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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/19329-8.txt b/19329-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..22bdfe8 --- /dev/null +++ b/19329-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7889 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sunny Side of Ireland, by +John O'Mahony and R. Lloyd Praeger + +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: The Sunny Side of Ireland + How to see it by the Great Southern and Western Railway + +Author: John O'Mahony and R. Lloyd Praeger + +Release Date: September 19, 2006 [EBook #19329] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUNNY SIDE OF IRELAND *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Janet Blenkinship and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + ++------------------------------------------------------------+ +|Transcriber's Note: Inconsistent spelling of place names | +|are left as in the original. | ++------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + + THE SUNNY SIDE + + OF + + IRELAND. + + [Illustration] + + + + + Second Edition. Re-written and Enlarged. + + THE SUNNY SIDE + + OF + + IRELAND. + + HOW TO SEE IT BY + THE GREAT SOUTHERN AND WESTERN RAILWAY. + + BY + + JOHN O'MAHONY. + + With Seven Maps and over 160 Illustrations. + + + AND A CHAPTER ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF + THE SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND, + + BY + + R. LLOYD PRAEGER, B.A., B.E., &c. + + + ALEX. THOM & CO. (LIMITED), + 87, 88, & 89, ABBEY STREET, + DUBLIN. + + + + +PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION. + + +These pages attempt to make better known the large part of Ireland which +is served by the Great Southern and Western Railway Company, and while +doing so to realise Shakespeare's words: + + "An honest tale speeds best being plainly told." + +If they succeed in these endeavours, they will satisfy the compiler. No +inexorable route is insisted upon, but no suggestion is stinted which +may help the tourist to enjoy fully the beautiful country he passes +through--and a beautiful country it truly is, be it approached from +Athlone, its north-western gate, by the Shannon, where, + + "In the quiet watered land, the land of roses, + Stands Saint Kieran's city fair," + +or from its south-western side, in the kingdom of Kerry, where the ocean +leans against the mountains, and the storm-swept peak of Skellig Michael +makes the most westerly citadel of Christ in the Old World! Everywhere +within its broad borders, swift-rushing rivers, mirror-like lakes, and +mountains tiaraed in the skies, delight the vision and gladden the +heart. + +The Gaelic names of places are usually word pictures reflecting with +fidelity the physical features of each place, or "tell sad stories of +the death of kings." Where possible, the equivalents have been given in +English. + +With these forewords, nothing further remains but to offer an Irish +welcome-- + FAILTÈ. + + + + +PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION. + + +Since "The Sunny Side of Ireland" was issued the Royal Assent has been +given to an Act of Parliament which makes the Great Southern and Western +Railway foremost in every sense amongst Irish Railways. The two +Provinces of Munster and Connaught are now knit together by a huge +network of railway lines comprised in their amalgamated system. + +The several counties thus included are dealt with in this Second +Edition. The volume is further enhanced by more particular information +as to the sports and pastimes of the country, and by a valuable chapter +on the Natural History of the South and West of Ireland, by writers of +authority on such subjects. + + + + + LIST OF MAPS. + + + MAP OF THE GREAT SOUTHERN AND + WESTERN RAILWAY AND ITS CONNECTIONS + IN IRELAND 6 + + MAP SHOWING CONNECTIONS OF THE + GREAT SOUTHERN AND WESTERN + RAILWAY IN GREAT BRITAIN 7 + + MAP OF DUBLIN CITY 14 + + MAP OF ENVIRONS OF DUBLIN 15 + + MAP OF CORK CITY 72 + + MAP OF ENVIRONS OF CORK 73 + + PICTORIAL MAP OF KILLARNEY DISTRICT 132 + + + + + CONTENTS. Page + + + INTRODUCTION 8 + + DUBLIN AND DISTRICT-- + + DUBLIN 15 + + DUBLIN DISTRICT 24 + + LIMERICK AND DISTRICT-- + + LIMERICK 46 + + LIMERICK DISTRICT 53 + + THE SHANNON LAKES 67 + + CORK AND DISTRICT-- + + CORK 73 + + CORK DISTRICT 85 + + THE RIVER BLACKWATER, YOUGHAL, &C. 98 + + WATERFORD AND DISTRICT 112 + + KILLARNEY AND GLENGARRIFF 133 + + LAKES AND FJORDS OF KERRY 175 + + COUNTY CLARE 221 + + GALWAY AND DISTRICT 235 + + CONNEMARA AND SLIGO 245 + + SUMMER AND WINTER RESORTS 256 + + NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND 260 + + + SPORTS-- + + CYCLING 278 + + GOLF 291 + + RIVER FISHING 295 + + LAKE FISHING 299 + + SHOOTING 303 + + + INDEX 306 + + + ADVERTISEMENTS 309 + + + + +Introduction. + + +Travelling through Ireland in the good old times was at best a +precarious and inconvenient diversion. Those who had to do so regretted +the necessity, and those who had not, praised Providence. Many "persons +of quality," to use Dr. Johnson's phrase, have written narratives of +their adventures and experiences in "the most damnable country." No man +of position, even early in the nineteenth century, would dream of +travelling threescore miles from his residence without having signed and +sealed his last will and testament. The highways were beset by +"Gentlemen of the Road," such as that fascinating felon, "Brennan on the +Moor," of whom the ballad tells-- + + "A brace of loaded pistols he carried night and day." + +The coach roads were dangerous, the stage was deplorable, and everything +but the scenery unpleasant. The interior and west of the country were +connected with Dublin by canals cut in the time of the Irish +Parliament, which followed the enterprise of the Dutch. They were looked +upon at the time as feats of engineering skill, somewhat in the light +that we view the Suez or Panama Canals to-day. Neville, the engineer, +was the recipient of extravagant encomiums from the Lords and Commons, +and his fame is embalmed in a street ballad which sings the praise of-- + + "Bold Neville, + Who made the streams run level + In that bounding river + Called the Grand Canal." + +Nowadays we have changed all that, and Neville and his skill are as +little remembered in Ireland as the military-road cutter in Scotland, of +whom, to show that + +[Illustration: G. S. & W. R. Corridor Train.] + +Ireland had not the monopoly in "bulls," an English admirer wrote:-- + + "If you had seen those roads before they + Were made, + You would hold up your hands and bless + General Wade." + +A poor Italian boy--Charles Bianconi--who tramped through the country as +a print-seller, was the first, in the days of Waterloo, in the south of +Ireland, to begin really that healthy competition with the mail-coaches +which made straight the way for the Iron Horse. + +The Great Southern and Western Railway was incorporated in 1845. Mr. +Under-Secretary Drummond, the English statesman who got closest to the +Irish heart, was identified with the construction of the line. + +Year after year the Company prospered and increased, gradually absorbing +the smaller lines adjoining it until the year 1901, when it amalgamated +the only two other systems of broad gauge lines in their district which +had remained independent. Practically the two provinces of Munster and +Connaught are now knit together by the great network of railway lines +which comprise the Great Southern and Western System. The total length +is about 1,100 miles. The main line stretches from Dublin, through Cork, +to Queenstown, forming the route for the American Mails and the great +transatlantic passenger traffic. Branches extend to Waterford, Limerick, +Killarney, and Kerry, and every place of importance in the South of +Ireland, while in the west the line extends from Tralee, through +Limerick, to Sligo. The carriages which the Company provide are of the +very latest design; vestibule corridor trains, with dining and breakfast +cars, are run daily, and the speed of the trains will bear comparison +with any. The journey, Dublin to Cork (165 miles) is performed in four +hours; to Killarney (189 miles) in about fifteen minutes more, and all +the important tourist centres can be reached within a very short time. +The comfort of passengers is well arranged for; refreshment rooms are +provided at the principal stations, and breakfast, luncheon, and tea +baskets can always be had, as well as pillows, rugs, and all the modern +conveniences of travel. Besides all this, the enterprise of the Company +has provided at Killarney, Parknasilla, Kenmare, Caragh Lake, and +Waterville, hotels, which for appearance and luxury, tempered by +economy, are the equals of any in Europe. + +[Illustration: Interior of G. S. & W. R. Dining Carriage.] + +The scenery of Ireland surpasses the most roseate expectations. Within a +comparatively small compass her scenic beauties include mountains, +lakes, and seas, and it is the good fortune of the Great Southern and +Western Company to have within its borders the finest scenery in the +country. The "Skies of Erin" have been paid tribute to by artists again +and again. Turner said the sun never seemed to set so beautifully +anywhere as in Ireland, and Lady Butler, the well-known painter, has +expressed the opinion that nowhere, except in the valley of the Nile, +does the firmament put forth such varied changes of beauty as in +Ireland. To the Gulf Stream, which strikes the south-western coast, +scientists attribute the mildness of the climate. From Queenstown to +Leenane the coast-line contains countless health resorts, where invalids +may be recommended winter quarters as salubrious as many of the +continental districts. + +The sportsman has always found himself at home here. The fine hunting +counties of Kildare, Tipperary, Kilkenny, and Waterford are familiar to +every son of Nimrod. Shooting and fishing, although the preserves are +not so many or so well kept as in Scotland, may be called the staple +sports of Ireland. Golf has come to stay, and within recent years links +have been laid in the vicinity of most of the tourist districts. + +One word for Irish industries will not be out of place. Ireland has no +industries in the sense in which England has. With the exception of +Belfast, there is no place in the country which approaches to a factory +town in the sense in which that phrase is understood across the channel. +Agriculture, of course, is the backbone of Ireland, and in connection +with it the creamery system of the south may be mentioned. Anyone +anxious to find a line of industry in Ireland which has beaten the Dane +in his own market should visit Cleeves' famous factory at Limerick. The +woollen industry in the country has withstood destructive legislature, +and a typical example of modern success is the great tweed factory of +Morroghs, at Douglas, County Cork. The Blarney tweeds have become a +household word, but Douglas is shouldering them in the keen competition +for public recognition. The great bacon-curing houses of Denny, at +Waterford, are well worth seeing, as is also the thriving wholesome +Co-operative Factory at Tralee. In Dublin the mammoth brewery of +Guinness and Sons can be viewed under the conductorship of a servant of +the firm employed for the sole purpose of showing visitors through the +great concern. But it is the lesser industries in Ireland which are +really attractive. The law of the survival of the fittest stands to +these--the homespuns woven in the cottages, the beautiful Dublin poplin, +the delicate lace of Youghal and Limerick, the exquisite pottery of +Belleek, these good things are beyond compare. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Sackville-street, Dublin.] + + + + +Dublin and District. + +DUBLIN. + + +The Tourist too often hurries away from Dublin to the south or west with +but a superficial knowledge of the attractions of the city. It will well +repay a stay, and if the visitor happens to come at Horse Show week he +can easily believe himself sojourning in the capital of one of the +wealthiest countries in Europe. During that short carnival each autumn +the tears are brushed aside, and Erin is all smiles and welcomes for her +guests. The hotels are good, the lodging-houses are clean, and moderate +in price. The restaurants have much improved within recent years. +Readers of Lord Mayo's encouraging articles to would-be Irish tourists +will do well to test his tribute to "The Dolphin" in Essex-street. If +anyone wants to see the ladies of fashion at their tea, Mitchell's in +Grafton-street is a sure find, and the well-equipped D.B.C. tea-houses, +which are established in several parts of the city, will meet the +requirements of moderate purses. + +To attempt to mention more than a few of the more important places worth +seeing in this city would be beyond the intention of these pages. +Stretched beneath the beautiful Dublin Mountains the city scatters +itself about the sides of the River Liffey. To get from one place to +another in Dublin is simplicity itself. The electric-tram system is +equal to any in Europe, and excels most in the cheapness of its fares. +The cars run through the principal streets and along the quay sides to +the suburbs. A good view of the city may be had from the top of a tram +on a fine day. Those who wish to suit their own convenience, however, +will always avail themselves of the outside car. The jaunting car is to +Dublin what the gondola is to Venice--at least an imaginative Irish +Member of Parliament has said so, and that settles the matter. When +selecting an "outside" take care that you secure one equipped with a +pneumatic tyre. The Dublin driver is much maligned, he is generally +courteous, and not without humour. The municipal authorities supply him +with a list of fares and distances. He is bound to produce it should any +difficulty arise as to the financial relations, which sometimes happens. + +[Illustration: _Photo,, Lawrence, Dublin._ Shelbourne Hotel, +Stephen's-green.] + +Dublin was an old fortress of the Danes. They held the whole eastern +seaboard of Ireland until 1014 when Brian Boru defeated them and broke +their power at the battle of Clontarf. Historic remains of the old +city--the Ford of the Hurdles the Irish call it--there are none. The +Danes, the Normans, the Elizabethan, the Cromwellian, the Jacobite, all +made history in Dublin in their day, but the city as it stands is +practically modern. Between the Rotunda, one of the finest maternity +hospitals in the world, and St. Stephen's Green, the beautiful park +presented to the citizens by Lord Ardilaun, the principal buildings in +the city lie. The College Green, however, forms a natural centre from +which to make a short tour. The magnificent portico of the Bank of +Ireland--formerly the Irish House of Parliament--is characterized by +surprising dignity of proportion. Visitors can witness the printing of +bank notes. The Irish House of Lords, which remains unaltered, is an +oblong room with recess for throne at one end. Within may be seen two +valuable Dutch tapestries, the one representing the famous Siege of +Derry, and the second the Battle of the Boyne. Immediately outside "The +Old House at Home," as the historic building is affectionately called by +Irishmen, is a noble statue of Henry Grattan. He was the people's +darling from 1782, when the Volunteers mustered in College-green, up to +1800, when the Act of Union was passed. Behind Grattan stands the old +leaden statue of William III., erected in 1701. This equestrian figure +of "King Billy," as the prince of glorious, pious, and immortal memory +is familiarly known, has been the centre of, in its time, much mischief +and merriment. Up to 1822 His Majesty was annually decorated with orange +ribbons to celebrate the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne. This +party demonstration was always resented by the populace, and King Billy +came in for no end of ill-treatment. However, he has braved the battle +and the breeze. + +Turning from the Bank we face the University, in front of which stand +fine bronze statues of its distinguished sons, Edmund Burke and Oliver +Goldsmith. The University, unlike its sisters, Oxford and Cambridge, +contains but a single college--that of the Holy and Undivided +Trinity--founded by Adam Loftus in Elizabeth's reign. Visitors to the +College should be shown the chapel halls, museum, and library, and grand +quadrangles, including Lever's notorious "Botany Bay." While in the +library the world-famous "Book of Kells" may be inspected, and the +enduring qualities of its marvellous illuminations admired. The College +park is very beautiful, and during the College races at midsummer +presents quite a gala sight. + +[Illustration: _Photo,, Lawrence, Dublin._ Dublin Castle.] + +In Dame-street most of the Irish banks have their offices. At the end of +the street furthest from the College is the City Hall. The building was +originally the Royal Exchange, but in the middle of the nineteenth +century it was handed over to the Dublin Corporation. The Corinthian +columns which form the portico are very handsome. The entrance is +modern, the older structure having given way in "the troubled times," +while a crowd of citizens were beguiling the time watching a public +whipping of a malefactor from the steps. The centre hall is crowned with +a decorated dome. The hall contains statues of O'Connell, +Under-Secretary Drummond, Grattan, and Dr. Lucas, a publicist in +eighteen-century Dublin. The Council Chamber is well furnished, and some +of the portraits of former Lords Mayor are very fine. Immediately behind +the City Hall is Dublin Castle, far from being the imposing structure +those familiar with its history may suppose. The Lower Castle Yard is +entered from Palace-street. It contains the Birmingham Tower, a modern +structure replacing the fortress, some of the walls of which still +stand, from which the fiery Red Hugh O'Donel, Prince of Tyrone, escaped. +The Castle Chapel is beside the Tower, and permission to visit it is +easily obtained. Among the things of interest in the chapel are the +emblazoned arms of all the Irish viceroys. The wood work throughout is +Irish oak, and there are ninety heads in marble to represent the +sovereigns of England. St. Patrick's Hall, the Throne-room, and the Long +Drawing-room are the most important of the State apartments. While in +the vicinity of the Castle, St. Patrick's Cathedral should be visited. +Founded so long ago as 1190, this cathedral, dedicated to the Apostle of +Ireland, has had a chequered history. Mostly Early English in +architecture, modern styles have been grafted on the building without +consistency or unity of ideal. The monuments are many. Dean Swift's +bears an inscription written by himself and breathing the hatred of +oppression and love of liberty characteristic of the writer-- + + "Hic depositum est corpus + JONATHAN SWIFT, s. t. d. + Hujus Ecclesiae Cathedralis Decani + Ubi saeva indignatio + Ulterius cor lacerare nequit + Abe Viator + Et imitare si poteris + Strenuum, pro virili, + Libertatis vindicatorem, + Obiit 19° die mensis Octobris, A.D. 1745, + Anno Aetatis 78." + +Hard by is a white marble slab in memory of her whose name must be for +ever associated with that of Swift--"Stella." Ten minutes' walk through +Patrick-street will bring one from St. Patrick's to the most interesting +ecclesiastical structure in Dublin--Christ Church Cathedral. An old +Danish foundation, fire and time laid hands upon the original +building. Its restoration is a triumph of architectural genius in the +reproduction of thirteenth-century English Gothic. Strongbow's tomb is +the famous monument of the place. The Crypt contains, besides other +antiquities, the old City stocks, which is some three centuries old. +Other places worth seeing in the city are the Four Courts, the Custom +House, the Pro-Cathedral, Marlborough-street, St. Michan's Church and +Churchyard, and the Church of St. Francis Xavier, Gardiner-street. The +general architecture in the streets is incongruous, and the modern +"improvements" not always desirable. In the back streets here and there +the quaint gables as old as Queen Anne still survive, but the Dutch +houses have almost entirely, and the Cage houses have entirely, +disappeared. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Custom House, Dublin.] + +Leinster Lawn, or the Duke's Lawn, as the man in the street in Dublin +still calls it, contains, among other attractions, the National Gallery, +Museum, and Public Library. These are store houses of treasure. The +catalogue of the Gallery reveals a valuable collection of paintings, and +the Museum contains an unique exhibition of gold, silver, and bronze +ornaments, collars, brooches, shields, clasps, and spears, which were +found from time to time throughout Ireland, and are evidence of her +former civilization. The Royal Irish Academy, in Dawson-street, +possesses a rich collection of ancient Irish manuscript. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ National Library, Dublin. Four +Courts, Dublin.] + +The cemeteries of Dublin are small, except Glasnevin. A drive through +the Phoenix Park will bring one by the embanked river or through the +northern side of the city. An inquisitive tourist asked an Irish driver +why the Park was so called, when there was no such bird ever in the +world. "Sure that's the reason," said the driver. "Sure there's no such +Park in the world either." Lord Chesterfield put up a column with a +Phoenix in the Park, but of old its name was Parc-na-Fionniake (the +field of the clear water). It lies on the northern bank of the river +celebrated by Sir Samuel Ferguson:-- + + "Delicious Liffey, from the bosoming-hills + What man who sees thee issuing strong and pure + But with some wistful, fresh emotion fills, + Akin to nature's own sweet temperature; + And haply thinks:--On this green bank 'twere sweet + To make one's mansion sometime of the year, + For health and pleasure on these uplands meet, + And all the Isle's amenities are here." + +Long ago the St. John's Hospitallers had their house at Kilmainham, and +the lands belonging to the Order lay about either side of the stream. +The Hospice is now the Old Man's House--an Asylum for Disabled Soldiers, +designed by Sir Christopher Wren--and possesses one of the finest halls +in Europe. The lands have been built over at Inchicore, and on the other +side of the river formed into the Phoenix Park, containing close on +two thousand acres, and bounded by a circumference of seven miles. The +Park contains the lodges of the Viceroy and the Chief Secretary for +Ireland, and the monuments to Lord Gough, Lord Carlisle, and the +"overgrown milestone," as the obelisk to the Duke of Wellington has been +called. The People's Gardens have been laid out with great taste, but +they cannot compare with the natural beauty of the Furze Glen with its +deep shade and silent lake. Visitors in the summer time should not fail +to drive from Knockmaroon gate, beside the Liffey, to "The Strawberry +Beds." Here, in the season, delicious fruit, fresh from the gardens, and +rich cream, can be had in most of the cottages beside the road. + + +DUBLIN DISTRICT. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Round Tower and Church at +Clondalkin.] + +The country in the immediate vicinity of Dublin contains much that is +picturesque. The scenery along the coast has in general been already +referred to. But Killiney, Bray, and Howth, if time permits, should be +visited. The train and tram facilities are sufficient. Wicklow County +has been called the Garden of Erin, and on no account should a visit to +Glendalough or "The Meeting of the Waters" in the Vale of Avoca be +deferred. But those who wish to speed on to the south or west will do so +from the Kingsbridge Terminus. From here we pass through Inchicore, the +busy thriving hive of industry, where the Great Southern and Western +Railway have their engineering works. The first station we come to is +that of ~Clondalkin~. The old village sits snuggled up at the foot of +its round tower, which is one of the best specimens of that early +architecture in Ireland, of which the poet says: + + "Two favourites hath Time--the Pyramids of Nile + And the old mystic temples of our own dear Isle." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Salmon Leap, Lucan.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Castletown House.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Carton House, Maynooth.] + +Irish antiquaries for generations have squabbled over these famous +"Pillar Towers of Ireland," but the general trend of scientific opinion +is that they are of early Christian origin. Father Matt Horgan, a famous +Munster antiquary, humorously started the theory that they were built to +puzzle posterity, which they have very successfully done. ~Lucan~ is a +health resort, possessing a sulphur spa, and situated in a well-wooded +country above the Liffey. The Hydropathic stands well sheltered and +commanding a splendid view. The drives in the district are many, and the +antiquarian will find much of interest. In Lord Annaly's demesne are the +remains of an early Norman castle, and in the vicinity is an ancient +Rath and souterraine. The drive to the Salmon Leap, at Leixlip, should +not be missed. Near by is ~Castletown~, the palatial mansion of the +Connolly family, and a grotesque structure known as "Connolly's Folly," +which was built in the time of the famine of "Black '47" to give +employment. Here, too, the great Dean of St. Patrick's beguiled his time +at "The Abbey," the home of Esther Vanhomrigh, the "Vanessa" of his +strange life. From Lucan Maynooth may be reached. Here is St. Patrick's +National College for the education of priests for the Catholic Church, +originally founded on a Government grant. "Carton House," in the +vicinity, is the residence of the Dukes of Leinster. It is surrounded by +beautiful parks, well planted, among the trees the royal oaks, for which +Kildare was celebrated, being conspicuous. ~Straffan~ may be called a +"hunting village," as the meets of the famous "Killing Kildares" most +usually take place in its neighbourhood. Here, too, are the seats of +Lords Cloncurry and Mayo. The thriving market town of ~Naas~ is two +miles from Sallins, and is the railway station for Punchestown, the +great steeplechase meeting of the Kildare Hunt. Long centuries ago it +was an historic spot--"Naas of the Kings." From the station may be seen +the Hill of Allen, rising like a sentinel on the mearings of the "Great +Plain of Ireland." ~Harristown~, the second station on a branch line, is +about three miles from Poulaphouca Waterfall. The road to the Falls +leads through the picturesque village of Ballymore-Eustace, situated on +a bank at a bend in the river Liffey. The view from the river below the +Falls is very impressive. Tullow is the terminus of this branch of the +line. It is a good business town, and the river Slaney affords excellent +trout fishing. Within half-an-hour's walk from Sallins is Bodenstown +Churchyard, where Theobald Wolfe Tone, the founder of the United Irish +Organisation of 1798, is buried. He was the most desperate man who ever +crossed the path of the English Government in Ireland. "The most +extraordinary man I ever met," is the verdict of the Duke of Wellington. +"He went to France with but one hundred guineas in his pocket, and +induced Bonaparte, by his single unaided efforts, to send three +armaments to Ireland." Six and twenty miles from Dublin, the town of +~Newbridge~ exists as a kind of aide-de-camp to the Commissariat +Department of the ~Curragh Camp~. The Curragh, a great plain over twelve +miles square, was once a common, the property of the Geraldine tenants, +but the Crown quietly seized upon it, and "their right there is none to +dispute." It has been made a camp of instruction, and can accommodate, +under more or less permanent cover, ten thousand men. It is in a good +fox-hunting, sporting country, "the country of the short grass," and +several times a year is the scene of race meetings. It is the Newmarket +of Ireland, for here are the training stables for Punchestown, +Fairyhouse, Leopardstown, Baldoyle, and all the lesser meetings in the +Green Isle, and many of the greater ones across the water. The Curragh +was the scene of more than one battle in centuries past, and, like Tara, +was one of the historic places chosen in the minds of the insurgents of +Ninety-eight as an ideal mustering point. The Curragh District Golf Club +has been formed by the military stationed there. ~Kildare~, some thirty +miles from Dublin, is the junction for the Kilkenny branch of the line. +The town is very old, being, in the early Christian era, a cell of St. +Bride, a patroness of Ireland. The ancient cathedral has been partly +rebuilt, and in the south transept is the vault of the Earls of Kildare, +progenitors of the Leinster line. These Geraldines were the most famous +of the Norman invaders: + + + "And, oh! through many a dark campaign + They proved their prowess stern, + In Leinster's plains and Munster's vales + On king, and chief, and kern; + + But noble was the cheer within + The halls so rudely won, + And generous was the steel-gloved hand + That had such slaughter done. + How gay their laugh, how proud their mien, + You'd ask no herald's sign-- + Amid a thousand, you had known + The princely Geraldine." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Liffey, near Celbridge.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Curragh Military Camp.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Curragh Military Camp.] + +The Round Tower in the graveyard, which is one hundred and three feet +high, is perfect, except that the original cap has been replaced with a +battlement, out of character with the rest. The old castle stood by, to +guard the church and tower, and what remains of it has been turned to +use as a tenement. The Earls of Kildare were often warring with the +Kings of England. The Archbishop of Cashel one time protested to the +King against the Earl burning down his cathedral, and the Earl, when +reprimanded, explained to the King in person that he would not have done +so had he not thought that the Archbishop was inside the church at the +time. This was the same Earl of whom the Parliament complained that "all +Ireland could not govern the Earl of Kildare." "Then," said the King, +"let the Earl of Kildare govern all Ireland," and he was appointed Lord +Deputy, and made an excellent one. From Kildare, Carlow, twenty-six +miles distant, and Kilkenny, fifty-one, are the principal stations on +the line which terminates at Waterford. ~Carlow~ is an old town which +belonged to the hereditary enemies of the Fitzgeralds, the Butlers of +Ormonde. It is beautifully situated, surrounded by fine trees, and built +on the picturesque Barrow. There is splendid water-power above the town, +and it was the first place in Ireland that was lighted with electricity. +~Kilkenny~, the marble city, easily induces the visitor to linger within +its walls and enjoy fully the attractions of the river Nore. Long ago it +was a keep of "Dermott of the Foreigners," "who had grown hoarse from +many shoutings in the battle," and was given by him as a dowry with +his beautiful daughter Eva to Strongbow. Afterwards it passed, by +purchase, into the possession of the Butlers, Lords of Ormonde. Here a +Parliament was held in 1367, which endeavoured by law to prevent the +absorption of the newcomers by the old Irish race. It tainted the blood +of all who gave their children into fosterage with Irish women, and +penalised the usage of Irish dress and customs. It made it a capital +offence for any of English blood to marry an Irish woman, which was +humorous enough when we remember that Strongbow, "the first of the +foreigners," did so. But the statute was of no avail, and the Butlers in +time became as big rebels as the Geraldines. Here, in 1642, the +Confederate Catholics held their Parliament. Among other things they +drafted a scheme of local government for the country, and set up the +first printing press in Ireland. ~St. Canice's Cathedral~, the Round +Tower, one hundred feet high, the Black Abbey, and Franciscan Friary, +are the principal ecclesiastical objects of interest. The Round Tower is +at the southern side of the Cathedral. This latter building, which is of +an Early Pointed Style, was founded in the twelfth or thirteenth +century. The pavement is of the famous Kilkenny marble. The principal +object of interest in the building is St. Kieran's Chair, against the +wall in the northern transept. + +[Illustration:] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kilkenny Castle.] + +The grounds of the Franciscan Friary have been overbuilt by a brewery, +but the fine seven-light window and tower still stand. The ~Black +Abbey~, a thirteenth century foundation, has come back into the +possession of the Order of Preachers, or Dominicans, who have restored +it. The small parish church near the northern transept of St. Canice's +contains a window commemorative of Lieutenant Hamilton, V.C., of +Inistioge, who was killed in the massacre of the Cavagnari Expedition by +the Afghans in 1879. From the market place, Kilkenny Castle, the noble +seat of the Butlers, may be entered. In the absence of the family of +the Marquis of Ormonde, the public are allowed to visit the castle. It +is a practically modern residence, built into the ancient walls; and +three of the imposing watch towers of bygone years survive. The hall of +the castle is decorated with beautiful Spanish leather work, and the +rich tapestries on the staircase were wrought in the sixteenth century, +on looms set up in the town by Flemings. Besides the family plate, +jewels, and heirlooms--which are displayed in several apartments--the +picture gallery is exceptionally attractive. Among its treasures are +Murillo's "St. John," Corregio's "Marriage of St. Catherine," and +Giordano's "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin." From St. John's Bridge, +above the Nore, a splendid view of the castle may be seen. There is a +pleasant pathway under the castle wall, along the river side from the +bridge. From Kilkenny many interesting excursions may be made. To +~Kells~, twelve statute miles, where there are the ruins of an important +twelfth century priory. Two miles from Kells is Kilree, where are +situate a ruined church, Round Tower, and Celtic cross, and a remarkable +tomb slab in the church, on which is an ancient symbolic sculpture of a +cock-in-a-pot crowing. Three miles from Kilree is Aghavillar, with +ruined church, attached castellated house, and Round Tower. About seven +miles from the city is the Cave of Dunmore, a stalactite cavern worth +seeing. ~Thomastown~, on the line to Waterford, was formerly a walled +town. It is less than two miles from Jerpoint Abbey, the ruins of which +are interesting. It was founded by Donough Tiernach, Chief of Ossory, in +1180. The style is Early Norman, but the turrets and battlements are +fifteenth century work. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Picture Gallery, Kilkenny +Castle.] + +Cromwell, who is discredited with destroying places in Ireland where he +never was, is said to have passed by Jerpoint without molesting it, but +when the peal of bells rang out in thanksgiving, he took it for a +challenge, and returned and sacked the place. In Cork he melted down the +chapel bells, saying that "as it was a priest that invented gunpowder, +the best thing that could be done with chapel bells was to make them +into cannons," which he did. + +If, instead of branching off the main line at Kildare, we continue along +it in the south-western direction. + +~Monasterevan~, which was an old ecclesiastical place of importance, now +insignificant except for its malting houses and distillery. The Marquis +of Drogheda's demesne and residence, Moore Abbey, stands in the centre +of the well-wooded lands, which were formerly monastic property. +~Portarlington~, a small town on the Barrow, has the seat of the Earl of +Portarlington. The river divides the town, and is the boundary here +between Kildare and the Queen's County. The Irish name of this place is +Coltody; but in the time of the "Merrie Monarch" it was given to a court +favourite, Lord Arlington, who here built a little harbour on the +Barrow, whence its name. In the townland of Deer Park, near the town, +there is still a colony of pure Huguenot descent. Portarlington is the +junction of the branch line running to Athlone. + +~Maryborough~ is pleasantly situated on the river side. From the Rock of +Dunamaise, an old fort of "Dermot of the Foreigners" in an almost +impregnable position, there is a splendid view of the Slieve Bloom +mountain ranges. At Ballybrophy is the junction for the Parsonstown and +Roscrea and Nenagh branches. ~Roscrea~, under the Devil's Bit mountains, +has celebrated ecclesiastical remains and a modern Cistercian Monastery, +the parent house of which is the famous Mount Melleray Abbey. Among the +ruins of interest to the antiquary are the remains of Augustinian and +Franciscan foundations, and a Round Tower, about the foot of which St. +Cronan had one of the early schools in Ireland in the sixth century. A +square tower of the Butlers and a tower of Prince John's Castle will +repay attention. ~Birr Castle~, the seat of the Earl of Rosse at +Parsonstown, is surrounded by a fine park. It is remarkable for its +mammoth telescopes, one of which is fifty-two feet long, with a speculum +six feet in diameter. Nenagh, at the foot of the Silvermines and Keeper +mountains (2,278 feet), is a stirring market town, and possesses a +Norman keep in fair preservation. Birdhill brings us to the Shannon, the +attractions of which are dealt with in another chapter. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Birr Castle.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lord Rosse's Telescopes at +Birr.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Bridge, Athlone.] + +The branch line which runs from Portarlington to Athlone, runs right +through the Bog of Allen. It is available for through passengers for +Connemara. For miles, the undulating bog land, green and brown. The +~King's County~ still remains out of the primeval forests, and its great +peat fields are the only source of wealth to the surrounding peasantry. +~Athlone~, some two miles below Lough Ree, on the Shannon, is the +military key to the Province of Connaught. The keep of the old Castle, +dating from King John's reign, remains, but the bridge and salmon weir +are of more interest. In 1691 Ginckle besieged the town on the eastern +bank, but a handful of Irish troops held the Connaught side, desiring to +keep the position until St. Ruth arrived. The defence of the bridge is +one of the most gallant exploits in Irish history. Colonel Richard +Grace, who held the position for the Jacobites, was offered security in +his estates and military honours, if he surrendered, by the Duke of +Schomberg. At night, when the offer reached the Jacobite general, he was +in his quarters, playing the familiar Irish card game of spoil-five with +his officers. The six-of-hearts happened to be the "deckhead." Grace +took it from the pack and wrote on the back, "It ill becomes a gentleman +to betray his trust," and gave it to the Williamite messenger. The +"six-of-hearts" is still known as "The Grace's Card," especially in +Kilkenny, where the general's estates were. From Athlone excursions may +be made to Auburn, eight miles; Clonmacnoise, ten Irish miles; and to +Lough Ree. Lissoy, where Goldsmith spent his childhood, there can be +little doubt, was the original of-- + + "Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain." + +It is a pleasant drive, the road from Ballykeeran skirting Lough +Killinure. Lough Ree, three miles from Athlone, is low-lying, some ten +miles long, and in parts prettily wooded. There is a small archipelago +in the northern end, of which pretty "Hare Island" is the residence of +Lord Castlemaine. The Seven Churches of Clonmacnoise formed the old city +of St. Kieran, whose feast day is the 9th September. There are two Round +Towers, O'Rourke's and M'Carthy's; a Holy Well, the Cairn of Three +Crosses, Relich Calliagh, founded by Devorgilla, who bewitched Dermot of +the Foreigners. Teampul-Kieran is a small cell. Teampul-Connor has an +interesting tenth century doorway, and in Teampul-Fineen the chancel +arch still remains, and the piscina can be traced. Teampul-Ree has two +round-headed lights and a lancet window, twelfth century work. The +~Great Cross of the Scriptures~ is inscribed with Gaelic, "a prayer for +Flan, son of Malseclyn," and "a prayer for Colman, who made this cross +for St. Flan," referring to the ninth century monarch of Meath, and to +Colman, Abbot, early in the tenth century, of Clonmacnoise. The cross is +fifteen feet high, and its panels were sculptured with Scriptural +scenes, interlined with Celtic tracery. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Shannon at Athlone.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Clonmacnoise.] + + "In a quiet, watered land, a land of roses, + Stands St. Kieran's city fair; + And the warriors of Erin in their famous generations + Slumber there. + + "There, beneath the dewy hillside, sleep the noblest + Of the Clan of Conn; + Each below his stone with name in branching Ogham, + And the sacred knot thereon." + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Dublin District, see + end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +Limerick and District + +[Illustration] + +LIMERICK. + + +Leaving ~Limerick Junction~, between it and Limerick City, there are few +places of interest. The country side is very rich, and is the centre of +the Creamery Co-operative system. At Boher is Glenstal, the residence of +Sir Charles Barrington. The demesne contains the Ilchester Oaks, with +which the country people associate a romance. The story is told in +detail in Lefanu's "Seventy Years of Irish Life." At Caghercullen, which +is now part of Glenstal Demesne, early in the last century lived Squire +O'Grady, an old _grandee_ of Limerick; he was a fox-hunting widower, and +his beautiful and only daughter was the cynosure of all eyes. When she +came out at a Limerick hunt ball the little beauty captivated Lord +Stourdale--eldest son to Lord Ilchester who was then with his regiment +at Limerick. O'Grady's keen eye soon discerned that the young people +were falling in love with each other. Proud of his family as the +Irishman was, he feared his position was such that an English lord may +not look on an alliance with favour. He wrote a friendly letter to Lord +Ilchester--in order to prevent trouble--saying that, as an elder man, he +perceived that his son was about getting into a scrape, and it would be +well to have him brought home or sent on active service. Stourdale +disappeared; and Lord Ilchester wrote thanking the squire, and notifying +that an old military friend--a Colonel Prendergast--would call and thank +him personally. The colonel came in good time, and partook of O'Grady's +hospitality. As he was leaving, he mentioned to the squire that he +thought his beautiful daughter was falling into bad health. O'Grady, +with brusque confidence, said that she had been fooling about Stourdale, +but would soon forget him. Lovers will rejoice at the sequel of the +romance. Colonel Prendergast discovered himself as Lord Ilchester, and +expressed his gratification at the possibility of having such a wife for +his son. There was the usual happy marriage; and the present Earl of +Ilchester and the present Earl of Lansdowne, can claim descent from +Maureen O'Grady. + +~Limerick~.