag27">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteM">Note M.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote28"
+ name="footnote28"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 28:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag28">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteN">Note N.</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote29"
+ name="footnote29"></a><span class='fnheader'>Footnote 29:</span>
+ <a href="#footnotetag29">(return)</a><p> <a href="#noteO">Note O.</a></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of
+2) (1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2)
+(1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of 2) (1888)
+
+Author: William Henry Hurlbert
+
+Release Date: December 29, 2004 [EBook #14511]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRELAND, VOL. 2 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Robert Ledger and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IRELAND UNDER COERCION
+
+THE DIARY OF AN AMERICAN
+
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM HENRY HURLBERT
+
+
+VOL. II.
+
+_SECOND EDITION._
+
+1888
+
+
+"Upon the future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire."
+CARDINAL MANNING TO EARL GREY, 1868
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+ Rossbehy, Feb. 21, 1
+ The latest eviction at Glenbehy, 1
+ Trafalgar Square, 1, 2
+ Father Little, 3
+ Mr. Frost, 3, 4
+ Priest and landlord, 3
+ Savings Banks' deposits at Six-mile Bridge, 5
+ Drive through Limerick, 5
+ Population and trade, 5, 6
+ Boycotting and commerce, 6, 7
+ Shores of the Atlantic, 7
+ Tralee, 7
+ Killorglin, 8
+ Hostelry in the hills, 8
+ Facts of the eviction, 9-13
+ Glenbehy Eviction Fund (see Note G2), 12
+ A walk on Washington's birthday, 13
+ A tenant at Glenbehy offers L13 in two instalments
+ in full for L240 arrears, 13
+ English and Irish members, 14
+ "Winn's Folly," 15
+ Acreage and rental of the Glenbehy estate, 16
+ Work of eviction begun, 17
+ Patience of officers, 17
+ American and Irish evictions contrasted, 17
+ "Oh, he's quite familiar," 18
+ A modest Poor Law Guardian, 18, 19
+ Moonlighters' swords, 20
+ Father Quilter and the "poor slaves," his people, 21,22
+ Beauty of Lough Caragh, 23
+ Difficulty of getting evidence, 25
+ Effects of terrorism in Kerry, 25
+ Singular identification of a murderer, 26
+ Local administration in Tralee, 28
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+ Cork, Feb. 23, 30
+ Press accounts of Glenbehy evictions astonish an eye-witness, 30
+ Castle Island, 31
+ Mr. Roche and Mr. Gladstone, 31
+ Opinions of a railway traveller, 31, 32
+ Misrepresentations of evictions, 32
+ Cork, past and present, 34
+ Mr. Gladstone and the Dean, 35
+ League Courts in Kerry, 36
+ Local Law Lords, 36
+ Mr. Colomb and the Fenian rising in 1867, 37
+ Remarkable letter of an M.P., 38
+ Irish Constabulary, _morale_ of the force, 40
+ The clergy and the Plan of Campaign, 41
+ Municipal history, 43
+ Increase of public burdens, 44
+ Tralee Board of Guardians, 46
+ Labourers and tenants, 46
+ Feb. 25, 47
+ Boycotting, 47-49
+ Land law and freedom of contract, 49
+ Rivalry between Limerick and Cork, 50
+ Henry VIII. and the Irish harp, 50
+ Municipal Parliamentary franchise, 51
+ Environs of Cork, 52
+ Churches and chapels, 53
+ Attractive home at Belmullet, 54
+ Lord Carnarvon and the Priest, 55
+ Feb. 26, 56
+ Blarney Castle, 56, 57
+ St. Anne's Hill, 56, 57
+ An evicted woman on "the Plan," 59
+ The Ponsonby estate, 59
+ Feb. 27--A day at Youghal, 60
+ Father Keller, 61-76
+ On emigration and migration, 66
+ Protestants and Catholics (see Note G3), 68
+ Meath as a field for peasant proprietors, 69
+ Ghost of British protection, 70
+ A farmer evicted from a tenancy of 200 years, 71
+ Sir Walter Raleigh's house and garden, 71-73
+ Churches of St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway, 73
+ Monument and churchyard, 73, 74
+ An Elizabethan candidate for canonisation, 75
+ Drive to Lismore, 76
+ Driver's opinions on the Ponsonby estates, 77
+ Dromaneen Castle and the Countess of Desmond, 78
+ Trappist Monastery at Cappoquin, 78
+ Lismore, 78, 79
+ Castle grounds and cathedral, 79, 80
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+ Feb. 28, 82
+ Portumna, Galway, 82
+ Run through Cork, Limerick, Tipperary,
+ Queen's and King's County to Parsonstown, 82
+ A Canadian priest on the situation, 83
+ His reply to M. de Mandat Grancey, 83
+ Relations of priests with the League, 83-85
+ Parsonstown and Lord Rosse, 86
+ Drive to Portumna, 87
+ An abandoned railway, 88
+ American storms, grain, and beasts, 88, 89
+ Portumna Castle, 90, 91
+ Lord Clanricarde's estate, 92
+ Mr. Tener, 92-128
+ Plan of Campaign, 94-99
+ Ability of tenants to pay their rents, 95
+ Mr. Dillon in 1886, 96
+ Mr. Parnell in 1885, 97
+ Tenants in greater danger than landlords and agents, 100
+ Feb. 29, 100
+ Conference between evicted tenants and agent, 100-106
+ Castle and park, 107
+ The League shopkeeper and tenant, 108
+ Under police escort, 109
+ Cost of 'knocking' a man, 109
+ What constitutes a group, 110
+ Favourite spots for administering a League oath, 110
+ Disbursing treasurers, 111
+ Change of venue, 111
+ Bishop of Clonfert, 112-115
+ Bector of Portumna, 115
+ Father Coen, 116
+ Coercion on the part of the League, 118-121
+ Deposits in banks, 120
+ Should landlords and shopkeepers be placed on one footing? 121
+ New Castle of Portumna, 122
+ Portumna Union, 123, 124
+ Troubles of resident landlords, 125-127
+ Effects of the agitation on the people, 124
+ War against property and private rights, 127
+ Mr. Tener's experiences in Cavan, 127-130
+ Similar cases in Leitrim, 130-132
+ Sale of rents and value of tenant-right, 133, 134
+
+CHAPTER X.
+ Dublin, March 1, 135
+ Portumna to Woodford, 135
+ Evictions of October 1887, 135
+ Capture of Cloondadauv Castle, 137-141
+ A tenant and a priest, 141-144
+ Workmen's wages in Massachusetts compared with
+ the profits of a tenant farmer in Ireland, 146
+ Loughrea, 148, 149
+ Murder of Finlay, 150, 151
+ The chrysoprase Lake of Loughrea, 154
+ Lord Clanricarde's estate office, acreage, and rental, 155
+ Woodford acreage and rental, 155,156
+ Drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn, 156-160
+ A Galway "jarvey" on the situation, 156-159
+ Woodlawn and the Ashtown property, 160
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+ Borris, March 2, 161
+ Mr. Kavanagh, 161-163
+ Borris House, 163-167
+ A living Banshee, 165, 166
+ Land Corporation--its mode of working, 167
+ Meeting in Dublin, 1885, 168
+ Rev. Mr. Cantwell, 168
+ Lord Lansdowne's property at Luggacurren, 169
+ Mr. Kavanagh's career, 170
+ Books and papers at Borris, 171
+ Strongbow, 172
+ "The five bloods," 172, 173
+ Genealogy of M'Morroghs and Kavanaghs, 173
+ March 4, 174
+ Protestant service read every morning, 174
+ A Catholic gentleman's views, 175
+ Relation of tenants to village despots, 176
+ Would America make a State of Ireland? 177
+ Land Acts since 1870, 178
+ The O'Grady of Kilballyowen and his rental, 179
+ Dispute with his tenants: its cause and effect, 180
+ His circular to his tenantry, 181-186
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+ Grenane House, March 5, 187
+ Visit to Mr. Seigne, 187
+ Beautiful situation of Grenane, 189
+ A lady of the country, 189
+ Mr. Seigne's experience of the tenants, 191-194
+ The beauty of Woodstock, 194-198
+ The watch of Waterloo, 197-200
+ Curious discovery of stolen property, 200
+ Dublin, March 6, 200
+ State of deposits in the Savings Banks, 200-201
+ Interest on "Plan of Campaign" funds, 202
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+ Dublin, March 8, 203
+ Inch and the Coolgreany evictions, 203
+ Sweet vale of Avoca, 204
+ Dr. Dillon of Arklow, 204
+ Fathers O'Neill and Dunphy, 205, 206
+ Mr. Davitt watching the evictions, 207
+ Lazy and thriftless tenants better off than before, 209
+ A self-made committee, 211
+ The Brooke estate, 212
+ Sir Thomas Esmonde's house, 213
+ An Arklow dinner, 214
+ Dr. Dillon in his study, 215-217
+ Visit to Glenart Castle, 217
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+ Dublin, March 9, 219
+ Athy, 219
+ A political jarvey, 220-225
+ "Who is Mr. Gilhooly?" 221
+ Lord Lansdowne's offer refused through pressure of the League, 226
+ Mr. Kilbride, M.P., and Mr. Dunne, 226-228
+ Lord Lansdowne's estate in Kerry, 228-231
+ Plan of Campaign at Luggacurren, 231-236
+ Interview with Father Maher, 236-239
+ A "jarvey" on a J.P., 240
+ "Railway amenities," 241
+ Dublin, March 10, 242
+ Mr. Brooke, 242-248
+ Unreasonable tenants, 243, 244
+ Size and rental of estate, 246
+ Sub-commissioner's reduction reversed, 246, 247
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+ Maryborough, 249
+ Archbishop Croke, 249
+ Interviews with labourers, 251-253
+ Views of a successful country teacher, 254, 255
+ A veteran of the '48, 256-260
+ Amount of wages to men, 261
+ The farmers and labourers and lawyers, 264, 265
+ Dublin, June 23, 268
+ Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, 268-270
+ From Attanagh to Ballyragget, 270
+ Case of "a little-good-for tenant," 271, 272
+ Mr. Kough and his tenants, 273-277
+ Mr. Richardson of Castle Comer, 277
+ Position of the tenants, 282
+ L70 a year for whisky, 282
+ Kilkenny Castle, 282
+ Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, 283-292
+ John O'Leary, 285-292
+ Boycotting private opinion, 292
+ The League as now conducted, 295
+ Poems and Ballads of "Young Ireland," 296
+ Law Courts and Trinity College, 297
+ American Civil War, 299-302
+ Dublin, June 24, 302
+ A dinner with officials, 303-306
+ A priest earns over L20,000, 305, 306
+ "Crowner's Quest Law," 309-311
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+ Belfast, June 25, 313
+ Ulster in Irish history, 313
+ Moira, 315
+ Views of an Ulsterman, 315, 316
+ Beauty of Belfast, 317, 318
+ Its buildings, 319-321
+ Dr. Hanna, 322-324
+ Dr. Kane, 325
+ June 26, 326
+ Sir John Preston, 326-328
+ Mr. Cameron, of Royal Irish Constabulary, 328
+ Police parade, 328
+ Belfast steamers, 329
+ Scotland and America at work on Ireland, 330
+
+EPILOGUE, p. 333-349
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ NOTES--
+
+ F. The Moonlighters and Home Rule (pp. 10, 38), 351
+ G. The Ponsonby Property (pp. 59-66), 353
+ G2 The Glenbehy Eviction Fund (p. 12), 360
+ G3 Home Rule and Protestantism (p. 68), 362
+ H. Tully and the Woodford Evictions (p. 149), 364
+ H2. Boycotting the Dead (p. 151), 370
+ I. The Savings Banks (P.O.) (vol. i. p. 39, vol. ii. pp. 5 and 200), 371
+ K. The Coolgreany Evictions (p. 216), 372
+ L. A Ducal Supper in 1711 (p. 283), 374
+ M. Letter from Mr. O'Leary (p. 291), 375
+ N. Boycotting Private Opinion (p. 293), 377
+ O. Boycotting by Crowner's Quest Law (p. 312), 382
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+ROSSBEHY,[1] _Feb. 21._--We are here on the eve of battle! An "eviction"
+is to be made to-morrow on the Glenbehy[1] estate of Mr. Winn, an uncle
+of Lord Headley, so upon the invitation of Colonel Turner, who has come
+to see that all is done decently and in order, I left Ennis with him at
+7.40 A.M. for Limerick; the "city of the Liberator" for "the city of the
+Broken Treaty." There we breakfasted at the Artillery Barracks.
+
+The officers showed us there the new twelve-pounder gun with its
+elaborately scientific machinery, its Scotch sight, and its four-mile
+range. I compared notes about the Trafalgar Square riots of February
+1886 with an Irish officer who happened to have been on the opposite
+side of Pall Mall from me at the moment when the mob, getting out of the
+hand of my socialistic friend Mr. Hyndman, and advancing towards St.
+James' Street and Piccadilly was broken by a skilful and very spirited
+charge of the police. He gave a most humorous account of his own
+sensations when he first came into contact with the multitude after
+emerging from St. Paul's, where, as he put it, he had left the people
+"all singing away like devils." But I found he quite agreed with me in
+thinking that there was a visible nucleus of something like military
+organisation in the mob of that day, which was overborne and, as it
+were, smothered by the mere mob element before it came to trying
+conclusions with the police.
+
+On our way to Limerick, Colonel Turner caught sight, at a station, of
+Father Little, the parish priest of Six Mile Bridge, in County Clare,
+and jumping out of the carriage invited him to get in and pursue his
+journey with us, which he very politely did. Father Little is a tall
+fine-looking man of a Saxon rather than a Celtic type, and I daresay
+comes of the Cromwellian stock. He is a staunch and outspoken
+Nationalist, and has been made rather prominent of late by his
+championship of certain of his parishioners in their contest with their
+landlord, Mr. H.V. D'Esterre, who lives chiefly at Bournemouth in
+England, but owns 2833 acres in County Clare at Rosmanagher, valued at
+L1625 a year. More than a year ago one of Father Little's parishioners,
+Mr. Frost, successfully resisted a large force of the constabulary bent
+on executing a process of ejectment against him obtained by Mr.
+D'Esterre.
+
+Frost's holding was of 33 Irish, or, in round numbers, about 50 English,
+acres, at a rental of L117, 10s., on which he had asked but had not
+obtained an abatement. The Poor-Law valuation of the holding was L78,
+and Frost estimated the value of his and his father's improvements,
+including the homestead and the offices, or in other words his
+tenant-right, at L400. The authorities sent a stronger body of
+constables and ejected Frost. But as soon as they had left the place
+Frost came back with his family, on the 28th Jan. 1887, and reoccupied
+it. Of course proceedings were taken against him immediately, and a
+small war was waged over the Frost farm until the 5th of September last,
+when an expedition was sent against it, and it was finally captured, and
+Frost evicted with his family. Upon this last occasion Father Little
+(who gave me a very temperate but vigorous account of the whole affair)
+distinguished himself by a most ingenious and original attempt to "hold
+the fort." He chained himself to the main doorway, and stretching the
+chains right and left secured them to two other doors. It was of this
+refreshing touch of humour that I heard the other day at Abbeyleix as
+happening not in Clare but in Kerry.
+
+Since his eviction Frost has been living, Father Little tells me, in a
+wooden hut put up for him on the lands of a kinsman of the same name,
+who is also a tenant of Mr. D'Esterre, and who has since been served by
+his landlord with a notice of ejectment for arrears, although he had
+paid up six months' dues two months only before the service. Father
+Little charged the landlord in this case with prevarication and other
+evasive proceedings in the course of his negotiations with the tenants;
+and Colonel Turner did not contest the statements made by him in support
+of his contention that the Rosmanagher difficulty might have been
+avoided had the tenants been more fairly and more considerately dealt
+with. It is strong presumptive evidence against the landlord that a
+kinsman, Mr. Robert D'Esterre, is one of the subscribers to a fund
+raised by Father Little in aid of the evicted man Frost. On the other
+hand, as illustrating the condition of the tenants, it is noteworthy
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank's deposits at Six-Mile Bridge rose
+from L382, 17s. 10d. in 1880 to L934, 13s. 4d. in 1887.
+
+After breakfast we took a car and drove rapidly about the city for an
+hour. With its noble river flowing through the very heart of the place,
+and broadening soon into an estuary of the Atlantic, Limerick ought long
+ago to have taken its place in the front rank of British ports dealing
+with the New World. In the seventeenth century it was the fourth city of
+Ireland, Boate putting it then next after Dublin, Galway, and Waterford.
+Belfast at that time, he describes as a place hardly comparable "to a
+small market-town in England." To-day Limerick has a population of some
+forty thousand, and Belfast a population of more than two hundred
+thousand souls. This change cannot be attributed solely, if at all, to
+the "Protestant ascendency," nor yet to the alleged superiority of the
+Northern over the Southern Irish in energy and thrift, For in the
+seventeenth century Limerick was more important than Cork, whereas it
+had so far fallen behind its Southern competitor in the eighteenth
+century that it contained in 1781 but 3859 houses, while Cork contained
+5295. To-day its population is about half as large as that of Cork. It
+is a very well built city, its main thoroughfare, George Street, being
+at least a mile in length, and a picturesque city also, thanks to the
+island site of its most ancient quarter, the English Town, and to the
+hills of Clare and Killaloe, which close the prospect of the surrounding
+country. But the streets, though many of them are handsome, have a
+neglected look, as have also the quays and bridges. One of my
+companions, to whom I spoke of this, replied, "if they look neglected,
+it's because they are neglected. Politics are the death of the place,
+and the life of its publics."[2]
+
+As we approached the shores of the Atlantic from Limerick, the scenery
+became very grand and beautiful. On the right of the railway the country
+rolled and undulated away towards the Stacks, amid the spurs and slopes
+of which, in the wood of Clonlish, Sanders, the Nuncio sent over to
+organise Catholic Ireland against Elizabeth, miserably perished of want
+and disease six years before the advent of the great Armada. To the
+south-west rose the grand outlines of the Macgillicuddy's Reeks, the
+highest points, I believe, in the South of Ireland. We established
+ourselves at the County Kerry Club on our arrival in Tralee, which I
+found to be a brisk prosperous-looking town, and quite well built. A
+Nationalist member once gave me a gloomy notion of Tralee, by telling
+me, when I asked him whether he looked forward with longing to a seat in
+the Parliament of Ireland, that "when he was in Dublin now he always
+thought of London, just as when he used to be in Tralee he always
+thought of Dublin." But he did less than justice to the town upon the
+Lee. We left it at half-past four in the train for Killorglin. The
+little station there was full of policemen and soldiers, and knots of
+country people stood about the platform discussing the morrow. There had
+been some notion that the car-drivers at Killorglin might "boycott" the
+authorities. But they were only anxious to turn an honest penny by
+bringing us on to this lonely but extremely neat and comfortable
+hostelry in the hills.
+
+We left the Sheriff and the escort to find their way as best they could
+after us.
+
+Mrs. Shee, the landlady here, ushered us into a very pretty room hung
+with little landscapes of the country, and made cheery by a roaring
+fire. Two or three officers of the soldiers sent on here to prevent any
+serious uproar to-morrow dined with us.
+
+The constabulary are in force, but in great good humour. They have no
+belief that there will be any trouble, though all sorts of wild tales
+were flying about Tralee before we left, of English members of
+Parliament coming down to denounce the "Coercion" law, and of risings in
+the hills, and I know not what besides. The agent of the Winn property,
+or of Mr. Head of Reigate in Surrey, the mortgagee of the estate, who
+holds a power of attorney from Mr. Winn, is here, a quiet, intelligent
+young man, who has given me the case in a nut-shell.
+
+The tenant to be evicted, James Griffin, is the son and heir of one Mrs.
+Griffin, who on the 5th of April 1854 took a lease of the lands known as
+West Lettur from the then Lord Headley and the Hon. R. Winn, at the
+annual rent of L32, 10s. This rent has since been reduced by a judicial
+process to L26. In 1883 James Griffin, who was then, as he is now, an
+active member of the local branch of the National League, and who was
+imprisoned under Mr. Gladstone's Act of 1881 as a "suspect," was
+evicted, being then several years in arrears. He re-entered unlawfully
+immediately afterwards, and has remained in West Lettur unlawfully ever
+since, actively deterring and discouraging other tenants from paying
+their rents. He took a great part in promoting the refusal to pay which
+led to the famous evictions of last year. As to these, it seems the
+tenants had agreed, in 1886, to accept a proposition from Mr. Head,
+remitting four-fifths of all their arrears upon payment of one year's
+rent and costs. Mr. Sheehan, M.P., a hotel-keeper in Killarney,
+intervened, advising the tenants that the Dublin Parliament would soon
+be established, and would abolish "landlordism," whereupon they refused
+to keep their agreement.[3] Sir Redvers Buller, who then filled the post
+now held by Sir West Ridgway, seeing this alarming deadlock, urged Mr.
+Head to go further, and offer to take a half-year's rent and costs. If
+the tenants refused this Sir Redvers advised Mr. Head to destroy all
+houses occupied by mere trespassers, such as Griffin, who, if they could
+hold a place for twelve years, would acquire a title under the Statute
+of Limitations. A negotiation conducted by Sir Redvers and Father
+Quilter, P.P., followed, and Father Quilter, for the tenants, finally,
+in writing, accepted Mr. Head's offer, under which, by the payment of
+L865, they would be rid of a legal liability for L6177. The League again
+intervened with bribes and threats, and Father Quilter found himself
+obliged to write to Colonel Turner a letter in which he said, "Only
+seventeen of the seventy tenants have sent on their rents to Mr. Roe
+(the agent). Though promising that they would accept the terms, they
+have withdrawn at the last moment from fulfilment.... I shall never
+again during my time in Glenbehy interfere between a landlord and his
+tenants. I have poor slaves who will not keep their word. Now let Mr.
+Roe or any other agent in future deal with Glenbeighans as he likes."
+The farms lie at a distance even from this inn, and very far therefore
+from Killorglin, and the agent, knowing that the tenants would be
+encouraged by Griffin and by Mr. Harrington, M.P., and others, to come
+back into their holdings as soon as the officers withdrew, ordered the
+woodwork of several cottages to be burned in order to prevent this. This
+burning of the cottages, which were the lawful property of the
+mortgagee, made a great figure in the newspaper reports, and
+"scandalised the civilised world." The present agent thinks it was
+impolitic on that account, but he has no doubt it was a good thing
+financially for the evicted tenants. "You will see the shells of the
+cottages to-morrow," he said, "and you will judge for yourself what they
+were worth." But the sympathy excited by the illustrations of the cruel
+conflagration and the heartrending descriptions of the reporters,
+resulted in a very handsome subscription for the benefit of the tenants
+of Glenbehy. General Sir William Butler, whose name came so prominently
+before the public in connection with his failure to appear and give
+evidence in a recent _cause celebre_, and whose brother is a Resident
+Magistrate in Kerry, was one of the subscribers. The fund thus raised
+has been since administered by two trustees, Father Quilter, P.P., and
+Mr. Shee, a son of our brisk little landlady here, who maintain out of
+it very comfortably the evicted tenants. Not long ago a man in Tralee
+tried to bribe the agent into having him evicted, that he might make a
+claim on this fund! At Killorglin the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits,
+which stood at L282, 15s. 9d. in 1880, rose in 1887 to L1299, 2s. 6d.
+James Griffin, despite, or because, of the two evictions through which
+he has passed, is very well off. He owns a very good horse and cart, and
+seven or eight head of cattle. His arrears now amount to about L240, and
+on being urged yesterday to make a proposition which might avoid an
+eviction, he gravely offered to pay L8 of the current half-year's rent
+in cash, and the remaining L5 in June, the landlord taking on himself
+all the costs and giving him a clean receipt! This liberal proposition
+was declined. The zeal of her son in behalf of the evicted tenants does
+not seem to affect the amiable anxiety of our trim and energetic hostess
+to make things agreeable here to the minions of the alien despotism. The
+officers both of the police and of the military appear to be on the best
+of terms with the whole household, and everything is going as merrily as
+marriage bells on this eve of an eviction.
+
+TRALEE, _Wednesday evening, Feb. 22._--We rose early at Mrs. Shee's,
+made a good breakfast, and set out for the scene of the day's work. It
+was a glorious morning for Washington's birthday, and I could not help
+imagining the amazement with which that stern old Virginian landlord
+would have regarded the elaborate preparations thought necessary here in
+Ireland in the year of our Lord 1888, to eject a tenant who owes two
+hundred and forty pounds of arrears on a holding at twenty-six pounds a
+year, and offers to settle the little unpleasantness by paying thirteen
+pounds in two instalments!
+
+We had a five miles' march of it through a singularly wild and
+picturesque region, the hills which lead up to the Macgillicuddy's Reeks
+on our left, and on the right the lower hills trending to the salt water
+of Dingle Bay. Our start had been delayed by the non-appearance of the
+Sheriff, in aid of whom all this parade of power was made; but it turned
+out afterwards that he had gone on without stopping to let Colonel
+Turner know it.
+
+The air was so bracing and the scenery so fine that we walked most of
+the way. Two or three cars drove past us, the police and the troops
+making way for them very civilly, though some of the officers thought
+they were taking some Nationalist leaders and some English
+"sympathisers" to Glenbehy. One of the officers, when I commented upon
+this, told me they never had much trouble with the Irish members. "Some
+of them," he said, "talk more than is necessary, and flourish about; but
+they have sense enough to let us go about our work without foolishly
+trying to bother us. The English are not always like that." And he then
+told me a story of a scene in which an English M.P., we will call Mr.
+Gargoyle, was a conspicuous actor. Mr. Gargoyle being present either at
+an eviction or a prohibited meeting, I didn't note which, with two or
+three Irish members, all of them were politely requested to step on one
+side and let the police march past. The Irish members touched their hats
+in return to the salute of the officer, and drew to one side of the
+road. But Mr. Gargoyle defiantly planted himself in the middle of the
+road. The police, marching four abreast, hesitated for a moment, and
+then suddenly dividing into two columns marched on. The right-hand man
+of the first double file, as he went by, just touched the M.P. with his
+shoulder, and thereby sent him up against the left-hand man of the
+corresponding double file, who promptly returned the attention. And in
+this manner the distinguished visitor went gyrating through the whole
+length of the column, to emerge at the end of it breathless, hatless,
+and bewildered, to the intense and ill-suppressed delight of his Irish
+colleagues.
+
+Our hostess's son, the trustee of the Eviction Fund, was on one of the
+cars which passed us, with two or three companions, who proved to be
+"gentlemen of the Press." We passed a number of cottages and some larger
+houses on the way, the inmates of which seemed to be minding their own
+business and taking but a slight interest in the great event of the day.
+We made a little detour at one of the finest points on the road to visit
+"Winn's Folly," a modern mediaeval castle of considerable size, upon a
+most enchanting site, with noble views on every side, quite impossible
+to be seen through its narrow loopholed and latticed windows. The castle
+is extremely well built, of a fine stone from the neighbourhood, and
+with a very small expenditure might be made immediately habitable. But
+no one has ever lived in it. It has only been occupied as a temporary
+barrack by the police when sent here, and the largest rooms are now
+littered with straw for the use of the force. At the beginning of the
+century, and for many years afterwards, Lord and Lady Headley lived on
+the estate, and kept a liberal house. Their residence was on a fine
+point running out into the bay, but, I am told, the sea has now invaded
+it, and eaten it away. In 1809 the acreage of this Glenbehy property was
+8915 Irish acres or 14,442 English acres, set down under Bath's
+valuation at L2299, 17s. 6d. Between 1830 and 1860 the rental averaged
+L5000 a year, and between these years L17,898, 14s. 5d. were expended by
+the landlord in improvements upon the property. This castle, which we
+visited, must have involved since then an outlay of at least L10,000 in
+the place.
+
+The present Lord Headley, only a year or two ago, went through the
+Bankruptcy Court, and the Hon. Rowland Winn, his uncle, the titular
+owner of Glenbehy, is set down among the Irish landlords as owning
+13,932 Irish acres at a rental of L1382.
+
+After we passed the castle we began to hear the blowing of rude horns
+from time to time on the distant hills. These were signals to the people
+of our approach, and gave quite the air of an invasion to our
+expedition. We passed the burned cottages of last year just before
+reaching Mr. Griffin's house at West Lettur. They were certainly not
+large cottages, and I saw but three of them. We found the Sheriff at
+West Lettur. The police and the soldiers drew a cordon around the place,
+within which no admittance was to be had except on business; and the
+myrmidons of the law going into the house with the agent held a final
+conference with the tenant, of which nothing came but a renewal of his
+previous offer. Then the work of eviction began. There was no attempt at
+a resistance, and but for the martial aspect of the forces, and an
+occasional blast of a horn from the hills, or the curious noises made
+from time to time by a small concourse of people, chiefly women,
+assembled on the slope of an adjoining tenancy, the proceedings were as
+dull as a parish meeting. What most struck me about the affair was the
+patience and good-nature of the officers. In the two hours and a half
+which we spent at West Lettur a New York Sheriff's deputies would have
+put fifty tenants with all their bags and baggage out of as many houses
+into the street. In fact it is very likely that at least that number of
+New York tenants were actually so ousted from their houses during this
+very time.
+
+The evicted Mr. Griffin was a stout, stalwart man of middle age,
+comfortably dressed, with the air rather of a citizen than of a farmer,
+who took the whole thing most coolly, as did also his women-kind. All of
+them were well dressed, and they superintended the removal and piling up
+of their household goods as composedly as if they were simply moving out
+of one house into another. The house itself was a large comfortable
+house of the country, and it was amply furnished.
+
+I commented on Griffin's indifference to the bailiff, a quiet,
+good-natured man.
+
+"Oh, he's quite familiar," was the reply; "it's the third time he's been
+evicted! I believe's going to America."
+
+"Oh! he will do very well," said a gentleman who had joined the
+expedition like myself to see the scene. "He is a shrewd chap, and not
+troubled by bashfulness. He sat on a Board of Guardians with a man I
+knew four years ago, and one day he read out his own name, 'James
+Griffin,' among a list of applicants for relief at Cahirciveen. The
+chairman looked up, and said, 'Surely that is not your name you are
+reading, is it?' 'It is, indeed,' replied Griffin, 'and I am as much in
+need of relief as any one!' Perhaps you'll be surprised to hear he
+didn't get it. This is a good holding he had, and he used to do pretty
+well with it--not in his mother's time only of the flush prices, but in
+his own. It was the going to Kilmainham that spoiled him."
+
+"How did that spoil him?"
+
+"Oh, it made a great man of him, being locked up. He was too well
+treated there. He got a liking for sherry and bitters, and he's never
+been able to make his dinner since without a nip of them. Mrs. Shee
+knows that well."
+
+To make an eviction complete and legal here, everything belonging to the
+tenant, and every live creature must be taken out of the house. A cat
+may save a house as a cat may save a derelict ship. Then the Sheriff
+must "walk" over the whole holding. All this takes time. There was an
+unobtrusive search for arms too going on all the time. Three ramrods
+were found hidden in a straw-bed--two of which showed signs of recent
+use. But the guns had vanished. An officer told me that not long ago two
+revolvers were found in a corner of the thatch of a house; but the
+cartridges for them were only some time afterwards discovered neatly
+packed away in the top of a bedroom wall. It is not the ownership of
+these arms, it is the careful concealment of them which indicates
+sinister intent. One of the constables brought out three "Moonlighters'
+swords" found hidden away in the house. One of these Colonel Turner
+showed me. It was a reversal of the Scriptural injunction, being a
+ploughshare beaten into a weapon, and a very nasty weapon of offence,
+one end of it sharpened for an ugly thrust, the other fashioned into
+quite a fair grip. While I was examining this trophy there was a stir,
+and presently two of the gentlemen who had passed us on Mr. Shee's car
+came rather suddenly out of the house in company with two or three
+constables.
+
+They were representatives, they said, of the Press, and as such desired
+to be allowed to remain. Colonel Turner replied that this could not be,
+and, in fact, no one had been suffered to enter the house except the
+law-officers, the agent, and the constables. So the representatives of
+the Press were obliged to pass outside of the lines, one of the
+constables declaring that they had got into the house through a hole in
+the back wall!
+
+Shortly after this incident there arose a considerable noise of groaning
+and shouting from the hill-side beyond the highway, and presently a
+number of people, women and children predominating, appeared coming down
+towards the precincts of the house. They were following a person in a
+clerical dress, who proved to be Father Quilter, the parish priest, who
+had denounced his people to Colonel Turner as "poor slaves" of the
+League! A colloquy followed between Father Quilter and the policemen of
+the cordon. This was brought to a close by Mr. Roche, the resident
+magistrate, who went forward, and finding that Father Quilter wished to
+pass the cordon, politely but firmly informed him that this could not be
+done. "Not if I am the bearer of a telegram for the lawyer?" asked
+Father Quilter, in a loud and not entirely amiable tone. "Not on any
+terms whatever," responded the magistrate. Father Quilter still
+maintaining his ground, the women crowded in around and behind him, the
+men bringing up the rear at a respectable distance, and the small boys
+shouting loudly. For a moment faint hopes arose within me that I was
+about to witness one of the .exciting scenes of which I have more than
+once read. But only for a moment. The magistrate ordered the police to
+advance. As they drew near the wall with an evident intention of going
+over it into the highway, Father Quilter and the women fell back, the
+boys and men retreated up the opposite hill, and the brief battle of
+Glenbehy was over.
+
+A small messenger bearing a telegram then emerged from the crowd, and
+showing his telegram, was permitted to pass. Father Quilter, in a loud
+voice, commented upon this, crying out, "See now your consistency! You
+said no one should pass, and you let the messenger come in!" To this
+sally no reply was returned. After a little the priest, followed by most
+of the people, went up the hill to the holding of another tenant, and
+there, as the police came in and reported, held a meeting. From time to
+time cries were heard in the distance, and ever and anon the blast of a
+horn came from some outlying hill.
+
+But no notice was taken of these things by the police, and when the
+tedious formalities of the law had all been gone through with, a squad
+of men were put in charge of the house and the holding, the rest of the
+army re-formed for the march back, our cars came up, and we left West
+Lettur. Seeing a number of men come down the hill, as the column
+prepared to move, Mr. Roche, making his voice tremendous, after the
+fashion of a Greek chorus, commanded the police to arrest and handcuff
+any riotous person making provocative noises. This had the desired
+effect, and the march back began in silence. When the column was fairly
+in the road, "boos" and groans went up from knots of men higher up the
+hill, but no heed was taken of these, and no further incident occurred.
+I shall be curious to see whether the story of this affair can possibly
+be worked up into a thrilling narrative.
+
+We lunched at Mrs. Shee's, where no sort of curiosity was manifested
+about the proceedings at West Lettur, and I came back here with Colonel
+Turner by another road, which led us past one of the loveliest lakes I
+have ever seen--Lough Caragh. Less known to fame than the much larger
+Lake of Killarney, it is in its way quite worthy of comparison with any
+of the lesser lakes of Europe. It is not indeed set in a coronal of
+mountains like Orta, but its shores are well wooded, picturesque, and
+enlivened by charming seats--now, for the most part, alas!--abandoned by
+their owners. We had a pleasant club dinner here this evening, after
+which came in to see me Mr. Hussey, to whom I had sent a letter from Mr.
+Froude. Few men, I imagine, know this whole region better than Mr.
+Hussey. Some gentlemen of the country joined in the conversation, and
+curious stories were told of the difficulty of getting evidence in
+criminal cases. What Froude says of the effect of the prohibitive and
+protection policy in Ireland upon the morals of the people as to
+smuggling must be said, I fear, of the effect of the Penal Laws against
+Catholics upon their morals as to perjury. It is not surprising that the
+peasants should have been educated into the state of mind of the
+Irishman in the old American story, who, being solicited to promise his
+vote when he landed in New York, asked whether the party which sought it
+was for the Government or against it. Against it, he was told, "Then
+begorra you shall have my vote, for I'm agin the Government whatever it
+is." One shocking case was told of a notorious and terrible murder here
+in Kerry. An old man and his son, so poor that they lay naked in their
+beds, were taken out and shot by a party of Moonlighters for breaking a
+boycott. They were left for dead, and their bodies thrown upon a
+dunghill. The boy, however, was still alive when they were found, and it
+was thought he might recover. The magistrates questioned him as to his
+knowledge of the murderers. The boy's mother stood behind the
+magistrate, and when the question was put, held up her finger in a
+warning manner at the poor lad. She didn't wish him to "peach," as, if
+he lived, the friends of the murderers would make it impossible for them
+to keep their holding and live on it. The lad lied, and died with the
+lie on his lips. Who shall sit in judgment on that wretched mother and
+her son? But what rule can possibly be too stern to crush out the
+terrorism which makes such things possible?
+
+And what right have Englishmen to expect their dominion to stand in
+Ireland when their party leaders for party ends shake hands with men who
+wink at and use this terrorism? It has so wrought upon the population
+here, that in another case, in which the truth needed by justice and the
+fears of a poor family trembling for their substance and their lives
+came thus into collision, an Irish Judge did not hesitate to warn the
+jury against allowing themselves to be influenced by "the usual family
+lie"!
+
+A magistrate told us a curious story, which recalls a case noted by Sir
+Walter Scott, about the detection of a murderer, who lay long in wait
+for a certain police sergeant, obnoxious to the "Moonlighters," and
+finally shot him dead in the public street of Loughrea, after dark on a
+rainy night, as he was returning from the Post-Office on one side of the
+street to the Police Barracks on the other. The town and the
+neighbouring country were all agog about the matter, but no trace could
+be got until the Dublin detectives came down three days after the
+murder. It had rained more or less every one of these days, and the
+pools of water were still standing in the street, as on the night of the
+murder. One of the Dublin officers closely examining the highway saw a
+heavy footprint in the coarse mud at the bottom of one of these pools.
+He had the water drawn off, and made out clearly, from the print in the
+mud, that the brogan worn by the foot which made it had a broken
+sole-piece turned over under the foot. By this the murderer was
+eventually traced, captured, tried, and found guilty.
+
+Mr. Morphy, I find, is coming down from Dublin to conduct the
+prosecution in the case of the Crown against the murderers of
+Fitzmaurice, the old man, so brutally slain the other day near Lixnaw,
+in the presence of his daughter, for taking and farming a farm given up
+by his thriftless brother. "He will find," said one of the company,
+"the mischief done in this instance also by prematurely pressing for
+evidence. The girl Honora, who saw her father murdered, never ought to
+have been subjected to any inquiry at first by any one, least of all by
+the local priest. Her first thought inevitably was that if she intimated
+who the men were, they would be screened, and she would suffer. Now she
+is recovering her self-possession and coming round, and she will tell
+the truth."
+
+"Meanwhile," said a magistrate, "the girl and her family are all
+'boycotted,' and that, mark you, by the priest, as well as by the
+people. The girl's life would be in peril were not these scoundrels
+cowards as well as bullies. Two staunch policemen--Irishmen and
+Catholics both of them--are in constant attendance, with orders to
+prevent any one from trying to intimidate or to tamper with her. A
+police hut is putting up close to the Fitzmaurice house. The Nationalist
+papers haven't a word to say for this poor girl or her murdered father.
+But they are always putting in some sly word in behalf of Moriarty and
+Hayes, the men accused of the murder."
+
+"Furthermore," said another guest, "these two men are regularly supplied
+while in prison with special meals by Mrs. Tangney. Who foots the bills?
+That is what she won't tell, nor has the Head-Constable so far been able
+accurately to ascertain. All we know is that the friends of the
+prisoners haven't the money to do it."
+
+Late in the evening came in a tall fine-looking Kerry squire, who told
+us, _a propos_ of the Fitzmaurice murder, that only a day or two ago a
+very decent tenant of his, who had taken over a holding from a
+disreputable kinsman, intending to manage it for the benefit of this
+kinsman's family, came to him and said he must give it up, as the
+Moonlighters had threatened him if he continued to hold it.
+
+A man of substance in Tralee gave me some startling facts as to the
+local administration here. In Tralee Union, he said, there were in 1879
+eighty-seven persons receiving outdoor relief, at a cost to the Union of
+L30, 17s. 11d., being an average per head of 7s. 1d., and 1879 was a
+very bad year, the worst since the great famine year, 1847. A
+Nationalist Board was elected in 1880, and a Nationalist chairman in
+1884. 1884 was a very good year, but in that year no fewer than 3434
+persons received outdoor relief, at a cost of L2534, 13s. 10d., making
+an average per head of 14s. 9d.! And at the present time L5000 nominal
+worth of dishonoured cheques of the authorities were flying all over the
+county!
+
+"On whom," I asked, "does the burden fall of these levies and
+extravagances?"
+
+"On the landlords, not on the tenants," he promptly replied. "The
+landlord pays the whole of the rates on all holdings of less than L4 a
+year, and on all land which is either really or technically in his own
+possession. He also pays one-half of the rates on all the rest of his
+property."
+
+"Then, in a case like that of Griffin's, evicted at Glenbehy, with
+arrears going back to 1883, who would pay the rates?"
+
+"The landlord of course!"[4]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+CORK, _Thursday, Feb. 23d._--We left Tralee this morning. It was
+difficult to recognise the events yesterday witnessed by us at Glenbehy
+in the accounts which we read of them to-day when we got the newspapers.
+
+As these accounts are obviously intended to be read, not in Ireland,
+where nobody seems to take the least interest in Irish affairs beyond
+his own bailiwick, but in England and America, it is only natural, I
+suppose, that they should be coloured to suit the taste of the market
+for which they are destined. It is astonishing how little interest the
+people generally show in the newspapers. The Irish make good journalists
+as they make good soldiers; but most of the journalists who now
+represent Irish constituencies at Westminster find their chief field of
+activity, I am told, not in Irish but in British or in American
+journals. Mr. Roche, R.M., who travelled with us as far as Castle
+Island, where we left him, was much less moved by the grotesque accounts
+given in the local journals of his conduct yesterday than by Mr.
+Gladstone's "retractation" of the extraordinary attack which he made the
+other day upon Mr. Roche himself, and four other magistrates by name.
+
+"The retractation aggravates the attack," he said.
+
+When one sees what a magistrate now represents in Ireland, it certainly
+is not easy to reconcile an inconsiderate attack upon the character and
+conduct of such an officer with the most elementary ideas of good
+citizenship.
+
+After Mr. Roche left us, a gentleman in the carriage, who is interested
+in some Castle Island property, told us that nothing could be worse than
+the state of that region. Open defiance of the moral authority of the
+clergy is as rife there, he says, as open defiance of the civil
+authorities. The church was not long ago broken into, and the sacred
+vestments were defiled; and, but the other day, a young girl of the
+place came to a magistrate and asked him to give her a summons against
+the parish priest "for assaulting her." The magistrate, a Protestant,
+but a personal friend of the priest, esteeming him for his fidelity to
+his duties, asked the girl what on earth she meant. She proceeded with
+perfect coolness to say that the priest had impertinently interfered
+with her, "assaulted her," and told her to "go home," when he found her
+sitting in a lonely part of the road with her young man, rather late at
+night! For this, the girl, professing to be a Catholic, actually wanted
+the Protestant magistrate to have her parish priest brought into his
+court! He told the girl plainly what he thought of her conduct,
+whereupon she went away, very angry, and vowing vengeance both against
+the priest and against him.
+
+This same gentleman said that at the Bodyke evictions, of which so much
+has been heard, the girls and women swarmed about the police using
+language so revoltingly obscene that the policemen blushed--such
+language, he said, as was never heard from decent Irishwomen in the days
+of his youth.
+
+Of this business of evictions, he said, the greatest imaginable
+misrepresentations are made in the press and by public speakers. "You
+have just seen one eviction yourself," he said, "and you can judge for
+yourself whether that can be truly described in Mr. Gladstone's language
+as a 'sentence of death.' The people that were put out of these burned
+houses you saw, houses that never would have needed to be burned, had
+Harrington and the other Leaguers allowed the people to keep their
+pledges given Sir Redvers Buller, those very people are better off now
+than they were before they were evicted, in so far as this, that they
+get their food and drink and shelter without working for it, and I'm
+sorry to say that the Government and the League, between them, have been
+soliciting half of Ireland for the last six or eight years to think that
+sort of thing a heaven upon earth. An eviction in Ireland in these days
+generally means just this, that the fight between a landlord and the
+League has come to a head. If the tenant wants to be rid of his holding,
+or if he is more afraid of the League than of the law, why, out he goes,
+and then he is a victim of heartless oppression; but if he is
+well-to-do, and if he thinks he will be protected, he takes the eviction
+proceedings just for a notice to stop palavering and make a settlement,
+and a settlement is made. The ordinary Irish tenant don't think anything
+more of an eviction than Irish gentlemen used to think of a duel; but
+you can never get English people to understand the one any more than the
+other!"
+
+The fine broad streets which Cork owes to the filling up and bridging
+over of the canals which in the last century made her a kind of Irish
+Venice, give the city a comely and even stately aspect. But they are not
+much better kept and looked after than the streets of New York. And they
+are certainly less busy and animated than when I last was here, five
+years ago. All the canals, however, are not filled up or bridged over.
+From my windows, in a neat comfortable little private hotel on
+Morrison's Quay, I look down upon the deck of a small barque, moored
+well up among the houses. The hospitable and dignified County Club is
+within two minutes' walk of my hostelry, and the equally hospitable and
+more bustling City Club, but a little farther off, at the end of the
+South Mall. At luncheon to-day a gentleman who was at Kilkenny with Mr.
+Gladstone on the occasion of his visit to that city told me a story too
+good to be lost. The party were eight in number, and on their return to
+Abbeyleix they naturally looked out for an empty railway carriage. The
+train was rather full, but in one compartment my informant descried a
+dignitary, whom he knew, of the Protestant Church of Ireland, its only
+occupant. He went up and saluted the Dean, and, pointing to his
+companions, asked if he would object to changing his place in the train,
+which would give them a compartment to themselves. The Dean courteously,
+and indeed briskly, assented, when he saw that Mr. Gladstone was one of
+the party.
+
+After the train moved off, Mr. Gladstone said, "Was not that gentleman
+who so kindly vacated his place for us a clergyman?"
+
+"Yes." "I hope he won't think I have disestablished him again!"
+
+At the next station, my informant getting out for a moment to thank the
+Dean again for his civility, and chat with him, repeated Mr. Gladstone's
+remark.
+
+"Oh!" said the Dean; "you may tell him I don't mind his disestablishing
+me again; for he didn't disendow me; he didn't confiscate my ticket!"
+
+With this gentleman was another from Kerry, who tells me there is a
+distinct change for the better already visible in that county, which he
+attributes to the steady action of the Dublin authorities in enforcing
+the law.
+
+"The League Courts," he said, "are ceasing to be the terror they used to
+be."
+
+I asked what he meant by the "League Courts," when he expressed his
+astonishment at my not knowing that it was the practice of the League to
+hold regular Courts, before which the tenants are summoned, as if by a
+process of the law, to explain their conduct, when they are charged with
+paying their rents without the permission of the Local League. In his
+part of Kerry, he tells me, these Courts used not very long ago to sit
+regularly every Sunday. The idea, he says, is as old as the time of the
+United Irishmen, who used to terrorise the country just in the same way.
+A man whom he named, a blacksmith, acted as a kind of "Law Lord," and to
+him the chairmen of the different local "Courts" used to refer cases
+heard before them![5]
+
+All this was testified to openly two years ago, before Lord Cowper's
+Commission, but no decisive action has ever been taken by the Government
+to put a stop to the scandal, and relieve the tenants from this open
+tyranny. These Courts enforced, and still enforce, their decrees by
+various forms of outrage, ranging "from the boycott," in its simplest
+forms up to direct outrages upon property and the person.
+
+"This dual Government business," he said, "can only end in a duel
+between the two Governments, and it must be a duel to the death of one
+or the other."
+
+To-night at dinner I had a most interesting conversation with Mr.
+Colomb, Assistant Inspector-General of the Constabulary, who is here
+engaged with Mr. Cameron of Belfast, and Colonel Turner, in
+investigating the affair at Mitchelstown. Mr. Colomb was at Killarney at
+the time of the Fenian rising under "General O'Connor" in 1867--a rising
+which was undoubtedly an indirect consequence of our own Civil War in
+America. Warning came to two magistrates, of impending trouble from
+Cahirciveen. Upon this Mr. Colomb immediately ordered the arrest of all
+passengers to arrive that day at Killarney by the "stage-car" from that
+place. When the car came in at night, it brought only one person--"an
+awful-looking ruffian he was," said Mr. Colomb, "whom, by his
+square-toed shoes, we knew to be just arrived from your side of the
+water."
+
+He was examined, and said he was a commercial traveller, and that he had
+only one letter about him, a business letter, addressed to "J. D.
+Sheehan."
+
+"Have you any objection to show us that letter?"
+
+"Certainly not," he replied very coolly, and, taking it out of his
+pocket, he walked toward a table on which stood a candle, as if to read
+it. A gentleman who was closely watching him, caught him by the wrist,
+just as he was putting the letter to the flame, and saved it. It was
+addressed to J. D. Sheehan, Esq., Killarney [Present], and ran as
+follows:
+
+ "_Feb. 12th, Morning_.
+
+ "MY DEAR SHEEHAN,--I have the honour to introduce to you Captain
+ Mortimer Moriarty. He will be of great assistance to you, and I
+ have told him all that is to be done until I get to your place. The
+ Private _Spys_ are very active this morning. Unless they smell a
+ rat all will be done without any trouble.
+
+ "Success to you. Hoping to meet soon,--Yours as ever.
+
+ "(Signed) JOHN J. O'CONNOR."[6]
+
+Despatches were at once sent off to the authorities at different points.
+They were all transmitted, except to Cahirciveen, the wires to which
+place were found to have been cut. Mr. Colomb--who had a force of but
+seventeen men in the town of Killarney--saw the uselessness of trying to
+communicate with the officer at Cahirciveen, but was so strongly urged
+by the magistrates that he unwillingly consented to endeavour to do so,
+and a mounted orderly was sent. Just after this unfortunate officer had
+passed Glenbehy (the scene of the eviction I have just witnessed) he was
+shot by some of O'Connor's party, whom he tried to pass in the dark, and
+who were marching on Killarney, and fell from his horse, which galloped
+off. He managed to crawl to a neighbouring cottage, where he was not
+long after found by "General O'Connor" and some of his followers. The
+wounded man was kindly treated by O'Connor, who had him examined for
+despatches, but prevented one of his men from shooting him dead, as he
+lay on the ground, and had his wounds as well attended to as was
+possible. There was no response in the country to the Kerry rising, such
+as it was, because the intended seizure of Chester Castle by the Fenians
+failed, but O'Connor was not captured, though great efforts were made to
+seize him. How he escaped is not known to this day.
+
+At that time, as always in emergencies, Mr. Colomh says the Constabulary
+behaved with exemplary coolness, courage, and fidelity. His position
+gives him a very thorough knowledge of the force, which is almost
+entirely recruited from the body of the Irish people. Of late years not
+a few men of family, reduced in fortune, have taken service in it. Among
+these has been mentioned to me a young Irishman of title, and of an
+ancient race, who is a sergeant in the force, and who recently declined
+to accept a commission, as his increased expenses would make it harder
+for him to support his two sisters. Another constable in the ranks
+represents a family illustrious in the annals of England four centuries
+ago.
+
+As to the _morale_ of the force, he cites one eloquent fact. Out of a
+total of more than 13,000 men, the cases of drunkenness, proved or
+admitted, average no more than fourteen a week! On many days absolutely
+no such cases occur. This is really amazing when one thinks how many of
+the men are isolated on lonely posts all over the island, exposed to all
+sorts of weather, and cut off from the ordinary resources and amusements
+of social life.
+
+CORK, _Friday, Feb. 24th._--This morning after breakfast I met in the
+South Mall a charming ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance I made in Rome
+while I was attending the great celebration there in 1867 of St. Peter's
+Day. Father Burke introduced me to him after the Pontifical Mass at San
+Paolo fuori le Mure; and we had a delightful symposium that afternoon. I
+walked with him to his lodgings, talking over those "days long
+vanished," and the friend whose genius made them, like the suppers of
+Plato, "a joy for ever." He is sorely troubled now by the attitude of a
+portion of the clergy in his part of Ireland, which is one almost of
+open hostility, he says, to the moral authority of the Church, and
+indicates the development of a class of priests moving in the direction
+of the "conventional priests," by whom the Church was disgraced during
+the darkest days of the French Revolution of 1793.
+
+Almost more mischievous than these men, he thinks, who must eventually
+go the way of their kind in times past, are the timid priests, for the
+most part parish priests, who go in fear of their violent curates, and
+of the politicians who tyrannise their flocks. He showed me a letter
+written to him last week by one of these, whose parish is just now in a
+tempest over the Plan of Campaign. Certainly a most remarkable letter.
+In it the writer frankly says, "There is no justification for the Plan
+of Campaign on this property.
+
+"I assented to putting it in force here," he goes on, "because I did not
+at the time know the facts of the case, and took them on trust from
+persons who, I find, have practised upon my confidence. What am I to do?
+I am made to appear as a consenting party now, and, indeed, an assisting
+agent in action, which I certainly was led to believe right and
+necessary, but which upon the facts I now see involves much injustice
+to ---- (naming the landlord), and I fear positive ruin to worthy men and
+families of my people. I shall be grateful and glad of your counsel in
+these most distressing circumstances."
+
+"What can any one do to help such a man?" said my friend. "The
+rebellious and unruly in the Church, be they priests or laymen, can only
+in the end damage themselves. _Tu es Petrus_; and revolt, like schism,
+is a devil which only carries away those of whom it gets possession out
+of the Church and into the sea. But a weak sentinel on the wall or at
+the gate who drops his musket to wipe his eyes, that is a thing for
+tears!"
+
+He asked me to come and see him if possible in his own county, and he
+has promised to send me letters to-day for priests who will he glad to
+tell me what they know only too well of the pressure put upon the better
+sort of the people by the organised idlers and mischief-makers in Clare
+and Kerry.
+
+To-day at the City Club, I made the acquaintance of the Town-Clerk of
+Cork, Mr. Alexander M'Carthy, a staunch Nationalist and Home Ruler, who
+holds his office almost by a sort of hereditary tenure, having been
+appointed to it in 1859 in succession to his father. He gave me many
+interesting particulars as to the municipal history and administration
+of Cork, and showed me some of the responses he is receiving to a kind
+of circular letter sent by the municipality to the town governments of
+England, touching the recent proceedings against the Mayor. So far these
+responses have not been very sympathetic. He invited me to lunch here
+with him to-morrow, and visit some of the most interesting points in and
+around the city. Here, too, I met Colonel Spaight, Inspector of the
+Local Government Board, who gives me a startling account of the increase
+of the public burdens. Twenty years ago there were no persons whatever
+seeking outdoor relief in Cork. This year, out of a total population of
+145,216, there are 3775 persons here receiving indoor relief, and 4337
+receiving outdoor relief, making in all 8112, or nearly 6 per cent. of
+the inhabitants. This proportion is swelled by the influx of people from
+other regions seeking occupation here, which they do not find, or simply
+coming here because they are sure of relief. This state of things
+illustrates not so much the decay of industry in Cork as the development
+of a spirit of mendicancy throughout Ireland. In the opinion of many
+thoughtful people, this began with the Duchess of Marlborough's Fund,
+and with the Mansion House Fund. Colonel Spaight remembers that in
+Strokestown Union, Roscommon, when the guardians there received a supply
+of one hundred tons of seed potatoes, they distributed eighty tons, and
+were then completely at a loss what to do with the remaining twenty
+tons. Mr. Parnell and Mr. O'Kelly, however, came to Roscommon, and the
+latter made a speech out of the hotel window to the people, advising
+them to apply for more, and take all they could get. "With a stroke of a
+pen," he said, "we'll wipe out the seed rate!" Whereupon the
+applications for seed rose to six hundred tons!