--Like most of the Munster seaboard towns, it was built by +the Danes; and it was the cock-pit of the fights between the Ostmen and +the warlike clans who followed O'Brien's banner in the early centuries. +It made history in Cromwell's days, and until recently the old house +occupied by Ireton stood within its streets. Ireton sentenced many men +of eminence to death during the short triumph of Cromwell. Among the +most noble of the cavaliers who died at Limerick was Geoffrey Barron of +Clonmel, a young Irish lawyer who acted as civil secretary to the +Confederates. With exquisite cruelty he was sentenced to be executed +upon the morning which had previously been fixed for his wedding. He +asked, as a favour, that he should be permitted to wear his bridegroom +attire on the scaffold, and Ireton granted the boon. + +He made a brave show amid the crop-eared Roundheads. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Treaty Stone, Limerick.] + + "Taffeta as white as milk, + Made all his suit. + Threads of silver in the silk + Trailed like moonlight through it. + Silver cap and white feather, + Stepping proud and high, + In his shoon of white leather, + Came Geoffrey Barron to die. + Then the Roundhead general said, + Fingering his sword-- + Art thou coming to be wed, + Like a heathen lord? + + "Go! thy pride thy scaffold is, + Give her sigh for sigh. + Breath for breath, and kiss for kiss, + For Geoffrey Barron must die. + But he laughed out as he ran + Up the black steps; + Never happier bridegroom man, + With his wife's lips. + If for mortal woman's sake, + In silks should go I, + I shall for heaven the same pains take, + Now, Geoffrey Barron must die." + +But the name of Limerick scintillates in those glowing chapters in its +country's history, when it stoutly withstood the valour and prowess of +the great soldier-king, William of Orange. Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, the +beloved of damsels and dames, was the hero of this period. A handsome, +large-limbed, brawny soldier, towering over the tallest of his dragoons, +and true as the steel he wore, he was a fitting leader of a forlorn +hope. Originally, one of the "Gentlemen of the Guard" under the Merrie +Monarch, his defence of Limerick was a military achievement worthy of +the ambition of any general; nor were his Williamite opponents slow to +cordially appreciate his valour. But he was fated to die, "on a far, +foreign field." The sieges of Limerick led up to its name of the City of +the Broken Treaty. William of Nassau, having routed King James in +August, 1690, invested the city with 35,000 men. Tyrconnel and Lauzun, +Commander of the French allies, had cleared out, considering that the +place could not be defended. Sarsfield, although not in command, with +other kindred spirits, decided to defend the position. The heavy +ordnance of the Williamites, while on the way to the scene of siege, was +surprised at night at Ballyneety by Sarsfield and a hero called +"Galloping O'Hogan," and the guns spiked and the ammunition mined and +fired. Auxiliary artillery was, however, brought into camp, and the +assault delivered. The guns breached the walls, the outworks were +carried, but before the garrison could pour in, the townspeople--men and +women--the latter, vieing in valour, flowed out and swept away all +opposition. The siege was raised. But a year later, Ginckle again +invested the place by land and sea. After three months' defence, +Sarsfield agreed to capitulate, the chief conditions of the treaty +being, that Catholics should be admitted to practice their religion +without hindrance, and that the Jacobite garrison should march out with +the honours of war. The latter condition was kept, but when Sarsfield +and his regiments had gone beyond the seas, the former was shamefully +violated. By the Thomond may be seen the Treaty Stone, on which the +capitulation papers were signed, October 3rd, 1691. In the Cathedral +place is the modern monument to Sarsfield. The castle, which was built +by King John--now a store--is an excellent example of the military +architecture introduced into Ireland by the Normans. The Shannon, the +largest river in Ireland, flows through the city. Limerick lace is +valued wherever people of taste are. The industry still thrives; but the +former greatness of the glove manufacturers has departed. Bacon curing +is the great industry of the city to-day, and the names of Denny, +Matterson, and Shaw--the principal manufacturers--have become household +words. The greatest factory in Limerick, however, is belonging to the +famous Condensed Milk Company, organized through the enterprise of Sir +Thomas Cleeve. The milk of some 15,000 cows contributes to the huge +output of this great concern. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Sarsfield Statue, Limerick.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Castleconnell, near +Limerick.] + + +LIMERICK DISTRICT. + +From Limerick tours may be made into North Kerry by rail, or by combined +steamer and coach service along the Shannon lakes and shores. The +amalgamation of the railway services in the south and west of Ireland +has contributed greatly to the many facilities which, with an improved +railway accommodation, now await the tourist. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Falls of Doonass-River +Shannon.] + +Some seven miles from Limerick, and about the same distance from +Killaloe, is the pretty little town of ~Castleconnell~. The place was of +yore a stronghold of the O'Brien's, and to-day the remains of the old +castle from which the village takes the name still stand. During the +Jacobite wars the place was of importance as one of the military keys to +the Province of Connaught, and Sarsfield and Ginkel alternately +garrisoned and fought for its possession. The village is situated +delightfully beside "The lordly Shannon," and is famous as a resort for +anglers. The scenery in the immediate vicinity is unsurpassed, and the +Shannon here has been described as possessing "The majesty of the Amazon +with the grandeur of the Rhine." Taking the well-appointed Shannon Hotel +as our centre many most enjoyable excursions can be made to the +beautiful places in the adjoining district. The hotel itself is only +five minutes' walk from the far-famed Rapids of Doonass, and beside the +celebrated Chalybeate Spa. Beneath a list of excursions is given of some +of the pleasant driving and boating trips that may be made. It cannot +pretend to be exhaustive, however, and is only offered as suggestive. +Assume that the visitor has three days at his disposal-- + + ~First Day.~--Start from Hotel, walk to Chalybeate Spa, World's + End, Old Castle and Grounds (admission by pass), cross River at + Ferry, walk to "Old Turrett," from which a grand view of the + "Rapids" may be obtained--the Scenery at this particular point is + unsurpassed--visit St. Synan's Well, return to Hotel, drive to + "Clare Glens," see the Cascades--this is one of the most + picturesque spots imaginable and well repays a visit. + + ~Second Day.~--DAY TRIP ON THE LORDLY SHANNON (LOUGH + DERG).--Take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. + for Killaloe where the Shannon Development Co.'s Steamer awaits the + arrival of the Train to convey passengers for a Cruise on Lough + Derg. Steamer returns to Killaloe about 5.30 p.m., the Train leaves + Killaloe at 6.10 p.m. for Castleconnell, arriving at 6.41 p.m.; or + take car from Hotel to meet the 8.15 a.m. Steamer at Killaloe for + Portumna, return by down Steamer to Killaloe, thence by 6.10 p.m. + Train for Castleconnell. This Cruise embraces the whole length of + Lough Derg, and affords a grand combination of lake and mountain + scenery. + + ~Third Day.~--A selection from the following may be made:-- + + (_a_) Drive to Limerick City. See its magnificent Churches, + Treaty Stone, etc, etc. + + (_b_) To Killaloe. St. Flannan's Cathedral, a very ancient edifice, + Oratory with stone roof, Brian Boru's Fort, and Cragg + Hill, from which a very pretty view of Lough Derg may be + obtained. + + (_c_) To Glenstal Castle and Grounds (admission by pass). + + (_d_) To Keeper Hill. A splendid panoramic view of the + surrounding country afforded from the summit of this Hill, + including Lough Derg and "reaches" of the Shannon below + Limerick. + + (_e_) To Adare Manor (admission by pass). + + (_f_) Or take Row Boat from Castleconnell to Killaloe _via_ + O'Brien's Bridge, or to Limerick _via_ Plassy. + + (_g_) Take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. for + Nenagh, drive from Nenagh to Dromineer, take Steamer + from Dromineer to Killaloe, thence rail or car to Castleconnell. + + (_h_) Or take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. for + Killaloe, take Steamer Killaloe to Dromineer, drive from + Dromineer to Nenagh, thence rail to Castleconnell. + + (_i_) Lower Shannon Steamer Trip to Kilrush (see special programme + of Sailings). + + +Above a bend in the river at the Falls of Doonass the "Rapids" begin, +and eddying and whirling through the rocks run for nearly half a mile +along the surface of the river. It is to the angler, however, +Castleconnell will prove most attractive. The season commences on the +1st February, and closes on the 31st October. Trout, pike, and perch +fishing free; salmon and grilse fishing by arrangement. The fishing-rods +manufactured at Castleconnell have won a world-wide reputation for +Messrs. Enright and Sons, and Mr. Jack Enright has himself won the +record as a long distance fly caster. A writer in _The Fishing Gazette_ +having dealt in an appreciative article with Castleconnell gives +valuable information as to the names and situations of the more +important pools on the river. + +The fisheries in the Castleconnell district taken in rotation from +below, are: the Prospect or Clareville Fishery, on the Limerick side of +the river (this means that the fishery extends to midstream; adjoining +it on the Clare side, and immediately opposite, is the Landscape +Fishery. Both of these are well-known salmon and peel catches. A few of +the best pools in Prospect are Pinnee, Salahoughe, Feemoor, and +Commogue. On Landscape the best pools are Poulahoo, Pallaherro, and +Filebegs). + +Adjoining the Prospect Fishery, on the Limerick side of the river, is +the New Garden Fishery, which contains the pools of Moreagh, Glassogue, +Black Weir, and Sporting Eddy. Next to this, on the Limerick side, is +the Hermitage Fishery, which contains some famous catches, such as Back +of Leap, Fallahassa, Poolbeg, the Commodore, Bunnymoor, and Head of +Moreagh. Still on the Limerick side, we next reach the Woodland's +Fishery, a picturesque portion of the Shannon, and here are the pools of +Panlaides, Drarhus, Thunnavullion, and Long Eddy. Next is reached the +Castle Fishery, and the pools here are Balcraheen, Lackaleen, and the +Lough, the last affording several courses of fly fishing. Still on the +Limerick side the World's End Fishery adjoins the Castle Fishery, and +the pools here are the Pantry, the Kitchen, and the Over the Weir. + +Returning to the Clare side of the river the fishery next to Landscape +is the famous Doonas, the lower part of which contains the pools of +Poolcoom, the Stand, Black Weir, Faalgorribs, Franklin's Eddy, and the +Old Door, while the upper part includes Lickenish, the Dancing Hole, Old +Turf, Lurgah, Lacka, and Sallybush. Next on the Clare side we reach the +Summer Hill Fishery, part of which is opposite the Woodland's Fishery +and part opposite the Castle Fishery. The pools on Summer Hill are the +Black Eddy, Clare side of Drarhus, Thunahancha, Figar, Clare side of +Lackaleen, and Clare side of the Lough. After this the Erinagh Fishery +is reached, and here the pools are Gorribs and side of the big Eddy. + +In the spring salmon fishing is pursued principally with Devon minnows +as lures, the "cullough" running a good second favourite. Phantom +minnows and the very large spinning Shannon flies are also useful. A bit +later on the prawn takes precedence, the bigger the prawn the better. As +the season advances the lure, whatever it may be--fly, minnow, prawn, or +what not--should decrease in size until October, when again they should +assume larger proportions, but not so big as in the spring. Towards the +latter end of March, and onwards for the rest of the season, artificial +flies are are almost exclusively used. Truly wonderful specimens of the +fly dresser's art are some of the Shannon patterns. Fancy a salmon fly +dressed on an 8-o hook! Yet this is at times absolutely necessary to +ensure success. The best patterns for various times of the year are--For +February, March, and April, big Shannon Blue Fly, the Black Goldfinch, +the Jock Scot, and the Yellow Lahobber; for May, June, and July, Purple +Mixture, tinsel bodied Green Parrot, purple bodied Green Parrot, Silver +and Blue Doctors, Purple Widgeon, Orange and Grouse, and Thunder and +Lightning. Towards the end of the season here, as elsewhere, strange +fancy patterns will frequently prove successful. The most suitable +patterns of trout flies (the size of which depends entirely upon the +height of the water) are--Orange and Grouse, Green Rail, Purple Rail, +Black Rail, Orange Rail, March Brown, Hare's Ear, silver-tinselled body +Black Rail, and Orange and Grouse with a sprig of Guinea Fowl or Green +Parrot in wing. + +The tackle for the coarse fish is of the ordinary character. + +At the foot of Lough Derg stands ~Killaloe~, an ideal resting place for +an angler. The cathedral is of some interest, and in the vicinity the +Protestant Bishop's palace stands. The bridge connecting the town with +the village of Ballina has thirteen arches, and the huge weir helps as a +breakwater. Shortly above the bridge of old time stood Kincora, the +fortified palace of Brian Boru; its glory has departed, and all that +remains is a mound, crowned with a grove of trees. Here Brian of the +Tribes held his sway; and still the peasant in Munster, wishing to +express his welcome, says in Gaelic--"Were mine the boire of the Dane or +the wine of Kincora, it would be poured for you." Here it was that the +Norse King, Magnus, wintered early in the twelfth century, and found a +wife for his son, Sigurd, in the house of Brian. M'Laig, the bard of +Brian Boru, after the death of his king in 1014, made a lamentation, +which Mangan thus translated:-- + + "Oh! where Kincora is Brian the Great? + And where is the beauty that once was thine? + Oh! where are the princes and nobles that sate + At the feast in thy halls, and drank the red wine? + Where! oh, Kincora. + They are gone, those heroes of royal birth, + Who plundered no church and broke no trust, + It is weary for me to be living on earth, + When they, oh, Kincora, are below in the dust. + Lo, of Kincora." + +From Killaloe, northwards for twenty-five miles, Lough Derg at times +expands in width over eight miles, where its distant shores form a sky +line--hedged in with Tipperary and Clare Mountains. The lough loses none +of its picturesque attractiveness to the sportsman, who is informed that +the whole of the fishing is free. + +From Limerick as centre, as we have said, tours may be made into North +Kerry. + +To the average tourist North Kerry is a _terra incognita_, and yet from +the pleasant pasture lands around "Sweet Adare" in Limerick to where the +distant mountain of Caherconree sees his regal head reflected in the +sea--there lies a beautiful land. Beyond Patrickswell, on the Maigue, is +the little village of Adare, once the camping ground and stronghold of +"those very great scorners of death," the Desmond Geraldines. Still the +ruins of Desmond Castle, and of three abbeys, tell the tale that here +once, beside a citadel of strength, were places of religion and refuge. +Now, in the depth of the retreat of sylvan splendour, the Earl of +Dunraven has his noble mansion.[1] At Adare, as well as at Ballingrane, +six miles away, still are many evidences of the Palatine plantations, +which were effected here in the eighteenth century. In 1709 a fleet was +sent to Rotterdam by Queen Anne, and brought to England some 7,000 +refugees from the German Palatinate. Of these, over 3,000 were settled +in this part of the County Limerick. They were allowed eight acres of +land for each man, woman, and child, at _5s._ per acre; and the +Government engaged to pay their rent for twenty years, and supplied +every man with a musket to protect himself. Industrious and frugal, the +exiles throve in the land of their adoption; many of them emigrated to +America, and only a comparatively small number of families still remain. +These, however, preserve, besides the names, many of the characteristics +of their predecessors--as Dr. R. T. Mitchell, Inspector of +Registration in Ireland, testifies in his survey of this very +district:--"Differing originally in language, though even the oldest of +the present generation know nothing of the German tongue spoken or +written, as well as in race and religion, from the natives amongst whom +they were planted, these Palatines still cling together like the members +of a clan, and worship together. Most of them have a distinctly foreign +type of features, and are strongly built, swarthy in complexion, dark +haired, and brown eyed. The comfortable houses built in 1709 are in +ruins now. The original square of Court Matrix in the ruined wall can be +traced, and also, in the very centre of this square the foundations of +the little Meeting House in which John Wesley occasionally preached to +them in the interval, 1750-1765. Modern houses stand there now, but not +closely grouped together. They are all comfortable in appearance, some +thatched, some slated, some with one story, others with two; nearly all +have a neat little flower garden in front, and very many have an orchard +beside or immediately behind the house. There is all the appearance of +thrift and industry among them." From ~Ballingrane~, a branch line +passing Askeaton, with its ruined Castle and Abbey ruins, to ~Foynes~, a +good harbour, from which passage can be made to Kilrush, and thence per +rail to Kilkee. From the junction the main line runs by ~Rathkeale~ and +~Newcastle~, where there is a ruined castle of the Knights Templars, and +by Abbeyfeale and Kilmorna, where Mr. Pierce Mahony bred and kept his +stud of famous Kerry cattle, to Listowel, an old market town which +figured in the Desmond rebellion. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Adare Abbey, Croom.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin_ Adare Manor.] + +From Listowel the Lartigue railway, unique in the British Isles, runs to +~Ballybunion~, a beautiful watering place, remarkable for its sea-caves +and old castle. ~Ardfert~ is remarkable for its ruined Abbey and +Cathedral, both dedicated to St. Brendon, the story of whose voyage to +the New World was one of the subjects mentioned at the court of +Ferdinand and Isabella by Columbus, when inducing them to assist him in +his mission of discovery. ~Tralee~ is the largest town in the Kingdom of +Kerry. It is one of the most thriving towns in the south of Ireland, and +is situated in the vicinity of marine and mountain scenery. Those +interested in the revival of industry in Ireland will do well to visit +the Kerry Knitting Co.'s Factory, as well as the fine bacon-curing +establishment of the Wholesale Co-operative Society which has been +erected under the management of the well known Mr. Joseph Prosser. At +Spa and Fenit there is good sea-bathing, and on the Dingle Promontory +the ascent of Mount Brandon may be made. From Dingle excursions can +easily be taken to Slea Head, by Ventry, and under the Eagles' Mountain, +and within sight of the Blasket Islands. ~Smerwick~ has in its +neighbourhood a coast line of mighty cliffs, the most remarkable of +which is called the ~Three Sisters~. Smerwick was the scene of the +massacre of seven hundred Spaniards, who had surrendered in the +sixteenth century to Lord Deputy Grey's forces. The bloody affair is the +blackest stain in the careers of the gallant Raleigh and the gentle +Spenser. Between Smerwick and Ballydavid Head the well preserved remains +of the ~Oratory of Gallerius~ may be seen. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lartique Railway, Ballybunion.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Ballybunion.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Ballybunion.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Limerick District, see + end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +The Shannon Lakes. + +DUKE OF YORK ROUTE. + + +The Shannon Development Company run during the season a service of +steamers between Killaloe and Dromod (county Leitrim). The whole of the +journey from ~Killaloe~ to Dromod--about one hundred miles--is +interesting and full of variety, the shores and lakes of the lordly +river presenting an ever-changing panorama of beautiful scenes. About +Killaloe the views are very fine. The mountains of Clare and Tipperary +shadow the town on either side, and away to the north for twenty-three +miles stretches Lough Derg. Going up the lake, the first stopping place +is at Scariff, which overlooks the beautiful Inniscattery or Holy +Island. The reach from here to Portumna is crowded with islands, and on +both shores are ruined castles and finely wooded demesnes. Dromineer, on +the opposite bank, four and a quarter miles from Nenagh, is the next +station. Nearly opposite Portumna, with its ruined and blackened castle, +are the ruins of the monastery of Tirdaglass. + +[Illustration: Sailing on the Shannon.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kincora, Killaloe.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Shannon Steamer.] + +The ancient city of Portumna was once the chief pass and means of +communication between Connaught and North Munster. Between Portumna, at +the head of Lough Derg and Banagher, are the rich meadow lands of +Galway, along which the river winds tranquilly, passing beautifully +wooded islands; its banks green with rich, low-lying pastures. A few +miles from Shannon Bridge is Clonmacnoise, over which hang many ancient +memories of learning, of wars, and of worship. Near Athlone is a point +in the river where the Counties of Westmeath, Roscommon, and King's +County meet, and the waters of Lough Ree wash the shores of County +Roscommon on the one side and of Westmeath and Longford on the other. +Lough Ree is but little known to the tourist; and yet this lake, with +its rocky shores full of indentations, and its shoals of sparkling +islands, is one of the loveliest in Ireland. King John's Castle, on the +Roscommon side of the lake, is a magnificent Norman ruin, and the town +of Roscommon--which is not far from the brink of the lake--also contains +the remains of a fine castle and of a Dominican Friary. The castle, +which is flanked by four towers of massive masonry, was built in the +thirteenth century by Sir Robert de Ufford, and afterwards suffered many +changes of fortune; it is now the property of The O'Conor Don. The abbey +is chiefly interesting as containing the sculptured tomb of Phelim +Cathal O'Connor. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lough Ree, Shannon Lakes.] + +Circular tourist tickets for one day trips are issued by the Railway +Company. Details will be seen on summer time tables. + + + + +[Illustration] + +Cork and District. + +CORK. + + +Enshrined in song and _saga_, set in the beautiful valley of a romantic +river, Cork is one of the pleasantest places within the four shores of +"the most distressful country." It is the capital of the rich Province +of Munster, "the wheat of Ireland," says a Gaelic proverb, and while it +preserves the characteristics of an old Irish town, here, too, the +traveller, familiar with the quaint cities of the Continent, will meet +with much that is suggestive of foreign scenes. + +Cork sits snugly at the foot of, and leans her back up against, high +hills that shelter her from the north, and the breeze that blows up from +the sea is fresh and mildly bracing. From a height to the north +overlooking the city a bird's-eye view can be had of the entire +surroundings, and of what the poet Spenser called-- + + "The pleasant Lee, that like an island fayre + Encloseth Cork in his divided flood." + +Away to the west the eye can easily trace the river, winding with haste +to the sea, through the barony of Muskerry, "the fair country," from its +fountain home over the hills and far away. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Patrick-street, Cork.] + +More than halfway along the Mardyke Walk there is a sidepath leading +down to a ferry across the Lee. Here a good view may be had of the river +looking towards the city, with Sunday's Well, Blair's Castle, and +Shandon standing high on the hill. + +The history of the foundation of Cork City, and its progress through the +centuries, is well authenticated. Towards the close of the sixth +century, the place was founded by Lochan, son of Amirgin, the great +smith to Tiernach M'Hugh, the proud chief of the O'Mahonys. Lochan has +since come to be called St. Finbarr. His feast day is a retrenched +holiday in the diocese of Cork, and his patron day is kept by the +peasantry at the shrine of Gougane Barra, by the cradle of the river +Lee. The Irish name, Cork, signifies that the locality was a marsh, and +in the life of its founder it is described as a "land of many waters." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Marina, Cork.] + +For less than three hundred years the little city throve, and then came +the Sea Rovers, hungry for spoil. In 820 they burned down Cork, carrying +away as pillage the silver coffin wherein St. Finbarr was buried. +Shortly afterwards they returned, and seized on the marshes lying +beneath Gill Abbey Rock, fortified them, and founded another little +city--but their own. There they sang their "Mass of the Lances; it began +at the rising of the sun," and, as the Four Masters assure us, +"wheresoever they marched they were escorted by fire." + +But in time the Rovers were absorbed, and race hatreds died out. They +paid tribute to the MacCarthys, and were married and given in marriage +to the Irish. Merovingian Kings came to buy and sell in Cork, and the +Sagas of the North tell of many a hardy Norseman who fell captive to the +maidens of Munster. To this day the Danish blood moulds the nature of +many in Cork, and among the men especially the passionate affection for +the sea is a characteristic. When the Normans invaded Ireland they found +Cork a Danish fortress. They broke the power of the Danes in a sea +fight, and won over the allegiance of MacCarthy, the old King of Cork, +through the wiles of a woman. The strangers had not been long in the +city when they, like the Danes before them, were absorbed, and became +more Irish than the Irish themselves. As their island city grew in +opulence, they began to assert an independence similar to the free +cities of the Continent. A historical writer of repute points out that +they were practically independent of external authority. Their edicts +had nearly the force of laws. They levied taxes, and regulated commerce. +They judged, pilloried, and hanged offenders. To suit themselves they +modified the English laws of property. They set up a mint of their own, +and their money had to be declared by the English Parliament to be +"utterly damned." + +Their audacity can be imagined from the part they played in Perkin +Warbeck's rebellion of 1492. They decked him out "with some clothes of +silk," and John Walters, the Mayor, insisting that the poor Fleming was +son to the Duke of Clarence, demanded that the Lord Deputy should +declare him King. Failing in this a number of Cork merchants sent him to +France, where they duped the King, and induced the Duchess of Burgundy +to give them armament and money. They then sailed for Kent, and having +landed there, proclaimed their foundling "Richard the Fourth, King of +England and Lord of Ireland." But the sequel of all this bravura +behaviour was not so happy, as Warbeck and Walters lost their heads, and +Cork lost its charter. + +In 1847 the city suffered fearfully from the ravages of famine and +famine fever. The failure of the potato crop drove the unfortunate, +hunger-stricken peasantry into the city for sustenance; and it has been +estimated that upwards of a million of people emigrated in these unhappy +years through the port of Cork. During the Fenian movement, 1865-67, +Cork was a hotbed of treason, and more prisoners were sentenced from +there than from all the other parts of Ireland put together. Thus, in +the nineteenth century, the name of "Rebel Cork," which was earned so +far back as the time of Perkin Warbeck, was still deserved. + +The manners of the people, gentle and simple, rich and poor, are +perfect. There is, perhaps, too often a tendency to adopt your view of +anything or everything with the most accommodating agreeableness. This +is very pleasant, if not always sincere, but in this respect a thing +never to be forgotten is that Cork is only a few miles from Blarney, and + + "There is a stone there, whoever kisses, + Oh! he never misses to grow eloquent. + 'Tis he may clamber to a lady's chamber, + Or become a Member of Parliament. + + A clever spouter, he'll sure turn out, or + An 'out-an'-outer' to be let alone; + Don't hope to hinder him, or to bewilder him, + Sure he's a pilgrim from the Blarney Stone." + +Thackeray, like many another man before his time and since, has paid +tribute to the loveliness of the girls of Cork. There is a graceful +charm about them before which the most inveterate bachelor succumbs. The +accents of the Siren singers were never so insinuating and caressing as +the Munster brogue as it slips off the tongue of a gentlewoman. Blue +eyes predominate, but are excelled in lustre by what Froude has been +pleased to call "the cold grey eyes of the dark Celt of the south of +Ireland." Edmund Spencer, when he was not busy "undertaking" Rapparees, +or smoking Raleigh's fragrant weed--"than which there is no more fair +herb under the broad canopy of heaven"--wooed and won and wedded a fair +woman of Cork; not of the city, though, but of the county. She was a +country lass, as he is at pains to point out to the Shandon belles who +fain would vie with her:-- + + "Tell me, ye merchant daughters, did ye see + So fayre a creature in your town before? + Her goodlie eyes, like sapphyres shining bright; + Her forehead, ivory white; + Her lips like cherries charming men to byte." + +There is nothing of peculiar interest about the streets of Cork but +their number, their narrowness, and the irregularity of the houses. St. +Patrick's-street, which is the principal thoroughfare, has many handsome +shops, and winds its way in three curves through the city. + +From the "Dyke," as it is locally known, through the "Band Field"--the +baby park of Cork--we can cross to an entrance to the Queen's College on +the Western-road. The College itself is a handsome building of white +Cork limestone, in the later Tudor style, forming three sides of a +quadrangle, and consisting of lecture-rooms, museum, examination hall, +&c. It is built in the centre of well-laid pleasure grounds, which are +open to the public, and which formerly were the site of St. Finbarr's +old monastery. During the session proper, practically from November to +June, visitors will not be admitted through the building without an +official order, which may be had at the Registrar's office. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Queen's College, Cork.] + +During the vacation the steward or assistant officials are in attendance +to conduct visitors. The large palm-house is one of the most successful +in Ireland, and the Crawford Observatory will repay a visit. The grounds +were laid out under the personal supervision of the late president, Dr. +W. K. Sullivan, a distinguished scientist. While at the south side of +the city, St. Finbarr's Cathedral[2] (Church of Ireland), eastward from +the College, should be seen. It is a very dignified design of the French +Early Pointed style. The nave, aisles, and transepts are grouped under +three lofty towers with spires. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ St. Finbarr's Cathedral, Cork.] + +From the foot of the street a few minutes' walk will bring us under the +old bi-coloured steeple, which contains the famous Shandon Bells. The +church was built in 1772. The steeple is unique, inasmuch as the +southern and western sides are of white limestone, and the northern and +eastern red sandstone-- + + "Parti-coloured, like Cork people, + Red and white, stands Shandon steeple." + +But the "Bells" are the chief attraction, and the quaint inscriptions on +them amuse the curious. In the stillness of a summer night their sweet +chimes sound with peculiar cadence across the waters which encircle the +old city of the Lee. The charter song of Cork is:-- + + THE BELLS OF SHANDON. + + With deep affection and recollection + I often think of the Shandon bells-- + Whose sounds so wild would, in days of childhood, + Fling round my cradle their magic spells; + On this I ponder, where'er I wander, + And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee; + With thy bells of Shandon, + That sound so grand on + The pleasant waters of the river Lee. + + I have heard bells chiming full many a clime in, + Tolling sublime in cathedral shrine; + While at a glib rate brass tongues would vibrate, + But all their music spoke nought to thine; + For memory dwelling on each proud swelling + Of thy belfry knelling its bold notes free, + Made the bells of Shandon + Sound far more grand on + The pleasant waters of the river Lee. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Shandon Church, Cork.] + +Francis Sylvester Mahony, author of this ballad, known in the world of +literature as "Father Prout," was born in Cork in 1804. He was educated +for the priesthood, but spent the best years of his life in London, as a +magazine writer. + +Further north than Shandon is St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral, an +ample piece of architecture, not particularly attractive. Coming down +the hill towards the city on Pope's-quay, St. Mary's Dominican Church +may be seen. It is a very beautiful church, of the composite style of +architecture. The Grecian portico is remarkable for the gracefulness and +justness of its proportions, and is very much admired. It is, perhaps, +the most chaste building of its kind in the kingdom. + +Besides the churches and public buildings already enumerated, the +Courthouse and the Municipal Schools of Science and Art should be seen. +The Courthouse is in Great George-street. In a recent fire there many +valuable records were destroyed. Courthouses seem to be ill-fated in +Cork. The old Courthouse fell during the trial for treason in the Penal +days of the Catholic Bishop of Cork. The present Courthouse was burnt on +Good Friday, 1891. + +The punning, duel-fighting, hanging judge, Lord Norbury, of whom the +country people still say, "He'd hang a man as soon as knock the head off +a rush," often dispensed with an escort in the most exciting times, and +rode here on circuit with a brace of pistols at his saddle-bow. But he +was a man of uncommon determination. Once, when his acts were unusually +unjudicial, he was reprimanded from Dublin Castle and threatened with +compulsory retirement. He rode instanter to Dublin, and never stopped +until he drew rein at the Castle gate. He demanded to see the Lord +Lieutenant, but the then Viceroy, Lord Talbot, was in England. He was +ushered into the presence of a courteous official, who was a little +astonished to be authoritatively asked, "Who are you?" "I, sir," said +the Under Secretary, whom he addressed, "am Mr. Gregory." "Then you be +d----d, and don't Sir me," said his Lordship. "Fifty-two years ago I +began life at the Irish Bar with fifty guineas and a case of pistols. +Here it is! I have fought my way to preferment. Within a few months I +expect a letter of an unpleasant character from the Castle. Tell the +writer he may take his choice of these, and send me his second." History +does not record whether "the letter of an unpleasant character" was ever +written. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Guy and Co., Cork._ Cork Exhibition.] + +The Municipal Buildings of Science and Art in Emmet-place can bear +comparison with those of any town of the same size in Great Britain or +Ireland. The sculpture and picture galleries are open to visitors. The +splendid collection of casts from the antiques in the Vatican Gallery +were executed under the superintendence of Canova, and sent by Pope Pius +VII. to George IV. The ship which carried them by long sea from Italy +put into Cork, and was there detained for harbour dues. The King, +instead of paying, transferred the Papal gift to the Cork Society of +Arts. + +A paltry exhibit of coins, antiquities, and fossils forms the Museum. +Although Cork County has been one of the richest in Ireland in "finds" +of gold and metal work of the ancient Irish, they are absolutely +unrepresented. + + +CORK DISTRICT. + +The county of Cork is the largest shire in Ireland. The pleasure seeker, +the artist, the antiquary, the sportsman, the invalid, will each find +within its broad barriers much to meet his wants. Sir Walter Scott is +credited with the statement that the history of this single county +contains more romance than the history of the lowlands and highlands of +his own dear land of the mountain and the flood. + +The surface of the county Cork is as diversified as the people. In some +places, such as Kilworth, Mushera, and Ballyhoura, the elevation is +considerable, elsewhere it sinks to a low-lying plain, such as at +Kilcrea, where the bog is that tradition says saw the last wolf in +Ireland killed, and Imokilly, where the sea is yearly eating into the +lowlands. The county is watered by no less than twenty rivers of +importance. + +Making the city the headquarters for a few days, there are many places +of interest in the vicinity which may with ease be visited. The +excellent tram system may be availed of by visitors to the sights in its +immediate vicinity. A drive by Douglas and Vernamount can be +recommended. Douglas was an old town, famous for its manufacture of sail +cloth, and in recent years a village providence in the person of the +late Mr. John Morrogh has resuscitated industry in the district by the +establishment of a splendidly equipped tweed factory. With a fine day +and a good "outside jaunting-car" to travel the five miles' drive to +~Blarney Castle~ will be found most enjoyable. The famous stone, which +no one should miss kissing, is set in the parapet wall. The word +"Blarney," meaning pleasant "deluderin' talk," is said to have +originated at the Court of Queen Elizabeth. MacCarthy, the then +chieftain over the clan of that name, resided at Blarney, and was +repeatedly asked to come in from "off his keeping," as the phrase in the +State Papers goes, to abjure the system of Tanistry by which the clan +elected the chief, and take tenure of his lands direct from the Crown. +He was always promising with fair words and soft speech to do what was +desired, but never could be got to come to the sticking point. The +Queen, it is told, when one of his speeches was brought to her, said, +"This is all Blarney; what he says he never means." + +By the Great Southern and Western Railway the castle can also be +reached. By this route a good stretch of the Upper Lee is seen, with +Carrigrohane Castle, which belonged to the M'Sweeneys, beetling high on +a rock, and the line runs through the picturesque valley of the +Sournagh, which may be likened to a Swiss ravine. All the remains of the +former greatness of Blarney consists of the ruins of two mansions, one +of the fifteenth century, and the other of the Elizabethan period. In +its time the place was one of considerable strength, and was erected by +Cormac MacCarthy Laider, or the Strong-handed chief of his name. Most of +the outworks and defences are gone. The old square keep, ivy-crowned, +rises from a huge limestone rock, around which the Coomaun or crooked +river winds. The Castle is over 120 feet high; the great staircase at +the right-hand side leads through the entire building, here and there +small vaulted chambers being set in the massive walls, which are in +places nine feet thick. The arched room, of which the projecting window +with three lights overlooks the streamlet below, is known as the Earl's +Chamber. The last fight in which Blarney Castle figured, was that in +which the Confederates held out for King Charles in 1642. It fell before +the superior ordnance of Cromwell's commander, Ireton. It was never +afterwards used for a dwelling-house, being almost completely +dismantled. From the summit of the Castle a good view of the surrounding +country can be had. To the west lies Muskerry, with what Ruskin calls +"the would-be hills" rising towards Mushera Mountain. To the north is +St. Ann's Hydropathic Establishment, on a gentle slope, surrounded by +well-wooded parks. In the village beneath is the well-known Blarney +Tweed Factory of Messrs. Martin Mahony Brothers, through which visitors +may be shown when convenient to the courteous proprietors. The "Rock +Close," which is at the foot of the Castle at the southern side, is one +beautiful jungle of foliage, in which myrtle, ivy, and arbutus +intertwine with the rowan tree and the silver hazel. + +[Illustration: Blarney Castle.] + +If we have gone to Blarney on the "outside jaunting-car," the return +journey may be made by Bawnafinny, Kerry Pike, and the Sournagh Valley, +and Northern Lee road. Beneath Bawnafinny, "the pastures of beauty," we +get a glimpse of Blarney Lake, a broad sheet of water bordered with tall +trees, above which the old Castle raises its head. It would gladden the +heart of Izaak Walton, as it is full of fish, among which is the famous +gillaroo trout, which will not rise to the tantalising fly. The +peasantry have a legend, that within the lake lies hidden the treasure +and plate of the last of the MacCarthys, who hid them there sooner than +allow his conquerors to gain possession of it. The secret is said to be +known to three of the old family, and before one dies he tells it to +the other, so that it may be recovered when the MacCarthy "comes to his +own again." The milk girls also on May mornings are said to have +frequently seen fairy cows along the banks of the lake, which vanish +into thin mists when approached by human footsteps! + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Blackrock Castle, Cork.] + +~Ballincollig~ is a place of some interest. The powder mill is a +long-established factory, and gives considerable employment in the +neighbourhood. The large cavalry barracks is amongst the finest in the +south of Ireland. + +~Blackrock~ is little better than a fishing village; but the suburbs +between it and Cork are filled with villa residences, pleasure grounds, +and market gardens. Beside the road, between the city and the village, +are situated the well-known nursery gardens belong to Hartland. The +daffodil farm, when the flowers are full, is a sight very difficult to +surpass in the three Kingdoms. Maxwellstown House, on the slope of a +southern hill, was the scene of a tragedy, not yet forgotten in Cork. +After a marriage _dejeuner_, the bride retired to her dressing-room to +don her going-away dress, but the bridegroom waited in vain for her +return. She had died suddenly in the arms of those who attended her; and +the story goes that the disconsolate lover dismissed the servants, shut +up the house with everything just as it was, and went on his way out +into the wide world alone. Long years afterwards, when news of his death +came from a far-off land, his next-of-kin had the house re-opened, and +found everything just as it had been left half a century before, after +the wedding breakfast. The dust and cobwebs were cleared away, and all +went to the hammer. + +Eastward, towards the harbour's mouth, there is much to be enjoyed. +Excursionists may take the train direct from the Great Southern and +Western Railway terminus, or by Passage from the Albert Station, and +then by steamer to Queenstown. Taking the direct line the train runs +almost parallel with the promenade called the Marina, which separates +from the river side the broad pasture known as Cork Park, which is the +local race course. A race meeting at Cork is well worth witnessing. The +gay young bucks, described long ago by Arthur Young, still are with us, +and they and their lady friends make a fine flutter during race week. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Queenstown Harbour.] + +~Passage~ (~West~) was once the busy site of ship-building and +dock-yards, but the industry is no longer of anything like its original +proportions. The town is an old-fashioned place, and has not escaped the +pen of Father Prout, who, in what he calls "manifestly an imitation of +that unrivalled dithyramb," The Groves of Blarney--with little of its +humours and all its absurdity--signs the attractions of what he styles a +fashionable Irish watering-place:-- + + "The town of Passage + Is both large and spacious, + And situate + Upon the say; + 'Tis nate and dacent, + And quite adjacent + To come from Cork + On a summer's day." + +Steamers ply between the railway station at Passage and the many little +towns around the port. ~Glenbrook~ and ~Monkstown~ are particularly +picturesque. Above the latter, nestling in the trees, may be seen +Monkstown Castle, the legend attached to which says it was built for one +groat. The owner of the site, one of the Archdeckens, an Anglo-Irish +family, having gone away to the wars in the Lowlands, his better-half +promised him a pleasant surprise on his return. She employed a number of +workmen to build the castle, a condition of the contract being that they +should buy their food from her while so engaged. Truly, she was a shrewd +woman. Her profits were such, that she had enough to pay the entire cost +of the work, less one solitary groat. + +~Spike Island~ is mentioned in Church History as a present given by a +Munster King to St. Cartach, of Lismore. In modern times it was used as +a convict prison, the convicts' labour being employed in the +construction of the fortifications around the harbour. + +~Queenstown~, or, to give it its old Irish name, Cove, is built upon an +island. It is the paradise of naval pensioners, and the home of all +nationalities, yet Irish is still a spoken tongue not a mile away, +behind "Spy Hill." The magnificent Cathedral to St. Colman, the patron +Saint of Cloyne, occupies a commanding position over the harbour. It is +in the later florid Gothic architecture, and within one of its +transepts is buried the celebrated Dr. Coppinger, a learned writer and +member of the most famous and enduring of the Danish families to whom +Ireland became a native land. In an old graveyard on the island, Charles +Wolfe, the writer of the elegy on Sir John Moore, and Tobin, the +dramatist, are buried. The panorama from Spy Hill embraces the +enchanting river and the wide harbour, which is capable of holding all +the ships in the British Navy within the line drawn from the two forts, +Camden and Carlisle, which guard the entrance. Of Queenstown, the +_Dublin Health Record_ says:--"The climate is remarkably mild and +equable, and, at the same time, fairly dry and tonic, and is especially +suitable as a winter and spring residence for persons with delicate +chests, to sufferers from chronic catarrhal throat affections, and to +convalescents from acute diseases. It is particularly appropriate as a +seaside resort to persons requiring a soothing and sedative atmosphere. +From the position of Queenstown, winds from the colder points are very +little felt, and it is completely protected from the north, north-east, +and north-west winds. The mean temperatures of the seasons are exactly +similar to those at Torquay, the noted winter health resort in the south +of England, and higher than those of Bournemouth, Hastings, and Ventnor. +As a winter health resort, Queenstown possesses all the best natural and +climatic advantages." + +The beach presents the most varied and motley sights to be seen anywhere +in northern Europe. Merchant seamen from every port of the world +congregate here; military and man-of-war sailors are ever present, +pleasure-seeking yachtsmen, pilots and fishers mix with the melancholy +groups of emigrants, or the irrepressible vendors of impossible wares. +Beyond in the blue waters, His Majesty's flagship rides at anchor, one +or more of the "ocean greyhounds," with dead slow engines, are steaming +out between the forts; tenders, whale-boats, small steamers, tugs, and +every craft that sails the sea, down to the familiar Munster "hooker," +are hurrying to ports far and near, or lying "idle as painted ships upon +a painted ocean." Most of the Atlantic liners have offices here. Tenders +convey the mails from the deep-water quays at the Great Southern and +Western terminus out to the steamers, which usually ride in the fair way +by the harbour's mouth. Queenstown is the principal port through which +the emigrants leave Ireland. Young and old, when the "emigration fever" +is rife, the tides of people may be seen flowing oceanwards. Sometimes +they have a little money, and are going to better themselves; but most +usually they are going out penniless to relatives abroad, or "just +trusting in God." Not an unfrequent sight is to see bare-footed peasant +children waiting for their turn to cross the gangway which leads to the +New World. Perhaps they have nothing with them but "a pot of shamrock," +or a little mountain thrush or orange-billed blackbird, in a wicker +cage, to make friends with "beyant the herring-pond." It is very +curious, but very Irish, that they do not at all seem to want the +sympathy that is lavished upon them by the onlookers. When they are +leaving their native place, the "neighbours" hold an "American wake," +and in the morning, with heartrending embraces and wild caioning, give +them the last "Bannact Dea Leat"--"God's blessing be on your way"; but +when they come to Cove, the sorrow is smothered; they are buoyed up by +that trusting faith in the future which is the first fibre in the Irish +nature. They may look melancholy to us, but they themselves make merry, +and before the "big ship" is but on the "Old Sea," as the Atlantic is +called, the girls and young men are slipping through rollicking reels to +improvised music "to show their heart's deep sorrow they are scorning." +Perhaps, as the Gaelic proverb expresses it, "'Tis the heavy heart that +has the lightest foot." But a truce to trouble. They tell a story of an +emigrant and a grand trunk merchant at Queenstown which shows alike the +hapless condition and happy-go-lucky heart of the Irishman. "Pat," said +the merchant, "you're going to travel; will you buy a trunk?" "A trunk," +answered Pat, "an' for what, yerra?" "To put your clothes in, of +course." "And meself go naked, is it? Och! lave off your gladiatoring; +sure it's took up I'd be if I did that!" + +~Crosshaven~ and ~Aghada~, two watering places inside the harbour, are +within easy reach of Cove by steamer, which calls at Currabinny Pier. +The Owenabwee[3] river runs between Currabinny and Crosshaven; it is a +beautiful, well-wooded stream which has been celebrated in a +plaintive-aired Jacobite ballad, the "Lament of the Irish Maiden." + + "On Carrigdhoun the heath is brown, + The clouds are dark on Ardnalee, + And many a stream comes rushing down + To swell the angry Owenabwee. + The moaning blast is whistling fast + Through many a leafless tree, + But I'm alone, for he is gone, + My hawk is flown, ochone machree." + +A few hundred yards from Crosshaven river there is a fiord of the +Owenabwee, known as Drake's Pool. Here the great soldier-sailor, Sir +Francis Drake, with his five little sloops, hid in 1587 from a +formidable Spanish fleet. The Spaniards entered the harbour, but failing +to find their quarry, put to sea again in high dudgeon. + +Near ~Aghada~, at the other side of the harbour, is Rostellan Castle, +formerly the residence of the Lords of Thomond. ~Cloyne~ is only four +miles' drive "on the long car" through a rich countryside, and on the +way may be seen a Druidical cromlech, at Castlemartyr, in a very fair +state of preservation. Cloyne Round Tower "points its long fingers to +the sky" above the ancient church wherein there is a fine alabaster +statue of the metaphysician, Dr. Berkeley, who was Bishop of Cloyne. +~Ballycotton~ is seven miles from Cloyne. The cliffs here are high and +wild, and Youghal, shining white in the sun in summer weather, can be +easily seen at the mouth of the far-famed Blackwater. There are modern +hotels and moderate lodgings at Ballycotton. In the season splendid +deep-sea fishing can be had in the vicinity, and the opportunities of +sea-bathing are enticing. + +[Illustration: Ballycotton Harbour] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Ballycotton.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Cork District, see end + of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +[Illustration] + +The River Blackwater, Youghal, Etc. + + +Edmund Spenser spent most of his time in Cork County, at Kilcoleman +Castle in the vicinity of Buttevant. The place was well chosen as the +house of a poet. The surrounding country is very beautiful, and every +mountain and glen has its story. + +The town of ~Buttevant~ took its name from the battle-cry of the +Barrymores--"Boutez-en-avant," "push forward." The ruins of the +beautiful Abbey remain. At the time of the supervision of monasteries it +was described as "a nest of abbots." Buttevant is the railway station +for Doneraile, and hard by is Cahirmee, where the greatest horse fair in +the British Isles is annually held. The fair lasts for two days. It is +held about midsummer, and attracts buyers not only from all parts of +these countries, but from as far away as Vienna and Stockholm. Spenser +pays tribute to the beautiful Blackwater which flows through Mallow to +Youghal-- + + "Swift Annsduff, which of the English is called Blackwater." + +Far away in the highland country between Cork and Kerry the stream +rises, and comes floating and pushing down from the haunt of the +fairies and the outlaw, through the wild country of Meelin. Here is a +remarkable cave, the hiding place of Donald O'Keeffe, last of the old +chiefs of the land of Duhallow, who was outlawed after the fall of the +Jacobites. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ In the Woods at Buttevant.] + +The river flows through Newmarket, the birthplace of Curran, and +Kanturk, the birthplace of Barry Yelverton, to ~Mallow~ which is the +centre of the lines of railway radiating into Kerry, Fermoy, and +Lismore, as well as to Cork city. The town is very beautifully situated. +In the distance are the Kilworth mountains, which seem afar off to join +the ample deer-park at Mallow Castle. It was once one of the liveliest +and most fashionable resorts in Ireland, but its famous spas, to which +gentlewomen and gallants came in the last century, are now unfrequented +and almost forgotten. When abductions, duelling, and such pastimes were +in vogue, "The Rakes of Mallow" were in their heyday. As Lysaght sang:-- + + "Beauing, belleing, dancing, drinking, + Breaking windows, damning, sinking, + Ever raking, never thinking, + Live the rakes of Mallow. + + Spending faster than it comes, + Beating waiters, bailiffs, duns, + Bacchus' true-begotten sons, + Live the rakes of Mallow. + + Living short, but merry lives. + Going where the devil drives: + Having sweethearts, but no wives, + Live the rakes of Mallow." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Mallow Castle.] + +~The Blackwater~ flows past Mallow through a rich country surrounded by +soft-breasted hills and well-planted lawns, to Fermoy, a garrison town +of importance, from which Mitchelstown, eleven miles away, may be +reached by a light railway. The caves at Mitchelstown are described +elsewhere (Waterford section). We will part the branch line here and +return, _via_ Cork, to Youghal, the point from which to become familiar +with the Blackwater at its best. + +~Youghal~, except in summer-time, when the visitors to its splendid +strand enliven its appearance, is a sombre old place with an air of +retired respectability. It is full of memories of other days, for here +the Dane and the Christian came together; the Norman made it a walled +town, and the Spaniards came into its harbour. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ View on the Blackwater Youghal.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Clock Tower, Youghal.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Sir Walter Raleigh's House at +Youghal.] + +From here Sir Walter Raleigh, its Mayor, went forth to found +Virginia--and to the scaffold. It was a chartered city, and grew in +wealth and importance from 1183 to 1579, when it was sacked by Gerald, +sixteenth Earl of Desmond, then out "upon his keeping." Ormonde drove +the Geraldines out of the town, and hanged the then Mayor outside his +own door for aiding them. He rebuilt its walls, and placed here a +strong garrison. In 1641 it was again besieged, but held out for six +weeks until relieved. In 1645, Castlehaven attacked it, but was repulsed +by Broghill, fifth son of the Earl of Cork. Here, during the war with +the Confederates, money was struck. On the execution of Charles I., +Ormonde proclaimed his son King, but the Puritans in the town revolted +to Cromwell, who wintered here in 1649. In 1660, the Cavaliers and +broken followers of the Geraldines captured the town, and ten days +before his actual succession proclaimed Charles II. King. With varying +fortunes of war, the town passed into the hands of the Jacobites and +Williamites. The objects of interest, besides the picturesque +attractions of the strand and beautiful bay, are very many. The Clock +Tower remains where the old South Gate to the town stood. Tynte's Castle +was built by Norman settlers in the fifteenth century. St. Mary's +Cathedral is cruciform, consisting of nave, aisle, transepts, choir, and +massive tower. In the chantry of Our Blessed Saviour, or south transept, +besides the memorial to the founder and his countess, is the grotesque +mausoleum, in florid, glaring Italian style, to the Earl of Cork and his +family. At Boyle's feet is the kneeling figure of his first wife, Joan; +at his head is that of his second, Catherine. Over the arch is his +mother, Joan, and along the margin of the plinth are nine diminutive +effigies--his children. The tower was evidently constructed rather as a +defence than simply for a belfry. The churchyard, where there are many +ancient gravestones, is the chief centre of local superstition, and here +all local ghostly visitations are alleged to take place. ~Myrtle Grove~, +whilom the residence of the ill-fated Elizabethan soldier, Raleigh, is +an unpretentious, ancient gabled dwelling. The interior is remarkable +for its beautiful oak wainscoting. + +During his sojourn in Munster, "Captain Sir Walter Raleigh" performed +many deeds of dering-do, albeit some of them were far from being like +Bayard's, without reproach. He was Mayor of Youghal, 1588-9; and, with +Spenser, was granted the greater part of the forfeited estates of the +Earl of Desmond. Raleigh's grant comprised property at Youghal and along +the Blackwater to Affane, already mentioned. In the garden attached to +Myrtle Grove he is supposed to have planted the potato, the first +planted in Ireland. + +The strand at Youghal is very fine, and sea-bathers are afforded every +opportunity of enjoying themselves. In summer time the watering-place is +much patronized, and every year is becoming more attractive. There are +good hotels, and plenty of residences and lodgings to accommodate +visitors during the season. In the morning the whole fore-shore is given +over to the bathers, and in the evenings it is mostly "Oh, listen to the +band" along the Promenade and in the Green Park. The inroads of the sea +at Claycastle are at length being successfully encountered by the Case +groining system, which has been found so efficient elsewhere. + +The coast-line from Youghal to Cork is indented with splendid sea +cliffs, fiords, and strands. Garryvoe lies between Youghal and +Ballycotton. The sea for miles along this district has been eating into +the clay cliffs, and threatens to fulfil a Gaelic prophecy that it will +yet reach Killeagh, a town six miles inland. Near Killeagh is a very +beautiful scene of sylvan splendour, Glenbower. + +The railway line runs direct from Youghal to Cork, passing the thriving +market town of Midleton, the granary of Cork County, and Carrigtwohill, +where there are the ruins of a Norman Castle. + +A ferry from Youghal brings the passenger into Waterford County. The +road above Whiting Bay leads to the fishing village of ~Ardmore~. It was +perhaps, the first place in Ireland where the light of Christianity +shone, as St. Declan is generally agreed to have been a precursor of the +National apostle. In the country districts surrounding, as in the +fishing village itself, the language most in use is Gaelic. The round +tower, said to be of later date than any other in Ireland, is unique in +many respects. The Cathedral, with its exquisite chancel arch and +elaborate exterior arcading, will delight the antiquary and architect. +Other interesting objects are the Ogham stones in its chancel, and the +narrow lintelled "Bed" of St. Declan. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Strancally Castle, Co. +Waterford.] + +The service of steamers from Youghal to Cappoquin up the ~River +Blackwater~ depends at present mainly on the state of the tide. But +despite this and other things, the scenery on the river side will well +repay inconvenience. Having left the ferry behind, the first place of +interest is Rhincrew (The Bloody Point), and on the wooded hill the +ruins of a preceptory of the Knights Templars still remain. Higher up on +the western bank of the Glendine tributary stands Temple Michael, an +old fortalice of the Geraldines, which Cromwell battered down for "dire +insolence." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Blackwater River.] + +There is a legend which tells that the last of the Geraldines was buried +at Ardmore, far from his young bride, who lost her life during the siege +by the regicides. The story says, after his burial, at night his voice +could be heard clearly, calling across the river, to bring him back and +bury him by his own. For seven years the awe-struck peasants heard the +plaintive voice calling, in the tender tongue of the Gael, "Garault, +come to me,"--"Gerald, a ferry!" At last, some young men of his clan +went to Ardmore and brought his dead body to Temple Michael, where his +wife was buried, and henceforth his spirit no longer troubled the silent +vigils of the fishermen at night. + +The bend in the waterway brings one into sight of rich pastures and fine +demesnes. Ballintray, "The Town of the Strand" has in its vicinity +Molana Abbey, where the warrior, Raymond Le Gros, lies buried. At the +broads of Clashmore, the highest water-mark to which the inflowing tide +comes, one can easily imagine themselves upon an inland lake. Beyond is +Strancally Castle, beetling over the river, set firmly in a foundation +of crags. The local tradition carriers will gladly point out "The +Murdering Hole," a natural fissure in the rocks, and here they will tell +you that the departed Desmonds destroyed their guests after robbing +them! Above the confluence of the Bride with the Blackwater, +Villierstown and Camphire villages are passed, then the Awbeg joins its +little flood, and beyond the island Dromana Ford is reached. Near is +Dromana Castle, where "the old Countess of Desmond" was born. In the +table-book of Robert Sydney, second Earl of Leyicester, written when +Ambassador at Paris, about 1640, there is the following reference to +her:-- + + "The old Countess of Desmond was a marryed woman in Edward IV. time + of England, and lived till towards the end of Queen Elizabeth, so + as she must needes be neare one hundred and forty years old. She + had a new sett of teeth not long afore her death, and might have + lived much longer had she not mett with a kind of violent death, + for she would needes climbe a nut-tree to gather nuts, so falling + down she hurt her thigh, which brought a fever, and that fever + brought death. This my cousin, Walter Fitzwilliam, told me. This + old lady, Mr. Haniot told me, came to petition the Queen, and, + landing at Bristoll, she came on foot to London, being then so old + that her daughter was decrepit, and not able to come with her." + +Dromana House, on the eastern branch of the river, is situated on a +beautiful height, which commands the reaches of the river from Cappoquin +to Youghal. At more than one point on the river there were opportunities +of seeing in the distance the cloisters of ~Mount Melleray~--"the little +town of God," lonely above the mists and shadows of the hills. As we +walk or drive, the hillside behind the river winds its way through +cliffs and well-wooded lands in front, the mountains unfold themselves +range behind range. No one who has ever visited Mount Melleray will +forget it or the generous Brothers. The Trappists, expelled from France +in 1830, first settled on the borders of Kerry, but subsequently +colonised this barren hillside, and already they have transformed it +into a fine farm, containing rich pastures and thriving plantations. The +monastery may be visited by gentlemen visitors, and cannot fail to prove +of extraordinary interest. There are two guest houses, one for gentlemen +and the other for ladies. No charge is made for their bed or board, and +all creeds, classes, and nationalities are received with a _caed mille +failté_. Every week a sermon in Irish is preached to the mountaineers. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Mount Melleray--View from South.] + +Either from Melleray or Cappoquin, ~Lismore~ may be reached by car or +train. It was the home of learning of old, and to-day, not only its +beautiful position but historic Castle command attention. It is the +birthplace of Boyle, the philosopher. Ptolemy is asserted very +confidently by some authorities to have mentioned this place and its +river. It is certain, however, that the place was long in existence in +631, when St. Carthage, of Rahan, fled thither. Nothing could be +prettier than the appearance of the town, and it is a comfortable, +well-to-do place, monopolising the trade of a large countryside. St. +Machuda's Cathedral will repay inspection. The Castle is the Irish seat +of the Duke of Devonshire. It was an ancient fortress, dating back to +the reign of King John. It stands in a pre-eminently commanding +position, over the Blackwater, and was the scene of many a hard-fought +fight, especially in the wars of the Commonwealth, when Castlehaven +captured it from the Roundheads. A magnificent view of the surrounding +country may be had from its higher-storied windows. The public are +freely admitted. From one of the high windows, it is said, when James +II. was asked to look, he accused the maker of the suggestion of +desiring to throw him from the dizzy height. + +From the Railway Station at Lismore, the most interesting object in view +is the new Roman Catholic Cathedral, dedicated to St. Carthage, the +founder of the See, and believed to occupy the site of his cell. Thickly +surrounded by beautiful lime trees, the warm red sandstones of the +walling, with the limestone dressing of the windows and doorways, forms +a brilliant picture. The interior is richly furnished, and altogether +the church is well worthy of a visit. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Guest House, Mount Melleray.] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Waterford and District. + + +Waterford is the port of call for most of the shipping from the West and +South of England and Wales. The projected system by which steamers will +run direct from Fishguard to Rosslare Harbour, whatever effect it may +have upon Waterford as a port, will bring it by many hours nearer to the +English markets. It is only a question of a few years until this route +will be at the disposal of tourists and travellers from across the +Channel. Under the Amalgamation of Railways Act of 1900, Waterford has +the additional advantage of becoming a terminus of the system. With it +as centre, railway services are supplied to Cork County and Lismore, to +Limerick _via_ Carrick-on-Suir and Clonmel, and to Kilkenny _via_ +Kilmacow and Thomastown. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Waterford.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Waterford, from North Side of +River.] + +"The Star of the Suir"--the City of ~Waterford~--derived its name from +the Danish words, Vedr-fiord, given to it by its original founders, the +hardy Norsemen. From whatever side we approach the old town, whether +land or sea, the sight is equally delightful. From without, approaching +by the broad waterway, the city stretches forth to meet us, with the +quaint wooden bridge spanning the noble river, and the hills forming a +zone behind. Surely the Danes had an eye for beauty, as for maritime +advantage, in selecting this happy spot for their fortress. In the ninth +century, when the ploughers of the sea seized on the mouth of the Suir, +they fortified a little delta some twenty acres in size, having the +present Quay as its long side. From this little triangle the town grew, +and in the last century was one of the first seaport towns in Ireland. +Here, in 1171, Strongbow landed, defeated the Danes and Irish, who had +confederated to repel him, and sacked the town. It is a strange +historical coincidence that the Feast of St. Bartholomew was the day on +which Strongbow landed and countenanced the massacre of the inhabitants. +Under Raymond Le Gros the carnage was carried out, and in St. Lawrence +O'Toole's address to the Irish princes at peace with the invader, which +has been versified by Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, it is referred to in the +lines:-- + + "Tell me not of leagues and treaties, + Treaties sealed in faith as true + As Black Raymond's, on the bloody + Feast of St. Bartholomew." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ The Quays, Waterford.] + +King John landed here, and the town was walled in and fortified against +the Irish, who hung like wolves around a fold in the outlying country. +In the Revolution the town adhered to the King. It was the port most +used by the Confederates, and here many of their proclamations were +printed. It was the one place in Ireland which successfully resisted the +all-conquering Cromwell, and hence received the name from the Cavaliers +of _Urbs intacta_. An object of historic interest which has been +restored within the present century is Reginald's Tower. It was built +originally by Reginald the Dane, son of Sitrius, the great Danish King +of Dublin and Fingal (The Fair Strangers), whom Brian Boru defeated at +Clontarf. Here, it is said, DeClair married Eva, whose fair face induced +him to join his forces to her father's fallen fortunes. Maclise, in his +wonderful historical picture "Bartered Away,"[4] represents the nuptials +as taking place on the battlefield, dyed with the blood of the +vanquished Irish. There could not have been much love in the match after +all. Strongbow was scarcely dead when his young widow wrote to Raymond +Le Gros that "a great tooth had fallen out," which he understood to mean +that the time had arrived for him to come and make her his own, which he +did. The patron saints of the diocese of Waterford and Lismore are Saint +Cartach and Saint Otteran, the latter being a Dane who embraced +Christianity. The Cathedral (Episcopalian) occupies the site of the old +Danish Cathedral, the existence of which, together with that of Christ +Church in Dublin, bears testimony to the zeal with which the Danes +embraced Christianity. The Quay is the most characteristic bit of +Waterford. Across the bridge, from Mount Misery or Cromwell's Rock, two +points of vantage, excellent views of the surroundings can be had. The +Suir, shining silvery, steals in and out among the hills and by the old +town into the sea. The most interesting of the ancient monuments in +Waterford is what is commonly called the "French Church," which, more +correctly, is entitled "The Holy Ghost Friary." Authorities agree in +assigning the date of its foundation to 1240, but its history has never +been written. After the Edict of Nantes, the fugitive Huguenots formed a +little colony in Waterford. The Corporation granted a salary to their +minister, and they were provided with a place of worship in the choir of +the old church. All that remain of this once gorgeous pile of +buildings are the ruins of the tower, Lady Chapel, chancel, and nave. +The style is Early English, and the most attractive feature is the +graceful three-lighted east window. The Catholic Cathedral is worth a +visit. Within easy reach of the Quay is Ballybricken, the heart of the +bacon industry, and the home of the best known body of pig-buyers in +Ireland. These men are almost a community to themselves. They have their +own traditions, and are more like an organisation which would have +sprung up from a church guild centuries ago than in any way a modern +trades union. Formerly Waterford was remarkable for the manufacture of +beautiful cut glass, but the industry has died away. The housekeeper who +possesses specimens of the art considers herself lucky indeed in her +possession, as collectors are continually on the alert to procure them. +In the immediate vicinity of Waterford itself there are many beauty +spots and places of interest. In the suburb of Newtown stands the +paternal home of Lord Roberts of Waterford and Candahar, besides whom on +its roll of famous children Waterford includes the names of Charles +Keane and Vincent Wallace. Portlaw, four and a half miles away, on the +south bank of the Suir, was once the centre of a thriving cotton +industry. Here an order may be had at the estate office to visit +Curraghmore, the residence of the Marquis of Waterford. The magnificent +demesne includes over four thousand acres, and Curraghmore is possessed +of the best-blooded stud of hunters in Ireland. + +[Illustration: Imperial Hotel, Waterford.] + +[Illustration: Curraghmore.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Tramore.] + +~Tramore~, seven miles away, is reached by train in fifteen minutes. It +is one of the most popular watering places in the South of Ireland, and +in the height of the season it is estimated that about four thousand +visitors augment the normal population of two thousand. Many of the +Waterford merchants live there, and their villas and the houses of the +town, rising one street above another on the side of the hill, make a +pretty picture when viewed from the strand. The hotels are numerous, +the Grand Hotel can be recommended as being specially comfortable, while +there are three or four other hotels where very good accommodation can +be had. The lodging-house accommodation is equal to that to be obtained +at any Irish seaside resort. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Evening at Tramore.] + +In addition to capital sea and trout fishing, the visitor can enjoy the +pleasures of golf and lawn-tennis, and during the summer months races +are frequently held at the Tramore Flying Course, which is situated +within view of the town. The views of this pleasantly situated holiday +reunion will recall to many minds happy days spent by the Sounding Sea. + +The Rabbit Burrow, a little further on, is a mile in length, and helps +to divide the Back Strand from the spacious bay. Just before reaching +this Burrow, the visitor will see a tombstone erected to the memory of +those who were lost in the "Sea Horse" transport, in January, 1816, when +returning from the Peninsular Campaign. No less than 362 lost their +lives in this terrible disaster. At the western side of Tramore there +are many places along the rock-bound coast well worth a visit. Passing +along in the Newtown direction we come in view of the Ladies' Cove; +here, years ago, a fishing pier was built by the Board of Works. It was +swept right away one stormy night over two decades ago, and has not been +replaced since. Along the Cliff Road we catch views of Gun's Cove, and +the Gillameen Cove, where excellent bathing facilities, free of charge, +can be availed of by the visitor. + +On the western shore, twelve miles by road from Waterford, is the pretty +watering place of ~Dunmore~. It is situated at the mouth of the river +Suir in a valley gently sloping to the sea, and is protected from the +north winds by a wood which, in the hot summer days, is a most +delightful resort for visitors. There is also a public park and tennis +ground, and the facilities for bathing, particularly for gentlemen, +leave nothing to be desired. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Dunmore.] + +In the early part of the last century the place was a mail packet +station for the mails to and from England. The harbour was built by the +Government at a cost of about £100,000, and is at present under the +control of the Board of Works. Here, in the fishing season, are boats +from all parts of the Kingdom fishing for herring and mackerel, and +special steamers are constantly running to and from Milford with the +harvest of the sea. + +There are some particularly good villas and houses which can be rented +in the season, and there is a good hotel just over the harbour, while +rooms are to be had on reasonable terms at many houses in the town. For +persons who desire a select quiet place to spend a holiday in, it can be +recommended strongly, while for those who are fond of sea-fishing or +yachting no better place in Ireland can be had. Although there is no +railway connection with Waterford cars run daily, the fare being only +_1s._ for the twelve miles. + +Above the confluence of the Barrow and Suir, six and a half miles from +the city, from the top of the hill over Cheekpoint (Side a fairy)--where +"the river Rosse meets the river of Waterford"--a grand panorama +presents itself. In the distance the mountains shoulder one another for +prominence; the Comeraghs, the many peaked Galtees, and + + "Sweet Slievenamon, the darling and pride, + With soft flowing bosom and brow like a bride." + +This beautiful mountain owes its name, "The Hill of the Women," to a +Finnian legend, which tells that Finn M'Cool promised to make his wife +of whichever of the fair women of Ireland could reach its summit first, +when all were started from the foot. Grainne Oge, the Gaelic Helen, of +course was heroine of the day, and Finn's taking her was the origin of +one of the most enthralling of the Celtic romances. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Dunmore Harbour.] + +Among the more interesting objects at Dunbrody are St. Catherine's +Church, an old time dependency of the Abbey, and the splendid remains +of the Cistercian Monastery, rising above the meadows by which the +Campile Stream flows. The monastic church in general style is Early +English, and is fairly preserved. It dates from the twelfth century, and +was founded by Henri de Montmorenzi, Marshal to Henry II.--the same who +was killed at the Curragh. + +There is a severe simplicity about its lines which gives an impression +of great dignity. The crenelated Tower springs from the nave and +transept. The Abbots of Dunbrody sat as Lords in Parliament, and +exercised civil jurisdiction. Above Dunbrody, on the river opposite "The +Little Island," where was an ancient hermitage, in a straight line is +Ballinakill House, where James II. spent his last night in Ireland, on +the day before that celebrated in the ballad, which tells:-- + + "Righ Shemus he has gone to France, + And left his crown behind, + Ill luck be their's, both day and night, + Put running in his mind." + +~Passage East~ (seven miles), now a fishing village, with spider-legged +spit light, was reduced by Cromwell in 1649. The old mole still stands. +At Ballyhack, across the ferry, a strong, square castle is well +preserved. "New Geneva," in the vicinity, was garrisoned with Hessians +during the Rebellion of '98. It is mentioned in the well-known Irish +song, "The Croppy Boy." The place received its name in 1786, when a +colony of Genoese exiles were established there. On the Waterford coast, +from the city to where the Blackwater kisses the sea, beside a range of +noble cliffs, there are many points of interest. The Tower of Hook, +standing one hundred feet high, on the promontory of the same name on +the Wexford side, is attributed amongst others to Reginald the Dane, +Ross MacRume, the founder of New Ross, and Florence de la Hague (1172). +Its circular walls are of great thickness and strength. When Strongbow +heard of this Tower of Hook, with Crook (Norse, Krok a nook) on the +western side, he is alleged to have said "He would take Waterford by +Hook or Crook," and thus originated a common saying which has come down +to our own days. The Saltees, two islands off the Wexford coast, were +the refuge to which Colclough and Bagnall Harvey hastened in vain after +the suppression of the Rebellion in '98. Helvick Head, the name of which +also betrays its Danish origin, marks the entrance to Dungarvan Bay. The +line running from Waterford to Limerick Junction contains many places of +interest, from which short tours may be made. As we come near to +~Carrick-on-Suir~ the castle comes into view. The present building was +mainly erected by the former Earl of Ormonde, "Black Tom," as he is +known in history. He was one of the many Irish gallants who found favour +in the eyes of Queen Elizabeth. From Carrick, a drive of eight miles +brings us to Lough Coumshinawn, a lonely tarn lying high among the +Comeragh mountains, on one side of which the cliff rises perpendicularly +to a height of seven hundred feet. The railway from Carrick runs through +the beautiful valley of the Suir to Kilsheelan, and then passes to the +left of the Knockmealdown mountains to ~Clonmel~, the capital of the +"premier county." The town is pleasantly placed in a thriving centre of +local trade. It figured largely in the fights between Cromwellian and +Confederate, and some of the old battlements still stand witness to its +strength in bygone times. The peasantry have a tradition that a cloud +will ever hang above the town since Father Sheehy's death in the last +century. The tradition is hinted at in the beautiful emigrant ballad +"Shameen Dhu," by Katherine Tynan:-- + + "Now, God watch over you, Shameen, + An' His blessed Mother Mary! + 'Twas you that had the lightest heart + In all sweet Tipperary-- + + 'Twas you could sing the blackbird's song, + In dry or rainy weather: + Avic, the long-road wasn't long + Whin we thravelled it together. + + Sure, scores of times in the mornin' bright + You sung this very road, + You med the mare's heart bate so light + She never felt her load; + 'Twas you could lilt wid the thrush's trill, + Ah, well, avic machree! + God grant you may be singin' still + In that lonely far counthrie!" + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Holy Cross Abbey at Thurles.] + +The name of Laurence Sterne, author of "Tristram Shandy," and of the +gorgeous Countess of Blessington, are both associated with Clonmel as +their birthplace. Through a mountain cut, appropriately called "The +Wilderness," the railway line runs aside to Thurles. The little church +of Rathronan, standing high on the hill, was the scene of the +sensational Arbuthnot abduction in the last century. Those who wish for +details of that unhappy love affair will find the story told in faithful +words elsewhere. The demesne lands between Clonmel and Fethard are many. +~Fethard~ was an old walled town, it defied the Cromwellians, and +surrendered with all the honours of war. After treaty and terms were +agreed on, the Roundheads found that what they had mistaken as gaping +mouths of cannon on the fortress were nothing more dangerous than +innocent churns placed in positions of pretence, not defence. The +bogland from Fethard to Thurles is uninteresting; the intermediate +stations are Farranalleen, Laffan's Bridge, and Horse and Jockey, at +which collieries are still being worked. At Thurles we meet the main +line of the Great Southern and Western. ~Thurles~, originally a Danish +town and the scene of the battle between the Norsemen and Irish, +afterwards became a fortalice of the Knights Templars. Here, by the +bridge across the Suir, the remains of the old settlement are still to +be seen. Four miles distant, standing by the banks of the river, +surrounded by tall trees, are the remains of the once great Cistercian +~Holy Cross Abbey~. It was built in 1168-69 to house the relic of the +True Cross sent by the Pope to Brian Boru's grandson, Donald, King of +Thomond. This interesting relic, after centuries of vicissitudes, is now +enshrined at the Convent of the Ursulines, in Blackrock, Cork. On the +feasts of the Finding of the True Cross (May 3rd), and of the Exaltation +of the Holy Cross (September 14th), and on every Friday in Lent, it is +presented for public veneration. Thurles is the seat of Episcopal +residence of the Archdiocese of Cashel. On the main line higher than +Thurles is Templemore, founded by the Knights Templars. Between Thurles +and the Limerick Junction is Goold's Cross station, six miles from +Cashel. The noblest evidence of the early civilization of Ireland is to +be found in ~Cashel Of the Kings~. Generally the buildings date from the +early twelfth century, the Round Tower being much earlier and the +Cathedral later. Cormac's Chapel was consecrated in 1134, being built by +the Saint King of Munster. It is rich Norman work, comprising nave, +chancel, and towers at the transepts. The doorways and chancel arch are +elaborate. The Round Tower is unique when compared with the other +buildings, as it is of sandstone. It is connected with the transept of +the Cathedral. The pointed windows, choir, transepts, and tower are very +beautiful. In the burial-ground outside is the famous Cross of Cashel, +with a sculptured effigy of St. Patrick. The whole group gathered +together on the massive Rock of Cashel, whose firmness is a proverb in +Ireland, presents an imposing array. This Cathedral was the one burnt by +the Earl of Kildare in 1495, when his excuse was that he thought the +Archbishop was within. Here, in 1647, a bloody tragedy fell out. +Murragh-an-Theathaun, "Murrough of the Burnings," as the peasantry still +call Lord Inchiquin, massacred a number of women and children, who +sought sanctuary here when Cashel had fallen before his siege train. At +the foot of the rock are the cruciform remains of the Abbey of the +Cistercians. If, instead of diverging from Clonmel to Thurles, we +continue to the Limerick Junction, we pass Cahir, a military station +with an ancient Castle in excellent repair. From Cahir, tourists can +drive to Cashel, to Ardfinane, or to ~Mitchelstown~ _via_ Clogheen. The +Caves at Mitchelstown may be visited from Fermoy, Lismore, or Clogheen, +and if the visitor is sojourning at any of these places he should find +his way to these wonderful formations. Besides the caves, Mitchelstown +contains Caherderinny Castle, Kilbehiny, and Mitchelstown Castle, the +residence of the Kingston family. Leaving the village of Kilbehiny we +cross to Skereenarinka, "the height for dancing," and follow a narrow +hilly road on the Galtee side which leads to the caves, in the townland +of Coolagarranroe. The different chambers of the larger caves, of which +the Kingston gallery is most beautiful, have been named: "the House of +Lords," "the House of Commons," "the Cross of the Four Roads," "the +Scotchman's," "O'Leary's," and "O'Callaghan's" caves, "the Altar," "the +Closet," "the Cellar," and "the Garret." The smaller objects of interest +within have been called: "Lot's Wife," "Mary Queen of Scots," "the Bed +of Honour," "the Cat and Kittens," "the Flitch of Bacon," &c. From +Clogheen to Tipperary we cross the Suir, and follow the foot of the +Galtees. The surrounding country is picturesque and contains some of the +finest pasture land in Ireland, being part of what is known in Munster +as the "Golden Vale." Four miles away by a beautiful road, through the +rising-grounds, the Glen of Aherlow can be reached. The glen is richly +wooded, and from Newbridge over the Aherlow river, Galteemore (3,015 +feet), the highest peak of the range may be reached. Tipperary town is a +good market place, and is pleasantly situated beneath Slievenamon. The +only relic of its former grandeur is that of the Augustinian Friary, a +foundation of Henry the Third's reign. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Rock of Cashel.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Waterford District, + see end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, + Fishing, Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Dungarvan.] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Killarney and Glengarriff. + + +Killarney.--From Limerick Junction to Mallow, where the branch line runs +into Kerry, the tourist to Killarney runs by many places of interest. +~Emly~, now a dwindled village, was once a diocesan city. During the +wars of the Commonwealth, Terence Albertus O'Brien, Bishop of Emly, was +executed in Limerick by Ireton. His stole and pectoral cross are still +in the possession of representatives of the family to which he belonged +at Mitchelstown. + +In the rich plain under the Ballyhoura hills, "the land flowing with +milk," is the ancient town of ~Kilmallock~. It was the citadel of the +Earls of Desmond when they held high their crests, and every stone in +the place is historical. + +Two of its four gates still remain, and among the ruins, which have +secured it the name of the "Baalbec of Ireland," are those of the old +Dominican Priory and Abbey Church. In the former is the mutilated grave +of the White Knight, a name still loathsome in the peasant's ear, and on +whom the bards have let fall their choicest curses. + +Lough Gur is of interest to the antiquary. It is ten miles to the north, +and was the centre of the Desmond country. Here of old, the Kings of +Cashel kept their Grenan or "Sunny Place" for feasting. The cyclopean +structure in the vicinity points to the place as being of importance in +pre-historic times. From Charleville, a thriving town, runs a line of +railway direct to Limerick. Buttevant and Mallow are particularly +referred to elsewhere. Millstreet is the border town on the mearings of +Cork and Kerry. + +Beyond the bogland country outside Millstreet is the village of Cullen, +where tradition says no smith has been known to thrive. Saint Lateerin, +a virgin of early Christian days, near here made her recluse, and every +day she walked across the bog, and took "living fire" in her kirtle from +the forge to her home. The smith once remarking the prettiness of her +white feet, she momentarily forgot her vow of chastity, and the fire +burnt through the homespun and blistered her feet. She went back to her +cell, and prayed that no smith should ever thrive in Cullen, and none +has ever tried to do so! + +~Rathmore~ is on the high road to Gneeveguillia mountain, and to the +north of the station, and at Christmas time, 1896, occurred the fearful +_débâcle_ of the bog, which struck terror into the simple inhabitants, +and, not unnaturally, was attributed by them to super-natural causes. +Two hundred acres of Bogach-na-Mine formed a landslip and rolled in a +huge mass southwards, sweeping away several little farmsteads and +suffocating the inhabitants and cattle. At ~Headford~, the junction for +Kenmare, the scenery is very wild, and all around + + "Kerry is pushing her high headlands out + To give us the kindly greeting." + +At last, after about a four hours' run, if we came by the special +tourist train from Dublin, we have completed our one hundred and +eighty-six miles, and are in sight of + +KILLARNEY, + +the home of lakes, which has well been called "the Gem of the Western +World": its magnificent mountain peaks, its green swards and gushing +cascades, all surrounded with an atmosphere of romance and tradition. +Outside the railway station, we are face to face with the finest hotel +in the south of Ireland. Well placed, well managed, it combines all the +comforts of a home with the convenience of a well-appointed hostelry. It +is within easy reach of the principal points of interest. + +[Illustration: Boating at Killarney] + +[Illustration: Great Southern Hotel--Killarney.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Guy & Co., Cork._ Lakes of Killarney.] + +The grounds adjoin Lord Kenmare's beautiful demesne and Deer Park, which +skirts the lake shores, and contain the splendid Golf Links. + +Killarney, or "the Church of the Sloetrees," lies on a flat plateau, +within a mile from the shores of the far-famed Lough Lene, as the three +lakes, popularly known as the Lakes of Killarney, are called in Irish. +The town possesses an Episcopal Palace, a cathedral and churches of +interest, besides a monastery and School of Arts and Crafts. Otherwise +it deserves little attention; but on fair days, when the peasantry from +the neighbouring parishes crowd in, it presents a lively and varying +aspect. If the town is insignificant, not so its surroundings, for +nowhere else in the wide world is there such a combination of charms and +variety of beauty, in mountain and lake scenery, thrown together. + + "For how could river, lake, and sea + In softer sister hues agree? + Or hills of passionate purple glow + Far and near more proudly flow? + And when will summer kiss awake + Lovelier flowers by lawn or brake? + Or brighter berries blush between + Foliage of a fresher green?" + +There is a story of a tourist who, lingering long in the Holy Land, was +pained at the irreverent hurry of an American, who arrived there one +afternoon, scurried over the sacred places, and prepared to depart +betimes on the morrow. He timidly inquired of the swift-foot why he, who +had come so far, rushed away so quickly. "Sir," said the American, "I am +timed to do Europe in a fortnight. I have thrown in the Holy Land, but +if I stay here longer than one night I cannot see Killarney, which takes +three days." He was a wise man in his generation. Although enterprising +people have attempted to do the tour of the Lakes in a day, they have +always gone away more than satisfied with what they saw, but with hearts +hungry to return at a future date, and behold the beauties they had +left unseen. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ On the Upper Lake, Killarney.] + +The ~Lakes Of Killarney~ are three in number, connected by a +swift-flowing stream, the Long Range, and emptying their waters through +the river Laune into Castle Haven, on the Kerry coast. The entire +journey can be performed by boat, but in the suggested tours given, both +car, and boat, and ponies are pressed into our service. + +The divisions of the Lough Lene are:--The Upper Lake (extreme length, +two-and-a-half miles; extreme breadth, half-a-mile); the Torc, or Middle +Lake (extreme length, two miles; extreme breadth, seven-eighths of a +mile); and the Lower Lake (extreme length, five and one-eighth miles; +extreme breadth, three miles). The first glimpse caught of the lakes, +lying like broad mirrors beneath the high mountains, is a vision of fair +delight. Like tall clansmen, Mangerton, Carnthoul, and the gathering +Cruacha dhu M'Gillicuddy--the black reeks of the McGillicuddy--muster +around, as it were, to re-tell us + + "The tale of the spell-stricken band, + All entranced, with their bridles and broad swords in hand, + Who await but the word to give Erin her own"-- + +that old legend of the sleeping warriors garrisoned within the +mountain's sides, which is met with in more than one Irish county. The +Upper Lake is characterised by an untamed, peerless outline, and so near +to the mountains does it lie, that the fissures in their rugged sides +are almost countable, and the fingers of fancy almost touch the gorse on +their slopes. Gliding over its waters, we readily see in them a +land-locked sea. A ridge of the Glena mountains shuts it out from the +north, the many-peaked reeks guard the passes to the west, and to the +south stands up Derrycunnihy--"The Oak Wood of the Rabbits"--between +which and Torc is the fair bend of a Glen Coumagloun. Between the lips +of the Lakes and the feet of the hills there appears no distance + + "Save just a trace of silver sand + Marks where the water meets the land." + +Muffling the boatmen's oars for a moment, we can realise that +indescribable solemnity with which silent nature hushes everything. Even +the countless streams that have lost their way across the highlands, in +their hurry to join the Lakes, seem to cease from babbling. But +following the sinuous Long Range when we reach the still water beneath +the Eagle's Nest, Nadanullar, is the psychological moment to awaken the +echoes that eternally haunt the frowning eyry. A bugle-call sounded here +is taken up by the barricades of rock, and is repeated even ten times +over. Small wonder that the fairy hosts are credited with passing it +along their lines! The mountains take up their dying tones of sweet +sounds, and answer it one to the other until the ear can no longer +follow it through space. The ferns and rich foliage of the mountain side +trail their long fingers in the water, and cluster and quicken among the +crevices of the rocks. Recently the Laureate visited Ireland for the +first time; hitherto this land of poetry had been to him but "the +damnable country" of the politician. He came, he saw, but Killarney +conquered; and he, like all others who have gazed upon its beauty, +renders tribute where it rightly belongs. "Damnable" is not the +adjective to apply to a heavenly land, of which he truly says:-- + +"Such varied and vigorous vegetation I have seen no otherwhere; and when +one has said that, one has gone far towards awarding the prize for +natural beauty. But vegetation, at once robust and graceful, is but the +fringe and decoration of that enchanting district. The tender grace of +wood and water is set in a frame-work of hills--now stern, now ineffably +gentle, now dimpling with smiles; now frowning and rugged with impending +storm; now muffled and mysterious with mist, only to gaze out on you +again with clear and candid sunshine. Here the trout leaps; there the +eagle soars; and there beyond the wild deer dash through the arbutus +coverts, through which they have come to the margin of the lake to +drink, and, scared by your footstep or your oar, are away back to +crosiered bracken or heather covered moorland. But the first, the final, +the deepest and most enduring impression of Killarney is that of beauty +unspeakably tender, which puts on at times a garb of grandeur and a look +of awe, only in order to heighten by passing contrast the sense of soft +insinuating loveliness. How the missel thrushes sing, as well they may! +How the streams and runnels gurgle, and leap, and laugh! For the sound +of journeying water is never out of your ears; the feeling of the moist, +the fresh, the vernal, is never out of your heart. My companion agreed +with me, that there is nothing in England or Scotland as beautiful as +Killarney--meaning by Killarney its lakes, its streams, its hills, its +vegetation; and if mountain, wood, and water--harmoniously +blent--constitute the most perfect and adequate loveliness that nature +presents, it surely must be owned that it has all the world over no +superior." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Shooting the Rapids.] + +Leaving the ~Upper Lake~ behind, and bidding adieu to the green islands +that stud its breast with arbutus and the cedars of Lebanon, the Old +Weir Bridge meets the eye. 'Neath its arch the waters come down with +foam and force, the oars are shipped, and we shoot straight through the +eye of the rapid, thanks to the strong arm and sure nerve of the +oarsmen. The beautiful reach here is the bosom "where the bright waters +meet." Amid exquisite combination of colour, a Vallambrosa strewed with +ferns, lichens, mosses, rich green hollies and arbutus with many +coloured berries, we tread our way by a passage of beauty round Dinis +Island into the ~Middle~ or ~Torc Lake~, sheltered by the broad breast +of the mountain from which it takes its name. Like "Muckross," the +"Pleasant Point of Wild Swine," the name Torc is called after the wild +boars, which in former years went "gerasening" over its slopes. Rising +abruptly, the mountain stands clear between Mangerton and Glena, the +lower sides well wooded. ~Innis Dinish~, the island at the "beginning of +the waters," is the port for boats. The Cottage may be visited. The +Whirlpool, between the waters of the lake and river, has been called +O'Sullivan's Punch Bowl. Drohid-na-Brickeen, "The Bridge of Little +Trout," or Brickeen Bridge, and Doolah, where the disused marble +quarries and copper mines are still pointed out, are within a short +distance. At the estuary of the Devil's Stream, which flows through the +ravines on the mountain side, is the Devil's Island--almost +inaccessible--on which a few stunted trees manage to secure a precarious +existence. Within the little bay of Dundag is Goose Island. The rocks +and caves along the lake shores are shrouded with traditions of +O'Donoghue, Chieftain of the Glens. A long cave is called "The Wine +Cellar"; at the end is "O'Donoghue's Arm Chair"; his Butler, a solitary +crag, is called "Jackybwee." The most interesting of the fissures made +by the waters in the rock side are what the enterprising boatmen have +agreed to call "Colleen Bawn Rock." By the beautiful Glena Bay, we enter +the Lower Lake, which is the largest and most charming of the group. It +sleeps beneath the guardian heights of the Toomies Hills, and a vision +of more loveliness is nowhere to be found. Low-lying shores, to the east +and north, are jungled with the fronds of the hill ferns. + + "Oh, the Fern! the fresh hill Fern! + That girds our blue lakes from Lough Ine to Lough Erne; + That waves on the crags, like the plume of a King, + And bends like a nun, over clear well and spring; + The fairy's tall palm-tree, the heath birds fresh nest, + And the couch the red deer deems the sweetest and best; + With the free winds to fan it, and dew-drops to gem, + Oh, what can ye match with its beautiful stem!" + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Eagle's Nest Mountain, +Killarney.] + +The highest mountain in Ireland, ~Carrantual~,[4] at one side lifts its +lofty brow, "crowned with tiaras fashioned in the sky." On its summit an +outlaw, known in Munster as the "Shon" or Hawk, after many sleepless +nights, footsore and weary, slept here with a prayer, "Thank God, at +last I am above all my enemies." The peasantry pronounce the name +"Carntwohill," which translated means, the left-handed or inverted +sickle. The expansiveness of the Lower Lake appears at first to minimise +its beauty, when compared with its smaller companions. But the more its +loveliness is explored, the greater the revelation of the harmony and +luxuriance of the landscape. No less than thirty-five islands, like +beauty spots of a fairy "drop scene," bedeck the silver sheen of its +surface. The largest of these, ~Innisfallen~, almost midway between the +eastern and western shores, is some thirty acres in extent, and is +engirdled by leafy bowers of green trees. Shaggy sheep are couched in +repose, or are busy with its verdant lawn. In the early morning, or +tender gloaming which closes the Munster day, the holy place is + + "Quiet as a nun, + Breathless with adoration." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ The Turnpike Cap of Dunloe.] + +Shafts of the dawning or waning sun, as the hour may be, illumine the +fair pageant. The wavering outlines of the hills make the turret-tops +to the dark green of the woods and the emerald of the meadows. The +richest of colours from hill, tree, and rock accumulate on the surface +of the Lake, burnished like silver. To-day the natural scenery is the +same as of old, and few will wonder that here a saint found delights to +prepare him in some degree for the pleasures stored in eternity. Of St. +Finian Labra we know little beyond that he was a native of Ely +O'Carroll, then a part of Munster, and was a disciple of St. Brendan. +But his spirit loiters around Innisfallen, and the most casual of +travellers will tread lightly on the ground hallowed by his footsteps. +The monastic remains are many, but by the enthusiastic antiquary alone +can their fragments and chief features be traced. "_The Annals of +Innisfallen_," which form one of the chief sources of Irish history, +were written here 600 years ago. Leaving the "Holy Island," we cross the +lake and land at the foot of the Toomies Mountains, famous in +pre-historic myths, to visit the O'Sullivan Cascade. The legend, which +is too often wasted on sceptical ears, tells that O'Sullivan, a captain +of his people, renowned amongst them for fleetness of foot and prowess +as a hunter, on one occasion went to hunt the red deer. The faint yellow +rays of morning were lighting up the eastern sky as he went forth. Gaily +the deep-mouthed dogs obeyed, sniffing the fresh breeze across the +mountain purpled with heather. Scarce had he left home when a +magnificent stag bounded across his path. Swift as the lightning flash +the dogs sprung upon the track--away across the moors and down the +glens, on the scent they went. Throughout that livelong day O'Sullivan +followed the chase, weary, tired, and thirsty, but still determined to +make the prize his own. At length night, and darkness with it, came; the +stag could be seen no more, the dogs, too, were at fault, and the scent +was lost. Disappointed, and spent with the labour of the chase, the +huntsman blew a shrill blast on his horn to call the dogs to him, and +faced for home across the hills. But there was a voice that, loud and +clear, called upon him--"O'Sullivan, O'Sullivan, turn back!" Brave and +fearless, like his race, he turned round, to behold before him the +centre of so many cycles of romance--Finn MacCool. "Why do you dare +chase my stag?" asked Finn. "Because it was the finest that man ever +saw," answered O'Sullivan. The answer pleased Finn MacCool. +"O'Sullivan," said he, "you are a valiant man, and have been wasted in +the long chase. You thirst, and I will give you to drink." So saying, he +stamped his huge heel upon the hard rock, and forth burst the waters, +seething and dashing as they do to this day. O'Sullivan quenched his +thirst and sped on his way. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Meeting of the Waters, +Killarney.] + +From the innermost recess of the glen the water flows down, in one of +the most fascinating spots to be found within all the delicious realm of +Kerry. The ivy hangs in dense draperies from the rocks, a sweet disorder +of arbutus, evergreens, and all the flowers that grow in a radiant land, +daringly lean across the canyon, and vainly try to trip the rushing +stream, which, in cascade after cascade, flings itself with passionate +energy, and a ceaseless murmur, over the rocks. The placidness of the +huge lake is in strange contrast to the noisy stream which so excitedly +hastens to meet it, and, as if awed by its dignity, as it comes nearer +and nearer the mountain stream, sinks its voice, until in a subdued sigh +it falls into the breast of the lake. Underneath the projecting rock, +and overhung with luxuriant herbs, O'Sullivan's Grotto offers a quiet +retreat. Following the wooded shores of Glena Bay, we pass Stags, Burnt, +and other islands, and come to Glena Cottage, hiding in the foliage of +leafy trees. Glena means "the valley of good fortune," and a name more +suggestive of happier thoughts than weird Glownamorra across the +lake--"the glen of the dead." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Muckross Abbey, Killarney.] + +A mile's drive through the pleasant demesne lands of Muckross brings us +to the water's edge at Castlelough Bay, in the middle lake, on a +promontry of which the ruins of ~Muckross Abbey~ are to be seen. Here, +in the fifteenth century, Donald M'Carthy founded an Abbey for +Franciscan friars. The quiet cloisters in the northwest transept, with +their varying pointed and rounded arches, are unique. The recessed +doorway by which we enter is very beautiful. The towers and east window +are in fair preservation. The monuments within the ruined pile tell us +that it + + "contains + In death's embrace M'Carthy More's remains," + +and also reminds us that + + "If Erin's chiefs deserve a generous tear, + Heir of their worth, O'Donoghue lies here." + +In the centre of the cloisters there grows a great yew tree, spreading +its many branches and shade over them, and above the side walls, forming +a dark cowl, which overshadows the old house of the monks. In ancient +Erin the yew tree was regarded as sacred, and in its shade the Druids +performed their mystic rites. With the early Christians, as an +evergreen, it was a symbol of Life Eternal. + +The peasants still inherit some of the awe with which the sacred tree +was held in former days, and they are loth to hurt it with the loss of a +single leaf. All impressive is the desolate majesty of Muckross, +whatever time it is visited! + + "But the gay beams of lightsome day + Gild but to flout the ruins grey." + +At night, when the pale ghost of the moon looks across the lake, when +the mountains are shrouded in shadows, when the waters are lulling the +slumbering land, + + "And the owlet hoots o'er the dead man's grave," + +the solemnity of the scene surpasses even that of fair Melrose, by the +distant Tweed, of which Sir Walter Scott tells. + +Driving past the modern mansion in the demesne, along ~Torc Lake~, by +the groves of Dinis, and through the arches of the Old Weir Bridge, the +river glistens and sparkles in the sun, while the distant calmer water +lies deep in sleepy shadows. Beyond the peculiar rock known as the +White Deer we pass through the Tunnel cut under the huge slope of the +mountains. Here is a point of view which fascinates all visitors, and +from which an ample picture of the surroundings may be secured. A mile +further we cross the Galway river, rushing down a well-worn channel +through Cournaglown, the valley sides of which are covered with oak +trees. Already the ceaseless chorus of Derrycunnihy Cascade fills our +ears. With tumult and cries of havoc, the water springs from an altitude +on the mountain side, dividing its force into many minor cataracts, as +it forces the passage barricaded by rocks and boulders, to unite them +again in a deep pool, and after a second's rest, it musters its full +strength, and falls in a torrent towards the Middle Lake. Colman's Leap, +across the stream beneath the Eagle's Nest, is shown here, and of it a +legend similar to others in many parts of Ireland is told. A mile +eastward, along the Kenmare road, we come to ~Torc Waterfall~, lovely as +a capricious _colleen_, whose modes are all the more "deludering" for +their uncertainty--Torc, whether tripping gently or rushing angrily, "to +one thing constant never," makes its bed in a fairy realm, a leafy +garden of ever-changing beauty. Larch and alder, arbutus, oak, and hazel +thickly curtain the Fall from the passing glance. But a sylvan path +o'erstrewn with leaves, and bordered with many fronded ferns, discovers +the fountain in full bearing. White with foam, and angry for its long +delay in the grip of Mangerton, and the hollow of the Devil's Punch +Bowl, the flood breaks through the wall of rocks seventy feet high, and +spits a shower of spray on every futile thing which attempts to stem its +course or stay its purpose. The panorama spread out beneath the rocks of +Torc comprehends, in all their glory of colour and contrast, the Middle +and Lower Lakes beneath the mountains. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Torc Waterfall, Killarney.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Ross Castle, Killarney.] + +Two and a-half miles northwards by the King's Bridge, or about one mile +direct from Killarney, within sight of the ~Lower Lake~ and the Purple +Mountains, are the ruins of Aghadoe, the "Church of the two Yew Trees," +founded under the blessing of Saint Finian. The remains of the Round +Tower and Abbot's Castle can still be seen, but these and the eighth +century doorway of the old church are all that have weathered the wind +of centuries. The summit of the old tower is a vantage point for a +vista. Dr. Todhunter has written a beautiful ballad, in imitation of the +passionate Irish laments, for an outlaw who was buried there. + + + AGHADOE. + + There's a glade in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + There's a green and silent glade in Aghadoe, + Where we met, my love and I, love's fair planet in the sky, + O'er that sweet and silent glade in Aghadoe. + + There's a glen in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + There's a deep and secret glen in Aghadoe, + Where I hid him from the eyes of the redcoats and their spies + That year the trouble came to Aghadoe. + + Oh! my curse on one black heart in Aghadoe, Aghadoe; + On Shaun Dhuv, my mother's son, in Aghadoe! + When your throat fries in hell's drouth, salt the flame be in your mouth, + For the treachery you did in Aghadoe! + + For they tracked me to that glen in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + When the price was on his head in Aghadoe; + O'er the mountain, through the wood, as I stole to him with food, + Where in hiding lone he lay in Aghadoe. + + But they never took him living in Aghadoe, Aghadoe; + With the bullets in his heart in Aghadoe, + There he lay, the head--my breast keeps the warmth where once + 'twould rest-- + Gone, to win the traitor's gold, from Aghadoe! + + Oh! to creep into that cairn in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + There to rest upon his breast in Aghadoe! + Sure your dog for you could die with no truer heart than I, + Your own love, cold on your cairn in Aghadoe. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ The Gap of Dunloe.] + +The nearest boat place for Innisfallen is at ~Ross Castle~. We approach +it from the high road across the moat, where once the drawbridge was let +up and down. The old keep, wearing a cotamore of ivy, still guards the +water's edge. By a spiral stone staircase we reach the battlements and +look out across the lake. + +The Castle held out for Charles the First, but was dismantled by Ludlow. +It was originally a fort of "The O'Donoghue," the chief who centres in +the many traditions which the boatmen weave around every object of +interest in Killarney. He lies enchanted beneath the lake, with a city +full of his people. But at times he has come across the water on his +fiery steed, or danced to the Rincead-fadda on the shores. Whoever sees +him is fortunate, because he gives "good luck, which is better than +money," to all whose eyes meet his. + +The ~Gap of Dunloe~ is a gloomy mountain pass cut through the rough +rocky slope in the hills between the Toomies and the Macgillicuddy's +Reeks. It is a magnificent defile, four miles long. The rough +bridle-path running through it, at times almost on the edge of +precipices, beneath which the wild goats flock. It is approached by a +winding road, embroidered on one side by a shady little grove of fir, +larch, stunted oaks, and mountain ash. Through the little windows +between the trees, when the sun shines, the reflection of the river Loe +is caught, as it creeps humbly on its way to the lakes. On the other +side, the mountains throw up a huge wall. Bidding good-bye to the little +grove, vegetation seems to fear to enter the desolate, sterile places in +the throat of the Gap. Where the river widens, at Cushvalley Lough, the +industrious echo-makers most usually greet the visitor. One has scarcely +recovered from the warmth of their courteous welcome, when some +suggestive volunteer, aborigine to the place, with a "Mr. Bugler, God +spare you your wind," secures their services; although you do not call +the tune, you are expected to pay the musicians. But the trifle spent +on the gunpowder for their cannons, or the breath from their lungs, is +well repaid by the mighty mass of air they start into waves of music. +Here, too, the "auxiliary forces," or pony boys, besiege us with their +sure-footed, shaggy "coppaleens." They have come galloping down the pass +at break-neck speed to lend us the assistance of their light cavalry. +Wonderful creatures they are, these horses and riders. The peasant boys +are for all the world the modern prototypes of those "rake-helly horse +boys" of Queen Elizabeth's reign, who filled so many pages of the State +papers. Sinew and muscle knit their loose limbs together, and, in their +eyes, mild and calm as those of the quiet cattle in the field, but like +the surface of their native lakes, covering unfathomed depths, they +conceal souls swept by deep thoughts, and minds clouded by many +memories. The long unrenewed, but still to be distinguished, Spanish +strain is shown in many of their olive-tinted faces and dark features. +But guides safe, and true, and courteous are they, who know every perch +of the dark Pass, where at times the craggy cliffs shut out the canopy +of the sky, and attempt to precipitate themselves across the track. The +point where the path is narrowest, the peasants have called the "Pike." +From it onward the mountains begin to recede, and the Pass is more open +until, crossing a shoulder of the ~Purple Mountain~ past the three great +expansions of the Commeen Thomeen Lakes, into which St. Patrick is said +to have driven the last serpent, we suddenly come on a surprising +spectacle of magnificent scenery. Here, from the head of the Gap, we see +the Upper Lake spread beneath, to the west, Coomeenduff, or the Black +Valley, dark as the valley of the shadow of death, in charming contrast +with the stern grandeur of the mountains. Their melancholy seems to +reign supreme; the long valley is steeped with shadows in which several +lakes are set, the light upon which only heightens the sublime darkness +of the surroundings. The longest of these lakes is called Lough +Nabricderg, or the "Pool of the Red Trout." Far and wide beneath us lies +what, in the old times, was MacCarthy More's country, and into which so +often the Fiery Cross was sped, when the chief of the great clan went +into action. + +Ruskin's ideals of mountains as the great cathedrals of the earth, with +their gates of rock, pavements of cloud, choirs of stream and stone, +altars of snow, and vaults of purple, traversed by the continual stars, +can nowhere be realized more readily than in Killarney. Here the +mysterious summits, warm with the morning tints or evening's glow, will +delight and refresh again and again, and reflect to us imperishable +memories. Crossing the Flesk, if ~Mangerton~ be the desired point, seven +good miles are to be traversed. From the Muckross, a short detour will, +if desired, lead to Flesk Castle, standing on a finely wooded hill above +the wide sweeping river. Eastward, along the Kenmare road, and southward +for a mile, the mountain path is met. From here, either on foot or on a +pony, the ascent of Mangerton may be made. The first important object +that comes in view is Lough Kittane, at the eastern base of the +mountain. It is nearly five miles in circumference, and its waters +contain four islands. The ravine behind the lake, with Mangerton on the +west and Crohane mountain on the east, is the "mustering place of the +winds," Coomnageeha. In this ravine the Blackwater flows. There are two +small lakes, Loughnabraude and "the Lake of Beech-crowned Rock," Lough +Carrigaveha. Away in the bed of the mountains is Keimva Lochlin--the +pass of the Danes--reminding the historian of "Stern Lochlin's sons of +roving war," and Dereenanawlar, or "the little oakwood of eagles." +Moving still higher, eastward the mountains melt into the distant +counties of Cork and Limerick, and beneath, the smaller highlands recall +the Psalmist's description of + + "The hills like the lambs of the flock." + +[Illustration: McCarthy More's Castle--Lake Hotel Landing Stage.] + +To the left, Glown-a-Coppal, the "Horse's Glen," invites the adventurous +to fathom its depths. The dark lakes lying in its shadows are shoreless, +but for the gloomy rocks which overhang the water's edge. Where the +ground becomes more broken and rugged, suddenly a less inaccessible path +arises, and leads to the Devil's Punch Bowl, a dark tarn, beset with +strange echoes that strike a death-song on the heart-strings of the +superstitious. The view from the summit is very wonderful; in the +foreground of the huge picture, the forest of mountain tops, while +westward in the distance is the fabled and saint-blessed Mare +Brendanicum of the old writers, where the fiords embroider the coast +line. + +Descents from Mangerton may be made due south from the eastern angle +along the Oubeg to Kilgarvan, five miles east from Kenmare; by the +"Horse's Glen," from Lough Garagary, across the moor to the commencement +of the bridle-path. Neither way is recommended in the afternoon or +without a guide. The best route to Carntuol is from the entrance to the +Gap of Dunloe. There is a beaten track by the side of the waterway of +the mountain stream, called "Giddagh," the bed of which is filled with +glacial moraines, leading into a romantic valley, the Hag's Glen, which +is shut in by the Reeks and Knocknabinaneen. The dark tarn in the Glen, +as well as every object of prominence, has been seized upon by the +imaginative peasants, and associated in some wise with the witch who +here had her local habitation and left it its name. The track across the +heather leads to the junction of two rivulets from Lough Gonvogh on the +right, and Lough Callee on the left. The beginning of the summit is +reached by the rough moraine pavement, and with a little perseverance +the "parkeen," or "little pasture," on top is reached. Here on the +wind-swept height it is interesting to find the _London Pride_, or _St. +Patrick's Cabbage_, and the common _Thrift_ flourishing The view is +indescribable. Like the jaws of some huge monster, the teeth of the +Reeks close in everywhere, each with its own blue lake behind. Of +Killarney we see little; but seawards "everything between this end of +the world and America," descent may be made, either following the flank +of the hill, and half way between the two largest lakes beneath, +striking for the Gap of Dunloe road, or through Coomduff to the shores +of the Upper Lake. + +When the tourist's time is limited, the following excursions, extending +over three days, will enable him to see a good many of the points of +interest:-- + + TOUR NO. 1. FARE, _8s._ ESTATE TOLLS, _1s._ + + Well-appointed coaches, or other conveyances, leave the Hotel + (weather permitting) at about 9.30 a.m., for a visit to the + celebrated Gap of Dunloe and the grand tour of the Lakes. The route + lies along the northern side of the Lower Lake for about six miles, + when the exquisite mountain scenery comes in full view, rapidly + assuming more interesting features until "Arbutus" Cottage is + reached. Here the party must alight, and proceed on ponies, or on + foot, at discretion, through the Pass to Lord Brandon's Cottage, at + the head of the Upper Lake, where the boats will be in readiness. + Arrangements can be made with the Manager of the Hotel, before + starting, to provide ponies for _3s._ each to this point. Some + wonderful echoes are produced in various parts of the Pass. + Luncheon will be served, before entering the boat, on one of the + adjoining islands, after which the party will proceed by the Upper + Lake and Long Range to the Eagle's Nest Mountain. The boat will + then shoot the Rapids under the rustic Old Weir Bridge; stop a + short time at the "Meeting of the Waters"; pass through the Middle + Lake, and across the Lower Lake to "Sweet Innisfallen Island," to + enable the party to view the ruins of the old Abbey, Abbot's Grave, + and Bed of Honour; thence to Ross Castle, where the party will + resume their drive to the Hotel, which is usually reached about + 5.30 p.m. + + TOUR NO. 2. FARE, _4s. 6d._ ESTATE TOLLS, _2s._ + + The conveyances leave the Hotel about 10 a.m. for the drive through + Mr. H. A. Herbert's beautiful demesne. The ancient ruins of + Muckross Abbey are soon reached, and, after a short delay to + inspect them, the party proceed by the shore of the Middle Lake, + over Brickeen Bridge, pass the Colleen Bawn Rocks for Dinis + Island; thence, passing the Torc Mountain, to the Cottage and + Waterfall of Derrycunihy (Queen's Cottage), the property of the + Earl of Kenmare, where luncheon is usually served. Returning, the + party will pass under the tunnel on the Kenmare Road, and through + fine scenery by road, mountain, and lake to Torc Cascade, where, by + an easy footpath, fine views can be obtained of the Waterfall and + Lakes; thence to the Hotel, which is usually reached about 3 p.m. + + TOUR No. 3. FARE, _4s. 6d._ ESTATE TOLLS, _1s._ + + The conveyances leave the Hotel at about 9.30 a.m., passing through + the Earl of Kenmare's Deer Park to the Heights of Aghadoe, + obtaining grand views of the Lower Lake, Macgillicuddy's Reeks, and + Carran Tual (the highest mountain in Ireland), as also the ruins of + the round tower of Aghadoe Church, thence through the Earl of + Kenmare's beautiful West and Home Parks, which skirt the + north-eastern shores of the Lower Lake, round Ross Island, and to + the Hotel, which is usually reached about 2.30 p.m. + + +KENMARE AND GLENGARRIFF. + +The coach drive from Killarney to Kenmare is over a fine broad mountain +road, and from Mulgrove Barrack, about half way, a splendid view of the +lake country can be obtained. Kenmare, as its name signifies in Irish, +is at the head of the sea or beautiful bay to which it gives its name on +the Roughty river. Sir William Pettie, in the seventeenth century, +founded the town on lands confiscated from the O'Sullivan More. It is a +market place of importance, and the Convent of the Poor Clares is famous +the world over for the beautiful lace made here. The town stands on the +highway between Killarney and Glengarriff, known as "The Prince of +Wales' route." The coach drives through the town past the Lansdowne +Arms' Hotel and into the beautiful spot which has been selected for the +new hotel belonging to the Southern Hotels Company. Already young groves +and plantations teem about the mansion, which is built on a natural +terrace overlooking the bay, and facing the high hills of Glenaroughty, +behind which the Red River rises, and the bare mountain slopes of +Mucksna. + +No visitor should fail, if time permits, to visit the Convent of the +Poor Clares, and see the lace-makers at work. From Kenmare the train or +coach may be taken to Killarney. + + +DRIVING EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF KENMARE. + + No. 1.