+
+The Labourers Act, passed by the British Parliament for the benefit of
+the Irish labourers, who get but scant recognition of their wants and
+wishes from the tenant farmers, is not producing the good results
+expected from it, mainly because it is perverted to all sorts of
+jobbery. Only last week Colonel Spaight had to hand in to the Local
+Government Board a report on certain schemes of expenditure under this
+Act, prepared by the Board of Guardians of Tralee. These schemes
+contemplated the erection of 196 cottages in 135 electoral divisions of
+the Union. This meant, of course, so much money of the ratepayers to be
+turned over to local contractors. Colonel Spaight on inspection found
+that of the 196 proposed cottages, the erection of 61 had been forbidden
+by the sanitary authorities, the notices for the erection of 23 had been
+wrongly served, 20 were proposed to be erected on sites not adjoining a
+public road, and no necessity had been shown for erecting 40 of the
+others. He accordingly recommended that only 32 be allowed to be
+erected! For a small town like Tralee this proposition to put up 196
+buildings at the public expense where only 32 were needed is not bad. It
+has the right old Tammany Ring smack, and would have commanded, I am
+sure, the patronising approval of the late Mr. Tweed.
+
+I mentioned it to-night at the County Club, when a gentleman said that
+this morning at Macroom a serious "row" had occurred between the local
+Board of Guardians there and a great crowd of labourers. The labourers
+thronged the Board-room, demanding the half-acre plots of land which had
+been promised them. The Guardians put them off, promising to attend to
+them when the regular business of the meeting was over. So the poor
+fellows were kept waiting for three mortal hours, at the end of which
+time they espied the elected Nationalist members of the Board subtly
+filing out of the place. This angered them. They stopped the fugitives,
+blockaded the Board-room, and forced the Guardians to appoint a
+committee to act upon their demands.
+
+It is certainly a curious fact that, so far, in Ireland I have seen no
+decent cottages for labourers, excepting those put up at their own
+expense on their own property by landlords.
+
+I dined to-night at the County Club with Captain Plunkett, a most
+energetic, spirited, and well-informed resident magistrate, a brother of
+the late Lord Louth,--still remembered, I dare say, at the New York
+Hotel as the only Briton who ever really mastered the mystery of
+concocting a "cocktail,"--and an uncle of the present peer. We had a
+very cheery dinner, and a very clever lawyer, Mr. Shannon, gave us an
+irresistible reproduction of a charge delivered by an Irish judge famous
+for shooting over the heads of juries, who sent twelve worthy citizens
+of Galway out of their minds by bidding them remember, in a case of
+larceny, that they could not find the prisoner guilty unless they were
+quite sure "as to the _animus furandi_ and the _asportavit_."
+
+_Saturday, Feb. 25._--I had an interesting talk this morning at the
+County Club with a gentleman from Limerick on the subject of
+"boycotting." I told him what I had seen at Edenvale of the practice as
+applied to a forlorn and helpless old woman, for the crime of standing
+by her "boycotted" son. "You think this an extreme case," he said, "but
+you are quite mistaken. It is a typical case certainly, but it gives you
+only an inadequate idea of the scope given to this infernal machinery.
+The 'boycott' is now used in Ireland as the Inquisition was used in
+Spain,--to stifle freedom of thought and action. It is to-day the chief
+reliance of the National League for keeping up its membership, and
+squeezing subscriptions out of the people. If you want proof of this,"
+he added, "ask any Nationalist you know whether members of the League in
+the country allow farmers who are not members to associate with them in
+any way. I can cite you a case at Ballingarry, in my county, where last
+summer a resolution of the League was published and put on the Chapel
+door, that members of the National League were thenceforth to have no
+dealings or communication with any person not a member. This I saw with
+my own eyes, and it was matter of public notoriety."
+
+I lunched at the City Club with Mr. M'Carthy. Sir Daniel O'Sullivan,
+formerly Mayor of Cork, whose views of Home Rule seem to differ widely
+from those of his successor, now incarcerated here, was one of the
+company. In the course of an animated but perfectly good-natured
+discussion of the Land Law question between two other gentlemen present,
+one of them, a strong Nationalist, smote his Unionist opponent very
+neatly under the fifth rib. The latter contending that it was monstrous
+to interfere by law with the principle of freedom of contract, the
+Nationalist responded, "That cannot be; it must be right and legitimate
+to do it, for the Imperial Parliament has done it four times within
+seventeen years!"
+
+I walked with Mr. M'Carthy to his apartments, where he showed me many
+curious papers and volumes bearing on municipal law and municipal
+history in Ireland. Among these, two most elaborate and interesting
+volumes, being the Council Books of Cork, Youghal, and Kinsale, from
+1610 to 1659, 1666 to 1687, and 1690 to 1800. The records for the years
+not enumerated have perished, that is, for the first five or six years
+after the Restoration, and for the years just preceding and just
+following the fall of James II. These volumes take one back to the
+condition of Southern Ireland immediately after English greed and
+intrigue had sapped the foundations of the peace which followed the
+submission of the great Earl of Tyrone, and brought about the flight to
+the Continent of that chieftain, and of his friend and ally, the Earl of
+Tyrconnell.
+
+They give us no picture, unfortunately, of the closing years of
+Elizabeth's long struggle to establish the English power, or of the
+occupation of Kinsale by the Spanish in the name of the Pope. But there
+is abundant evidence in them of the theological hatred which so
+embittered the conflict of races in Ireland during the seventeenth
+century.
+
+It was a relief to turn from these to a solemn controversy waged in our
+own times between Cork and Limerick over a question of municipal
+precedence, in which Mr. M'Carthy did battle for the City of the Galley
+and the Towers[7] against the City of the Gateway and Cathedral dome.
+The truth seems to be that King John gave charters to both cities, but
+to Cork twelve years earlier than to Limerick. Speaking of this contest,
+by the way, with a loyalist of Cork to-night, I observed that it was
+almost as odd to find such a question hotly disputed between two
+Nationalist cities as to see the champions of Irish independence
+marching under the banner of the harp, which was invented for Ireland by
+Henry VIII.
+
+"I don't know why you call Cork a Nationalist city," he replied, "for
+Parnell and Maurice Healy were returned for it by a clear minority of
+the voters. If all the voters had gone to the polls, they would both
+have been beaten."
+
+A curious statement certainly, and worth looking into. Mr. M'Carthy gave
+me also much information as to the working of the municipal system here,
+and a copy of the rules which govern the debates of the Town Council.
+One of these might be adopted with advantage in other assemblies, to
+wit, "that no member be permitted to occupy the time of the Council for
+more than ten minutes."
+
+There is an important difference between the parliamentary and the
+municipal constituencies of Cork. The former constituency comprises all
+residents within the borough boundaries occupying premises of the
+rateable value of L10 a year. The municipal constituency consists of no
+more than 1800 voters, divided among the seven wards which make up the
+city under the "3d and 4th Victoria," and which contain about 13,000 of
+the 15,116 Parliamentary voters of the borough. The same thing is true
+in the main of nine out of the eleven municipal boroughs of Ireland
+including Dublin. The 3d and 4th Victoria was amended for Dublin in
+1849, so as to give that city the municipal franchise then existing in
+England, but no move in that direction was made for Cork, Waterford,
+Limerick, or any other municipal borough. The Nationalists have taken no
+interest in the question. Perhaps they have good reason for this, as in
+Belfast, where the municipal franchise has been widely extended since
+the present Government came into power, the democratic electorate has
+put the whole municipal government into the hands of the Unionists. The
+day being cool, though fine, Mr. M'Carthy got an "inside car," and we
+went off for a drive about the city. The environs of Cork are very
+attractive. We visited the new cemetery grounds which are very neatly
+and tastefully laid out. There was a conflict over them, the owners of
+family vaults staunchly standing out against the "levelling" tendency of
+a harmonious city of the dead. But all is well that ends well, and now
+two handsome stone chapels, one Catholic and one Protestant, keep watch
+and ward over the silent sleepers, standing face to face near the grand
+entrance, and exactly alike in their architecture. A very pretty drive
+took us to the water-works, which are extensive, well planned, and
+exceedingly well kept. They are awaiting now the arrival from America of
+some great turbine wheels, but the engines are of English make. In the
+city we visited the new Protestant cathedral of St. Finbar, a very fine
+church, which advantageously replaces a "spacious structure of the Doric
+order," built here in the reign of George II., with the proceeds of a
+parliamentary tax on coals. Despite his name, I imagine that admirable
+prelate, Dr. England, the first Catholic bishop of my native city in
+America, must have been a Corkonian, for he it was, I believe, who put
+the cathedral of Charleston under the invocation of St. Finbar, the
+first bishop of Cork. The church stands charmingly amid fine trees on a
+southern branch of the river Lea. We visited also two fine Catholic
+churches, one of St. Vincent de Paul, and the other the Church of St.
+Peter and St. Paul, a grandly proportioned and imposing edifice.
+
+It was at vespers that we entered it, and found it filled with the
+kneeling people. This noble church is rather ignobly hidden away behind
+crowded houses and shops, and the contrast was very striking when we
+emerged from its dim religious space and silence into the thronged and
+rather noisy streets. There is a statue here of Father Mathew; but what
+I have seen to-night makes me doubt whether the present generation of
+Corkonians would have erected it.
+
+At dinner a gentleman gave us a most interesting account of the
+picturesque home which a man of taste, and a lover of natural history,
+has made for himself at the remote seaside village of Belmullet, in
+Mayo, the seat of the Mayo quarries, in which Mr. Davitt takes so much
+interest. The sea brings in there all sorts of wreckage, and the house
+is beautifully finished with mahogany and other rare woods, just as I
+remember finding in a noble mansion in South Wales, near a dangerous
+head-land, some magnificent doors and wainscotings made of that most
+beautiful of the Central American woods, nogarote, which I never saw in
+the United States, excepting in a superb specimen of it sent home by
+myself from Corinto. This colonist of Mayo employs all the people he can
+get in the fisheries there, which are very rich; and the ducks and wild
+geese are so numerous that he sometimes sends as far as to Wicklow for
+men to capture and sell them for him. He was once fortunate enough to
+trap a pair of the snow geese of the Arctic region, but Belmullet, in
+other respects a primeval paradise, is cursed with the small boy of
+civilisation; and one of these pests of society slew the goose with a
+stone. The widowed gander consoled himself by contracting family ties
+with the common domestic goose of the parish, and all his progeny, in
+other particulars indistinguishable from that familiar bird, bear the
+black marks distinctive of the Arctic tribe.
+
+Belmullet, this gentleman tells me, boasts a very good little inn, kept
+by a Mrs. Deehan, which was honoured by a visit from Lord Carnarvon with
+his wife and daughters during the Earl's Viceroyalty. This was in the
+course of a private and personal, not official tour, during which, Lord
+Carnarvon says, he was everywhere received with the greatest courtesy by
+all sorts and conditions of the people. It is an interesting
+illustration of the temper in which certain priests in Ireland deal with
+matters of State, that when Lord Carnarvon politely invited the parish
+priest of Belmullet to come to see him, that functionary declined to do
+so. Upon this the placable Viceroy sent to know whether the priest would
+receive the visit he refused to pay. The priest replied that he never
+declined to receive any gentleman who wished to see him; and the Viceroy
+accordingly called upon him, to the edification of the people, who
+afterwards listened very respectfully to a little speech which His
+Excellency made to them from a car. It is rather surprising that these
+incidents have never been adduced in proof of Lord Carnarvon's
+determination to take the Home Rule wind out of the sails of the
+Liberals!
+
+
+CORK, _Sunday, Feb. 26._--I went out to-day with Mr. Cameron to see
+Blarney Castle and St. Anne's Hill. Nothing can be lovelier than the
+country around Cork and the valley of the Lea. A "light railway," of the
+sort authorised by the Act of 1883, takes you out quickly enough to
+Blarney, and the train was well filled. The construction of these
+railways is found fault with as aggravating instead of relieving those
+defects in the organisation and management of the Irish railways, which
+are so thoroughly and intelligently exposed in the Public Works Report
+of Sir James Allport and his fellow-commissioners. A morning paper
+to-day points this out sharply.
+
+In the days of King William III. Blarney Castle must have been a
+magnificent stronghold. It stands very finely on a well-wooded height,
+and dominates the land for miles around. But it held out against the
+victor of the Boyne so long that, when he captured it, he thought it
+best, in the expressive phrase of the Commonwealth, to "slight" it,
+little now remaining of it but the gigantic keep, the walls of which are
+some six yards thick, and a range of ruined outworks stretching along
+and above a line of caverns, probably the work of the quarrymen who got
+out the stone for the Castle ages ago. The legend of the Blarney Stone
+does not seem to be a hundred years old, but the stone itself is one of
+the front battlements of the grand old tower, which has more than once
+fallen to the ground from the giddy height at which it was originally
+set. It is now made fast there by iron clamps, in such a position that
+to kiss it one should be a Japanese acrobat, or a volunteer rifleman
+shooting for the championship of the world. There are many and very fine
+trees in the grounds about the Castle, and there is a charming garden,
+now closed against the casual tourist, as it has been leased with the
+modern house to a tenant who lives here. In the leafy summer the place
+must be a dream of beauty. An avenue of stately trees quite overarching
+the highway leads from Blarney to St. Anne's Hill, the site of which, at
+least, is that of an ideal sanatorium. We walked thither over hill and
+dale. The panorama commanded by the buildings of the sanatorium is one
+of the widest and finest imaginable, worthy to be compared with the
+prospect from the Star and Garter at Richmond, or with that from the
+terrace at St. Germain.
+
+Several handsome lodges or cottages have been built about the extensive
+grounds. These are comfortably furnished and leased to people who prefer
+to bring their households here rather than take up their abode in the
+hotel, which, however, seems to be a very well kept and comfortable sort
+of place, with billiard and music rooms, a small theatre, and all kinds
+of contrivances for making the country almost as tedious as the town.
+The establishment is directed now by a German resident physician, but
+belongs to an Irish gentleman, Mr. Barter, who lives here himself, and
+here manages what I am told is one of the finest dairy farms and dairies
+in Ireland. Our return trip to Cork on the "light railway," with a warm
+red sunset lighting up the river Lea, and throwing its glamour over the
+varied and picturesque scenery through which we ran, was not the least
+delightful part of a very delightful excursion.
+
+After we got back I spent half-an-hour with a gentleman who knows the
+country about Youghal, which I propose to visit to-morrow, and who saw
+something of the recent troubles there arising out of the Plan of
+Campaign, as put into effect on the Ponsonby property.
+
+He is of the opinion that the Nationalists were misled into this contest
+by bad information as to Mr. Ponsonby's resources and relations. They
+expected to drive him to the wall, but they will fail to do this, and
+failing to do this they will be left in the vocative. He showed me a
+curious souvenir of the day of the evictions, in the shape of a
+quatrain, written by the young wife of an evicted tenant. This young
+woman, Mrs. Mahoney, was observed by one of the officers, as the
+eviction went on, to go apart to a window, where she stood for a while
+apparently writing something on a wooden panel of the shutter. After the
+eviction was over the officer remembered this, and going up to the
+window found these lines pencilled upon the panel:--
+
+ "We are evicted from this house,
+ Me and my loving man;
+ We're homeless now upon the world!
+ May the divil take 'the Plan'!"
+
+CORK, _Monday, Feb. 27._--A most interesting day. I left alone and early
+by the train for Youghal, having sent before me a letter of introduction
+to Canon Keller, the parish priest, who has recently become a
+conspicuous person through his refusal to give evidence about matters,
+his knowledge of which he conceives to be "privileged," as acquired in
+his capacity as a priest.
+
+I had many fine views of the shore and the sea as we ran along, and the
+site of Youghal itself is very fine. It is an old seaport town, and once
+was a place of considerable trade, especially in wool.
+
+Oliver dwelt here for a while, and from Youghal he embarked on his
+victorious return to England. He seems to have done his work while he
+was here "not negligently," like Harrison at Naseby Field, for when he
+departed he left Youghal a citadel of Protestant intolerance. Even under
+Charles II they maintained an ordinance forbidding "any Papist to buy or
+barter anything in the public markets," which may be taken as a piece of
+cold-blooded and statutory "boycotting." Then there was no parish priest
+in Youghal; now it may almost be said there is nobody in Youghal but the
+parish priest! So does "the whirligig of time bring in his revenges"!
+
+At Youghal station a very civil young man came up, calling me by name,
+and said Father Keller had sent him with a car to meet me. We drove up
+past some beautiful grounds into the main street. A picturesque
+waterside town, little lanes and narrow streets leading out of the main
+artery down to the bay, and a savour of the sea in the place, grateful
+doubtless to the souls of Raleigh and the west country folk he brought
+over here when he became lord of the land, just three hundred years ago.
+Edmund Spenser came here in those days to see him, and talk over the
+events of that senseless rising of the Desmonds, which gave the poet of
+the "Faerie Queen" his awful pictures of the desolation of Ireland, and
+made the planter of Virginia master of more than forty thousand acres of
+Irish land.
+
+We turned suddenly into a little narrow wynd, and pulled up, the driver
+saying, "There is the Father, yer honour!" In a moment up came a tall,
+very fine-looking ecclesiastic, quite the best dressed and most
+distinguished-looking priest I have yet seen in Ireland, with features
+of a fine Teutonic type, and the erect bearing of a soldier. I jumped
+down to greet him, and he proposed that we should walk together to his
+house near by. An extremely good house I found it to be, well placed in
+the most interesting quarter of the town. Having it in my mind to drive
+on from Youghal to Lismore, there to make an early dinner, see the
+castle of the Duke of Devonshire, and return to Cork by an evening
+train, I had to decline Father Keller's cordial hospitalities, but he
+gave me a most interesting hour with him in his comfortable study.
+Father Keller stands firmly by the position which earned for him a
+sentence of imprisonment last year, when he refused to testify before a
+court of justice in a bankruptcy case, on the ground that it might
+"drift him into answers which would disclose secrets he was bound in
+honour not to disclose." He does not accept the view taken of his
+conduct, however, by Lord Selborne, that, in the circumstances, his
+refusal is to be regarded as the act of his ecclesiastical superiors
+rather than his own. He maintains it as his own view of the sworn duty
+of a priest, and not unnaturally therefore he looks upon his sentence as
+a blow levelled at the clergy; nor, as I understood him, has he
+abandoned his original contention, that the Court had no right to summon
+him as a witness. It was impossible to listen to him on this subject,
+and doubt his entire good faith, nor do I see that he ought to be held
+responsible for the interpretation put by Mr. Lane, M.P., and others
+upon his attitude as a priest, in a sense going to make him merely a
+"martyr" of Home Rule. I did not gather from what he said that, in his
+mind, the question of his relations with the Nationalists or the Plan of
+Campaign entered into that affair at all, but simply that he believed
+the right and the duty of a priest to protect, no matter at what cost to
+himself, secrets confided to him as a priest, was really involved in his
+consent or refusal to answer, when he was asked whether he was or was
+not on a certain day at the "Mall House" in Youghal. Of course from the
+connection of this refusal in this particular case with the Nationalist
+movement, Nationalists would easily glide into the idea that he refused
+to testify in order to serve their cause.
+
+As to the troubles on the Ponsonby estate, Father Keller spoke very
+freely. He divided the responsibility for them between the
+untractableness of the agent, and the absenteeism of the owner. It was
+only since the troubles began, he said, that he had ever seen Mr.
+Ponsonby, who lived in Hampshire, and was therefore out of touch with
+the condition and the feelings of the people here. In a personal
+interview with him he had found Mr. Ponsonby a kindly disposed
+Englishman, but the estate is heavily encumbered, and the agent who has
+had complete control of it forced the tenants, by his hard and fast
+refusal of a reasonable reduction more than two years ago, into an
+initial combination to defend themselves by "clubbing" their rents. That
+was before Mr. Dillon announced the Plan of Campaign at all.
+
+"It was not till the autumn of 1886," said Father Keller, "that any
+question arose of the Plan of Campaign here,[8] and it was by the
+tenants themselves that the determination was taken to adopt it. My part
+has been that of a peace-maker throughout, and we should have had peace
+if Mr. Ponsonby would have listened to me; we should have had peace, and
+he would have received a reasonable rental for his property. Instead of
+this, look at the law costs arising out of bankruptcy proceedings and
+sheriff's sales and writs and processes, and the whole district thrown
+into disorder and confusion, and the industrious people now put out of
+their holdings, and forced into idleness."
+
+As to the recent evictions which had taken place, Father Keller said
+they had taken him as well as the people by surprise, and had thus led
+to greater agitation and excitement. "But the unfortunate incident of
+the loss of Hanlon's life," he said, "would never have occurred had I
+been duly apprised of what was going on in the town. I had come home
+into my house, having quieted the people, and left all in order, as I
+thought, when that charge of the police, for which there was no
+occasion, and which led to the killing of Hanlon, was ordered. I made my
+way rapidly to the people, and when I appeared they were brought to
+patience and to good order with astonishing ease, despite all that had
+occurred."
+
+As to the present outlook, it was his opinion that Mr. Ponsonby, even
+with the Cork Defence Union behind him, could not hold out. "The Land
+Corporation were taking over some parts of the estate, and putting
+Emergency men on them--a set of desperate men, a kind of _enfants
+perdus_," he said, "to work and manage the land;" but he did not believe
+the operation could be successfully carried out. Meanwhile he
+confidently counted upon seeing "the present Tory Government give way,
+and go out, when it would become necessary for the landlords to do
+justice to the rack-rented people. Pray understand," said Father Keller,
+"that I do not say all landlords stand at all where Mr. Ponsonby has
+been put by his agent, for that is not the case; but the action of many
+landlords in the county Cork in sustaining Mr. Ponsonby, whose estate is
+and has been as badly rack-rented an estate as can be found, is, in my
+judgment, most unwise, and threatening to the peace and happiness of
+Ireland."[9]
+
+I asked whether, in his opinion, it would be possible for the Ponsonby
+tenants to live and prosper here on this estate, could they become
+peasant proprietors of it under Lord Ashbourne's Act, provided they
+increased in numbers, as in that event might be expected. This he
+thought very doubtful so far as a few of the tenants are concerned.
+
+"Would you seek a remedy, then," I asked, "in emigration?"
+
+"No, not in emigration," he replied, "but in migration."
+
+I begged him to explain the difference.
+
+"What I mean," he said, "is, that the people should migrate, not out of
+Ireland, but from those parts of Ireland which cannot support them into
+parts of Ireland which can support them. There is room in Meath, for
+example, for the people of many congested districts."
+
+"You would, then, turn the great cattle farms of Meath," I said, "into
+peasant holdings?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"But would not that involve the expropriation of many people now
+established in Meath, and the disturbance or destruction of a great
+cattle industry for which Ireland has especial advantages?"
+
+To this Father Keller replied that he did not wish to see Ireland
+exporting her cattle, any more than to see Ireland exporting her sons
+and daughters. "I mean," he said, quite earnestly, "when they are forced
+to export them to pay exorbitant rents, and thus deprive themselves of
+their capital or of a fair share of the comforts of life. I should be
+glad to see the Irish people sufficient to themselves by the domestic
+exchange of their own industries and products." At the same time he
+begged me to understand that he had no wish to see this development
+attended by any estrangement or hostile feeling between Ireland and
+Great Britain. "On the contrary," he said, "I have seen with the
+greatest satisfaction the growth of such good feeling towards England as
+I never expected to witness, as the result of the visits here of English
+public men, sympathising with the Irish tenants. I believe their visits
+are opening the way to a real union of the Democracies of the two
+countries, and to an alliance between them against the aristocratic
+classes which depress both peoples." This alliance Father Keller
+believed would be a sufficient guarantee against any religious contest
+between the Catholics of Ireland and the Protestants of Great Britain.
+
+"I was much astounded," he said, "the other day, to hear from an English
+gentleman that he had met a Protestant clergyman who told him he really
+believed that a persecution of the Protestants would follow the
+establishment of Home Rule in Ireland. I begged him to consider that Mr.
+Parnell was a Protestant, and I assured him Protestants would have
+absolutely nothing to fear from Home Rule."
+
+Reverting to his idea of re-distributing the Irish population through
+Ireland, under changed conditions, social and economical, I asked him
+how in Meath, for example, he would meet the difficulty of stocking with
+cattle the peasant holdings of a new set of proprietors not owning
+stock. He thought it would be easily met by advances of money from the
+Treasury to the peasant proprietors, these advances to be repaid, with
+interest, as in the case of Lady Burdett Coutts, and the advances made
+by her to the fishermen now under the direction of Father Davis at
+Baltimore.
+
+I was struck by the resemblance of these views to the Irish policy
+sketched for me by my Nationalist fellow-traveller of the other night
+from London. "The evil that men do lives after them"--and when one
+remembers how only a hundred years ago, and just after the establishment
+of American Independence ought to have taught England a lesson, the
+Irish House of Commons had to deal with the persistent determination of
+the English manufacturers to fight the bogey of Irish competition by
+protective duties in England against imports from Ireland, it is not
+surprising that Irishmen who allow sentiment to get the upper hand of
+sense should now think of playing a return game. England went in fear
+then not only of Irish beasts and Irish butter, but of Irish woollens,
+Irish cottons, Irish leather, Irish glass. Nay, absurd as it may now
+seem, English ironmasters no longer ago than in 1785 testified before a
+Parliamentary Committee that unless a duty was clapped on Irish
+manufactures of iron, the Irish ironmasters had such advantages through
+cheaper labour and through the discrimination in their favour under the
+then existing relations with the new Republic of the United States that
+they would "ruin the ironmasters of England."
+
+In Ireland, as in America, the benign spirit of Free Trade is thwarted
+and intercepted at every turn by the abominable ghost of British
+Protection. What a blessing it would have been if the meddlesome
+palaverers of the Cobden Club, American as well as English, could ever
+have been made to understand the essentially insular character of
+Protection and the essentially continental character of Free Trade!
+
+It should never be forgotten, and it is almost never remembered, that
+when the Treaty of Versailles was making in 1783 the American
+Commissioners offered complete free trade between the United States and
+all parts of the British Dominions save the territories of the East
+India Company. The British Commissioner, David Hartley, saw the value of
+this proposition, and submitted it at London. But King George III. would
+not entertain it.
+
+When I rose to leave him Father Keller courteously insisted on showing
+me the "lions" of Youghal. A most accomplished cicerone he proved to be.
+As we left his house we met in the street two or three of the "evicted"
+tenants, whom he introduced to me. One of these, Mr. Loughlin, was the
+holder of farms representing a rental of L94. A stalwart, hearty,
+rotund, and rubicund farmer he was, and in reply to my query how long
+the holdings he had lost had been in his family, he answered, "not far
+from two hundred years." Certainly some one must have blundered as badly
+as at Balaklava to make it necessary for a tenant with such a past
+behind him to go out of his holdings on arrears of a twelvemonth. Father
+Keller gave me, as we left Mr. Loughlin and his friend, a leaflet in
+which he has printed the story of "the struggle for life on the Ponsonby
+estate," as he understands it.
+
+A minute's walk brought us to Sir Walter Raleigh's house, now the
+property of Sir John Pope Hennessey. It was probably built by Sir Walter
+while he lived here in 1588-89, during the time of the great Armada; for
+it is a typical Elizabethan house, quaintly gabled, with charming Tudor
+windows, and delightfully wainscoted with richly carved black oak. A
+chimney-piece in the library where Sir John's aged mother received us
+most kindly and hospitably is a marvel of Elizabethan woodwork. The
+shelves are filled with a quaint and miscellaneous collection of old and
+rare books. I opened at random one fine old quarto, and found it to
+contain, among other curious tracts, models of typography, a Latin
+critical disquisition by Raphael Regini on the first edition of
+Plutarch's Life of Cicero, "_nuper inventa diu desideraia _"--a
+disquisition quite aglow with the cinquecento delight in discovery and
+adventure. In the grounds of this charming house stand four very fine
+Irish yews forming a little hollow square, within which, according to a
+local legend, Sir Walter sat enjoying the first pipe of tobacco ever
+lighted in Ireland, when his terrified serving-maid espying the smoke
+that curled about her master's head hastily ran up and emptied a pail of
+water over him. In the garden here, too, we are told, was first planted
+the esculent which better deserves to be called the Curse of Ireland
+than does the Nine of Diamonds to be known as the Curse of Scotland. The
+Irish yew must have been indigenous here, for the name of Youghal,
+Father Keller tells me, in Irish signifies "the wood of yew-trees." A
+subterranean passage is said to lead from Sir Walter's dining-room into
+the church, but we preferred the light of day.
+
+The precincts of the church adjoin the grounds and garden, and with
+these make up a most fascinating poem in architecture. The churches of
+St. Mary of Youghal and St. Nicholas of Galway have always been cited to
+me as the two most interesting churches in Ireland. Certainly this
+church of St. Mary, as now restored, is worth a journey to see. Its
+massive tower, with walls eight feet thick, its battlemented chancel,
+the pointed arches of its nave and aisles, a curious and, so far as I
+know, unique arch in the north transept, drawn at an obtuse angle and
+demarcating a quaint little side-chapel, and the interesting monuments
+it contains, all were pointed out to me with as much zest and
+intelligent delight by Father Keller as if the edifice were still
+dedicated to the faith which originally called it into existence. It
+contains a fine Jacobean tomb of Richard, the "great Earl of Cork," who
+died here in September 1643. On this monument, which is in admirable
+condition, the effigy of the earl appears between those of his two
+wives, while below them kneel his five sons and seven daughters, their
+names and those of their partners in marriage inscribed upon the marble.
+It was of this earl that Oliver said: "Had there been an Earl of Cork in
+every province, there had been no rebellion in Ireland." Several Earls
+of Desmond are also buried here, including the founder of the church,
+and under a monumental effigy in one of the transepts lies the wonderful
+old Countess of Desmond, who having danced in her youth with Richard
+III. lived through the Tudor dynasty "to the age of a hundred and ten,"
+and, as the old distich tells us, "died by a fall from a cherry-tree
+then."
+
+In the churchyard is a hillock, bare of grass, about a tomb. There lies
+buried, according to tradition, a public functionary who attested a
+statement by exclaiming, "If I speak falsely, may grass never grow on my
+grave." One of his descendants is doubtless now an M.P. Mr. Cameron had
+kindly written from Cork to the officer in charge of the constabulary
+here asking him to get me a good car for Lismore. So Father Keller very
+kindly walked with me through the town to the "Devonshire Arms," a very
+neat and considerable hotel, in quest of him. On the way he pointed out
+to me what remains of a house which is supposed to have served as the
+headquarters of Cromwell while he was here, and a small chapel also in
+which the Protector worshipped after his sort. Off the main street is a
+lane called Windmill Lane, where probably stood the windmill from which
+in 1580 a Franciscan friar, Father David O'Neilan, was hung by the feet
+and shot to death by the soldiers of Elizabeth because he refused to
+acknowledge the spiritual supremacy of the Queen. He had been dragged
+through the main street at the tail of a horse to the place of
+execution. His name is one of many names of confessors of that time
+about to be submitted at Rome for canonisation. We could not find the
+officer I sought at the hotel, but Father Keller took me to a livery-man
+in the main street, who very promptly got out a car with "his best
+horse," and a jarvey who would "surely take me over to Lismore inside of
+two hours and a half." He was as good as his master's word, and a
+delightful drive it was, following the course of Spenser's river, the
+Awniduffe, "which by the Englishman is called Blackwater." Nobody now
+calls it anything else. The view of Youghal Harbour, as we made a great
+circuit by the bridge on leaving the town, was exceedingly fine. Lying
+as it does within easy reach of Cork, this might be made a very pleasant
+summer halting-place for Americans landing at Queenstown, who now go
+further and probably fare worse. One Western wanderer, with his family,
+Father Keller told me, did last year establish himself here, a Catholic
+from Boston, to whom a son was born, and who begged the Father to give
+the lad a local name in baptism, "the oldest he could think of."
+
+I should have thought St. Declan would have been "old" enough, or St.
+Nessan of "Ireland's Eye," or Saint Cartagh, who made Lismore a holy
+city, "into the half of which no woman durst enter," sufficiently
+"local," but Father Keller found in the Calendar a more satisfactory
+saint still in St. Goran or "Curran," known also as St. Mochicaroen _de
+Nona_, from a change he made in the recitation of that part of the Holy
+Office.
+
+The drive from Youghal to Lismore along the Blackwater, begins,
+continues, and ends in beauty. In the summer a steamer makes the trip by
+the river, and it must be as charming in its way as the ascent of the
+Dart from Dartmouth to Totness, or of the Eance from Dinard to St.
+Suliac. My jarvey was rather a taciturn fellow, but by no means
+insensible to the charms of his native region. About the Ponsonby estate
+and its troubles he said very little, but that little was not entirely
+in keeping with what I had heard at Youghal. "It was an old place, and
+there was no grand house on it. But the landlord was a kind-man."
+"Father Keller was a good man too. It was a great pity the people
+couldn't be on their farms; and there was land that was taken on the
+hills. It was a great pity. The people came from all parts to see the
+Blackwater and Lismore; and there was money going." "Yes, he would be
+glad to see it all quiet again. Ah yes! that was a most beautiful place
+there just running out into the Blackwater. It was a gentleman owned it;
+he lived there a good deal, and he fished. Ah! there's no such river in
+the whole world for salmon as the Blackwater; indeed, there is not!
+Everything was better when he was a lad. There was more money going, and
+less talking. Father Keller was a very good man; but he was a new man,
+and came to Youghal from Queenstown."
+
+We passed on our way the ruins of Dromaneen Castle, the birthplace of
+the lively old Countess of Desmond, who lies buried at Youghal. Here,
+too, according to a local tradition, she met her death, having climbed
+too high into a famous cherry-tree at Affane, near Dromaneen, planted
+there by Sir Walter Raleigh, who first introduced this fruit, as well as
+the tobacco plant and the potato, into Ireland. At Cappoquin, which
+stands beautifully on the river, I should have been glad to halt for the
+night, in order to visit the Trappist Monastery there, an offshoot of La
+Meilleraye, planted, I think, by some monks from Santa Susanna, of
+Lulworth, after Charles X. took refuge in the secluded and beautiful
+home of the Welds. The schools of this monastery have been a benediction
+to all this part of Ireland for more than half a century.
+
+Lismore has nothing now to show of its ancient importance save its
+castle and its cathedral, both of them absolutely modern! A hundred
+years ago the castle was simply a ruin overhanging the river. It then
+belonged to the fifth Duke of Devonshire, who had inherited it from his
+mother, the only child and heiress of the friend of Pope, Richard,
+fourth Earl of Cork, and third Earl of Burlington. It had come into the
+hands of the Boyles by purchase from Sir Walter Ealeigh, to whom
+Elizabeth had granted it, with all its appendages and appurtenances. The
+fifth Duke of Devonshire, who was the husband of Coleridge's "lady
+nursed in pomp and pleasure," did little or nothing, I believe, to
+restore the vanished glories of Lismore; and the castle, as it now
+exists, is the creation of his son, the artistic bachelor Duke, to whom
+England owes the Crystal Palace and all the other outcomes of Sir Joseph
+Paxton's industry and enterprise. His kinsman and successor, the present
+Duke, used to visit Lismore regularly down to the time of the atrocious
+murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish, and many of the beautiful walks and
+groves which make the place lovely are due, I believe, to his taste and
+his appreciation of the natural charms of Lismore. I dismissed my car at
+the "Devonshire Arms," an admirable little hotel near the river, and
+having ordered my dinner there, walked down to the castle, almost within
+the grounds of which the hotel stands. It is impossible to imagine a
+more picturesque site for a great inland mansion. The views up and down
+the Blackwater from the drawing-room windows are simply the perfection
+of river landscape. The grounds are beautifully laid out, one secluded
+garden-walk, in particular, taking you back to the inimitable Italian
+garden-walks of the seventeenth century. In the vestibule is the sword
+of state of the Corporation of Youghal, a carved wooden cradle for which
+still stands in the church at that place, and over the great gateway are
+the arms of the great Earl of Cork, but these are almost the only
+outward and visible signs of the historic past about the castle. Seen
+from the graceful stone bridge which spans the river, its grey towers
+and turrets quite excuse the youthful enthusiasm with which the Duke of
+Connaught, who made a visit here when he was Prince Arthur, is said to
+have written to his mother, that Lismore was "a beautiful place, very
+like Windsor Castle, only much finer."
+
+Lismore Cathedral was almost entirely rebuilt by the second Earl of Cork
+three or four years after the Restoration, and has a handsome marble
+spire, but there is little in it to recall the Catholic times in which
+Lismore was a city of churches and a centre of Irish devotion.
+
+The hostess of the "Devonshire Arms" gave me some excellent salmon,
+fresh from the river, and a very good dinner. She bewailed the evil days
+on which she has fallen, and the loss to Lismore of all that the Castle
+used to mean to the people. Lady Edward Cavendish had spent a short time
+here some little time ago, she said, and the people were delighted to
+have her come there. "It would be a great thing for the country if all
+the uproar and quarrelling could be put an end to. It did nobody any
+good, least of all the poor people."
+
+From Lismore I came back by the railway through Fermoy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+PORTUMNA, GALWAY, _Feb. 28._--I left Cork by an early train to-day, and
+passing through the counties of Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Queen's, and
+King's, reached this place after dark on a car from Parsonstown. The day
+was delightfully cool and bright. I had the carriage to myself almost
+all the way, and gave up all the time I could snatch from the constantly
+varying and often very beautiful scenery to reading a curious pamphlet
+which I picked up in Dublin entitled _Pour I'Irlande._ It purports to
+have been written by a "Canadian priest" living at Lurgan in Ireland,
+and to be a reply to M. de Mandat Grancey's volume, _Chez Paddy._ It is
+adorned with a frontispiece representing a monster of the Cerberus type
+on a monument, with three heads and three collars labelled respectively
+"Flattery," "Famine," and "Coercion." On the pedestal is the
+inscription--"1800 to 1887. Erected by the grateful Irish to the English
+Government." The text is in keeping with the frontispiece. In a passage
+devoted to the "atrocious evictions" of Glenbehy in 1887, the agent of
+the property is represented as "setting fire with petroleum" to the
+houses of two helpless men, and turning out "eighteen human beings into
+the highway in the depth of winter." Not a word is said of the agent's
+flat denial of these charges, nor a word of the advice given to the
+agent by Sir Redvers Buller that the mortgagee ought to level the
+cottages occupied by trespassers, nor a word about Father Quilter's
+letter to Colonel Turner, branding his flock as "poor slaves" of the
+League, and turning them over to "Mr. Roe or any other agent" to do as
+he liked with them, since they could not, or would not, keep their
+plighted faith given through their own priest.
+
+This sort of ostrich fury is common enough among the regular drumbeaters
+of the Irish agitation. But it is not creditable to a "Canadian priest."
+Still less creditable is his direct arraignment of M. de Mandat
+Grancey's good faith and veracity upon the strength of what he describes
+as M. de Mandat Grancey's amplification and distortion of a story told
+by himself. This was a tale of a priest called out to confess one of his
+parishioners. The penitent accused himself of killing one man, and
+trying to kill several others. The priest, as the dreadful tale went on,
+made a tally on his sleeve, with chalk, of the crimes recited. "Good
+heavens! my son," he cried at last, "what had all these men done to you
+that you tried to send them all into eternity? Who were they?"
+
+"Oh, Father, they were all bailiffs or tax-collectors!"
+
+"You idiot!" exclaimed the confessor, angrily rubbing at his sleeve,
+"why didn't ye tell me that before instead of letting me spoil my best
+cassock?"
+
+As I happened to have the book of M. de Mandat Grancey in my
+despatch-box, I compared it with the attack made upon it. The results
+were edifying. In the first place, M. de Mandat Grancey does not
+indicate the Canadian priest as his authority. He says that he heard the
+story, apparently at a dinner-table in France, from a _cure Irlandais_,
+who was endeavouring to impress upon his hearers "the sympathy of the
+clergy with the Land League." The "Canadian priest" now comes forward
+and makes it a count in his indictment against M. de Mandat Grancey that
+he is described as an "Irish curate," when he is in fact neither an
+Irishman nor a curate. What was more natural than that an ecclesiastic,
+claiming to live in Ireland, and telling stories in France about the
+sympathy of the Irish clergy with the Land League, should be taken by
+one of his auditors to be an Irish _cure_, particularly as the French
+_cure_ is, I believe, the equivalent of the Irish "parish priest"?
+
+In the next place, the "Canadian priest" declares that the story "is as
+old as the Round Towers of Ireland," and that M. de Mandat Grancey
+represents him as making himself the hero of the tale. As a matter of
+fact, M. de Mandat Grancey does nothing of the kind. On the contrary, he
+expressly says that the _cure Irlandais_, who told the story, gave it to
+his hearers as having occurred not to himself at all, but "to one of his
+colleagues." Furthermore he is at the pains to add (_Chez Paddy_, p. 43)
+that the story, which was not to the taste of some of the French
+ecclesiastics who heard it, was related "as a simple pleasantry."
+"But," he adds, and this I suspect is the sting which has so exasperated
+the "Canadian priest," "he gave us to understand at the same time that
+this pleasantry struck the keynote of the state of mind of many Irish
+priests, and, he said, that he was himself the President of the League
+in his district."
+
+In connection with Colonel Turner's statements as to the conduct of
+Father White at Milltown Malbay, and with the accounts given me of the
+conduct of Father Sheehan at Lixnaw, this side-light upon the relations
+of a certain class of the Irish clergy with the most violent henchmen of
+the League, is certainly noteworthy. I happen to have had some
+correspondence with friends of mine in Paris, who are friends also of M.
+de Mandat Grarncey, about his visit to Ireland before he made it, and I
+am quite certain that he went there, to put the case mildly, with no
+prejudices in favour of the English Government or against the
+Nationalists. Perhaps the extreme bitterness shown in the pamphlet of
+the "Canadian priest" may have been born of his disgust at finding that
+the sympathy of French Catholics with Catholic Ireland draws the line at
+priests who regard the assassination of "bailiffs and tax-collectors" as
+a pardonable, if not positively amusing, excess of patriotic zeal.
+
+It was late when I reached Parsonstown, known of old in Irish story as
+Birr, from St. Brendan's Abbey of Biorra, and now a clean prosperous
+place, carefully looked after by the chief landlord of the region, the
+Earl of Rosse, who, while he inherits the astronomical tastes and the
+mathematical ability of his father, is not so absorbed in star-gazing as
+to be indifferent to his terrestrial duties and obligations. I have
+heard nothing but good of him, and of his management of his estates,
+from men of the most diverse political views. But I think it more
+important to get a look at the Clanricarde property, about which I have
+heard little but evil from anybody. The strongest point I have heard
+made in favour of the owner is, that he is habitually described by that
+dumb organ of a down-trodden people, _United Ireland_, as "the most vile
+Clanricarde."
+
+I found a good car at the railway station, and set off at once for
+Portumna. Parsonstown was called by Sir William Petty, in his _Survey of
+Ireland_, the _umbilicus Hiberniae_. It is the centre of Ireland, as a
+point near Newnham Paddox is of England, and the famous or infamous "Bog
+of Allan" stretches hence to Athlone. Our way fortunately took us
+westward. A light railway was laid down some years ago from Parsonstown
+to Portumna, but it did not pay, and it has now been abandoned.
+
+"What has become of the road?" I asked my jarvey.
+
+"Oh! they just take up the rails when they like, the people do."
+
+"And what do they do with them?"
+
+"Is it what they do with them? Oh; they make fences of them for the
+beasts."
+
+He was a dry, shrewd old fellow, not very amiably disposed, I was sorry
+to find, towards my own country.
+
+"Ah! it's America, sorr, that's been the ruin of us entirely."
+
+"Pray, how is that?"
+
+"It's the storms they send; and then the grain; and now they tell me
+it's the American beasts that's spoiling the market altogether for
+Ireland."
+
+"Is that what your member tells you?"
+
+"The member, sorr? which member?"
+
+"The member of Parliament for your district, I mean. What is his name?"
+
+"His name? Well, I'm not sure; and I don't know that I know the man at
+all. But I believe his name is Mulloy."
+
+"Does he live in Portumna?"
+
+"Oh no, not at all. I don't know at all where he lives, but I believe
+it's in Tullamore. But what would he know about America? Sure, any one
+can see it's the storms and the grain that is the death of us in
+Ireland."
+
+"But I thought it was the landlords and the rents?"
+
+"Oh, that's in Woodford and Loughrea; not here at all. There'll be no
+good till we get a war."
+
+"Get a war? with whom? What do you want a war for?"
+
+"Ah! it was the good time when we had the Crimean war--with the wheat
+all about Portumna. I'll show you the great store there was built. It's
+no use now. But we'll have a war. My son, he's a soldier now. He went
+out to America. But he didn't like it."
+
+"Why not?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, he didn't like it. He could get no work, but to be a porter, and it
+was too hard. So he came back in three months' time, and then he 'listed
+for a soldier. He's over in England now. He likes it very well. He's
+getting very good pay. They pay the soldiers well. There's a troop of
+Hussars here now. They bring a power of money to the place."
+
+"What do they do with the wheat lands now?"
+
+"Oh, they're for sheep; they do very well. Were you ever in Australia,
+sorr?" pointing to a place we were passing. "There was a man came here
+from Australia with a pot of money, and he bought that place; but he
+thought he was a bigger man than he was, and now he's found himself out.
+I think he would have done as well to stay in Australia where he was."
+
+In quite a different vein he spoke of the landlord of another large
+seat, and of the way in which the people, some of them, had
+misbehaved--breaking open the graves of the family on the place, "and
+tossing the coffins and the bones about, and all for what?"
+
+The view as we crossed the long and very fine bridge over the Shannon
+after dusk was very striking. It was not too dark to make out the course
+of the broad gleaming river, and the lights of the town made it seem
+larger, I daresay, than it really is. As we drove up the main street I
+told my jarvey to take me to the Castle.
+
+"To the Castle, is it?" he replied, looking around at me with an
+astonished air.
+
+"Yes," I said, "I am going to see Mr. Tener, the agent, who lives there,
+doesn't he?"
+
+"Oh, the new agent? Oh yes; I believe he's a very good man."
+
+"You don't expect to be 'boycotted' for going to the Castle, do you?"
+
+"And why should I be? But I haven't been inside of the Castle gates for
+twenty years. And--here they are!" he cried out suddenly, pulling up his
+horse just in time to avoid driving him up against a pair of iron gates
+inhospitably closed. It was by this time pitch dark. Not a light could
+we see within the enclosure. But presently a couple of shadowy forms
+appeared behind the iron gates; the iron gates creaked on their hinges,
+a masculine voice bade us drive in, and a policeman with a lantern
+advanced from a thicket of trees. All this had a fine martial and
+adventurous aspect, and my jarvey seemed to enjoy it as much as I.
+
+We got directions from the friendly policeman as to the roads and the
+landmarks, and after once nearly running into a clump of trees found
+ourselves at last in an open courtyard, where men appeared and took
+charge of the car, the horse, and my luggage. We were in a quadrangle of
+the out-buildings attached to the old residence of the Clanricardes,
+which had escaped the fire of 1826. The late Marquis for a long time
+hesitated whether to reconstruct the castle on the old site (the walls
+are still standing), or to build an entirely new house on another site.
+He finally chose the latter alternative, chiefly, I am told, under the
+advice of his oldest son, the late Lord Dunkellin, one of the most
+charming and deservedly popular men of his time. He was a great friend
+and admirer of Father Burke, whom he used to claim as a Galway cousin,
+and with whom I met him in Rome not long before his death in the summer
+of 1867. His brother, the present Marquis, I have never met, but Mr.
+Tener, his present agent here, who passed some time in America several
+years ago, learning from him that I wished to see this place, very
+courteously wrote to me asking me to make his house my headquarters. I
+found my way through queer passages to a cheery little hall where my
+host met me, and taking me into a pleasant little parlour, enlivened by
+flowers, and a merrily blazing fire, presented me to Mrs. Tener.
+
+Mr. Tener is an Ulster man from the County Cavan. He went with his wife
+on their bridal trip to America, and what he there saw of the peremptory
+fashion in which the authorities deal with conspiracies to resist the
+law seems not unnaturally to have made him a little impatient of the
+dilatory, not to say dawdling, processes of the law in his own country.
+He gave me a very interesting account after dinner this evening of the
+situation in which he found affairs on this property, an account very
+different from those which I have seen in print. He is himself the owner
+of a small landed property in Cavan, and he has had a good deal of
+experience as an agent for other properties. "I have a very simple
+rule," he said to me, "in dealing with Irish tenants, and that is
+neither to do an injustice nor to submit to one." It was only, he said,
+after convincing himself that the Clanricarde tenants had no legitimate
+ground of complaint against the management of the estate, not removable
+upon a fair and candid discussion of all the issues involved between
+them and himself, that he consented to take charge of the property. That
+to do this was to run a certain personal risk, in the present state of
+the country, he was quite aware.
+
+But he takes this part of the contract very coolly, telling me that the
+only real danger, he thinks, is incurred when he makes a journey of
+which he has to send a notice by telegraph--a remark which recalled to
+me the curious advice given me in Dublin to seal my letters, as a
+protection against "the Nationalist clerks in the post-offices." The
+park of Portumua Castle, which is very extensive, is patrolled by armed
+policemen, and whenever Mr. Tener drives out he is followed by a police
+car carrying two armed men.
+
+"Against whom are all these precautions necessary?" I asked. "Against
+the evicted tenants, or against the local agents of the League?"
+
+"Not at all against the tenants," he replied, "as you can satisfy
+yourself by talking with them. The trouble comes not from the tenants at
+all, nor from the people here at Portumna, but from mischievous and
+dangerous persons at Loughrea and Woodford. Woodford, mind you, not
+being Lord Clanricarde's place at all, though all the country has been
+roused about the cruel Clanricarde and his wicked Woodford evictions.
+Woodford was simply the headquarters of the agitation against Lord
+Clanricarde and my predecessor, Mr. Joyce, and it has got the name of
+the 'cockpit of Ireland,' because it was there that Mr. Dillon, in
+October 1886, opened the 'war against the landlords' with the 'Plan of
+Campaign.' It is an odd circumstance, by the way, worth noting, that
+when these apostles of Irish agitation went to Lord Clanricarde's
+property nearer the city of Gralway, and tried to stir the people up,
+they failed dismally, because the people there could understand no
+English, and the Irish agitators could speak no Irish! Nobody has ever
+had the face to pretend that the Clanricarde estates were 'rack-rented.'
+There have been many personal attacks made upon Mr. Joyce and upon Lord
+Clanricarde, and Mr. Joyce has brought that well-known action against
+the Marquis for libel, and all this answers with the general public as
+an argument to show that the tenants on the Clanricarde property must
+have had great grievances, and must have been cruelly ground down and
+unable to pay their way. I will introduce you, if you will allow me, to
+the Catholic Bishop here, and to the resident Protestant clergyman, and
+to the manager of the bank, and they can help you to form your own
+judgment as to the state of the tenants. You will find that whatever
+quarrels they may have had with their landlord or his agent, they are
+now, and always have been, quite able to pay their rents, and I need not
+tell you that it is no longer in the power of a landlord or an agent to
+say what these rents shall be."[10]
+
+"Mr. Dillon in that speech of his at Woodford (I have it here as
+published in _United Ireland_), you will see, openly advised, or rather
+ordered, the tenants here to club their rents, or, in plain English, the
+money due to their landlord, with the deliberate intent to confiscate to
+their own use, or, in their own jargon, 'grab,' the money of any one of
+their number who, after going into this dishonest combination, might
+find it working badly and wish to get out of it. Here is his own
+language:"--
+
+I took the speech as reported in the _United Ireland_ of October 23rd,
+1886, and therein found Mr. Dillon, M.P., using these words:--"If you
+mean to fight really, you must put the money aside for two
+reasons--first of all because you want the means to support the men who
+are hit first; and, secondly, because you want to prohibit traitors
+going behind your back. There is no way to deal with a traitor except to
+get his money under lock and key, and if you find that he pays his rent,
+and betrays the organisation, what will you do with him? I will tell you
+what to do with him. _Close upon his money, and use it for the
+organisation_. I have always opposed outrages. _This is a legal plan,
+and it is ten times more effective_."
+
+Not a word here as to the morality of the proceeding thus recommended;
+but almost in the same breath in which he bade his ignorant hearers
+regard his plan as "legal," Mr. Dillon said to them, "_this must be done
+privately, and you must not inform the public where the money is
+placed_!"
+
+Why not, if the plan was "legal"? Mr. Dillon, I believe, is not a
+lawyer, but he can hardly have deluded himself into thinking his plan of
+campaign "legal" in the face of the particular pains taken by his
+leader, Mr. Parnell, to disclaim all participation in any such plans. A
+year before Mr. Dillon made this curious speech, Mr. Parnell, I
+remember, on the 11th of October 1885, speaking at Kildare, declared
+that he had "in no case during the last few years advised any
+combination among tenants against even rack-rents," and insisted that
+any combination of the sort which might exist should be regarded as an
+"isolated" combination, "confined to the tenants of individual estates,
+who, of their own accord, without any incitement from us, on the
+contrary, kept back by us, without any urging on our part, without any
+advice on our part, but stung by necessity, and the terrible realities
+of their position, may have formed such a combination among themselves
+to secure such a reduction of rent as will enable them to live in their
+own homes." From this language of Mr. Parnell in October 1885 to Mr.