--Car to Goulane on old road to Killarney, walk to summit of + mountain, from which a magnificent view is obtained, returning by + Inchamore Cross Roads, Roughty Falls, and Suspension Bridge. _6s._ + + No. 2.--Car to Kilgarvan, thence to the Bird Mountain, on the + Borlin Road, returning by Lounihan and Letter. Grand panoramic + views of the Mangerton Mountains and Roughty Valley. _10s._ + + No. 3.--Car to Windy Gap on the Killarney Road, view of Gap of + Dunloe and M'Gillicuddy Reeks, thence by Dirreenfeenlahid Lake and + Bouchill Mountain, returning by Slieveaduff and Templemore Road. + _10s._ + + No. 4.--Car to Blackwater Bridge and Waterfall, thence by Old + Dromore and Valley of the Blackwater, returning by old road over + Coomnakilla; magnificent sea and mountain scenery. _12s._ + + No. 5.--Car to Clonee Lakes and Glen of Inchiquin, thence to + cascade at head of glen; beautiful drive along the southern shore + of Kenmare Bay, affording splendid views of mountain, lake, and + river. _15s._ + + No. 6.--Car to Derreen by the Lansdowne Road, along the shore of + Kenmare Bay and Kilmackillogue Harbour, thence to Glanmore Lake by + road skirting Lord Lansdowne's demesne, returning by Furniss + (ancient smelting works) and Carriganine Road. _20s._ + + It is particularly requested that visitors requiring cars will give + not less than an hour's notice at the office. + + +SOUTHERN HOTEL, KENMARE. + +HIRE FOR FIXED DISTANCES (Driver's fee included) + + Two-horse carriage. One-horse car. + +From Kenmare to Parknasilla, _20s._ _10s._ + + " " Killarney, _28s._ _14s._ + + " " Glengarriff, _28s._ _14s._ + + " " Caragh Lake, -- _25s._ + + " " Waterville, _50s._ _2s._ + +Fifty per cent. additional for return journey. + +To Glengarriff the coach runs by very beautiful scenery, terminating in +the lovely creek of the bay at ~Eccles' Hotel~ and by the fair height +where ~Roche's Hotel~ commands the view. From Glengarriff the coach may +be continued to Bantry, and the train then taken direct to Cork, along +the East Bandon line; or the road may be taken through the beautiful +Pass of Keimaneigh--the "Pass of the Deer"--and by the lovely lake of +Gougane Barra to Macroom. Here the Cork and Macroom Railway brings the +tourist back into the City of the Lee. + +The road from Kenmare leads high out of the valley up the hill sides. We +command a good view of Kenmare Sound, and having passed under a number +of tunnels through the rock we cross the mearings into county Cork. + + +GLENGARRIFF + +[Illustration: At Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: Otter Island, Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: Glengarriff Harbour] + +[Illustration: Otter Rock Glengarriff] + +[Illustration: Gougane Barra. Co Cork] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Gougane Barra.] + +In a fair spot above the blue waters of the Bay of Bantry, +~Glengarriff~, as a health resort, vies with its charming young rival, +Parknasilla. Its climate, too, is softened by the nearness of the Gulf +Stream, and yew and arbutus, as well as tropical cryptogamia and Alpine +plants, overgrow every available spot along the sides of the rough +defile. It is come-at-able from Cork by train to Bantry and then coach, +or by coach from Killarney or Kenmare. Apart from the beauty of the +situation and the mildness of its climate, Glengarriff possesses +splendid facilities for sea bathing and boating. There is excellent +hotel accommodation both at Eccles', on the shore of the bay, and at +Roche's, in the midst of beautiful grounds, through which the Owvane, or +"fair river," flows, making on its way a wild cascade. The drive from +Glengarriff to Gougane Barra, through the Pass of Keimaneigh, "the path +of the deer," is one of the great excursions to be made. ~Gougane +Barra~, the shrine of Saint Finbarr, is in the midst of a lonely lake +near the source of the Lee. It is still the scene of "patrons" on Saint +Finbarr's day, and Mass is celebrated in the open air in the middle of +the lake. There is good trout fishing in the Allua and other streams in +the Desmond Valley. Callaghan, the poet, has sung of it-- + + "There is a green island in lone Gougane Barra, + Where Allua of songs rushes forth as an arrow; + In deep-valleyed Desmond--a thousand wild fountains + Come down to that lake, from their home in the mountains; + There grows the wild ash, and a time-stricken willow + Looks chidingly down on the mirth of the billow; + As, like some gay child, that sad monitor scorning, + It lightly laughs back to the laugh of the morning. + + And its zone of dark hills--oh! to see them all bright'ning; + When the tempest flings out its red banner of lightning; + And the waters rush down, mid the thunders deep rattle, + Like clans from their hills at the voice of the battle; + And brightly the fire-crested billows are gleaming, + And wildly from Mullagh the eagles are screaming."... + +The "green island" is a little over half an acre in extent. In its +centre is a quadrangle, with walls at parts fourteen feet thick, in +which are eight cells or cloisters rudely arched over. Within, on a +raised platform, is a large cross with five steps ascending to it. There +is a large flagstone here with an inscription, giving directions how +"the rounds" are to be performed on the vigil and forenoon of the feast +days of St. Finbarr and St. John the Baptist, to whom there is a +special cultos all over Munster. The road from Gougane runs through +Inchigeela and Ballingeary by a wild stretch of river inches, called the +Gearagh, to Macroom, where the old Castle and Convent are worth +visiting. In the latter the kindergarten system has been introduced with +great success. It is also here that the Gaelic Feis or Festival is held +for the locality, which contains a large percentage of Irish-speaking +people, including numbers of children. From Macroom train runs direct to +Cork. In the visitors' book at Inchigeela Hotel some vagabond rhymester +penned the following farewell:-- + + Sweet Inchigeela, fare thee well, to-morrow we depart + On Mrs. Brophy's outside car, for Gougane B. we start; + I add my mite of doggerel to all I have read here, + And put my X to all that's writ of this hotel's good cheer. + + O charming Inchigeela, were mine the poet's pen, + How I would do the Longfellow, in praising rock and glen; + Among thy mountains, hills, and lakes, six happy days we passed, + And sigh to think the day draws near that's doomed to be the last. + + We've climbed the rocky mountains, we've plodded o'er the plain, + We've bid a wild defiance to the drizzling, drenching rain; + And yielding to the influence of your coquettish weather, + We've grilled beneath the sunshine on thy "tick" infected heather. + + O lovely Inchigeela! O cosy Lake Hotel! + O Hannah! best of waiting-maids, and civilest as well; + O were I not so sleepy, a great deal more I'd say, + But I must grasp my pilgrim's staff and wend my onward way. + +From ~Cromwell's Bridge~, at Glengarriff, the road runs to Berehaven, +where there is an old Castle of the O'Sullivan's and some splendid +caves. Cromwell's Bridge, of which one arch only now remains intact, is +said to have been built here to facilitate the march of the Protector on +his return from Dunboy Castle, he having threatened, if the bridge was +not erected on his return, he would hang a man for every hour he was +delayed. ~Bantry~, or the White Strand, is a thriving town, a pleasant +drive from Glengarriff. Here the French fleet, with Wolfe Tone on board, +purported landing in the winter of 1797; but, like the Armada, were +scattered by a hurricane. Bantry House, the residence of the +White-Hedges family, is beautifully situated on the side of the bay. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cromwell's Bridge, +Glengarriff.] + +The Cork and Bandon Railway from Bantry is connected with most of the +towns on the Cork coast. From Skibberreen, the famous fishing village of +~Baltimore~ may be visited. The Piscatorial School is doing good work, +and is an enduring monument to the philanthropy of the Baroness +Burdett-Coutts. Innisherin Island, in Baltimore Harbour, was an old +fortress of the O'Driscolls--and in particular of "Finnen O'Driscoll, +the Rover"--of whom it is told:-- + + "The men of Clan-London brought over + Their strong ships to make him a slave; + He met them by Mizen's wild headlands, + And the sharks gnaw their bones 'neath the wave." + +Baltimore was sacked in the early seventeenth century by Algerine +pirates, and all the able-bodied inhabitants sold into slavery. These +pirates were finally put down by the intrepidity of the Commonwealth +seamen. Kinsale, also on the coast, is a remarkable old town; there +James II. landed on his ill-fated visit to Ireland. Bandon, beautifully +situated on the broad river of that name, was long the Derry of the +South. The memory of these "good old times" only now remains, and Bandon +is the centre of many successful industries. + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Killarney District, + see end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Cycling, + Fishing, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +[Illustration: Coaching in Kerry] + +[Illustration] + +The Lakes and Fiords of Kerry. + + +The Grand Atlantic Tour--Caragh, Cahirciveen, Valencia, Waterville, +Parknasilla, Kenmare, &c. + +The beauty of Killarney is not without a rival, and that even "next +door" to it in its very own kingdom of Kerry. Leaving behind the +soft-swelling hills, deep-eyed lakes and dark mountains, we speed +southward and westward to other lakes and mountains kindred to what we +have already seen. It is for these lovely lands that the Gulf Stream +crosses the Atlantic to kiss, that we are making over the wide-armed +railway which clasps the most picturesque scenery in the country within +its embrace. Starting from Killarney for Valencia, we leave the train to +continue its journey northwards to Tralee, at Farranfore Junction. While +changing into the carriages for the south-west coast, where + + "The mountains kiss high heaven, + And the waves clasp one another," + +one look round reveals the amphitheatre of hills. Westward, whither we +are going, the hills above Glenbeigh point our road to where the +Atlantic meets the shore. To the eastward, where the morn, in russet +mantle clad, walks o'er the dew, the line of far-piercing spears, +Mangerton, Torc, Glena, Toomies, and the Reeks extend. At Killorglin +(twenty-four miles rail), with a wide-spanning viaduct, we cross the +Laune, wending its way from the Lakes to Dingle Bay. Here the ruins of +an old Knights Templar Castle remain to remind us of the historic past. +For five-and-twenty miles from this place onward, the route runs over +the southern shore-line of Dingle Bay. Some five miles from Killorglin, +in a secluded nest of old trees beneath the mountains, lies ~Caragh +Lake~. + + "Long, long ago, beyond the space + Of twice ten hundred years; + In Erin old there lived a race + Taller than Roman spears." + +[Illustration: Fishing in Caragh River] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Caragh River and Lake.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Southern Hotel, Caragh Lake.] + +And in their romances and love-songs, Caragh was tenderly mentioned, for +was it not here that Dermot sheltered Grania in the bowers of the +quicken-trees? All who have read the fine old Finnian romance, "The +Pursuit of Diarmuid and Grainne," which tells the iliad of their flight +across ancient Erin, will remember that here on the shores of Kerry he +met his enemies and discomfited them. In the mists westward from the +lake is the hill-summit, Seefin, where the disconsolate son of MacCool +sat. For long this little paradise has remained forgotten by +scenery-seeking men, but now that it is re-discovered, it will enthral +all comers. The lake, sheltered under the cloak of the hills, is six +miles long, and all around its coasts are things of beauty, green velvet +mosses, dark broom and heather-clad hills, with rowan trees interspersed +throughout. The grisly mountains are glistening with silver +threads--small streams that hasten to see themselves reflected in the +lake. Far from the busy haunts of men, in a sleepy hollow only five +minutes' walk from the railway station, the ~Southern Hotel~ Company +has secured a delightful site for their fine hotel. If nature has done +great things for Caragh, "filthy lucre," too, has done much, and here is +everything to help the invalid, the sportsman, or "the common or garden" +tourist to take advantage of the charming pleasure and health resort. +For the fisherman there are almost endless opportunities. There is +excellent salmon and trout fishing in the Caragh Lake, and also in the +Caragh, Carahbeg, Ougarriv, and Meelagh Rivers, while within easy reach +are Lakes Acoose, Cloon, Coomlonkir, Oulagh, Loughnakirkna, Corravoula, +and Nabrackdarrig, all of which would gladden the heart of old Izaac +Walton. Over twenty-five thousand acres of the best shooting in Kerry is +reserved for the use of guests. It comprises principally grouse, +woodcock, snipe, duck, wild goose, and plover. Both banks of the Caragh +River, which is carefully preserved, have also been secured. ~Dooks~, in +the vicinity, has been selected for an excellent nine-hole golf course, +of which guests, as honorary members, are entitled to take advantage. A +flag-station on the railway brings the links within easy walking +distance. The grand strand along the shore gives every opportunity of +bathing. Across the beautiful Dingle Bay rises Mount Brandon (3,127 +feet), and Dunmore Head, out at the edge of the ocean, has the Blasket +Islands scattered around its coast, the treacherous rocks of which were +so fatal to the Spanish Armada. By car from the hotel to Blackstones +Bridge, returning by boat through the lake, is a short tour of many +attractions. Beneath, at one side, lie the bright waters of the bay; on +the other the dark waters of the lake. The Killorglin road is reached +about a mile from Acoose Lake, and then following the declivity by a +mountain stream, we get a good view of Gort-na-gloran Mountain, on the +east of the lake, and see in the distance the fishing hamlet of Glencar, +with the Glencar Hotel high up on pasture ground, surrounded by a cordon +of green fir trees. Except in the Swiss valleys and parts of Norway, +there is no scenery in Europe to compare with an inland route from +Caragh to Parknasilla. It lies across the mountains + + "Where the wandering water gushes + In the hills above Glencar; + In pools among the rushes, + That scarce could bathe a star," + +through wild scenery between the gorges of the mountains, and into +Ballaghbeama Pass. Beneath, in a winding valley, lies Lough Brin, +turning from which we come into the valley of the Eskdhu, or Blackwater, +and follow it amid the beeches until it falls into the sea. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Pass of Ballaghbeama.] + +Leaving Caragh Lake, the railway line follows the flow of the river, the +next station being ~Glenbeigh~, where there is a growing watering-place. +The strand is particularly fine, extending over two miles. There is a +good hotel, with golf links, beside plenty of fishing and boating. +~Coomasaharn~--the wonderful lake in the vicinity--it has been correctly +said is surrounded by precipices more awful than anything to be found +nearer home than the Alps or Pyrenees--clinging to the mountain side, at +a height of several hundred feet above the sea, with here a cutting or +embankment, and there a mountain gorge, in which a lovely waterfall is +almost lost to sight in a labyrinth of foliage. + +~Mountain Stage~ and ~Kells~ are passed, and the train glides down an +incline to Cahirciveen and Valentia Harbour. ~Cahirciveen~, the +birthplace of Daniel O'Connell, is the most westerly town in the three +kingdoms. It lies with its back up against the Iveragh Mountains, and +facing the blue waters of Dingle Bay. Only since the road was cut across +the hills to Valentia in later years has it come to be of importance. In +1803 there were only fifteen houses here, and the beginning of its +uprise in the world was when O'Connell got it made a market town. But in +legends of the past it is a place of fame, and received its name from +Sive, one of the beautiful daughters of the great monarch, Owen More. +~Carhan House~, where the Liberator spent his childhood (but was not +actually born, as alleged), the ruins of which now only remain, may be +seen a short distance outside the town. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ On the Coast near Glenbeigh.] + +Two charming fishing harbours under Knocktubber Mountain are worth +seeing, Councroum, "the Haven's Bend," and Coonana, which is called +after the woman who bore the great Finn. Here, the mighty fighter of the +old days, "Conn of the Hundred Battles," fought no less than thirteen of +his fields, and three pre-historic forts remain to bear testimony to the +past--Cahir-na-cahal, Cahirgal, and Castlequinn. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Glenbeigh.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lake Coomasaharn.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cahirciveen.] + +Ballycarbery's ruined castle, too, deserves attention. In ancient times +it was the fortress of Carbery O'Shea, whose tide-swept tomb is still to +be seen. Then it passed into the hands of Owen More's descendants, and +from them to the O'Connells. When the Spaniards sent their "ale" over to +Erin, and the Kerry women borrowed one another's cloaks to go to Spain +to sell eggs and dulisc, Ballycarbery, commanding the harbour's mouth, +was a place frequented by mariners and merchantmen from many a Spanish +port. There is a story of Morgan of the Wine and a Spanish Captain worth +re-telling. Two O'Connells lived in Ballycarbery together, one brother, +Shawn, occupying the lower portion, and the other, Morgan, living in the +upper apartments. Both at the same moment invited a Spanish captain, who +had come into the port, to dine with them. The foreigner, embarrassed by +their hospitality, and not wishing to show an undue preference--as +neither brother would give way--agreed to give his company to whichever +gentleman had his repast cooked first. The brothers repaired with speed +to the castle, and Morgan was chagrined when he had mounted to his +rooms, to find that Shawn had barricaded the entrance behind him, to +prevent his servants from drawing water to cook the dinner. But he +was not to be foiled, for, broaching a cask of wine, he cooked in it +what he wanted, and as his dinner was first prepared, the Spaniard and +his brother Shawn were his guests! In the wars of the Commonwealth the +castle was reduced. ~Derriana Lake~, in the bed of the mountains--with +wisps of mist on its further shores--is like a dream picture. The fair +isle floating in its centre is freighted down with oak and arbutus trees +standing out in relief against the mountain, and reflected in the +mirror-faced waters. The coloured setting of the surroundings is +exquisite. The cliffs bristle crest high with rigid firs, the young oak +copse is entangled with an undergrowth of guelder rose, and in the +sedges near the heron-frequented reeds, white water lilies open their +wonderful eyes. Close by, ~Cloonaghlin Lake~, when it is dark with +mountain shadows and frowning clouds, is sufficiently desolate to awe +the least susceptible, but when auspiciously the sky is brightened, we +feel-- + + "Truly the light is sweet, and + A pleasant thing it is for the + Eyes to behold the sun." + +The shadows recede into the depths of the water or the hollows of the +hills, the many colours of the trees show themselves; and song-birds +begin anew their music, as though a great hawk had been near, and had +passed them by scathless. + + +VALENCIA ISLAND + +May truly be termed the "Next parish to America," and should be visited +for its noble cliffs, wild headlands, and wonderful jungle of fuschia +trees. From Valencia Harbour a ferry, manned for upwards of a century by +the O'Neills, brings passengers and mails across to Knightstown, the +principal village, and a busy port of industry during the fishing +season. Glenleam, the Knight of Kerry's residence--about one mile +inland--is surrounded by beautiful gardens, where, besides arbutus and +myrtle, many tropical exotics thrive. The fuschias form a thick glade, +and the trunks of several of them almost defy the ordinary axe or saw. +There are on the island, besides holy wells, a number of soutterains and +cairns, that + + "Sit upon the ground + To tell sad stories of the death of kings." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Valencia.] + +[Illustration: _Photos, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Valencia Harbour. Fishing +Fleet. Entrance to Valencia Harbour.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cliffs at Valencia.] + +Irish is freely spoken on the island, and if properly introduced, the +visitor may be able to hear many old stories of Finn and his companions, +the Gabawn Saior, and other heroes of the peasants' heart. Thick as +mists at morn legends hover about the island, and beyond the great Slate +quarries may be seen many caves of great interest. There is a tradition +on the island that St. Vincent Ferrar landed there. The harbour offers a +deep and sheltered anchorage, and was formerly much frequented by +smugglers, whose cave is still shown. Paul Jones often put in here, and +on one occasion pressed into his service a number of fishermen, whom he +took from the neighbouring fishing grounds. None of them returned except +one, who had long been imprisoned in France, but he came home "with a +stocking full of doubloons," and his children's children are still known +as "The Paul Jones's." + +At ~Brayhead~, + + "Where the broad ocean leans against the land," + +there is a splendid view from nearly eight hundred feet above the sea. +The rocks around the coast, encircled with white foam, make a beautiful +contrast to the grey and emerald and gold of the sandy coves and green +hills. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cliffs at Valencia.] + +Dolus and Bolus Heads reach far into the ocean. The ~Skelligs~, "the +most western of Christ's fortresses in the ancient world," raise their +heads to the south, while northwards the Great Blasket, a mountainous +island, and its eleven brothers, with Innisvic Killane, may be seen. On +the 10th September, 1588, the Armada ship, _Our Lady of the Rosary_, of +1,000 tons, was wrecked in the Blasket Sound; among the many who +perished was the Prince of Askule, natural son to King Philip of Spain. +Around the coast line there have been many wrecks, and not a few are the +pathetic stories still told of them on the island. + +The last wreck of importance gave another opportunity for the intrepid +islanders to show what stern stuff they were made of. Under the +captaincy of Mr. Alexander O'Driscoll, the volunteers put off to the +wreck, and despite of a sea running high, and the buffeting of a great +storm, saved the lives of the crew, and rendered full salvage. While on +the island, a visit should be paid to the Anglo-American Cable Company's +Station, care being taken beforehand to go through the formality of +applying to the Managing Director (26, Old Bond-street, London, E.C.) +for an order. Every facility is extended by the courteous local +officials. + + +THE SKELLIGS--ST. MICHAEL'S ROCK. + +From Valencia, or from across the channel at Portmagee, where there is a +thriving fish-curing industry, the Skelligs can be reached in favourable +weather. Standing high above the green billows that encircle them with +collars of white foam, they repay every trouble taken to inspect them. +The ~Little Skellig~, a fantastic rock, with a great arch like a flying +buttress under which for centuries the seas have churned deep, is almost +inaccessible. It is a great breeding ground for gannet, with which, +during the breeding season, its sides are white as the waves below. + +[Illustration: GE Skellig.] + +So unused are these magnificent birds to being disturbed by intruders +that even when within oar's length of them, they remain passive and +unscared. The ~Great Skellig~ swings high its cliffs seven hundred feet +above the water. Clinging to the ridge of its impressive rocks "like +swallows' nests" are the round roofs of the beehive cells which of old +formed a citadel of Christianity. To Saint Michael the Archangel, +guardian against all the powers of darkness, the isle is dedicated. Its +history is of old date, for here Milesius buried the beloved son, Ir, +that the thieving waters robbed of his soul. Here "the slanting, +full-sailing ships" of Daire, on their way to the great battle of Ventry +Harbour, paused in their march along the deep. Here, too, in recording +times, was the great hero-king of the Norse, Olaf Iryggveson, baptized. + +A little cove, deep in the recess of a cavern, makes a landing stage, +only to be attempted at favourable times. An easy path leads halfway +round the island; then, mounting a flight of steps, the visitor beholds, +spread before him, a green valley, the one patch of richness on the +desolate rock. This is Christ's Saddle, from which, with reverent +hearts, the "Way of the Cross" may be traversed, ending in the heart of +Skellig-Michael. Each of the fourteen Stations have descriptive Gaelic +names, such as "The Stone of Pain," where our Saviour falls the first +time; "The Rock of the Woman's Piercing Caoine," where His Mother and +the Holy Women have met. Lonely and deserted, none should enter these +hallowed places but with feelings of reverence. + + +WATERVILLE. + +The morning stillness, broken by the clear blast of the postillion's +horn, reminds the visitor lingering lovingly over the shores at +Cahirciveen that the coach for the coast tour is ready. With a crack of +the whip that would do credit to Will Goldfinch, in the coaching days +of old, the driver urges on his team, and the blooded four-in-hand cut +their way clear of the town. The tour along the Atlantic between +Cahirciveen and Kenmare is nearly fifty miles, and passes through the +most diversified country. The eleven miles as far as Waterville is first +inland, passing through dreary stretches of moorland, where the small +black Kerry cattle manage to thrive, until Ballinskelligs Bay suddenly +comes in sight. Bolus Head reaches out its great arm into the sea, to +shelter the Bay from the winds. At one side may be seen the little town +of Ballinskelligs, with its white Cable Station; and in at the head of +the waters, beyond where the Inny river joins the sea, Waterville +spreads itself out around the long shore. Here it lies on the little +streak of land which protects Lough Currane from the embrace of the +ocean. Coming down the hill, out of the town, the delusion is that this +great fresh-water lake is but itself a bay, the mouth of which is +concealed from view, but not so, for its waters run clear and fresh, and +as fishful as the Erne. It is the best free fishing lake in Ireland. +Just outside Waterville the Commercial Cable Company (Mackay-Bennett +system) have their extensive offices. + +[Illustration: _Photos, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Gannets on Little Skelligs.] + +[Illustration: Southern Hotel, Waterville.] + +The road leads across the Inny, and we enter the little town by the +pleasantly-situated Butler Arms Hotel. On going further, fronting the +shore line, we pass the Bay View Hotel, and, following a bend in the +hill, come suddenly in view of the beautiful Lough Currane, beside +which, in the midst of plantations, more like a home than a +well-equipped hostelry, which it is, the ~Southern Hotel~ is built. +Lough Currane is eight miles in circumference, and its shores are +fretted with thousands of inlets. Through the windows of the Hotel, a +charming view is had of the mountains which encircle the lake. On one +side green slopes and pleasantly wooded heights meet the eye, and on the +other, old familiar grey-faced mountains, with their heads raised on +high among the clouds, shining, changing, and fading in the silver +mists. The surface of the lake, calm-faced and deep-welled, here and +there lifts up to be admired beautiful islands. Here a saint made his +temporal home, and in Church Island is the beehive cell where St. Finian +prayed, "in whose orisons were all our sins remembered." The ruins of +the sixth century church deserve the attention of the antiquary. Away at +the head of Lough Currane is Coppal, where sea trout and small brown +trout abound. It, too, has charms all its own, in parts wild and +untamed, but again, calm as the race of a sleeping child. Full +information as to the flies suitable for the lake, and the places well +to troll, may be had from the best known angler in Kerry, Teigue +M'Carthy. Like Sir Roger de Coverley's friend, Will Wimble, he can tie +a fly "to a miracle," and he is an enthusiastic devotee of the "gentle +art." Besides the attractions for fishermen, there are thousands of +acres of shooting in the vicinity. There is plenty of opportunity and +accommodation for bathing by the bay, and a new Golf Links, laid out +under the best professional advice, affords a further source of +healthful amusement. Over the hills from Waterville the pre-historic +remains of Staigue Fort may be visited. It is the best example of +cyclopean stone forts that remains in Ireland, and by authoritative +antiquaries is said to be at least 2,000 years old. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Lake Currane.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Raheen, Lake Currane.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Arbutus Rock, Lake Currane.] + + +EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF WATERVILLE. + +TOUR 1.--The conveyance will leave the Hotel at 11 a.m. for a +drive to Derrynane, the historic home of the Liberator, On reaching +Coomakista Pass--the highest point of the road--a gradual descent brings +the party to Derrynane House, and further on to Derrynane Hotel, close +to the remains of the old Abbey. Those who wish to walk can get off the +car at Coomakista, and walk one and-a-half miles to Lord Dunraven's +cottage, where they can meet the cars. The path winds along the shore of +Derrynane Bay, and well repays those who follow it on their way to the +Abbey, The party can lunch at Derrynane Hotel, and may return by the +path, and meet the car at Coomakista, or drive the whole way back to +Waterville. Fare for four persons, _12s._ + +TOUR 2.--The conveyance will leave the Hotel at 11 a.m., and +drive along the northern shore of Lough Currane. Crossing the Coomeragh +by the Ivy Bridge, the road leads us as far as Isknamaclery Lake. At +this point a unique view is obtained of Isknamaclery Lake and Lough +Nabrackderrag on the right, and Loughs Namona and Cloonaghlin on the +left. The party can have the option of proceeding on foot to Derriana +Lake, or returning and driving along the Coomeragh to Derriana Lodge, +and from thence returning to Waterville, or they can cross the Dromad +Hills, and return by the river Inny. Fare for four persons, _12s._ + +TOUR 3.--The conveyance leaves the Hotel at 11 a.m. for Saint +Finan's Glen. Before entering the Glen, a fine view is obtained of the +Iveragh Mountains, and even the M'Gillicuddy Reeks, and later, the Lemon +Rock and the Skelligs. After luncheon in the Glen, the party will return +by Bolus Head, visiting the old Abbey of Saint Michael's and +Ballinskellias Castle, and (with the permission of the Superintendent) +the Atlantic Cable Station. For sea and mountain combined this view +cannot be surpassed. Fare for four persons, _16s._ + +TOUR No. 4.--The conveyance will leave the Hotel at about 11 +a.m., for the remarkable fort of Staigue-an-or. The route lies along the +southern shore of Lough Currane for about six miles, (passing the +Waterfall) as far as Isknagahenny (Coppal) Lake, and good views are +obtained of both lakes. At Isknagahenny Lake the party alights, and +proceeds on foot for about four miles to the fort. When the highest +point of the ascent is reached, a magnificent view is obtained of +Kenmare river and the islands off the coast of Beara Peninsula. The +descent to the foot is easy. After luncheon the party may return either +by West Cove and Derrynane to Waterville, or again ascend the mountain +and return by Lake Road. Fare for four persons, _16s._ + +Shorter excursions can be arranged. + + +HIRE OF BOATS + +Boat and one man, _1s._ per hour, _5s._ per day. Boat and two men, _2s._ +per hour, _10s._ per day. + +In no case will the charge be for less than two hours. + +POSTING ARRANGEMENTS. + +Hire by Time (Driver's Fee included). + + Two-horse carriage. One-horse car. + + +For the first hour, _7s. 0d._ _3s. 6d._ + +For two hours, _14s. 0d._ _7s. 0d._ + +For each additional hour or + fraction of an hour _3s. 6d._ _2s. 0d._ + +Hire for Fixed Distances (Driver's Fee included). + +Two-horse One-horse car. +carriage. + +Waterville to Caragh Lake, -- _25s. 0d._ + + " " Caherciveen, _15s. 0d._ _8s. 0d._ + + " " Valentia, _15s. 0d._ _8s. 0d._ + + " " Portmagee, _18s. 0d._ _10s. 0d._ + + " " Derrynane, _15s. 0d._ _8s. 0d._ + + " " Parknasilla, _30s. 0d._ _16s. 0d._ + +Fifty per cent. additional for return journey. + +[Illustration: Coomakisteen Hill.] + +The coach road from Waterville, following the outskirts of +Ballinskelligs Bay, insinuates itself up a dizzy height. Looking +backwards, Waterville, "standing with reluctant feet" between the sea +and the lake, seems to wonder which is more bewitching. Forging ahead +through the mountain gaps, we pass under ~Coomakiska~, 1,500 feet, and +~Beenarourke~, 1,000 feet above the sea level. Clearing the gates of the +mountains, we come into the open highlands above ~Derrynane~, watching +out from its post over the sea. Truly the home for a chief. Here +O'Connell spent his happiest days, within the roar of the Atlantic +billows, but far from the turmoil and stress of the great agitation in +which his figure looms large as a giant form. Here his hospitable door +flew open wide to the passing stranger, and across the hills, with the +fleet-footed hound, he enjoyed the most delightful of sports, coursing! +Several interesting relics of the Liberator are shown at the house of +his descendant, the present proprietor. The ruins of ~Derrynane Abbey~, +in the vicinity of O'Connell's home, stand on a small peninsula, at some +seasons transformed into an island by the divorcing rush of the high +tides. It was a foundation of the monks of St. Finbarr, called +Aghermore, such a place as that described in the life of St. Brendan, +who, first of the old-world mariners, discovered the great Land of the +West. + + I grew to manhood by the western wave, + Among the mighty mountains on the shore; + My bed, the rock within some natural cave, + My food, whate'er the sea or seasons bore. + + And there I saw the mighty sea expand, + Like Time's unmeasured and unfathomed waves; + One with its tide-marks on the ridgy strand, + The other with its line of weedy graves. + + And, as beyond the outstretched waves of Time, + The eye of Faith a brighter land may meet; + So did I dream of some more sunny clime, + Beyond the waste of waters at my feet. + +From Cahirdaniel village, the site of a Danish fort, the route extends +directly along the Kenmare Fiord, under the foot of Crohan Mountain. The +Slieve Misk and Cahar Mountains separate themselves out to win our +admiration the better. They recall Lady Dufferin's words, addressed +to other sweet mountains, where + + "The sunlight sleeping + On your green banks is a picture rare, + You crowd around me like young girls peeping, + And puzzling me to say which is most fair; + As though you'd see your own sweet faces + Reflected in that smooth and silver sea + O! my blessing on those lovely places, + Though no one cares how dear they are to me." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Sneem.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Sneem.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Sneem.] + +On the road beneath Crohan, a mile north from Coad Church is St. +Kiernan's Cell, eaten into the face of the sheer rock. In this district +formerly the mines were worked and copper smelted. As the road winds +along we can see Staigue-an-or, with its cyclopean mounds, lying low and +dwarfed on the hillside. By the high mountains, where the coach-horn +sounds sweet and awakens echoes, the road comes down into the lowlands, +and from the bridge is seen beautiful landscape, with ~Sneem~ spread out +in the foreground. Under lovely beechen boughs, and through a glade of +oak and first we are ushered into + + +PARKNASILLA, + +An ideal residence, hidden from the summer sun by a variegated veil of +the rocky garden foliage; sheltered from the winter's blast by the +Askeve Mountains and the kind shores that button themselves around its +inlet sea, of which Mr. A. P. Graves has written: + + "Ocean before, the summer sky above + Who could pourtray the mountains' purple smiles-- + And all the opal hues of earth and heaven, + Foam fringing forests, heather-tufted Isles; + The roseate dawn--purpureal pomps of even-- + And young Atlantic's petulant, shifting wiles? + Who could do aught but mar the true expression + Where all is change? Then why a record shape + Of scenes whose nature glories in succession + From wood to wave--from wave to distant cape-- + Like the young poet's dream, fair beyond all possession." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Parknasilla.] + +Here in the demesne lands of a Bishop's Old Palace, the ~Southern Hotel~ +new palace has been built. The green turf of its lawn extends down to +the water's edge. It is a land of arbutus and myrtle, of glades laden +with the pink and white blossoms of oleander and rhododendron, and thick +with bells of fuschias, the fair daffodils of Shakespeare and Herrick, +that fade away too soon: + + "Daffodils that come + Before the swallow dares, and take + The winds of March with beauty." + +Derreen, away in the lap of the landscape, found favour of Froude, and +at Kilmackilloge he found material for his novel. The beautiful +~Garinish~ Island is like a little paradise, lost in a land where all is +lovely. Around the shores, and in the sandy caves, the beautiful seals +cluster, and at times are so tame as to answer the shrill whistle of the +boatman, and show their lovely forms on the water's surface near at +hand. We live in sceptical times, when + + "The powder, the beauty, and the majesty, + That had their haunts in dale, or piney mountain, + Or forests by slow stream, or pebbly spring, + Or chasms and watery depths--all these have vanished. + They live no longer in the faith of reason." + +But still here, along the old-world shores, where daylight dies, the +superstitions and traditions of the pagan past still linger among them, +and there is none more interesting than that which teaches the fishermen +to regard these beautiful-eyed, plaintive-voiced creatures with +tenderness. The souls of the dead, drowned at sea, who die out of +friendship with God, go into the bodies of the seals, and there through +the ages await the Trump of the Archangel to call them before the Great +White Throne. + +[Illustration: Southern Hotel, Parknasilla.] + +"Parknasilla is situated on the northern shore of Kenmare Bay, a bay +rich in beauty, and with singularly-indented coast lines. Its +well-sheltered position amidst a number of islets, thickly wooded down +to the water's edge, has endowed it with unique advantages. This +protective area gives to Parknasilla claims of a special character, and +prevents the access to it of all winds except those coming from the +warmer points, viz., south and south-west; these winds, before reaching +the southern coast of Ireland, having travelled over the Gulf Stream, +and being thus subjected to its moderating and balmy influence. We all +recognise what elevation of the land will do for any place, particularly +if it shelters that place from winds blowing from the cold quarters. +Thus, mountain protection is of supreme importance in the choice of a +health resort, more especially in the winter and spring seasons of the +year. In this regard Parknasilla is exceptionally favoured, a +mountainous range closely guarding and protecting it from the northerly +and easterly winds. The combination of mountain, wood, and water gives a +special charm to this locality; and a convincing evidence of the +mildness of the winter and early spring here is the forward character of +the vegetation, the early budding of the trees, shrubs, and flowers--all +bearing testimony to the mildness of the climate. Temperature rapidly +tells its tale on the vegetable world, and there can be no more +reassuring proof of the equable and balmy character of the climate of a +district than the early growth of flowering shrubs, plants, and table +produce. The position of this favoured and sheltered sea inlet upon the +isothermal map shows it to have a mean annual temperature of 52 degrees, +being similar in this regard to its neighbour, Glengarriff, and +registering a higher mean annual temperature than Ventnor or Torquay. +The mildness of the climate in the earlier spring months is of such a +character that exercise can be freely partaken of in the open air daily, +without risk of chill; and this to the invalid is of paramount +importance. No record has, as yet, been regularly taken of the daily +sunshine, or of the rainfall, but so far as could be ascertained, the +rainfall does not appear to be excessive. To sufferers from chronic or +recurrent affections of the respiratory organs, Parknasilla, in the +winter and early spring months, would appear to be indicated as a most +desirable place of residence. I have had the advantage of two recent +visits to this district, and feel convinced that, when it becomes better +known, Parknasilla will prove a veritable haven of health and rest to +the chronic invalid and the convalescent, as well as a delightful +retreat to the busy man of the 'world's mart,' who may need a temporary +repose from the worries and cares of daily life. Parknasilla is about a +two hours' drive or thereabouts from Kenmare, the drive being one of +exceptional beauty and interest."--_Dublin Journal of Medical Science_, +May, 1896. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Garinish Island, Parknasilla.] + + +DRIVING AND BOATING EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF PARKNASILLA. + + No. 1--Car to Sneem, and by Killarney Road to Letterfinish; thence + to Tahilla Chapel, and return by Dunquilla (ancient fort), or + direct. _8s._ + + No. 2.--Car to Sneem and Letterfinish; on to Geragh Bridge, and by + Blackwater Valley and Coast Road to Tahilla, returning by + Dunquilla, or direct, _12s._ + + No. 3.--Car to Sneem and Coomyauna Bridge, pony (cost _5s._, to top + and back not included), or walk to summit of Beoun Mountain, view + of Glencar and M'Gillicuddy Reeks, Cloon, Lakes, and Coomlumina + Glen with Dingle Bay in the distance. Return same way. _12s._ + + No. 4.--Car to Sneem and Glorah, pony (cost _5s._, to top and back + not included), or walk to summit of Finnavagough, view of + Foylenagearough, Cloonaghlin, Derriana, and Waterville Lakes. + Return same way. _12s._ + + No. 5.--Car to Staigue Fort and back. This ancient round stone + Fort, in a wonderful state of preservation, is well worth a visit. + _16s._ + + No. 6.--Car to Blackwater Bridge and Waterfall; along the + Blackwater Valley to Lough Erin, view of Ballaghbeama Pass, + returning by Geragh Bridge, Sneem Road, and Tahilla. _16s._ + + No. 7.--By boat to Reenkilla, car to Glanmore Lake, and by Furniss + to Killmakillogue, skirting Derreen, Lord Lansdowne's demesne (fare + _5s._, not included). Return by boat (four-oared). _20s._ + + No. 8.--By boat to Ormonde's Island; car along shore of Clonea Lake + to Inchiquin, Glen and Cascade, thence by Derreen or coast road. + (Fare, _10s._, not included.) Return by boat (four-oared). _20s._ + + No. 9.--By boat to the Caves, and into Ardgroom Harbour; car by + Eyeries to Castletown-Bere, Dunboy Castle, and back (fare _10s._, + not included). Return by boat (four-oared). _20s._ + + Excursions by Steam Launch will also be organised to the Caves, + Ardgroom, Derrynane, and other places of interest on the Kenmare + River. + +[Illustration: Cycling at Parknasilla.] + +[Illustration] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Blackwater at Kenmare.] + +The demesne around the hotel comprises one hundred acres of beautiful +land, where tropical flora flourish all the year round. The meadows +trim, with daisies pied, there are on every mossy bank the dewy lips of + +_"Violets dim, But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes, Or Cytherea's +breath."_ + +The road to Kenmare lies high above the sea. Ardgroom is hiding under +the Caha mountains, with Glenbeg Lake behind, in the little valley. +Beneath Derrenamackan the lashing seas wage perpetual warfare against +the rocks. By the Eskdhu, or Blackwater Bridge, amid the dense foliage +of the trees, a waterfall bleats from the thicket with plaintive murmur. +Then it breaks itself free, and amid rocks, and briars, and tangled +underwood, rushes wildly towards the sea. Between us and the ocean is +Dromore Castle, the residence of one of the heads of a sept of the +O'Mahony clan. In the demesne are the ruins of Cappacross, a stronghold +of the O'Sullivans. Dunkerron Castle, on the shore, gives its name to +the islands in the bay. + + + + +[Illustration] + +County Clare. + + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Dromoland Castle.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Ennistymon.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lisdoonvarna Spa.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kilkee.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Amphitheatre at Kilkee.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Look-out Cliff, Kilkee.] + +[Illustration: Golfing at Lahinch] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Golfing, Lahinch.] + +Clare County possesses the finest cliff scenery in Ireland. From +Limerick or Galway the county may be explored. On the journey by rail +from Limerick, beyond Long Pavement, we come on a fine view of Cratloe +woods. An ancient saint referred to Cratloe as "a pleasant seclusion +from sin"; but in later times it became a haunt of rapparees, and its +thick foliage provided what Spenser would call "a meet house for +rebels." In later times Freney, a noted highwayman, whose exploits +delighted the Irish peasant, here found a refuge. Bunratty Castle was a +strong place in feudal times. Here Rinuccini, the Papal Legate to +Ireland in 1641, sojourned, and his papers contain many references to +the picturesqueness of the surrounding country, and its herds of wild +deer. Between Newmarket and Ardsollus is Dromoland, the seat of Lord +Inchiquin, and the birthplace of William Smith O'Brien, the aristocratic +leader of the revolutionists of 1848. Crossing the Ardsollus river, we +are near Quin Abbey, an old Franciscan Priory, and Clare Castle, which +took its name from an old watch tower in the river Fergus. ~Ennis~ is +the chief town in the County Clare. It is more quaint than important. It +is pleasantly placed on the river Fergus, and is a clean town, doing a +thriving business with the country. The principal monument in the +town is to Daniel O'Connell, who was returned for Clare in the famous +election of 1828. The ashes of the controversy that raged around +O'Connell in his lifetime are long since dead, and if one wanted proof +of this it is in the recent biography of the great agitator which +appears in the "Heroes of the Nation" series. In that, the famous Clare +election is treated with true historic discrimination by the writer, who +compares the bravery of the Clare peasants at Ennis to the gallant +Covenanters standing up against Claverhouse's Dragoons at Bothwell +Bridge. From Ennis, by car and light railway, Ennistymon, Lehinch, +Lisdoonvarna, and Ballyvaughan may be reached. At Ennistymon there is a +splendid cascade on the Innagh river. ~Lisdoonvarna~ possesses the +best known Spa in Ireland. It is come-at-able from Milltown-Malbay or +Ennistymon. Its friends have called it "The Cheltenham of Ireland." It +cannot be pretended that the immediate scenery is attractive, but there +are many interesting drives in the vicinity. The hotels and lodgings are +good. The sixth century Church of Saint Cronan, pleasantly placed in an +ash-grove, will give those of an antiquarian taste opportunity of +beguiling their time during a stay at the beneficial chalybeate and +sulphurous springs. The drives from Lisdoonvarna may include tours to +Ballyvaughan and the Cliffs of Moher. The drive by Black Head, the +north-eastern promontory of county Clare, gives one a fine view as far +north as the Arran; then we approach Ballyvaughan, in Galway Bay, an +out-of-the-way old world village. Its approach is by a spiral hill, over +two miles in length, called "The Corkscrew-road." The sides of the stony +hills are interspersed with the most delicate maiden-hair fern, growing +wild. There are two small but neat hotels in Ballyvaughan. From this +little town Galway might be visited by steamer and the Arran Isles by +hooker. ~Kilkee~ is admittedly the best bathing-place in these islands. +It is dashed into with the full force of the Atlantic, but with the +countless nooks fitted into the rocky coast-line, there are numbers of +sandy strands suitable for bathing. Here, situated in the very outpost +of the West of Ireland, it is as up-to-date and as go-a-head as some of +its more fashionable rivals, while in natural advantages it excels them +all. It is easy of access by land and sea. The town is protected by a +long reef of rock, called "Duggerna." The cliff scenery is very +beautiful. The spots to visit are The Puffing Hole, Saint Senanus' Holy +Well, Bishop's Island, with its beehive cells and Green Rock. A tour to +Loophead will bring one in sight of a long line of cliff scenery. +~Lehinch~ and Liscanor Bay promise to become the best patronised golf +links in Ireland. Right in front of the little town is a splendid +strand, and local enterprise has been auxiliary to nature in making the +spot attractive. ~Spanish Point~ also possesses splendid strands, where +sea-bathing may be enjoyed with safety. Two miles away is +~Milltown-Malbay~. The town is business-like, and the coast-line in the +vicinity is associated with weird tales of wreckers; there some of the +unfortunate Spaniards came to grief in 1588. The ~Cliffs of Moher~ may +be visited from Milltown, Lehinch, or Lisdoonvarna. Going up the road +from Lehinch to ~Liscanor~ we pass a Holy Well dedicated to Saint +Brigid. The only cliff scenery in the British Isles to compare with that +of Moher is at the Orkney islands. They make a magnificent embroidery +into the red sandstone along the coast-line for four miles, rising in +heights varying from 440 to 700 feet. From their height on a clear day +the distant Isles of Arran may be seen, and the whole surroundings make +as gorgeous a seascape as is to be found anywhere in the world. An +observer will readily recognise that the quaint craft which the +fishermen still use in the vicinity of Moher, as indeed elsewhere in +Clare, is the ancient coracle. ~Kilrush~, on the Lower Shannon, is +chiefly of interest to the antiquary. It can be reached from Limerick, +by the Shannon, as pointed out already, and from Kilkee by Rail. By a +ferry from a slip at the foot of the little town, the holy island, +Scattery, the shrine of Saint Senanus, may be reached. The Round Tower +is in good preservation, and the remains of the Seven Churches can +still be traced. Saint Senanus' bed is still pointed out. No peasant +woman who wishes to be a mother will ever enter this hallowed spot. The +legend of Saint Senanus is similar to that of Saint Kevin. He was +haunted by the love of a woman from whom he flew. Thomas Moore in verse +tells us the hard-heartedness of both the anchorites:-- + + "Oh! haste, and leave this sacred isle, + Unholy bark, e'er morning smile, + For on thy deck, though dark it be, + A female form I see. + And I have sworn this sainted sod + Shall ne'er by woman's feet be trod." + + "Oh! Father, send not hence my bark, + Through wintry winds and billows dark; + I come with humble heart to share + Thy morn and evening-prayer; + Nor mine the feet, oh! holy Saint, + The brightness of thy sod to taint." + + The lady's prayer Senanus spurned, + The wind blew fresh, the bark returned; + But legends hint that had the maid + Till morning's light delay'd, + And given the Saint one rosy smile, + She ne'er had left his lonely isle. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cliffs of Moher.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kilrush.] + +[Illustration: Country Car.] + +[Illustration] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Galway and District. + + +Leaving the County Clare by rail we cross into Galway, between Crusheen +and Tubber. Beyond the marshy country on the right, away in the +woodlands, nestles Loughcootra Castle. The great lake from which the +place takes its name covers eight square miles. The hundreds of islets +here scattered about its surface are the homes of thousands of herons. +The country people have a belief that this bird is a messenger of good +omen, and never interfere with it or its young. There is a beautiful +legend in Irish of a heron which visited St. Columba, at Iona, a +traveller from his own country. This story is recorded in the +interesting life of the saint written in the seventh century by Adamnan, +one of his successors; a beautiful version in English tells of the saint +rising at dawn of day after a dream of the coming of the bird:-- + + "He looked out over the dreary moor, + Over the hill so bleak and hoar-- + 'A bird from the land I revisit no more + Has come to visit me, + Dear Innisfail from thy fragrant shore-- + Land of my own I shall see no more-- + Across the driving sea.' + + Then he left his prayer, and 'Brother,' he said, + 'Take to thee corn, and oil, and bread, + A bird has alit--half frozen, half dead-- + Upon our southern strand. + Then warm him and feed him with gentle care, + And chafe his wing's and anoint him there, + He comes from my own loved land-- + From my own loved land,' and the old Saint wept; + But the Monk arose, while the others slept, + And warmed the heron, and fed and kept + The bird for a day and night. + So Columb feeling, though far away, + For Ireland's soil--like the Gael to-day-- + One favour in heaven's sight." + +The magnificent residence was designed and erected similarly to East +Comer Castle (by Nash, who remodelled Windsor) for Lord Gort, the head +of the Vereker family, at a cost of £70,000. The black hand of the +famine of 1847 fed on this property, like many another in Ireland, and +it passed from its owners under the Encumbered Estates Act. Cove Park, +the residence of Lady Gregory, is just outside Gort. Her Ladyship has +found a way to the hearts of the country people by her sympathy with the +Irish language movement. Her volume, "Mr. Gregory's Letter Box," is a +valuable contribution to the history of Ireland in the first three +decades of the nineteenth century. Sir William Gregory's Memoirs it is +that contain the circumstantial version of the Cabinet scandal, in which +the name of the Hon. Mrs. Norton (George Meredith's "Diana of the +Crossways") figures. The story of the leakage of the State secret is as +follows:-- + + "When Sir Robert Peel determined to repeal the Corn Laws he + consulted a portion of his Cabinet. They were Sidney Herbert, Lord + Lincoln, Sir Jas. Graham, and Lord Aberdeen, all of whom determined + that the repeal of the Corn Laws should be kept a profound secret + until the whole of the Cabinet had assembled. That same evening + Sidney Herbert dined _tête-à-tête_ with Mrs. Norton, the well-known + object of his attachment, and with whom he was infatuated. Before + dinner was over she wormed out of him the secret of the Cabinet. + After dinner she pretended to go to see a sick friend for a short + time, and returned in half-an-hour. In the meantime she had taken a + cab and driven down to the _Times_ Office, and saw Barnes, the + Editor, and told him the Government were going to repeal the Corn + Laws. Barnes said to her, "If you have no proof I shall not detain + you, but if you have you shall have £500." She gave him the chapter + and verse, and returned to poor Sidney Herbert with the cheque in + her pocket. The next day the announcement was made in the _Times_ + which astounded all England. This was on the 5th December, 1845. + The other papers disbelieved it. Lord Derby and the Duke of + Richmond left the Government." + +In the heart of a stony country beset with high fences and rough copple +stones, stands the little town of ~Gort~, The military stationed there +now add to its importance. Kilmacduagh, at the base of the Burren Hills, +contains a church (seventh century) of St. Colman, the Blue-eyed, and a +Round Tower leaning out of the perpendicular. In pre-historic times all +this country side at the foot of Burren, from Gort to Loughrea, and for +miles apart, is said to have been the favourite hunting-ground of Queen +Maev. ~Kinvara~, away on an inlet of Galway Bay, is a fishing village, +and the locality is celebrated for the "succulent oysters"--which in the +season are to be found in every restaurant in Dublin. The antiquary will +find his way easily to Corcomroe Abbey--the church is still in a good +state of preservation. Donald More O'Brien, King of Limerick, is +commonly believed to have built it in the twelfth century. It +subsequently became subject to Furness, in Lancashire. Donough O'Brien, +King of Thomond--killed in battle in 1267--is buried here; his monument +discloses the rude magnificence of his attire. The effigy is looked upon +by scientists as an example of the attire of an Irish King of the +thirteenth century. + +~Athenry~, as its name, the "Ford of the Kings," signifies, and its +ruins testify, was of old a place of renown. The tower is entered by a +small gate tower; before it stands the quaint market cross, on one side +is the Virgin and Child, on the other the figure of the Crucified. The +base is relieved with deer and wolf hounds, and at the corner an angel +holds a scroll, the legend of which is defaced. The Franciscan Priory +(1464), despite the attempt to modernise it, has still two thirteenth +century windows, and the south transept has the remains of a very +beautiful window. The Dominican Priory is said to have been erected at +the personal request of St. Dominick in 1241. So late as 1644 it was the +seat of a university acknowledged by Rome. + +~Tuam~ is now of little importance. It is to ecclesiastics, however, of +interest, as the centre of an Archiepiscopal See. The statue to John +MacHale is worth seeing. He was well known in the first part of the +nineteenth century as "John of Tuam." An uncompromising Ultramontane, he +translated Homer into Gaelic, and O'Connell in one of his speeches +called this great patriot bishop "The Lion of the Fold of Judah." The +ancient cross in the square is a good specimen of the Irish stone +crosses. + +~Galway~ still possesses the evidence of its former greatness. To-day it +is simply an old world city in the midst of a sporting county. Of old it +was a strong-walled town, ever on the alert against alarm and foray, +with its harbour crowded with the warships of Spain and the merchantmen +of many a foreign port. There is a famous map of the city, dating back +to 1651, when the then Lord Deputy Clanricarde pledged the town to the +Duke of Lorraine. It shows a walled-in town with fourteen gates, each +guarded by a watch-tower. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Galway.] + +In the twelfth century, when De Burgo conquered O'Connor, he made Galway +the citadel of his western possessions. During the next century there +gathered into the prosperous town from far and near adventurers and +merchants--the Blakes and the Bodkins, the Lynches, the Morrises, the +Martins, the Joyces, &c.; founders of the great families, whose names +have since been inseparable from Galway. In after times the clanship and +attachment of these families to their members and each other, drew from +the Scripture-loving Puritans the scornful appellation--"The Tribes of +Galway"; but the expression was afterwards adopted by the Galway men as +an honourable mark of distinction between themselves and their cruel +oppressors. In old times the merchant princes of the place were renowned +for their hospitality, which they carried to such an excess that the +civil authorities interfered with it, in 1518, with a law to the effect +that + + "No man of this town shall oste or receive into their houses at + Christmas, Easter, nor no feaste elles, any of the Burkes, + MacWilliams, the Kellies, nor no cepte elles without license of + the Mayor and Councill, on payn to forfeit £5; that neither O nor + Mac shall strutte nor swaggere through the street of Gallway." + +Indeed, the O's and Mac's seem to have made their history by more than +enjoying the hospitality of their neighbours, and what was not given +them willingly they at times took by the strength of their right hands. +Over the western gate of the city was the following meaningful +inscription:-- + + "From the fury of the O'Flaherties, good Lord, deliver us." + +The trade with Spain was for centuries a source of great prosperity to +the town, and those familiar with the characteristics of Spanish +architecture will see much in Galway to remind them of it. The sympathy +of the townspeople seems always to have been with the leaders of forlorn +hopes in Irish history. It was almost destroyed by Ludlow for its +fidelity to the King in 1652, and having been rebuilt, it again fell +before the siege trains of the victorious Ginckle in 1691 after the +battle of Aughrim, the Culloden of Ireland. With the fall of the +Jacobite standard in that battle, the hopes of the western Irish +declined. The surviving sons of most of the old families sought service +abroad in the armies of France, Spain, and Austria. There are many love +songs of the time in Irish, which have been translated, such as-- + + +AFTER AUGHRIM. + + Do you remember long-ago, + Kathaleen! + When your lover whispered low-- + "Shall I stay or shall I go, + Kathaleen?" + And you answered proudly, "Go, + And join King James and strike a blow + For the Green." + + Mavrone! your hair is white as snow, + Kathaleen, + Your heart is sad and full of woe-- + Do you repent you bade him go, + Kathaleen? + But still you answer proudly, "No, + Far better die with Sarsfield so, + Than live a slave without a blow + For the Green." + +Many of the old houses remain. Far and away the most interesting is +Lynch's mansion at the corner of Abbey Gate-street. On the walls are the +arms of the Lynches and their crest, a lynx, which it is said was given +them for the watchfulness with which they guarded a besieged Austrian +town in the middle ages. Behind Saint Nicholas' Church, in +Market-street, is the Lynch stone, inscribed with a skull and +crossbones, and "Vanity of vanity, and all is but vanity," above which +is an inscription:-- + + "This memorial of the stern and unbending justice of the Chief + Magistrate of this city, James Lynch Fitzstephen, elected Mayor, + A.D. 1493, who condemned and executed his own guilty son, Walter, + on this spot, has been restored to its ancient site A.D. 1854, with + the approval of the Town Commissioners, by their Chairman, Very + Rev. Peter Daly, P.P., and Vicar of Saint Nicholas." + +The stern and unbending justice relates to the Mayor's execution of his +own son. The story tells how a young Spaniard, who was the Mayor's +guest, crossed in love the Mayor's son. One night, heated with wine and +inflamed with jealousy, young Lynch drove a stiletto through the heart +of his rival. His father tried and condemned him for the crime. His +mother roused the sympathy of the townspeople to such an extent that +none could be found to act as executioner, but the old Mayor was +even-handed with them, and hanged the unfortunate culprit with his own +hands. + +No visitor to Galway will fail to find out the Claddagh. It is the most +conservative community in Ireland, and with them neither old times are +changed nor old manners gone. The colony inhabit a number of +low-thatched cottages apart from the town. They live mostly by fishing. +The Claddagh women dress in blue cloaks and red petticoats, and their +rings, which visitors procure as keepsakes, represent two hands holding +a harp. Hardman, in his "Rare History of Galway," wrote of them as +follows:-- + + "The colony, from time immemorial, has been ruled by one of their + own body, periodically elected, who is dignified with the title of + Mayor, regulates the community according to their own peculiar laws + and customs, and settles all their fishery disputes. His decisions + are so decisive and so much respected that the parties are seldom + known to carry their differences before a legal tribunal or to + trouble the civil magistrates." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Arran Island. Claddagh.] + +Salthill, to the west of the town, is a well-sheltered bathing-place, +with pleasant villas for visitors. The Queen's College will repay a +visit. At the bridge in the town excellent salmon fishing is to be had. +When the fish are making up the river for Corrib or Lough Mask the +sight is very interesting. From Galway the old Franciscan Monastery at +Claregalway may be driven to, or an excursion made down the bay to the +Arran Islands. They are twenty-seven miles from the harbour. There are +three principal islands, Innismore, Innismaan, and Innisheen, and +several small isles. Two centuries ago they were described as paved over +with stones, with wide openings between them for cattle to break their +legs, and the modern description by Hon. Emily Lawless does not far +differ. + +The dress of the people is mostly white, homespun flannel "bawneens," +and sandals of cowhide, fastened across the instep, which they call +"pampooties." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Queen's College, Galway.] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Connemara and Sligo. + + +The Great Southern and Western Railway line runs northward from Tuam to +Sligo. To the westward lies Iar Connaught and Connemara, the capital of +which is Clifden, standing high above Ardhear Bay. If we go direct from +Galway to Clifden we pass Oughterard and the ruins of Aughnanure Castle, +formerly the stronghold of "The furious O'Flahertys." From its Tower we +can get a view of Lough Corrib, with its famous Caislean-no-Circe, long +the lair of Grace O'Malley, of whom the western peasant may say she + + "Fought, and sailed, and ruled, + And loved, and made our world." + +Oughterard nowadays is given over to fishermen instead of the fighting +followers of the western chieftains. The Connaught Glendalough differs +much from its Leinster namesake, but the Maamturk Mountains and the Glen +of Innagh have a panorama of scenes difficult, indeed, to rival. Clifden +is an excellent centre from which to make excursions. Wherever we look +the Twelve Bens of Bumabeola spring up like uplifted lances. The +coast-line is beautiful, and from the promontories we see distant Slyne +Head and the Isles of the West. Mountain climbers will find on the +summit of Urrisbeg a curious plateau. The district is a good one for +lake and sea fishing. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Achill Head Mayo.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Diamond Mountain, Letterfrack.] + +The coast drive to Leenane should not be missed. Leenane itself is on +the outer flank of "Joyce's County," as a fiord of Killery Bay. +Letterfrack is but ten miles from Clifden. The mountain scenery in the +immediate vicinity of the town is delightful. Within easy reach is +Little Killery Bay and the beautiful valley, The Pass of Kylemore, near +which is Kylemore Castle, where Mitchell Henry started his model farm in +1864. The mountain pass of Lehinch cuts through the hills to the sea. A +journey by Ballinakill brings the adventuresome to Renvyle Bay, where +there is a comfortable hotel. Leenane is the best starting ground for an +expedition up the Twelve Bens; from it also a tour may be made to Cong. + +About eight miles beyond Leenane is Errig Bridge, from which the best +view of Croagh Patrick Mountain may be had. But an ascent of the +mountain is best made from Murrisk Abbey, six miles outside Westport. +From the mountain side the expansive country from island-set Clew Bay to +Nephin and Slievemore, in Achill, spreads out to best advantage. The +famous coach road from Clifden cuts into Westport from the south. The +Quay and Mall and the Marquis of Sligo's demesne are the "sights" of the +town. It is a convenient centre from which to visit Achill Island. The +drive through Newport, Mallaranny, and Achill Sound to Dingort, although +across an exposed country, on a fine day will more than repay the +tourist. + +The views of Clew Bay are like the changing scenes in a panorama. +Newport will clamour for the attention of fishermen; and lavish on them +opportunities for sport. The Glens on the way to Mallaranny will tempt +excursions, and beyond Burrishoole Bridge the antiquary will deviate +to Carrighooley Castle, and lend his ears to the peasant tales of Grace +O'Malley and her husband, the MacWilliam. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Glendalough.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lough Corrib.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Killery Bay.] + +Mallaranny is a home of rest. It hides beside a promontory in the bay, +and its splendid strand faces the south. The direct way to Achill is +through Dingort. For scenery and sport few places in the west surpass +the island. The mountain cliff scenery is superb. The seals breed in the +cliffs, and the rocks are the homes of countless seabirds. At Meenawn, +the eagles on the island mostly nest. The great horned wild goats offer +good sport to the marksman, and the deep-sea fisher will delight in the +shoals and "schools" of herring and mackerel which in the seasons strike +the coast and into the bays of the island. Did Izaac Walton but live in +our days he would be sure to find his way to Ballina, because of the Moy +River and the salmon which "most do congregate there." Loughs Conn and +Cullin are open free fishing, and on the preserves the terms are most +liberal. Foxford, beside Lough Conn, will gladden the hearts of those +interested in philanthropic schemes for the benefit of "the very poor" +in rural Ireland. Within a few years, enterprises well directed, has +transformed the district from being a "most distressful country" into a +thriving, self-respecting, self-advancing locality. Killala, six miles +from Ballina, is of interest as the point at which General Humbert and +1,100 Frenchmen invaded Ireland in 1798. Sligo is the most thriving town +in the west of Ireland. Its public buildings, its commerce, and its +picturesque position, are one and all notable. Sligo Abbey, a structure +of the thirteenth century, is a very remarkable pile of ruins. Lough +Gill contains most beautiful sylvan and sea pictures. There is sea, +lake, and river fishing _galore_, and mostly free. The point from which +to see Lough Gill in all its glory is Dooine Rock. Excursions may be +made to Hazelwood, Glencar, and even to Bundoran, the most deservedly +patronised watering-place in the north-west of Ireland. Those who +desire an exquisite souvenir of a visit to Ireland, should not fail to +procure a piece of Belleek ware, remarkable for its elegance and +delicacy; and if in the vicinity of Belleek village, permission may be +obtained to visit the interesting pottery. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kylemore.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lough Gill.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Sligo District, see end + of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +Summer and Winter Resorts + + +The health resorts of Ireland are so many, their attractions and +advantages so varied, that one wonders why it is that they are +comparatively so little patronised. The explanation is not far to seek. +Hitherto they have been but little known, one cause and another have +helped to keep Ireland a _terra incognita_. The "faculty," however, has +been for long acquainted with the benefits which the Green Isle +possesses, and many an insular invalid, consumed with the desire to +visit some continental resort, has taken the common sense advice of the +family physician and learned to appreciate the advantages Providence has +bestowed nearer home. + +Winter quarters we have a good store, and beauty spots abound on the +coast, where summer delights can be enjoyed _galore_, to use an Irish +expression. + +Most of the places referred to beneath have already been described in +the foregoing pages, but it will, perhaps, be convenient for those in +search of particular information as to health resorts and seaside +watering places, to have them collected in one chapter and listed +alphabetically-- + + ~ARDMORE.~--Fishing village, five miles from Youghal, growing as a + watering place. Beautifully situated on southern shore of Bay. + Splendid strand, good opportunities for bathing. Deep-sea fishing, + mackerel, and herring "schools," plenty of lobsters. Cliff scenery + in vicinity; the bay is frequented by seals. Gaelic-speaking + peasantry. Round tower and ancient church. Good cottage + accommodation. + + ~ARRAN ISLANDS.~--Three in number--Innismore, Innismaan, + Innisheer--standing out in the Atlantic, a sort of long harbour bar + to Galway Bay. Scenery cannot pretend to be attractive. Bathing and + deep-sea fishing. Splendid views of cliff scenery on Clare Coast. + Steam trip up Galway Bay delightful. An enjoyable inn at Kilronan. + + BALLYBUNION.--Good watering place, splendid strand, fine cliff + scenery, sheer on Atlantic Ocean, plenty bathing accommodation. + Castle Hotel is comfortable, lodgings clean and cheap. Eight miles + from Listowel. + + BLARNEY.--Hydro, at St. Ann's Hill, on the side of pleasant uplands + overlooking old castle. Nicely wooded, with lake and trout stream. + Cottage homes, within grounds which are between six and seven + hundred acres in extent. Sandy soil and pine forests. The + residences well sheltered. Six miles from City Cork and Muskerry + tram; two miles G. S. W. Railway. Terms and particulars of + treatment, &c., to be had from the medical officer, Dr. Altdorfer. + + CAHIRCIVEEN.--An inlet of Valencia Harbour, well sheltered, mild + winters. Coach drives through mountain scenery or along coast to + Waterville. Valencia three miles. + + CASTLECONNELL.--Fishing village on the Shannon, outside Limerick, + six miles. Possesses chalybeate spring. Beautiful river scenery, + and splendid fishing. The Shannon Hotel can be recommended. + + DUNMORE EAST.--Pleasant, quiet, and select seaside resort, eleven + miles from Waterford, at the mouth of the River Suir. Good strand, + well sheltered. Splendid sea fishing and exceptionally good harbour + for yachting or boating. Plenty of villa and lodging-accommodation, + demand for same on increase in season. Good bathing; good hotel. + + GLENGARRIFF.--Coach from Kenmare or Bantry. Beautiful scenery. + Inlet of Bantry Bay. Well wooded, mild climate, winter resort + beyond compare. Gulf Stream strikes coast in vicinity. Excellent + hotel accommodation. Good cottage accommodation. Plenty coaching + and boating facilities in summer; splendid sea bathing. Arbutus + grows wild. + + KENMARE.--One of the starting-points for the Grand Atlantic Coast + Drive. Thriving pleasant town at the head of the fiord. + Macgillicuddy Reeks stand out behind the town. Mountain climbers + will make ascent best from point beyond Sohaleen Bridge. Both the + Cork and Kerry sides of the bay are very beautiful and worthy of + investigation. The Southern Hotels Company has one of its branches + outside the railway station. The Lansdowne Arms is an old coaching + inn, famed for its mountain mutton and good claret. + + ~KILKEE.~--The best bathing-resort in the three kingdoms. Splendid + facilities. The cliff scenery and coast walks attractive. Good + villa and cottage accommodation. Modern hotels on esplanade. + + ~KILLARNEY~, see page 136. + + ~LEHINCH.~--Bracing air from Atlantic. Good bathing. Bold coast + line. New hotel, fine golf links. Promises to be the most + up-to-date watering place in Clare. + + ~LEENANE.~--The pleasant place on Killary Harbour. It has the + Mweelrea mountains behind it and the sea in front. The bay is + remarkable for sea fishing, while the salmon and trout angler will + have his heart's desire in Errif Lake. The Leenane Hotel stands + close to the shore, and the Aasleagh Hotel, high above the Errif, + is surrounded by demesne lands. The mountain scenery is remarkable. + + ~LISDOONVARNA.~--Inland watering place. An old favourite health + resort now more easy of access than hitherto. The spas are + sulphurous and chalybeate. The hotel accommodation is unusually + good, but still insufficient for the summer and early autumn + visitors. The driving tours in the locality take in the most + delightful scenery in county Clare. + + ~LUCAN.~--A very old spa. Beautiful sylvan retreat within nine + miles of Dublin. Scenery on upper Liffey and drives in vicinity + through charming country. The Hydro, equipped with every modern + advantage. + + ~PARKNASILLA.~--THE PREMIER WINTER RESORT OF IRELAND. Hotel well + sheltered on fiord of Kenmare Bay. The grounds around beautifully + wooded and planted with luxuriant shrubs. Absolutely free from + winter cold. This country side the pride of Kerry. The seascape and + islands in vicinity delightful. Admirable arrangements for boating, + fishing, and coaching. + + ~POULAPHOUCA.~--Approached from Harristown on the Tullow branch. The + upper Liffey winds here through a beautiful glen with a splendid + fall beyond Poulaphouca bridge. Splendid facilities for shooting and + fishing are afforded in the surrounding mountain country. + Convenient centre for pedestrian and cycle tours. Hotel immediately + above the Fall, also good hotel at Blessington: and four miles + higher up in the Wicklow Highlands, at Lacken, excellent hotel. + + ~QUEENSTOWN.~--"The Paradise of Pensioners." The port of Cork + Harbour. Centre of American tourist traffic. Well sheltered. Long + the winter quarters of invalids. Every facility for visitors. + Within easy reach of Cork city. Excellent train service. In summer + steamer trips on beautiful river. Several good hotels; splendid + villa accommodation. A bright cheerful town, full of life and + change of colour. A well known specialist (Dr. A. Thomson), in his + "Physician's Note Book," puts the query--"Where should a + consumptive patient pass the winter months if he can't go abroad?" + and answers himself, "There is no place within Great Britain and + Ireland so well adapted for the residence of a consumptive patient + as Queenstown." + + ~RECESS.~--Midway between Clifden and Kylemore, on the edge of the + western Glendalough, guarded behind by mountain scenery, secluded, + but all the more attractive to those weary of the busy haunts of + men. The lake and mountain scenery exceptionally wild. It is an + ideal resort for sportsmen. + + ~TRAMORE.~--One of the most attractive watering places in Ireland. + Its name in English signifies "the great strand," and it is no + misnomer. The bathing facilities are the best on southern coast, + and are not, indeed, surpassed on any other coast. Splendid new + hotel up-to-date in every respect, and other hotels to suit all + classes, with fine race-course, plenty of lodgings and houses to be + had in the season. Twenty minutes run from Waterford by train. + Military bands in the summer. Exceptionally good place for + families. Tramore is a delightful seaside resort, built on a + gradual incline, with a southerly aspect, on the shores of the + broad Atlantic. The air is almost proverbial for its restorative + qualities, not only in popular but also in scientific opinion. It + is beyond all doubt that Tramore has as many hours of sunshine, + less rainfall, and more even temperature than any other seaside + town in the United Kingdom. + + ~VALENCIA.~--The next parish to America, the home of Atlantic cable + stations. The island remarkable for the number of tropical plants + which grow in the open. Climate unusually mild. Boating, sailing, + and bathing in the season. Deep-sea fishing with islanders. Good + hotel, comfortable, clean, and cheap. Other accommodation difficult + to obtain. + + ~WATERFORD~, see page 112. + + ~WATERVILLE.~--Principal posting place on Atlantic coast tour. + Splendid watering place, beautifully situated on strip of land + dividing mountain lake from sea. Fine strand. Sea and lake fishing. + The station for Mackey Bennet cable system. Three good hotels, + M'Elligott's and Galvin's, on the coast, and the Southern Hotel on + the shore of the picturesque Lough Currane, within a stone's throw + of the sea. Very good cottage accommodation in summer season. + + + + +[Illustration] + +Natural History of the South and West of Ireland. + +By R. LLOYD PRAEGER, B.A., B.E., &c. + + +The Natural History of the South and West of Ireland possesses a special +and peculiar interest in the occurrence in this region of a number of +plants and animals which are rare in or absent from Great Britain and +the adjoining portions of Europe. Let us first consider the general +geographical features of this area, and the geological characters which +have produced those features. Ireland has often been likened to a +saucer, consisting as it does of a great central plain, fringed with +mountain groups disposed around the coast. The plain has a slightly +undulating floor of Carboniferous limestone; the groups of hills are +mostly formed of older rocks, which break through the level limestones. +On our journey from Dublin to Athlone, or from Dublin to Mallow, we pass +across typical portions of the central plain; and the brown ridges of +Slieve Bloom and Devil's Bit, and the greener heights of the Galtees, +furnish good examples of the masses of older rocks that rise out of the +plain. + +In considering the features and natural history of this wide area, it +will be convenient to divide it into districts, which we shall treat of +in the following order:-- + + 1. Wicklow and Wexford. + + 2. Waterford and East Cork. + + 3. West Cork and Kerry. + + 4. Clare and East Galway. + + 5. West Galway and West Mayo. + + 6. Sligo. + + 7. The Central Plain and River Shannon. + + +1. ~WICKLOW AND WEXFORD.~--Here we are on the East Coast, looking across +St. George's Channel towards the shores of Wales. The lovely county of +Wicklow is the most mountainous in Ireland, having 180 square miles over +1,000 feet elevation, and 25 square miles over 2,000. Wexford is lower +and more fertile. The coasts of both counties are in great measure flat +and sandy, and are the home of many rare plants. A number of species of +light soils and of gravelly shores have here their Irish headquarters, +such as the Round-headed Trefoil (_Trifolium glomeratum_) the Sea-Stock +(_Matthiola sinuata_), the rare Sea-Cudweed (_Diotis candidissima_), and +the Wild Asparagus (_A. officinalis_). The Murrough, a great gravel +beach backed by salt marshes which extends from Greystones to Wicklow, +and the marshes of the River Slaney, may be specially recommended to the +naturalist. These coasts are the only Irish locality for the handsome +ground-beetle, _Nebria complanata_, a typical South European animal. The +Wicklow mountains, which reach in Lugnaquilla a height of 3,039 feet, +are the main portion of the Leinster highlands, formed by a great mass +of granite which stretches from Dublin into county Kilkenny. Considering +their elevation this range is singularly devoid of alpine plants and +animals, but many interesting species inhabit the lower grounds, famous +on account of the beauty of the scenery. + +Among the Lepidoptera several rare species are characteristic of the +district, such as the "Bath White" butterfly (_Pontia daplidice_), and +the "Four-spotted Footman" moth (_OEnistis quadra_). + +2. ~WATERFORD AND EAST CORK.