+Dillon's speech in October 1886, urging and advising the tenants to
+organise, exact contributions from every member of the organisation, and
+put these contributions under the control of third parties determined to
+confiscate the money subscribed by any member who might not find the
+organisation working to his advantage, is a rather long step! It covers
+all the distance between a cunning defensive evasion of the law, and an
+open aggressive violation of the law--not of the land only, but of
+common honesty. One of two things is clear: either these combinations
+are voluntary and "isolated," and intended, as Mr. Parnell asserts, to
+secure such a reduction of rents as will enable the tenants, and each of
+them, to live peacefully and comfortably at home, and in that case any
+member of the combination who finds that he can attain his object better
+by leaving it has an absolute right to do this, and to demand the return
+of his money; or they are part of a system imposed upon the tenants by a
+moral coercion inconsistent with the most elementary ideas of private
+right and personal freedom. This makes the importance of Mr. Dillon's
+speech, that by his denunciation of any member who wishes to withdraw
+from this "voluntary" combination as a "traitor," and by his order to
+"close upon the money" of any such member, "and use it for the
+organisation," he brands the "organisation" as a subterranean despotism
+of a very cheap and nasty kind. The Government which tolerates the
+creation of such a Houndsditch tyranny as this within its dominions
+richly deserves to be overthrown. As for the people who submit
+themselves to it, I do not wonder that in his more lucid moments a
+Catholic priest like Father Quilter feels himself moved to denounce them
+as "poor slaves." Of course with a benevolent neutral like myself, the
+question always recurs, Who trained them to submit to this sort of
+thing? But I really am at a loss to see why a parcel of conspirators
+should be encouraged in the nineteenth century to bully Irish farmers
+out of their manhood and their money, because in the seventeenth century
+it pleased the stupid rulers of England, as the great Duke of Ormond
+indignantly said, to "put so general a discountenance upon the
+improvement of Ireland, as if it were resolved that to keep it low is to
+keep it safe."
+
+On going back to the little drawing-room after dinner we found Mrs.
+Tener among her flowers, busy with some literary work. It is not a gay
+life here, she admits, her nearest visiting acquaintance living some
+seven or eight miles away--but she takes long walks with a couple of
+stalwart dogs in her company, and has little fear of being molested.
+"The tenants are in more danger," she thinks, "than the landlords or the
+agents"--nor do I see any reason to doubt this, remembering the Connells
+whom I saw at Edenvale, and the story of the "boycotted" Fitzmaurice
+brutally murdered in the presence of his daughter at Lixnaw on the 31st
+of January, as if by way of welcome to Lord Ripon and Mr. Morley on
+their arrival at Dublin.
+
+
+PORTUMNA, _Feb. 29th._--Early this morning two of the "evicted" tenants,
+and an ex-bailiff of the property here, came by appointment to discuss
+the situation with Mr. Tener. He asked me to attend the conference, and
+upon learning that I was an American, they expressed their perfect
+willingness that I should do so. The tenants were quiet, sturdy,
+intelligent-looking men. I asked one of them if he objected to telling
+me whether he thought the rent he had refused to pay excessive, or
+whether he was simply unable to pay it.
+
+"I had the money, sir, to pay the rent," he replied, "and I wanted to
+pay the rent--only I wouldn't be let."
+
+"Who wouldn't let you?" I asked.
+
+"The people that were in with the League."
+
+"Was your holding worth anything to you?" I asked.
+
+"It was indeed. Two or three years ago I could have sold my right for a
+matter of three hundred pounds."
+
+"Yes!" interrupted the other tenant, "and a bit before that for six
+hundred pounds."
+
+"Is it not worth three hundred pounds to you now?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Tener, "for he has lost it by refusing the settlement I
+offered to make, and driving us into proceedings against him, and
+allowing his six months' equity of redemption to lapse."
+
+"And sure, if we had it, no one would be let to buy it now, sir," said
+the tenant. "But it's we that hope Mr. Tener here will let us come back
+on the holdings--that is, if we'd be protected coming back."
+
+"Now, do you see," said Mr. Tener, "what it is you ask me to do? You ask
+me to make you a present outright of the property you chose foolishly to
+throw away, and to do this after you have put the estate to endless
+trouble and expense; don't you think that is asking me to do a good
+deal?"
+
+The tenants looked at one another, at Mr. Tener, and at me, and the
+ex-bailiff smiled.
+
+"You must see this," said Mr. Tener, "but I am perfectly willing now to
+say to you, in the presence of this gentleman, that in spite of all, I
+am quite willing to do what you ask, and to let you come back into the
+titles you have forfeited, for I would rather have you back on the
+property than strangers--"
+
+"And, indeed, we're sure you would."
+
+"But understand, you must pay down a year's rent and the costs you have
+put us to."
+
+"Ah! sure you wouldn't have us to pay the costs?"
+
+"But indeed I will," responded Mr. Tener; "you mustn't for a moment
+suppose I will have any question about that. You brought all this
+trouble on yourselves, and on us; and while I am ready and willing to
+deal more than fairly, to deal liberally with you about the arrears--and
+to give you time--the costs you must pay."
+
+"And what would they be, the costs?" queried one of the tenants
+anxiously.
+
+"Oh, that I can't tell you, for I don't know," said Mr. Tener, "but they
+shall not be anything beyond the strict necessary costs."
+
+"And if we come back would we be protected?"
+
+"Of course you will have protection. But why do you want protection?
+Here you are, a couple of strong grown men, with men-folk of your
+families. See here! why don't you go to such an one, and such an one,"
+naming other tenants; "you know them well. Go to them quietly and sound
+them to see if they will come back on the same terms with you; form a
+combination to be honest and to stand by your rights, and defy and break
+up the other dishonest combination you go in fear of! Is it not a shame
+for men like you to lie down and let those fellows walk over you, and
+drive you out of your livelihood and your homes?"
+
+The tenants looked at each other, and at the rest of us. "I think," said
+one of them at last, "I think ---- and ----," naming two men, "would come
+with us. Of course," turning to Mr. Tener, "you wouldn't discover on us,
+sir."
+
+"Discover on you! Certainly not," said Mr. Tener. "But why don't you
+make up your minds to be men, and 'discover' on yourselves, and defy
+these fellows?"
+
+"And the cattle, sir? would we get protection for the cattle? They'd be
+murdered else entirely."
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Tener, "the police would endeavour to protect the
+cattle."
+
+Then, turning to me, he said, "That is a very reasonable question. These
+scoundrels, when they are afraid to tackle the men put under their ban,
+go about at night, and mutilate and torture and kill the poor beasts. I
+remember a case," he went on, "in Roscommon, where several head of
+cattle mysteriously disappeared. They could be found nowhere. No trace
+of them could be got. But long weeks after they vanished, some lads in a
+field several miles away saw numbers of crows hovering over a particular
+point. They went there, and there at the bottom of an abandoned
+coal-shaft lay the shattered remains of these lost cattle. The poor
+beasts had been driven blindfold over the fields and down into this pit,
+where, with broken limbs, and maimed, they all miserably died of
+hunger."
+
+"Yes," said one of the tenants, "and our cattle'd be driven into the
+Shannon, and drownded, and washed away."
+
+"You must understand," interposed Mr. Tener "that when cattle are thus
+maliciously destroyed the owners can recover nothing unless the remains
+of the poor beasts are found and identified within three days."
+
+The disgust which I felt and expressed at these revelations seemed to
+encourage the tenants. One of them said that before the evictions came
+off certain of the National Leaguers visited him, and told him he must
+resist the officers. "I consulted my sister," he said, "and she said,
+'Don't you be such a fool as to be doing that; we'll all be ruined
+entirely by those rascals and rogues of the League.' And I didn't
+resist. But only the other day I went to a priest in the trouble we are
+in, and what do you think he said to me? He said, 'Why didn't you do as
+you were bid? then you would be helped,' and he would do nothing for us!
+Would you think that right, sir, in your country?"
+
+"I should think in my country," I replied, "that a priest who behaved in
+that way ought to be unfrocked."
+
+"Did you pay over all your rent into the hands of the trustees of the
+League?" I asked of one of these tenants.
+
+"I paid over money to them, sir," he replied.
+
+"Yes," I said, "but did you pay over all the amount of the rent, or how
+much of it?"
+
+"Oh! I paid as much as I thought they would think I ought to pay!" he
+responded, with that sly twinkle of the peasant's eye one sees so often
+in rural France.
+
+"Oh! I understand," I said, laughing. "But if you come to terms now with
+Mr. Tener here, will you get that money back again?"
+
+"Divil a penny of it!" he replied, with much emphasis.
+
+Finally they got up together to take their leave, after a long whispered
+conversation together.
+
+"And if we made it half the costs?"
+
+"No!" said Mr. Tener good-naturedly but firmly; "not a penny off the
+costs."
+
+"Well, we'll see the men, sir, just quietly, and we'll let you know what
+can be done"; and with that they wished us, most civilly, good-morning,
+and went their way.
+
+We walked in the park for some time, and a wild, beautiful park it is,
+not the less beautiful for being given up, as it is, very much to the
+Dryads to deal with it as they list. It is as unlike a trim English park
+as possible; but it contains many very fine trees, and grand open sweeps
+of landscape. In a tangled copse are the ruins of an ancient Franciscan
+abbey, in one corner of which lie buried together, under a monumental
+mound of brickwork, the late Marquis of Clanricarde and his wife. The
+walls of the Castle, burned in 1826, are still standing, and so perfect
+that the building might easily enough have been restored. A keen-eyed,
+wiry old household servant, still here, told us the house was burned in
+the afternoon of January 6, 1826. There were three women-servants in the
+house--"Anna and Mary Meehan, and Mrs. Underwood, the housekeeper"; and
+they were getting the Castle ready for his Lordship's arrival, so little
+of an "absentee" was the late Lord Clanricarde, then only one year
+married to the daughter of George Canning. The fires were laid on in the
+upper rooms, and Mrs. Underwood went off upon an errand. When she came
+back all was in flames.
+
+The deer-park is full of deer, now become quite wild. We heard them
+crashing through the undergrowth on all sides. There must be capital
+fishing, too, in the lake, and in the river of which it is an expansion.
+
+While they were getting the cars ready for a drive, came up another son
+of the soil. This man I found had only a small interest in the battle on
+the Clanricarde estates, holding his homestead of another landlord. But
+he admitted he had gone in a manner into the "combination," in that he
+had paid a certain, not very large, sum, which he named, to the
+trustees, "just for peace and quiet." He considered it gone, past
+recovery; and he named another man with a small holding, but doing a
+considerable business in other ways, who had "paid L10 or more just not
+to be bothered." Upon this Mr. Tener told me of a shopkeeper at Loughrea
+in a large way of business, a man with seven or eight thousand pounds,
+who, finding his goods about to be seized after the agent had turned a
+sharp strategic corner on him, and unexpectedly got into his shop, was
+about to own up to his defeat, and make a fair settlement, when the
+secretary of the League appeared, and requested a private talk with him.
+In a quarter of an hour the tradesman reappeared looking rather sullen
+and crestfallen. He said he couldn't pay, and must let the goods be
+taken. So taken they were, and duly put up under the process and sold.
+He bought them in himself, paying all the costs.
+
+Presently two cars appeared. We got upon one, Mr. Tener driving a
+spirited nag, and taking on the seat with him a loaded carbine-rifle.
+Two armed policeman followed us upon the other, keeping at such a
+distance as would enable them easily to cover any one approaching from
+either side of the roadway. It quite took me back to the delightful days
+of 1866 in Mexico, when we used to ride out to picnics at the Rincon at
+Orizaba armed to the teeth, and ready at a moment's notice to throw the
+four-in-hand mule-wagons into a hollow square, and prepare to receive
+cavalry. As it seems to be perfectly well understood that the regular
+price paid for shooting a designated person (they call it "knocking" him
+in these parts) is the ridiculously small sum of four pounds, and that
+two persons who divide this sum are always detailed by the organisers of
+outrage to "knock" an objectionable individual, it is obvious that too
+much care can hardly be taken by prudent people in coming and going
+through such a country. Fortunately for the people most directly
+concerned to avoid these unpleasantnesses a systematic leakage seems to
+exist in the machinery of mischief. The places where the oaths of this
+local "Mafia" are administered, for instance, are well known. A roadside
+near a chapel is frequently selected--and this for two or three obvious
+reasons. The sanctity of the spot may be supposed to impress the
+neophyte; and if the police or any other undesirable people should
+suddenly come upon the officiating adepts and the expectant acolyte, a
+group on the roadside is not necessarily a criminal gathering--though I
+do not see why, in such times, our old American college definition of a
+"group" as a gathering of "three or more persons" should not be adopted
+by the authorities, and held to make such a gathering liable to
+dispersion by the police, as our "groups" used to be subject to
+proctorial punishment. Mills are another favourite resort of the
+law-breakers. Mr. Tener tells me that a large mill between this place
+and Loughrea is a great centre of trouble, not wholly to the
+disadvantage of the astute miller, who finds it not only brings grist to
+his mill, but takes away grist from another mill belonging to a couple
+of worthy ladies, and once quite prosperous. It is no uncommon thing, it
+appears, for the same person to be put through the ceremony of swearing
+fidelity more than once, and at more than one place, with the not
+unnatural result, however, of diminishing the pressure of the oath upon
+his conscience or his fears, and also of alienating his affections, as
+he is expected to pay down two shillings on each occasion. Once a
+member, he contributes a penny a week to the general fund. It seems also
+to be an open secret who the disbursing treasurers are of this fund,
+from whom the members, detailed to do the dark bidding of the
+"organisation," receive their wage. "A stout gentleman with sandy hair
+and wearing glasses" was the description given to me of one such
+functionary. When so much is known of the methods and the men, why is it
+that so many crimes are committed with virtual impunity? For two
+sufficient reasons. Witnesses cannot be got to testify, or trusted, if
+they do testify, to speak the truth; and it is idle to expect juries of
+the vicinage in nine cases out of ten will do their duty. Political
+cowardice having made it impossible to transfer the venue in cases of
+Irish crime, as to which all the authorities were agreed about these
+points, from Ireland into Great Britain, it is found that even to
+transfer the trial of "Moonlighters" from Clare or Kerry into Wicklow,
+for example, has a most instructive effect, opening the eyes of the
+people of Wicklow to a state of things in their own island, of which
+happily for themselves they were previously as ignorant as the people of
+Surrey or of Middlesex. This explains the indignant wish expressed to me
+some time ago in a letter from a priest in another part of Ireland, that
+"martial law" might be proclaimed in Clare and Kerry to "stamp out the
+Moonlighters, those pests of society." That in Clare and Kerry priests
+should be found not only disposed to wink at and condone the proceedings
+of these "pests of society," but openly to co-operate with them under
+the pretext of a "national" movement, is surely a thing equally
+intolerable by the Church and dangerous to the cause of Irish autonomy.
+This I am glad to say is strongly felt, and has been on more than one
+occasion very vigorously stated by one of the most eminent and estimable
+of Irish ecclesiastics, the Bishop-Coadjutor of Clonfert, upon whom I
+called this morning. Dr. Healy, who is a senator of the Royal University
+of Ireland, and a member of the Royal Irish Academy, presides over that
+part of the diocese of Clonfort which includes Portumna and Woodford. He
+lives in a handsome and commodious, but simple and unpretentious house,
+set in ample grounds well-planted, and commanding a wide view of a most
+agreeable country. We were ushered into a well-furnished study, and the
+bishop came in at once to greet us with the most cordial courtesy. He is
+a frank, dignified, unaffected man, and in his becoming episcopal
+purple, with the gold chain and cross, looked every inch a bishop. I was
+particularly anxious to see Dr. Healy, as a type of the high-minded and
+courageous ecclesiastics who, in Ireland, have resolutely refused to
+subordinate their duties and their authority as ecclesiastics to the
+convenience and the policy of an organisation absolutely controlled by
+Mr. Parnell, who not only is not a Catholic, but who is an open ally and
+associate of the bitterest enemies of the Catholic Church in France and
+in England. Protestant historians affirm that Pope Innocent was one of
+the financial backers of William of Orange when he set sail from Holland
+to crush the Catholic faith in Great Britain and Ireland, and drive the
+Catholic house of Stuart into exile. But it was reserved for the
+nineteenth century to witness the strange spectacle of men, calling
+themselves Irishmen and Catholics, deliberately slandering and assailing
+in concord with a non-Catholic political leader the consecrated pastors
+and masters of the Church in Ireland. When in order to explain what they
+themselves concede to be "the absence from the popular ranks of the best
+of the priesthood," Nationalist writers find it necessary to denounce
+Cardinal Cullen and Cardinal M'Cabe as "anti-Irish "; and to sneer at
+men like Dr. Healy as "Castle Bishops," it is impossible not to be
+reminded of the three "patriotic" tailors of Tooley Street.
+
+Bishop Healy looks upon the systematic development of a substantial
+peasant proprietary throughout Ireland as the economic hope of the
+country, and he regards therefore the actual "campaigning" of the
+self-styled "Nationalists" as essentially anti-national, inasmuch as its
+methods are demoralising the people of Ireland, and destroying that
+respect for law and for private rights which lies at the foundation of
+civil order and of property. In his opinion, "Home Rule," to the people
+in general, means simply ownership of the land which they are to live
+on, and to live by. How that ownership shall be brought about peaceably,
+fairly, and without wrong or outrage to any man or class of men is a
+problem of politics to be worked out by politicians, and by public men.
+That men, calling themselves Catholics, should be led on to attempt to
+bring this or any other object about by immoral and criminal means is
+quite another matter, and a matter falling within the domain, not of the
+State primarily, but of the Church.
+
+As to this, Bishop Healy, who was in Rome not very long ago, and who,
+while in Rome, had more than one audience of His Holiness by command,
+has no doubt whatever that the Vatican will insist upon the abandonment
+and repudiation by Catholics of boycotting, and "plans of campaign," and
+all such devices of evil. Nor has the Bishop any doubt that whenever the
+Holy Father speaks the priests and the people of Ireland will obey.
+
+To say this, of course, is only to say that the Bishop believes the
+priests of Ireland to be honest priests, and the people of Ireland to be
+good Catholics.
+
+If he is mistaken in this it will be a doleful thing, not for the
+Church, but for the Irish priests, and for the Irish people. No Irishman
+who witnessed the magnificent display made at Rome this year, of the
+scope and power of the Catholic Church, can labour under any delusions
+on that point.
+
+From the Bishop's residence we went to call upon the Protestant rector
+of Portumna, Mr. Crawford. The handsome Anglican church stands within an
+angle of the park, and the parsonage is a very substantial mansion. Mr.
+Crawford, the present rector, who is a man of substance, holds a fine
+farm of the Clanricarde estate, at a peppercorn rent, and he is tenant
+also of another holding at L118 a year, as to which he has brought the
+agent into Court, with the object, as he avers, of setting an example to
+the other tenants, and inducing them, like himself, to fight under the
+law instead of against it. He is not, however, in arrears, and in that
+respect sets a better example, I am sorry to say, than the Catholic
+priest, Father Coen, who made himself so conspicuous here on the
+occasion of the much bewritten Woodford evictions. The case of Father
+Coen is most instructive, and most unpleasant. He occupies an excellent
+house on a holding of twenty-three acres of good laud, with a garden--in
+short, a handsome country residence, which was provided by the late Lord
+Clanricarde, expressly for the accommodation of whoever might be the
+Catholic priest in that part of his estate. For all this the rent is
+fixed at the absurd and nominal sum of two guineas a year! Yet Father
+Coen, who now enjoys the mansion, and has a substantial income from the
+parish, is actually two years and a half in arrears with this rent! This
+fact Mr. Tener mentioned to the Bishop, whose countenance naturally
+darkened. "What am I to do in such a case, my lord?" asked Mr. Tener.
+"Do?" said the Bishop, "do your plain duty, and proceed against him
+according to law." But suppose he were proceeded against and evicted, as
+in America he certainly would be, who can doubt that he would instantly
+be paraded, before the world, on both sides of the Atlantic as a
+"martyr," suffering for the holy cause of an oppressed and down-trodden
+people, at the hands of a "most vile" Marquis, and of a remorse-less and
+blood-thirsty agent?[11] Mr. Crawford, a tall, fine-looking man, talked
+very fully and freely about the situation here. He came to Portumna
+about eight years ago; one of his reasons for accepting the position
+here offered him being that he wished to take over a piece of property
+near Woodford from his brother-in-law, who found he could not manage it.
+As a practical farmer, and a straightforward capable man of business, he
+has gradually acquired the general confidence of the tenants here. That
+they are, as a rule, quite able to pay the rents which they have been
+"coerced" into refusing to pay, he fully believes. He told me of cases
+in which Catholic tenants of Lord Clanricarde came to him when the
+agitation began about the Plan of Campaign, and begged him privately to
+take the money for their rents, and hold it for them till the time
+should come for a settlement.
+
+The reason for this was that they did not wish to be obliged to give
+over the money into the "Trust" created by the Campaigners, and wanted
+it to be safely put beyond the reach of these obliging "friends." One
+very shrewd tenant came to him and begged him to buy some beasts, in
+order that he might pay his rent out of the proceeds. The man owed L15
+to the Clanricarde property. Mr. Crawford did not particularly want to
+buy his beasts, but eventually agreed to do so, and gave him L50 for
+them. The man went off with the money, but he never paid the rent! Mr.
+Crawford discovering this called him to account, and refused to grant
+him some further favour which he asked. The result is that the
+"distressed tenant" now cuts Mr. Crawford when he meets him, and is the
+prosperous owner of quite a small herd of cattle.
+
+Mr. Crawford's opinion of the mischief done by the methods and spirit of
+the National League in this place is quite in accord with the opinions
+of the Bishop-Coadjutor. Power without responsibility, which made the
+Caeesars madmen, easily turns the heads of village tyrants, and there is
+something positively grotesque in the excesses of this subterranean
+"Home Rule." Mr. Crawford told me of a case here, in which a tenant
+farmer, whom he named, came to him in great wrath, not unmingled with
+terror, to say that the League had ordered him, on pain of being
+boycotted, to give up his holding to the heirs of a woman from whom,
+twenty years ago, he had bought, for L100 in cash, the tenant-right of
+her deceased husband! There was no question of refunding the L100. He
+was merely to consider himself a "land-grabber," and evict himself for
+the benefit of those heirs who had never done a stroke of work on the
+property for twenty years, and who had no shadow of a legal or moral
+claim on it, except that the oldest of them was an active member of the
+local League!
+
+Nor was this unique.
+
+In another case, the children of a tenant, who died forty years ago,
+came forward and called upon the League to boycott an old man who had
+been in possession of the holding during nearly half a century. In a
+third case, a tenant-farmer, some ten years ago, had in his employ as
+herd a man who fell ill and died. He put into the vacant place an
+honest, capable young fellow, who still holds it, and has faithfully and
+efficiently served him. Only the other day this tenant-farmer was warned
+by the League to expect trouble, unless he dismissed this herd, and put
+into his place the son, now grown to man's estate, of the herd who died
+ten years ago!
+
+It is amusing, if not instructive, to find the hereditary principle,
+just now threatened in its application to the British Senate, cropping
+out afresh as an element in the regeneration of Irish agriculture and
+the land tenure of Ireland!
+
+On our way back to the Castle we called on Mr. Place, the manager of the
+Portumna Branch of the Hibernian Bank, who lives in the town. He was
+amusing himself, after the labour of the day in the bank, with some
+amateur work as a carpenter, but received us very cordially. He said
+there was no doubt that the deposits in the bank had increased
+considerably since the adoption of the Plan of Campaign on the
+Clanricarde property. Money was paid into the bank continually by
+persons who wished the fact of their payments kept secret; and he knew
+of more than one case in which tenants, whose stock had been seized by
+the agent for the rents, were much delighted at the seizure, since it
+had paid off their rents, and so enabled them to retain their holdings
+and keep out of the grasp of the League, even though to do this they had
+undergone a forced sale and been muleted in costs.
+
+It was his opinion that the tenants on the Clanricarde property, who are
+not in arrears, would gladly accept a twenty-five per cent. reduction,
+and do very well by accepting it. But they are constrained into a
+hostile attitude by the tenants who are in arrears, some of them for
+several years (as, for example, Father Coen), although I find, to my
+astonishment, that in Ireland the landlord has no power to distrain for
+more than a twelvemonth's rent, no matter how far back the arrears may
+run.
+
+Mr. Place seems to think it would be well to put all the creditors of
+the tenants on one footing with the landlords. The shopkeepers and other
+creditors, he thinks, in that event would see many things in quite a new
+light.
+
+What is called the new Castle of Portumna is a large and handsome
+building of the Mansard type, standing on an eminence in the park, at
+some distance from the original seat. The building was finished not long
+before the death of his father, the late Marquis. It has never been
+occupied, save by a large force of police quartered in it not very long
+ago by Mr. Tener in readiness for an expedition against the Castle of
+Cloondadauv, to the scene of which he promises to drive me to-morrow on
+my way back to Dublin. It is thoroughly well built, and might easily be
+made a most delightful residence. The views which it commands of the
+Shannon are magnificent, and there are many fine trees about it.
+
+The old man who has charge of it is a typical Galway retainer of the old
+school. The "boys," he says, once tried to "boycott" him because he was
+the pound-master; but he showed fight, and they let him alone. He
+pointed out to me from the top of the house, in the distance, the
+residences of Colonel Hickie, and of the young Lord Avonmore, who lately
+succeeded on the death of his brother in the recent Egyptian expedition.
+The place is now shut up, and the owners live in France.
+
+We visited too the Portumna Union before driving home. The buildings of
+this Union are extensive for the place, and well built, and it seems to
+be well-ordered and neatly kept--thanks, in no small degree, I suspect,
+to the influence of the Sisters who have charge of the hospital, but
+whose benign spirit shows itself not only in the flower-garden which
+they have called into being, but in many details of the administration
+beyond their special control.
+
+The contrast was very striking between the atmosphere of this
+unpretending refuge of the helpless and that of certain of the
+"laicised" hospitals of France, which I not long ago visited, from which
+the devoted nuns have been expelled to make way for hired nurses. I made
+a remark to this effect to the clerk of the Union, Mr. Lavan, whom we
+found in his office.
+
+"Oh, yes," he said, "I have no doubt of that. We owe more than I can say
+to the Sisters, but I don't know how long we should have them here if
+the local guardians could have their way."
+
+In explanation of this, he went on to tell me that these local
+guardians, who are elected, are hostile to the whole administration,
+because of its relations with the Local Government Board at Dublin,
+which controls their generous tendency to expend the money of the
+ratepayers. By way of expressing their feelings, therefore, they have
+been trying to cut down, not only the salary of the clerk, but that of
+the Catholic chaplain of the Union; and as there is a good deal of
+irreligious feeling among the agitators here, it is his impression that
+they would make things disagreeable for the Sisters also were they in
+any way to get the management into their own hands. That there cannot be
+much real distress in this neighbourhood appears from two facts. There
+are now but 130 inmates of this Union, out of a population of 12,900,
+and the outlay for out-of-door relief averages between eight and ten
+pounds a week.
+
+In the quiet, neat chapel two or three of the inmates were kneeling at
+prayers; and others whom we saw in the kitchen and about the offices had
+nothing of the "workhouse" look which is so painful in the ordinary
+inmates of an English or American almshouse.
+
+"The trouble with the place," said Mr. Lavan, "is that they like it too
+well. It takes an eviction almost to get them out of it."
+
+We sat down with Mr. Lavan in his office, and had an interesting talk
+with him.
+
+He is the agent of Mr. Mathews, who lives between Woodford and Portumna.
+Mr. Mathews is a resident landlord, he says, who has constantly employed
+and has lived on friendly terms with his tenants, numbering twenty, who
+hold now under judicial rents. On these judicial rents two years ago
+they were allowed a further reduction of 15 per cent. Last year they
+were allowed 20 per cent. This year he offered them a reduction of 25
+per cent., which they rejected, demanding 35 per cent.
+
+This demand Mr. Lavan considers to be unreasonable in the extreme, and
+he attributes it to the influence of the National Leaguers here, whose
+representatives among the local guardians constantly vote away the money
+of the ratepayers in "relief to evicted tenants who have ample means and
+can in no respect be called destitute." In his opinion the effect of the
+Nationalist agitation here has been to upset all ideas of right and
+wrong in the minds of the people where any question arises between
+tenants and landlords. He told a story, confirmed by Mr. Tener, of a
+bailiff, whom he named, on the Clanricarde property here, who was
+compelled two years ago to resign his place in order to prevent the
+"boycotting" of his mother who keeps a shop on the farm. He was
+familiar, too, with the details of a story told me by one of the
+Clanricarde tenants, a farmer near Loughrea who holds a farm at L90 a
+year. This man was forced to subscribe to the Plan of Campaign. The
+agent proceeded against him for the rent due, and he incurred costs of
+L10. His sheep and crop were then seized.
+
+He begged the local leaders to "permit" him to pay his rent, as he was
+able to do it _without drawing out the funds in their hands_! They
+refused, and so compelled him to allow his property to be publicly sold,
+and to incur further costs of L10. "His farm lies so near the town that
+he did not dare to risk the vengeance of the local ruffians."
+
+Mr. Lavan gave me the name also of another man who is now actually under
+a "boycott," because he has ventured to resist the modest demand made by
+the son of a man whose tenant-right he bought, paying him L100 for it,
+twenty years ago, that he shall give up his farm without being
+reimbursed for his outlay made to purchase it! In other words, after
+twenty years' peaceable possession of a piece of property, bought and
+paid for, this tenant-farmer is treated as a "land-grabber" by the
+self-installed "Nationalist" government of Ireland, because he will not
+submit to be robbed both of the money which he paid for his
+tenant-right, and of his tenant-right!
+
+Obviously in such a case as this the "war against landlordism" is simply
+a war against property and against private rights. Priests of the
+Catholic Church who not only countenance but aid and abet such
+proceedings certainly go even beyond Dr. M'Glynn. Dr. M'Glynn, so far as
+I know, stops at the confiscation of all private property in rent by the
+State for the State. But here is simply a confiscation of the property
+of A for the benefit of B, such as might happen if B, being armed and
+meeting A unarmed in a forest, should confiscate the watch and chain of
+A, bought by A of B's lamented but unthrifty father twenty years before!
+
+After dinner to-night Mr. Tener gave me some interesting and edifying
+accounts of his experience in other parts of Ireland.
+
+Some time ago, before the Plan of Campaign was adopted, one of his
+tenants in Cavan came to him with a doleful story of the bad times and
+the low prices, and wound up by saying he could pay no more than half a
+year's rent.
+
+"Now his rent had been reduced under the Land Act," said Mr, Tener, "and
+I had voluntarily thrown off a lot of arrears, so I looked at him
+quietly and said, 'Mickey, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have
+been very well treated, and you can perfectly well pay your rent. Your
+wife would be ashamed of you if she knew you were trying to get out of
+it.'"
+
+"Ah no, your honour!" he briskly replied; "indade she would approve it.
+If you won't discover on me, I'll tell you the truth. It was the wife
+herself, she's a great schollard, and reads the papers, that tould me
+not to pay you more than half the rent--for she says there's a new Act
+coming to wipe it all out. Will you take the half-year?"
+
+"No, I will not. Don't be afraid of your wife, but pay what you owe,
+like a man. You've got the money there in your pocket."
+
+This was a good shot. Mickey couldn't resist it, and his countenance
+broke into a broad smile.
+
+"Ah no! I've got it in two pockets. Begorra, it was the wife herself
+made up the money in two parcels, and she put one into each pocket, to
+be sure--and I wasn't to give your honour but one, if you would take it.
+But there's the money, and I daresay it's all for the best."
+
+On another occasion, when he was collecting the rents of a property in
+the county of Longford, one tenant came forward as the spokesman of the
+rest, admitted that the rents had been accepted fairly after a reduction
+under the Land Act, expressed the general wish of the tenants to meet
+their obligations, and wound up by asking a further abatement, "the
+times were so bad, and the money couldn't be got, it couldn't indeed!"
+
+Mr. Tener listened patiently--to listen patiently is the most essential
+quality of an agent in Ireland--and finally said:--
+
+"Very well, if you haven't got the money to pay in full, pay
+three-quarters of it, and I'll give you time for the rest."
+
+"Thank your honour!" said Pat, "and that'll be thirty pounds--and here
+it is in one pound notes, and hard enough to get they are, these times!"
+
+So Mr. Tener took the money, counted the notes twice over, and then,
+writing out a receipt, handed it to the tenant.
+
+"All right, Pat, there's your receipt for thirty-nine pounds, and I'm
+glad to see ten-pound notes going about the country in these hard
+times!"
+
+By mistake the "distressful" orator had put one ten-pound note into his
+parcel! He took his receipt, and went off without a word. But the
+combination to get an "abatement" broke down then and there, and the
+other tenants came forward and put down their money.
+
+These incidents occurred to Mr. Tener himself. Not less amusing and
+instructive was a similar mistake on a larger scale made by an
+over-crafty tenant in dealing with one of Mr. Tener's friends a few
+years ago in the county of Leitrim. This tenant, whom we will call
+Denis, was the fugleman also of a combination. He was a cattle dealer as
+well as a farmer, and having spent a couple of hours in idly eloquent
+attempts to bring about a general abatement of the rents, he lost his
+patience.
+
+"Ah, well, your honour!" he said, "I can't stay here all day talking
+like these men, I must go to the fair at Boyle. Will you take a
+deposit-receipt of the bank for ten pounds and give me the pound change?
+that'll just be the nine pounds for the half-year's rent. But all the
+same, yer honour, those men are all farmers, and it's not out of the
+farm at all I made the ten pounds, it's out of the dealing!"
+
+"But you couldn't deal without a farm, Denis, for the stock," said the
+agent, as he glanced at the receipt. He hastily turned it over, and went
+on, "Just indorse the receipt, and I'll consider your proposition."
+
+The receipt was indorsed, and at once taken off by the agent's clerk to
+the bank to bring back pound-notes for it, while the agent quietly
+proceeded to fill out the regular form of receipt for a full year's
+rent, eighteen pounds. Denis noted what he supposed of course to be the
+agent's blunder, but like an astute person held his peace. The clerk
+came back with the notes. Denis took up his receipt, and the agent
+quietly began handing him note after note across the table.
+
+"But, your honour!" exclaimed Denis, "what on earth are ye giving me all
+this money for?"
+
+"It's your change," said the agent, quite imperturbably. "You gave me a
+bank receipt for one hundred pounds. I have given you a receipt for your
+full year's rent, and here are eighty-two pounds in notes, and with it
+eighteen shillings in silver--that's five per cent. reduction. I would
+have made it ten per cent., only you were so very sharp, first about not
+having the money, and then about the full receipt!"
+
+In an instant all eyes were fastened upon Denis. Ichabod! the glory had
+departed. The chorus went up from his disenchanted followers:--
+
+"Ah, glory be to God, you were not bright enough for the agent, Denis!"
+
+And so that day the agent made a very full and handsome collection--and
+there was a slight reduction in the deposit-accounts of the local bank!
+
+In the evening Mr. Tener gave me the details of some cases of direct
+intimidation with the names of the tenants concerned. One man, whose
+farm he visited, told him he had paid his rent not long before to the
+previous agent. "Well," said Mr. Tener, "show me your receipt!" On this
+the tenant said that he dare not keep the receipt about him, nor even in
+the house, lest it should be demanded by the emissaries of the League,
+who went round to keep the tenants up to the "Plan of Campaign," and
+that it was hidden in his stable. And he went out to the stable and
+brought it in.
+
+This, he had reason to believe, was not an uncommon case.[12] The same
+man, wishing to take a grass farm which the people hoped the agent would
+consent to have "cut up" was asked to give two names on a
+promissory-note to pay the rent. He demurred to this, and after a parley
+said, "Would a certificate do?" upon which he pulled out an old
+tobacco-box, and carefully unfolded from it a bank certificate of
+deposit for a hundred pounds sterling! This tenant held eleven Irish, or
+more than seventeen English, acres, and his yearly rent was L11, 16s.
+6d.
+
+The people before this agitation began were generally quiet, thrifty,
+and industrious. They were great sheep-raisers. An old law of the Irish
+Parliament had exempted sheep, but not cattle or crops, from distraint,
+with an eye to encouraging the woollen interest in Ireland.
+
+As to the sale of tenant-right in Ireland, he told me a curious story.
+One woman, a widow, whom he named, owed two year' rent on a holding in
+Ulster at L4 a year. She was abundantly able to pay, but for her own
+reasons preferred to be evicted, and, finally, by an understanding with
+him, offered her tenant-right for sale. A man who had made money in
+iron-mines in the County of Durham was a bidder, and finally offered
+L240 for the holding. It was knocked down to him. He then saw the agent,
+who told him he had paid too much. The woman was then appealed to, and
+she admitted that the agent was right. But it was shown that others had
+offered L200, and the woman finally agreed to take, and received, that
+amount in gold, being fifty years' purchase!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Thursday, March 1._--This has been a crowded day. I left
+Portumna very early on a car with Mr. Tener, intending to visit the
+scene of his latest collision with the "National" government of Ireland,
+on my way to Loughrea. It was a bright spring morning, more like April
+in Italy than like March in America, and the country is full of natural
+beauty. We made our first halt at the derelict house of Martin Kenny,
+one of the "victims" of the famous "Woodford evictions," so called, as I
+have said, because Woodford is the nearest town.[13] The eviction here
+took place October 21st, 1887. The house has been dismantled by the
+neighbours since that time, each man carrying off a door, or a shutter,
+or whatever best suited him. One of the constables who followed us as
+Mr. Tener's body-guard had been present at the eviction. He came into
+the house with us, and very graphically described the performance. The
+house was still full of heavy stones taken into it, partly to block the
+entrances, and partly as ammunition; and trunks of trees used as
+_chevaux defrise_ still protruded through the door and the window. These
+trees had been cut down by the garrison in the woodlands here and there
+all over the property. I asked if the law in Ireland punished
+depredations of this sort, and was informed that trees planted by
+tenants, if registered by them within a certain time, are the property
+of the tenants. This would astonish our landlords in America, where the
+tenant who sticks so much as a sunflower into his garden-patch makes a
+present of it to his landlord.[14]
+
+I asked if the place made a long defence. Mr. Tener and the constable
+both laughed, and the former told me that when the storming party
+arrived shortly after daybreak, they found the house garrisoned only by
+some small boys, who had been left there to keep watch. The men were
+fast asleep at some other place. The small boys ran away as fast as
+possible to give the alarm, but the police went in, and in a jiffey
+pulled to pieces the elaborate defences prepared to repel them. Father
+Coen, the constable said, got to Kenny's house an hour after it was all
+over, with a mob of people howling and groaning. But the work had been
+done, and other work also at the Castle of Cloondadauv, to which we next
+drove.
+
+This place takes its truly awe-inspiring name from a ruined Norman tower
+standing on a picturesque promontory of no great height, which juts out
+into the lovely lake here made by the Shannon. At no great expense this
+tower might be so restored as to make an ideal fishing-box. It now
+simply adorns the holding formerly occupied by Mr. John Stanislaus
+Burke, a former tenant of Lord Clanricarde. The story of its capture on
+the 17th of September is worth telling.
+
+Some days before the evictions were to come off, a meeting was held at
+Woodford or Loughrea, at which one of the speakers, the patriotic Dr.
+Tully, rather incautiously and exultingly told his hearers that the
+defence in 1886 of the tenant's house known as "Fort Saunders" had been
+a grand and gallant affair indeed, but that next time "the exterminators
+would have to storm a castle"!
+
+This put Mr. Tener at once on the alert, and as Mr. Burke of Cloondadauv
+was set down for eviction, it didn't require much cogitation to fix upon
+the fortress destined to be "stormed." So he set about the campaign. The
+County Inspector of the constabulary, who had made a secret
+reconnaissance, reported that he found the place too strong to be taken
+if defended, except "by artillery." So it was determined to take it by
+surprise.
+
+When the previous evictions were made, the agent and the public forces
+had marched from Portumna by the highway to Woodford, so that, of
+course, their advent was announced by the scouts and sentinels of the
+League from hill to hill long before they reached the scene of action,
+and abundant time was given to the agitators for organising a
+"reception." Mr. Tener profited by the experience of his predecessors.
+He contrived to get his force of constabulary through the town of
+Portumna without attracting any popular attention. And as early rising
+is not a popular virtue here, he resolved to steal a march on the
+defenders of Cloondadauv.
+
+He had brought up certain large boats to Portumna, and put them on the
+lake. Rousing his men before dawn, he soon had them all embarked, and on
+their way swiftly and silently by the river and the lake to Cloondadauv.
+They reached the promontory by daybreak, and as soon as the hour of
+legal action had arrived they were landed, and surrounded the "castle."
+The ancient portal was found to be blocked with heavy stones and trunks
+of trees, nor did any adit appear to be available, till a young
+gentleman who had accompanied the party as a volunteer, discovered in
+one wall of the tower, at some little height from the ground, the vent
+of one of those conduits not infrequently found running down through the
+walls of old castles, which were used sometimes as waste-ways for
+rubbish from above, and sometimes to receive water-pipes from below.
+Looking up into this vent, he saw a rope hanging free within it. Upon
+this he hauled resolutely, and finding it firmly attached above, came to
+the conclusion that it must have been fixed there by the garrison as a
+means of access to the interior.
+
+Like an adventurous young tar, he bade his comrades stand by, and nimbly
+"swarmed" up the rope, without thought or care of what might await him
+at the top. In a few moments his shouts from above proclaimed the
+capture of the stronghold. It was absolutely deserted; the garrison,
+confident that no attack would that day be made, had gone off to the
+nearest village. The interior of the castle was found filled with
+munitions of war, in the shape of huge beams and piles of stones
+laboriously carried up the winding stairs, and heaped on all the
+landing-places in readiness for use. On the flat roof of the castle was
+established a sort of furnace for heating water or oil, to be poured
+down upon the besiegers; and crowbars lay there in readiness to loosen
+out and dislodge the battlements, and topple them over upon the
+assailants.
+
+The officers soon made their way all over the building, and thence
+proceeded to the residence of Mr. Burke near by, a large and very
+commodious house. All the formalities were gone through with, a
+detachment of policemen was put in charge, and the rest of the forces
+set out on their return to Portumna, before the organised "defenders" of
+Cloondadauv, hastily called out of their comfortable beds or from their
+breakfast-tables had realised the situation, and got the populace into
+motion. A mass meeting was held in the neighbourhood, and many speeches
+were made. But the castle and the farm-house and the holding all remain
+in the hands of a cool, quiet, determined-looking young Ulsterman, who
+tells me that he is getting on very well, and feels quite able with his
+police-guard to protect himself. "Once in a while," he said, "they come
+here from Loughrea with English Parliament-men, and stand outside of the
+gate, and call me 'Clanricarde's dog,' and make like speeches at me; but
+I don't mind them, and they see it, and go away again."
+
+Of Mr. Burke, the evicted tenant here, Mr. Crawford, the Protestant
+clergyman at Portumna, told me that he was abundantly able to pay his
+rent. The whole debt for which Burke was evicted was L115; and Mr.
+Crawford said he had himself offered Burke L300 for the holding. Burke
+would have gladly taken this, but "the League wouldn't let him." When
+his right was put up for sale at Galway for L5, he did not dare to buy
+it in, and he is now living with his wife and children on the League
+funds. Lord Clanricarde's agent offered to take him back and restore his
+right if he would pay what he owed; but he dared not accept. This farm
+comprises over one hundred and ten English acres, which Burke held at a
+rent--fixed by the Land Court--of L77, the valuation for taxes being
+L83.
+
+To call the eviction of such a tenant in such circumstances from such a
+holding a "sentence of death," is making ducks and drakes of the English
+language. Mr. Crawford's opinion, founded upon a thorough personal
+knowledge of the region, is that there is no exceptional distress in
+this part of Ireland, and that over-renting has nothing to do with such
+distress as does exist here. The case of a man named Egan, one of the
+"victims" of the Woodford evictions of 1886, certainly bears out this
+view of the matter. Egan, who was a tenant, not at all of Lord
+Clanricarde, but of a certain Mrs. Lewis, had occupied for twenty years
+a holding of about sixteen Irish acres, or more than twenty English
+acres. This he held at a yearly rental of L8, 15s., being 9d. over the
+valuation.
+
+In August 1886 he was evicted for refusing to pay one year's rent then
+due. At that time the crops standing on the land were valued by him at
+L60, 13s. He also owned six beasts. In other words, this man, when he
+was called upon to pay a debt of L8, 15s. had in his own possession,
+beside the valuable tenant-right of his holding, more than a hundred
+pounds sterling of merchantable assets. He refused to pay, and he was
+evicted.
+
+This was in August 1886. But such are the ideas now current in Ireland
+as to the relations of landlord and tenant, that immediately after his
+eviction Egan sent his daughter to gather some cabbages off the farm as
+if nothing had happened. The Emergency men in charge actually objected,
+and sent the damsel away. Thereupon Egan, on the 6th of September,
+served a legal notice on Mrs. Lewis, his landlady, requiring her either
+to let him take all the crops on the farm, or to pay him their value,
+estimated by him, as I have said, at L60, 13s. Two days after this, on
+the 8th of September, more than a hundred men came to the place by night
+and removed the greater portion of the crops. Not wishing a return of
+these visitors, Mrs. Lewis, on the 16th of September, sent word to Egan
+to come and take away what was left of the crops; one of the horses
+employed in the nocturnal harvest of September 8th having been seized by
+the police and identified as belonging to Egan. Egan did not respond;
+but in July 1887 he brought an action against his landlady to recover
+L100 sterling for her "detention of his goods," and her "conversion of
+the same to her own use "!
+
+The case was heard by the Recorder at Kilmainham, and the facts which I
+have briefly recited were established by the evidence. The daughter of
+this extraordinary "victim" Egan appeared as a witness, so "fashionably
+dressed" as to attract a remark on the subject from the defendant's
+counsel. To this she replied that "her brothers in America sent her
+money."
+
+"If your brothers in America sent you money for such purposes," not
+unnaturally observed the Recorder, "why did they allow your father to
+sacrifice crops worth L60 for the non-payment of L8, 15s.?"
+
+"They were tired of that," said the young lady airily; "the land wasn't
+worth the rent!"
+
+That is to say, a farm which yielded a crop of L60, and pastured several
+head of cattle, was not worth L8, 15s. a year. Certainly it was not
+worth L8, 15s. a year if the tenant under the operation of the existing
+or the impending laws of Great Britain in Ireland could get, or hope to
+get it for the half of that rent, or for no rent at all.
+
+But this being thus, on what grounds are the rest of mankind invited to
+regard this excellent man as a "victim" worthy of sympathy and of
+material aid? How had he come to be in arrears of a year in August 1886?
+The proceedings at Kilmainham tell us this.
+
+In November 1885 he had demanded, with other tenants of Mrs. Lewis, a
+reduction of 50 per cent. This would have given him his holding at a
+rental of L4, 7s. 6d. Mrs. Lewis refused the concession, and a month
+afterwards an attempt was made to blow up her son's house with dynamite.
+Between that time and August 1886, all the efforts of her son, who was
+also her agent, to collect her dues by seizing beasts, were defeated by
+the driving away of the cattle, so that no remedy but an eviction was
+left to her. I take it for granted that Mrs. Lewis had a family to
+maintain, and debts of one sort and another to pay, as well as Mr.
+Egan--but I observe this material difference between her position and
+his during the whole of this period of "strained relations" between
+herself and her tenant, that whereas she lay completely out of the
+enjoyment of the rent due her, being the interest on her capital,
+represented in her title to the land, Mr. Egan remained in the complete
+enjoyment and use of the land. Clearly the tenant was in a better
+position than the landlord, and as we are dealing not with the history
+of Ireland in the past, but with the condition of Ireland at present, it
+appears to me to be quite beside the purpose to ask my sympathies for
+Mr. Egan on the ground that a century or half a century ago the
+ancestors of Mr. Egan may have been at the mercy of the ancestors of
+Mrs. Lewis. However that may have been, Mr. Egan seems to me now to have
+had legally much the advantage of Mrs. Lewis. Not only this. Both
+legally and materially Mr. Egan, the tenant-farmer at Woodford, seems to
+me to have had much the advantage of thousands of his countrymen living
+and earning their livelihood by their daily labour in such a typical
+American commonwealth, for example, as Massachusetts. I have here with
+me the Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of
+Massachusetts. From this I learn that in 1876 the average yearly wages
+earned by workmen in Massachusetts were $482.72, or in round numbers
+something over L96. Out of this amount the Massachusetts workman had to
+feed, clothe, and house himself, and those dependent on him.
+
+His outlay for rent alone was on the average $109.07, or in round
+numbers rather less than L22, making 22-1/2 per cent, of his earnings.
+
+How was it with Mr. Egan? Out of his labour on his holding he got
+merchantable crops worth L60 sterling, or in round numbers $300, besides
+producing in the shape of vegetables and dairy stuff, pigs and poultry,
+certainly a very large proportion of the food necessary for his
+household, and raising and fattening beasts, worth at a low estimate L20
+or $100 more. And while thus engaged, his outlay for rent, which
+included not only the house in which he lived, but the land out of which
+he got the returns of his labour expended upon it, was L8, 15s., or
+considerably less than one-half the outlay of the Massachusetts workman
+upon the rent of nothing more than a roof to shelter himself and his
+family. Furthermore, the money thus paid out by the Massachusetts
+workman for rent was simply a tribute paid for accommodation had and
+enjoyed, while out of every pound sterling paid as rent by the Irish
+tenant there reverted to his credit, so long as he continued to fulfil
+his legal obligations, a certain proportion, calculable, valuable, and
+saleable, in the form of his tenant-right.
+
+I am not surprised to learn that the Recorder dismissed the suit brought
+by Mr. Egan, and gave costs against him. But the mere fact that in such
+circumstances it was possible for Egan to bring such a suit, and get a
+hearing for it, makes it quite clear that Americans of a sympathetic
+turn of mind can very easily find much more meritorious objects of
+sympathy than the Irish tenant-farmers of Galway without crossing the
+Atlantic in quest of them.
+
+From Cloondadauv to Loughrea we had a long but very interesting drive,
+passing on the way, and at no great distance from each other, Father
+Coen's neat, prosperous-looking presbytery of Ballinakill, and the shop
+and house of a local boat-builder named Tully, who is pleasantly known
+in the neighbourhood as "Dr. Tully," by reason of his recommendation of
+a very particular sort of "pills for landlords." The presbytery is now
+occupied by Father Coen, who finds it becoming his position as the moral
+teacher and guide of his people to be in arrears of two and a half years
+with the rent of his holding, and who is said to have entertained Mr.
+Blunt and other sympathising statesmen very handsomely on their visit to
+Loughrea and Woodford,[15] "Dr." Tully being one of the guests invited
+to meet them.[16] Not far from this presbytery, Mr. Tener showed me the
+scene of one of the most cowardly murders which have disgraced this
+region. Of Loughrea, the objective of our drive this morning, Sir George
+Trevelyan, I am told, during his brief rule in Ireland, found it
+necessary to say that murder had there become an institution. Woodford,
+previously a dull and law-abiding spot, was illuminated by a lurid light
+of modern progress about three years ago, upon the transfer thither in
+the summer of 1885 of a priest from Loughrea, familiarly known as "the
+firebrand priest."
+
+In November of that year, as I have already related, Mr. Egan and other
+tenants of Mrs. Lewis of Woodford made their demand for a 50 per cent.
+reduction of their rents, upon the refusal of which an attempt was made
+with dynamite on the 18th December to blow up the house of Mrs. Lewis's
+son and agent. All the bailiffs in the region round about were warned to
+give up serving processes, and many of them were cowed into doing so.
+One man, however, was not cowed. This was a gallant Irish soldier,
+discharged with honour after the Crimean war, and known in the country
+as "Balaklava," because he was one of the "noble six hundred," who there
+rode "into the jaws of death, into the valley of hell." His name was
+Finlay, and he was a Catholic. At a meeting in Woodford, Father Coen
+(the priest now in arrears), it is said, looked significantly at Finlay,
+and said, "no process-server will be got to serve processes for Sir
+Henry Burke of Marble Hill." The words and the look were thrown away on
+the veteran who had faced the roar and the crash of the Russian guns,
+and later on, in December 1885, Finlay did his duty, and served the
+processes given to him. From that moment he and his wife were
+"boycotted." His own kinsfolk dared not speak to him. His house was
+attacked by night. He was a doomed man. On the 3d March 1886, about 2
+o'clock P.M., he left his house--which Mr. Tener pointed out to me--to
+cut fuel in a wood belonging to Sir Henry Burke, at no great distance.
+Twice he made the journey between his house and the wood. The third time
+he went and returned no more. His wife growing uneasy at his prolonged
+absence went out to look for him. She found his body riddled with
+bullets lying lifeless in the highway. The police who went into Woodford
+with the tale report the people as laughing and jeering at the agony of
+the widowed woman. She was with them, and, maddened by the savage
+conduct of these wretched creatures, she knelt down over-against the
+house of Father Egan, and called down the curse of God upon him.
+
+On the next day things were worse. No one could be found to supply a
+coffin for the murdered man.[17] When the police called upon the priests
+to exert their influence and enforce some semblance at least of
+Christian and Catholic decency upon the people confided to their charge,
+the priests not only refused to do their duty, but floutingly referred
+the police to Lady Mary Burke. "He did her work," they said, "let her
+send a hearse now to bury him." The lady thus insolently spoken of is
+one of the best of the Catholic women of Ireland. At her summons Father
+Burke, a few years only before his death, I remember, made a long winter
+journey, though in very bad health, from Dublin to Marble Hill to soothe
+the last hours and attend the death-bed of her husband.
+
+No one who knew and loved him can wish him to have lived to hear from
+her lips such a tale of the degradation of Catholic priests in his own
+land of Galway.
+
+Mr. Tener pointed out to me, at another place on the road, near
+Ballinagar, the deserted burying-ground in which, after much trouble, a
+grave was found for the brave old soldier who had escaped the Russian
+cannon-balls to be so foully done to death by felons of his own race.
+There the last rites were performed by Father Callaghy, a priest who was
+himself "boycotted" for resigning the presidency of the League in his
+parish, and for the still graver offence of paying his rent. For weeks
+it was necessary to guard the grave![18]
+
+From that day to this no one has been brought to justice for this crime,
+committed in broad daylight, and within sight of the highway. Mr. Place,
+whom I saw at Portumna, told me that he believed the police had no moral
+doubt as to the murderer of Finlay, but that it was useless to think of
+getting legal evidence to convict him.
+
+Mr. Tener tells me that when Mr. Wilfrid Blunt came to Woodford he went
+with Father Egan, and accompanied by the police, to see the widow of
+this murdered man, heard from her own lips the sickening story, and took
+notes of it. But when Mr. Rowlands, M.P., an English "friend of Home
+Rule," was examined the other day during the trial of Mr. Blunt, he was
+obliged to confess that though he had visited Woodford more than once,
+and conversed freely with Mr. Blunt about it, he had "never heard of the
+murder of Finlay."
+
+Such an incident is apparently of little interest to politicians at
+Westminster. Fortunately for Ireland, it is of a nature to command more
+attention at the Vatican.
+
+Nature has sketched the scenery of this part of Ireland with a free,
+bold hand. It is not so grand or so wild as the scenery of Western
+Donegal, but it has both a wildness and a grandeur of its own. Sir Henry
+Burke's seat of Marble Hill, as seen in the distance from the road,
+stands superbly, high up on a lofty range of wooded hills, from which it
+commands the country for miles. And no town I have seen in Ireland is
+more picturesquely placed than Loughrea. It has an almost Italian aspect
+as you approach it from Woodford. But no lake in Lombardy or Piedmont is
+so peculiarly and exquisitely tinted as the lough on which it stands.
+The delicate grey-green of the sparkling waters reminded me of the
+singular and well-defined belts and stretches of chrysoprase upon which
+you sometimes come in sailing through the dark azure of the Southern
+Seas. I have never before seen precisely such a hue in any body of fresh
+water. The lake is incorrectly described, Mr. Tener tells me, in the
+guide-books, as being one of the many curious developments of the Lower
+Shannon. It is fed by springs, but if, like the river-lakes, it was
+formed by a solution of the limestone, this fact may have some chemical
+relation with its very peculiar colour. It contains three picturesque
+islands. No stream flows into it, but two streams issue from it. The
+town of Loughrea is an ancient holding of the De Burghs, and the
+estate-office of Lord Clanricarde is here in one wing of a great
+barrack, standing, as I understood Mr. Tener to say, on the site of a
+former fortress of the family. Lord Clanricarde's property here is put
+down by Mr. Hussey de Burgh at 49,025 acres in County Galway, valued at
+L19,634, and at 3576 acres in the county of the City of Galway, valued
+at L1202. These, I believe, are statute acres, and in estimating the
+relation of Irish rentals to Irish land this fact must be always
+ascertained. Of the so-called "Woodford" property the present rental is
+no more than L1900, payable by 260 tenants. The Poor-Law valuation for
+taxes is L2400. There was a revision of the whole Galway property made
+by the father of the present Marquis. Of the 260 Woodford holdings only
+twelve were increased, in no case more than 6-1/4 per cent, over the
+valuation. In 1882 six of these twelve tenants applied to the Land
+Court. The rents were in no case restored to the figures before 1872,
+but about 7 per cent. was taken off the increased rental. The assertion
+repeatedly made that in 1882 rents were reduced by the Land Court 50 per
+cent. on the Clanricarde estates, Mr. Tener tells me, is absolutely
+false. In the first year of the Court no reduction went beyond 10 per
+cent., and in later years, even under the panic of low prices, the
+average has not exceeded 20 per cent.
+
+After making arrangements for a car to take me on to Woodlawn, where I
+was to catch the Dublin train, I went out with Mr. Tener to look at the
+town.
+
+My drive from Loughrea to Woodlawn was delightful. It took me over a
+long stretch of the best hunting country of Galway, and my jarvey was a
+Galwegian of the type dear to the heart of Lever. He was a "Nationalist"
+after his fashion, but he did not hesitate to come rattling up through
+the town to the Estate Office to take me up; and after we got fairly off
+upon the highway, he spoke with more freedom than respect of all sorts
+and conditions of men in and about Loughrea.
+
+"He's a sharp little man, that Mr. Tener," he said, "and he gave the
+boys a most beautiful beating at Burke's place."
+
+This was said with genuine gusto, and not at all in the querulous spirit
+of the delightful member of Parliament who complained at Westminster
+with unconscious humour that the agent and the police in that case had
+"dishonourably" stolen a march on the defenders of Cloondadauv!
+
+"But we've beaten them entirely," he said, with equal zest, "at Marble
+Hill. Sir Henry has agreed to pay all the costs, and the living expenses
+too, of the poor men that were put out.[19] I didn't ever think we'd get
+that; but ye see the truth is," he added confidentially, "he must have
+the money, Sir Henry--he's lying out of a deal, and then there's heavy
+charges on the property. A fine property it is indeed!"
+
+"In fact," I said, "you put Sir Henry to the wall. Is that it?"
+
+"Well, it's like that. But we shan't get that out of Clanricarde, I'm
+thinking. He's got a power o' money they tell me; and he's that of the
+ould Burke blood, he won't mind fighting just as long as you like!"
+
+As we drove along, he pointed out to me several fine stretches of
+hunting country, and, to my surprise, informed me that only the other
+day "there was as fine a meet as ever you saw, more than a hundred
+ladies and gentlemen--a grand sight it was."
+
+I asked if the hunting had not been "put down by the League."
+
+"Oh, now then, sir, who'd be wanting to put down the hunting here in
+Galway?--and Ballinasloe? Were you ever at Ballinasloe? just the
+grandest horse fair there is in the whole wide world!"
+
+I insisted that I had always heard a great deal about the opposition of
+the League to hunting.
+
+"Oh, that'll be some little lawyer fellow," he replied, "like that
+Healy, that can't sit on a horse! It's the grandest country in all the
+world for riding over. What for wouldn't they ride over it?"
+
+"Were there many went out to America from about Loughrea?"
+
+"Oh, yes; they were always coming and going. But as many came back."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Oh, they didn't like the country. It wasn't as good a country, was it,
+as old Ireland? And they had to work too hard; and then some of them got
+money, and they'd like to spend it in the old place."
+
+The country about Woodlawn is very picturesque and well wooded, and for
+a long distance we followed the neatly-kept stone walls of the large and
+handsome park of Lord Ashtown.
+
+"The most beautiful and biggest trees in all Ireland, sorr," said the
+jarvey, "and it's a great pity, it is, ye can't stay to let me drive you
+all over it, for the finest part of the park is just what you can't see
+from this road. Oh, her ladyship would never object to any gentleman
+driving about to see the beauties of the place. She is a very good
+woman, is her ladyship. She gave work the last Christmas to thirty-two
+men, and there wasn't another house in the country there that had work
+for more than ten or twelve. A very good woman she is, indeed."
+
+"Yes, that is a very handsome church, it is indeed. It is the Protestant
+Church. Lord Ashtown built it; he was a very good man too, and did a
+power of good--building and making roads, and giving work to the people.
+He was buried there in that Castle, over the station--Trench's Castle,
+they called it."
+
+"All that lumber there by the station?"
+
+"That came out of the Ashtown woods. They were always cutting down the
+trees; there was so many of them you might be cutting for years--you
+would never get to the end of them."
+
+Woodlawn Station is one of the neatest and prettiest railway stations I
+have seen in Ireland--more like a picturesque stone cottage, green and
+gay with flowers, than like a station. The station-master's family of
+cheery well-dressed lads and lasses went and came about the bright fire
+in the waiting-room in a friendly unobtrusive fashion, chatting with the
+policeman and the porter and the passengers. It was hard to believe
+one's-self within an easy drive of the "cockpit of Ireland."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+BORRIS, _Friday, March 2d._--This is the land of the Kavanaghs, and a
+lovely, picturesque, richly-wooded land it is. I left Dublin with Mr.
+Gyles by an afternoon train; the weather almost like June. We ran from
+the County of Dublin into Kildare, and from Kildare into Carlow, through
+hills; rural scenery quite unlike anything I have hitherto seen in
+Ireland. At Bagnalstown, a very pretty place, with a spire which takes
+the eye, our host joined us, and came on with us to this still more
+attractive spot. Borris has been the seat of his family for many
+centuries. The MacMorroghs of Leinster, whom the Kavanaghs lineally
+represent, dwelt here long before Dermot MacMorrogh, finding his
+elective throne in Leinster too hot to hold him, went off into
+Aquitaine, to get that famous "letter of marque" from Henry II. of
+England, with the help of which this king without a kingdom induced
+Richard de Clare, an earl without an earldom, to lend him a hand and
+bring the Normans into Ireland. Many of this race lie buried in the
+ruins of St. Mullen's Abbey, on the Barrow, in this county. But none of
+them, I opine, ever did such credit to the name as its present
+representative, Arthur MacMorrogh Kavanagh.
+
+I had some correspondence with Mr. Kavanagh several years ago, when he
+sent me, through my correspondent for publication in New York, a very
+striking statement of his views on the then condition of Irish
+affairs--views since abundantly vindicated; and like most people who
+have paid any attention to the recent history of Ireland, I knew how
+wonderful an illustration his whole career has been of what philosophers
+call the superiority of man to his accidents, and plain people the power
+of the will. But I knew this only imperfectly. His servant brought him
+up to the carriage and placed him in it. This it was impossible not to
+see. But I had not talked with him for five minutes before it quite
+passed out of my mind. Never was there such a justification of the
+paradoxical title which Wilkinson gave to his once famous book, _The
+Human Body, and its Connexion with Man_,--never such a living refutation
+of the theory that it is the thumb which differentiates man from the
+lower animals. Twenty times this evening I have been reminded of the
+retort I heard made the other day at Cork by a lawyer, who knows Mr.
+Kavanagh well, to a priest of "Nationalist" proclivities, who knows him
+not at all. Some allusion having been made to Borris, the lawyer said to
+me, "You will see at Borris the best and ablest Irishman alive." On this
+the priest testily and tartly broke in, "Do you mean the man without
+hands or feet?"
+
+"I mean," replied the lawyer, very quietly, "the man in whom all that
+has gone in you or me to arms and legs has gone to heart and head!"
+
+Borris House stands high in the heart of an extensive and nobly wooded
+park, and commands one of the finest landscapes I have seen in Ireland.
+As we stood and gazed upon it from the hall door, the distant hills were
+touched with a soft purple light such as transfigures the Apennines at
+sunset.
+
+"You should see this view in June," said Mrs, Kavanagh, "we are all
+brown and bare now."
+
+Brown and bare, like most other terms, are relative. To the eye of an
+American this whole region now seems a sea of verdure, less clear and
+fresh, I can easily suppose, than it may be in the early summer, but
+verdure still. And one must get into the Adirondacks, or up among the
+mountains of Western Virginia, to find on our Atlantic slope such trees
+as I have this evening seen. One grand ilex near the house could hardly
+be matched in the Villa d'Este.
+
+The house is stately and commodious, and more ancient than it appears to
+be,--so many additions have been made to it at different times. It has
+passed through more than one siege, and in the '98 Mr. Kavanagh tells me
+the townspeople of Borris came up here and sought refuge. There are vast
+caverns under the house and grounds, doubtless made by taking out from
+the hill the stone used in building this house, and the fortresses which
+stood here before it. In these all sorts of stores were kept, and many
+of the people found shelter.
+
+I need not say that there is a banshee at Borris--though no living
+witness, I believe, has heard its warning wail. But as we sat in the
+beautiful library, and watched the dying light of day, a lady present
+told us a tale more gruesome than many of those in which the "psychical"
+inquirers delight. She was sitting, she said, in an upper room of an
+ancient mansion here in Carlow, in which she lives, when, from the lawn
+below, there came up to her a low, sad, shrill cry--the croon of a
+woman, such as one hears from the mourners sitting among the turbaned
+tombstones of the hill of Eyoub at Constantinople. It startled her, and
+she held her breath and listened. She was alone, as she knew, in that
+part of the house, and the hall door below was unlocked, as is the
+fashion still in Ireland, despite all the troubles and turmoils. Again
+the sound came, and this time nearer to the house. Could it be the
+banshee? Again and again it rose and died away, each time nearer and
+nearer. Then, as she listened, all her nerves strung to the keenest
+sensibility, it came again, and now, beyond a doubt, within the hall
+below.
+
+With an effort she rose from her chair, opened a door leading into a
+corridor running aside from the main stairway, and fled at full speed
+towards the wing in which she knew that she would find some of the
+maids. As she sped along she heard the cry again and again far behind
+her, as from a creature slowly and steadily mounting the grand stairway
+towards the room which she had just quitted.
+
+She found the maids, who fell into a terrible fright when she told her
+story and dared not budge. So the bells were violently rung till the
+butler and footman appeared. To the first she said simply, "There is a
+mad woman in this house--go and find her!"
+
+"The man looked at me," she said, "as I spoke with a curious expression
+in his face as of one who thought, 'yes, there is a mad woman in the
+house, and she is not far to seek!'"
+
+But the lady insisted, and the men finally went off on their quest. In
+the course of half an hour it was rewarded. The mad woman--a dangerous
+creature--who had wandered away from an asylum in the neighbourhood, was
+found curled up and fast asleep in the lady's own bed!
+
+Fancy a delicate woman going alone into her bedroom at midnight to be
+suddenly confronted by an apparition of that sort!
+
+
+BORRIS, _March 3d._--After a stroll on the lawn this morning, the wide
+and glorious prospect bathed in the light of a really soft spring day, I
+had a conversation with Mr. Kavanagh about the Land Corporation, of
+which he is the guiding spirit. This is a defensive organisation of the
+Irish landlords against the Land League. When a landlord has been driven
+into evicting his tenants, the next step, in the "war against
+landlordism," is to prevent other tenants from taking the vacated lands
+and cultivating them. This is accomplished by "boycotting" any man who
+does this as a "land-grabber."
+
+The ultimate sanction of the "boycott" being "murder," derelict farms
+increased under this system very rapidly; and the Eleventh Commandment
+of the League, "Thou shalt not pay the rent which thy neighbour hath
+refused to pay," was in a fair way to dethrone the Ten Commandments of
+Sinai throughout Ireland, even before the formal adoption in 1886 of the
+"Plan of Campaign."
+
+Mr. Gladstone would perhaps have hit the facts more accurately, if,
+instead of calling an eviction in Ireland a "sentence of death," he had
+called the taking of a tenancy a sentence of death. Mr. Hussey at Lixnaw
+had two tenants, Edmond and James Fitzmaurice. Edmond Fitzmaurice was
+"evicted" in May 1887; but he was taken into the house of a neighbour,
+made very comfortable, and still lives. James Fitzmaurice took, for the
+sake of the family, the land from which Edmond was evicted, and for this
+he was denounced as a "land-grabber," boycotted, and finally shot dead
+in the presence of his daughter.
+
+At a meeting in Dublin in the autumn of 1885, a parish priest, the Rev.
+Mr. Cantwell, described it as a "cardinal virtue" that "no one should
+take a farm from which another had been evicted," and called upon the
+people who heard him to "pass any such man by unnoticed, and treat him
+as an enemy in their midst." Public opinion and the law, if not the
+authorities of his church would make short work of any priest who talked
+in this fashion in New York. But in Ireland, and under the British
+Government, it seems they order things differently. So it occurred one
+day to the landlords thus assailed, as it did to the sea-lions of the
+Cape of Good Hope when the French sailors attacked them, that they might
+defend themselves.
+
+To this end the Land Corporation was instituted, with a considerable
+capital at its back, and Mr. Kavanagh at its head. The "plan of
+campaign" of this Corporation is to take over from the landlords
+derelict lands and cultivate them, stocking them where that is
+necessary.
+
+It is in this way that the derelict lands on the Ponsonby property at
+Youghal are now worked. But Mr. Kavanagh tells me that the men employed
+by the Corporation, of whom Father Keller spoke as a set of desperadoes
+or "_enfants perdus_," are really a body of resolute and capable working
+men farmers. Many, but by no means all of them, are Protestants and
+Ulstermen; and that they are up to their work would seem to be shown by
+the fact stated to me, that in no case so far have any of them been
+deterred and driven off from the holdings confided to them. A great part
+of the Luggacurren property of Lord Lansdowne is now worked by the
+Corporation; and Mr. Kavanagh was kind enough to let me see the
+accounts, which indicate a good business result for the current year on
+that property. This is all very interesting. But what a picture it
+presents of social demoralisation! And what is to be the end of it all?
+Can a country be called civilised in which a farmer with a family to
+maintain, having the capital and the experience necessary to manage
+successfully a small farm, is absolutely forbidden, on pain of social
+ostracism, and eventually on pain of death, by a conspiracy of his
+neighbours, to take that farm of its lawful owner at what he considers
+to be a fair rent? And how long can any civilisation of our complex
+modern type endure in a country in which such a state of things
+tolerated by the alleged Government of that country has to be met, and
+more or less partially mitigated, by deviating to the cultivation of
+farms rendered in this way derelict large amounts of capital which might
+be, and ought to be, far more profitably employed in other ways?
+
+Mr. Kavanagh, after serving the office of High Sheriff thirty years ago,
+first for Kilkenny, and then for Carlow, sat in Parliament for fourteen
+years, from 1866 to 1880, as an Irish county member. He has a very large
+property here in Carlow, and property also in Wexford, and in Kilkenny,
+and was sworn into the Privy Council two years ago. If the personal
+interests and the family traditions of any man alive can be said to be
+rooted in the Irish soil, this is certainly true of his interests and
+his traditions. How can the peace and prosperity of Ireland be served by
+a state of things which condemns an Irishman of such ties and such
+training to expend his energies and his ability in defending the
+elementary right of Paddy O'Rourke to take stock and work a ten-acre
+farm on terms that suit himself and his landlord?
+
+In the afternoon we took a delightful walk through the woods, Mr.
+Kavanagh going with us on horseback. Every hill and clump of trees on
+this large domain he knows, and he led us like a master of woodcraft
+through all manner of leafy byways to the finest points of view. The
+Barrow flows past Borris, making pictures at every turn, and the banks
+on both sides are densely and beautifully wooded. We came in one place
+upon a sawmill at work in the forest, and Mr. Kavanagh showed us with
+pride the piles of excellent timber which he turns out here. But he took
+a greater pride in a group, sacred from the axe, of really magnificent
+Scotch firs, such as I had certainly not expected to find in Ireland.
+Nearer the mansion are some remarkable Irish yews. The gardens are of
+all sorts and very extensive, but we found the head-gardener bitterly
+lamenting the destruction by a fire in one of the conservatories of more
+than six thousand plants just prepared for setting out.
+
+There are many curious old books and papers here, and a student of early
+Irish history might find matter to keep him well employed for a long
+time in this region. It was from this region and the race which ruled
+it, of which race Mr. Kavanagh is the actual representative, that the
+initiative came of the first Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. Strongbow
+made what, from the Anglo-Norman point of view, was a perfectly
+legitimate bargain, with a dispossessed prince to help him to the
+recovery of his rights on the understanding that these rights, when
+recovered, should pass in succession to himself through the only
+daughter of the prince, whom he proposed to marry. It does not appear
+that Strongbow knew, or that Dermot MacMorrogh cared to tell him, how
+utterly unlike the rights of an Anglo-Norman prince were those of the
+elective life-tenant of an Irish principality. FitzStephen, the son by
+her second marriage of Nesta, the Welsh royal mistress of Henry
+Beauclerk, and his cousin, Maurice Fitzgerald, the leaders into Ireland
+of the Geraldines, were no more clear in their minds about this than
+Strongbow, and it is to the original muddle thus created that Professor
+Richey doubtless rightly refers the worst and most troublesome
+complications of the land question in Ireland. The distinction between
+the King's lieges and the "mere Irish," for example, is unquestionably a
+legal distinction, though it is continually and most mischievously used
+as if it were a proof of the race-hatred borne by the Normans and Saxons
+in Ireland from the first against the Celts. The O'Briens, the O'Neills,
+the O'Mullaghlins, the O'Connors, and the M'Morroghs, "the five bloods,"
+as they are called, were certainly Celts, but whether in virtue of their
+being, or claiming to be, the royal races respectively of Minister, of
+Ulster, of Meath, of Connaught, and of Leinster, or from whatever other
+reason, these races were "within the king's law," and were never "mere
+Irish" from the first planting of the Anglo-Norman power in Ireland. The
+case of a priest, Shan O'Kerry, "an Irish enemy of the king," presented
+"contrary to the form of statute" to the vicarage of Lusk, in the reign
+of Edward IV. (1465), illustrates this. An Act of Parliament was passed
+to declare the aforesaid "Shan O'Kerry," or "John of Kevernon," to be
+"English born, and of English nation," and that he might "hold and enjoy
+the said benefice."
+
+There is a genealogy here of the M'Morroghs and Kavanaghs, most
+gorgeously and elaborately gotten up many years ago for Mr. Kavanagh's
+grandfather, which shows how soon the Norman and the native strains of
+blood become commingled. When one remembers how much Norman blood must
+have gone even into far-off Connaught when King John, in the early part
+of the thirteenth century, coolly gave away that realm of the O'Connors
+to the De Burgos, and how continually the English of the Pale fled from
+the exactions inflicted upon them by their own people, and sought refuge
+"among the savage and mere Irish," one cannot help thinking that the"
+Race Question" has been "worked for at least all it is worth" by
+philosophers bent on unravelling the 'snarl' of Irish affairs. If this
+genealogy may be trusted, there was little to choose between the ages
+which immediately preceded and the ages which followed the Anglo-Norman
+invasion in the matter of respect for human life. Celtic chiefs and
+Norman knights "died in their boots" as regularly as frontiersmen in
+Texas. One personage is designated in the genealogy as "the murderer,"
+for the truly Hibernian reason, so far as appears, that he was himself
+murdered while quite a youth, and before he had had a chance to murder
+more than three or four of his immediate relatives. It was as if the son
+of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Lady Constance should be branded in
+history as "Arthur, the Assassin."
+
+
+BORRIS, _March 4th._--This is a staunch Protestant house, and Mr.
+Kavanagh himself reads a Protestant service every morning. But there is
+little or nothing apparently in this part of Ireland of the bitter
+feeling about and against the Catholics which exists in the North. A
+very lively and pleasant Catholic gentleman came in to-day informally
+and joined the house party at luncheon. We all walked out over the
+property afterwards, visiting quite a different region from that which
+we saw yesterday--different but equally beautiful and striking, and this
+Catholic gentleman cited several cases which had fallen within his own
+knowledge of priests who begin to feel their moral control of the people
+slipping away from them through the operation of the "Plan of Campaign."
+I told him what I had heard in regard to one such priest from my
+ecclesiastical friend in Cork. "It does not surprise me at all," he
+said, "and, indeed, I not very long ago read precisely such another
+letter from a priest in a somewhat similar position. I read it with pain
+and shame as a Catholic," he continued, "for it was simply a complete
+admission that the priest, although entirely convinced that his
+parishioners were making most unfair demands upon their landlord to whom
+the letter was addressed, felt himself entirely powerless to bring them
+to a sense of their misconduct." "Had this priest given in his adhesion
+to the Plan of Campaign?" I asked. "Yes," was the reply, "and it was
+this fact which had broken his hold on the people when he tried to bring
+them to abandon their attitude under the Plan. His letter was really
+nothing more nor less than an appeal to the landlord, and that landlord
+a Protestant, to help him to get out of the hole into which he had put
+himself."
+
+Of the tenants and their relation to the village despots who administer
+the Plan of Campaign, this gentleman had many stories also to tell of
+the same tenor with all that I have hitherto heard on this subject.
+Everywhere it is the same thing. The well-to-do and well-disposed
+tenants are coerced by the thriftless and shiftless. "I have the
+agencies of several properties," he said, "and in some of the best parts
+of Ireland. I have had little or no trouble on any of them, for I have
+one uniform method. I treat every tenant as if he were the only man I
+had to deal with, study his personal ways and character, humour him, and
+get him on my side against himself. You can always do this with an
+Irishman if you will take the trouble to do it. Within the past years I
+have had tenants come and tell me they were in fear the Plan of Campaign
+would be brought upon them, just as if it were a kind of potato disease,
+and beg me to agree to take the rent from them in that case, and just
+not discover on them that they had paid it before it was due!"
+
+This gentleman is a pessimist as to the future. "I am a youngish man
+still," he said, "and a single man, and I am glad of it. I don't believe
+the English will ever learn how to govern this country, and I am sure it
+can never govern itself. Would your people make a State of it?"
+
+To this I replied that with Cuba and Canada and Mexico, all still to be
+digested and assimilated, I thought the deglutition of Ireland by the
+great Republic must be remitted to a future much too remote to interest
+either of us.
+
+"I suppose so," he said in a humorously despondent tone; "and so I see
+nothing for people who think as I do, but Australia or New Zealand!"
+
+Mr. Kavanagh sees the future, I think, in colouring not quite so dark.
+As a public man, familiar for years with the method and ways of British
+Parliaments, he seems to regard the possible future legislation of
+Westminster with more anxiety and alarm than the past or present
+agitations in Ireland. The business of banishing political economy to
+Jupiter and Saturn, however delightful it may be to the people who make
+laws, is a dangerous one to the people for whom the laws are made. While
+he has very positive opinions as to the wisdom of the concession made in
+the successive Land Acts for Ireland, which have been passed since 1870,
+he is much less disquieted, I think, by those concessions, than by the
+spirit by which the legislation granting them has been guided. He thinks
+great good has been already done by Mr. Balfour, and that much more good
+will be done by him if the Irish people are made to feel that clamorous
+resistance to the law will no longer be regarded at Westminster as a
+sufficient reason for changing the law. That is as much as to say that
+party spirit in Great Britain is the chief peril of Ireland to-day. And
+how can any Irishman, no matter what his state in his own country may
+be, or his knowledge of Irish affairs, or his patriotic earnestness and
+desire for Irish prosperity, hope to control the tides of party spirit
+in England or Scotland?
+
+Of the influence upon the people in Ireland of the spirit of recent
+legislation for Ireland, the story of the troubles on the O'Grady
+estate, as Mr. Kavanagh tells it to me, is a most striking illustration.
+"The O'Grady of Kilballyowen," as his title shows, is the direct
+representative, not of any Norman invader, but of an ancient Irish race.
+The O'Gradys were the heads of a sept of the "mere Irish"; and if there
+be such a thing--past, present, or future--as an "Irish nation," the
+place of the O'Gradys in that nation ought to be assumed. Mr. Thomas De
+Courcy O'Grady, who now wears the historic designation, owns and lives
+on an estate of a little more than 1000 acres, in the Golden Vein of
+Ireland, at Killmallock, in the county of Limerick. The land is
+excellent, and for the last half-century certainly it has been let to
+the tenants at rents which must be considered fair, since they have
+never been raised. In 1845, two years before the great famine, the
+rental was L2142. This rental was paid throughout the famine years
+without difficulty; and in 1881 the rental stood at L2108.
+
+There has never been an eviction on the estate until last year, when six
+tenants were evicted. All of these lived in good comfortable houses, and
+were prosperous dairy-farmers. Why were they evicted?
+
+In October 1886, during the candidacy at New York of the Land Reformer,
+Mr. George, Mr. Dillon, M.P., propounded the "Plan of Campaign" at
+Portumna in Galway. The March rents being then due on the estate of The
+O'Grady in Limerick, his agent, Mr. Shine, was directed to continue the
+abatements of 15 per cent, on the judicial rents, and of 25 per cent, on
+all other rents, which had been cheerfully accepted in 1885. But there
+was a priest at Kilballyowen, Father Ryan, who wrought upon the tenants
+until they demanded a general abatement of 40 per cent. This being
+refused, they asked for 30 per cent. on the judicial rents, and 40 per
+cent. on the others. This also being refused, Father Ryan had his way,
+and the "Plan of Campaign" was adopted. The O'Grady's writs issued
+against several of the tenants were met by a "Plan of Campaign" auction
+of cattle at Herbertstown in December 1886, the returns of which were
+paid into "the Fund." For this, one of the tenants, Thomas Moroney, who
+held, besides a a farm of 37 Irish acres, a "public," and five small
+houses, at Herbertstown, and the right to the tolls on cattle at the
+Herbertstown farm, valued at from L50 to L60 a year, and who held all
+these at a yearly rent of L85, was proceeded against. Judge Boyd
+pronounced him a bankrupt.
+
+In the spring of 1887, after The O'Grady had been put to great costs and
+trouble, the tenants made a move. They offered to accept a general
+abatement of 17-1/2 per cent., "The O'Grady to pay all the costs."
+
+Here is the same story again of the small solicitors behind the "Plan of
+Campaign" promoting the strife, and counting on the landlords to defray
+the charges of battle!
+
+The O'Grady responded with the following circular:--
+
+ KlLLBALLYOWEN, BRUFF, CO. LlMERICK,
+
+ _13th August 1877_.
+
+ To my Tenants on Kilballyowen and Herbertstown Estate, Co.
+ Limerick.
+
+ MY FRIENDS,--Pending the evictions by the Sheriff on my estate,
+ caused by your refusal to pay judicial rents on offers of liberal
+ abatements, I desire to remind you of the following facts:--
+
+ I am a resident landlord; my ancestors have dwelt amongst you for
+ over 400 years; every tenant is personally known to me, and the
+ most friendly relations have always existed between us.
+
+ I am not aware of there ever having been an eviction by the Sheriff
+ on my estate.
+
+ Farming myself over 400 acres, and my late agent (Mr. Shine), a
+ tenant farmer living within four miles of my property, I have every
+ opportunity of realising and knowing your wants.
+
+ On the passing of the Land Act of 1881, I desired you to have any
+ benefit it could afford you, and as you nearly all held under
+ lease--which precluded you from going into court--I intimated to
+ you my wish, and offered you to allow your lands to be valued at my
+ expense, or to let you go into court and get your rents fixed by
+ the sub-commissioners.
+
+ You elected to have a valuation made, and Mr. Edmond Moroney was
+ agreed on as a land-valuer, possessing the confidence of tenants
+ and landlord.
+
+ I may mention, up to then I had not known Mr. Moroney personally.
+
+ In 1883 Mr. Moroney valued your holdings, and, as a result, his
+ valuation was accepted (except in three or four cases), and
+ judicial agreements signed by you, at rents ascertained by Mr.
+ Moroney's valuation.
+
+ The late Patrick Hogan objected to Mr. Moroney's valuation of his
+ farm, and went into court, and had his rent fixed by the County
+ Court Judge.
+
+ Thomas Moroney would not allow Mr. Edmond Moroney to value his
+ holding, nor would he go into court, his reason no doubt being he
+ should disclose the receipts of the amount of the tolls of the
+ fairs.
+
+ The rents were subsequently paid on Mr. Moroney's valuation with
+ punctuality.
+
+ In 1885, recognising the fall in prices of stock and produce, and
+ at the request of my late agent, Mr. Shine, I directed him to allow
+ you 15 per cent. on all judicial rents, or rents abated on Mr.
+ Moroney's valuation, and 25 per cent. on all other rents, when you
+ paid punctually and with thanks.
+
+ In October last, when calling in the March 1886 rents, at the
+ instance of Mr. Shine, I agreed to continue the abatement of 15 per
+ cent, and 25 per cent., which, when intimated to you, were refused,
+ and a meeting held, demanding an all-round abatement of 40 per
+ cent.
+
+ This I considered unreasonable and unjust, and I refused to give
+ it.
+
+ The Plan of Campaign was then most unjustly adopted on the estate,
+ and you refused to pay your rents.
+
+ Thomas Moroney was elected as a test case to try the legality of
+ the sale and removal of your property to avoid payment of your
+ rent. His tenancy was a mixed holding of house property in the
+ village of Herbertstown, the tolls of the fairs, and 37 acres of
+ land, at a rent of L85, and a Poor-Law valuation of L73, 5s., made
+ as follows:--
+
+ Land valued at L42 5 0
+ Tolls of fair at 17 0 0
+ Public house and yard at 11 0 0
+ Five small houses and forge at 3 0 0
+ --------
+ L73 5 0
+
+ I always was led to believe the tolls of the fair averaged from L50
+ to L60 a year, there being four fairs in the year; and I believe
+ his reason for refusing to allow Mr. E. Moroney to value his
+ holding, or to go into court, was that he should disclose the
+ amount of the tolls, and in consequence I never considered he was
+ entitled to any abatement; but still I gave it to him, and was
+ prepared to do so. The result of his case was that his conduct in
+ making away with his property was unjustifiable, and his farm and
+ holding was sold out for the benefit of his creditors, and he is no
+ longer a tenant on the estate.
+
+ I subsequently took proceedings against six other tenants, who
+ refused payment of rent, and removed their cattle off the land to
+ avoid payment, and having got judgment against them, the Sheriff
+ sold out four of their farms, and writs of possession on the title
+ were taken out against them, and are now lodged with the Sheriff
+ for execution. I have also got judgments for possession against two
+ other tenants for non-payment of rent, also lodged with the
+ Sheriff. One the widow of Patrick Hogan, who got his rent fixed in
+ the County Court, and the other Mrs. Denis Ryan, whose farm on her
+ marriage I assented to be put in settlement for her protection, Mr.
+ Shine, my agent, consenting to act as one of her trustees, whose
+ name, with his co-trustee, Mr. Thomas FitzGerald, appear as
+ defendants, they having signed her judicial agreement.
+
+ The following are the names of the above tenants, the extent of
+ their holdings, the rent, the Poor-Law valuation, and the average
+ rent per Irish acre:--
+
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | Acreage in | Judicial | Rent | |
+ | TENANT. | Irish | Rent Less 20| per | Poor Law |
+ | | Measure. | per cent. | acre[A]| Valuation |
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | A. R. P. | L s. d. | | L s. d. |
+ |John Carroll, | 87 3 38 | 132 4 0 | 30/- | 127 10 0 |
+ |Honora Crimmins, | 35 0 27 | 64 5 6 | 36/6 | 52 15 0 |
+ |James Baggott, | 18 0 0 | 37 16 10 | 42/- | 22 5 0 |
+ |Margaret Moloney, | 23 2 9 | 46 2 8 | 39/2 | 44 15 0 |
+ |Mrs. Denis Ryan, | 66 2 3 | 93 2 5 | 28/- | 96 0 0 |
+ |Maryanne Hogan, | 53 2 33 | 112 0 0 | 41/8 | 117 15 0 |
+ | +------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+ | | 294 3 30 | 485 11 5 | ... | 461 0 0 |
+ +------------------+------------+-------------+---------+-----------+
+
+ [A] Rent per Irish acre after abatement of 20 per cent.
+
+ This represents an average of 34s. the Irish acre, for some of the
+ best land in Ireland, and shows a difference of only L24, 11s. 5d.
+ between the rent, less 20 per cent. now offered, and Poor-Law
+ valuation.
+
+ After putting me to the cost of these proceedings, and giving me
+ every opposition and annoyance, amongst such, compelling my agent
+ (by threats of boycotting) to resign, boycotting myself and
+ household, preventing my servants from attending chapel, and
+ driving my labourers away, negotiations for a settlement were
+ opened, and you offered to accept an all-round abatement of 17-1/2
+ per cent. and to pay up one year's rent, provided I paid all costs,
+ including the costs in Moroney's case; this of course I refused,
+ but with a desire to aid you in coming to a settlement, and to
+ prevent the loss to the tenants of the farms under eviction on the
+ Title, I offered to allow the 17-1/2 per cent. all round on payment
+ of one year's rent and costs, and to give time for payment of the
+ costs as stated in my Solicitor's letter of the 2d June 1887 to
+ Canon Scully.
+
+ This offer was refused, and the writs for possession have been
+ lodged with the Sheriff.
+
+ I never commenced these proceedings in a vindictive spirit, or with
+ any desire to punish any of you for your ungracious conduct, but
+ simply to protect my property from unjust and unreasonable demands.
+
+ You will owe two years' rent next month (September), and I now
+ write you this circular letter to point out to each, individually,
+ the position of the tenants under eviction, and even at this late
+ hour to give them an opportunity of saving their holdings, to
+ enable them to do so, and with a view to settlement, I am now
+ prepared to allow 20 per cent. all round, on payment of a year's
+ rent and costs.
+
+ Under no circumstance will I forego payment of costs, as they must
+ be paid in full.
+
+ If this money be paid forthwith, I will arrange with my brother,
+ the purchaser, to restore the four holdings purchased by him at
+ sheriff's sale to the late tenants.
+
+ After this offer I disclaim any responsibility for the result of
+ the evictions, and the loss attendant thereon, as it now remains
+ with you to avert same.
+
+
+All the evictions have since been carried out, and the Land Corporation
+men are at work upon the estate! Whom has all this advantaged? The
+tenants?--Certainly not. The O'Grady?--Certainly not. The peace and
+order of Ireland?--Certainly not. But it has given the National League
+another appeal to the intelligent "sympathies" of England and America.
+It has strengthened the revolutionary element in Irish society. It has
+"driven another nail into the coffin" of Irish landlordism and of the
+private ownership of land throughout Great Britain.
+
+
+Such at least is the opinion of Mr. Kavanagh. If I were an Englishman or
+a Scotchman, I should be strongly inclined to take very serious account
+of this opinion in forecasting the future of landed property in England
+or Scotland.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+GREENANE HOUSE, THOMASTOWN, _March 5th._--The breakfast-room at Borris
+this morning was gay with pink coats. A meet was to come off at a place
+between Borris and Thomastown, and bidding fare-well to my cordial host
+and hostess, I set out at 11 o'clock for a flying visit to this quaint
+and charming house of Mr. Seigne, one of the best known and most highly
+esteemed agents in this part of Ireland.
+
+My jarvey from Borris had an unusually neat and well-balanced car. When
+I praised it he told me it was "built by an American," not an Irish
+American, I understood him to say, but a genuine Yankee, who, for some
+mysterious reason, has established himself in this region, where he has
+prospered as a cart and car builder ever since. "Just the best cars in
+all Ireland he builds, your honour!" Why don't he naturalise them in
+America?
+
+All the way was charming, the day very bright, and even warm, and the
+hill scenery picturesque at every turn. We looked out sharply for the
+hunt, but in vain. My jarvey, who knew the whole country, said they must
+have broken cover somewhere on the upper road, and we should miss them
+entirely. And so we did.
+
+The silting up of the river Nore has reduced Thomastown or
+Ballymacanton, which was its Irish name, from its former importance as
+an emporium for the country about Kilkenny. The river now is not
+navigable above Inistiogue. But two martial square towers, one at either
+end of a fine bridge which spans the stream here, speak of the good old
+times when the masters of Thomastown took toll and tribute of traders
+and travellers. The lands about the place then belonged to the great
+monastery of Jerpoint, the ruins of which are still the most interesting
+of their kind in this part of Ireland. They have long made a part of the
+estate of the Butlers. We rattled rapidly through the quiet little town,
+and whisking out of a small public square into a sort of wynd between
+two houses, suddenly found ourselves in the precincts of Grenane House.
+The house takes its name from the old castle of Grenane, an Irish
+fortress established here by some native despot long before Thomas
+Fitz-Anthony the Norman came into the land. The ruins of this castle
+still stand some half a mile away. "We call the place Candahar," said
+Mr. Seigne, as he came up with two ladies from the meadows below the
+house, "because you come into it so suddenly, just as you do into that
+Oriental town." But what a charming occidental place it is! It stands
+well above the river, the slope adorned with many fine old trees, some
+of which grow, and grow prosperously, in the queerest and most
+improbable forms, bent double, twisted, but still most green and
+vigorous. They have no business under any known theory of arboriculture
+to be beautiful, but beautiful they are. The views of the bridge, of the
+towers, and of the river, from this slope would make the fortune of the
+place in a land of peace and order.
+
+A most original and delightful lady of the country lunched with
+us,--such a character as Miss Edgeworth or Miss Austen might have drawn.
+Shrewd, humorous, sensible, fearless, and ready with impartial hand to
+box the ears alike of Trojan and of Tyrian. She not only sees both sides
+of the question in Ireland as between the landlords and the tenants, but
+takes both sides of the question. She holds lands by inheritance, which
+make her keenly alive to the wrongs of the landlords, and she holds
+farms as a tenant, which make her implacably critical as to their
+claims. She mercilessly demolished in one capacity whatever she advanced
+in the other, and all with the most perfect nonchalance and good faith.
+This curiously dual attitude reminded me of the confederate General,
+Braxton Bragg, of whom his comrades in the old army of the United States
+used to say that he once had a very sharp official correspondence with
+himself. He happened to hold a staff appointment, being also a line
+officer. So in his quality of a staff officer, he found fault with
+himself in his capacity as a line officer, reprimanded himself sharply,
+replied defiantly to the reprimand, and eventually reported himself to
+himself for discipline at head-quarters. She told an excellent story of
+a near kinsman of hers who, holding a very good living in the Protestant
+Irish Church, came rather unexpectedly by inheritance into a baronetcy,
+upon which his women-folk insisted that it would be derogatory to a
+baronet to be a parson. "Would you believe it, the poor man was silly
+enough to listen to their cackle, and resign seven hundred a year!"
+
+"That didn't clear him," I said, "of the cloth, did it?"
+
+"Not a bit, of course, poor foolish man. He was just as much a parson as
+ever, only without a parsonage. Men are fools enough of themselves,
+don't you think, without needing to listen to women?"
+
+Mr. Seigne comes of a French Protestant stock long ago planted in
+Ireland, and his Gallic blood doubtless helps him to handle the
+practical problems daily submitted in these days to an Irish
+land-agent--problems very different, as he thinks, from those with which
+an Irish agent had to deal in the days before 1870. The Irish tenant has
+a vantage-ground now in his relations with his landlord which he never
+had in the olden time, and this makes it more important than it ever was
+that the agent should have what may be called a diplomatic taste for
+treating with individuals, finding out the bent of mind of this man and
+of that, and negotiating over particulars, instead of insisting, in the
+English fashion, on general rules, without regard to special cases. I
+have met no one who has seemed to me so cool and precise as Mr. Seigne
+in his study of the phenomena of the present situation. I asked him
+whether he could now say, as Mr. Senior did a quarter of century ago,
+that the Irish tenants were less improvident, and more averse from
+running into debt than the English.
+
+"I think not," he replied; "on the contrary, in some parts of Ireland
+now the shopkeepers are kept on the verge of bankruptcy by the
+recklessness with which the tenants incurred debts immediately after the
+passing of the Land Act of 1870--a time when shopkeepers, and bankers
+also, almost forced credit upon the farmers, and made thereby 'bad
+debts' innumerable. Farmers rarely keep anything like an account of
+their receipts and expenses. I know only one tenant-farmer in this
+neighbourhood who keeps what can be called an account, showing what he
+takes from his labour and spends on his living."[20] "They save a great
+deal of money often," he says, "but almost never in any systematic way.
+They spend much less on clothes and furniture, and the outward show of
+things, than English people of the same condition do, and they do not
+stint themselves in meat and drink as the French peasants do. In fact,
+under the operation of existing circumstances, they are getting into the
+way of improving their condition, not so much by sacrifices and savings,
+as by an insistence on rent being fixed low enough to leave full margin
+for improved living."
+
+"I had a very frank statement on this point," said Mr. Seigne, "not long
+ago from a Tipperary man. When I tried to show him that his father had
+paid a good many years ago the very same rent which he declares himself
+unable to pay now, he admitted this at once. But it was a confession and
+avoidance. 'My father could pay the rent, and did pay the rent,' he
+said, 'because he was content to live so that he could pay it. He sat on
+a boss of straw, and ate out of a bowl. He lived in a way in which I
+don't intend to live, and so he could pay the rent. Now, I must have,
+and I mean to have, out of the land, before I pay the rent, the means of
+living as I wish to live; and if I can't have it, I'll sell out and go
+away; but I'll be--if I don't fight before I do that same!'"
+
+"What could you reply to that?" I asked.
+
+"Oh," I said, "'that's square and straightforward. Only just let me know
+the point at which you mean to fight, and then we'll see if we can agree
+about something.'"
+
+"The truth is," said Mr. Seigne, "that there is a pressure upward now
+from below. The labourers don't want to live any longer as the farmers
+have always made them live; and so the farmers, having to consider the
+growing demands of the labourers, and meaning to live better themselves,
+push up against the landlord, and insist that the means of the
+improvement shall come out of him."
+
+He then told me an instructive story of his calling upon a
+tenant-farmer, at whose place he found the labourers sitting about their
+meal of pork and green vegetables. The farmer asked him into another
+room, where he saw the farmer's family making their meal of stirabout
+and milk and potatoes.
+
+"I asked you in here," said the farmer, "because we keep in here to
+ourselves. I don't want those fellows to see that we can't afford to
+give ourselves what we have to give them,"--this with strong language
+indicating that he must himself be given a way to advance equally with
+the progressive labourer, or he would know the reason why!
+
+This afternoon Mr. Seigne drove me over through a beautiful country to
+Woodstock, near Inistiogue, the seat of the late Colonel Tighe, the head
+of the family of which the authoress of "Psyche" was an ornament.
+
+It is the finest place in this part of Ireland, and one of the finest I
+have seen in the three kingdoms, a much more picturesque and more nobly
+planted place indeed than its namesake in England. The mansion has no
+architectural pretensions, being simply a very large and, I should
+think, extremely comfortable house of the beginning of this century. The
+library is very rich, and there are some good pictures, as well as
+certain statues in the vestibule, which would have no interest for the
+Weissnichtwo professor of _Sartor Resartus_, but are regarded with some
+awe by the good people of Inistiogue.
+
+The park would do no discredit to a palace, and if the vague project of
+establishing a royal residence in Ireland for one of the British Princes
+should ever take shape, it would not be easy, I should say, to find a
+demesne more befitting the home of a prince than this of the Tighes. At
+present it serves the State at least as usefully, being the "pleasaunce"
+of the people for miles around, who come here freely to walk and drive.
+
+It stretches for miles along the Nore, and is crowned by a gloriously
+wooded hill nearly a thousand feet in height. The late Colonel Tighe, a
+most accomplished man, and a passionate lover of trees, made it a kind
+of private Kew Gardens. He planted long avenues of the rarest and finest
+trees, araucarias, Scotch firs, oaks, beeches, cedars of Lebanon; laid
+out miles of the most varied and delightful drives, and built the most
+extensive conservatories in Ireland.
+
+The turfed and terraced walks among those conservatories are
+indescribably lovely, and the whole place to-day was vocal with
+innumerable birds. Picturesque little cottages and arbours are to be
+found in unexpected nooks all through the woodlands, each commanding
+some green vista of forest aisles, or some wide view of hill and
+champaign, enlivened by the winding river. From one of those to-day we
+looked out over a landscape to which Turner alone or Claude could have
+done justice, the river, spanned by a fine bridge, in the middle
+distance, and all the region wooded as in the days of which Edmund
+Spenser sings, when Ireland
+
+ "Flourished in fame,
+ Of wealth and goodnesse far above the rest
+ Of all that bears the British Islands' name."
+
+Over the whole place broods an indefinable charm. You feel that this was
+the home at once and the work of a refined and thoughtful spirit. And so
+indeed it was. Here for the greater part of the current century the
+owner lived, making the development of the estate and of this demesne
+his constant care and chief pleasure. And here still lives his widow,
+with whom we took tea in a stately quiet drawing-room. Lady Louisa Tighe
+was in Brussels with her mother, the Duchess of Richmond, on the eve of
+Waterloo. She was a child then of ten years old, and her mother bade
+them bring her down into the historic ball-room before the Duke of
+Wellington left it. The duke took up his sword. "Let Louisa buckle it
+for you," said her mother, and when the little girl had girded it on,
+the great captain stooped, took her up in his arms, and kissed her. "One
+never knows what may happen, child," he said good-naturedly; and taking
+his small gold watch out of his fob, he bade her keep it for him.
+
+She keeps it still. For more than sixty years it has measured out in
+this beautiful Irish home the hours of a life given to good works and
+gracious usefulness. To-day, with all the vivacity of interest in the
+people and the place which one might look for in a woman of twenty, this
+charming old lady of eighty-three, showing barely threescore years in
+her carriage, her countenance, and her voice, entertained us with minute
+and most interesting accounts of the local industries which flourish
+here mainly through her sympathetic and intelligent supervision. We
+seemed to be in another world from the Ireland of Chicago or
+Westminster!
+
+Mr. Seigne drove me back here by a most picturesque road leading along
+the banks of the Nore, quite overhung with trees, which in places dip
+their branches almost into the swift deep stream. "This is the favourite
+drive of all the lovers hereabouts," he said, "and there is a spice of
+danger in it which makes it more romantic. Once, not very long ago, a
+couple of young people, too absorbed in their love-making to watch their
+horse, drove off the bank. Luckily for them they fell into the branches
+of one of these overhanging trees, while the horse and car went plunging
+into the water. There they swung, holding each other hand in hand,
+making a pretty and pathetic tableau, till their cries brought some
+anglers in a boat on the river to the rescue."
+
+We spoke of Lady Louisa, and of the watch of Waterloo. "That watch had a
+wonderful escape a few years ago," said Mr. Seigne.
+
+Lady Louisa, it seems, had a confidential butler whom she most
+implicitly trusted. One day it was found that a burglary had apparently
+been committed at Woodstock, and that with a quantity of jewelry the
+priceless watch had vanished. The butler was very active about the
+matter, and as no trace could be found leading out of the house, he
+intimated a suspicion that the affair might possibly have some
+connection with a guest not long before at the house. This angered Lady
+Louisa, who thereupon consulted the agent, who employed a capable
+detective from Dublin. The detective came down to Inistiogue as a
+commercial traveller, wandered about, made the acquaintance of Lady
+Louisa's maid, of the butler, and of other people about the house, and
+formed his own conclusions. Two or three days after his arrival he
+walked into the shop of a small jeweller in a neighbouring town, and
+affecting a confidential manner, told the jeweller he wanted to buy
+"some of those things from Woodstock." The man was taken by surprise,
+and going into a backshop produced one very fine diamond, and a number
+of pieces of silver plate, of the disappearance of which the butler had
+said nothing to his mistress. This led to the arrest of the butler, and
+to the discovery that for a long time he had been purloining property
+from the house and selling it. Many cases of excellent claret had found
+their way in this fashion to a public-house which had acquired quite a
+reputation for its Bordeaux with the officers quartered in its
+neighbourhood. The wine-bins at Woodstock were found full of bottles of
+water. Much of the capital port left by Colonel Tighe had gone--but the
+hock was untouched. "Probably the butler didn't care for hock," said Mr.
+Seigne. The Waterloo watch was recovered from a very decent fellow, a
+travelling dealer, to whom it had been sold: and many pieces of jewelry
+were traced up to London. But Lady Louisa could not be induced to go up
+to London to identify them or testify.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Tuesday, March 6._--It is a curious fact, which I learned
+to-day from the Registrar-General, that the deposits in the Post-office
+Savings Banks have never diminished in Ireland since these banks were
+established.[21] These deposits are chiefly made, I understand, by the
+small tenants, who are less represented by the deposits in the General
+Savings Banks than are the shopkeepers and the cattle-drovers. In the
+General Savings Banks the deposit line fluctuates more; though on the
+whole there has been a steady increase in these deposits also throughout
+Ireland.
+
+Of the details of the dealings of the private banks it is very hard to
+get an accurate account. One gentleman, the manager of a branch of one
+important bank, tells me that a great deal of money is made by usurers
+out of the tenants, by backing their small bills. This practice goes
+back to the first establishment of banks in Ireland. Formerly it was not
+an uncommon thing for a landlord to offer his tenants a reduction, say,
+of twenty per cent., on condition of their paying the rent when it fell
+due. Such were the relations then between landlord and tenants, and so
+little was punctuality expected in such payments that this might be
+regarded as a sort of discount arrangement. The tenant who wished to
+avail himself of such an offer would go to some friendly local usurer
+and ask for a loan that he might avail himself of it. "One of these
+usurers, whom I knew very well," said the manager, "told me long ago
+that he found these operations very profitable. His method of procedure
+was to agree to advance the rent to the tenant at ten per cent., payable
+at a near and certain date. This would reduce the landlord's reduction
+at once, of course, for the tenant, to ten per cent., but that was not
+to be disdained; and so the bargain would be struck. If the money was
+repaid at the fixed date, it was not a bad thing for the usurer. But it
+was almost never so repaid; and with repeated renewals the usurer, by
+his own showing, used to receive eventually twenty, fifty, and, in some
+cases, nearly a hundred per cent, for his loan."
+
+It is the opinion of this gentleman that, under the "Plan of Campaign,"
+a good deal of money-making is done in a quiet way by some of the
+"trustees," who turn over at good interest, with the help of friendly
+financiers, the funds lodged with them, being held to account to the
+tenants only for the principal. "Of course," he said, "all this is
+doubtless at least as legitimate as any other part of the 'Plan,' and I
+daresay it all goes for 'the good of the cause.' But neither the tenants
+nor the landlords get much by it!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Thursday, March 8._--At eight o'clock this morning I left the
+Harcourt Street station for Inch, to take a look at the scene of the
+Coolgreany evictions of last summer. These evictions came of the
+adoption of the Plan of Campaign, under the direction of Mr. Dillon,
+M.P., on the Wexford property of Mr. George Brooke of Dublin. The agent
+of Mr. Brooke's estate, Captain Hamilton, is the honorary director of
+the Property Defence Association, so that we have here obviously a
+grapple between the National League doing the work, consciously or
+unconsciously, of the agrarian revolutionists, and a combination of
+landed proprietors fighting for the rights of property as they
+understand them.
+
+We ran through a beautiful country for the greater part of the way. At
+Bray, which is a favourite Irish watering-place, the sea broke upon us
+bright and full of life; and the station itself was more like a
+considerable English station than any I have seen. Thence we passed into
+a richly-wooded region, with neat, well-kept hedges, as far as Rathdrum
+and the "Sweet Vale of Avoca." The hills about Shillelagh are
+particularly well forested, though, as the name suggests, they must have
+been cut for cudgels pretty extensively for now a great many years. We
+came again on the sea at the fishing port of Arklow, where the stone
+walls about the station were populous with small ragamuffins, and at the
+station of Inch I found a car waiting for me with Mr. Holmes, a young
+English Catholic officer, who had most obligingly offered to show me the
+place and the people. We had hardly got into the roadway when we
+overtook a most intelligent-looking, energetic young priest, walking
+briskly on in the direction of our course. This was Dr. Dillon, the
+curate of Arklow. We pulled up at once, and Mr. Holmes, introducing me
+to him, we begged him to take a seat with us. He excused himself as
+having to join another priest with whom he was going to a function at
+Inch; but he was good enough to walk a little way with us, and gave me
+an appointment for 2 P.M. at his own town of Arklow, where I could catch
+the train back to Dublin. We drove on rapidly and called on Father
+O'Neill, the parish priest. We found him in full canonicals, as he was
+to officiate at the function this morning, and with him were Father
+Dunphy, the parish priest of Arklow, and two or three more robed
+priests.
+
+Father O'Neill, whose face and manner are those of the higher order of
+the continental clergy, briefly set forth to me his view of the
+transactions at Coolgreany. He said that before the Plan of Campaign was
+adopted by the tenants, Mr. William O'Brien, M.P., had written to him
+explaining what the effect of the Plan would be, and urging him to take
+whatever steps he could to obviate the necessity of adopting it, as it
+might eventually result to the disadvantage of the tenants. "To that
+end," said Father O'Neill, "I called upon Captain Hamilton, the agent,
+with Dr. Dillon of Arklow, but he positively refused to listen to us,
+and in fact ordered us, not very civilly, to leave his office."
+
+It was after this he said that he felt bound to let the tenants take
+their own way. Eighty of them joined in the "Plan of Campaign" and paid
+the amount of the rent due, less a reduction of 30 per cent., which they
+demanded of the agent, into the hands of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., Sir
+Thomas being a resident in the country, and Mr. Mayne, M.P. Writs of
+ejectment were obtained against them afterwards, and in July last
+sixty-seven of them were evicted, who are now living in "Laud League
+huts," put up on the holdings of three small tenants who were exempted
+from the Plan of Campaign, and allowed to pay their rents subject to a
+smaller reduction made by the agent, in order that they might retain
+their land as a refuge for the rest.