~--This is a picturesque district, formed +largely of slates and sandstones of Old Red Sandstone age. The coast +is mostly of very bold character, with towering cliff ranges. The +country is generally undulating and fertile, with occasional mountain +ranges, of which the Comeraghs are rendered especially interesting and +picturesque by the deep "cooms," embosoming tarns, which give them their +name. The Comeraghs and the lovely valley of the Blackwater furnish +particularly attractive ground for the naturalist. The flora and fauna +of this area are intermediate in character between that of the district +last considered and of the surpassingly interesting country that lies to +the westward, and which will next claim attention. Thus, the coasts +yield several of the rare plants mentioned in the last paragraph--for +instance, _Diotis_ and _Asparagus_ grow at Tramore; while at the same +time we first meet in this area with some of the most famous plants of +the south-west--London Pride (_Saxifraga umbrosa_), Kidney-leaved +Saxifrage (_S. Geum_), Great Butterwort (_Pinguicula grandiflora_), +Irish Spurge (_Euphorbia hiberna_). Two rare butterflies of this +district are _Dianthæcia cæsia_ and _D. luteago_ var. _Barrettii_; and +the largest of the British leaf-beetles, _Timarcha lævigata_, has been +taken near Waterford, and at Tipperary. + +[Illustration: _Drawing, J. St. J. Phillips._ Geological Section from +Bantry Bay to Killarney.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ A Kerry ditchbank showing +Pennywort two feet in height.] + +3. ~WEST CORK AND KERRY.~--This is one of the most beautiful and +interesting districts in the British Isles, and indeed in Europe. The +ancient Devonian rocks which prevail have been folded into a grand +series of simple arches and troughs, the axes running north-east and +south-west. The arches form noble mountain ranges, which on the coast +project far into the Atlantic in a series of grand promontories, and +inland form picturesque highlands, of which Macgillicuddy's Reeks, which +rise to 3,404, constitute the highest land in Ireland. The valleys in +their lower portions are occupied by the sea, in the form of long +island-studded fiords; their upper parts are often filled with +Carboniferous limestone, and offer a pleasant contrast of tillage and +green pasture between the gaunt brown mountain-ribs. Here we stand on +the most western outpost of the European Continent, with the Atlantic on +three sides. The effect of the encompassing ocean, and the western winds +which constantly blow in from it, is to produce here and along the whole +western coast the most uniform annual temperature to be found in Europe. +Frosts are almost unknown, and great heat and drought likewise. These +peculiar climatic conditions have resulted in the acquisition and +preservation of a fauna and flora which spread here from more southern +latitudes at some time now long gone by, and which in these favoured +spots still remain to remind us of a period when a state of things +prevailed very different from what obtains at present. For naturalists +tell us that there can be no doubt that these southern plants and +animals migrated to Ireland over land-surfaces now destroyed, having +spread along the old-time coast line which long ago extended from the +Pyrenean highlands to Ireland; and as a relic of their march, we find +some of the species still surviving in the south-west of England, while +all of them are absent from the rest of England and from the adjoining +parts of continental Europe. + +An enumeration of a few of the most remarkable of the plants, with a +definition of their range, will make clearer this peculiar feature of +the natural history of the West of Ireland:-- + +[Illustration: Saxifraga umbrosa.] + +London Pride (_Saxifraga umbrosa_). In Ireland along the west and south +coasts. Absent from England. On the Continent it is found only in the +south. + +Kidney-leaved Saxifrage (_S. Geum_). In Ireland in the south-west. +Unknown in England. On the Continent confined to the Pyrenean district + +Strawberry-tree (_Arbutus unedo_). In Ireland in the south-west. Unknown +in England. On the Continent it grows all along the Mediterranean. + +Great Butter wort (_Pinguicula grandiflora_). In Ireland in the +south-west. Unknown in England. On the Continent it grows on the Alps +and in the south-west. + +Irish Spurge (_Euphorbia hiberna_). In Ireland along the south and west +coasts. In England it is confined to Devonshire. On the Continent it +occurs only in the south-west. + +[Illustration: _Photo, J. St. J. Phillips._ Among the Arbutus, Cloonee +Lakes.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ Arbutus Islands, Killarney.] + +Going for a moment further north, we find in Connemara, and there only, +a group of three kinds of Heath with the same peculiar distribution:-- + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ The Irish Spurge.] + + St. Dabeoc's Heath (_Dabeocia polifolia_). In Ireland + in Connemara. Unknown in England. On the + Continent confined to the south-west. + + Mediterranean Heath (_Erica mediterranea_). In + Ireland in Connemara. Unknown in England. + On the Continent confined to the south-west. + + Mackay's Heath (_E. Mackaiana_). In Ireland in + Connemara. Unknown in England. On the + Continent in Spain only. + +Nor is it the plants alone that exhibit the peculiar relation existing +between the Natural History of Ireland and of the Pyrenean region. +Among the animals the same features may be observed, the most striking +instance being the peculiar Kerry Slug (_Geomalacus maculosus_), which +is abundant in many parts of the extreme south-west of Ireland, and is +elsewhere found only in Portugal. + +[Illustration: _Drawing, Dr. R. F. Scharff._ The Kerry Slug.] + +Mixed with these southern forms in the West of Ireland we find another +group of still stranger affinities. In pools and lakes from Kerry to +Donegal grows the curious Pipe-wort (_Eriocaulon septangulare_). It may +be also found in the Island of Skye, in the West of Scotland, but +nowhere else in Europe; to see it again we must go to the northern +regions of North America, where it flourishes under conditions much more +rigorous than those which obtain in its mild Irish home. The deliciously +fragrant orchid, _Spiranthes Romanzoviana_, grows in the counties of +Cork, Armagh, Antrim, and Londonderry; elsewhere only in sub-arctic +America and the portion of Asia which most nearly approaches the Alaskan +shores. The "Blue-eyed Grass" of Canada (_Sisyrinchium angustifolium_) +is likewise confined to the West of Ireland and to North America; and +further instances might be quoted. In the animal kingdom, too, parallel +cases have been noted, the most interesting being the discovery of no +less than three American species of fresh-water sponge, which are +unknown in the rest of Europe. + +To account for the presence of this American group naturalists are +driven, as in the case of the southern species, to the conclusion that +these represent one of the very oldest components of our existing fauna +and flora, and point to a period when the edge of Europe was prolonged +far to the north-west, forming a continuous land area, presumably by way +of Iceland and Greenland, to America. And here on the wild western coast +of Ireland these last inhabitants of the lost lands of Europe still +survive. + +[Illustration: The Kerry Slug, showing the manner in which its +coloration mimics clusters of lichen among which it lives.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ Nest of Wood Ant at Killarney] + +4. ~CLARE AND EAST GALWAY.~--Our last district--West Cork and Kerry--was +characterised by great ribs of slate and sandstone, and by an absence of +limestone and the numerous plants which follow in its train. The present +district forms a marked contrast, being largely composed of +Carboniferous limestone. And the remarkable thing about these limestones +is that they are over many miles totally devoid of any covering of soil +or clay; the grey gnarled rock, fantastically carved and crevassed by +the action of rain and weather, lies naked and bare. But in the crevices +of the rock a wonderful variety of rare and beautiful plants abound. One +or two of these have their home in the far south, like the plants we +have lately considered, notably the little Close-flowered Orchid, +_Neotinea intacta_, whose nearest station is about Nice. But the +majority of the interesting species of these limestones are alpine +plants, usually found at high elevations on mountains, which here form +sheets of verdure down to the very edge of the sea. The Mountain Dryas +(_D. octopetala_), the Bearberry (_Arctostaphylos Uva-ursi_), the lovely +Spring Gentian (_G. verna_), and the Blue Moor-grass (_Sesleria +cærulea_) are good examples, all of them growing in great abundance from +the hill-tops down to the shore. It is this strange mingling of plants +from the far south, from the far north, and from the mountains, which +renders the West of Ireland so fascinating a field for the botanist. In +the barren district of Clare, and in the adjoining Isles of Arran and +south-west portion of county Galway, this peculiar flora may be seen in +its greatest perfection. Some very rare insects have been taken in +eastern Galway, including the Lepidoptera _Nallia ancilla_ and _Lycæna +artexerus_. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ Wolf Spider (_Pisaura +mirabilis_) spinning nest for young.] + +5. ~WEST GALWAY AND WEST MAYO~.--In this district we have again a +complete change of geology and of scenery. The grey limestones with rich +grass and rare flowers filling every crevice are gone, and we are in a +wild region of ancient metamorphic rocks--schists, quartzites, gneisses, +and granites--which form wide moorlands, dotted with innumerable +lakelets, with noble mountain groups rising over the wild boggy +lowlands. To the student of metamorphism the geology of this area is of +very high interest. The botanist finds himself once again, as in Kerry, +in a focus of the southern flora already discussed. As stated above, +Connemara contributes to the list of Pyrenean plants three Heaths, of +which St. Dabeoc's Heath is the loveliest of the British representatives +of the order. Here we may also meet again our old Kerry friends the +London Pride, and on Inisbofin the Irish Spurge--plants which strictly +avoid the limestone, as do the Heaths. The American element is +represented by the Pipe-wort, which is common, and the little water +plant, _Naias flexilis_, which grows near Roundstone. Of the three +famous Heaths, St. Dabeoc's is abundant throughout Connemara, becoming +rarer in Mayo. The Mediterranean Heath grows near Roundstone, and in +immense abundance on the north side of Clew Bay, and again near the +north-west corner of Mayo, extending inland as far as Lough Conn. +Mackay's Heath is the rarest, being confined to the neighbourhood of +Roundstone. As regards its fauna, Connemara and West Mayo yield fewer +peculiar species than the south-west; but much remains to be done before +it can be said that the zoology of this area is thoroughly known, and it +offers a most promising field for the explorer. + + +6. ~SLIGO.~--The visitor who makes Sligo his headquarters finds himself +in a district of much variety and interest. This is a district that +cannot be too highly recommended to the naturalist. To the geologist the +fossiliferous limestones and the metamorphic rocks are alike of +interest. The botanist naturally turns to the Ben Bulben Mountains, +which harbour the richest group of alpine plants to be found in Ireland, +including the pretty _Arenaria ciliata_, which does not grow elsewhere +in the British Isles. To the zoologist a rich field lies waiting. A +recent exploration of the limestone glens by a party of English and +Irish conchologists has shown that in variety of land mollusca this +district surpasses almost any other in these islands; and good results +may be confidently expected in other invertebrate groups. + + +7. ~THE CENTRE.~--The area comprised in the field of operations of the +Great Southern and Western Railway Company include the southern half of +the great Central Plain of Ireland and the lower course of the Shannon, +the largest river in the British Isles. Towards the east the counties of +Carlow and Kilkenny include much picturesque ground, especially along +the courses of the rivers Nore and Barrow; and as picturesque ground +implies the existence of hill and valley, wood and rock, the naturalist +will find himself at home here. The flora is rich, though without any +very marked features; the Nettle-leaved Bell-flower (_Campanula +Trachelium_) being the most characteristic species. Regarding the fauna +much has still to be learned. In Tipperary, Queen's County, and King's +County we are in typical central plain country--great tracts of slightly +undulating drift-covered Carboniferous limestone, the surface including +wide pastures, cultivated ridges, and large areas of peat bog and marsh. +The bogs, which form so peculiar a feature of the surface of Ireland, +may be studied here over many miles of country. The noble Shannon, which +winds slowly southward across the plain, widens at intervals into great +lake-like expanses, of which Lough Derg is the largest, a place of much +interest to the student of natural history. One plant which grows here, +the Willow-leaved Inula (_I. salicina_), is found nowhere else in the +British Isles; other characteristic Shannon plants are the Water +Germander (_Teucrium Scordium_) and the rare Stone wort _Chara +tomentosa_. Further west, in Limerick, a more varied surface prevails. +Like Waterford and Cork, Limerick is a great centre for animals of the +"Southern" distributional type, such as the Wood White Butterfly +(_Leptidia sinapis_) the Brimstone Butterfly (_Gonapteryx rhamm_), and +the Purple Hair-streak (_Thecla quercus_). The small but handsome +Ground-beetle, _Panogæus crux-major_, is known in Ireland only from +Finlough. This species has a typically "germanic" distribution in Great +Britain. The Water-beetle _Pelobius Hermanni_, a very rare species, and +the only British member of its family, occurs near Limerick and Cork. +Cratloe Wood, by the Shannon near Limerick, may be specially recommended +as a hunting-ground. + +[Illustration] + + + + +SPORT. + + +For sportsmen Ireland is a happy land, ready to supply their every want. +Royal Meath, Kildare, Waterford, Tipperary, and Cork County are hunted +by several good packs during-each season, and "the meets" are duly +published in the local newspapers. + +In the large tracts of bog, moorland, river reaches, and mountain lands +there is splendid shooting; in Kerry especially, where poaching is put +down with a heavy hand, there are plenty of opportunities for sport. + +In most cases the hosts of the hotels have secured the shooting of many +thousands of acres in their vicinity. + +When the weather is "hard," excellent sport can be had along the +southern districts. + +The gentry most usually preserve their estates with great vigilance, but +they are generous in giving permission to bona-fide sportsmen. + + + + +[Illustration: CYCLING] + +GENERAL HINTS + +(FROM MECREDY'S ROAD BOOK OF IRELAND.) + + +June and September are the driest months in Ireland. Tourists will find +the Royal Irish Constabulary the best source of information, and they +cannot do better than inquire at the various police barracks on the way +for advice as to places of interest to be visited, and the condition of +the roads. In unfrequented country districts the footpaths as a rule may +be taken with impunity, but it is never absolutely safe to do so. It is +always well to enquire of other cyclists met _en route_. The roads are +very variable, some being grand and others very bad. Intercourse with +the peasantry will be found interesting and amusing. Nothing can exceed +their civility and courtesy; and for those who are not too particular it +will be found an excellent plan to lunch in their cottages, excellent +tea, home-made bread, butter and eggs being procurable for 1/-per head. +There is little use questioning them as to distances, however. They are +nearly always wrong, and in any case they calculate in Irish miles--11 +Irish equal 14 English. The police, however, are reliable, and give the +distances in statute miles. Repairers are few and far between, but the +local blacksmiths are often clever and handy men. The by-roads are +generally better than the main roads, and the surface is better at the +edge than in the middle. The mountain roads are as a rule very good, and +not nearly so hilly as one would expect. The country people are rather +stupid about getting out of one's way, and live stock on the road are a +frequent source of danger, especially pigs, sheep, donkeys, and Kerry +cows. Mountain passes should be negotiated carefully, as mountain +torrents sometimes sweep away short stretches of otherwise excellent +roads, and one comes on these spots unexpectedly. The corners, too, are +excessively sharp, and steep pitches occur unexpectedly. + +In most small Provincial towns the Hotels are not good, but in tourists' +districts, such as Kerry, they are really excellent and the charges are +reasonable. Where lodgings are required it is a good plan to ask the +local Head Constable for advice. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +Cork is an excellent centre for cycling. The roads are in fair order and +the inclines moderate. There is abundance of fine scenery, and notably +in the extreme south and south-west where there are some entrancing +tit-bits. Magnificent tracts of inland mountain scenery are to be found, +and many important historical and archæological ruins. There are hotels +nearly everywhere within easy reach, many of them very good, and in most +cases affording fair accommodation at reasonable cost. + +~One Day Tours from Cork.~ + +No. 1.--To Queenstown, road 14 miles or rail 12 miles. Thence to East +Ferry, 5 miles, cross the Ballinacurragh River by ferry. Thence by road +to Midleton, 4 miles, back to Cork, road or rail, 12 miles. Fine views +of the River Lee, Lough Mahon, the lovely Harbour of Queenstown, +Ballinacurragh River, &c. + +No. 2.--To Youghal, road or rail, 27 miles. Thence by road to Ardmore, 6 +miles--a watering place with a ruined chapel where there are some +curious carvings in stone, and a fine and perfect specimen of the old +Irish round tower, Return same road. + +No. 3.--To Midleton, 12 miles, road or rail. Thence to Cloyne, 6 miles, +where there is an ancient Cathedral still in use. Thence to Ballycotton, +6 miles, a small watering place. Back by Cloyne and Aghada, on +Queenstown Harbour, 12 miles. Thence by steamer to Queenstown, or across +the East Ferry by road to Queenstown, 6 miles. Back by road or rail, 12 +miles. + +Hotels at Midleton, Cloyne, and Ballycotton. + +No. 4.--To Queenstown, road or rail, then by steamer, 20 minutes across +the harbour to Crosshaven. Thence by road, 2 miles, to Church Bay. Fine +view of mouth of the harbour and open Atlantic. Thence by Carrigaline +and Douglas, back to Cork, 12 miles. + +Good hotels at Crosshaven and Church Bay. + +No. 5.--Cork to Blarney, by the Valley of the Lee and Carrigrohane, 9 +miles. Famous Castle of Blarney with the "Kissing Stone." The Groves of +Blarney round the Castle may be seen, also St. Ann's Hydropathic +establishment. Return by Rathpeacon and Blackpool to Cork, 6 miles. + +No. 6.--Cork to Dunkettle, 3 miles, road or rail, thence along the +Glanmire River to Glanmire, 2 miles. Thence by Sallybrook and Kilcully, +back to Cork, 6 miles. + +~Two Day Tours from Cork.~ + +No. 1.--Cork to Macroom, road or rail, 25 miles. Thence to Inchigeela, +10 miles, and Gougane Barra, 10 miles. Beautiful lake scenery, and the +hermitage at Gougane Barra; a chapel on the Holy Lake is well worth +seeing. The Pass of Keimaneigh is 3 miles further. From this point the +traveller can return to sleep at Inchigeela or Macroom, where, at both +places, there are good hotels; or may continue his journey to +Glengarriff, Kenmare, or Killarney. If returning to Cork from Macroom, +the journey may be made by Coachford and Dripsey, distance about 25 +miles. + +No. 2.--Cork to Bandon, 20 miles by rail or road. Thence to +Courtmacsherry and the Old Head of Kinsale, each about 7 miles by road. +The tourist can sleep at either place, and return to Cork by Kinsale and +Innishannon, or continue his journey to Bantry, 37-1/2 miles by road or +rail. Thence to Glengarriff, Killarney, &c. + +~Tours for Three or more Days from Cork.~ + +No. 1.--Cork to Youghal, 28 miles by road or rail. Thence to Temple +Michael, 3 miles along left bank of the River Blackwater, through +Dromana to Cappoquin, 11 miles. From Cappoquin the Trappist Monastery of +Mount Melleray, 3-1/2 miles, can be visited. Returning to Cappoquin the +tourist can take either bank of the Blackwater, along a beautiful and +level road to Lismore, 3-1/2 miles. The distance from Lismore to Fermoy +is 16 miles by road or rail; the road along the Valley of the Blackwater +being very fine throughout, and most picturesque. At Lismore the +beautiful castle belonging to the Duke of Devonshire can be seen. The +tourist can return from Fermoy to Mallow 16 miles, and thence to Cork, +21 miles. Good hotels at Youghal, Lismore, Fermoy, and Mallow. + +No. 2.--Two day tour, No. 1, can be extended to three or more days, by +proceeding from Inchigeela to Glengarriff, 23 miles, and Killarney, 39 +miles. Good hotels at Inchigeela, Glengarriff, Kenmare, and Killarney. + +Two day tour, No. 2, can be similarly extended to three or more days, by +continuing the journey from Bandon to Bantry, 37-1/2 miles. Thence 10 +miles by road to Glengarriff, thence to Killarney, 39 miles. Good hotels +at Bantry, Glengarriff, Kenmare, and Killarney. Or from Kenmare, 20 +miles, or from Glengarriff the tourist can ride to Parknasilla, 16 miles +from Kenmare, where there is an excellent modern hotel and some of the +loveliest scenery in Ireland. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +To the cyclist on tour, Limerick and the surrounding districts offer +many scenic attractions in wood, lake, and river. The roads are not good +as a rule, owing in a great measure, to the fact that the city is the +centre of a large agricultural district. The hotels in the city are +good, and in the surrounding towns and villages the tourist will find +good accommodation in hotels and otherwise. + +~One Day Tours from Limerick.~ + +No. 1.--Perhaps the easiest one day tour which the cyclist can enjoy +from Limerick, as his head quarters, is to Doonass Falls _via_ Clonlara. +Five miles thence by O'Brien's Bridge, 7 miles, to Killaloe, where an +excellent lunch can be had. The return home can be made by +Castleconnell, the popular resort of the devotees of "Izaak Walton," +where an excellent tea can be had at the Shannon Hotel. + +No. 2.--Castleconnell and Clare Glens, and lengthened visit to +Castleconnell to view the waterfalls, "The World's End"--a remarkably +fine reach of the River Shannon. There is much to interest the visitor +in the gigantic eel fishery, and here also is the renowned Enright, +whose fishing rods are used all over the world. The Clare Glen, situated +by the way in Limerick county, is not far from Castleconnell; and if +liberty is obtained beforehand, the Glenstal Demesne, seat of the +Barrington family, can be visited. Sir Charles Barrington, the present +baronet, has never yet refused permission to the cycling tourist to view +the charming scenery surrounding the Glenstal Castle. + +No. 3.--Askeaton, 16-1/2 miles, splendid road, one of the best from +Limerick; famous old abbey to be visited, with excellent fishing on the +Deel, granted that the tourist has obtained the requisite permission. + +No. 4.--Adare, 9 miles; roads pretty good. Mr. P. Fitzgerald, J.P., +Agent to Lord Dunraven, should be written to beforehand for a permit to +visit the demesne, where some fine old ruins are in an excellent state +of preservation. The Manor House is a magnificent building, but +visitors are only allowed to enter when the family are away. This is +well known as the district which inspired Gerald Griffin to write one of +his famous poems. Lunch can be had at very moderate terms at the +Dunraven Arms Hotel. The demesne wall turns eastward to Croom. The name +of this village is derived from the old war cry of the Geraldines, +"Munster Branch "--_Crom-a-boo_. To Limerick, from Croom, _via_ +Patrick's Well, there is a pretty good road, 10 miles. + +~Two Days Tours from Limerick.~ + +Ballybunion. Good roads generally, but slightly up-hill when the Kingdom +is reached. This charming seaside resort is rapidly coming to rival +Kilkee. It has splendid bathing accommodation, and the coast scenery and +caves equal to those of any other watering place in Ireland. The visitor +for the first time makes his acquaintance with the Lartique, or "Single +Line," Railway--the only one in the United Kingdom--from Listowel to +Ballybunion, a distance of 8 miles. + +Returning to Limerick, a digression can be made to Shanid Castle, near +Shanagolden. This towering mass of masonry, perched high on a +hill--three sides of which are precipitous--is almost ignored by +tourists. It was one of the strongholds of the Desmonds. The other spots +on the Shannon--homeward bound--are Glinn, where the hereditary Knight +of Glin has his seat, and where Gerald Griffin resided in his young +days, near the pretty little village of Loughill. Foynes and Foynes +Island, seat of Sir Aubrey de Vere, will repay a visit. Hotels are good +on this line, also roads. + +No. 2.--Waterford and Tramore. Decent roads and accommodation, as good +as can be got once outside Limerick county, border at the Limerick +Junction, a distance of 20 miles from the Treaty Stone. Splendid views +of the Galtee ranges can be had, and on towards Clonmel the wooded +slopes of the minor ranges and hills are a delightful picture. If time +affords, the tourist can digress from the main road and visit the famous +Glen of Aherlow. Back to Tipperary for lunch, good hotels, and splendid +roads. Visit the Kickham monument, and then on to Clonmel. Excellent +accommodation to be had at Clonmel. Next day Waterford and Tramore, and +back. + +~Tours for Three or more Days from Limerick.~ + +Ballybunion, Tarbert, Kilrush, Kilkee, Lisdoonvarna, from Ballybunion. +See "No. 1 Day Tours." Tarbert is only a few miles from Ballybunion. +There is a steamboat service across the Shannon estuary to Kilrush. +Thence to Kilkee by road, where first night out can be had. Next day to +Spanish Point, Milltownmalbay, Lisdoonvarna, to the famous "Spa"; home +_via_ Ennis, splendid roads. + +No. 2.--Killaloe, Scariff, Portumna, and Upper Shannon. A most enjoyable +trip can be had from Killaloe. See "No. 1 Day Tour." There is a constant +steamboat service on Lough Derg, which will take a cyclist and his +machine, and land him at Scariff--on the Clare side--or Portumna, +"Galway." From either of these towns a tourist can have his chance of +the most diversified lake and river scenery to be had in the kingdom. +Without doubt the praises of Lough Derg and the Upper Shannon have not +been sung sufficiently. From Portumna to Dromineer, on the Tipperary +shore, by lake steamer, thence to Nenagh on bike; splendid roads home to +Limerick, 27 miles. + + +~KILLARNEY DISTRICT.~ + +Killarney is an ideal centre for the cyclist. Good roads proceed in +every direction, and mounted on his favourite machine the wheelman will +be able to discover and investigate scenic treasures unknown to the +ordinary tourist. + +~One Day Tours from Killarney.~ + +No. 1.--Killarney to Gap of Dunloe, 10 miles; Owenreagh Glen, 18 miles; +Windy Gap, 30 miles. Killarney, total, 36 miles. Care should be taken to +keep on the proper road through the Glen; there are many crossings. Any +of the local folk will point out the road. + +No. 2.--Killarney to Torc Waterfall, 3 miles; return to Muckross Hotel, +4 miles; enter demesne at Dinis, 10 miles; on to Kenmare road and home +to Killarney, 17 miles. The road through Muckross Demesne is in some +places dangerous owing to its steep and winding character. + +No. 3.--Killarney to Ross Castle, 1-1/2 miles; through demesne to +Library Point, 2-1/2 miles. Back through Ross Island and demesne to +Mahony's Point, 9-1/2 miles; Killarney, 12-1/2 miles. This road is +perfectly safe and good, except two descents in Ross Island. Returning +from Mahony's Point to Killarney by Aghadoe, about 15 miles, splendid +view of Lower Lake and mountains can be had from the old ruins of +Aghadoe. + +No. 4.--Killarney to Glenflesk _via_ Lough Guittane. Visit Robbers' Den, +9 miles, home _via_ Headford and Barraduff, 26 miles. Roads good, +scenery wild and romantic. There are many short and beautiful trips +which can be made in and about the neighbourhood. + +~Two Day Tours from Killarney.~ + +No. 1.--Killarney to Windy Gap, 16 miles; thence to Parknasilla across +mountain. Total, 30 miles. Remain for night at Southern Hotel, +Parknasilla. Parknasilla to Kenmare, 14 miles, and back to Killarney +_via_ Kilgarvan. Total, 35 miles. Roads fairly good, but in places very +steep, so that riders must keep a careful watch. + +No. 2.--Killarney to Beaufort, 6 miles; thence to Glencar, 19 miles, and +on to Caragh Lake Hotel, 27 miles. Remain at Caragh Lake Hotel for the +night. Return to Killarney _via_ Windy Gap and Gerah Cross. There are +some sharp turns and steep descents requiring care. + +~Tours for Three or more Days from Killarney.~ + +No. 1.--Killarney to Kenmare, 20 miles. Thence by Glengarriff, 40 miles, +to Macroom, _via_ Inchigeela, Pass of Keimaneigh to Millstreet, and back +to Killarney. Hotels at Kenmare (Southern Hotel), Glengarriff, +Inchigeela, Macroom, and Millstreet. + +No. 2.--Killarney to Killorglin. Caragh Lake, Cahirciveen, visit +Valentia, Waterville, Parknasilla, Kenmare, and back to Killarney by +either rail or road. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +Waterford can be recommended as a cycling centre, as the scenery in many +districts of the South-east of Ireland is beautiful in the extreme, and +can compare favourably with any in the country, and the roads are first +rate. The hotels, too, are generally very good, and have been improved +wonderfully of late, and the tariffs have been so arranged by the +South-eastern Branch of the Irish Cyclist Association, that all +requirements of the most slender purse can be satisfactorily arranged. + +Below we sketch out a few very enjoyable Tours which can be made, taking +Waterford as the starting point:-- + +~First Tour from Waterford.~ + +Leaving-Waterford by the Newtown-road, we pass the house in which Lord +Roberts spent his early days, and where his father and mother lived for +many years. This is actually in the Borough and, from the grounds +surrounding it, a capital view of the river and part of the City can be +had. After passing by Newtown we keep along to the left until Parkswood +is reached, when we run under a bridge and up a hill to Checkpoint, and +here a magnificent view can be obtained. From the hill overlooking this +pretty little village seven counties can be seen. Dunbrody Abbey, one of +the most famous ecclesiastical ruins in Ireland, is situated immediately +opposite on the other side of the river. Duncannon Fort, a short +distance from here, comes into view, and we are enabled to see the +joining of the three rivers--Suir, Nore, and Barrow. We pass from +Checkpoint, and we reach Passage, a famous fishing station since the +herring industry has become so prosperous in this part of Ireland. A +little further on is Woodstown, and right opposite on the far side of +the river can be seen Duncannon Fort, a fortified place in the days of +old. Turning to the right by Ballyglan, we mount a steep incline, and we +then come in view of Hook Tower, a beacon light which is said to be the +oldest in the kingdom. Dunmore, about five miles from Woodstown, is one +of the most picturesque, beautiful, and delightful resorts in the whole +of Ireland. Here there is a magnificent pier, and boating and fishing +can be enjoyed to one's heart's content. Wheeling back in the Waterford +direction we make for Tramore, ten miles away. It is beautifully +situated, and the visitor here can spend several hours in viewing the +most attractive scenery. Close to the town are the Golf Links and the +Race Course. + +From Tramore to Waterford the run is over a splendid level road, and the +distance seven miles. + +The full distance of this run is 33 miles, and at all the principal +points capital hotel accommodation can be had. + +~Tour Two, from Waterford.~ + +The first part of this run is to Passage. At the Half-way House take the +turn over the bridge, up the hill and down a steep decline to Passage. +At the latter place the ordinary ferryboat can be taken to Ballyhack, +which is directly opposite. The run from Ballyhack to Duncannon is over +a fairly surfaced road. At the latter place M'Gonnigal's hotel is well +appointed. From Duncannon the run to the famous Hook Tower is about +seven miles, and the surface of the road generally is very good. Along +this run a splendid view of the Harbour can be obtained, and on the way +there are several places of interest--Loftus Hall, the Irish seat of the +Marquis of Ely, stands on the edge of the river unprotected by a single +tree. It was modernised within the last 25 years, and is now a +splendidly appointed mansion. Bag-an-Bun, a little distance off, will +well repay a visit--the coast line at this point being the principal +attraction. From Hook we run to Fethard, 6 miles to the left, and here +a very pleasant hour can be spent. Tintern Abbey is the next point to be +visited. This is one of the most famous Abbeys in the country. From +Tintern to Dunbrody the distance is 8 miles, and here we can spend a +considerable time in viewing the great historical ruin, said to be one +of the finest in the whole of Ireland. Leaving Dunbrody we come to the +ferry of Ballinlaw, and crossing here ride by Snow-hill and Bellview +into Waterford. The full distance of this ride is 41 miles. + +~Tour Three from Waterford.~ + +Proceeding up the Cork road we ride up Ballyaneeshagh Hill, and on the +left see Butlerstown Castle, an ancient building: which, in the days of +Cromwell, held out for sometime against his forces. At the Sweep we turn +round to the right and run to the bottom of the hill. A little way from +the end of the hill the right turn is to be taken again to Kilmeaden, 8 +miles. The ride then is to Portlaw four miles away. Some fifty years ago +this town was the seat of a great cotton industry. It has since fallen +into decay, and the place looks like Goldsmith's "Deserted Village." +Just outside the town is the magnificent demesne of Curraghmore, said to +be the finest in the three kingdoms. The variety of scenery here is +almost unsurpassed. Curraghmore is the property of the Marquis of +Waterford. It is one of the great points of vantage to tourists and +pic-nic parties. Passing through the demesne we come to the house +itself, a modern and rather unpretentious structure. The court-yard is, +however, very large, and is said to be capable of accommodating close +upon 100 horses. Clonegam Church, where Lord William Beresford, uncle to +the present Marquis of Waterford, was laid to rest, can be seen on the +right glistening in the trees on the hill side. Through Curraghmore we +ride to Clonea, about 5 miles further on, and then to the foot of the +Comeragh Mountains, which occupy a centre of the county, and which are +to be seen from all parts, as well as from a considerable portion of +Tipperary. The greatest natural curiosity in this range is the +appearance and site of an almost circular lake, by name Coomshinawin. +From Coomshinawin to Kilmacthomas the distance is about 8 miles. +Kilmacthomas Woollen Factory may be visited, and a good hotel +accommodation can be had at Walsh's. From Kilmacthomas to Waterford is +16-1/2 miles over a good road, the full distance being 45 miles. + +~Tour Four, from Waterford.~ + +Our next tour will be from Waterford, _via_ the Sweep, to Knockaderry, 9 +miles away. At the latter place there is a very fine lake which amply +supplies the City. Leaving Knockaderry we reach Dunhill, close to which +place is the Castle of Donile, still distinguished for its peculiar and +romantic situation, and in ancient times the property of De-La-Poer, +from whom the present Marquis is descended. The village of Annestown, +distant about one mile, is on the sea coast, and from it a magnificent +view of rock and ocean scenery can be had. The run from Annestown to +Tramore is over a beautiful road, and many pretty views of the coast can +be seen. The spin to Waterford completes this tour, which is one of +nearly thirty miles. + +~Two Day Tours from Waterford. No. 1.~ + +Waterford, Dunmore, Annestown, Bonmahon, Stradbally, and Dungarvan. + +FIRST DAY. + +This is rather a long run of 47 miles, but as the roads are generally +good and the scenery delightful it should be most enjoyable to the +Cyclist who may feel in good form. We have already spoken of Annestown. +From Annestown to Bonmahon the distance is over 5 miles. The road is +very hilly, but the surface is splendid. At Bonmahon the once famous +Knockmahon Mines are situated. These mines were the most valuable in the +country about fifty years ago, but when the value of the metal (copper) +fell operations were discontinued. Stradbally, 4 miles further on, is a +delightful little village, said to be the most health-restoring place on +the south-eastern coast. Here Whelan's Hotel is recommended. Dungarvan +is 8 miles further on, and the road by the sea is well surfaced and very +picturesque. At Dungarvan Lawlor's Hotel will be found very comfortable. + +SECOND DAY. + +A good run can be taken through Ardmore, Youghal, Lismore, and +Cappoquin, part of which tour embraces the delightful Valley of the +Blackwater. This complete run will tot about 50 miles. + +At Ardmore a very comfortable hotel is kept by Miss Prendergast. At +Youghal, the Greenpark Hotel is a capital one. In Lismore, the +Devonshire Arms and Blackwater Vale Hotels are recommended; and Kenny's +at Cappoquin is also a good one. + +~Two Day Tours from Waterford. No. 2.~ + +FIRST DAY. + +Piltown to Curraghmore, round by Coomshinawin. This complete run will be +about 40 miles. The roads generally are capital, and the scenery as fine +as can be seen in this part of the country. + +SECOND DAY. + +From Dungarvan, round by Ballymacarbery, Newcastle, Ardfinan, Clogheen, +Melleray Abbey, to Dungarvan. This ride runs close upon 60 miles, and +to undertake it the tourist must have been in cycling form for a +considerable time. The roads, however, are generally very good. +Ballymacarbery is 15 miles from Dungarvan; Ardfinan, about 26; then from +Ardfinan to Clogheen the ride is 6 miles, and from that to Melleray +about 13. At Melleray, from the Abbey, a grand view can be had of some +of the most beautiful scenery in the whole of the county. + +The following are the best places of refreshment _en +route_:--Ballymacarbery (Miss Power's), Newcastle, and Ardfinan. Two +good licensed houses. Clogheen--The Hotel. Melleray--The traveller will +always be hospitably received here. + +~Three or more Day Tours from Waterford. No. 1.~ + +Waterford, Dunmore, 11; Tramore, 22; Dunhill, 27; Annestown, 28; +Bonmahon, 34; Stradbally, 38; and Dungarvan, 47 miles. + +SECOND AND THIRD DAYS + +To Dungarvan--have been previously referred to. + +Instead of returning to Waterford by rail, the tourist on the +fourth day may enjoy a most entertaining tour, _via_ the Pike, +Coomshinawin--previously referred to--Curraghmore, Piltown, and +Waterford. This run measures something like 40 miles. + +~Three or more Day Tours from Waterford, No. 2.~ + +Waterford, Mullinavat, 8; Ballyhack, 16; Stoneyford, 21; Danesfort, 25; +Kilkenny, 30; Thomastown, 40; and Inistioge, 47-1/2 miles. + +SECOND DAY. + +New Ross, 10; Waterford, 33; and Rosslare, 42 miles. + +THIRD DAY. + +Lady's Island, 4; Kilmore, 11; Fethard, 20; Hooktower, 26; Duncannon, +35; and Waterford, 46 miles. + +This latter tour embraces some of the finest scenery on the +south-eastern coast, and the inland scenery at Inistioge is equal to any +to be seen in any part of Ireland. + + +_IMPORTANT NOTE._ + +The tariffs for Members of the Irish Cyclists' Association and Cyclists' +Touring-Club are at most of the hotels in the south-eastern districts:-- + +Breakfast.--Tea, coffee, or cocoa, with bread and butter, toast and +preserve, ham and eggs, chops, steaks, cold meat, or fish, _2s._ +Substantial Luncheon, _1s. 6d._ Table d'Hote Dinner, 2_s._ 6_d._ Bed, +_2s. 6d._ + + + + +[Illustration: CYCLING] + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +(FROM MECREDY'S ROAD BOOK). + + +~One Day Tour from Sligo. No. 1.~ + +Sligo, Dromahaire, 12; Ballysadare, 24; Knockanree Glen, 28; Sligo, 33. + +Keeping along the north shore of the lake, Hazlewood Park, 2 miles from +Sligo, is well worth visiting. The public are admitted, and the tourist +should ride right down to the shore, which is here very beautiful. The +road now winds over the hills, and is undulating with fairly good but +rather loose surface, and it is some miles until the lake is reached +again. The scene here is indescribably beautiful, and reminds one +forcibly of Killarney. The lake is studded with islands, and the shores +are densely wooded, whilst northwards extends one of the most +fascinating districts we have ever toured in. It consists of a regular +jumble of mountains, densely wooded, and often most precipitous. The +gapes of the hills are extremely picturesque, and the scene can be +revisited time and again without its palling. Those who would like to +thoroughly explore this lovely neighbourhood should stop at Dromahaire, +where they will find a most excellent hotel, remarkable alike for +moderate charges and a cuisine which could not be surpassed. There is +also an ancient abbey here, well worthy of inspection. Dromahaire is +some little distance from the lake, and on leaving it the road, now +excellent, winds round a mountain, and a few miles farther, after taking +a sharp turn to the right, reaches the lake shore again at its +southern-most point. Farther on it branches inland again, and at a point +2 miles from Sligo a sharp turn to the left has to be taken for +Ballysadare, and if time permits the tourist might proceed on through +Collooney to Mackree Castle (3 miles), which will mean an addition of 6 +miles to the day's ride. At Ballysadare there are some really beautiful +waterfalls. Retracing your steps towards Sligo for a short distance, +proceed along the north shore of Ballysadare Bay. The road is good. +Presently it begins to ascend a spur of Knockanree Hill, and a narrow +lane and gate to the right admit to the Glen of the same name. It should +on no account be missed. It is one of the most extraordinary natural +phenomenon we have ever seen, and is exceedingly beautiful besides. It +is very narrow, densely wooded, and the sides are quite precipitous. The +path wanders through a wealth of undergrowth, and in most places we +fancy the Glen is not forty feet wide, while here and there it is much +narrower. In some of these spots the foliage actually meets overhead, +and we noticed in one place a fallen tree had made a natural bridge +across. Just at the beginning of the Glen there is a little glade where +a house once stood. + +Keeping-round Knockanree Hill the road comes out on the shore of Sligo +Bay. The surface is excellent, and the scenery pretty right into Sligo. + +~One Day Tour from Sligo. No. 2.