+
+All this Father O'Neill told us very quietly, in a gentle,
+undemonstrative way, but he was much interested when I told him I had
+recently come from Rome, where these proceedings, I was sure, were
+exciting a good deal of serious attention. "Yes," he said, "and Father
+Dunphy who is here in the other room, has just got back from Rome, where
+he had two audiences of the Holy Father."
+
+"Doubtless, then," I said, "he will have given his Holiness full
+particulars of all that took place here."
+
+"No doubt," responded Father O'Neill, "and he tells me the Holy Father
+listened with great attention to all he had to say--though of course, he
+expressed no opinion about it to Father Dunphy."
+
+As the time fixed for the function was at hand, we were obliged to leave
+without seeing Father Dunphy.
+
+From the Presbytery we drove to the scene of the evictions. These
+evictions were in July. Mr. Holmes witnessed them, and gave me a lively
+account of the affair. The "battle" was not a very tough one. Mr.
+Davitt, who was present, stood under a tree very quietly watching it
+all. "He looked very picturesque," said Mr. Holmes, "in a light grey
+suit, with a broad white beaver shading his dark Spanish face; and
+smoked his cigar very composedly." After it was over, Dr. Dillon brought
+up one of the tenants, and presented him to Mr. Davitt as "the man who
+had resisted this unjust eviction." Mr. Davitt took his cigar from his
+lips, and in the hearing of all who stood about sarcastically said,
+"Well, if he couldn't make a better resistance than that he ought to go
+up for six months!" The first house we came upon was derelict--all
+battered and despoiled, the people in the neighbourhood here, as
+elsewhere, regarding such houses as free spoil, and carrying off from
+time to time whatever they happen to fancy. Near this house we met an
+emergency man, named Bolton, an alert, energetic-looking native of
+Wicklow. He has four brothers; and is now at work on one of the
+"evicted" holdings.
+
+I asked if he was "boycotted," and what his relations were with the
+people.
+
+He laughed in a shrewd, good-natured way. "Oh, I'm boycotted, of
+course," he said; "but I don't care a button for any of these people,
+and I'd rather they wouldn't speak to me. They know I can take care of
+myself, and they give me a good wide berth. All I have to object to is
+that they set fire to an outhouse of mine, and cut the ears of one of my
+heifers, and for that I want damages. Otherwise I'm getting on very
+well; and I think this will be a good year, if the law is enforced, and
+these fellows are made to behave themselves."
+
+Near Bolton's farm we passed the holding of a tenant named Kavanagh, one
+of the three who were "allowed" to pay their rents. Several Land League
+huts are on his place, and the evicted people who occupy them put their
+cattle with his. He is a quiet, cautious man, and very reticent. But it
+seemed to me that he was not entirely satisfied with the "squatters" who
+have been quartered upon him. And it appears that he has taken another
+holding in Carlow. From his place we drove to Ballyfad, where a large
+house, at the end of a good avenue of trees, once the mansion of a
+squire, but now much dilapidated, is occupied as headquarters by the
+police. Here we found Mr. George Freeman, the bailiff of the Coolgreany
+property, a strong, sturdy man, much disgusted at finding it necessary
+to go about protected by two policemen. That this was necessary,
+however, he admitted, pointing out to us the place where one Kinsella
+was killed not very long ago. The son of this man Kinsella was formerly
+one of Mr. Brooke's gamekeepers, and is now, Mr. Freeman thinks, in
+concert with another man named Ryan, the chief stay of the League in
+keeping up its dominion over the evicted tenants.
+
+Many of these tenants, he believes, would gladly pay their rents now,
+and come back if they dared.
+
+"Every man, sir," he said, "that has anything to lose, would be glad to
+come back next Monday if he thought his life would be safe. But all the
+lazy and thriftless ones are better off now than they ever were; they
+get from L4 to L6 a month, with nothing to do, and so they're in clover,
+and they naturally don't like to have the industrious, well-to-do
+tenants spoil their fun by making a general settlement."
+
+"Besides that," he added, "that man Kinsella and his comrade Ryan are
+the terror of the whole of them. Kinsella always was a curious, silent,
+moody fellow. He knows every inch of the country, going over it all the
+time by night and day as a gamekeeper, and I am quite sure the
+Parnellite men and the Land Leaguers are just as much afraid of him and
+Ryan as the tenants are. He don't care a bit for them; and they've no
+control of him at all."
+
+Mr. Freeman said he remembered very well the occasion referred to by
+Father O'Neill, when Captain Hamilton refused to confer with Dr. Dillon
+and himself.
+
+"Did Father O'Neill tell you, sir," he said, "that Captain Hamilton was
+quite willing to talk with him and Father O'Donel, the parish priests,
+and with the Coolgreany people, but he would have nothing to say to any
+one who was not their priest, and had no business to be meddling with
+the matter at all?"
+
+"No; he did not tell me that."
+
+"Ah! well, sir, that made all the difference. Father Dunphy, who was
+there, is a high-tempered man, and he said he had just as much right to
+represent the tenants as Captain Hamilton to represent the landlord, and
+that Captain Hamilton wouldn't allow. It was the outside people made all
+the trouble. In June of last year there was a conference at my house,
+and all that time there was a Committee sitting at Coolgreany, and the
+tenants would not be allowed to do anything without the Committee."
+
+"And who made the Committee?"
+
+"Oh, they made themselves, I suppose, sir. There was Sir Thomas
+Esmonde--he was a convert, you know, of Father O'Neill--and Mr. Mayne
+and Mr. John Dillon. And Dr. Dillon of Arklow, he was as busy as he
+could be till the evictions were made in July. And then he was in
+retreat. And I believe, sir, it is quite true that he wanted the Bishop
+to let him come out of the retreat just to have a hand in the business."
+
+The police sergeant, a very cool, sensible man, quite agreed with the
+bailiff as to the influence upon the present situation of the
+ex-gamekeeper Kinsella, and his friend Eyan. "If they were two
+Invincibles, sir," he said, "these member fellows of the League couldn't
+be in greater fear of them than they are. They say nothing, and do just
+as they please. That Kinsella, when Mr. John Dillon was down here, just
+told him before a lot of people that he 'wanted no words and no advice
+from him,' and he's just in that surly way with all the people about."
+
+As to the Brooke estate, I am told here it was bought more than twenty
+years ago with a Landed Estates Court title from Colonel Forde, by the
+grandfather of Mr. Brooke. He paid about L75,000 sterling for it. His
+son died young, and the present owner came into it as a child, Mr. Vesey
+being then the agent, who, during the minority, spent a great deal on
+improving the property. Captain Hamilton came in as agent only a few
+years ago. While the Act of 1881 was impending, an abatement was granted
+of more than twenty per cent. In 1882 the tenants all paid except
+eleven, who went into Court and got their rents cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners. There were appeals; and in 1885, after Court
+valuations, the rents cut down by the Sub-Commissioners were restored in
+several cases. There never was any rack-renting on the estate at all.
+There are upon it in all more than a hundred tenants, twelve of whom are
+Protestants, holding a little less in all than one-fourth of the
+property.
+
+There are fifteen judicial tenants, twenty-one lease-holders, and
+seventy-seven hold from year to year.
+
+The gross rental is a little over L2000 a year of which one-half goes to
+Mr. Brooke's mother. Mr. Brooke himself is a wealthy man, at the head of
+the most important firm of wine-merchants in Ireland, and he has
+repeatedly spent on the property more than he took out of it.
+
+The house of Sir Thomas Esmonde, M.P., was pointed out to me from the
+road. "Sir Thomas is to marry an heiress, sir, isn't he, in America?"
+asked an ingenuous inquirer. I avowed my ignorance on this point. "Oh,
+well, they say so, for anyway the old house is being put in order for
+now the first time in forty years."
+
+We reached Arklow in time for luncheon, and drove to the large police
+barracks there. These were formerly the quarters of the troops. Arklow
+was one of the earliest settlements of the Anglo-Normans in Ireland
+under Henry II., and once rejoiced in a castle and a monastery both now
+obliterated; though a bit of an old tower here is said to have been
+erected in his time. The town lives by fishing, and by shipping copper
+and lead ore to South Wales. The houses are rather neat and well kept;
+but the street was full of little ragged, merry mendicants.
+
+We went into a small branch of the Bank of Ireland, and asked where we
+should find the hotel. We were very civilly directed to "The Register's
+Office over the way." This seemed odd enough. But reaching it we were
+further puzzled to see the sign over the doorway of a "coach-builder"!
+However, we rang the bell, and presently a maid-servant appeared, who
+assured us that this was really the hotel, and that we could have
+"whatever we liked" for luncheon. We liked what we found we could
+get--chops, potatoes, and parsnips; and without too much delay these
+were neatly served to us in a most remarkable room, ablaze with mural
+ornaments and decorations, upon which every imaginable pigment of the
+modern palette seemed to have been lavished, from a Nile-water-green
+dado to a scarlet and silver frieze. There were five times as many
+potatoes served to us as two men could possibly eat, and not one of them
+was half-boiled. But otherwise the meal was well enough, and the service
+excellent. Beer could be got for us, but the house had no licence, Lord
+Carysfort, the owner of the property, thinking, so our hostess said,
+that "there were too many licences in the town already." Lord Carysfort
+is probably right; but it is not every owner of a house, or even of a
+lease in Ireland, I fear, who would take such a view and act on it to
+the detriment of his own property.
+
+Dr. Dillon lives in the main square of Arklow in a very neat house. He
+was absent at a funeral in the handsome Catholic church near by when we
+called, but we were shown into his study, and he presently came in.
+
+His study was that of a man of letters and of politics. Blue-books and
+statistical works lay about in all directions, and on the table were the
+March numbers of the _Nineteenth Century_, and the _Contemporary
+Review_.
+
+"You are abreast of the times, I see," I said to him, pointing to these
+periodicals.
+
+"Yes," he replied, "they have just come in; and there is a capital paper
+by Mr. John Morley in this _Nineteenth Century_."
+
+Nothing could be livelier than Dr. Dillon's interest in all that is
+going on on both sides of the Atlantic, more positive than his opinions,
+or more terse and clear than his way of putting them. He agreed entirely
+with Father O'Neill as to the pressure put upon the Coolgreany tenants,
+not so much by Mr. Brooke as by the agent, Captain Hamilton; but he
+thought Mr. Brooke also to blame for his treatment of them.
+
+"Two of the most respectable of them," said Dr. Dillon, "went to see Mr.
+Brooke in Dublin, and he wouldn't listen to them. On the contrary, he
+absolutely put them out of his office without hearing a word they had to
+say."[22]
+
+I found Dr. Dillon a strong disciple of Mr. Henry George, and a firm
+believer in the doctrine of the "nationalisation of the land." "It is
+certain to come," he said, "as certain to come in Great Britain as in
+Ireland, and the sooner the better. The movement about the sewerage
+rates in London," he added, "is the first symptom of the land war in
+London. It is the thin edge of the wedge to break down landlordism in
+the British metropolis."
+
+He is watching American politics, too, very closely, and inclines to
+sympathise with President Cleveland. Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia, he
+tells me, in his passage through Ireland the other day, did not hesitate
+to express his conviction that President Cleveland would be re-elected.
+
+Dr. Dillon was so earnest and so interesting that the time slipped by
+very fast, until a casual glance at my watch showed me that we must make
+great haste to catch the Dublin train.
+
+We left therefore rather hurriedly, but before reaching the station we
+saw the Dublin train go careering by, its white pennon of smoke and
+vapour curling away along the valley.
+
+I made the best of it, however, and letting Mr. Holmes depart by a train
+which took him home, I found a smart jarvey with a car, and drove out to
+Glenart Castle, the beautiful house of the Earl of Carysfort. This is a
+very handsome modern house, built in a castellated style of a very good
+whitish grey marble, with extensive and extremely well-kept terraced
+gardens and conservatories.
+
+It stands very well on one high bank of the river, a residence of the
+Earl of Wicklow occupying the other bank. My jarvey called my attention
+to the excellence of the roads, on which he said Lord Carysfort has
+spent "a deal of money," as well as upon the gardens of the new Castle.
+The head-gardener, an Englishman, told me he found the native labourers
+very intelligent and willing both to learn and to work. Evidently here
+is another centre of useful and civilising influences, not managed by an
+"absentee."[23]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Friday, March 9th._--At 7.40 this morning I took the train for
+Athy to visit the Luggacurren estates of Lord Lansdowne. Mr. Lynch, a
+resident magistrate here, some time ago kindly offered to show me over
+the place, but I thought it as well to take my chance with the people of
+Athy who are reported to have been very hot over the whole matter here,
+and so wrote to Mr. Lynch that I would find him at the Lodge, which is
+the headquarters of the property.
+
+Athy is a neat, well-built little town, famous of old as a frontier
+fortress of Kildare. An embattled tower, flanked by small square
+turrets, guards a picturesque old bridge here over the Barrow, the
+bridge being known in the country as "Crom-a-boo," from the old war-cry
+of the Fitz-Geralds. It is a busy place now; and there was quite a
+bustle at the very pretty little station. I asked a friendly old porter
+which was the best hotel in the town. "The best? Ah! there's only one,
+and it's not the best--but there are worse--and it's Kavanagh's." I
+found it easily enough, and was ushered by a civil man, who emerged from
+the shop which occupies part of it, into a sort of reading-room with a
+green table. A rather slatternly but very active girl soon converted
+this into a neat breakfast-table, and gave me an excellent breakfast.
+The landlord found me a good car, and off I set for the residence of
+Father Maher, the curate of whom I had heard as one of the most fiery
+and intractable of the National League priests in this part of Ireland.
+
+
+My jarvey was rather taciturn at first, but turned out to be something
+of a politician. He wanted Home Rule, one of his reasons being that then
+they "wouldn't let the Americans come and ruin them altogether, driving
+out the grain from the markets." About this he was very clear and
+positive. "Oh, it doesn't matter now whether the land is good or bad,
+America has just ruined the farmers entirely."
+
+I told him I had always heard this achievement attributed to England.
+"Oh! that was quite a mistake! What the English did was to punish the
+men that stood up for Ireland. There was Mr. O'Brien. But for him there
+wasn't a man of Lord Lansdowne's people would have had the heart to
+stand up. He did it all; and now, what were they doing to him? They were
+putting him on a cold plank-bed on a stone floor in a damp cell!"
+
+"But the English put all their prisoners in those cells, don't they?" I
+asked.
+
+"And what of it, sir?" he retorted. "They're good enough for most of
+them, but not for a gentleman like Mr. O'Brien, that would spill the
+last drop of his heart's blood for Ireland!"
+
+"But," I said, "they're doing just the same thing with Mr. Gilhooly, I
+hear."
+
+"And who is Mr. Gilhooly, now? And it's not for the likes of him to
+complain and be putting on airs as if he was Mr. O'Brien!"
+
+"Yes, it is a fine country for hunting!"
+
+"Was it ever put down here, the hunting?"
+
+"No, indeed! Sure, the people wouldn't let it be!"
+
+"Not if Mr. O'Brien told them they must?" I queried.
+
+"Mr. O'Brien; ah, he wouldn't think of such a thing! It brings money all
+the time to Athy, and sells the horses."
+
+As to the troubles at Luggacurren, he was not very clear. "It was a
+beautiful place, Mr. Dunne's; we'd see it presently. And Mr. Dunne, he
+was a good one for sport. It was that, your honour, that got him into
+the trouble"--
+
+"And Mr. Kilbride?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Kilbride's place was a very good place too, but not like Mr.
+Dunne's. And he was doing very well, Mr. Kilbride. He was getting a good
+living from the League, and he was a Member of Parliament. Oh, yes, he
+wasn't the only one of the tenants that was doing good to himself. There
+was more of them that was getting more than ever they made out of the
+land."[24]
+
+"Was the land so bad, then?" I asked.
+
+"No, there was as good land at Luggacurren as any there was in all
+Ireland; but," and here he pointed off to the crests of the hills in the
+distance, "there was a deal of land there of the estate on the hills,
+and it was very poor land, but the tenants had to pay as much for that
+as for the good property of Dunne and Kilbride."
+
+"Do you know Mr. Lynch, the magistrate?" I asked. "If you do, look out
+for him, as he has promised to join me and show me the place."
+
+"Oh no, sorr!" the jarvey exclaimed at once; "don't mind about him. Hell
+have his own car, and your honour won't want to take him on ours."
+
+"Why not?" I persisted, "there's plenty of room."
+
+"Oh! but indeed, sir, if it wasn't that you were going to the priest's,
+Father Maher, you wouldn't get a car at Athy--no, not under ten pounds!"
+
+"Not under ten pounds," I replied. "Would I get one then for ten
+pounds?"
+
+"It's a deal of money, ten pounds, sorr, and you wouldn't have a poor
+man throw away ten pounds?"
+
+"Certainly not, nor ten shillings either. Is it a question of principle,
+or a question of price?"
+
+The man looked around at me with a droll glimmer in his eye: "Ah, to be
+sure, your honour's a great lawyer; but he'll come pounding along with
+his big horse in his own car, Mr. Lynch; and sure it'll be quicker for
+your honour just driving to Father Maher's."
+
+There was no resisting this, so I laughed and bade him drive on.
+
+"Whose house is that?" I asked, as we passed a house surrounded with
+trees.
+
+"Oh! that's the priest, Father Keogh--a very good man, but not so much
+for the people as Father Maher, who has everything to look after about
+them."
+
+We came presently within sight of a handsome residence, Lansdowne Lodge,
+the headquarters of the estate. Many fine cattle were grazing in the
+fields about it.
+
+"They are Lord Lansdowne's beasts," said my jarvey; "and it's the
+emergency men are looking after them."
+
+Nearly opposite were the Land League huts erected on the holding of an
+unevicted tenant--a small village of neat wooden "shanties." On the
+roadway in front of these half-a-dozen men were lounging about. They
+watched us with much curiosity as we drove up, and whispered eagerly
+together.
+
+"They're some of the evicted men, your honour," said my jarvey, with a
+twinkle in his eye; and then under his breath, "They'll be thinking your
+honour's came down to arrange it all. They think everybody that comes is
+come about an arrangement."
+
+"Oh, then, they all want it arranged!"
+
+"No; not all, but many of them do. Some of them like it well enough
+going about like gentlemen with nothing to do, only their hands in their
+pockets."
+
+We turned out of the highway here and passed some very pretty cottages.
+
+"No, they're not for labourers, your honour," said my jarvey; "the
+estate built them for mechanics. It's the tenants look after the
+labourers, and little it is they do for them."
+
+Then, pointing to a ridge of hills beyond us, he said: "It was
+Kilbride's father, sir, evicted seventeen tenants on these hills--poor
+labouring men, with their families, many years ago,--and now he's
+evicted himself, and a Member of Parliament!"
+
+Father Maher's house stands well off from the highway. He was not at
+home, being "away at a service in the hills," but would be back before
+two o'clock. I left my name for him, with a memorandum of my purpose in
+calling, and we drove on to see the bailiff of the estate, Mr. Hind. On
+the way we met Father Norris, a curate of the parish, in a smart trap
+with a good horse, and had a brief colloquy with him. Mr. Hind we found
+busy afield; a quiet, staunch sort of man. He spoke of the situation
+very coolly and dispassionately. "The tenants in the main were a good
+set of men--as they had reason to be, Lord Lansdowne having been not
+only a fair landlord, but a liberal and enterprising promoter of local
+improvements." I had been told in Dublin that Lord Lansdowne had offered
+a subscription of L200 towards establishing creameries, and providing
+high-class bulls for this estate. Similar offers had been cordially met
+by Lord Lansdowne's tenants in Kerry, and with excellent results. But
+here they were rejected almost scornfully, though accompanied by offers
+of abatement on the rents, which, in the case of Mr. Kilbride, for
+example, amounted to 20 per cent.
+
+"How did this happen, the tenants being good men as you say?" I asked of
+Mr. Hind.
+
+"Because they were unable to resist the pressure put on them by the two
+chief tenants, Kilbride and Dunne, with the help of the League. Kilbride
+and Dunne both lived very well." My information at Dublin was that Mr.
+Kilbride had a fine house built by Lord Lansdowne, and a farm of seven
+hundred acres, at a rent of L760, 10s. Mr. Dunne, who co-operated with
+him, held four town lands comprising 1304 acres, at a yearly rent of
+L1348, 15s. Upon this property Lord Lansdowne had expended in drainage
+and works L1993, 11s. 9d., and in buildings L631, 15s. 4d., or in all
+very nearly two years' rental. On Mr. Kilbride's holdings Lord Lansdowne
+had expended in drainage works L1931, 6s. 3d., and in buildings L1247,
+19s. 5d., or in all more than four years' rental. Mr. Kilbride held his
+lands on life leases. Mr. Dunne held his smallest holding of 84 acres on
+a yearly tenure; his two largest holdings, one on a lease for 31 years
+from 1874, and the other on a life lease, and his fourth holding of 172
+acres on a life lease.
+
+Where does the hardship appear in all this to Mr. Dunne or Mr. Kilbride?
+
+On Mr. Kilbride's holdings, for instance, Lord Lansdowne expended over
+L3000, for which he added to the rent L130 a year, or about 4 per cent.,
+while he himself stood to pay 6-1/2 per cent, on the loans he made from
+the Board of Works for the expenditure. In the same way it was with Mr.
+Dunne's farms. They were mostly in grass, and Lord Lansdowne laid out
+more than L2500 on them, borrowed at the same rate from the Board, for
+which he added to the rent only L66 a year, or about 2-1/2 per cent. Mr.
+Kilbride was a Poor-Law Guardian, and Mr. Dunne a Justice of the Peace.
+The leases in both of these cases, and in those of other large tenants,
+seem to have been made at the instance of the tenants themselves, and
+afforded security against any advance in the rental during a time of
+high agricultural prices. And it would appear that for the last quarter
+of a century there has been no important advance in the rental. In 1887
+the rental was only L300 higher than in 1862, though during the interval
+the landlord had laid out L20,000 on improvements in the shape of
+drainage, roads, labourers' cottages, and other permanent works.
+Moreover, in fifteen years only one tenant has been evicted for
+non-payment of rent.
+
+"Was there any ill-feeling towards the Marquis among the tenants?" I
+asked of Mr. Hind.
+
+"Certainly not, and no reason for any. They were a good set of men, and
+they would never have gone into this fight, only for a few who were in
+trouble, and I'm sure that to-day most of them would be thankful if they
+could settle and get back. The best of them had money enough, and didn't
+like the fight at all."
+
+All the trouble here seems to have originated with the adoption of the
+Plan of Campaign.
+
+Lord Lansdowne, besides this estate in Queen's County, owns property in
+a wild, mountainous part of the county of Kerry. On this property the
+tenants occupy, for the most part, small holdings, the average rental
+being about L10, and many of the rentals much lower. They are not
+capitalist farmers at all, and few of them are able to average the
+profits of their industry, setting the gains of a good, against the
+losses of a bad, season. In October 1886, while Mr. Dillon was
+organising his Plan of Campaign, Lord Lansdowne visited his Kerry
+property to look into the condition of the people. The local Bank had
+just failed, and the shopkeepers and money-lenders were refusing credit
+and calling in loans. The pressure they put upon these small farmers,
+together with the fall in the price of dairy produce and of young stock
+at that time, caused real distress, and Lord Lansdowne, after looking
+into the situation, offered, of his own motion, abatements varying from
+25 to 35 per cent, to all of them whose rents had not been judicially
+fixed under the Act of 1881, for a term of fifteen years.
+
+As to these, Lord Lansdowne wrote a letter on the 21st of October 1886
+(four days after the promulgation of the Plan of Campaign at Portumna on
+the Clanricarde property), to his agent, Mr. Townsend Trench. This
+letter was published. I have a copy of it given to me in Dublin, and it
+states the case as between the landlords and the tenants under judicial
+rents most clearly and temperately.
+
+"It might, I think," says the Marquis, "be very fairly argued, that the
+State having imposed the terms of a contract on landlord and tenant,
+that contract should not be interfered with except by the State.
+
+"The punctual payment of the 'judicial rent' was the one advantage to
+which the landlords were desired to look when, in 1881, they were
+deprived of many of the most valuable attributes of ownership.
+
+"It was distinctly stipulated that the enormous privileges which were
+suddenly and unexpectedly conferred upon the tenants were to be enjoyed
+by them conditionally upon the fulfilment on their part of the statutory
+obligations specified in the Act. Of those, by far the most important
+was the punctual payment of the rent fixed by the Court for the judicial
+term.
+
+"This obligation being unfulfilled, the landlord might reasonably claim
+that he should be free to exercise his own discretion in determining
+whether any given tenancy should or should not be perpetuated.
+
+"In many cases [such cases are probably not so numerous on my estate as
+upon many others] the resumption of the holding, and the consolidation
+of adjoining farms, would be clearly advantageous to the whole
+community. In the congested districts the consolidation of farms is the
+only solution that I have seen suggested for meeting a chronic
+difficulty.
+
+"I have no reason to believe that the Judicial Rents in force on my
+estate are such that, upon an average of the yield and prices of
+agricultural produce, my tenants would find it difficult to pay them."
+
+In spite of all these considerations Lord Lansdowne instructed Mr.
+Trench to grant to these tenants under judicial leases an abatement of
+20 per cent. on the November gale of 1886. This abatement, freely
+offered, was gladly accepted. There had been no outrages or disturbances
+on the Kerry properties, and the relations of the landlord with his
+tenants, before and after this visit of Lord Lansdowne to Kerry, and
+these reductions which followed it, had been, and continued to be,
+excellent.
+
+But the tale of Kerry reached Luggacurren; and certain of the tenants on
+the latter estate were moved by it to demand for the Queen's County
+property identical treatment with that accorded to the very differently
+situated property in Kerry.
+
+The leaders of the Luggacurren movement, I gather from Mr. Hind, never
+pretended inability to pay their rents. They simply demanded abatements
+of 35 per cent. on non-judicial, and 25 per cent. on judicial, rents as
+their due, on the ground that they should be treated like the tenants in
+Kerry: and the Plan of Campaign being by this time in full operation in
+more than one part of Ireland, they threatened to resort to it if their
+demand was refused. Lord Lansdowne at once declared that he would not
+repeat at Luggacurren his concession made in Kerry as to the rents
+judicially fixed; but he offered on a fair consideration of the
+non-judicial rents to make abatements on them ranging from 15 to 25 per
+cent.
+
+The offer was refused, and the war began. On the 23d of March 1887 Mr.
+Kilbride was evicted. One week afterwards, on the 29th of March, he got
+up in the rooms of the National League in Dublin, and openly declared
+that "the Luggacurren evictions differed from most other evictions in
+this, that they were able to pay the rent. It was a fight," he
+exultingly exclaimed, "of intelligence against intelligence; it was
+diamond cut diamond!" In other words, it was a struggle, not for
+justice, but for victory.
+
+On all these points, and others furnished to me at Dublin touching this
+estate, much light was thrown by the bailiff, who had not been concerned
+in the evictions. He told me what he knew, and then very obligingly
+offered to conduct me to the lodge, where we should find Mr. Hutchins,
+who has charge now of the properties taken up by Mr. Kavanagh's Land
+Corporation. My patriotic jarvey from Athy made no objection to my
+giving the bailiff a lift, and we drove off to the lodge. On the way the
+jarvey good-naturedly exclaimed, "Ah! there comes Mr. Lynch," and even
+offered to pull up that the magistrate might overtake us.
+
+We found Mr. Hutchins at home, a cool, quiet, energetic, northern man,
+who seems to be handling the difficult situation here with great
+firmness and prudence. Mrs. Hutchins, who has lived here now for nearly
+a year--a life not unlike that of the wife of an American officer on the
+Far Western frontier--very amicably asked me to lunch, and Mr. Hutchins
+offered to show me the holdings of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride. Mr. Lynch
+proposed that we should all go on my car, but I remembered the protest
+of the jarvey, and sending him to await me at Father Maher's, I drove
+off with Mr. Hutchins. As we drove along, he confirmed the jarvey's hint
+as to the difference between the views and conduct of the parish priest
+and the views and conduct of his more fiery curate. This is a very
+common state of affairs, I find, all over Ireland.
+
+The house of Mr. Dunne is that of a large gentleman farmer. It is very
+well fitted up, but it was plain that the tenants had done little or
+nothing to make or keep it a "house beautiful." The walls had never been
+papered, and the wood-work showed no recent traces of the brush. "He
+spent more money on horse-racing than on housekeeping," said a shrewd
+old man who was in the house. In fact, Mr. Dunne, I am told, entered a
+horse for the races at the Curragh after he had undergone what Mr.
+Gladstone calls "the sentence of death" of an eviction!
+
+Some of the doors bore marks of the crowbar but no great mischief had
+been done to them or to the large fine windows. The only serious damage
+done during the eviction was the cutting of a hole through the roof. An
+upper room had been provisioned to stand a siege, and so scientifically
+barricaded with logs and trunks of trees that after several vain
+attempts to break through the door the assailants climbed to the roof,
+and in twenty minutes cut their way in from without. The dining and
+drawing rooms were those of a gentleman's residence, and one of the
+party remembered attending here a social festivity got up with much
+display.
+
+A large cattle-yard has been established on this place, with an
+original, and, as I was assured, most successful weighing-machine by the
+Land Corporation. We found it full of very fine-looking cattle, and Mr.
+Hutchins seems to think the operation of managing the estate as a kind
+of "ranch" decidedly promising. "I am not a bit sorry for Mr. Dunne," he
+said, "but I am very sorry for other quiet, good tenants who have been
+deluded or driven into giving up valuable holdings to keep him and Mr.
+Kilbride company, and give colour to the vapourings of Mr. William
+O'Brien."
+
+The cases of some of these tenants were instructive. One poor man,
+Knowles, had gone out to America, and regularly sent home money to his
+family to pay the rent. They found other uses for it, and when the storm
+came he was two years and a half in arrears. In another instance, two
+brothers held contiguous holdings, and were in a manner partners. One
+was fonder of Athy than of agriculture; the other a steady husbandman.
+Four years' arrears had grown up against the one; only a half-year's
+gale against the other. Clearly this difference originated outside of
+the fall of prices! In a third case, a tenant wrote to Mr. Trench
+begging to have something done, as he had the money to pay, and wanted
+to pay, but "didn't dare."
+
+From Mr. Dunne's we drove to Mr. Kilbride's, another ample, very
+comfortable house--not so thoroughly well fitted up with bathroom and
+other modern appurtenances as Mr. Dunne's perhaps--but still a very good
+house. It stands on a large green knoll, rather bare of trees, and
+commands a fine sweep of landscape.
+
+Mr. Hutchins drove me to the little road which leads up past the "Land
+League village" to the house of Father Maher, and there set me down.
+
+I walked up and found the curate at home--a tall, slender, well-made
+young priest, with a keen, intelligent face. He received me very
+politely, and, when I showed him the card of an eminent dignitary of the
+Church, with cordiality.
+
+I found him full of sympathy with the people of his parish, but neither
+vehement nor unfair. He did not deny that there were tenants on Lord
+Lansdowne's estate who were amply able to pay their rents; but he did
+most emphatically assert that there were not a few of them who really
+could not pay their rents.
+
+"I assure you," he said, "there are some of them who cannot even pay
+their dues to their priest, and when I say that, you will know how
+pinched and driven they must indeed be." It was in view of these tenants
+that he seemed to justify the course of Mr. Dunne and Mr. Kilbride.
+"They must all stand or fall together." He had nothing to say to the
+discredit of Lord Lansdowne; but he spoke with some bitterness of the
+agent, Mr. Townsend Trench, as having protested against Lord Lansdowne's
+making reductions here while he had himself made the same reductions on
+the neighbouring estate of Mrs. Adair.
+
+"In truth," he said, "Mr. Trench has made all this trouble worse all
+along. He is too much of a Napoleon"--and with a humorous twinkle in his
+eye as he spoke--"too much of a Napoleon the Third.
+
+"I was just reading his father's book when you came in. Here it is," and
+he handed me a copy of Trench's _Realities of Irish Life_.
+
+"Did you ever read it? This Mr. Trench, the father, was a kind of
+Napoleon among agents in his own time, and the son, you see, thinks it
+ought to be understood that he is quite as great a man as his father.
+Did you never hear how he found a lot of his father's manuscripts once,
+and threw them all in the fire, calling out as he did so, 'There goes
+some more of my father's vanity?'"
+
+About his people, and with his people, Father Maher said he "felt most
+strongly." How could he help it? He was himself the son of an evicted
+father.
+
+"Of course, Father Maher," I said, "you will understand that I wish to
+get at both sides of this question and of all questions here. Pray tell
+me then, where I shall find the story of the Luggacurren property most
+fully and fairly set forth in print?"
+
+Without a moment's hesitation he replied, "By far the best and fairest
+account of the whole matter you will get in the Irish correspondence of
+the London _Times_."
+
+How the conflict would end he could not say. But he was at a loss to see
+how it could pay Lord Lansdowne to maintain it.
+
+He very civilly pressed me to stay and lunch with him, but when I told
+him I had already accepted an invitation from Mr. Hutchins, he very
+kindly bestirred himself to find my jarvey.
+
+I hastened back to the lodge, where I found a very pleasant little
+company. They were all rather astonished, I thought, by the few words I
+had to say of Father Maher, and especially by his frank and sensible
+recommendation of the reports in the London _Times_ as the best account
+I could find of the Luggacurren difficulty. To this they could not
+demur, but things have got, or are getting, in Ireland, I fear, to a
+point at which candour, on one side or the other of the burning
+questions here debated, is regarded with at least as much suspicion as
+the most deliberate misrepresentation. As to Mr. Town send Trench, what
+Father Maher failed to tell me, I was here told: That down to the time
+of the actual evictions he offered to take six months' rent from the
+tenants, give them a clean book, and pay all the costs. To refuse this
+certainly looks like a "war measure."
+
+But for the loneliness of her life here, Mrs. Hutchins tells me she
+would find it delightful. The country is exceedingly lovely in the
+summer and autumn months.
+
+When my car came out to take me back to Athy, I found my jarvey in
+excellent spirits, and quite friendly even with Mr. Hutchins himself. He
+kept up a running fire of lively commentaries upon the residents whose
+estates we passed.
+
+"Would you think now, your honour," he said, pointing with his whip to
+one large mansion standing well among good trees, "that that's the
+snuggest man there is about Athy? But he is; and it's no wonder! Would
+you believe it, he never buys a newspaper, but he walks all the way into
+Athy, and goes about from the bank to the shops till he finds one, and
+picks it up and reads it. He's mighty fond of the news, but he's fonder,
+you see, of a penny!
+
+"There now, your honour, just look at that house! It's a magistrate he
+is that lives there; and why? Why, just to be called 'your honour,' and
+have the people tip their hats to him. Oh! he delights in that, he does.
+Why, you might knock a man, or put him in the water, you might, indeed,
+but if you came before Mr.----, and you just called him 'your honour'
+often enough, and made up to him, you'd be all right! You've just to go
+up to him with your hat in your hand, looking up at him, and to say,
+'Ah! now, your honour'" (imitating the wheedling tone to perfection),
+"and indeed you'd get anything out of him--barring a sixpence, that is,
+or a penny!
+
+"Ah! he's a snug one, too!" And with that he launched a sharp thwack of
+the whip at the grey mare, and we went rattling on apace.
+
+At the very pretty station of Athy we parted the best of friends. "Wish
+you safe home, your honour." The kindly railway porter, also, who had
+recommended Kavanagh's Hotel, was anxious to know how I found it, and so
+busied himself to get me a good carriage when the train came in, that I
+feel bound to exempt Athy from the judgment passed by Sir James
+Allport's committee against the "amenities of railway travelling in
+Ireland."
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Saturday, March 10._--I called by appointment to-day upon Mr.
+Brooke, the owner of the Coolgreany estate, at his counting-house in
+Gardiner's Row. It is one of the spacious old last-century houses of
+Dublin; the counting-room is installed with dark, old-fashioned mahogany
+fittings, in what once was, and might easily again be made, a
+drawing-room. Pictures hang on the walls, and the atmosphere of the
+whole place is one of courtesy and culture rather than of mere modern
+commerce. One of the portraits here is that of Mr. Brooke's
+granduncle--a handsome, full-blooded, rather testy-looking old warrior,
+in the close-fitting scarlet uniform of the Prince Regent's time.
+
+"He ought to have been called Lord Baltimore," said Mr. Brooke
+good-naturedly; "for he fought against your people for that city at
+Bladensburg with Ross."
+
+"That was the battle," I said, "in which, according to a popular
+tradition in my country, the Americans took so little interest that they
+left the field almost as soon as it began."
+
+Another portrait is of a kinsman who was murdered in the highway here in
+Ireland many years ago, under peculiarly atrocious circumstances, and
+with no sort of provocation or excuse.
+
+Mr. Brooke confirmed Dr. Dillon's statement that he had ordered out of
+his counting-house two tenants who came into it with a peculiarly brazen
+proposition, of which I must presume Dr. Dillon was ignorant when he
+cited the fact as a count against the landlord of Coolgreany. I give the
+story as Mr Brooke tells it. "The Rent Audit," he says, "at which my
+tenants were idiots enough to join the Plan of Campaign occurred about
+the 12th December 1886, when, as you know, I refused to accept the terms
+which they proposed to me. I heard nothing more from them till about the
+middle of February 1887, when coming to my office one day I found two
+tenants waiting for me. One was Stephen Maher, a mountain man, and the
+other Patrick Kehoe. 'What do you want?' I asked. Whereupon they both
+arose, and Pat Kehoe pointed to Maher. Maher fumbled at his clothes, and
+rubbed himself softly for a bit, and then produced a scrap of paper.
+'It's a bit of paper from the tenants, sir,' he said. A queer bit of
+paper it was to look at--ruled paper, with a composition written upon it
+which might have been the work of a village schoolmaster. It was neither
+signed nor addressed! The pith of it was in these words,--'in
+consequence of the manner in which we have been harassed, our cattle
+driven throughout the country, and our crops not sown, we shall be
+unable to pay the half-year's rent due in March, in addition to the
+reduction already claimed!' I own I rather lost my temper at this!
+Remember I had already plainly refused to give 'the reduction already
+claimed,' and had told them not once, but twenty times, that I would
+never surrender to the 'Plan of Campaign'! I am afraid my language was
+Pagan rather than Parliamentary--but I told them plainly, at least, that
+if they did not break from the Plan of Campaign, and pay their debts,
+they might be sure I would turn the whole of them out! I gave them back
+their precious bit of paper and sent them packing.
+
+"One of them, I have told you, was a mountain man, Stephen Maher. He is
+commonly known among the people as 'the old fox of the mountain,' and he
+is very proud of it!
+
+"This old Stephen Maher," said Mr. Brooke, "is renowned in connection
+with a trial for murder, at which he was summoned as a witness. When he
+was cross-examined by Mr. Molloy, Q.C., he fenced and dodged about with
+that distinguished counsellor for a long time, until getting vexed by
+the lawyer's persistency, he exclaimed, 'Now thin, Mr. Molloy, I'd have
+ye to know that I had a cliverer man nor iver you was, Mr. Molloy, at
+me, and I had to shtan' up to him for three hours before the Crowner,
+an' he was onable to git the throoth out of me, so he was! so he was!'"
+
+
+Neither did Dr. Dillon mention the fact that one of the demands made of
+Captain Hamilton, Mr. Brooke's agent, in December 1886, was that a
+Protestant tenant named Webster should be evicted by Mr. Brooke from a
+farm for which he had paid his rent, to make room for the return thither
+of a Roman Catholic tenant named Lenahan, previously evicted for
+non-payment of his rent.
+
+When Mr. Brooke's grandfather bought the Coolgreany property in 1864, he
+adopted a system of betterments, which has been ever since kept up on
+the estate. Nearly every tenant's house on the property has been slated,
+and otherwise repaired by the landlord, nor has one penny ever been
+added on that account to the rents.
+
+In the village of Coolgreany all the houses on one side of the main
+street were built in this way by the landlord, and the same thing was
+done in the village of Croghan, where twenty tenants have a grazing
+right of three sheep for every acre held on the Croghan Mountain,
+pronounced by the valuers of the Land Court to be one of the best
+grazing mountains in Ireland.
+
+Captain Hamilton became the agent of the property in 1879, on the death
+of Mr. Vesey. One of his earliest acts was to advise Mr. Brooke to grant
+an abatement of 25 per cent. in June 1881, while the Land Act was
+passing. At the same time, he cautioned the tenants that this was only a
+temporary reduction, and advised them to get judicial rents fixed.
+
+The League advised them not to do this, but to demand 25 per cent.
+reduction again in December 1881. This demand was rejected, and forty
+writs were issued. The tenants thereupon in January 1882 came in and
+paid the full rent, with the costs.
+
+Eleven tenants after this went into Court, and in 1883 the
+Sub-Commissioners cut down their rents. In five cases Mr. Brooke
+appealed. What was the result before the Chief Commissioner? The rent of
+Mary Green, which had been L43, and had been cut down by the
+Sub-Commissioners to L39, was restored to L43; the rent of Mr. Kavanagh,
+cut down from L57 to L52, was restored to L55; the rent of Pat Kehoe
+(one of the two tenants "ejected" from Mr. Brooke's office as already
+stated), cut down from L81 to L70, was restored to L81; the rent of
+Graham, cut down from L38 to L32, 10s., was restored to L38. Other
+reductions were maintained.
+
+This appears to be the record of "rack-renting" on the Coolgreany
+property.
+
+There are 114 tenants, of whom 15 hold under judicial rents; 22 are
+leaseholders, and 77 are non-judicial yearly tenants. There are 12
+Protestants holding in all a little more than 1200 acres. All the rest
+are Catholics, 14 of these being cottier tenants. The estate consists of
+5165 acres. The average is about L24, and the average rental about L26,
+10s. The gross rental is L2614, of which L1000 go to the jointure of Mr.
+Brooke's mother, and L800 are absorbed by the tithe charges, half
+poor-rates and other taxes. During the year 1886, in which this war was
+declared against him, Mr. Brooke spent L714 in improvements upon the
+property: so in that year his income from Coolgreany was practically
+_nil_.
+
+What in these circumstances would have been the position of this
+landlord had he not possessed ample means not invested in this
+particular estate? And what has been the result to the tenants of this
+conflict into which it seems clear that they were led, less to protect
+any direct interest of their own than to jeopardise their homes and
+their livelihood for the promotion of a general agrarian agitation? It
+is not clear that they are absolutely so far out of pocket, for I find
+that the Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Inch and Gorey rose from
+L3699, 5s. 4d. in 1880 to L5308, 13s. in 1887, showing an increase of
+L1609, 7s. 8d. But they are out of house and home and work, entered
+pupils in that school of idleness and iniquity which has been kept by
+one Preceptor from the beginning of time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.[25]
+
+
+* * * *--Mrs. Kavanagh was quite right when she told me at Borris in
+March that this country should be seen in June! The drive to this lovely
+place this morning was one long enchantment of verdure and hawthorn
+blossoms and fragrance.
+
+I came over from London to bring to a head some inquiries which have too
+long delayed the publication of this diary. My intention had been to go
+directly to Thurles, but a telegram which I received from the Archbishop
+of Cashel just before I left telling me that he could not be at home for
+the last three days of the week, I came directly here. Nothing can be
+more utterly unlike the popular notions of Ireland and of Irish life
+than the aspect of this most smiling and beautiful region: nothing more
+thoroughly Irish than its people.
+
+* * * who is one of the most active and energetic of Irish landlords,
+lives part of the year abroad, but keeps up his Irish property with
+care, at the expense, I suspect, of his estates elsewhere.
+
+From a noble avenue of trees, making the highway like the main road of a
+private park, we turned into a literal paradise of gardens. The air was
+balmy with their wealth of odours. "Oh! yes, sir," said the coachman,
+with an air of sympathetic pride, "our lady is just the greatest lady in
+all this land for flowers!"
+
+And for ivy, he might have added. We drove between green walls of ivy up
+to a house which seemed itself to be built of ivy, like that wonderful
+old mansion of Castle Leod in Scotland. Here, plainly, is another centre
+of "sweetness and light," the abolition of which must make, not this
+region alone, but Ireland poorer in that precise form of wealth, which,
+as Laboulaye has shown in one of the best of his lectures, is absolutely
+identical with civilisation. It is such places as this, which, in the
+interest of the people, justify the exemption from redistribution and
+resettlement, made in one of a series of remarkable articles on Ireland
+recently published in the _Birmingham Post_, of lands, the "breaking up
+of which would interfere with the amenity of a residence."
+
+* * * relations with all classes of the people here are so cordial and
+straightforward that he has been easily able to give me to-day, what I
+have sought in vain elsewhere in Ireland, an opportunity of conversing
+frankly and freely with several labouring men. For obvious reasons these
+men, as a rule, shrink from any expression of their real feelings. Their
+position is apparently one of absolute dependence either upon the
+farmers or the landlords, there being no other local market for their
+labour, which is their only stock-in-trade. As one of them said to me
+to-day, "The farmers will work a man just as long as they can't help it,
+and then they throw him away."
+
+I asked if there were no regular farm-labourers hired at fixed rates by
+the year?
+
+"Oh! very few--less now than ever; and there'll be fewer before there'll
+be more. The farmers don't want to pay the labourers or to pay the
+landlords; they want the land and the work for nothing, sir,--they do
+indeed!"
+
+"What does a farm-hand get," I asked, "if he is hired for a long time?"
+
+"Well, permanent men, they'll get 6s. a week with breakfast and dinner,
+or 7s. maybe, with one meal; and a servant-boy, sir, he'll get 2s. a
+week or may be 3s. with his board; but it's seldom he gets it."
+
+"And what has he for his board?"
+
+"Oh, stirabout; and then twice a week coorse Russian or American meat,
+what they call the 'kitchen,' and they like it better than good meat,
+sir, because it feeds the pot more."
+
+By this I found he meant that the "coorse meat" gave out more
+"unctuosity" in the boiling--the meat being always served up boiled in a
+pot with vegetables, like the "bacon and greens" of the "crackers" in
+the South.
+
+"And nothing else?"
+
+"Yes; buttermilk and potatoes."
+
+"And these wages are the highest?"
+
+"Oh, I know a boy got 5s., but by living in his father's house, and
+working out it was he got it. And then they go over to England to work."
+
+"What wages do they get there?"
+
+"Oh, it differs, but they do well; 9s. a week, I think, and their board,
+and straw to sleep on in the stables."
+
+"But doesn't it cost them a good deal to go and come?"
+
+"Oh no; they get cheap rates. They send them from Galway to Dublin like
+cattle, at L2, 5s. a car, and that makes about 1s. 6d. a head; and then
+they are taken over on the steamers very cheap. Often the graziers that
+do large business with the companies, will have a right to send over a
+number of men free; and they stowaway too; and then on the railways in
+England they get passes free often from cattle-dealers, specially when
+they are coming back, and the dealers don't want their passes. They do
+very well. They'll bring back L7 and L10. I was on a boat once, and
+there was a man; he was drunk; he was from Galway somewhere, and they
+took away and kept for him L18, all in good golden sovereigns; that was
+the most I ever saw. And he was drunk, or who'd ever have known he had
+it?"
+
+"Do the farmers build houses for the labourers?"
+
+"Build houses, is it! Glory be to God! who ever heard of such a thing?
+The farmers are a poor proud lot. They'd let a labourer die in the
+ditch!"
+
+All that this poor man said was corroborated by another man of a higher
+class, very familiar with the conditions of life and labour here, and
+indeed one of the most interesting men I have met in Ireland. Born the
+son of a labouring man, he was educated by a priest and educated
+himself, till he fitted himself for the charge of a small school, which
+he kept to such good purpose that in eighteen years he saved L1100, with
+which capital he resolved to begin life as a small farmer and
+shopkeeper. He had studied all the agricultural works he could get, and
+before he went fairly into the business, he travelled on the Continent,
+looking carefully into the methods of culture and manner of life of the
+people, especially in Italy and in Belgium. The Belgian farming gave him
+new ideas of what might be done in Ireland, and those ideas he has put
+into practice, with the best results.
+
+"On the same land with my neighbours," he said, "I double their
+production. Where they get two tons of hay I get four or four and a
+half, where they get forty-five barrels of potatoes I get a hundred.
+Only the other day I got L20 for a bullock I had taken pains with to
+fatten him up scientifically. Of course I had a small capital to start
+with: but where did I get that? Not from the Government. I earned and
+saved it myself; and then I wasn't above learning how best to use it."
+
+He thinks the people here--though by no means what they might be with
+more thrift and knowledge--much better off than the same class in many
+other parts of Ireland. There are no "Gombeen men" here, he says, and no
+usurious shopkeepers. "The people back each other in a friendly way when
+they need help." Many of the labourers, he says, are in debt to him, but
+he never presses them, and they are very patient with each other. They
+would do much better if any pains were taken to teach them. It is his
+belief that agricultural schools and model farms would do more than
+almost any measure that could be devised for bringing up the standard of
+comfort and prosperity here, and making the country quiet.
+
+It is the opinion of this man that the people of this place have been
+led to regard the Papal Decree as a kind of attack on their liberties,
+and that they are quite as likely to resist as to obey it. For his own
+part, he thinks Ireland ought to have her own parliament, and make her
+own laws. He is not satisfied with the laws actually made, though he
+admits they are better than the older laws were. "The tenants get their
+own improvements now," he said, "and in old times the more a man
+improved the worse it was for him, the agent all the while putting up
+the rents."
+
+But he does not want Irish independence. "The people that talk that
+way," he said, "have never travelled. They don't see how idle it is for
+Ireland to talk about supporting herself. She just can't do it."
+
+Not less interesting was my talk to-day with quite a different person.
+This was a keen-eyed, hawk-billed, wiry veteran of the '48. As a youth
+he had been out with "Meagher of the Sword," and his eyes glowed when he
+found that I had known that champion of Erin. "I was out at Ballinagar,"
+he said; "there were five hundred men with guns, and five hundred
+pikemen." It struck me he would like to be going "out" again in the same
+fashion, but he had little respect for the "Nationalists."
+
+"There's too many lawyers among them," he said, "too many lawyers and
+too many dealers. The lawyers are doing well, thanks to the League. Oh
+yes!" with a knowing chuckle, and a light of mischief in his eye; "the
+lawyers are doing very well! There's one little bit of a solicitor not
+far from here was of no good at all four years ago, and now they tell me
+he's made four thousand pounds in three years' time, good money, and got
+it all in hand! And there's another, I hear, has made six thousand. The
+lawyers that call themselves Nationalists, they just keep mischief
+agoing to further themselves. What do they care for the labourers? Why,
+no more than the farmers do--and what would become of the poor men! * *
+* * here, he is making * * * * * * * and he keeps more poor men going
+than all the lawyers and all the farmers in the place a good part of the
+year."
+
+"Are the labourers," I asked, "Nationalists?"
+
+"They don't know what they are," he answered. "They hate the farmers,
+but they love Ireland, and they all stand together for the counthry!"
+
+"How is it with the Plan of Campaign and the Boycotting?"
+
+"Now what use have the labourers got for the Plan of Campaign? No more
+than for the moon! And for the Boycotting, I never liked it--but I was
+never afraid of it--and there's not been much of it here."
+
+"Will the Papal Decree put a stop to what there is of it?"
+
+"I wouldn't mind the Pope's Decree no more than that door!" he exclaimed
+indignantly. "Hasn't he enough, sure, to mind in Rome? Why didn't he
+defend his own country, not bothering about Ireland!"
+
+"Are you not a Catholic, then?" I asked.
+
+"Oh yes, I'm a Catholic, but I wouldn't mind the Decree. Only remember,"
+he added, after a pause, "just this: it don't trouble me, for I've
+nothing to do with the Plan of Campaign--only I don't want the Pope to
+be meddlin' in matters that don't concern him."
+
+"It's out of respect, then, for the Pope that you wouldn't mind the
+Decree?"
+
+"Just that, intirely! It was some of them Englishmen wheedled it out of
+him, you may be sure, sir."
+
+"I am told you went out to America once."
+
+"Yes, I went there in '48, and I came back in '51."
+
+"What made you go?" I asked.
+
+"Is it what made me go?" he replied, with a sudden fierceness in his
+voice. "It was the evictions made me go; that we was put out of the good
+holding my father had, and his father before him; and I can never
+forgive it, never! But I came back; and it was * * * father that was the
+good man to me and to mine, else where would I be?"
+
+I afterwards learned from * * * * that the evictions of which the old
+man spoke with so much bitterness were made in carrying out important
+improvements, and that it was quite true that his father had greatly
+befriended the emigrant when he got enough of the New World and came
+home.
+
+It was curious to see the old grudge fresh and fierce in the old man's
+heart, but side by side with it the lion lying down with the lamb--a
+warm and genuine recognition of the kindness and help bestowed on
+himself. His resentment against the landlord's action in one generation
+did not in the least interfere with his recognition of the landlord's
+usefulness and liberality in the next generation.
+
+"You didn't like America?" I said. "Where did you live there?"
+
+"I lived at North Brookfield in Massachusetts, a year or two," he
+replied, "with Governor Amasa Walker. Did you know him? He was a good
+man; he was fond of the people, but he thought too much of the nagurs."
+
+"Yes," I answered; "I know all about him, and he was, as you say, a very
+good man, even if he was an abolitionist. But why didn't you stay in
+North Brookfield?"
+
+"Oh, it was a poor country indeed! A blast of wind would blow all the
+ground away there was! It does no good to the people, going to America,"
+he said; "they come back worse than they went!"
+
+He is at work now in some quarries here.
+
+"The quarrymen get six shillings a week," he said, "with bread and tea
+and butter and meat three times a week. With nine shillings a week and
+board, a man'll make himself bigger than * * *!"
+
+"Was the country quiet now?"
+
+"This country here? Oh! it's very quiet; with potatoes at 3s. 6d. a
+barrel, it's a good year for the people. They're a very quiet
+people,"--in corroboration apparently of which statement he told me a
+story of a coroner's jury called to sit on the body of a man found on
+the highway shot through the head, which returned an unanimous verdict
+of "Died by the visitation of God."
+
+This country is dominated by the Rocky Hills climbing up to Cullenagh,
+which divides the Barrow valley from the Nore. We drove this afternoon
+to * a most lovely place. The mansion there is now shut up and
+dismantled, but the park and the grounds are very beautiful, with a
+beauty rather enhanced than diminished by the somewhat unkempt
+luxuriance of the vegetation. We passed a now well-grown tree planted by
+the Prince of Wales * * * * * * and drove over many miles of excellent
+road made by * * * * * * * * employs * * * * * * * * regularly, * * *
+men as labourers, cartmen and masons, to whom he pays out annually the
+sum of * * Mr. * * who, by the way, rather resented my asking him if he
+came of one of the Cromwellian English families so numerous here, and
+informed me that his people came over with Strongbow--assures me that
+but for these works of * * * * these men under him would be literally
+without occupation. In addition to these there are about a dozen more
+men employed * * as gamekeepers and plantation-men. At the * * places
+belonging to * * * * * * * * * * above eighty men find constant
+employment, and receive regular wages amounting to over L4000. Were * *
+* * dispossessed or driven out of Ireland, all this outlay would come to
+an end, and with what result to these working-men? As things now are,
+while * * * working-men receive a regular wage of five shillings, the
+same men, as farmers' labourers, would receive, now and then, five
+shillings a week, and that without food! I saw enough in the course of
+our afternoon's drive to satisfy me that my informant of the morning had
+probably not overstated matters when he told me that for at least
+seventy per cent. of the work done by the labourers here, from November
+to May, they have to look to the landlords. On the property of * * as
+well as on the neighbouring properties * * * * * * * the houses have
+been generally put up by the landlords. We called in the course of the
+afternoon upon a labouring man who lives with his wife in a very neat,
+cozy, and quite new house, built recently for him by * *. These good
+people have been living on this property for now nearly half a century.
+Their new house having been built for them, * * has had an agreement
+prepared, under which it may be secured to them. The terms have all been
+discussed and found satisfactory, but the old labourer now hesitates
+about signing the agreement. He gives, and can be got to give, no reason
+for this; but when we drove up he came out to greet us in the most
+friendly manner. We went in and found his wife, a shrewd, sharp-eyed,
+little old dame, with whom * * * * fell into a confabulation, while I
+went into the next room with the labourer himself. The house was neatly
+furnished--with little ornaments and photographs on the mantel-shelf,
+and nothing of the happy-go-lucky look so common about the houses of the
+working people in Ireland, as well as about the houses of the lesser
+squires.
+
+I paid him a compliment on the appearance of his house and grounds.
+"Yes, sir!" he answered: "it's a very good place it is, and * * * * has
+built it just to please us."
+
+"But I am told you want to leave it?"
+
+"Ah, no, that is not so, sir, indeed at all! We've three children you
+see, sir, in America--two girls and a boy we have."
+
+"And where are they?"
+
+"Ah, the girls they're not in any factory at all. They're like leddies,
+living out in a place they call * * in Massachusetts; and the lad, he
+was on a farm there. But we don't know where he is nor his sisters any
+more just now. And the wife, she thinks she would like to go out to
+America and see the children."
+
+"Do you hear from them regularly?"
+
+"Well, it's only a few pounds they send, but they're doing very well.
+Domestics they are, quite like leddies; there's their pictures on the
+shelf."
+
+"But what would you do there?"
+
+"Ah! we'd have lodgings, the wife says, sir. But I like the ould place
+myself."
+
+"I think you are quite right there," I replied. "And do you get work
+here from the farmers as the labourers do in my country?"
+
+"Work from the farmers, sir?" he answered, rather sharply. "What they
+can't help we get, but no more! If the farmers in America is like them,
+it's not I would be going there! The farmers! For the farmers, a
+labourer, sir, is not of the race of Adam! They think any place good
+enough for a labourer--any place and any food! Is the farmers that way
+in America?"
+
+"Well, I don't know that they are so very much more liberal than your
+farmers are," I replied; "but I think they'd have to treat you as being
+of the race of Adam! But are not the farmers here, or the Guardians,
+obliged to build houses for the labourers? I thought there was an Act of
+Parliament about that?"
+
+"And so there is but what's the good of it? It's just to get the
+labourers' votes, and then they fool the labourers, just making them
+quarrel about where the cottages shall be, what they call the 'sites';
+and then there's no cottages built at all, at all. It's the lawyers, you
+see, sir, gets in with the farmers--the strongest farmers--and then they
+just make fools of the labourers as if there was no Act of Parliament at
+all."
+
+"But if the labourers want to go away, to emigrate," I said, "as you
+want to do, to America, don't the farmers, or the Government, or the
+landlords, help them to get away and make a start?"
+
+"Not a bit of it, sir," he replied; "not a bit of it. I believe,
+though," he added after a moment; "I believe they do get some help to go
+to Australia. But they're mostly no good that goes that way. The best is
+them that go for themselves, or their friends help them. But there's not
+so many going this year."
+
+When we drove away I asked * * if he had made any progress towards a
+signature of the agreement with the labourer's wife.
+
+"No; she couldn't be got to say yes or no. I asked her," said * * "what
+reason they had for imagining that after all these years I would try to
+do them an injury? She protested they never thought of such a thing; but
+she couldn't be brought to say she wished her husband to sign the paper.
+It's very odd, indeed."
+
+I couldn't help suspecting that the _materfamilias_ was at the bottom of
+it all, and that she was bent upon going out to America to participate
+in the prosperity of her two daughters, who were living "like leddies"
+at * * in Massachusetts.
+
+The incident recalled to me something which happened years ago when I
+was returning with the Storys from Rome to Boston. Our Cunarder, in the
+middle of the night, off the Irish coast, ran down and instantly sank a
+small schooner.
+
+In a wonderfully short time we had come-to, and a boat's crew had
+succeeded in picking up and bringing all the poor people on board. Among
+them was a wizened old woman, upon whom all sorts of kind attentions
+were naturally lavished by the ship's company. She could not be
+persuaded to go into a cabin after she had recovered from the shock and
+the fright of the accident, but, comforted and clothed with new and dry
+garments, she took refuge under one of the companion-ways, and there,
+sitting huddled up, with her arms about her knees, she crooned and
+moaned to herself, "I was near being in a wetter and a warmer place; I
+was near being in a wetter and a warmer place!" by the half hour
+together. We found that the poor old soul had been to Liverpool to see
+her son off on a sailing ship as an emigrant to America. So a
+subscription was soon made up to send her on our arrival to New York
+there to await her son. We had some trouble in making her understand
+what was to be done with her, but when she finally got it fairly into
+her head, gleams of mingled surprise and delight came over her withered
+face, and she finally broke out, "Oh, then, glory be to God! it's a
+mercy that I was drownded! glory be to God! and it's the proud boy
+Terence will be when he gets out to America to find his poor ould mother
+waiting for him there that he left behind him in Liverpool, and quite
+the leddy with all this good gold money in her hand, glory be to God!"
+
+On our way back to * * we passed through * * a very neat
+prosperous-looking town, which * * tells me is growing up on the heels
+of * *. * * * was one of the few places at which the "no rent"
+manifesto, issued by Mr. Parnell and his colleagues from their prison in
+Kilmainham, during the confinement of Mr. Davitt at Portland, and
+without concert with him, was taken up by a village curate and commended
+to the people. He was arrested for it by Mr. Gladstone's Government, and
+locked up for six weeks.
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Saturday, June 23d._--I left * * * yesterday morning early on
+an "outside car," with one of my fellow-guests in that "bower of
+beauty," who was bent on killing a salmon somewhere in the Nore * * We
+drove through a most varied and picturesque country, viewing on the way
+the seats of Mr. Hamilton Stubber and Mr. Robert Staples, both finely
+situated in well-wooded parks. Mr. Stubber was formerly master of the
+Queen's County hounds, a famous pack, which, as our jarvey put it,
+"brought a power of money into the county, and made it aisy for a poor
+man." But the local agitations wore out his patience, and he put the
+pack down some years ago. Not far from his house is an astonishing
+modern "tumulus," or mound of hewn and squared stones. These it seems
+were quarried and brought here by him, with the intention of building a
+new and handsome residence. This intention he abandoned under the same
+annoyance.
+
+"They call it Mr. Stubber's Cairn," said the jarvey; "and a sorrowful
+sight it is, to think of the work it would have given the people,
+building the big house that'll never be built now, I'm thinking." If Mr.
+Stubber should become an "absentee," he can hardly, I think, be blamed
+for it.
+
+His property marches with that of Mr. Robert Staples, who comes of a
+Gloucestershire family planted in Ireland under Charles I.
+
+"Mr. Staples is farming his own lands," said our jarvey, when I
+commented on the fine appearance of some fields as we drove by; "and
+he'll be doing very well this year. Ah! he comes and goes, but he's here
+a great deal, and he looks after everything himself; that's the reason
+the fields is good."
+
+This is a property of some 1500 statute acres. Only last March the
+landlord took over from one tenant, who was in arrears of two years and
+a half and owed him some L300, a farm of 90 acres, giving the man fifty
+pounds to boot, and bidding him go in peace. I wonder whether this
+proceeding would make the landlord a "land-grabber," and expose him to
+the pains and penalties of "boycotting"?
+
+On this place, too, it seems that Mr. Staples's grandfather put up many
+houses for the tenants; a thing worth noting, as one of not a few
+instances I have come upon to show that it will not do to accept without
+examination the sweeping statements so familiar to us in America, that
+improvements have never been made by the landlord upon Irish estates.
+
+My companion had meant to put me down at the railway station of
+Attanagh, there to catch a good train to Kilkenny.
+
+But we had a capital nag, and reached Attanagh so early that we
+determined to drive on to Ballyragget.
+
+From Attanagh to Ballyragget the road ran along a plateau which
+commanded the most beautiful views of the valley of the Nore and of the
+finely wooded country beyond. Ballyragget itself is a brisk little
+market town, the American influence showing itself here, as in so many
+other places, in such trifles as the signs on the shops which describe
+them as "stores." My salmon-fishing companion put me down at the station
+and went off to the river, which flows through the town, and is here a
+swift and not inconsiderable stream.
+
+An hour in the train took me to Kilkenny, where I met by appointment
+several persons whom I had been unable to see during my previous visit
+in March.
+
+These gentlemen, experienced agents, gave me a good deal of information
+as to the effect of the present state of things upon the "_moral_" of
+the tenantry in different parts of Ireland. On one estate, for example,
+in the county of Longford, a tenant has been doing battle for the cause
+of Ireland in the following extraordinary fashion.
+
+He held certain lands at a rental of L23, 4s. Being, to use the
+picturesque language of the agent, a "little good for tenant," he fell
+into arrears, and on the 1st of May 1885 owed nearly three years' rent,
+or L63, 12s., in addition to a sum of L150 which he had borrowed of his
+amiable landlord three or four years before to enable him to work his
+farm. Of this total sum of L213, 12s. he positively refused to pay one
+penny. Proceedings were accordingly taken against him, and he was
+evicted. By this eviction his title to the tenancy was broken. The
+landlord nevertheless, for the sake of peace and quiet, offered to allow
+him to sell, to a man who wished to take the place, any interest he
+might have had in the holding, and to forgive both the arrears of the
+rent and the L150 which had been borrowed by him. The ex-tenant flatly
+refused to accept this offer, became a weekly pensioner upon the
+National League, and declared war. The landlord was forced to get a
+caretaker for the place from the Property Defence Association at a cost
+of L1 per week, to provide a house for a police protection party, and to
+defray the expenses of that party upon fuel and lights. Nor was this
+all. The landlord found himself further obliged to employ men from the
+same Property Defence Association to cut and save the hay-crop on the
+land, and when this had been done no one could be found to buy the crop.
+The crop and the lands were "boycotted." It was only in May last that a
+purchaser could be found for the hay cut and saved two years ago--this
+purchaser being himself a "boycotted" man on an adjoining property. He
+bought the hay, paying for it a price which did not quite cover one-half
+the cost of sowing it!
+
+"No one denies for a moment," said the agent, "that the tenant in all
+this business has been more than fairly, even generously, treated by the
+estate; yet no one seems to think it anything but natural and reasonable
+that he should demand, as he now demands, to be put back into the
+possession of his forfeited tenancy at a certain rent fixed by himself,"
+which he will obligingly agree to pay, "provided that the hay cut and
+saved on the property two years ago is accounted for to him by the
+estate!"
+
+In another case an agent, Mr. Ivough, had to deal with a body of five
+hundred tenants on a considerable estate. Of these tenants, two hundred
+settled their rents with the landlord before the passing of the Land Act
+of 1881, and valuations made by the landlord's valuer, with their full
+assent. There was no business for the lawyers, so far as they were
+concerned, and no compulsion of any sort was put on them. Among them was
+a man who had married the daughter of an old tenant on the estate, and
+so came into a holding of 12 Irish, or more than 20 statute, acres, at a
+rental of L18 a year. The valuer reduced this to L14, 10s., which
+satisfied the tenant, and as the agent agreed to make this reduced
+valuation retroactive, all went as smoothly as possible for two years,
+when the tenant began to fall into arrears. When the Sub-Commissioners,
+between 1885 and 1887, took to making sweeping reductions, the tenants
+who had settled freely under the recent valuation grumbled bitterly. As
+one of them tersely put it to the agent, "We were a parcel of bloody
+fools, and you ought to have told us these Sub-Commissioners were
+coming!" Mr. Sweeney, the tenant by marriage already mentioned, was not
+content to express his particular dissatisfaction in idle words, but
+kept on going into arrears. In May 1888 things came to a crisis. The
+agent refused to accept a settlement which included the payment by him
+of the costs of the proceedings forced upon him by his tenant. "You have
+had a good holding," said the agent, "with plenty of water and good
+land. In this current year two acres of your wheat will pay the whole
+rent. You have broken up and sold bit by bit a mill that was on the
+place; and above all, when Mr. Gladstone made us accept the judicial
+rents, he told us we might be sure, if we did this, of punctual payment.
+That was the one consideration held out to us. And we are entitled to
+that!"
+
+The tenant being out of his holding, the agent wishes to put another
+tenant into it. But the holding is "boycotted." Several tenants are
+anxious for it, and would gladly take it, but they dare not The great
+evicted will neither sell any tenant-right he may have, nor pay his
+arrears and costs, nor give up the place to another tenant. To put
+Property Defence men on the holding would cost the landlord L2, 10s. a
+week, and do him no great good, as the evicted man "holds the fort,"
+being established in a house which he occupies on an adjoining property,
+and for which presumably he pays his rent. It seems as if Mr. Sweeney
+were inspired by the example of another tenant, named Barry, who, before
+the passing of the Land Act of 1881, gave up freely a holding of 20
+acres, on a property managed by Mr. Kough; but as he was on such good
+terms with the agent that he could borrow money of him, he begged the
+agent to let him retain at a low rent a piece of this surrendered land
+directly adjoining his house. He asked this in the name of his eight or
+nine children, and it was granted him. The agent afterwards found that
+the piece of land in question was by far the best of the surrendered
+holding. But that is a mere detail. This ingenious tenant Barry, living
+now on another estate just outside the grasp of the agent, has
+systematically "boycotted" for the last nine years the land which he
+gave up, feeding his own cattle upon it freely meanwhile, and keeping
+all would-be tenants at a distance! "He is now," said the agent, "quite
+a wealthy man in his way, jobbing cattle at all the great markets!"
+
+"When the eviction of Sweeney took place," said the agent, "I was
+present in person, as I thought I ought to be, and the result is that I
+have been held up to the execration of mankind as a monster for putting
+out a child in a cradle into a storm. As a matter of fact," he said,
+"there was a cradle in the way, which the sheriff-Officer gently took
+up, and by direction of the tenant's wife removed. I made no remark
+about it at all, but a local paper published a lying story, which the
+publisher had to retract, that I had said 'Throw out the child!'"
+
+"Two priests," he said, "came quite uninvited and certainly without
+provocation, to see me, and one of them shouted out, 'Ah! we know you'll
+be making another Coolgreany,' which was as much as to say there 'would
+be bloodshed.' This was the more intolerable," he added, "that, as I
+afterwards found, I had already done for the sake of the tenants
+precisely what these ecclesiastics professed that they had come to ask
+me to do!
+
+"For thirty years," said this gentleman, "I have lived in the midst of
+these people--and in all that time I have never had so much as a
+threatening letter. But after this story was published of my throwing
+out a cradle with a child in it, I was insulted in the street by a woman
+whom I had never seen before. Two girls, too, called out at the
+eviction, 'You've bad pluck; why didn't you tell us you were coming down
+the day?' and another woman made me laugh by crying after me, 'You've
+two good-looking daughters, but you're a bad man yourself.'"
+
+Quite as instructive is the story given me on this occasion of the
+Tyaquin estate in the county of Galway. This estate is managed by an
+agent, Mr. Eichardson of Castle Coiner, in this county of Kilkenny.
+
+The rents on this Galway estate, as Mr. Richardson assures me, have been
+unaltered for between thirty and forty years, and some of them for even
+a longer period. For the last twenty-five years certainty, during which
+Mr. Richardson has been the agent of the estate, and probably, he
+thinks, for many years previous, there has never been a case of the
+non-payment of rent, except in recent years when rents were withheld for
+a time for political reasons.
+
+Large sums of money have been laid out in various useful improvements.
+Constant occupation was given to those requiring it, until the agrarian
+agitation became fully developed. On the demesne and the home farms the
+best systems of reclaiming waste lands and the best systems of
+agriculture were practically exhibited, so that the estate was an
+agricultural free school for all who cared to learn.
+
+When the Land Act of 1881 was passed, almost all the tenants applied,
+and had judicial rents fixed, many of them by consent of the agent.
+
+In 1887 the tenants were called on as usual to pay these judicial rents.
+A large minority refused to do so except on certain terms, which were
+refused. The dispute continued for many months, but as the charges on
+the estate had to be met, the agent was obliged to give way, and allow
+an abatement of four shillings in the pound on these judicial rents.
+Some of these charges, to meet which the agent gave way, were for money
+borrowed from the Commissioners of Public Works to _improve the holdings
+of the tenants_. For these improvements thus thrown entirely upon the
+funds of the estate no increase of rent or charge of any kind had been
+laid upon the tenants.
+
+When a settlement was agreed on, those of the tenants who had adopted
+the Plan came in a body to pay their rents on 3d January 1888. They
+stated that they were unable to pay more than the rent due up to
+November 1886, and that they would never have adopted the Plan had they
+not been driven into it by _sheer distress_. After which they handed Mr.
+Richardson a cheque drawn by John T. Dillon, Esq., M.P., for the amount
+banked with the National League.
+
+An article appeared shortly afterwards in a League newspaper, loudly
+boasting of the great victory won by Mr. Dillon, M.P., for the starving
+and poverty-stricken tenants. Two of these tenants (brothers) were under
+a yearly rent of L7, 10s. They declared they could only pay L3, 15s., or
+a half-year's rent, and this only if they got an abatement of 15s. Yet
+these same tenants were then paying Mr. Richardson L50 a year for a
+grass farm, and about L12 for meadows, as well as L30 a year more for a
+grass farm to an adjoining landlord.
+
+Another tenant who held a farm at L13, 5s. a year declared he could only
+pay L6, 12s. 6d., or a half-year's rent, if he got an abatement of L1,
+6s. 6d. A very short time before, this tenant had taken a grass farm
+from an adjoining landlord, and he was so anxious to get it that he
+showed the landlord a bundle of large notes, amounting to rather more
+than L300 sterling, in order to prove his solvency! The same tenant has
+since written a letter to Mr. Richardson offering L50 a year for a grass
+farm!
+
+All these campaigners, Mr. Richardson says, "with one noble exception,
+the wife of a tenant who was ill, declined to pay a penny of rent beyond
+November 1st, 1886," stating that they were "absolutely unable" to do
+more. So they all left the May 1887 rent unpaid, and the hanging gale to
+November 1887, which, however, they were not even asked to pay.
+
+The morning after the settlement many of the tenants who, when they were
+all present in a body on the previous evening, had declared their
+"inability" to pay the half-year's rent due down to May 1887,
+individually came to Mr. Richardson unasked, and paid it, some saying
+they had "borrowed the money that night," but others frankly declaring
+that they dared not break the rule publicly, having been ordered by the
+League only to pay to November 1886, for fear of the consequences. These
+would have been injury to their cattle, or the burning of their hay, or
+possibly murder.
+
+Of the country about Kilkenny, I am told, as of the country about
+Carlow, that nearly or quite seventy per cent, of the labourers are
+dependent upon the landlords from November to May for such employment as
+they get.
+
+The shopkeepers, too, are in a bad way, being in many cases reduced to
+the condition of mere agents of the great wholesale houses elsewhere,
+and kept going by these houses mainly in the hope of recovering old
+debts. There is a severe pressure of usury, too, upon the farmers. "If a
+farmer," said one resident to me, "wants to borrow a small sum of the
+Loan Fund Bank, he must have two securities--one of them a substantial
+man good for the debt. These two indorsers must be 'treated' by the
+borrower whom they back; and he must pay them a weekly sum for the
+countenance they have given him, which not seldom amounts, before he
+gets through with the matter, to a hundred per cent, on the original
+loan."
+
+I am assured too that the consumption of spirits all through this region
+has greatly increased of late years. "The official reports will show
+you," said one gentleman, "that the annual outlay upon whisky in Ireland
+equals the sum saved to the tenants by the reductions in rent." This is
+a proposition so remarkable that I simply record it for future
+verification, as having been made by a very quiet, cool, and methodical
+person, whose information on other points I have found to be correct. He
+tells me too, as of his own knowledge, that in going over some financial
+matters with a small farmer in his neighbourhood, he ascertained, beyond
+a peradventure, that this farmer annually spent in whisky, for the use
+of his family, consisting of himself, his wife and three adult children,
+nearly, or quite, _seventy pounds a year_! "You won't believe this," he
+said to me; "and if you print the statement nobody else will believe it;
+but for all that it is the simple unexaggerated truth."
+
+Falstaff's reckoning at Dame Quickly's becomes a moderate score in
+comparison with this!
+
+I spent half an hour again in the muniment-room at Kilkenny Castle,
+where, in the Expense-Book of the second Duke of Ormond, I found a
+supper _menu_ worthy of record, as illustrating what people meant by
+"keeping open house" in the great families of the time of Queen
+Anne.[Note L.]
+
+Taking a train early in the afternoon, I came on here in time to dine
+last night with Mr. Rolleston of Delgany, an uncompromising Protestant
+"Home Ruler"--as Protestant and as uncompromising as John Mitchel--whose
+recent pamphlet on "Boycotting" has deservedly attracted so much
+attention on both sides of the Irish Sea.
+
+I was first led into a correspondence with Mr. Rolleston by a remarkable
+article of his published in the _Dublin University Review_ for February
+1886, on "The Archbishop in Politics." In that article, Mr. Rolleston,
+while avowing himself to be robust enough to digest without much
+difficulty the _ex officio_ franchise conferred upon the Catholic clergy
+by Mr. Parnell to secure the acceptance of his candidates at
+Parliamentary conventions, made a very firm and fearless protest against
+the attempt of the Archbishops of Dublin and Cashel to "boycott"
+Catholic criticism of the National League and its methods, by declaring
+such criticism to be "a public insult" offered, not to the Archbishops
+of Cashel and Dublin personally, or as political supporters of the
+National League, but to the Archbishops as dignitaries of the Catholic
+Church, and to their Archiepiscopal office. The "boycotting," by
+clerical machinery, of independent lay opinion in civil matters, is to
+the body politic of a Catholic country what the germ of cancer is to the
+physical body. And though Mr. Rolleston, in this article, avowed himself
+to be a hearty supporter of the "political programme of the National
+League," and went so far even as to maintain that the social boycotting,
+"which makes the League technically an illegal conspiracy against law
+and individual liberty," might be "in many cases justified by the
+magnitude of the legalised crime against which it was directed," it was
+obvious to me that he could not long remain blind to the true drift of
+things in an organisation condemned, by the conditions it has created
+for itself, to deal with the thinkers of Ireland as it deals with the
+tenants of Ireland. His recent pamphlet on "Boycotting" proves that I
+was right. What he said to me the other day in a letter about the
+pamphlet may be said as truly of the article. It was "a shaft sunk into
+the obscure depths of Irish opinion, to bring to light and turn to
+service whatever there may be in those depths of sound and healthy;" and
+one of my special objects in this present visit to Ireland was to get a
+personal touch of the intellectual movement which is throwing such
+thinkers as Mr. Rolleston to the front.
+
+We were five at table, Mr. Rolleston's other guests being Mr. John
+O'Leary, whose name is held in honour for his courage and honesty by all
+who know anything of the story of Ireland in our times, and who was sent
+a quarter of a century ago as a Fenian patriot--not into seclusion with
+sherry and bitters, at Kilmainham, like Mr. Gladstone's "suspects" of
+1881--but like Michael Davitt, into the stern reality of penal
+servitude; Dr. Sigerson, Dean of the Faculty of Science of the Boyal
+University, and an authority upon the complicated question of Irish Land
+Tenures; and Mr. John F. Taylor, a leading barrister of Dublin, an ally
+on the Land Question of Mr. Davitt, and an outspoken Repealer of the
+Union of 1800.
+
+I have long wished to meet Mr. O'Leary, who sent me, through a
+correspondent of mine, two years ago, one of the most thoughtful and
+well-considered papers I have ever read on the possibilities and
+impossibilities of Home Rule for Ireland; and it was a great pleasure to
+find in the man the elevation of tone, the breadth of view, and the
+refined philosophic perception of the strong and weak points in the
+Irish case, which had charmed me in. the paper. Now that "Conservative"
+Englishmen have come to treat the main points of Chartism almost as
+commonplaces in politics, it is surely time for them to recognise the
+honesty and integrity of the spirit which revolted in the Ireland of
+1848 against the then seemingly hopeless condition of that country. Of
+that spirit Mr. O'Leary is a living, earnest, and most interesting
+incarnation. He strikes one at once as a much younger man in all that
+makes the youth of the intellect and the emotions than any Nationalist
+M.P. of half his years whom I have ever met. No Irishman living has
+dealt stronger or more open blows than he against the English dominion
+in Ireland. Born in Tipperary, where he inherited a small property in
+houses, he was sent to Trinity College in Dublin, and while a student
+there was drawn into the "Young Ireland" party mainly by the poems of
+Thomas Davis. Late in the electrical year of the "battle summer," 1848,
+he was arrested on suspicion of being concerned in a plot to rescue
+Smith O'Brien and other state prisoners. The suspicion was well founded,
+but could not be established, and after a day or two he was liberated.
+From Trinity, after this, he went to the Queen's College in Cork, where
+he took his degree, and studied medicine. When the Fenian movement
+became serious, after the close of our American Civil War, O'Leary threw
+himself into it with Stephens, Luby, and Charles Kickham. Stephens
+appointed him one of the chief organisers of the I.E.B. with Luby and
+Kickham, and he took charge of the _Irish People_--the organ of the
+Fenians of 1865. It was as a subordinate contributor to this journal
+that Sir William Harcourt's familiar Irish bogy, O'Donovan Rossa[26],
+was arrested together with his chief, Mr. O'Leary, and with Kickham in
+1865, and found guilty, with them, after a trial before Mr. Justice
+Keogh, of treason-felony. The speech then delivered by Mr. O'Leary in
+the dock made a profound impression upon the public mind in America. It
+was the speech, not of a conspirator, but of a patriot. The indignation
+with which he repelled for himself and for his associate Luby the
+charges levelled at them both, without a particle of supporting
+evidence, by the prosecuting counsel, of aiming at massacre and plunder,
+was its most salient feature. The terrible sentence passed upon him, of
+penal servitude for twenty years, Mr. O'Leary accepted with a calm
+dignity, which I am glad, for the sake of Irish manhood, to find that
+his friends here now recall with pride, when their ears are vexed by the
+shrill and clamorous complaints of more recent "patriots," under the
+comparatively trivial punishments which they invite.
+
+In 1870, Mr. O'Leary and his companions were released and pardoned on
+condition of remaining beyond the British dominions until the expiration
+of their sentences. Mr. O'Leary fixed his residence for a time in Paris,
+and thence went to America, where he and Kickham were regarded as the
+leaders of the American branch of the I. R. B. He returned to Ireland in
+1885, his term of sentence having then expired, and it was shortly after
+his return that he gave to my correspondent the letter upon Irish
+affairs to which I have already referred. He had been chosen President
+of the "Young Ireland Society" of Dublin before he returned, and in that
+capacity delivered at the Rotunda, in the Irish capital, before a vast
+crowd assembled to welcome him back, an address which showed how
+thoughtfully and calmly he had devoted himself during his long years of
+imprisonment and exile to the cause of Ireland. Mr. William O'Brien,
+M.P., and Mr. Redmond, M.P., took part in this reception, but their
+subsequent course shows that they can hardly have relished Mr. O'Leary's
+fearless and outspoken protests against the intolerance and injustice of
+the agrarian organisation which controls their action. In England, as
+well as well as in Ireland, Mr. O'Leary spoke to great multitudes of his
+countrymen, and always in the same sense. Mr. Rolleston tells me that
+Mr. O'Leary's denunciations of "the dynamite section of the Irish
+people," to use the euphemism of an American journal, "are the only ones
+ever uttered by an Irish leader, lay or clerical." The day must come, if
+it be not already close at hand, when the Irish leader of whom this can
+be truly said, must be felt by his own people to be the one man worthy
+of their trust. The thing that has been shall be, and there is nothing
+new under the sun. The Marats and the Robespierres, the Bareres and the
+Collots, are the pallbearers, not the standard-bearers of liberty.
+
+Towards the National League, as at present administered on the lines of
+the agrarian agitation, Mr. O'Leary has so far preserved an attitude of
+neutrality, though he has never for a moment hesitated either in public
+or in private most vehemently to condemn such sworn Fenians as have
+accepted seats in the British Parliament, speaking his mind freely and
+firmly of them as "double-oathed men" playing a constitutional part with
+one hand, and a treasonable part with the other.
+
+Yet he is not at one with the extreme and fanatical Fenians who oppose
+constitutional agitation simply because it is constitutional. His
+objection to the existing Nationalism was exactly put, Mr. Rolleston
+tells me, by a clever writer in the Dublin _Mail_, who said that
+O'Connell having tried "moral force" and failed, and the Fenians having
+tried "physical force" and failed, the Leaguers were now trying to
+succeed by the use of "immoral force."
+
+Dr. Sigerson, who, as a man of science, must necessarily revolt from the
+coarse and clumsy methods of the blunderers who have done so much since
+1885 to discredit the cause of Ireland, evidently clings to the hope
+that something may still be saved from the visible wreck of what has
+come, even in Ireland, to be called "Parnellism," and he good-naturedly
+persisted in speaking of our host last night and of his friends as
+"mugwumps." For the "mugwumps" of my own country I have no particular
+admiration, being rather inclined, with my friend Senator Conkling (now
+gone to his rest from the racket of American politics), to regard them
+as "Madonnas who wish it to be distinctly understood that they might
+have been Magdalens." But these Irish "mugwumps" seem to me to earn
+their title by simply refusing to believe that two and two, which make
+four in France or China, can be bullied into making five in Ireland.
+"What certain 'Parnellites' object to," said one of the company, "is
+that we can't be made to go out gathering grapes of thorns or figs of
+thistles. Some of them expect to found an Irish republic on robbery, and
+to administer it by falsehood. We don't."[27] This is precisely the
+spirit in which Mr. Rolleston wrote to me not long before I left England
+this week. "I have been slowly forced," he wrote, "to the conclusion
+that the National League is a body which deserves nothing but
+reprobation from all who wish well to Ireland. It has plunged this
+country into a state of moral degradation, from which it will take us at
+least a generation to recover. It is teaching the people that no law of
+justice, of candour, of honour, or of humanity can be allowed to
+interfere with the political ends of the moment. It is, in fact,
+absolutely divorcing morality from politics. The mendacity of some of
+its leaders is shameless and sickening, and still more sickening is the
+complete indifference with which this mendacity is regarded in Ireland."
+
+
+It is the spirit, too, of a letter which I received not long ago from
+the west of Ireland, in which my correspondent quoted the bearer of one
+of the most distinguished of Irish names, and a strong "Home Ruler," as
+saying to him, "These Nationalists are stripping Irishmen as bare of
+moral sense as the Bushmen of South Africa."
+
+This very day I find in one of the leading Nationalist journals here
+letters from Mr. Davitt, Mr. O'Leary, and Mr. Taylor himself, which
+convict that journal of making last week a statement about Mr. Taylor
+absolutely untrue, and, so far as appears, absolutely without the shadow
+of a foundation. These letters throw such a curious light on passing
+events here at this moment that I shall preserve them.[28] The statement
+to which they refer was thus put in the journal which made it: "We have
+absolute reason to know that when the last Coercion Act was in full
+swing this pure-souled and disinterested patriot (Mr. John F. Taylor)
+begged for, received, and accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship
+under a Coercion Government. As was wittily said at the time, He sold
+his principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+stirred the mess." This is no assertion "upon hearsay"--no publication of
+a rumour or report. It is an assertion made, not upon belief even, but
+upon a claim of "absolute knowledge."
+
+Yet to-day, in the same journal, I find Mr. Taylor declaring this
+statement, made upon a claim of "absolute knowledge," to be "absolutely
+untrue," and appealing in support of this declaration to Mr. Walker, the
+host of Lord Riand Mr. Morley, and to The M'Dermot, Q.C., a conspicuous
+Home Ruler; to which Mr. Davitt adds: "Mr. Taylor, on my advice,
+declined the Crown Prosecutorship for King's County, a post afterwards
+applied for by, and granted to, a near relative of one of the most
+prominent members of the Irish Party,"--meaning Mr. Luke Dillon, a
+cousin of Mr. John Dillon, M.P.!
+
+We had much interesting conversation last night about the relations of
+the Irish leaders here with public and party questions in America, as to
+which I find Mr. O'Leary unusually well and accurately informed.
+
+I am sorry that I must get off to-morrow into Mayo to see Lord Lucan's
+country there, for I should have been particularly pleased to look more
+closely with Mr. Rolleston into the intellectual revolt against
+"Parnellism" and its methods, of which his attitude and that of his
+friends here is an unmistakable symptom. As he tersely puts it, he sees
+"no hope in Irish politics, except a reformation of the League, a return
+to the principles of Thomas Davis."
+
+The lines for a reformation or transformation of the League, as it now
+exists, appear to have been laid down in the original constitution of
+the body. Under that constitution, it seems, the League was meant to be
+controlled by a representative committee chosen annually, open to public
+criticism, and liable to removal by a new election. As things now are,
+the officers of this alleged democratic organisation are absolutely
+self-elected, and wield the wide and indefinite power they possess over
+the people of Ireland in a perfectly unauthorised, irresponsible way. It
+is a curious illustration of the autocratic or bureaucratic system under
+which the Irish movement is now conducted, that Mr. Davitt, who does not
+pretend to be a Parliamentarian, and owes indeed much of his authority
+to his refusal to enter Parliament and take oaths of allegiance, does
+not hesitate for a moment to discipline any Irish member of Parliament
+who incurs his disapprobation. Sir Thomas Esmonde, for example, was
+severely taken to task by him the other day in the public prints for
+venturing to put a question, in his place at Westminster, to the
+Government about a man-of-war stationed in Kingstown harbour. Mr. Davitt
+very peremptorily ordered Sir Thomas to remember that he is not sent to
+Westminster to recognise the British Government, or concern himself
+about British regiments or ships, and Sir Thomas accepts the rebuke in
+silence. Whom does such a member of Parliament represent--the
+constituents who nominally elect him, or the leader who cracks the whip
+over him so sharply?
+
+I have to-day been looking through a small and beautifully-printed
+volume of poems just issued here by Gill and Son, Nationalist
+publishers, I take it, who have the courage of their convictions, since
+their books bear the imprint of "O'Connell," and not of Sackville
+Street. This little book of the _Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland _is
+a symptom too. It is dedicated in a few brief but vigorous stanzas to
+John O'Leary, as one who
+
+ "Hated all things base,
+ And held his country's honour high."
+
+And the spirit of all the poems it contains is the spirit of '48, or of
+that earlier Ireland of Robert Emmet, celebrated in some charming verses
+by "Rose Kavanagh" on "St. Michan's Churchyard," where the
+
+ "sunbeam went and came
+ Above the stone which waits the name
+ His land must write with freedom's flame."
+
+It interests an American to find among these poems and ballads a
+striking threnody called "The Exile's Return," signed with the name of
+"Patrick Henry"; and it is noteworthy, for more reasons than one, that
+the volume winds up with a "Marching Song of the Gaelic Athletes,"
+signed "An Chraoibhin Aoibbinn." These Athletes are numbered now, I am
+assured, not by thousands, but by myriads, and their organisation covers
+all parts of Ireland. If the spirit of '48 and of '98 is really moving
+among them, I should say they are likely to be at least as troublesome
+in the end to the "uncrowned king" as to the crowned Queen of Ireland.
+
+As for the literary merit of these _Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland_,
+it strikes one key with their political quality. One exquisite ballad of
+"The Stolen Child," by W. B. Yeats, might have been sung in the
+moonlight on a sylvan lake by the spirit of Heinrich Heine.
+
+I spent an hour or two this morning most agreeably in the libraries of
+the Law Courts and of Trinity College: the latter one of the stateliest
+most academic "halls of peace" I have ever seen; and this afternoon I
+called upon Dr. Sigerson, a most patriotic Irishman, of obviously Danish
+blood, who has his own ideas as to Clontarf and Brian Boru; and who gave
+me very kindly a copy of his valuable report on that Irish Crisis of
+1879-80, out of which Michael Davitt so skilfully developed the agrarian
+movement whereof "Parnellism" down to this time has been the not very
+well adjusted instrument. The report was drawn up after a thorough
+inspection by Dr. Sigerson and his associate, Dr. Kenny, visiting
+physicians to the North Dublin Union, of some of the most distressed
+districts of Mayo, Sligo, and Galway; and a more interesting,
+intelligent, and impressive picture of the worst phases of the social
+conditions of Ireland ten years ago is not to be found. I have just been
+reading it over carefully in conjunction with my memoranda made from the
+Emigration and Seed Potato Fund Reports, which Mr. Tuke gave me some
+time ago, and it strongly reinforces the evidence imbedded in those
+reports, which goes to show that agitation for political objects in
+Ireland has perhaps done as much as all other causes put together to
+depress the condition of the poor in Ireland, by driving and keeping
+capital out of the country. The worst districts visited in 1879 by Dr.
+Sigerson and Dr. Kenny do not appear to have been so completely cut off
+from civilisation as was the region about Gweedore before the purchase
+of his property there by Lord George Hill, and the remedies suggested by
+Dr. Sigerson for the suffering in these districts are all in the
+direction of the remedies applied by Lord George Hill to the condition
+in which he found Gweedore. After giving full value to the stock
+explanations of Irish distress in the congested districts, such as
+excessive rents, penal laws, born of religious or "racial" animosity,
+and a defective system of land tenure, it seems to be clear that the
+main difficulties have arisen from the isolation of these districts, and
+from the lack of varied industries. Political agitation has checked any
+flow of capital into these districts, and a flow of capital into them
+would surely have given them better communications and more varied
+industries. Dr. Sigerson states that some of the worst of these regions
+in the west of Ireland are as well adapted to flax-culture as Ulster,
+and Napoleon III. showed what could be done for such wastes as La
+Sologne and the desert of the Landes by the intelligent study of a
+country and the judicious development of such values as are inherent in
+it. The loss of population in Ireland is not unprecedented. The State of
+New Hampshire, in America, one of the original thirteen colonies which
+established the American Union, has twice shown an actual loss in
+population during the past century. The population of the State declined
+during the decade between 1810 and 1820, and again during the decade
+between 1860 and 1870. This phenomenon, unique in American history, is
+to be explained only by three causes, all active in the case of
+congested Ireland,--a decaying agriculture, lack of communications, and
+the absence of varied industries. During the decade from 1860 to 1870
+the great Civil War was fought out. Yet, despite the terrible waste of
+life and capital in that war, especially at the South, the Northern
+State of New Hampshire, peopled by the energetic English adventurers who
+founded New England, was actually the only State which came out of the
+contest with a positive decline in population. Virginia (including West
+Virginia, which seceded from that Commonwealth in 1861) rose from
+1,596,318 inhabitants in 1860 to 1,667,177 in 1870. South Carolina,
+which was ravaged by the war more severely than any State except
+Virginia, and upon which the Republican majority at Washington pressed
+with such revengeful hostility after the downfall of the Confederacy,
+showed in 1870 a positive increase in population, as compared with 1860,
+from 703,708 to 705,606. But New Hampshire, lying hundreds of miles
+beyond the area of the conflict, showed a positive decrease from 326,073
+to 318,300. During my college days at Cambridge the mountain regions of
+New Hampshire were favourite "stamping grounds" in the vacations, and I
+exaggerate nothing when I say that in the secluded nooks and corners of
+the State, the people cut off from communication with the rest of New
+England, and scratching out of a rocky land an inadequate subsistence,
+were not much, if at all, in advance of the least prosperous dwellers in
+the most remote parts of Ireland which I have visited. They furnished
+their full contingent to that strange American exodus, which, about a
+quarter of a century ago, was led out of New England by one Adams to the
+Holy Land, in anticipation of the Second Advent, a real modern crusade
+of superstitious land speculators, there to perish, for the most part,
+miserably about Jaffa--leaving houses and allotments to pass into the
+control of a more practical colony of Teutons, which I found
+establishing itself there in 1869.
+
+Since 1870 a change has come over New Hampshire. The population has
+risen to 346,984. In places waste and fallen twenty years ago brisk and
+smiling villages have sprung up along lines of communication established
+to carry on the business of thriving factories.
+
+What reason can there be in the nature of things to prevent the
+development of analogous results, through the application of analogous
+forces, in the case of "congested" Ireland? A Nationalist friend, to
+whom I put this question this afternoon, answers it by alleging that so
+long as fiscal laws for Ireland are made at Westminster, British capital
+invested in Great Britain will prevent the application of these
+analogous forces to "congested" Ireland. His notion is that were Ireland
+as independent of Great Britain, for example, in fiscal matters as is
+Canada, Ireland might seek and secure a fiscal union with the United
+States, such as was partially secured to Canada under the Reciprocity
+Treaty denounced by Mr. Seward.
+
+"Give us this," he said, "and take us into your system of American
+free-trade as between the different States of your American Union, and
+no end of capital will soon be coming into Ireland, not only from your
+enormously rich and growing Republic, but from Great Britain too. Give
+us the American market, putting Great Britain on a less-favoured
+footing, just as Mr. Blake and his party wish to do in the case of
+Canada, and between India doing her own manufacturing on the one side,
+and Ireland becoming a manufacturing centre on the other, and a mart in
+Europe for American goods, we'll get our revenge on Elizabeth and
+Cromwell in a fashion John Bull has never dreamt of in these times,
+though he used to be in a mortal funk of it a hundred years ago, when
+there wasn't nearly as much danger of it!"
+
+
+DUBLIN, _Sunday, June 24._--"Put not your faith in porters!" I had
+expected to pass this day at Castlebar, on the estate of Lord Lucan, and
+I exchanged telegrams to that effect yesterday with Mr. Harding, the
+Earl's grandson, who, in the absence of his wonderfully energetic
+grandsire, is administering there what Lord Lucan, with pardonable
+pride, declares to be the finest and most successful dairy-farm in all
+Ireland. I asked the porter to find the earliest morning train; and
+after a careful search he assured me that by leaving Dublin just after 7
+A.M. I could reach Castlebar a little after noon.
+
+Upon this I determined to dine with Mr. Colomb, and spend the night in
+Dublin. But when I reached the station a couple of hours ago, it was to
+discover that my excellent porter had confounded 7 A.M. with 7 P.M.
+
+There is no morning train to Castlebar! So here I am with no recourse,
+my time being short, but to give up the glimpse I had promised myself of
+Mayo, and go on this afternoon to Belfast on my way back to London.
+
+At dinner last night Mr. Colomb gave me further and very interesting
+light upon the events of 1867, of which he had already spoken with me at
+Cork, as well as upon the critical period of Mr. Gladstone's experiments
+of 1881-82 at "Coercion" in Ireland.
+
+Mr. Colomb lives in a remarkably bright and pleasant suburb of Dublin,
+which not only is called a "park," as suburbs are apt to be, but really
+is a park, as suburbs are less apt to be. His house is set near some
+very fine old trees, shading a beautiful expanse of turf. He is an
+amateur artist of much more than ordinary skill. His walls are gay, and
+his portfolios filled, with charming water-colours, sketches, and
+studies made from Nature all over the United Kingdom. The grand
+coast-scenery of Cornwall and of Western Ireland, the lovely lake
+landscapes of Killarney, sylvan homes and storied towers, all have been
+laid under contribution by an eye quick to seize and a hand prompt to
+reproduce these most subtle and transient atmospheric effects of light
+and colour which are the legitimate domain of the true water-colourist.
+With all these pictures about us--and with Mr. Colomb's workshop fitted
+up with Armstrong lathes and all manner of tools wherein he varies the
+routine of official life by making all manner of instruments, and
+wreaking his ingenuity upon all kinds of inventions--and with the
+pleasant company of Mr. Davies, the agreeable and accomplished official
+secretary of Sir West Ridgway, the evening wore quickly away. In the
+course of conversation the question of the average income of the Irish
+priests arose, and I mentioned the fact that Lord Lucan, whose knowledge
+of the smallest details of Irish life is amazingly thorough, puts it
+down at about ten shillings a year per house in the average Irish
+parish.
+
+He rated Father M'Fadden and his curate of Gweedore, for example,
+without a moment's hesitation, at a thousand pounds a year in the whole,
+or very nearly the amount stated to me by Sergeant Mahony at Baron's
+Court. This brought from Mr. Davies a curious account of the proceedings
+in a recent case of a contested will before Judge Warren here in Dublin.
+The will in question was made by the late Father M'Garvey of Milford, a
+little village near Mulroy Bay in Donegal, notable chiefly as the scene
+of the murder of the late Earl of Leitrim. Father M'Garvey, who died in
+March last, left by this will to religious and charitable uses the whole
+of his property, save L800 bequeathed in it to his niece, Mrs. O'Connor.
+It was found that he died possessed not only of a farm at Ardara, but of
+cash on deposit in the Northern Bank to the very respectable amount of
+L23,711. Mrs. O'Connor contested the will. The Archbishop of Armagh, and
+Father Sheridan, C.C. of Letterkenny, instituted an action against her
+to establish the will. Father M'Fadden of Gweedore, lying in Londonderry
+jail as a first-class misdemeanant, was brought from Londonderry as a
+witness for the niece. But on the trial of the case it appeared that
+there was actually no evidence to sustain the plea of the niece that
+"undue influence" had been exerted upon her uncle by the Archbishop, who
+at the time of the making of the will was Bishop of Raphoe, or by
+anybody else; so the judge instructed the jury to find on all the issues
+for the plaintiffs, which was done. The judge declared the conduct of
+the defendant in advancing a charge of "undue influence" in such
+circumstances against ecclesiastics to be most reprehensible; but the
+Archbishop very graciously intimated through his lawyer his intention of
+paying the costs of the niece who had given him all this trouble,
+because she was a poor woman who had been led into her course by
+disappointment at receiving so small a part of so large an inheritance.
+Had the priest's property come to him in any other way than through his
+office as a priest her claim might have been more worthy of
+consideration, but Mr. M'Dermot, Q.C., who represented the Archbishop,
+took pains to make it clear that as an ecclesiastic his client, who had
+nothing to do with the making of the will, was bound to regard it "as
+proper and in accordance with the fitness of things that what had been
+received from the poor should be given back to the poor."
+
+I see no adequate answer to this contention of the Archbishop. But it
+certainly goes to confirm the estimates given me by Sergeant Mahony of
+Father M'Fadden's receipts at Gweedore, and the opinion expressed to me
+by Lord Lucan as to the average returns of an average Catholic parish,
+that the priest of Milford, a place hardly so considerable as Gweedore,
+should have acquired so handsome a property in the exercise there of his
+parochial functions.
+
+One form in which the priests in many parts of Ireland collect dues is
+certainly unknown to the practice of the Church elsewhere, I believe,
+and it must tend to swell the incomes of the priests at the expense,
+perhaps, of their legitimate influence. This is the custom of personal
+collections by the priests. In many parishes the priest stands by the
+church-door, or walks about the church--not with a bag in his hand, as
+is sometimes done in France on great occasions when a _quele_ is made by
+the _cure_ for some special object,--but with an open plate in which the
+people put their offerings. I have heard of parishes in which the priest
+sits by a table near the church-door, takes the offerings from the
+parishioners as they pass, and comments freely upon the ratio of the
+gift to the known or presumed financial ability of the giver.
+
+We had some curious stories, too, from a gentleman present of the
+relation of the priests in wild, out-of-the-way corners of Ireland to
+the people, stories which take one back to days long before Lever. One,
+for example, of a delightful and stalwart old parish priest of eighty,
+upon whom an airy young patriot called to propose that he should accept
+the presidency of a local Land League. The veteran, whose only idea of
+the Land League was that it had used bad language about Cardinal Cullen,
+no sooner caught the drift of the youth than he snatched up a huge
+blackthorn, fell upon him, and "boycotted" him head-foremost out of a
+window. Luckily it was on the ground floor.
+
+Another strenuous spiritual shepherd came down during the distribution
+of potato-seed to the little port in which it was going on, and took up
+his station on board of the distributing ship. One of his parishioners,
+having received his due quota, made his way back again unobserved on
+board of the ship. As he came up to receive a second dole, the good
+father spied him, and staying not "to parley or dissemble," simply
+fetched him a whack over the sconce with a stick, which tumbled him out
+of the ship, head-foremost, into the hooker riding beside her! Quite of
+another drift was a much more astonishing tale of certain proceedings
+had here in February last before the Lord Chief-Justice. These took
+place in connection with a motion to quash the verdict of a coroner's
+jury, held in August 1887, on the body of a child named Ellen Gaffney,
+at Philipstown, in King's County, which preserves the memory of the
+Spanish sovereign of England, as Maryborough in Queen's preserves the
+memory of his Tudor consort. Cervantes never imagined an Alcalde of the
+quality of the "Crowner"' who figures in this story. Were it not that
+his antics cost a poor woman her liberty from August 1887 till December
+of that year, when the happy chance of a winter assizes set her free,
+and might have cost her her life, the story of this ideal magistrate
+would be extremely diverting.
+
+A child was born to Mrs. Gaffney at Philipstown on the 23d of July, and
+died there on the 25th of August 1887, Mrs. Gaffney being the wife of a
+"boycotted" man.
+
+A local doctor named Clarke came to the police and asked the Sergeant to
+inspect the body of the child, and call for an inquest. The sergeant
+inspected the body, and saw no reason to doubt that the child had died a
+natural death. This did not please the doctor, so the Coroner was sent
+for. He came to Philipstown the next day, conferred there with the
+doctor, and with a priest, Father Bergin, and proceeded to hold an
+inquest on the child in a public-house, "a most appropriate place," said
+Sir Michael Morris from the bench, "for the transactions which
+subsequently occurred." Strong depositions were afterwards made by the
+woman Mrs. Gaffney, by her husband, and by the police authorities, as to
+the conduct of this "inquest." She and her husband were arrested on a
+verbal order of the Coroner on the day when the inquest was held, August
+27th, and the woman was kept in prison from that time till the assizes
+in December. The "inquest" was not completed on the 27th of August, and
+after the Coroner adjourned it, two priests drove away on a car from the
+"public-house" in which it had been held. That night, or the next day, a
+man came to a magistrate with a bundle of papers which he had found in
+the road near Philipstown. The magistrate examined them, and finding
+them to be the depositions taken before the Coroner in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney, handed them to the police. How did they come to be in the road?
+On the 1st of September the Coroner resumed his inquest, this time in
+the Court-House at Philipstown, and one of the police, with the
+depositions in his pocket, went to hear the proceedings. Great was his
+amazement to see certain papers produced, and calmly read, as being the
+very original depositions which at that moment were in his own custody!
+He held his peace, and let the inquest go on. A letter was read from the
+Coroner, to the effect that he saw no ground for detaining the husband,
+Gaffney--but the woman was taken before a justice of the peace, and
+committed to prison on this finding by the Coroner's jury: "That Mary
+Anne Gaffney came by her death; and that the mother of the child, Ellen
+Gaffney, is guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food
+and care to sustain the life of this child "!
+
+It is scarcely credible, but it is true, that upon this extraordinary
+finding the Coroner issued a warrant for "murder" against this poor
+woman, on which she was actually locked up for more than three months!
+The jury which made this unique finding consisted of nineteen persons,
+and it was in evidence that their foreman reported thirteen of the jury
+to be for finding one way and six for finding another, whereupon a
+certain Mr. Whyte, who came into the case as the representative of
+Father Bergin, President of the local branch of the National
+League--nobody can quite see on what colourable pretext--was allowed by
+the Coroner to write down the finding I have quoted, and hand it to the
+Coroner. The Coroner read it over. He and Mr. Whyte then put six of the
+jury in one place, and thirteen in another; the Coroner read the finding
+aloud to the thirteen, and said to them, "Is that what you agree to?"
+and so the inquest was closed, and the warrant issued--for murder--and
+the woman, this poor peasant mother sent off to jail with the brand upon
+her of infanticide.[29]
+
+Where would that poor woman be now were there no "Coercion" in Ireland
+to protect her against "Crowner's quest law" thus administered? And what
+is to be thought of educated and responsible public men in England who,
+as recent events have shown, are not ashamed to go to "Crowner's quest
+Courts" of this sort for weapons of attack, not upon the administration
+only of their own Government, but upon the character and the motives of
+their political opponents?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+BELFAST, _Monday, June 25._--I left Dublin yesterday at 4 P.M., in a
+train which went off at high pressure as an "express," but came into
+Belfast panting and dilatory as an "excursion." The day was fine, and
+the line passes through what is reputed to be the most prosperous part
+of Ireland. In this part of Ireland, too, the fate of the island has
+been more than once settled by the arbitrament of arms; and if
+Parliamentary England throws up the sponge in the wrestle with the
+League, it is probable enough that the old story will come to be told
+over again here.
+
+At Dundalk the Irish monarchy of the Braces was made and unmade. The
+plantation of Ulster under James I. clinched the grasp not so much of
+England as of Scotland upon Ireland, and determined the course of events
+here through the Great Rebellion. The landing of the Duke of Schomberg
+at Carrickfergus opened the way for the subjugation of Jacobite Ireland
+by William of Orange. The successful descent of the French upon the same
+place in February 1760, after the close of "the Great Year," in which
+Walpole tells us he came to expect a new victory every morning with the
+rolls for breakfast, and after Hawke had broken the strength of the
+great French Armada off Belleisle, and done for England the service
+which Nelson did for her again off Trafalgar in 1805, shows what might
+have happened had Thurot commanded the fleet of Conflans. In this same
+region, too, the rout of Munro by Nugent at Ballinahinch practically
+ended the insurrection of 1798.
+
+There are good reasons in the physical geography of the British Islands
+for this controlling influence of Ulster over the affairs of Ireland,
+which it seems to me a serious mistake to overlook.
+
+The author of a brief but very hard-headed and practical letter on the
+pacification of Ireland, which appeared in the _Times_ newspaper in
+1886, while the air was thrilling with rumours of Mr. Gladstone's
+impending appearance as the champion of "Home Rule," carried, I
+remember, to the account of St. George's Channel "nine-tenths of the
+troubles, religious, political, and social, under which Ireland has
+laboured for seven centuries." I cannot help thinking he hit the nail on
+the head; and St. George's Channel does not divide Ulster from Scotland.
+From Donaghadee, which has an excellent harbour, the houses on the
+Scottish coast can easily be made out in clear weather. A chain is no
+stronger than its weakest link, and it is as hard to see how, even with
+the consent of Ulster, the independence of Ireland could be maintained
+against the interests and the will of Scotland, as it is easy to see why
+Leinster, Munster, and Connaught have been so difficult of control and
+assimilation by England. To dream of establishing the independence of
+Ireland against the will of Ulster appears to me to be little short of
+madness.
+
+At Moira, which stands very prettily above the Ulster Canal, a small
+army of people returning from a day in the country to Belfast came upon
+us and trebled the length of our train. We picked up more at Lisburn,
+where stands the Cathedral Church of Jeremy Taylor, the "Shakespeare of
+divines." Here my only companion in the compartment from Dublin left me,
+a most kindly, intelligent Ulster man, who had very positive views as to
+the political situation. He much commended the recent discourse in
+Scotland of a Presbyterian minister, who spoke of the Papal Decree as
+"pouring water on a drowned mouse," a remark which led me to elicit the
+fact that he had never seen either Clare or Kerry; and he was very warm
+in his admiration of Mr. Chamberlain. He told me, what I had heard from
+many other men of Ulster, that the North had armed itself thoroughly
+when the Home Rule business began with Mr. Gladstone. "I am a Unionist,"
+he said, "but I think the Union is worth as much to England as it is to
+Ireland, and if England means to break it up it is not the part of
+Irishmen who think and feel as I do to let her choose her own time for
+doing it, and stand still while she robs us of our property and turns us
+out defenceless to be trampled under foot by the most worthless
+vagabonds in our own island." He thinks the National League has had its
+death-blow. "What I fear now," he said, "is that we are running straight
+into a social war, and that will never be a war against the landlords in
+Ireland; it'll be a war against the Protestants and all the decent
+people there are among the Catholics."
+
+He was very cordial when he found I was an American, and with that
+offhand hospitality which seems to know no distinctions of race or
+religion in Ireland urged me to come and make him a visit at a place he
+has nearer the sea-coast. "I'll show you Downpatrick," he said, "where
+the tombs of St. Patrick and St. Bridget and St. Columb are, the saints
+sleeping quite at their ease, with a fine prosperous Presbyterian town
+all about them. And I'll drive you to Tullymore, where you'll see the
+most beautiful park, and the finest views from it all the way to the
+Isle of Man, that are to be seen in all Ireland." He was very much
+interested in the curious story of the sequestration of the remains of
+Mr. Stewart of New York, who was born, he tells me, at Lisburn, where
+the wildest fabrications on the subject seem to have got currency. That
+this feat of body-snatching is supposed to have been performed by a
+little syndicate of Italians, afterwards broken up by the firmness of
+Lady Crawford in resisting the ghastly pressure to which the widow and
+the executors of Mr. Stewart are believed to have succumbed, was quite a
+new idea to him.
+
+From Moira to Belfast the scenery along the line grows in beauty
+steadily. If Belfast were not the busiest and most thriving city in
+Ireland, it would still be well worth a visit for the picturesque charms
+of its situation and of the scenery which surrounds it. At some future
+day I hope to get a better notion both of its activity and of its
+attractions than it would be possible for me to attempt to get in this
+flying visit, made solely to take the touch of the atmosphere of the
+place at this season of the year; for we are on the very eve of the
+battle month of the Boyne.
+
+Mr. Cameron, the Town Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary, met me
+at the station, in accordance with a promise which he kindly made when I
+saw him several weeks ago at Cork; and this morning he took me all over
+the city. It is very well laid out, in the new quarters especially, with
+broad avenues and spacious squares. In fact, as a local wag said to me
+to-day at the Ulster Club, "You can drive through Belfast without once
+going into a street"--most of the thoroughfares which are not called
+"avenues" or "places" being known as "roads." It is, of course, an
+essentially modern city. When Boate made his survey of Ireland two
+centuries ago, Belfast was so small a place that he took small note of
+it, though it had been incorporated by James I. in 1613 in favour of the
+Chichester family, still represented here. In a very careful _Tour in
+Ireland_, published at Dublin in 1780, the author says of Belfast, "I
+could not help remarking the great number of Scots who reside in this
+place, and who carry on a good trade with Scotland." It seems then to
+have had a population of less than 20,000 souls, as it only touched that
+number at the beginning of this century. It has since then advanced by
+"leaps and bounds," after an almost American fashion, till it has now
+become the second, and bids fair at no distant day to become the first,
+city in Ireland. Few of the American cities which are its true
+contemporaries can be compared with Belfast in beauty. The quarter in
+which my host lives was reclaimed from the sea marshes not quite so long
+ago, I believe, as was the Commonwealth Avenue quarter of Boston, and
+though it does not show so many costly private houses perhaps as that
+quarter of the New England capital, its "roads" and "avenues" are on the
+whole better built, and there is no public building in Boston so
+imposing as the Queen's College, with its Tudor front six hundred feet
+in length, and its graceful central tower. The Botanic Gardens near by
+are much prettier and much better equipped for the pleasure and
+instruction of the people than any public gardens in either Boston or
+New York. These American comparisons make themselves, all the conditions
+of Belfast being rather of the New World than of the Old. The oldest
+building pointed out to me to-day is the whilom mansion of the Marquis
+of Donegal, now used as offices, and still called the Castle.
+
+This stands near Donegal Square, a fine site, disfigured by a quadrangle
+of commonplace brick buildings, occupied as a sort of Linen Exchange,
+concerning which a controversy rages, I am told. They are erected on
+land granted by Lord Donegal to encourage the linen trade, and the
+buildings used to be leased at a rental of L1 per window. The present
+holders receive L10 per window, and are naturally loath to part with so
+good a thing, though there is an earnest desire in the city to see these
+unsightly structures removed, and their place taken by stately municipal
+buildings more in key with the really remarkable and monumental private
+warehouses which already adorn this Square. Mr. Robinson, one of the
+partners of a firm which has just completed one of these warehouses, was
+good enough to show us over it. It is built of a warm grey stone, which
+lends itself easily to the chisel, and it is decorated with a wealth of
+carving and of architectural ornaments such as the great burghers of
+Flanders lavished on their public buildings. The interior arrangements
+are worthy of the external stateliness of the warehouse. Pneumatic tubes
+for the delivery of cash--a Scottish invention--electric lights, steam
+lifts, a kitchen at the top of the lofty edifice heated by steam from
+the great engine-room in the cellars, and furnishing meals to the
+employees, attest the energy and enterprise of the firm. The most
+delicate of the linen fabrics sold here are made, I was informed, all
+over the north country. The looms, three or four of which are kept going
+here in a great room to show the intricacy and perfection of the
+processes, are supplied by the firm to the hand-workers on a system
+which enables them, while earning good wages from week to week, to
+acquire the eventual ownership of the machines. The building is crowned
+by a sort of observatory, from which we enjoyed a noble prospect
+overlooking the whole city and miles of the beautiful country around. A
+haze on the horizon hid the coast of Scotland, which is quite visible
+under a clear sky. The Queen's Bridge over the Lagan, built in 1842
+between Antrim and Down, was a conspicuous feature in the panorama. Its
+five great arches of hewn granite span the distance formerly traversed
+by an older bridge of twenty-one arches 840 feet in length, which was
+begun in 1682, and finished just in time to welcome Schomberg and King
+William.
+
+The not less imposing warehouse of Richardson and Co., built of a
+singularly beautiful brown stone, and decorated with equal taste and
+liberality, adjoins that of Robinson and Cleaver. The banks, the public
+offices, the clubs, the city library, the museum, the Presbyterian
+college, the principal churches, all of them modern, all alike bear
+witness to the public spirit and pride in their town of the good people
+of Belfast. With more time at my disposal I would have been very glad to
+visit some of the flax-mills called into being by the great impulse
+which the cotton famine resulting from our Civil War gave to the linen
+manufactures of Northern Ireland, and the famous shipyards of the Woolfs
+on Queen's Island, As things are, it was more to my purpose to see some
+of the representative men of this great Protestant stronghold.
+
+I passed a very interesting hour with the Rev. Dr. Hanna, who is reputed
+to be a sort of clerical "Lion of the North," and whom I found to be in
+almost all respects a complete antitype of Father M'Fadden of Gweedore.
+
+
+Dr. Hanna is not unjustly proud of being at the head of the most
+extensive Sunday-school organisation in Ireland, if not in the world;
+and I find that the anniversary parade of his pupils, appointed for
+Saturday, June 30th, is looked forward to with some anxiety by the
+authorities here. He tells me that he expects to put two thousand
+children that day into motion for a grand excursion to Moira; but
+although he speaks very plainly as to the ill-will with which a certain
+class of the Catholics here regard both himself and his organisation, he
+does not anticipate any attack from them. With what seems to me very
+commendable prudence, he has resolved this year to put this procession
+into the streets without banners and bands, so that no charge of
+provocation may be even colourably advanced against it. This is no
+slight concession from a man so determined and so outspoken, not to say
+aggressive, in his Protestantism as Dr. Hanna; and the Nationalist
+Catholics will be very ill-advised, it strikes me, if they misinterpret
+it.
+
+He spoke respectfully of the Papal decree against Boycotting and the
+Plan of Campaign; but he seems to think it will not command the respect
+of the masses of the Catholic population, nor be really enforced by the
+clergy. Like most of the Ulstermen I have met, he has a firm faith, not
+only in the power of the Protestant North to protect itself, but in its
+determination to protect itself against the consequences which the
+northern Protestants believe must inevitably follow any attempt to
+establish an Irish nationality. Dr. Hanna is neither an Orangeman nor a
+Tory. He says there are but three known Orangemen among the clerical
+members of the General Assembly of the Irish Presbyterian Church, which
+unanimously pronounced against Mr. Gladstone's scheme of Home Rule, and
+not more than a dozen Tories. Of the 550 members of the Assembly, 538,
+he says, were followers of Mr. Gladstone before he adopted the politics
+of Mr. Parnell; and only three out of the whole number have given him
+their support. In the country at large, Dr. Hanna puts down the
+Unionists at two millions, of whom 1,200,000 are Protestants, and
+800,000 Catholics; and he maintains that if the Parliamentary
+representatives were chosen by a general vote, the Parnellite 80 would
+be cut down to 62; while the Unionists would number 44. He regards the
+Parnellite policy as "an organised imposture," and firmly believes that
+an Irish Parliament in Dublin would now mean civil war in Ireland. He
+had a visit here last week, he says, from an American Presbyterian
+minister, who came out to Ireland a month ago a "Home Ruler"; but, as
+the result of a trip through North-Western Ireland, is going back to
+denounce the Home Rule movement as a mischievous fraud.
+
+When I asked him what remedy he would propose for the discontent stirred
+up by the agitation of Home Rule, this Presbyterian clergyman replied
+emphatically, "Balfour, Balfour, and more Balfour!"
+
+This on the ground, as I understood, that Mr. Balfour's administration
+of the law has been the firmest, least wavering, and most equitable
+known in Ireland for many a day.
+
+Later in the day I had the pleasure of a conversation with the Rev. Dr.
+Kane, the Grand Master of the Orangemen at Belfast. Dr. Kane is a tall,
+fine-looking, frank, and resolute man, who obviously has the courage of
+his opinions. He thinks there will be no disturbances this year on the
+12th of July, but that the Orange demonstrations will be on a greater
+scale and more imposing than ever. He derides the notion that
+"Parnellism" is making any progress in Ulster. On the contrary, the
+concurrence this year of the anniversary of the defeat of the Great
+Armada with the anniversary of the Revolution of 1688 has aroused the
+strongest feelings of enthusiasm among the Protestants of the North, and
+they were never so determined as they now are not to tolerate anything
+remotely looking to the constitution of a separate and separatist
+Government at Dublin.
+
+BELFAST, _Tuesday, June 26._--Sir John Preston, the head of one of the
+great Belfast houses, and a former Mayor of the city, dined with us last
+night, and in the evening Sir James Haslett, the actual Mayor, came in.
+
+I find that in Belfast the office of Mayor is served without a salary,
+and is consequently filled as a rule by citizens of "weight and
+instance." In Dublin the Lord Mayor receives L3000 a year, with a
+contingent fund of L1500, and the office is becoming a distinctly
+political post. The face of Belfast is so firmly set against the
+tendency to subordinate municipal interests to general party exigencies,
+that the Corporation compelled Mr. Cobain, M.P., who sits at Westminster
+now for this constituency, to resign the post which he held as treasurer
+and cashier of the Corporation when he became a candidate for a seat in
+Parliament. I am not surprised, therefore, to learn that the city rates
+and taxes are much lower in the commercial than they are in the
+political capital of Ireland.
+
+Both Sir John Preston and Sir James Haslett have visited America. Sir
+John went there to represent the linen industries of Ireland, and to
+urge upon Congress the propriety of reducing our import duties upon
+fabrics which the American climate makes it practically imposssible to
+manufacture on our side of the water. Senator Sherman, who twenty years
+ago had the candour to admit that the wit of man could not devise a
+tariff so adjusted as to raise the revenue necessary for the Government
+which should not afford adequate incidental protection to all legitimate
+American industries, gave Sir John reason to hope that something might
+be done in the direction of a more liberal treatment of the linen
+industries. But nothing practical came of it. Sir John ought to have
+known that our typical American Protectionist, the late Horace Greeley,
+really persuaded himself, and tried to persuade other people, that with
+duties enough clapped on the Asiatic production, excellent tea might be
+grown on the uplands of South Carolina!
+
+In former years Sir John Preston used to visit Gweedore every year for
+sport and recreation. He knew Lord George Hill very well, "as true and
+noble a man as ever lived, who stinted himself to improve the state of
+his tenants." He threw an odd light on the dreamy desire which had so
+much amused me of the "beauty of Gweedore" to become "a dressmaker at
+Derry," by telling me that long ago the gossips there used to tell
+wonderful stories of a Gweedore girl who had made her fortune as a
+milliner in the "Maiden City."
+
+This morning Mr. Cameron, who as Town Inspector of the Royal Irish
+Constabulary will be responsible for public peace and order here during
+the next critical fortnight, held a review of his men on a common beyond
+the Theological College. About two hundred and fifty of the force were
+paraded, with about twenty mounted policemen, and for an hour and a
+half, under a tolerably warm sun, they were put through a regular
+military drill. A finer body of men cannot be seen, and in point of
+discipline and training they can hold their own, I should say, with the
+best of her Majesty's regiments. Without such discipline and training it
+would not be easy for any such body of men to pass with composure
+through the ordeal of insults and abuse to which the testimony of
+trustworthy eye-witnesses compels me to believe they are habitually
+subjected in the more disturbed districts of Ireland. As to the
+immediate outlook here, Mr. Cameron seems quite at his ease. Even if
+ill-disposed persons should set about provoking a collision between "the
+victors and the vanquished of the Boyne" his arrangements are so made,
+he says, as to prevent the development of anything like the outbreaks of
+former years.
+
+On the advice of Sir John Preston I shall take the Fleetwood route on my
+return to London to-night.
+
+This secures one a comfortable night on board of a very good and
+well-equipped boat, from which you go ashore, he tells me, into an
+excellent station of the London and North-Western Railway at Fleetwood,
+on the mouth of the Wyre on the Lancashire coast. Twenty years ago this
+was a small bathing resort called into existence chiefly by the
+enterprise of a local baronet whose name it bears. Its present
+prosperity and prospective importance are another illustration of the
+vigour and vitality of the North of Ireland, which is connected through
+Fleetwood with the great manufacturing regions of middle and northern
+England, as it is through Larne with the heart of Scotland.
+
+While it is as true now of the predominantly Catholic south of Ireland
+as it was when Sir Robert Peel made the remark forty years ago, that it
+stands "with its back to England and its face to the West," this
+Protestant Ireland of the North faces both ways, drawing Canada and the
+United States to itself through Moville and Derry and Belfast, and
+holding fast at the same time upon the resources of Great Britain
+through Glasgow and Liverpool. One of the best informed bankers in
+London told me not long ago, that pretty nearly all the securities of
+the great company which has recently taken over the business of the
+Guinnesses have already found their way into the North of Ireland and
+are held here. With such resources in its wealth and industry, better
+educated, better equipped, and holding a practically impregnable
+position in the North of Ireland, with Scotland and the sea at its back,
+Ulster is very much stronger relatively to the rest of Ireland than La
+Vendee was relatively to the rest of the French Republic in the last
+century. In a struggle for independence against the rest of Ireland it
+would have nothing to fear from the United States, where any attempt to
+organise hostilities against it would put the Irish-American population
+in serious peril, not only from the American Government, but from
+popular feeling, and force home upon the attention of the
+quickest-witted people in the world the significant fact that while the
+chief contributions, so far, of America to Southern Ireland, have been
+alms and agitation, the chief contributions of Scotland to Northern
+Ireland have been skilled agriculture and successful activity. It is
+surely not without meaning that the only steamers of Irish build which
+now traverse the Atlantic come from the dockyards, not of Galway nor of
+Cork, the natural gateways of Ireland to the west, but of Belfast, the
+natural gateway of Ireland to the north.
+
+
+
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+Not once, but a hundred times, during the visits to Ireland recorded in
+this book, I have been reminded of the state of feeling and opinion
+which existed in the Border States, as they were called, of the American
+Union, after the invasion of Virginia by a piratical band under John
+Brown, and before the long-pending issues between the South, insisting
+upon its constitutional rights, and the North, restive under its
+constitutional obligations, were brought to a head by the election of
+President Lincoln.
+
+All analogies, I know, are deceptive, and I do not insist upon this
+analogy. But it has a certain value here. For to-day in Ireland, as then
+in America, we find a grave question of politics, in itself not
+unmanageable, perhaps, by a race trained to self-government, seriously
+complicated and aggravated, not only by considerations of moral right
+and moral wrong, but by a profound perturbation of the material
+interests of the community.
+
+I well remember that after a careful study of the situation in America
+at the time of which I speak, Mr. Nassau Senior, a most careful and
+competent observer, frankly told me that he saw no possible way in which
+the problem could be worked out peacefully. The event justified this
+gloomy forecast.
+
+It would be presumptuous in me to say as much of the actual situation in
+Ireland; but it would be uncandid not to say that the optimists of
+Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee had greater
+apparent odds in their favour in 1861 than the optimists of Ireland seem
+to me to have in 1888.
+
+Ireland stands to-day between Great Britain and the millions of the
+Irish race in America and Australia very much as the Border States of
+the American Union stood in 1861 between the North and the South. There
+was little either in the Tariff question or in the Slavery question to
+shake the foundations of law and order in the Border States, could they
+have been left to themselves; and the Border States enjoyed all the
+advantages and immunities of "Home Rule" to an extent and under
+guarantees never yet openly demanded for Ireland by any responsible
+legislator within the walls of the British Parliament. But so powerful
+was the leverage upon them of conflicting passions and interests beyond
+their own borders that these sovereign states, well organised,
+homogeneous, prosperous communities, much more populous and richer in
+the aggregate in 1861 than Ireland is to-day, practically lost the
+control of their own affairs, and were swept helplessly into a terrific
+conflict, which they had the greatest imaginable interest in avoiding,
+and no interest whatever in promoting.
+
+I have seen and heard nothing in Ireland to warrant the very common
+impression that the country, as a whole, is either misgoverned or
+ungovernable; nothing to justify me in regarding the difficulties which
+there impede the maintenance of law and order as really indigenous and
+spontaneous. The "agitated" Ireland of 1888 appears to me to be almost
+as clearly and demonstrably the creation of forces not generated in, but
+acting upon, a country, as was the "bleeding Kansas" of 1856. But the
+"bleeding Kansas" of 1856 brought the great American Union to the verge
+of disruption, and the "agitated Ireland" of 1888 may do as much, or
+worse, for the British Empire. There is, no doubt, a great deal of
+distress in one or another part of Ireland, though it has not been my
+fortune to come upon any outward and visible signs of such grinding
+misery as forces itself upon you in certain of the richest provinces of
+that independent, busy, prosperous, Roman Catholic kingdom of Belgium,
+which on a territory little more than one-third as large as the
+territory of Ireland, maintains nearly a million more inhabitants, and
+adds to its population, on an average, in round numbers, as many people
+in four years as Ireland loses in five.
+
+I have seen peasant proprietors in Flanders and Brabant who could give
+the ideal Irish agent of the Nationalist newspapers lessons in
+rack-renting, though I am not at all sure that they might not get a hint
+or two themselves from some of the small farmers who came in my way in
+Ireland.
+
+Like all countries, mainly agricultural, too, Ireland has suffered a
+great deal of late years from the fall in prices following upon a period
+of intoxicating prosperity. Whether she has suffered more relatively
+than we should have suffered from the same cause in America, had we been
+foolish enough to imitate the monometallic policy of Germany in 1873, is
+however open to question; and I have an impression, which it will
+require evidence to remove, that the actual organisation known as the
+National Land League could never have been called into being had the
+British Government devoted to action upon the Currency Question, before
+1879, the time and energy which it has expended before and since that
+date in unsettling the principles of free contract, and tinkering at the
+relations of landlord and tenant in Ireland.
+
+But I am trenching upon inquiries here beyond the province of this book.
+
+Fortunately it is not necessary to my object in printing these volumes
+that I should either form or formulate any positive opinions as to the
+origin of the existing crisis in Ireland. Nor need I volunteer any
+suggestions of my own as to the methods by which order may best be
+maintained and civil government carried on in Ireland. It suffices for
+me that I close this self-imposed survey of men and things in that
+country with a conviction, as positive as it is melancholy, that the
+work which Mr. Redmond, M.P., informed us at Chicago that he and his
+Nationalist colleagues had undertaken, of "making the government of
+Ireland by England impossible," has been so far achieved, and by such
+methods as to make it extremely doubtful whether Ireland can be governed
+by anybody at all in accordance with any of the systems of government
+hitherto recognised in or adopted for that country. I certainly can see
+nothing in the organisation and conduct, down to this time, of the party
+known as the party of the Irish Nationalists, I will not say to
+encourage, but even to excuse, a belief that Ireland could be governed
+as a civilised country were it turned over to-morrow to their control. A
+great deal has been done by them to propagate throughout Christendom a
+general impression that England has dismally failed to govern Ireland in
+the past, and is unlikely hereafter to succeed in governing Ireland. But
+even granting this impression to be absolutely well founded, it by no
+means follows that Ireland is any more capable of governing herself than
+England is of governing her. The Russians have not made a brilliant
+success of their administration in Poland, but the Poles certainly
+administered Poland no better than the Russians have done. With an Irish
+representation in an Imperial British Parliament at Westminster,
+Ireland, under Mr. Gladstone's "base and blackguard" Union of 1800, has
+at least succeeded in shaking off some of the weightiest of the burdens
+by which, in the days of Swift, of Grattan, and of O'Connell, she most
+loudly declared herself to be oppressed. Whether with a Parliament at
+Dublin she would have fared as well in this respect since 1800 must be a
+matter of conjecture merely--and it must be equally a matter of
+conjecture also whether she would fare any better in this respect with a
+Parliament at Dublin hereafter. I am in no position to pronounce upon
+this--but it is quite certain that nothing is more uncommon than to find
+an educated and intelligent man, not an active partisan, in Ireland
+to-day, who looks forward to the reestablishment, in existing
+circumstances, of a Parliament at Dublin with confidence or hope.
+
+How the establishment of such a Parliament would affect the position of
+Great Britain as a power in Europe, and how it would affect the fiscal
+policy, and with the fiscal policy the well-being of the British people,
+are questions for British subjects to consider, not for me.
+
+That the processes employed during the past decade, and now employed to
+bring about the establishment of such a Parliament, have been, and are
+in their nature, essentially revolutionary, subversive of all sound and
+healthy relations between man and man, inconsistent with social
+stability, and therefore with social progress and with social peace,
+what I have seen and heard in Ireland during the past six months compels
+me to feel. Of the "Coercion," under which the Nationalist speakers and
+writers ask us in America to believe that the island groans and
+travails, I have seen literally nothing.
+
+Nowhere in the world is the press more absolutely free than to-day in
+Ireland. Nowhere in the world are the actions of men in authority more
+bitterly and unsparingly criticised. If public men or private citizens
+are sent to prison in Ireland, they are sent there, not as they were in
+America during the civil war, or in Ireland under the "Coercion Act" of
+1881, on suspicion of something they may have done, or may have intended
+to do, but after being tried for doing, and convicted of having done,
+certain things made offences against the law by a Parliament in which
+they are represented, and of which, in some cases, they are members.
+
+To call this "Coercion" is, from the American point of view, simply
+ludicrous. What it may be from the British or the Irish point of view is
+another affair, and does not concern me. I may be permitted, however, I
+hope without incivility, to say that if this be "Coercion" from the
+British or the Irish point of view, I am well content to be an American
+citizen. Ours is essentially a government not of emotions, but of
+statutes, and most Americans, I think, will agree with me that the sage
+was right who declared it to be better to live where nothing is lawful
+than where all things are lawful.
+
+The "Coercion" which I have found established in Ireland, and which I
+recognise in the title of this book, is the "Coercion," not of a
+government, but of a combination to make a particular government
+impossible. It is a "Coercion" applied not to men who break a public
+law, or offend against any recognised code of morals, but to men who
+refuse to be bound in their personal relations and their business
+transactions by the will of other men, their equals only, clothed with
+no legal authority over them. It is a "Coercion" administered not by
+public and responsible functionaries, but by secret tribunals. Its
+sanctions are not the law and honest public opinion, but the base
+instinct of personal cowardice, and the instinct, not less base, of
+personal greed. Whether anything more than a steady, firm administration
+of the law is needed to abolish this "Coercion" is a matter as to which
+authorities differ. I should be glad to believe with Colonel Saunderson
+that "the Leaguers would not hold up the 'land-grabber' to execration,
+and denounce him as they do, unless they knew in fact that the moment
+the law is made supreme in Ireland the tenants would become just as
+amenable to it as any other subjects of the Queen." But some recent
+events suggest a doubt whether these "other subjects of the Queen" are
+as amenable to the law as my own countrymen are.
+
+That the Church to which the great majority of the Irish people have for
+so many ages, and through so many tribulations, borne steadfast
+allegiance, has been shaken in its hold upon the conscience of Ireland
+by the machinery of this odious and ignoble "Coercion," appears to me to
+be unquestionable. That the head of that Church, being compelled by
+evidence to believe this, has found it necessary to intervene for the
+restoration of the just spiritual authority of the Church over the Irish
+people all the world now knows--nor can I think that his intervention
+has come a day or an hour too soon, to arrest the progress in Ireland of
+a social disease which threatens, not the political interests of the
+empire of which Ireland is a part alone, but the character of the Irish
+people themselves, and the very existence among them of the elementary
+conditions of a Christian civilisation.
+
+It would be unjust to the Irish people to forget that this demoralising
+"Coercion" against which the Head of the Catholic Church has declared
+war, seems to me to have been seriously reinforced by the Land
+Legislation of the Imperial Parliament.
+
+No one denies that great reforms and readjustments of the Land Tenure in
+Ireland needed to be made long before any serious attempt was made to
+make them.
+
+But that such reforms and readjustments might have been made without
+cutting completely loose from the moorings of political economy, appears
+pretty clearly, not only from examples on the continent of Europe, and
+in my own country, but from the Rent and Tenancy Acts carried out in
+India under the viceroyalty of Lord Dufferin since 1885. The conditions
+of these measures were different, of course, in each of the cases of
+Oudh, Bengal, and the Punjab, and in none of these cases were they
+nearly identical with the conditions of any practicable land measure for
+Ireland. But two great characteristics seem to me to mark the Indian
+legislation, which are not conspicuous in the legislation for Ireland.
+
+These are a spirit of equity as between the landlords and the tenants,
+and finality. I do not see how it can be questioned that the landlords
+of Ireland have been dealt with by recent British legislation as if they
+were offenders to be mulcted, and that the tenants in Ireland have been
+encouraged by recent British legislation to anticipate an eventual
+transfer to them, on steadily improving terms, of the land-ownership of
+the island. Mr. Davitt is perhaps the most popular Irishman living, and
+I believe him to be sincerely convinced that the ownership of the land
+of Ireland (and of all other countries) ought to be vested in the State.
+But if the independence of Ireland were acknowledged by Great Britain
+to-morrow, and all the actual landlords of Ireland were compelled
+to-morrow to part with their ownership, such as it is, of the land, I
+believe Mr. Davitt would be further from the recognition and triumph of
+his principle of State-ownership than he is to-day with a British
+Parliament hostile to "Home Rule," but apparently not altogether
+unwilling to make the landlords of Ireland an acceptable burnt-offering
+upon the altar of imperial unity. Probably he sees this himself, and the
+existing state of things may not be wholly displeasing to him, as
+holding out a hope that the flame which he has been helped by British
+legislation to kindle in Ireland may already be taking hold upon the
+substructions and outworks of the edifice of property in Great Britain
+also.
+
+One thing at least is clear.
+
+The two antagonistic principles which confront each other in Ireland
+to-day are the principles of the Agrarian Revolution represented by Mr.
+Davitt, and the principle of Authority, represented in the domain of
+politics by the British Government, and in the domain of morals by the
+Vatican. With one or the other of these principles the victory must
+rest. If the Irish people of all classes who live in Ireland could be
+polled to-day, it is likely enough that a decisive majority of them
+would declare for the principle of Authority in the State and in the
+Church, could that over-riding issue be made perfectly plain and
+intelligible to them. But how is that possible? In what country of the
+world, and in what age of the world, has it ever been possible to get
+such an issue made perfectly plain and intelligible to any people?
+
+In the domain of morals the principle of Authority, so far as concerns
+Catholic Ireland, rests with a power which is not likely to waver or
+give way. The Papal Decree has gone forth. Those who profess to accept
+it will be compelled to obey it. Those who reject it, whatever their
+place in the hierarchy of the Church may be, must sooner or later find
+themselves where Dr. M'Glynn of New York now is. Catholic Ireland can
+only continue to be Catholic on the condition of obedience, not formal
+but real, not in matters indifferent, but in matters vital and
+important, to the Head of the Catholic Church.
+
+In the domain of politics the principle of Authority rests with an
+Administration which is at the mercy of the intelligence or the
+ignorance, the constancy or the fickleness, the weakness or the
+strength, of constituencies in Great Britain, not necessarily familiar
+with the facts of the situation in Ireland, not necessarily enlightened
+as to the real interests either of Great Britain or of Ireland, nor even
+necessarily awake, with Cardinal Manning, to the truth that upon the
+future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.
+
+With two, three, four, or five years of a steady and cool administration
+of the laws in Ireland, by an executive officer such as Mr. Balfour
+seems to me to have shown himself to be--with a judicious abstinence of
+the British Legislature from feverish and fussy legislation about
+Ireland, with a prudent and persistent development of the material
+resources of Ireland, and with a genuine co-operation of the people who
+own land in Ireland with the people who wish to own land in Ireland, for
+the readjustment of land-ownership, the principle of Authority in the
+domain of politics may doubtless win in the conflict with the principle
+of the Agrarian revolution.
+
+But how many contingencies are here involved! Meanwhile the influences
+which imperil in Ireland the principle of Authority, in the domains
+alike of politics and of morals, are at work incessantly, to undermine
+and deteriorate the character of the Irish people, to take the vigour
+and the manhood out of them, to unfit them day by day, not only for good
+citizenship in the British Empire or the United States, but for good
+citizenship in any possible Ireland under any possible form of
+government. To arrest these influences before they bring on in Ireland a
+social crash, the effects of which must be felt far beyond the
+boundaries of that country, is a matter of primary importance,
+doubtless, to the British people. It is a matter, too, of hardly less
+than primary importance to the people of my own country. Unfortunately
+it does not rest with us to devise or to apply an efficient check to
+these influences.
+
+That rests with the people of Great Britain, so long as they insist that
+Ireland shall remain an integral portion of the British dominions. I do
+not see how they can acquit themselves of this responsibility, or escape
+the consequences of evading it, solely by devising the most ingenious
+machinery of local administration for Ireland, or the most liberal
+schemes for fostering the material interests of the Irish people. Such
+things, of course, must in due time be attended to. But the first duty
+of a government is to govern; and I believe that Earl Grey has summed up
+the situation in Ireland more concisely and more courageously than any
+other British statesman in his outspoken declaration, that "in order to
+avert the wreck of the nation, it is absolutely necessary that some
+means or other should be found for securing to Ireland during the
+present crisis a wiser and more stable administration of its affairs
+than can be looked for under its existing institutions."
+
+I have heard and read a good deal in the past of the "Three F's" thought
+a panacea for Irish discontent. Three other F's seem to me quite as
+important to the future of Irish content and public order. These are,
+Fair Dealing towards Landlords as well as Tenants; Finality of Agrarian
+Legislation at Westminster; and last and most essential of all, Fixity
+of Executive Tenure.
+
+The words I have just quoted of Earl Grey, show it to be the conviction
+of the oldest living leader of English Liberalism that this last is the
+vital point, the key of the situation. Let me bracket with his words,
+and leave to the consideration of my readers, the following pregnant
+passage from a letter written to me by an Irish correspondent who is as
+devoted to Irish independence as is Earl Grey to imperial unity:--
+
+"If the present Nationalist movement succeeds, it will have the effect
+of putting the worst elements of the Irish nation in power, and keeping
+them there irremoveably. We are to have an Executive at the mercy of a
+House of Representatives, and the result will be a government, or series
+of governments, as weak and vicious as those of France, with this
+difference, that here all purifying changes such as seem imminent in
+France will be absolutely prevented by the irresistible power of
+England. The true model for us would be a constitution like yours in the
+United States, with an Executive responsible to the nation at large, and
+irremoveable for a term of years. But this we shall never get from
+England. Shall we make use of Home Rule to take it for ourselves?
+
+"Many earnest and active Irish Unionists now say that if any bill
+resembling Mr. Gladstone's passes, they will make separation, their
+definite policy. If Home Rule comes without the landlords having been
+bought out on reasonable terms, a class will be created in Ireland full
+of bitter and most just hatred of England--a class which may very likely
+one day play the part here which the persecuted Irish Presbyterians who
+fled from the tyranny of the English Church in Ireland played in your
+own Revolution beyond the Atlantic."
+
+
+<p><hr /></p>
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+NOTE F.
+
+THE "MOONLIGHTERS" AND "HOME RULE."
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 38.)
+
+
+On Monday, the 1st of February 1886, the _Irish Times_ published the
+following story from Tralee, near the scene of the "boycotting,"
+temporal and spiritual, of the unfortunate daughters of Mr. Jeremiah
+Curtin, murdered in his own house by "moonlighters":--
+
+ "TRALEE, _Sunday_.
+
+ "It was stated that the bishop had ordered Mass to be celebrated
+ for them--the Curtins--but this did not take place. At the village
+ of Firies a number of people had assembled. They stopped loitering
+ about the place in the forenoon, waiting for a meeting of the
+ National League, which was subsequently held. A threatening notice
+ was discovered posted up on the door of a house formerly used as a
+ forge. It ran as follows:--
+
+ "'NOTICE.--If we are honoured by the presence of the bloodthirsty
+ perjurers at Mass on any of the forthcoming Sundays, take good care
+ you'll stand up very politely and walk out. Don't be under the
+ impression that all the Moonlighters are dead, and that this notice
+ is a child's play, as Shawn Nelleen titled the last one. I'll be
+ sure to keep my word, as you will see before long, so have no
+ welcome for the Curtins, and, above all, let no one work for them
+ in any way. As you respect the Captain, and as you value your own
+ life, abide by this notice.'--Signed, 'A MOONLIGHTER.'
+
+ "The above notice was written on tea paper in large legible style,
+ and evidently by an intelligent person. Groups were perusing it
+ during the day. A force of police marched through the village and
+ back, but did not observe this document, as it is still posted on
+ the door of the house."
+
+The "bloodthirsty perjurers" here mentioned were the daughters who had
+dared to demand and to promote the punishment of the assassins of their
+father! For this crime these daughters were to be excommunicated by the
+people of Firies, and denied the consolations of religion in their deep
+sorrow, even in defiance of the order of the Catholic bishop.
+
+As the advent of Mr. Gladstone to power in alliance with Mr. Parnell was
+then imminent, Mr. Sheehan, M.P., wrote a letter to the parish priest of
+Firies, the Rev. Mr. O'Connor, begging him in substance to put the
+brakes--for a time--upon the wheels of the local rack, lest the outcries
+of the young women subjected to this moral torture should interfere with
+the success of the new alliance. This, in plain English, is the only
+possible meaning of the letter which I here reprint from a leaflet
+issued by an Irish society:--
+
+ "The Rev. Father O'Connor, P.P., has received the following letter
+ from Mr. Sheehau, M.P., in reference to this matter, under date
+
+ "'House of Commons, _January 26th._
+
+ "'REV. DEAR SIR,--At this important juncture in our history, I am
+ sorry to see reports of the Firies display. Nothing that has taken
+ place yet in the South of Ireland has done so much harm to the
+ National cause. If they persist they will ruin us. To-morrow
+ evening will be most important in Parliamentary history. Our party
+ expect the defeat of the Government and resumption of power by Mr.
+ Gladstone. If we succeed in this, which we are confident of, the
+ future of our country will be great, and, although an appeal to the
+ constituencies must be made, the Irish party in those few days have
+ made an impression in future that no Government can withstand. The
+ Salisbury Government want to appeal to the country on the integrity
+ of the empire, and, of course, for the last few days have tried all
+ means to lead to this by raking up the Curtin case and all judicial
+ cases, which _must be avoided for a short time_, as our stoppage to
+ the Eviction Act will cover all this.--Yours faithfully, J.D.
+ SHEEHAN.'"
+
+This letter was read, the leaflet informs us, by the Rev. Mr. O'Connor,
+at the National Schools and other places.
+
+
+
+NOTE G.
+
+THE PONSONBY PROPERTY.
+
+(Vol. ii. pp. 59-66.)
+
+
+The account which the Rev. Canon Keller gave me of "The Struggle for
+Life on the Ponsonby Estate," in a tract bearing that title, and
+authorised by him to be published by the National League, is so
+circumstantial and elaborate that, after reading it carefully, I took
+unusual pains to obtain some reply to it from the representatives of the
+landlord implicated. These finally led to a visit from Mr. Ponsonby
+himself, who was so kind as to call upon me in London on the 15th of
+May, with papers and documents. I give in the following colloquy the
+results of this interview, putting together with the allegations of
+Canon Keller the answers of Mr. Ponsonby, and leave the matter in this
+form to the judgment of my readers.
+
+_Q_. Canon Keller, I see, describes you, Mr. Ponsonby, as "a retired
+navy officer, and an absentee Irish landlord." He says your estate is
+now "universally known as the famous Ponsonby Estate," and that it is
+occupied "by from 300 to 400 tenants, holding farms varying in extent
+from an acre and a half to over two hundred acres." Are these statements
+correct?
+
+_A_. I am a retired navy officer certainly, and perhaps I may be called
+an "absentee Irish landlord." I lived on my property for some time, and
+I have always attended to it. I succeeded to the estate in 1868, and
+almost my first act was to borrow L2000 of the Board of Works for
+drainage purposes--the tenants agreeing to pay half the interest. As a
+matter of fact some never paid at all, and I afterwards wiped out the
+claims against them. There are about 300 tenants on the property, and
+the average holdings are of about 36 acres, at an average rental of L30
+a holding. There are, however, not a few large farms.
+
+_Q_. Canon Keller says that "in the memory of living witnesses, and far
+beyond it, the Ponsonby tenants have been notoriously rack-rented and
+oppressed"; and that they have been committed to the "tender mercies of
+agents, seeing little or nothing of their landlord, and experiencing no
+practical sympathy from that quarter." How is this?
+
+_A_. I wish to believe Canon Keller truthful when he knows the truth. He
+certainly does not know the truth here. He is a newcomer at Youghal,
+having come there in November 1885, and hardly so much of an authority
+about "the memory of living witnesses and far beyond it" as the tenants
+on the estate, who, when I went there first with my wife, presented to
+me, May 25, 1868, an address of welcome, referring in very different
+terms to the history of the estate and of my family connection with it.
+Here is the original address, and a copy of it--the latter being quite
+at your service.
+
+This original address is very handsomely engrossed, and is signed by
+fifty tenants. Among the names I observed those of Martin Loughlin,
+Peter McDonough, Michael Gould, William Forrest, and John Heaphey, all
+of whom are cited by Canon Keller in his tract as conspicuous victims of
+the oppression and rack-renting which he says have prevailed upon the
+Ponsonby estates time out of mind. It was rather surprising, therefore,
+to find them joining with more than forty other tenants to sign an
+address, of which I here print the text:--
+
+ To C.W. TALBOT PONSONBY, Esq.
+
+ Honoured Sir,--The Tenantry of your Estates near Youghal have heard
+ with extreme pleasure of the arrival of yourself and lady in the
+ neighbourhood, and have deputed us to address you on their behalf.
+
+ Through us they bid you and Mrs. Ponsonby welcome, and respectfully
+ congratulate you on your accession to the Estates.
+
+ The name of Ponsonby is traditionally revered in this part of the
+ country, being associated in the recollections and impressions of
+ the people with all that is exalted, honourable, and generous. It
+ has been matter of regret that the heads of the family have not
+ (probably from uncontrollable causes) visited these Estates for
+ many years, but the tenantry have never wavered in their sentiments
+ of respect towards them.
+
+ We will not disguise from you the conviction generally entertained
+ that the improvement of landed property, and the condition of its
+ occupiers, is best promoted under the personal observation and
+ supervision of the proprietor, and your tenantry on that account
+ hail with satisfaction the promise your presence affords of future
+ intercourse between you and them.
+
+ Again, on the part of your Tenants and all connected with your
+ Estates, tendering you and your lady a most hearty welcome, and
+ sincerely wishing you and her a long and happy career--We subscribe
+ ourselves, Honoured Sir, Respectfully yours,
+
+ YOUGHAL, _May_ 1868.
+
+_Q_. Did Canon Keller ever see this address, may I ask, Mr. Ponsonby?
+
+_A_. I believe not; and I may as well say at once that I suppose he has
+taken for gospel all the stories which any of the tenants under the
+terrorism which has been established on the place think it best to pour
+into his listening ear. As I have said, he is quite a new man at
+Youghal, and when he first came there he was a quiet and not at all
+revolutionary priest. You saw him, and saw how good his manners are, and
+that he is a well-educated man. But on Sunday, November 7, 1886, a great
+meeting was held at Youghal. It was a queer meeting for a Sunday, being
+openly a political meeting, with banners and bands, to hear speeches
+from Mr. Lane, M.P., Mr. Flynn, M.P., and others. The Rev. Mr. Keller
+presided, and a priest from America, Father Hayes of Georgetown, Iowa,
+in the United States, was present. It was ostensibly a Home Rule
+meeting, but the burden of the speeches was agrarian. Mr. Lane, M.P.,
+made a bitter personal attack on another Nationalist member, Sir Joseph
+M'Kenna of Killeagh, calling him a "heartless and inhuman landlord;" and
+my property was also attended to by Mr. Lane, who advised my tenants
+openly not to accept my offer of 20 per cent. reduction, but to demand
+40 per cent. Father Hayes in his speech bade "every man stand to his
+guns," and wound up by declaring that if England and the landlords
+behaved in America as they behaved in Ireland, the Americans "would pelt
+them not only with dynamite, but with the lightnings of Heaven and the
+fires of hell, till every British bull-dog, whelp, and cur would be
+pulverised and made top-dressing for the soil." Canon Keller afterwards
+expressed disapproval of this speech of Hayes, and this coming to the
+knowledge of Hayes in America, Hayes denounced Keller for not daring to
+do this at the time in his presence. Since then Canon Keller has been
+much more violent in tone.
+
+_Q_. I don't want to carry you through a long examination, Mr. Ponsonby,
+but I see typical cases here, about which I should like to ask a
+question or two. Here, is Callaghan Flavin, for instance, described by
+Canon Keller as one of eight tenants who "had to retreat before the
+crowbar brigade," and who "deserved a better fate." Canon Keller says he
+is assured by a competent judge that Flavin's improvements, "full value
+for L341, 10s.," are now "the landlord's property." What are the facts
+about Mr. Flavin?
+
+_A_. Mr. Flavin's farm was held by his cousin, Ellen Flavin of Gilmore,
+who, on the 7th of February 1872, surrendered it to the landlord on
+receiving from me a sum of L172, 10s. 6d. I obtained a charging order
+under section 27 of the Land Act, entitling me to an annuity of L8, 12s.
+6d. for thirty-five years from July 3, 1872. It was let to Callaghan
+Flavin in preference to other applicants, July 3, 1872; and in 1873, at
+his request, I obtained a loan from the Board of Works for the thorough
+draining of a portion of the farm. Thirteen acres were drained at a cost
+of L84, 6s. 3d., for which the tenant promised to pay 5 per cent.
+interest, which I eventually forgave him. There was no house on the
+farm. He took it without one, and I did not want one there. He built a
+house himself without consulting my agent, and then wanted me to make
+him an allowance for it. I told him he had thirty-one years to enjoy it
+in, and must be content with that. About the same time he took another
+farm of mine at a rent of L35. Since I came into my property in 1868 I
+have laid out upon it in drainage, buildings, and planting--here are the
+accounts, which you may look at--over L15,000, including about L8000 of
+loans from the Board of Works. In the drainage the tenants got work for
+which they were paid. I gave them slates for the buildings, with timber
+and stone from the estate, and they supplied the labour. There is no
+case in which the outlays for improvements came from the tenants--not a
+single one. I repeat it, Canon Keller's tract is a tissue of fictions.
+
+What nonsense it is to talk about the "traditional rack-renting" of a
+property held by the Ponsonbys for two hundred years, the tenants on
+which could welcome me when I came into it with the language of the
+address you have here seen!
+
+I never evicted tenants for less than three years' arrears, till what
+Canon Keller calls the "crowbar brigade," by which he means the officers
+of the law, had to be put into action to meet the "Plan of Campaign" in
+May last. I did not proceed against the tenants because they could not
+pay. I selected the tenants who could pay, and who were led, or, I
+believe in most cases, "coerced," into refusing to pay by agitators with
+Mr. Lane, M.P., to inspire them, and Canon Keller, P.P., to glorify them
+in a tract.
+
+_Q_. What were your personal relations with the tenants when you were at
+Inchiquin?
+
+_A_. Always most friendly; and even the other day when I was there,
+while none of them would speak to me when they were all together, those
+I met individually touched their hats, and were as civil as ever. I
+believe they would all be thankful to have things as they were, and I
+have never refused to meet and treat with them on fair individual terms.
+
+In November 1885 my offer of an abatement of 15 per cent. being refused,
+a few tenants, I believe, clubbed their rents, and for the sake of peace
+I then offered 20 per cent., which they accepted and paid. In October
+1886 I hoped to prevent trouble by making the same offer of 20 per cent.
+abatement on non-judicial and 10 per cent. on judicial rents. One man
+took the latter abatement and paid. Then another tenant demanded 40 per
+cent. My agent said he would give them time, and also take money on
+account, the effect of which would be to put me out of court, and
+prevent my getting an order of ejectment if I wanted to for the balance.
+I thought this fair, and approved it, but I refused to make a 40 per
+cent. all-round abatement, authorising my agent, however, to make what
+abatements he liked in special cases. My words were, "I don't limit you
+on the amount of abatement you give, or as to the number of tenants you
+may choose so to treat." If this was not a fair free hand, what would
+be? My agent afterwards told me he had no chance to make this known. The
+fact is they meant to force the Plan on the tenants and me, and to
+prevent any settlement but a "victory for the League!"
+
+In my original notes of my conversation with Father Keller at Youghal, I
+found the name of one tenant whom he introduced to me, and who certainly
+told me that his holdings amounted to some L300 a year, and that they
+had been in his family for "two hundred years," set down as Doyle--I so
+printed it with the statements made. But Father Keller, to whom I
+submitted my proofs, and who was so good as to revise them, struck out
+the name of Doyle, and inserted that of Loughlin, putting the rental
+down at L94 (vol. ii. p. 71). Of course I accept this correction. But on
+my mentioning the matter to Mr. Ponsonby by letter, he replies to me
+(July 27th) as follows:--
+
+ "Maurice Doyle is a son of Richard Doyle, who died in 1876, leaving
+ his widow to carry on his farm of 74 acres 1 rood, in the townland
+ of Ballykitty, which he held in 1858 at a rental of L50, 11s. In
+ 1868 this was reduced to L48, 11s. In September 1871 he took in
+ addition a farm of 159 acres 2 roods at L130, in Burgen and
+ Ballykitty. He afterwards got a lease for thirty-one years of this
+ larger farm, with a portion of his earlier holding, for L155. This
+ left him to pay L21, 11s. for the residue of the earlier holding as
+ in 1858. But at his request, in 1876, the year of his death, I
+ reduced this to L17.
+
+ "In March 1879, by the death of Mr. Henry Hall, in whose family it
+ had been for certainly a century, the Inchiquin farm of 213 acres,
+ valued at L258, 10s., came on my hands. This farm was valued in
+ 1873 by one valuer at L384, 10s., and by another at L390, 10s. In
+ an old lease I find that this farm was let at L3 an acre. Mr. Henry
+ Hall to the day of his death held it at L306, 7s. 6d., under a
+ lease which I made a lease for life. For this farm Mrs. Richard
+ Doyle applied, agreeing to take it on a 31 years' lease, at L370 a
+ year. I let it to her, and she became the lease-holder, putting in
+ her son Maurice Doyle to take charge of it, though not as the
+ tenant. He was an active Land Leaguer from the moment he got into
+ the place, and in 1886 he was a leader in promoting the Plan of
+ Campaign. Proceedings had to be taken against his mother in order
+ to eject him, as she was the tenant, not he. I objected to this,
+ for I always have had the greatest regard for her. Had she been let
+ alone she would have paid her rent as she had always done. But Mr.
+ Lane and his allies saw it would never do to let Maurice Doyle
+ retain his place on his mother's holding. All this will show you
+ that Maurice Doyle did not inherit the Inchiquin farm. The only
+ inherited holding of his mother is the farm of 74 acres 1 rood in
+ the townland of Ballykitty, held by his father in 1858. I have no
+ doubt you saw Doyle at Youghal, by the description you gave me, and
+ you remembered his name at once. He was a thickset heavy-looking
+ man, florid, with a military moustache, the last time I saw him.
+ His mother is one of the 'rack-rented' tenants you hear of, having
+ been able in ten years to increase her acreage from 74 acres to 376
+ acres, and her rental from L48, 11s. to L542!"
+
+
+As to the general effect of all this business upon the tenants, and upon
+himself, Mr. Ponsonby spoke most feelingly. "The tenants are ruined
+where they might have been thriving. My means of being useful to them or
+to myself are taken away. My charges, though, all remain. I have to pay
+tithes for Protestant Church service, of which I can't have the benefit,
+the churches being closed; and the other day I had a notice that any
+property I had in England would be held liable for quit-rents to the
+Crown on my property in Ireland, of which the Government denies me
+practically any control or use!"
+
+
+
+NOTE G2.
+
+THE GLENBEHY EVICTION FUND.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 12.)
+
+
+In the _London Times_ of September 15 appears the following letter from
+the Land Agent whom I saw at Glenbehy, setting forth the effect of this
+"Glenbehy Eviction Fund" upon the morals of the tenants and the peace of
+the place:--
+
+ _To the Editor of the Times._
+
+ "Sir,--Although nearly eighteen months have elapsed since the
+ evictions on the Glenbehy estate, after which the above-named fund
+ was started and largely subscribed to by the sympathetic British
+ public, I think it only fair to throw a little light on the manner
+ in which this fund has been expended, and the effects which are
+ still felt in consequence of the money not yet being exhausted.
+
+ "It was generally supposed that the tenants then evicted were in
+ such poor circumstances as to be unable to settle, whereas, as a
+ matter of fact, they were, and are, with a few exceptions, the most
+ well-to-do on the estate, having, for the most part, from five to
+ fifteen head of cattle, in addition to sheep, pigs, etc.
+
+ "Among the tenants evicted at that time many had not paid rents
+ since 1879, and had been in illegal occupation since 1884, from
+ which latter date the landlord was responsible for taxes, provided
+ it is proved that sufficient distress cannot be made of the lands.
+ These tenants were offered a clear receipt to May 1, 1886, if they
+ paid half a year's rent, which would scarcely have paid the cost of
+ proceedings, and the landlord would therefore have been put to
+ actual loss. These people, though well able to settle, are given to
+ understand that as soon as they do so their participation in the
+ eviction fund will cease, and thus it will be seen that a direct
+ premium is being paid to dishonesty.
+
+ "In one case a widow woman was summoned for being on the farm from
+ which she was at that time evicted. Finding out that one of her
+ children was ill, I applied to the magistrate at the hearing of the
+ case only to impose a nominal fine. In consequence she was fined
+ one penny, but sooner than pay this she went to gaol, though she
+ had several head of cattle and, prior to her eviction, a very nice
+ farm. The case of this woman fairly illustrates the combination
+ which has existed to avoid the fulfilment of obligations.
+
+ "The amount of fines paid for similar offences comes, in several
+ instances, to nearly what I require to effect a settlement. Some of
+ the tenants actually wrote to the late agent on this estate begging
+ him to evict them in order that they might come in for a share of
+ the money raised for the relief of distress, and this clearly shows
+ beyond dispute that the well-meaning subscribers to the fund will
+ be more or less responsible for any further evictions to which it
+ may be necessary to resort. I may mention that the parish priest is
+ one of the trustees for the money which is thus being used for the
+ purpose of preventing settlements and keeping the place in a
+ continual state of turmoil.
+
+ "Judge Currane, at the January sessions held at Killarney this
+ year, ruled in about fifty ejectment cases on this estate that
+ tenants owing one and a half to nine years' rent should pay half a
+ year's rent and costs within a week, a quarter of a year's rent by
+ June 1, and a quarter of a year's rent by October 1; arrears to be
+ cancelled. Some of these, owing to non-compliance with the Judge's
+ ruling, may have to be evicted, and their eviction will be what is
+ termed the unrooting of peasants' houses and the ejectment of
+ overburdened tenants for not paying impossible rents.
+
+ "I confess I am at a loss to understand how Mr. Parnell's Arrears
+ Act would have improved matters or have averted what one of your
+ contemporaries calls a "painful scandal."--I am, Sirs, yours, &c.,
+
+ "D. TODD-THORNTON, J.P., Land Agent.
+
+ "Glenbehy, Killarney."
+
+
+
+NOTE G.
+
+HOME RULE AND PROTESTANTISM.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 68.)
+
+
+I fear that all the "Nationalist" clergy in Ireland are not as careful
+as Father Keller to avoid giving occasion for this impression that Irish
+autonomy would be followed by a persecution of the Protestants. But a
+little more than three years ago, for example, the following circular
+was issued by the Bishop of Ossory, and affixed to the door of the
+churches in his diocese. Who can wonder that it should have been
+regarded by Protestants in that diocese as a direct stirring up of
+bitter religious animosities against them? Or that, emanating directly
+as it did from a bishop of the Church, it should be represented as
+emanating indirectly from the Head of the Church himself at Rome?
+
+ "_Kilkenny, April 16th, 1885._
+
+ "REV. DEAR SIR,--May I ask you to read the following circular for
+ the people at each of the Masses on Sunday, 19th April?
+
+ "The course to be adopted for the future by the Priest of the Parish
+ to whom notice of a Mixed Marriage is given by the Minister, or the
+ Registrar, is as follows:--he makes the following entry on the book
+ of Parochial announcements, and reads it three consecutive Sundays
+ from the Altar:--
+
+ "'The Priests of the Parish have received the following notice of a
+ marriage to be celebrated between a Catholic and a Protestant. [Here
+ read Registrar's notice in full.] We have now to inform you that the
+ law of the Catholic Church regarding such marriages is: that the
+ Catholic party contracting marriage before a Registrar or other
+ unauthorised person is, by the very fact of so doing,
+ Excommunicated; and the witnesses to such marriage are also
+ Excommunicated.'
+
+ "I should be very much obliged if, as occasion may require, you
+ would explain the effects of this Excommunication from the Altar.
+
+ "You will please take notice that the Registrar or Minister is bound
+ legally to send the notice of marriage referred to above, and also,
+ that in reading it out _in the form, and with the accompanying
+ remarks above_, you incur no legal penalty.
+
+ "I feel sure that with your accustomed zeal you will do everything
+ in your power to prevent abuses in regard to the Sacrament of
+ Matrimony, which is great in Christ and the Church, and to induce
+ the faithful to prepare for receiving it by Prayer, by works of
+ Charity, and by approaching the Sacrament of Penance to purify their
+ souls.--Yours faithfully in Christ,
+
+ [Image: Cross] A. BROWNRIGG."
+
+
+ "MY DEAR BRETHREN,--We have been very much pained to learn, within
+ the past month, that marriages between Catholics and non-Catholics
+ have increased very much in this city of Kilkenny. Many
+ _evil-disposed_ persons, utterly unmindful of the prohibitions of
+ the Church, and regardless of the dreadful consequences they bring
+ on themselves, have not hesitated to enter into those _unholy
+ matrimonial alliances_ called "Mixed Marriages," which the Catholic
+ Church has always _hated and detested_. Those misguided Catholics,
+ who do not deserve the name, have not blushed to go, in some
+ instances, before the Protestant Minister, in other instances,
+ before the Public Registrar, to ask them to assist at their marriage
+ with a Protestant. By contracting marriage in this way, they run a
+ great risk of bringing on themselves and on their children, should
+ they have any, the _maledictions_ of Heaven instead of the blessings
+ of religion. In order to put a stop to this growing abuse, and to
+ prevent it from spreading like a contagion to other parts of the
+ Diocese, we beg to remind the faithful of certain regulations which,
+ for the future, shall have force in the Diocese of Ossory in
+ reference to the Catholics, who so far forget themselves as to
+ contract such marriages.
+
+ "1. In the first place, any one who contracts a "Mixed Marriage"
+ without a dispensation from the Holy See and before a Protestant
+ Minister or a Registrar is, by the very fact, guilty of a most
+ grievous mortal sin by violating a solemn law of the Church in a
+ most grave matter.
+
+ "2. The Catholic who assists as witness at such marriage also
+ commits a most grievous sin by co-operating in an unlawful act.
+
+ "3. Both the Catholic party contracting the marriage and the
+ Catholic witnesses to it cannot be absolved by any priest in the
+ Diocese of Ossory, unless by the Bishop or by those to whom he
+ grants special faculties.
+
+ "4. In order more effectually to deter people from entering into
+ _those detestable marriages_, the penalty of _Excommunication_
+ is hereby attached to that sin both for the Catholic _contracting_
+ party as also for the Catholic _witnesses_ to such marriage.
+
+ "5. The notice which the Protestant Rector or the Registrar is
+ legally bound in such cases to send to the Parish Priest of the
+ Catholic party, will be read from the Altar for three consecutive
+ Sundays, and thus the _crime_ of the offending party brought out
+ into open light before his or her fellow-parishioners.
+
+ "6. For the rest, we hope the sense of decency and religion of the
+ Catholic people and their Pastors shall be no more hurt by any
+ Catholic entering into those marriages, so full of, misery and evil
+ of every kind for themselves, their children, and society at
+ large.--Yours faithfully in Christ,
+
+ [Image: Cross] ABRAHAM, Bishop of Ossory.
+
+
+
+NOTE H.
+
+TULLY AND THE WOODFORD EVICTIONS.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 149.)
+
+
+Since the first edition of this book was published certain "evictions"
+mentioned in it as impending on the Clanricarde estates have been
+carried out. I have no reason to suppose that there was more or less
+reason for carrying out these evictions than there usually is, not in
+Ireland only, but all over the civilised world, for a resort by the
+legal owners of property to legal means of recovering the possession of
+it from persons who fail to comply with the terms on which it was put
+into their keeping. Whether this failure results from dishonesty or from
+misfortune is a consideration not often allowed, I think, to affect the
+right of the legal owner of the property concerned to his legal remedy
+in any other country but Ireland, nor even in Ireland in the case of any
+property other than property in land. But as what I learned on the spot
+touching the general condition of the Clanricarde tenants, and touching
+the conduct and character of Lord Clanricarde's agent, Mr. Tener, led me
+to take a special interest in these evictions, I asked him to send me
+some account of them. In reply he gave me a number of interesting
+details.
+
+The only serious attempt at resisting the execution of the law was made
+by "Dr." Tully, one of the leading local "agitators," to the tendency of
+whose harangues judicial reference was made during the investigation
+into the case of Mr. Wilfrid Blunt. Tully had a holding of seventeen
+acres at a rent of L2, 10s., the Government valuation being L4. He
+earned a good livelihood as a boat-builder, and he had put up a slated
+house on his holding. But in November 1884 he chose to stop paying the
+very low rent at which he held his place, and he has paid no rent since
+that time. As is stated in a footnote on page 153, vol. ii. of this
+book, a decree was granted against Tully by Judge Henn for three years'
+rent due in May 1887, and his equity of redemption having expired July
+9, 1888, this recourse was had to the law against him.
+
+As the leading spirit of the agitation, Tully had put a garrison into
+his house of twelve men and two women. He had dug a ditch around it,
+taken out the window-sashes, filled up the casements and the doorways
+with stones and trunks of trees. Portholes had been pierced under the
+roof, through which the defenders might thrust red-hot pikes,
+pitchforks, and other weapons, and empty pails of boiling water upon the
+assailants. A brief parley took place. Tully refused to make any offer
+of a settlement unless the agent would agree to reinstate all the
+evicted tenants, to which Mr. Tener replied that he would recognise no
+"combination," but was ready to deal with every tenant fairly and
+individually. Finally the Sheriff ordered his men to take the place.
+Ladders were planted, and while some of the constables, under the
+protection of a shield covered with zinc, a sort of Roman _testudo_,
+worked at removing the earthern ramparts, others nimbly climbed to the
+roof and began to break in from above. In their excitement the garrison
+helped this forward by breaking holes through the roof themselves to get
+at the attacking party, and in about twenty minutes the fortress was
+captured, and the inmates were prisoners. Two constables were burned by
+the red-hot pikes, the gun of another was broken to pieces by a huge
+stone, and a fourth was slightly wounded by a fork. One of the defenders
+got a sword-cut; and Tully was brought forth as one too severely wounded
+to walk. Upon investigation, however, the surgeon refused to certify
+that he was unable to undergo the ordinary imprisonment in such cases
+made and provided.
+
+The collapse of the resistance at this central point was followed by a
+general surrender.
+
+After the capture of Tully's house, Mr. Tener writes to me, "I found it
+being gutted by his family, who would have carried it away piecemeal.
+They had already taken away the flooring of one of the rooms." Thereupon
+Mr. Tener had the house pulled down, with the result of seeing a
+statement made in a leading Nationalist paper that he was "evicting the
+tenants and pulling down their houses."
+
+"Yesterday," Mr. Tener writes to me on the 9th of September, "I walked
+twenty-five miles, visiting thirty farms about Portumna. Except in two
+or three cases, the tenants have ample means, and part of the live stock
+alone on the farms, exclusive of the crops, would suffice to pay all the
+rents I had demanded. On the farms recently 'evicted,' I found treble
+the amount of the rent due in live stock alone."
+
+As to one case of these recent evictions, I found it stated in an Irish
+journal that a young man, who had been ill of consumption for two years,
+the son of a tenant, was removed from the house, the local physician
+refusing to certify that he was unfit for removal, and that he died a
+few days afterwards. The implication was obvious, and I asked Mr. Tener
+for the facts.
+
+He replied, "This young man, John Fahey, was in consumption, but did not
+appear to be in any danger. Dr. Carte, an Army surgeon, examined him,
+and said there was no immediate danger. The day was fine and he walked
+about wrapped in a comfortable coat, and talked with me and others. His
+father, a respectable man, made no attempt to defend his house; and at
+his request, after the crowd had gone away, my man in charge permitted
+the invalid and the family to reoccupy the house temporarily because of
+his illness. There was no inquest, and no need of any, after his death.
+His father, Patrick Fahey, had means to pay, but told me he 'could not,'
+which meant he 'dared not.' I went to him personally twice, and sent him
+many messages. But the terror of the League was upon the poor man.
+
+"An interesting case is that of Michael Fahey, of Dooras. In 1883 his
+rent was judicially reduced about 5 per cent., from L33 to L31, 5s. His
+house and all about it is substantial and comfortable. His father, about
+thirty years ago, fought for a whole night and bravely beat off a party
+of 'Terry-Alts,' the 'Moonlighters' of that day. For his courage the
+Government presented him with a gun, of which the son is very proud.
+Pity he did not inherit the pluck with the gun of his parent!
+
+"I had been privately told that this tenant would pay; but that he would
+first produce a doctor's certificate that his old mother could not be
+moved. He did give the Sheriff a carefully worded document to show this,
+but it was so vague that I objected to its being received by the
+Sheriff. Upon this (not before! mark the craft of even a well-disposed
+Irish tenant in those evil days), I was asked to go into the house. I
+went in and entered the parlour. There the tenant told me he would pay
+the year's rent and the costs, amounting to L50. He had risen from his
+seat to fetch the money, when, lo! Father Egan (the priest upon whose
+head the widow of the murdered Finlay called down the curse of God in
+the open street of Woodford) appeared in the doorway. He had come in on
+a pretence of seeing the old mother of the tenant, who had (for that
+occasion) taken to her bed. The bedroom lay beyond the parlour, and was
+entered from it. The tenant actually shook with fear as Father Egan
+passed through, and I thought all hope of a settlement gone, when
+suddenly the officer of the police came in, passed into the bedroom, and
+told Father Egan he must withdraw. This Father Egan refused to do,
+whereupon the officer said very quietly, 'I shall remove you forthwith
+if you do not go out quietly.' Upon this Father Egan hastily left. The
+tenant then went into the bedroom and soon reappeared with the L50 in
+bank-notes, which he paid me. All this was dramatic enough. But the
+comedy was next performed in front of the house, where all could see it,
+of handing to the Sheriff the alleged doctor's certificate, and of my
+saying aloud that 'in the circumstances' I had no objection to his
+receiving it! After this all the forces proceeded to take their luncheon
+on the green bank sloping down to the Shannon in front of the
+farm-house. There is a fine orchard on the place, and it recalled to me
+some of the farms I saw in Virginia.
+
+"I had gone into the house again, and was standing near the fire in the
+kitchen, where some of my escort were taking their luncheon. It is a
+large kitchen, and perhaps a dozen people were in it, when in came
+Father Egan again and called to the tenant Fahey, 'Put out those
+policemen, and do not suffer one of them to remain.'
+
+"The sergeant instantly said, 'We are here on duty, Father Egan, and if
+you dare to try to intimidate this tenant, I shall either put you out or
+arrest you.'
+
+"'Yes,' I interposed, looking at the sergeant, 'you are certainly here
+on duty, and in the name of the law, and it is sad to see a clergyman
+here in the interest of an illegal, criminal, and rebellious movement,
+and of the immoral Plan of Campaign.'
+
+"'Oh!' exclaimed Father Egan, 'the opinion of the agent of the Marquis
+of Clanricarde is valuable, truly!'
+
+"'I give you,' I said, 'not my opinion, but the opinion of Dr. Healy and
+Dr. O'Dwyer, bishops of your Church, and men worthy of all respect and
+reverence. And I am sorry to know that some ecclesiastics deserve no
+respect, but that at their doors lies the main responsibility for the
+misery and the crime which afflict our unhappy country. I feel sure a
+just God will punish them in due time.'
+
+"Father Egan made no reply, but paused a moment, and then walked out of
+the house.
+
+"At the next house, that of Dennis Fahey, we found a still better
+dwelling. Here we had another mock certificate, but we received the rent
+with the costs."
+
+
+
+NOTE H2.
+
+BOYCOTTING THE DEAD.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 151.)
+
+
+The following official account sent to me (July 24) of an affair in
+Donegal, the result of the gospel of "Boycotting" taught in that region,
+needs and will bear no comment.
+
+Patrick Cavanagh came to reside at Clonmany, County Donegal, about two
+months ago, as caretaker on some evicted farms. He died on Wednesday
+evening, June 20th, having received the full rites of the Roman Catholic
+Church. The people had displayed no ill-will towards him during his
+brief residence at Clonmany, and on the evening of his death his body
+was washed and laid out by some women. On Thursday two townsmen dug his
+grave, where pointed out by Father Doherty, P.P.
+
+The first symptom of change of feeling was that on Thursday every
+carpenter applied to had some excuse for not making a coffin for the
+body of deceased. On Friday morning the grave was found to be filled
+with stones, and a deputation waited on Father Doherty to protest
+against Cavanagh's burial in the chapel graveyard. He told them to go
+home and mind their business. About 10.30 A.M. on Friday the chapel bell
+was rung--not tolled or rung as for service, but faster. The local
+sergeant of police went to the cemetery; when he arrived there the
+tolling ceased. He then went to Father Doherty, who told those present
+that their conduct was such as to render them unfit for residence
+anywhere but in a savage country. He told them to go to their homes, and
+advised them to allow the corpse to be buried in the grave he had marked
+out. After Father Doherty had left, the people condemned his
+interference, and said they would not allow any stranger to be buried in
+the graveyard. When Constable Brady put it to those present that their
+real objection did not lie in the fact that Cavanagh had been a
+stranger, he was not contradicted.
+
+The body was ultimately buried at Carndonagh on Saturday, several people
+remaining in the graveyard at Clonmany all through the night (Friday)
+till the body was taken to Carndonagh for burial.
+
+At Carndonagh Petty Sessions, on the 18th July 1888, Con. Doherty and
+Owen Doherty, with five others, were prosecuted for unlawful assembly on
+the occasion above referred to. The first two named, who were the
+ringleaders, were convicted, and sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment
+each with hard labour; the charges against the remainder were dismissed.
+
+
+
+NOTE I.
+
+POST-OFFICE SAVINGS BANKS.
+
+(Vol. i. p. 117; vol. ii. pp. 5, 12, 66, 95, 200, 248.)
+
+
+As the Post-Office Savings Banks represent the smaller depositors, and
+command special confidence among them even in the disturbed districts, I
+print here an official statement showing the balances due to depositors
+in the undermentioned offices, situated in certain of the most disturbed
+regions I visited, on the 31st December of the years 1880 and 1887
+respectively:--
+
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ | OFFICE. | 1880. | 1887. |
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ | | L s. d. | L s. d. |
+ | Bunbeg, | 1,270 6 7 | 1,206 18 2 |
+ | Falcarragh, | 62 15 10 | 494 10 8 |
+ | Gorey, | 3,690 14 4 | 5,099 5 7 |
+ | Inch, |[A] 8 11 0 | 209 7 5 |
+ | Killorglin, | 282 15 9 | 1,299 2 6 |
+ | Loughrea, | 5,500 19 9 | 6,311 4 11 |
+ | Mitchelstown, | 1,387 13 2 | 2,846 9 3 |
+ | Portumna, | 2,539 10 11 | 3,376 5 4 |
+ | Sixmilebridge, | 382 17 10 | 934 13 4 |
+ | Stradbally, | 1,812 14 8 | 2,178 18 2 |
+ | Woodford, | 259 14 6 | 1,350 17 11 |
+ | Youghal, | 3,031 0 7 | 7,038 7 2 |
+ +-----------------+-----------------+---------------+
+ [A] This Office was not opened for Savings Bank
+ business until the year 1881, the amount shown
+ being balance due on the 31st December 1882.
+
+It appears from this table that the deposits in these Savings Banks
+increased in the aggregate from L20,329, 15s. 11d. in 1880 to L32,347,
+9s. 7d. in 1887, or almost 60 per cent, in seven years. They fell off in
+only one case, at Bunbeg, and there only to a nominal amount. At Youghal
+they much more than doubled, increasing about 133 per cent. Yet in all
+these places the Plan of Campaign has been invoked "because the people
+were penniless and could not pay their debts!"
+
+
+
+NOTE K.
+
+THE COOLGREANY EVICTIONS.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 216.)
+
+
+Captain Hamilton sends me the following graphic account of this affair
+at Coolgreany:--
+
+In the _Freeman's Journal_ of the 16th December 1886, it is reported
+that a meeting of the Brooke tenantry, the Rev. P. O'Neill in the chair,
+was held at Coolgreany on the Sunday previous to the 15th December 1886,
+the date on which the "Plan of Campaign" was adopted on the estate, at
+which it was resolved that if I refused the terms offered they would
+join the "Plan."
+
+I had no conference at Freeman's house or anywhere else at any time with
+two parish priests. On the 15th December 1886, when seated in Freeman's
+house waiting to receive the rents, four priests, a reporter of the
+_Freeman's Journal_, some local reporters, and four of the tenants
+rushed into the room; and the priests in the rudest possible manner (the
+Rev. P. Farrelly, one of them, calling me "Francy Hyne's hangman," and
+other terms of abuse) informed me that unless I re-instated a former
+Roman Catholic tenant in a farm which he had previously held, and which
+was then let to a Protestant, and gave an abatement of 30 per cent., no
+rent would be paid _me_ that day. Dr. Dillon, C.C., was not present on
+this occasion, or, if so, I do not remember seeing him.
+
+On my asking if I had no alternative but to concede to their demand, the
+Rev. Mr. Dunphy, parish priest, replied, "None other; do not think, sir,
+we have come here to-day to do honour to you."
+
+The Rev. P. O'Neill spoke as he always does, in a more gentlemanly and
+conciliatory manner, and I therefore, as the confusion in the room was
+great, offered to discuss the matter with him, the Rev. O'Donel, C.C.,
+and the tenants, if the other priests, who were strangers to me, and the
+reporters would leave the room. This the Rev. Mr. Dunphy declared they
+would not do, and I accordingly refused further to discuss the matter.
+
+After they left the house, one of the tenants, Mick Darcy, stepped
+forward and said, "Settle with us, Captain." I replied, "Certainly, if
+you come back with me into the house." The Rev. Mr. Dunphy took him by
+the collar of his coat and threw him against the wall of the house, then
+turning to me with his hand raised said, "You shall not do so; we, who
+claim the temporal as well as spiritual power over _you_ as well as
+these poor creatures, will settle this matter with you."
+
+The tenants were then taken down to the League rooms, where two M.P.s,
+Sir Thomas Esmonde and Mr. Mayne, were waiting to receive the rents,
+which, one by one, they were ordered in to pay into the war-chest of the
+"Plan of Campaign."
+
+I have I fear written too much of this commencement of the war on the
+estate which has since led to over seventy of the tenants and their
+families being ejected, and has brought ruin on nearly all who joined
+it. I have considerable experience as a land agent, but I know of no
+estate where the tenants were more respectable, better housed, or, as a
+body, in better circumstances than on the Brooke estate. They had a
+kind, indulgent landlord, and they knew it; and nothing but the belief
+that, led by their clergy, they were foremost in a battle fighting for
+their country and religion, would have induced them to put up with the
+great hardships and loss they have undoubtedly had to suffer.
+
+
+
+NOTE L.
+
+A DUCAL SUPPER IN IRELAND IN 1711.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 283.)
+
+
+The following entry I take from the Expense-Book of the Duke of Ormond,
+under date of August 23, 1711:--
+
+His Grace came to Kilkenny, half an hour after 10 at night.
+
+HIS GRACE'S TABLE.
+
+Pottage. Sautee Veal.
+5 Pullets, Bacon and Collyflowers.
+Pottage Meagre.
+Pikes with White Sauce.
+A Turbot with Lobster Sauce.
+Umbles.
+A Hare Hasht.
+Buttered Chickens, G.
+Hasht Veal and New Laid Eggs.
+Removes.
+A Shoulder and Neck of Mutton.
+Haunch of Venison.
+
+_Second Course._
+
+Lobsters.
+Tarts, an Oval Dish.
+Crabbs Buttered.
+4 Pheasants, 4 Partridges, 4 Turkeys.
+Ragoo Mushrooms.
+Kidney Beans. Ragoo Oysters.
+Fritters.
+Two Sallets.
+
+
+
+NOTE M.
+
+LETTER FROM MR. O'LEARY.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 291.)
+
+
+In the first edition of this book I credited Mr. O'Leary with making
+this pungent remark about figs and grapes, because I found it jotted
+down in my original memoranda as coming from him. In a private note he
+assures me that he does not think it was made by him, and though this
+does not agree with my own recollection, I defer, of course, to his
+impression. And this I do the more readily that it affords me an
+opportunity for printing the following very characteristic and
+interesting letter sent to me by him for publication should I think fit
+to use it.
+
+As the most important support given by the Irish in America to the
+Nationalists is solicited by their agents on the express ground that
+they are really labouring to establish an Irish Republic, this outspoken
+declaration of Mr. O'Leary, that he does not believe they "expect or
+desire" the establishment of an Irish Republic, will be of interest on
+my side of the water:--
+
+ "DUBLIN, _Sept._ 9, '88.
+
+ "My Dear Sir,--I am giving more bother about what you make me say
+ in your book than the thing is probably worth, especially seeing
+ that what you say about me and my present attitude towards men and
+ things here is almost entirely correct.
+
+ "It is proverbially hard to prove a negative, and my main reason
+ for believing I did not say the thing about figs and grapes is that
+ I never could remember the whole of any proverb in conversation;
+ but I am absolutely certain I never said that 'some of them (the
+ National Leaguers) expect to found an Irish republic on robbery,
+ and to administer it by falsehood. We don't.' Most certainly I do
+ not expect to found anything on robbery, or administer anything by
+ falsehood, but I do not in the least believe that the National
+ League either expects or desires to found an Irish republic at all!
+ Neither do I believe that the Leaguers will long retain the
+ administration of such small measure of Home Rule, as I now (since
+ the late utterances of Mr. Parnell and Mr. Gladstone) believe we
+ are going to get. My fault with the present people is not that they
+ are looking, or mean to look, for too much, but that they may be
+ induced, by pressure from their English Radical allies, to be
+ content with too little. It is only a large and liberal measure of
+ Home Rule which will ever satisfy the Irish people, and I fear
+ that, if the smaller fry of Radical M.P.'s are allowed to have a
+ strong voice in a matter of which they know next to nothing, the
+ settlement of the Irish question will be indefinitely postponed.--I
+ remain, faithfully yours,
+
+ "JOHN O'LEARY."
+
+
+
+NOTE N
+
+BOYCOTTING PRIVATE OPINION.
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 293.)
+
+
+This case of Mr. Taylor is worth preserving _in extenso_ as an
+illustration of that spirit in the Irish journalism of the day, against
+which Mr. Rolleston and his friends protest as fatal to independence,
+manliness, and truth. I simply cite the original attack made upon Mr.
+Taylor, the replies made by himself and his friends, and the comments
+made upon those replies by the journal which assailed him. They all tell
+their own story.
+
+ (_UNITED IRELAND_, JUNE 16.)
+
+ Mr. John F. Taylor owes everything he has or is to the Irish
+ National Party; nor is he slow to confess it where the
+ acknowledgment will serve his personal interests. His sneers are
+ all anonymous, and, like Mr. Fagg, the grateful and deferential
+ valet in _The Rivals_, "it hurts his conscience to be found out."
+ There is no honesty or sincerity in the man. His covert gibes are
+ the spiteful emanation of personal disappointment; his lofty
+ morality is a cloak for unscrupulous self-seeking. He has always
+ shown himself ready to say anything or do anything that may serve
+ his own interests. In the general election of 1885 he made frantic
+ efforts to get into Parliament as a member of the Irish Party. He
+ ghosted every member of the party whose influence he thought might
+ help him--notably the two men, Mr. Dillon and Mr. O'Brien, at whom
+ he now sneers, as he fondly believes, in the safe seclusion of an
+ anonymous letter of an English newspaper. During the period of
+ probation his hand was incessant on Mr. Dillon's door-knocker. The
+ most earnest supplications were not spared. All in vain. Either his
+ character or his ability failed to satisfy the Irish leader, and
+ his claim was summarily rejected. Since then his wounded vanity has
+ found vent in spiteful calumny of almost every member of the Irish
+ Party--whenever he found malice a luxury that could be safely
+ indulged in.
+
+ "His next step was a startling one. We have absolute reason to
+ know, when the last Coercion Act was in full swing, this
+ pure-souled and disinterested patriot begged for, received, and
+ accepted a very petty Crown Prosecutorship under a Coercion
+ Government. As was wittily said at the time, he sold his
+ principles, not for a mess of pottage, but for the stick that
+ stirred the mess. Strong pressure was brought to bear on him, and
+ he was induced for his own sake, after many protests and with much
+ reluctance, to publicly refuse the office he had already privately
+ accepted. Mr. Taylor professes to model himself on Robert Emmet and
+ Thomas Davis; it is hard to realise Thomas Davis or Robert Emmet as
+ a Coercion Crown Prosecutor in the pay of Dublin Castle. Since then
+ there has been no more persistent caviller at the Irish policy and
+ the Irish Party in company where he believed such cavilling paid.
+ When Home Rule was proposed by Mr. Gladstone, he had a thousand
+ foolish sneers for the measure and its author. When the Bill was
+ defeated, he elected Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Goschen, and Mr. T.W.
+ Russell as the gods of his idolatry. Such a nature needs a patron,
+ and Mr. Webb, Q.C., the Tory County Court Judge who doubled the
+ sentence on Father M'Fadden, was the patron to be selected. It is
+ shrewdly suspected that he supplied most of the misguiding
+ information for Dr. Webb's coercion pamphlet, and it is probable
+ that Dr. Webb gives him a lift with his weekly letter to the
+ _Manchester Guardian._
+
+
+ (_UNITED IRELAND_, JUNE 23.)
+
+ MR. JOHN F. TAYLOR.
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Sir,--You would not, I am sure, allow intentional misstatements to
+ appear in your columns, and I ask you to allow me space to correct
+ three erroneous observations made about myself in your current
+ issue--
+
+ 1. The first statement is to the effect that I owe everything I
+ have, or that I am, to the Irish National Party. I owe absolutely
+ nothing to the Irish Party, except an attempt to boycott me on my
+ circuit, which, fortunately for me, has failed.
+
+ 2. The second is to the effect that I made "frantic efforts" (these
+ are the words, I think) to enter Parliament, and besieged Mr.
+ Dillon's house during the time when candidates were being chosen. I
+ saw Mr. Dillon exactly twice, both occasions at Mr. Davitt's
+ request. Mr. Davitt urged me to allow my name to go forward as a
+ candidate, and it was at his wish and solicitation that I saw Mr.
+ Dillon.
+
+ 3. It is further said that I begged a Crown Prosecutorship.
+ Fortunately, Mr. Walker and The M'Dermot are living men, and they
+ know this to be absolutely untrue. I was offered such an
+ appointment, and, contrary to my own judgment, I allowed myself to
+ be guided by Mr. Davitt, who thought the matter would be
+ misunderstood in the state of things then existing. I believe I am
+ the only person that ever declined such an offer.
+
+ As to general statements, these are of no importance, and I shall
+ not trouble you about them.--Yours very truly,
+
+ JOHN F. TAYLOR.
+
+ _P.S._--The introduction of Dr. Webb's name was a gratuitous
+ outrage, Dr. Webb and I never assisted each other in anything
+ except in the defence of P.N. Fitzgerald. J.F.T.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Dear Sir,--As my name has been introduced into the controversy
+ between yourself and Mr. Taylor, I feel called upon to substantiate
+ the two statements wherein my name occurs in Mr. Taylor's letter of
+ last week. It was at my request that he called upon Mr. John
+ Dillon, M.P. I think I accompanied him on the occasion, and unless
+ my memory is very much at fault, Mr. Dillon was not unfriendly to
+ Mr. Taylor's proposed candidature. This visit occurred some three
+ months after Mr. Taylor had, on my advice, declined the Crown
+ Prosecutorship for King's County, a post afterwards applied for by
+ and granted to a near relative of one of the most prominent members
+ of the Irish Party. With Mr. Taylor's general views on the present
+ situation, or opinions upon parties or men, I have no concern. But,
+ in so far as the circumstances related above are dealt with in your
+ issue of last week, I think an unjust imputation has been made
+ against him, and in the interests of truth and fair play I feel
+ called upon to adduce the testimony of facts as they
+ occurred.--Yours truly,
+
+ MICHAEL DAVITT.
+
+ Ballybrack, Co. Dublin,
+
+ June 19, 1888.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Sir,--As this is, I believe, the first time I have sought to
+ intrude upon your columns, I hope you will allow me some slight
+ space in the interests of fair-play and freedom of speech. Those
+ interests seem to me to have been quite set at naught in the
+ attack, or rather series of attacks, upon Mr. Taylor in your last
+ issue. Mr. Taylor's views upon many matters are not mine. He is far
+ more democratic in his opinions than I see any sufficient reason
+ for being, and he is very much more of what is called a land
+ reformer than I am; but on an acquaintance of some years I have
+ ever found him an honourable and high-minded gentleman, and as good
+ a Nationalist, from my point of view, as most of the members of the
+ Irish Parliamentary Party whom I either know or know of. Of some of
+ the charges made against Mr. Taylor, such as the seeking for Crown
+ Prosecutorships and the like, I am in no position to speak, save
+ from my knowledge of his character, but I understand Mr. Davitt
+ knows all about these things, and I suppose he will tell what he
+ knows. But of the main matter, and I think the chief cause of your
+ ire, I am quite in a position to speak. I have read at least a
+ score of Mr. Taylor's letters to the _Manchester Guardian_, and I
+ have always found them very intelligently written, and invariably
+ characterised by a spirit of fairness and moderation; indeed, the
+ chief fault I found with them was that they took too favourable a
+ view of the motives, if not the acts, of many of our public men,
+ but notably of Messrs. Dillon and O'Brien. You may, of course,
+ fairly say that I am not the best judge of either the acts or the
+ motives of these gentlemen, and I freely grant you that I may not,
+ for my way of looking upon the Irish question is quite other than
+ theirs; but what I must be excused for holding is that both I and
+ Mr. Taylor have quite as good a right to our opinions as either of
+ these gentlemen, or as any other member of the Irish Parliamentary
+ Party. But this is the very last right that people are inclined to
+ grant to each other in Ireland just now. Personally I care very
+ little for this, but for Ireland's sake I care much. Some twenty
+ years ago or so I was sent into penal servitude with the almost
+ entire approval, expressed or implied, of the Irish Press. Some
+ short time after the same Press found out that I and my friends had
+ not sinned so grievously in striving to free Ireland. But men and
+ times and things may change again, and, though I am growing old, I
+ hope still to live long enough to be forgiven for my imperfect
+ appreciation of the blessings of Boycotting, and the Plan of
+ Campaign, and many similar blessings. It matters little indeed how
+ or when I die, so that Ireland lives, but her life can only be a
+ living death if Irishmen are not free to say what they believe, and
+ to act as they deem right.--Your obedient servant,
+
+ JOHN O'LEARY.
+
+ June 18, 1888.
+
+
+ _To the Editor of "United Ireland."_
+
+ Dear Sir,--I observe that in your last issue, amongst other things,
+ you state that Mr. Taylor accepted a Crown Prosecutorship in 1885.
+ I happen to know the precise facts. Mr. Taylor was offered the
+ Crown Prosecutorship of the King's County, and some of us strongly
+ advised him to accept it. There were no political prosecutions
+ impending at the time, and it seemed to me that a Nationalist who
+ would do his work honestly in prosecuting offenders against the
+ ordinary law might strike a blow against tyranny by refusing to
+ accept a brief, if offered, against men accused of political
+ offences or prosecuted under a Coercion Act. I know that a similar
+ view was entertained by the late Very Rev. Dr. Kavanagh of Kildare,
+ and many others. However, we failed to influence Mr. Taylor further
+ than to make him say that he would do nothing in the matter until
+ Mr. Davitt was consulted. I, for one, called on Mr. Davitt, and
+ pressed my views upon him; but he was decided that no Nationalist
+ could identify himself in the smallest way with Castle rule in
+ Ireland. This settled the question, and Mr. Taylor declined the
+ post, which was subsequently applied for by Mr. Luke Dillon, who
+ now holds it.--Faithfully yours,
+
+ JAMES A. POOLE.
+
+ 29 Harcourt Street.
+
+
+
+ EDITORIAL NOTE.
+
+ _"United Ireland," June 23._
+
+ We devote a large portion of our space to-day to the apparently
+ organised defence of Mr. J.F. Taylor and his friends, and we are
+ quite content to rest upon their letters the justification for our
+ comments. When a gentleman who avows himself a disappointed
+ aspirant for Parliamentary honours, and who owns his regret that he
+ did not become a petty Castle placeman, is discovered writing in an
+ important English Liberal paper, venomous little innuendos at the
+ expense of sorely attacked Irish leaders which excite the
+ enthusiasm of the _Liarish Times_, it was high time to intimate to
+ the _Manchester Guardian_ the source from which its Irish
+ information is derived. The case against Mr. Taylor as a
+ criticaster is clinched by the fact that his cause is espoused by
+ Mr. John O'Leary. The Irish public are a little weary of Mr.
+ O'Leary's querulous complaints as an _homme incompris_. So far as
+ we are aware, the only ground he himself has for complaining of
+ want of toleration is that he possibly considers the good-humoured
+ toleration for years invariably extended to his opinions on men and
+ things savours of neglect. His idea of toleration with respect to
+ others seems to be toleration for everybody except the unhappy
+ wretches who may happen to be for the moment doing any practicable
+ service in the Irish cause.
+
+
+
+
+NOTE O.
+
+BOYCOTTING BY "CROWNER'S QUEST LAW."
+
+(Vol. ii. p. 312.)
+
+
+The following circumstantial account of this deplorable case of Ellen
+Gaffney preserved here, as I find it printed in the _Irish Times_ of
+February 27, 1888.
+
+"In the Court of Queen's Bench, on Saturday, the Lord Chief-Justice (Sir
+Michael Morris, Bart.), Mr. Justice O'Brien, Mr. Justice Murphy, and Mr.
+Justice Gibson presiding, judgment was delivered in the case of Ellen
+Gaffney. The original motion was to quash the verdict of a coroner's
+jury held at Philipstown on August 27th and September 1st last, on the
+body of a child named Mary Anne Gaffney.
+
+"The Lord Chief-Justice said it appeared that Mary Anne Gaffney, the
+child on whose body the inquest was held, was born on the 23d July, and
+that she died on the 25th August, 1887. A Dr. Clarke, who had been very
+much referred to in the course of the proceedings, called upon the local
+sergeant of the police, and directed his attention to the body, but the
+sergeant having inspected the body, came to the conclusion that there
+was no need for an inquest. The doctor considered differently, and the
+sergeant communicated with the Coroner on the 26th August, and on the
+next day that gentleman arrived in Philipstown. He had a conference
+there with Dr. Clarke and with a reverend gentleman named Father Bergin,
+and subsequently proceeded to hold an inquest upon the child in a
+public-house--a most appropriate place apparently for the transactions
+which afterwards occurred there. The investigation, if it might be so
+called, was proceeded with upon that 27th of August. Very strong
+affidavits had been made on the part of Mrs. Gaffney--who applied to
+have the inquisition quashed--her husband, and some of the constabulary
+authorities as to the line of conduct pursued upon that occasion. Ellen
+Gaffney and her husband were taken into custody on the day the inquest
+opened by the verbal direction of the Coroner, who refused to complete
+the depositions given by the former on the ground that she was not
+sworn. That did not take him out of the difficulty, for if she was not
+sworn she had a right to be sworn, and the Coroner had no right to
+prevent her. The inquest was resumed on the 1st September in the
+court-house at Philipstown--the proper place--and a curious letter was
+read from the Coroner, the effect of which was that he did not consider
+that there was any ground for detaining the man Gaffney in custody, but
+the woman was brought before a justice of the peace and committed for
+trial. She was in prison from August 27th until the month of December,
+when the lucky accident of a winter assize occurred, else she might be
+there still. At the adjourned inquest the Coroner proceeded to read over
+the depositions taken on the former day, and it was sworn by four
+witnesses, whom he (the Lord Chief-Justice) entirely credited, that the
+Coroner read these depositions as if they were originals, whereas an
+unprecedented transaction had occurred. The Coroner had given the
+original depositions out of his own custody, and given them to a
+reverend gentleman who was rather careless of them, as was shown by the
+evidence of a witness named Greene, who deposed that he saw a car on the
+road upon which sat two clergymen, and he found on the road the original
+depositions which, presumably, one of the clergymen had dropped. The
+depositions were handed to a magistrate and afterwards returned to the
+police at Philipstown, who had possession of them on the resumption of
+the inquest. If the case stood alone there it was difficult to
+understand how a Coroner could come into court and appear by counsel to
+resist the quashing of an inquisition in regard to which at the very
+door such gross personal misconduct was demonstrated. No doubt, he said,
+he did not read them as originals but as copies, and it was strange,
+that being so, that he did not inform the jury of what had become of
+them, and he complained now of not being told by the police of their
+recovery--not told of his own misconduct. On the 1st September, Ellen
+Gaffney applied by a solicitor--Mr. Disdall, and as a set-off the
+Coroner permitted a gentleman named O'Kearney Whyte to appear--for whom?
+Was it for the constituted authorities or for the next-of-kin? No, but
+for the Rev. Father Bergin, who was described as president of the local
+branch of the National League, and the Coroner (Mr. Gowing) alleged as
+the reason why he allowed him to appear and cross-examine the witnesses
+and address the jury and give him the right of reply like Crown counsel
+was, that Ellen Gaffney stated that she had been so much annoyed by
+Father Bergin that she attributed the loss of her child to him--that it
+was he who had murdered the child. It was asserted that Father Bergin
+sat on the bench with the Coroner and interfered during the conduct of
+the inquest, and having to give some explanation of that Mr. Gowing's
+version was certainly a most amusing one. He said it was the habit to
+invite to a seat on the bench people of a respectable position in
+life--which, of course, a clergyman should be in--and that he asked
+Father Bergin to sit beside him in that capacity. But see the dilemma
+the Coroner put himself in. According to his own statement he had
+previously allowed this reverend gentleman to interfere, and to be
+represented by a solicitor because he was incriminated, inculpated, or
+accused, and it certainly was not customary to invite any one so
+situated to occupy a seat on the bench. He (the Lord Chief Baron) did
+not believe that Father Bergin was incriminated in any way, but that was
+the Coroner's allegation, and such was his peculiar action thereafter.
+The Coroner further stated that no matter whether he read the originals
+or the copies of the first day's depositions, it was on the evidence of
+September 1st that the jury acted. If that was so he placed himself in a
+further dilemma, for there was no evidence before the jury at all on the
+second day upon which they could bring a verdict against Ellen Gaffney.
+In regard to the recording and announcing of the verdict it appeared
+that the jury were 19 in number, and after their deliberations the
+foreman declared that 13 were for finding a verdict one way and 6 for
+another; that Mr. Whyte dictated the verdict to the Coroner, and the
+Coroner asked the 13 men if that was what they agreed to. Mr. Whyte's
+statement was that the jury, through the foreman, stated what their
+verdict was; that he wrote it down, and that the Coroner asked him for
+what he had written, and used it himself. But in addition to that, when
+the jury came in the Coroner and Mr. Whyte divided them--placed them
+apart while the verdict was being written--and then said to the 13 men,
+"Is that what you agree to?" Such apparent misconduct it was hardly
+possible to conceive in anybody occupying a judicial position as did the
+Coroner, and especially a Coroner who had an inquisition quashed before.
+What he had mentioned was sufficient to call forth the emphatic decision
+of the court quashing the proceedings, which, however, were also
+impeached on the grounds of its insufficiency and irregularity, and of
+the character of the finding itself. It was not until the Coroner had
+been threatened with the consequences of his contempt that he made a
+return to the visit of _certiorari_, and it was then found that out of
+ten so-called depositions only one contained any signature--that of Dr.
+Clarke's, which was one of those lost by the clergyman, and not before
+the jury on the 1st September. He (the Lord Chief-Justice) had tried to
+read the documents, but in vain--they were of such a scrawling and
+scribbling character, but, as he had said, all were incomplete and
+utterly worthless except the one which was not properly before the jury.
+Then, what was the finding on this inquisition, which should have been
+substantially as perfect as an indictment? "That Mary Anne Gaffney came
+by her death, and that the mother of this child, Ellen Gaffney, is
+guilty of wilful neglect by not supplying the necessary food and care to
+sustain the life of this child." Upon what charge could the woman have
+been implicated on that vague finding? He (his Lordship) could
+understand its being contended that that amounted argumentatively to a
+verdict of manslaughter; but the Coroner issued his warrant and sent
+this woman to prison as being guilty of murder, and she remained in
+custody, as he had already remarked, until discharged by the learned
+judge who went the Winter Assizes in December. Upon all of these grounds
+they were clearly of opinion that this inquisition should be quashed,
+and Mr. Coroner Gowing having had the self-possession to come there to
+show cause against the conditional order, under such circumstances, must
+bear the costs of that argument.
+
+Mr. Fred. Moorhead, who, instructed by Mr. O'Kearney Whyte, appeared for
+the Coroner, asked whether the Court would require, as was usual when
+costs were awarded against a magistrate, an undertaking from the other
+side--
+
+The Lord Chief-Justice.--That is not to bring an action against the
+Coroner, you mean?
+
+Mr. Moorhead.--Yes, my Lord. I think it is a usual undertaking when
+costs are awarded in such a case. I think you ought--
+
+The Lord Chief-Justice.--Well, I don't know that we ought, but we most
+certainly will not. (Laughter.)
+
+Mr. David Sherlock, who (instructed by Mr. Archibald W. Disdall)
+appeared for Ellen Gaffney.--Rest assured, we certainly will bring an
+action.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] I have the authority of Mr. Hennessey, "the best living
+Irish scholar, and a Kerryman to boot," for this spelling. I am quite
+right, he says, in stating that the people there pronounce the names of
+Glenbeigh and Rossbeigh as Glenbehy and Rossbehy in three syllables.
+"Bethe," pronounced "behy," is the genitive of "beith," the birch, of
+which there were formerly large woods in Ireland. Glenbehy and Rossbehy
+mean the "Glen," and the "Ross" or "wooded point" of the birch.
+
+[2] A letter received by me from a Protestant Irish gentleman,
+long an ardent Nationalist, seems to confirm this. He writes to me (June
+15),
+
+ "There is a noble river here, with a convenient line of quays for
+ unloading merchandise. But every sack that is landed must be carried
+ out of the ship on men's backs. The quay labourers won't allow a
+ steam crane to be set up. If it is tried there is a riot and a
+ tumult, and no Limerick tradesman can purchase anything from a
+ vessel that uses it, on pain of being boycotted. The result is that
+ the labourers are masters of the situation, and when they catch a
+ vessel with a cargo which it is imperative to land quickly, they
+ wait till the work is half done, and then strike for 8s. a day! If
+ other labourers are imported, they are boycotted for 'grabbing
+ work,' and any one who sells provisions to them is boycotted."
+
+[3] An interesting account of this gentleman, and of his
+connection with the earlier developments of the Irish agitation, given
+to me by Mr. Colomb of the R.I.C., will be found at p.38, and in the
+Appendix, Note F.
+
+[4] See Appendix, Note F.
+
+[5] The name of this blacksmith's son learned in the Law of the
+League is given in Lord Cowper's Report (2. 18,370) as Michael Healy.
+While these pages are in the printer's hands the London papers chronicle
+(May 25, 1888) the arrest of a person described to me as this
+magistrate's brother, Jeremiah Healy, on a charge of robbing and setting
+fire to the Protestant church at Killarney!
+
+[6] Mr. Colomb sends me, June 30, the following interesting
+note:--The letter of which I gave you a copy was produced in evidence at
+Kerry Summer Assizes, 1867. J. D. Sheehan, Esq., M.P., is the same man
+who was arrested on the 12th February 1867, and to whom the foregoing
+letter, ordering the rising in Killarney, is addressed. He was kept in
+custody for some time, and eventually released, it is believed, on the
+understanding that he was to keep out of Ireland. He came back in 1873
+or 1874 and married the proprietress of a Hotel at Killarney. His
+connection with the Glenbehy evictions is referred to on page 10, and in
+Note F of the Appendix I give an interesting account, furnished me by
+Mr. Colomb, of his activity in connection with the case of the Misses
+Curtin at Firies.
+
+[7] In the time of Henry VIII. these cities waged actual war
+with each other, like Florence and Pisa, by sea and land. Limerick was
+then called "Little London."
+
+[8] It was on the 17th October 1886 that Mr. Dillon first
+promulgated the Plan of Campaign at all at Portumna.
+
+[9] Mr. Ponsonby's account of this affair will be found in the
+Appendix, Note G. The Post-Office Savings Bank deposits at Youghal,
+which were L3031, 0s. 7d. in 1880, rose to L7038, 7s. 2d. in 1887.
+
+[10] As to the ability of these tenants to pay their way, one
+fact which I have since ascertained sufficiently supports Mr. Tener's
+contention. The deposits in the Postal Savings Banks of the three purely
+agricultural towns of Portumna, Woodford, and Loughrea, which in 1880,
+throwing off the shillings and pence, were respectively, L2539, L259,
+and L5500, rose in 1887 to L3376, L1350, and L6311, an increase of
+nearly L3000.
+
+[11] Mr. Tener, to whom I sent proofs of these pages, writes to
+me (July 18): "I shall soon execute the decree of the County-Court Judge
+Henn against Father Coen for L5, 5s., being two and a half year's
+rent."
+
+[12] At a hearing of cases before Judge Henn some time after I
+left Portumna, the Judge was reported in the papers as "severely"
+commenting upon the carelessness with which the estate-books were kept,
+tenants who were proceeded against for arrears producing "receipts" in
+court. I wrote to Mr. Tener on this subject. Under date of June 5th he
+replied to me: "Judge Henn did not use the severe language reported.
+There was no reporter present but a local man, and I have reason to
+believe the report in the _Freeman's Journal_ came from the lawyer of
+the tenants, who is on the staff of that journal. But the tenants are
+drilled not to show the receipts they hold, and to take advantage of
+every little error which they might at once get corrected by calling at
+the estate office. In no case, however, did any wrong occur to any
+tenant."
+
+[13] The town and estate proper of Woodford belong to Sir Henry
+Burke, Bart. The nearest point to Woodford of Lord Clamicarde's property
+is distant one mile from the town. And on the so-called Woodford estate
+there are not "316 tenants," as stated in publications I have seen, but
+260.
+
+[14] Martin Kenny, the "victim" of this eviction, is the tenant
+to whom the Rev. Mr. Crawford (_vide_ page 118) gave L50 for certain
+cattle, in order that he (Kenny) might pay his rent But, although he got
+the L50, he nevertheless suffered himself to be evicted; no doubt
+fearing the vengeance of the League should he pay.
+
+[15] The valuation for taxes of this holding is L7, 15s. for
+the land, and L5 for the presbytery house. The church is exempt.
+
+[16] Of "Dr." Tully Mr. Tener wrote to me (July 18):
+
+ "Tully has the holding at L2, 10s. a year, being 50 per cent, under
+ the valuation of the land for taxes, which is L3, 15s. As the total
+ valuation with the house (built by him) is only L4, he pays no
+ poor-rates. He was in arrears May 1, 1887, of three years for L7,
+ 10s. Lord Clanricarde offered him, with others, 20 per cent,
+ abatement, making for him 70 per cent, under the valuation--and he
+ refused!"
+
+Since then (on Saturday Sept. 1), Tully has been evicted after a
+dramatic "resistance," of which, with instructive incidents attending
+it, Mr. Tener sends me an account, to be found in the Appendix, Note H.
+
+[17] Note H2.
+
+[18] Mr. Tener writes to me (July 18):
+
+ "At Allendarragh, near the scene of Finlay's murder, Thomas Noonan,
+ who lately was brave enough to accept the post of process-server
+ vacated by that murder, was shot at on the 13th instant. It was on
+ the highway. He heard a heavy stone fall from a wall on the road and
+ turned to see what caused it. He distinctly saw two men behind the
+ wall with guns, and saw them fire. One shot struck a stone in the
+ road very near him--the other went wide. His idea is that one gun
+ dislodged the stone on which it had been laid for an aim, and that
+ its fall disturbed the aim and saved him. He fully identifies one of
+ the men as Henry Bowles, a nephew of 'Dr.' Tully, who lives with
+ Tully, and Bowles, after being arrested and examined at Woodford,
+ has been remanded, bail being refused, to Galway Jail. Before this
+ shooting Noonan had served a notice from me upon Tully, against whom
+ I have Judge Henn's decree for three years' rent, and whose equity
+ of redemption expired July 9th."
+
+[19] I have since learned that my jarvey was well informed. Sir
+Henry Burke actually paid Mr. Dillon L160 for the maintenance of his
+tenants while out of their farms. This, two other landlords, Lords
+Dunsandle and Westmeath, refused to do, but, like Sir Henry, they both
+paid all the costs, and accepted a "League" reduction of 5s. 6d. and 6s.
+in the pound (June 9, 1888).
+
+[20] Down to the date at which I write this note (June 9), Mr.
+Seigne has kindly, but without results, endeavoured to get for me some
+authentic return made by a small tenant-farmer of his incomings and
+outgoings.
+
+[21] Note I.
+
+[22] Note K.
+
+[23] While these pages are going through the press a Scottish
+friend sends me the following extract from a letter published in the
+_Scotsman_ of July 25:--
+
+ "In the same way I, in August last, when in Wicklow, ascertained as
+ carefully as I could the facts as to the Bodyke evictions; and being
+ desirous to learn now if that estate was still out of cultivation,
+ as I had found it in August, I wrote the gentleman I have referred
+ to above. His reply is as follows:--
+
+ "'I can answer your question as far as the Brooke estate is
+ concerned. None of the tenants are back in their farms, nor
+ are they likely to be. The landlord has the land partly
+ stocked with cattle; but I may say the land is nearly waste;
+ the gates, fences, and farmsteads partly destroyed. I was at
+ the fair of Coolgreany about three weeks ago, and the country
+ looked quite changed; the weeds predominating in the land
+ that the tenantry had under cultivation when they were
+ evicted from their farms. The landlord has done nothing to
+ lay the land down with grass seed, consequently the land is
+ waste. The village of Coolgreany is on the property, and
+ there was a good monthly fair held there, but it is very much
+ gone down since the disagreement between the landlord and
+ tenant. The tenants, speaking generally, in allowing
+ themselves to be evicted and not redeeming before six months,
+ are giving up all their improvements to the landlord, no
+ matter what they may be worth. I have got quite tired of the
+ vexed question, and may say I have given up reading about
+ evictions, and pity the tenant who is foolish enough to allow
+ any party to advise him so badly as to allow himself to be
+ evicted.'
+
+ "Those who read this testimony of a candid witness, and remember the
+ cordial footing on which Mr. Brooke stood with his tenantry in
+ Bodyke before Mr. Billon appeared amongst them, may well ask what
+ good his interference did to the now impoverished tenantry of
+ Bodyke, or to the district now deserted or laid waste.--I am, etc.,
+
+ A RADICAL UNIONIST."
+
+[24] In curious confirmation of this opinion expressed to me by
+a man of the country in March, I find in the _Dublin Express_ of July
+19th this official news from the Athy Vice-Guardians:
+
+ "At the meeting of the Vice-Guardians of the Athy Union yesterday, a
+ letter was read from Mr. G. Finlay, Auditor, in which he stated that
+ the two sureties of Collector Kealy, of the Luggacurren district,
+ had been evicted from their holdings by Lord Lansdowne, and were not
+ now in possession of any lands there. They were allowed outdoor
+ relief to the extent of L1 a week each on the ground of destitution.
+ The Auditor continued: 'The Collector tells me that they both
+ possess other lands, and have money in bank. The Collector is
+ satisfied that they are as good, if not better, securities for the
+ amount of his bond now than at the time they became sureties for
+ him. The Clerk of the Union concurs in this opinion.'
+
+ "It was ordered to bring the matter under the notice of the Board."
+
+[25] _Explanatory Note attached to First Edition._--After this
+chapter had actually gone to press, I received a letter from the friend
+who had put me into communication with the labourers referred to in it,
+begging me to strike out all direct indications of their whereabouts, on
+the ground that these might lead to grave annoyance and trouble for
+these poor men from the local tyrants.
+
+I do not know that I ought to regret the annoyance thus caused to my
+publisher and to me, as no words of mine could emphasise so clearly the
+nature and the scope of the odious, illegal, or anti-legal "coercion"
+established in certain parts of Ireland as the asterisks which mark my
+compliance with my friend's request. What can be said for the freedom of
+a country in which a man of character and position honestly believes it
+to be "dangerous" for poor men to say the things recorded in the text of
+this chapter about their own feelings, wishes, opinions, and interests?
+
+[26] It may be well to say here that whatever prominence Mr.
+O'Donovan Rossa has had among the Irish in America has been largely, if
+not chiefly, due to the curious persistency of Sir William Harcourt,
+when a Minister, in making him the ideal Irish-American leader. In and
+out of Parliament, Sir William Harcourt continually spoke of Mr. Rossa
+as of a kind of Irish Jupiter Tonans, wielding all the terrors of
+dynamite from beyond the Atlantic. This was a source of equal amusement
+to the Irish-American organisers in America and satisfaction to Mr.
+Rossa himself. I remember that when a question arose of excluding Mr.
+Rossa from an important Irish-American convention at Philadelphia, as
+not being the delegate of any recognised Irish-American body, Mr.
+Sullivan told me that he should recommend the admission of Mr. Rossa to
+the floor without a right to deliberative action, expressly because his
+presence, when reported, would be a cause of terror to Sir William
+Harcourt.
+
+[27] See Appendix, Note M.
+
+[28] Note N.
+
+[29] Note O.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (2 of
+2) (1888), by William Henry Hurlbert
+
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