~ + +Sligo, Drumcliff, 5; Carney, 7; Lissadill House, 9; Carney, 11; +Drumcliff, 13; Rathcormack Chapel, 14; Glencar, 18-1/2; Manorhamilton, +27, Sligo, 41. + +The road is indifferent for some miles, but gradually improves. At +Drumcliff there is an interesting round tower. Lissadill House is +delightfully situated on the seashore. The grounds are open to the +public, and it is a very pleasant ride through on the well-kept avenues. + +Retracing your steps to the main road, after passing Rathcormack Chapel, +turn off to the left for Glencar, along a fairly level by-road, with +fast, but stony, surface. After 2 miles turn to the left again. In due +course Glencar is reached. Keeping along the north shore of the lake an +extraordinary waterfall will be seen on the left. A thin sheet of water +falls from the top of the cliff, and when the wind is from a particular +quarter it catches the falling water every few minutes, and scattering +it in minute particles makes it have the appearance of being suddenly +cut off. Then all of a sudden it comes with a rush again, and apparently +with renewed vigour. It is a very strange phenomenon, and fascinating +withal. + +Wheeling along the shores of the lake we come to a larger waterfall at +the extreme extremity, to which our measurement of 18-1/2 miles is +taken. There is a fine volume of water here, and the neighbourhood being +well wooded, gives a pretty effect. A cup of tea can be had at Mr. +Siberry's, hard by. + +From this on to Manorhamilton the road, though good, is uninteresting, +but if time presses the cyclist can ride direct back to Sligo, round +Glencar Lake. By adopting this route, however, some beautiful scenery +will be missed, and we should strongly advise following what is known as +the old road from Manorhamilton to Sligo (14). Unless a meal is required +it is better not to go as far as Manorhamilton, but to turn to the +right, 1-1/2 miles out. This will reduce the day's journey by 3 miles. +From this turn there is a stiff climb of 2 miles, but the surface is +good the entire way. At the top of this incline a grand prospect bursts +on the view. A confusion of miniature mountains, densely wooded, extend +in every direction, while, as we descend, the waters of Lough Gill come +into view beneath. + +A short distance from the summit the road forks. To the right leads to +Sligo, while the turn to the left runs direct to the lake's shores, and +then joins the other road some miles farther on. Both routes lead +through beautiful scenery. The first is the shortest, but the second the +prettiest. + + + + +[Illustration: GOLFING] + + +~DUBLIN DISTRICT.~ + +There are a number of splendid Golf Courses round Dublin, but on the +Dublin District lines of the Great Southern and Western Railway the only +courses open to visitors are the following:-- + +~Tullamore.~ + +The course is of the inland description, and the period of play is from +October to June. The hazards consist of hedges, ditches, and whins, &c., +which are well distributed. Visitors, _5s._ per month. + +~Athlone.~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week, _5s._ per month, 9 holes; Par score, 74. + +The length of the course is about 1-1/2 miles, and the grass is never +long. The greens are not large, and the lies are somewhat heavy. +Straight play is necessary to avoid heavy punishment. The course is +beautifully situated and commands fine views of the Shannon and Lough +Ree. + +~Banagher.~ + +The course is situated 1/2 a mile out of the Town, and commands fine +views of the distant hills. The distance round is about 1 mile. The +grass is short, and the hazards consist of ruins, walls, and fences. +Number of holes, 9. + +~Birr.~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week. Number of holes, 9. + +The course is situated 2-1/2 miles from Birr. The holes are of a very +sporting character, the hazards being numerous and varied, consisting of +rocks, hedges, walls, and running water. The grass is short and wiry, +and good lies are obtained. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +~Lehinch.~ + +Visitors, _5s._ per week, or _1s. 6d._ per day. Number of holes 18. Par +score, 81. + +The course is laid over fine natural Golfing country. The lies are good, +as the soil is sandy with very short sea grass. The hazards consist of +natural sand bunkers and sandhills with bent, and are ideal. The greens +are excellent, and there probably is not in the United Kingdom a finer +natural Golf Links. + +Accommodation at Lehinch Golf Links Hotel and Aberdeen Arms. There are +some lodges to be had, capable of accommodating small families. Golfers' +cheap tickets are issued to Members and Visitors at Kingsbridge, Dublin, +Limerick, and other stations. + +~Adare Manor Club.~ + +Play on this course is confined to Members. Members can introduce a +Visitor for a few days, but the Links are not open to paying Visitors. +Number of holes, 9. + +This is a very nice course, laid out in the demesne at Adare; the lies +are perfect, and the greens small and well kept. + +~Killaloe.~ + +Number of holes, 9. + +Accommodation, the Lakeside Hotel. The Links are situated about 1 mile +from the Lakeside Hotel, and comprise a very nice sporting course. The +hazards are varied, and the lies excellent. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +Tramore. + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week. Number of holes, 18. + +The course is a seaside one, and commands magnificent views of the bay. +The grass is crisp and short, and the soil sandy. + +Accommodation at Grand Hotel and Hibernian Hotel. + +~Lismore.~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week; _5s._ per month. Number of holes, 9. + +High pastures interspersed with natural bunkers consisting of quarries, +gorse, ridges, and roads. The greens are moderate, but the play through +the course is very sporting. + +Accommodation at Devonshire Arms Hotel and Blackwater Vale Hotel. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +~Littleisland (on G.S. & W.R., 4-3/4 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors, _1s._ per day; or _5s._ per week, on application to Secretary. +Par score, 74 for 18 holes. + +Fine grass of a down nature. Hazards, banks, roads, etc., requiring +skilled play. Greens in first-rate order. Beautiful scenery. Handsome +pavilion, with every accommodation. Professional attendant. + +~Youghal (on G.S. & W R., 27 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors, easy Terms by week or month. + +Number of holes, 6 at present. + +Seaside course. Good turf. Hazards, water, land, peat banks. Owing to +inroads of the sea, ground has been greatly limited; but will be +extended, when works now in progress are completed. + +~Mallow (on G.S, & W.R., 21 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors staying with Members free for one week; _2s. 6d._ weekly +afterwards. Living at hotels, _5s._ first week; _2s. 6d._ afterwards. + +Number of holes, 9; Par score, 36. + +Pasture land, limestone bed. Hazards: fences, ditches, roads, a large +quarry, grass grown. Greens in first-rate order. Good pavilion. Tea +three times a week free. Grass grows too long for summer play. + +~Bandon (on C.B. and S.C.R., 20 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors free, if introduced by a Member. + +Number of holes, 9. + +The turf is composed of short grass. The distance between the holes +varies from 120 to 360 yards, and the hazards are stone walls, etc. + +~Clonakilty (on C.B. and S.C.R., 29-1/4 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per month; or _10s._ per annum. + +Number of holes, 9. + +Finely situated; commanding extensive views of surrounding: landscape. +The course is all grass; rather long-for summer play, but first-rate +from October to May. The hazards are stone walls and ditches. + +~Rushbrooke (on G.S. & W.R., 10-1/2 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors residing with Members free for fourteen days. Committee can +elect temporary Members for a month, on payment of _5s._ Number of +holes, 9. + +Grass on hill, fine view, good pavilion. Greens in good order. Long +hazards. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +~Bundoran.~ + +Station--Bundoran, on G.N.R. + +Hotels--The Great Northern Railway, Sweeney's, Hamilton's, etc. + +Visitors--_10s._ per month, _5s._ per week. Ladies half price. + +Number of holes--9. Par score--75. + +The course is partly sandy, and partly inland in character. It is finely +situated, and commands views of the Atlantic and the mountain ranges. +The distance round is about 1-1/2 miles, and the holes vary in length +from 100 to 250 yards. The hazards consist of a cliff, sandbanks, pits, +stone walls, and water. + +~Sligo.~ + +Station--Sligo, thence by car or steamer. During the season public cars +and a steamer run four times daily between Sligo and the course; fare, +_6d._ each way. + +Hotels--In Sligo there are good hotels, and good accommodation at +Ross's. + +Visitors--_1s._ per day, _2s. 6d._ per week (if introduced); not +introduced _5s._ per week, _15s._ per month. + +Number of holes, 9. Amateur record, 84. + +The air and scenery at the Links are splendid. The grass is ideal turf. +The distance round is 1-1/2 miles. The hazards are natural sand bunkers, +broken ground, bent, walls, etc. The lies are good. + + +~GALWAY~ + +~Galway.~ + +Visitors, _5s._ per week. Number of holes, 9. + +Accommodation at the Railway, Mack's, and Leane's Hotels. + +The Salt Hill tram brings the golfer within a mile of the Links, which +are situated on a hill running out into the sea. + + + + +[Illustration: FISHING] + + +DUBLIN DISTRICT. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Lucan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, +6-3/4 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Spa Hotel. Salmon and trout +free. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Hazelhatch, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 10 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon and +trout free. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Sallins, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 18 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Healy's Hotel. Splendid +trout fishing free. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Harristown, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 25-1/2 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation at Ballymore +Eustace and Poulaphouca. Splendid trout fishing at Kilcullen: at +Ballymore Eustace by permission of Mr. John Royce, Stonebrooke House. + +River.--Slaney. Station.--Rathvilly, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 47 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation moderate. Trout +fishing free. + +River.--Barrow. Station.--Bagnalstown, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 66 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Ward's Hotel. Salmon and +trout free. + +River.--Slaney. Station.--Baltinglass, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 42 miles from Dublin. Accommodation good. Trout fishing free. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Banagher, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 84 miles from Dublin. Accommodation good. Splendid salmon and +trout fishing free. + +River.--Barrow. Station.--Monasterevan, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 37 miles from Dublin. Trout, perch, and pike free. + +River.--Shannon. Station--Athlone on Great Southern and Western Railway, +80 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon, trout, pike, and +perch free. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Maigue. Station.--Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway. +Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Maigue View Hotel. Salmon, trout, and +pike fishing by permission of the owners. + +River.--Mulcair. Station.--Dromkeen, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 11 miles from Limerick. Accommodation good. Salmon and trout in +abundance, free. + +Rivers.--Shannon, Maigue, Camoge. Station.--Patrickswell, on the Great +Southern and Western Railway, 6 miles from the Shannon, 1-1/2 miles from +the Maigue, and 4 miles from the Camoge. Accommodation.--Good lodgings +and small hotel. Salmon and trout in the Maigue, and in Shannon and +Camoge very fine trout. There are small tributaries which afford very +good trout fishing free. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Lakeside Hotel, Royal +Hotel, Shannon View Hotel, Grace's Hotel, Lough Derg Hotel, and Hurley's +Hotel. Salmon and trout. The fishing is excellent. During the past few +seasons salmon varying from 20 to 40 lbs. have been taken by anglers. +About 400 yards below and 20 yards above the bridge is a free stretch of +salmon and trout water, where the catches compare favourably with those +on preserved waters. Fishings may be hired for a month or longer. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Castleconnell, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 9 miles from Limerick. Accommodation good. Castleconnell has a +high reputation as an angling centre. Salmon fishing may be rented by +the month, fortnight, week, or day, and the district is noted for the +heavy fish taken. Trout, pike, and perch fishing is free. + +River.--Deel. Station.--Rathkeale, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 19 miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Pigott Arms, Eagle +Hotel, and Hibernian Hotel. Good brown trout fishing, particularly in +early months of the season--April, May, and June. Also salmon fishing +by payment of ordinary licence. + +River.--Maigue. Station--Adare, on Great Southern and Western Railway. +Accommodation at Dunraven Arms Hotel. Trout and salmon, permission from +Mr. P. Fitzgerald, Agent, Adare. + +Rivers.--Brosna and Shannon. Station.--Birr, on Great Southern and +Western Railway. Accommodation at Dooley's and Mathew's Hotels. Other +private lodgings to be had in the town. Trout and salmon free. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Nenagh, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Good hotels at Dromineer and Nenagh. Splendid salmon and trout +fishing. + +River.--Mulcair. Station.--Boher, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Good salmon and trout fishing free. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +Salmon fishing is as a rule strictly preserved. + +Trout fishing is everywhere plentiful, and as a rule free. + +Rivers.--Lee, Sullane, Bride, &c. Station.--Macroom, on Cork and Macroom +Railway, 25 miles from Cork. Accommodation at four or five small hotels; +moderate. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Blackwater. Station.--Mallow, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 21 miles from Cork. Hotel accommodation good at the Royal +Hotel, Central Hotel, and others. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Bandon. Station.--Bandon, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway, 20 miles from Cork. Accommodation.--Moderate; Angel Hotel, +Railway Hotel, and Devonshire Arms. Good salmon and trout. + +River.--Dripsey. Station.--Dripsey, on Muskerry Railway, 10 miles from +Cork. Accommodation.--None nearer than St. Ann's Hydropathic, Blarney, +or Cork. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Bandon. Upton, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast Railway, 15-1/2 +miles from Cork. Accommodation.--None nearer than Bandon. Good salmon +and trout. + +River.--Ballylechy. Station.--Bantry, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway, 57-3/4 miles from Cork. Good accommodation at Vickery's, +Railway, and Terminus Hotels. Salmon and trout. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Blackwater. Station.--Kilmacow, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 4-1/2 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Farmell's Hotel. +Trout fishing free. + +River.--Blackwater. Station.--Mullinavat, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 7-3/4 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at M'Donald's and +Healy's Hotels. Trout free. + +Rivers.--Nore, Arigilla, Jerpoint Brook. Station--Thomastown, on Great +Southern and Western Railway, 20 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at +Globe Hotel, Commercial Hotel, Hibernian Hotel. Small portion of Nore +free. Arigilla River and Jerpoint Brook free. + +River.--Nore. Station.--Bennettsbridge on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 25 miles from Waterford. Accommodation.--None nearer than +Kilkenny or Thomastown. Salmon and trout; partly free. + +River--Blackwater. Station.--Lismore, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 43 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Devonshire Arms Hotel +and Blackwater View Hotel. Salmon and trout. Charges for salmon rod +fishing.--For season, _£2_; for one week, _15s._; for one day, _5s._ + +River.--Blackwater. Station--Cappoquin, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 39 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at three hotels, also +private accommodation. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Mahon. Station.--Kilmacthomas, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at E. J. Walsh's and P. +Cullinan's. Salmon and trout, free. + + +~KILLARNEY DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Flesk. Station.--Killarney. Accommodation at Killarney. Trout +and salmon free by permission of Lord Kenmare. + +River.--Eirk. Station.--Killarney; thence by car 7 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +River.--Erhagh. Station.--Killarney; thence by car 6-1/2 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout; permission required. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Ballysadare. Station.--Ballysadare, on Midland Great Western +Railway. Hotels at Sligo and Ballysadare. Salmon and sea trout +preserved, also brown trout, for which permission can be had. + + + + +[Illustration: LAKE FISHING] + + +~DUBLIN DISTRICT.~ + +Lake.--Lough Ree, Station.--Athlone, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 80 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon, trout, +pike, and perch free. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +Lake.--Lough Derg. Station.--Nenagh, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation at Lough Derg Hotel, Miss Mill's Private Hotel, +O'Meara's Hotel, Nenagh, and Hibernian Hotels. Some good trout and +salmon fishing; some by permission, and some fishings may be hired. + +Lake.--Inchiquin Lake. Station.--Corofin, on West Clare Railway, 33 +miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Lake Hotel. Famous for trout +fishing. + +Station.--Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Lakes.--Tony +Hill Lake, 1-1/2 miles from Croom, and Loughgor Lake, 7 miles from +Croom. Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Maigue View Hotel. Pike free by +permission of owners. + +Lake.--Lough Derg. Station.--Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Limerick. Hotel accommodation excellent. Lough +Derg is one of the prettiest pieces of water in Ireland, it is within +ten minutes row of Killaloe, and the trout fishing is about the best in +the United Kingdom. In favourable weather large baskets of trout are +taken, and the fish weigh from 1 lb. to 7 lbs. Pike and perch also +abound in the lake, the former grows very large. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +There is a chain of lakes near Inchigeela (Lake Allan and Gougane Barra) +where some salmon and pike fishing may be had. There is also a small +lake near Bruff (Loch Ghur) where trout, pike, etc., may be killed; also +there are small lakes near Bantry well stocked with trout, &c. + +Lake.--Inchigeela. Station.--Macroom, on Cork and Macroom Railway, 25 +miles from Cork. Good hotel, provided with boats, fishermen, etc. Pike +and trout free. + +Lake.--Loch Ghur. Station.--Kilmallock, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 42 miles from Cork. Good accommodation at O'Sullivan's Hotel. +Pike and trout free. + + +~KILLARNEY DISTRICT.~ + +Killarney for the Angler is a paradise. He can fish a different stream +or lake every day for a month or longer. The best fishing season is +March, April, May, and September. Close season, November to February. + +Lakes.--Lakes of Killarney, Lough Leane, Muckross Lake, the Long Range, +Upper Lake. Station.--Killarney, thence by car. Accommodation at +Killarney. Trout and salmon. Licence required for salmon, cost <i>20s.</i> + +Lake.--Guitane. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 5 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown and red trout free. + +Lake.--Looscannagh. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 10-1/2 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout, etc., free. + +Lake.--Glas Lake. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 5 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout, etc., free. + +Lake.--Gourggh. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 9 miles, walk two +more. Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Cushvalley. Station.--Killarney, thence by car about 8 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Garagarry. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 6 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Cummeenduff. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 13 miles through +Gap of Dunloe. Accommodation at Killarney. Amply stocked with trout +free. + +Lake.--Curraghmore. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 15 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Augur. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 9 miles. Brown trout +free. + +Lake.--Callee. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 8 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Fine stock of trout free. + +Lake.--Managh. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 6 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Brown trout free. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +Lake.--Lough Gill. Station.--Sligo, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, thence by car 3 miles. Good hotel accommodation at Sligo. +Salmon, white and brown trout and pike free, by permission, which may be +obtained without difficulty. + + + + +[Illustration: SHOOTING] + + +~DUBLIN DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Lucan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 6-3/4 miles from +Dublin. Accommodation at Spa hotel. Rough shooting by permission of +owners. + +Station.--Athlone, on Great Southern and Western Railway. 80 miles from +Dublin. Good hotels. Wild fowl shooting on River Shannon and Lough Ree +free. + +Station.--Monasterevan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 37 miles +from Dublin. Good hotels. Rough shooting free along the River Barrow. + +Station.--Banagher, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 84 miles from +Dublin. Good hotel. Wild fowl very plentiful along Rivers Shannon and +Brosna, free. + +Station.--Dunlavin, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 32 miles from +Dublin. Good hotel. Rough shooting free. + +Station.--Rathvilly, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 47 miles +from Dublin. Good hotel. Snipe and duck fairly abundant, free. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 11 English miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Murgue View Hotel. +Rabbits, plover, snipe, duck, at Tory Hill, by permission of owner of +land. + +Station.--Dromkeen, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 11 miles from +Limerick. Accommodation good. Snipe, duck, plover; free. + +Station.--Castleconnell, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 9 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation good. Wild fowl; shooting on the river. + +Station.--Patrickswell, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 7 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Patrickswell Hotel or Dunraven Arms, +Adare. Geese, duck, widgeon, teal, snipe, and cock; by permission of Mr. +Peter Fitzgerald, J.P., Mondela House. + +Station.--Rathkeale, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 19 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Pigott Arms and Eagle Hotel. Good duck +shooting; free. + +Station.--- Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation excellent. In winter Lough Derg is visited +by large quantities of wild fowl, which afford capital sport; and the +bogs and marshes around Killaloe hold snipe in fair numbers. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +There is excellent wild fowl shooting all along the sea coasts, and +along the rivers for a few miles from the sea. The Youghal coast, the +Lower Lee, Blackwater, and Bandon Rivers, afford excellent sport of this +kind; also the deeply indented coasts of Kinsale, Courtmacsherry, +Skibbereen, and Baltimore. + +Station.--Bandon, 20 miles from Cork, on South Coast Railway. +Accommodation fair at the Angel and Devonshire Arms. Snipe, wild fowl, +and plover; free. + +Station.--Blarney, 5 miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation excellent at St. Ann's Hydropathic Establishment. +Snipe and plover fairly abundant; free. + +Station.--Clonakilty, 33 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South +Coast Railway. Accommodation fairly good at Imperial or Shannon Arms. +Snipe and plover; free. + +Station.--Mitchelstown, miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation fair at Ahearn's or Fitzgerald's. Snipe and +plover may be had on the slopes of Kilworth Hills, by permission of +Officer Commanding Kilworth Camp. + +Station.--Kinsale, 24 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway. Accommodation good at Kinsale Arms or Sea View Hotels. Wild +fowl mostly preserved, but permission may be had. + +Station.--Skibbereen, 53-3/4 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South +Coast Railway. Accommodation fair at Commercial, Eldon, and Ilen Valley +Hotels. Duck, teal, widgeon, snipe, and plover; free. + +Station.--Youghal, 26-3/4 miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation good at Adelphi, Devonshire Arms, Green Park, +Imperial, and Strand Hotels. Wild fowl very plentiful along the sea +coast and at mouth of Blackwater; free. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Horse and Jockey, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 48 +miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Thurles, about 4 miles distant. +Grouse, hares, duck, &c., &c., in Liskeveen Bogs, by permission of D. J. +Mansergh, Esq., Grallagh Castle, Thurles. + +Station.--Ballyhale, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at Mrs. Hayes, Knocktopher Hotel, +Thomastown. Rough shooting to be had at Courisk and Castlecasker Bogs, +about 1 mile from the station, in the direction of Innistiogue, but game +not plenty, being a common; this would be free. A preserve at +Knocktopher. For permission apply to Captain Langrishe. A preserve at +Castlemorris. For permission apply to Rev. Wm. D'Montmorency, +Castlemorris. Applications as to payment and otherwise should be made to +above-mentioned gentlemen. + +Station.--Attanagh, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 45 miles from +Waterford. Accommodation at Griffith's Hotel, Durrow. About 1,000 acres, +almost adjoining station; duck, rabbit, snipe, woodcock; free, if with +permission of occupiers (tenant farmers). + +Station.--Kilmacthomas, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at E. J. Walsh's Hotel. There is no +preserved ground in this vicinity, on which permission is given to +shoot; snipe are fairly plentiful on surrounding bogs, and this is about +all the shooting there is. By permission of Charles Mansfield, +Kilmacthomas, and P. Power, Faithlegg, Waterford. + +Station.--Durrow, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 22 miles from +Waterford. Accommodation at Whelan's and Riley's Hotels. Waterfowl; +grey and green plover; also duck and snipe, rabbits, &c., by permission +of farmers. + +Station.--Lismore, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Accommodation +at Devonshire Arms Hotel and Blackwater Vale Hotel. Partridge, grouse, +woodcock. Permission to be obtained from James Penrose, Esq., Lismore +Castle. + +Station.--Carrick, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Accommodation +at Bessborough Arms and Kirwan's Hotels. Duck, rabbits, rooks. Free, and +by permission. + +Station.--Mullinavat, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 7-3/4 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at M'Donald's Hotel and Hely's Hotel. +Duck, widgeon, teal, and snipe; shooting free on Bishop's Mountain and +Moenrin. By permission. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Sligo, on Great Southern and Western Railway, thence by car. +Place, Rosse's Point. Accommodation--Hotels good. Shooting--free below +high water mark. + +[Illustration] + + + + +INDEX. + + + Achill Head, 246. + + Adare, 59. + + Adare Abbey, 60. + + Adare Manor, 61. + + Adare Manor Golf Links, 292. + + Aghada, 95. + + Aghadoe, 156. + + Among the Arbutus, 266. + + Arbutus Island, Killarney, 267. + + Arbutus Rock, Lake Currane, 202. + + Ardfert, 62. + + Ardmore, 105, 256. + + Arran Islands, 243, 256. + + Athenry, 237. + + Athlone, 39. + + Athlone Golf Links, 291. + + + Ballincollig, 89. + + Ballingrane, 62. + + Ballybunion, 62, 65, 257. + + Ballycotton, 96. + + Baltimore, 172. + + Banagher Golf Links, 291. + + Bandon Golf Links, 293. + + Bank of Ireland, 17. + + Bantry, 172. + + Beenarourke, 204. + + Birr Castle, 39. + + Birr Golf Links, 292. + + Black Abbey, 36. + + Blackrock, 89. + + Blackrock Castle, Cork, 89. + + Blackwater River, 101, 107. + + Blackwater River, Youghal, &c., 98. + + Blackwater at Kenmare, 219. + + Blarney, 77, 257. + + Blarney Castle, 86. + + Boating at Killarney, 135. + + Boher, 46. + + Brayhead, 192. + + Bundoran Golf Links, 294. + + Bunratty Castle, 221. + + Buttevant, 98. + + + Cahirciveen, 182, 187, 257. + + Caragh Lake, 178. + + Caragh Lake, Southern Hotel, 178. + + Carlow, 33. + + Carrantual, Killarney, 146. + + Carrick-on-Suir, 127. + + Carton House, Maynooth, 28. + + Cashel, 130. + + Castleconnell, 53, 257. + + Castletown, 27. + + Castletown House, 27. + + Caves of Mitchelstown, 131. + + Charleville, 134. + + Christ Church Cathedral, 20. + + Claddagh, 243. + + Clare and East Galway Natural History, 272. + + Clew Bay, 248. + + Clifden, 245. + + Cliffs of Moher, 231. + + Cliffs at Valencia, 191. + + Clock Tower, Youghal, 102. + + Clonakilty Golf Links, 293. + + Clondalkin, 26. + + Clonmacnoise, 44. + + Clonmel, 127. + + Cloonaghlin Lake, 188. + + Cloyne, 95. + + Connemara and Sligo, 245. + + Coomakista, 204. + + Coomakisteen Hill, 205. + + Coomasaharn, 182. + + Cork, 73. + + Cork District, 85. + + Cork District-- + Cycling, 279. + Fishing, 297, 300. + Shooting, 303. + + Cork Exhibition, 84. + + County Clare, 221. + + Cratloe Woods, 221. + + Cromwell's Bridge, 171. + + Crosshaven, 95. + + Curragh Camp, 31, 32. + + Curraghmore Ho., 118. + + Custom Ho., Dublin, 21. + + Cycling, 278. + + + Dame St., Dublin, 18. + + Derriana Lake, 188. + + Derrynane, 206. + + Derrynane Abbey, 206. + + Diamond Mountain, 247. + + Dinish Island, Killarney, 144. + + Dooks, 180. + + Dromod, 67. + + Dromoland Castle, 222. + + Dublin Castle, 19. + + Dublin and District, 15. + + Dublin District-- + Fishing, 295, 299. + Golfing, 291. + Shooting, 302. + + Duke of York Route, 67. + + Dungarvan, 132. + + Dunmore, 122. + + Dunmore East, 257. + + + Eagle's Nest, Killarney, 145. + + Eccles' Hotel, Glengarriff, 166. + + Emly, 133. + + Ennis, 221. + + Ennistymon, 223. + + + Falls of Doonass, 54. + + Fenit, 66. + + Fethard, 128. + + Fishing, 295. + + Four Courts, Dublin, 23. + + Foynes, 62. + + + Galteemore, 132. + + Galway, 238. + + Galway and Dist., 235. + + Galway Golf Links, 294. + + Galway, Queen's College, 244. + + Gannets on Little Skellig, 197. + + Gap of Dunloe, 157. + + Garinish Island, 212, 215. + + Geological Section, Bantry to Killarney, 263. + + Glenbeigh, 182. + + Glenbrook, 92. + + Glendalough, 249. + + Glengarriff, 166, 257. + + Golfing, 291. + + Golfing at Lehinch, 229. + + Gort, 237. + + Gougane Barra, 169. + + Grattan, 17. + + Great Cross of the Scriptures, 45. + + Guest House, Mount Melleray, 111. + + + Harristown, 29. + + Headford, 134. + + Holy Cross Abbey, 129. + + + Imperial Hotel, Waterford, 117. + + Inchigeela, 171. + + Innisfallen, Killarney, 146. + + Irish Spurge, 268. + + + Kells, 38, 182. + + Kenmare, 257. + + Kenmare and Glengarriff, 164. + + Kenmare, Southern Hotel, 166, 218. + + Kerry Ditchbank, 264. + + Kerry Slug, 269. + + Kildare, 31. + + Kilkee, 225, 228, 258. + + Kilkenny, 33, 34. + + Kilkenny Castle, 35. + + Killaloe, 58, 67. + + Killaloe Golf Links, 292. + + Killery Bay, 251. + + Killarney, 136, 258. + + Killarney, Arbutus Island, 267. + + Killarney, Carrantual, 146. + + Killarney, Dinish, 144. + + Killarney, Eagle's Nest, 145. + + Killarney, Gap of Dunloe, 157. + + Killarney, Innisfallen, 146. + + Killarney, Meeting of the Waters, 149. + + Killarney, Muckross Abbey, 151. + + Killarney, Shooting the Rapids, 143. + + Killarney, Torc, 153. + + Killarney, Up. Lake, 139. + + Killarney District, Cycling, 283. + + Killarney District, Fishing, 298, 300. + + Killarney and Glengarriff, 133. + + Killarney, Southern Hotel, 136. + + Killorglin, 178. + + Kilmallock, 133. + + Kilrush, 232. + + Kincora, 69. + + Kinvara, 237. + + Kylemore, 253. + + + Lake Coomasaharn, 186. + + Lake Currane, 200. + + Lakes and Fjords of Kerry, 175. + + Lartigue Railway, 63. + + Leenane, 248, 258. + + Lehinch, 258. + + Lehinch Golf Links, 292. + + Letterfrack, 248. + + Limerick, 47. + + Limerick District, Cycling, 281. + + Limerick District, Fishing, 296, 299. + + Limerick District, Golf Links, 292. + + Limerick District, Shooting, 303. + + Limerick Junction, 46. + + Liscanor, 232. + + Lisdoonvarna, 224, 258. + + Lismore, 110. + + Lismore Golf Links, 293. + + Littleisland Golf Links, 293. + + Look-out Cliff, Kilkee, 227. + + Lough Corrib, 245, 250. + + Lough Gill, 252, 254. + + Lough Gur, 134. + + Lough Ree, 71. + + Lucan, 26, 258. + + + Mallaranny, 252. + + Mallow, 99. + + Mallow Castle, 100. + + Mallow Golf Links, 293. + + Mangerton, 160. + + Marina, Cork, 75. + + Maryborough, 39. + + Meeting of the Waters, Killarney, 149. + + Midleton, 105. + + Milltown Malbay, 232. + + Mitchelstown, 131. + + Monasterevan, 38. + + Monkstown, 92. + + Mount Melleray, 109. + + Mount Melleray, Guest House, 111. + + Mountain Stage, 182. + + Muckross Abbey, 151. + + Myrtle Grove, 104. + + + Naas, 28. + + National Library, Dublin, 23. + + Natural History, 260. + + Nest of Wood Ant, 271. + + Newcastle, 62. + + Newbridge, 31. + + Newport, 248. + + North Kerry, 59. + + + Oughterard, 245. + + Oratory of Gallerius,66. + + + Parknasilla, 210, 258. + + Parknasilla, Southern Hotel, 212, 213. + + Passage (East), 126. + + Passage (West), 90. + + Pass of Ballaghbeama, 181. + + Patrick Street, Cork, 74. + + Pennywort, 264. + + Portarlington, 38. + + Portumna, 67. + + Poulaphouca, 258. + + Poulaphouca Waterfall, 30. + + Purple Mountain, Killarney, 159. + + Queen's College, Cork, 79. + + Queen's College, Galway, 244. + + Queenstown, 92, 258. + + Queenst'n Harbour, 91. + + + Raheen Lake, Currane, 201. + + Rathkeale, 62. + + Rathmore, 134. + + Recess, 259. + + Roche's Hotel, Glengarriff, 166. + + Roscrea, 39. + + Ross Castle, Killarney, 155, 158. + + Round Tower, Clondalkin, 25. + + Rushbrook Golf Links, 294. + + + Salmon Leap, Lucan, 26. + + Salthill, Galway, 242. + + Sarsfield Statue, Limerick, 50. + + Saxifraga umbrosa, 265. + + Scariff, 67. + + Shandon Church, Cork, 82. + + Shannon Development Company, 67. + + Shannon Steamer, 70. + + Shooting, 302. + + Shooting the Rapids, Killarney, 143. + + Sir Walter Raleigh's House, 103. + + Skelligs, 194. + + Slea Head, 66. + + Sligo District-- + Cycling, 289. + Fishing, 298, 301. + Shooting, 305. + + Sligo Golf Links, 294. + + Sligo, Nat. History, 274. + + Smerwick, 66. + + + Southern Hotel, Caragh Lake, 178. + + Southern Hotel, Kenmare, 166, 218. + + Southern Hotel, Killarney, 136. + + Southern Hotel, Parknasilla, 212, 213. + + Southern Hotel, Waterville, 198. + + Spa, 66. + + Spanish Point, 232. + + Spike Island, 92. + + Sport, 277. + + Staigue Fort, 202. + + St. Canice's Cathedral, 36. + + St. Finbarr's Cathedral, 80. + + St. Michael's Rock, 194. + + St. Patrick's Cathedral, 20. + + Straffan, 28. + + Strancally Castle, 106. + + St. Stephen's Green, 17. + + Sneem, 207. + + Suir, 116. + + Summer and Winter Resort, 256. + + + Thomastown, 38. + + Three Sisters, 66. + + Thurles, 128. + + Torc, 153. + + Tralee, 66. + + Tramore, 119, 259. + + Tramore Golf Links, 292. + + Treaty Stone, Lim'k. 48. + + Trinity College, 18. + + Tuam, 238. + + Tullamore Golf Links, 291. + + Tullow, 29. + + Twelve Bens, 245. + + + Upper Lake, Killarney, 139. + + + Valencia, 259. + + Valencia Harbour, 190. + + Valencia Island, 188. + + + Waterford, 112, 259. + + Waterford and District, 112. + + Waterford District-- + Cycling, 284. + Fishing, 297. + Golf Links, 292. + Shooting, 304. + + Waterford and East Cork, Natural History, 262. + + Waterford, The Quays, 115. + + Waterville, 196, 259. + + Waterville, Southern Hotel, 199. + + West Cork, &c., Natural History, 262. + + West Galway and West Mayo, Natural History, 272. + + Westport, 248. + + Wicklow and Wexford, Natural History, 261. + + Wolf Spider, 273. + + + Youghal, 101. + + Youghal Golf Links, 293. + + + * * * * * + + +Advertisements. + + + + +~Gresham Hotel, DUBLIN.~ + +[Illustration] + +This Old Established and First Class Hotel is situate in +Sackville-street, one of the finest thoroughfares in the world. Many +improvements have of late been made--Electric Light, &c. Visitors to +Dublin will find their Requirements catered for at the Gresham in a +manner unsurpassed by any Hotel in the City. No efforts are spared to +ensure in every possible way the comfort of its Patrons. + +~120 BEDROOMS.~ + +~Spacious Saloons and Ball Room on Ground Floor.~ + +~FIRST CLASS CUISINE.~ ~MODERATE CHARGES.~ + +~JAMES FARRELLY, Manager.~ + + + * * * * * + + +~DUBLIN SHELBOURNE HOTEL~ + +Charmingly situated facing the beautiful St. Stephen's Green Park. + +FIRST CLASS + +WITH + +MODERATE CHARGES + +CHOICEST WINES + +AND + +FRENCH CUISINE. + +HYDRAULIC LIFT, + +ELECTRIC LIGHT, + +TELEPHONE NO. 150. + +EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE. + + + * * * * * + + +~The "Hammam" Hotel~ AND ~Turkish Baths~, + +SACKVILLE ST. DUBLIN, + +[Illustration] + +"Three Days' Guide to Dublin" free on application. + +Daily Terms from 8/6. + + + * * * * * + + +_By Special Permission of Her late Most Gracious Majesty Queen +Victoria._ + +~The ROYAL VICTORIA Hotel,~ + +PATRONISED BY _His Majesty King Edward VII., H.R.H. the Duke of +Connaught, the Royal Families of France and Belgium, the Nobility and +Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, and leading American Families._ + +[Illustration] + +MAGNIFICENTLY situated on Lower Lake, facing Innisfallen. Highly +recommended for its superior comfort. The only Hotel in Killarney at +which King Edward VII. stayed when Prince of Wales. + +JOHN O'LEARY, PROPRIETOR. + + + * * * * * + + +~LAKE HOTEL, KILLARNEY LAKES.~ + +_Patronised by HIS MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY THE KING._ + +~Under New Management. Standing in its own Grounds upwards of 60 acres +on the Shore of the Lower Lake.~ + +Unrivalled in situation, concentrating in one view all that is +picturesque and sublime in the scenery. + +[Illustration] + +NEWLY FURNISHED; Electric Light throughout (Bedrooms included). Boating, +Fishing, and Shooting. Conveyances Daily for Local Tours at fixed rates +for each Person, also for Private Hiring. Billiards, Tennis. + +THE ONLY HOTEL IN THE DISTRICT DIRECTLY ON THE LAKE SHORE. + +Hotel Omnibus meets all Trains. The Glengarriff Coach stops at Entrance +Gates to take up and set down Passengers. + +The Railway Company allow only the Porters of their own Hotel on the +Arrival Platform. The Lake Hotel Porters will be found at the Station +Entrance. + +~Address THE MANAGER.~ + + + * * * * * + + +~WEST END HOTEL, KILKEE.~ + +~First-Class Accommodation.~ + +Beautifully Situated. Overlooking Bay. Magnificent Coast Scenery. + +Nearest Bathing Resorts. + +Recently Furnished. Board per Week or per Day. + +'Bus and Porter await arrival of all Trains. + +Coupons of The Irish Railway Companies Tourist Office, 2, Charing Cross, +London. + + + * * * * * + + +~KILKEE, CO. CLARE.~ + +~Royal Marine Hotel.~ + +Extensive additions have been made for the coming season. It is the most +central Hotel in Kilkee, commanding full view of Bay and Cliffs. Is +within two minutes' walk of Railway Station, principal Bathing Resorts, +Post Office, and places of Worship. This Hotel contains all facilities +and convenience of a First-Class Hotel, with the quiet and comforts of +home. Tourists and Visitors will find it to their advantage to patronise +the above Hotel. + +~Arrangements made for Private Families.~ + +_The Hotel Omnibus attends the trains._ + +OWN DAIRY. + +~Address: PROPRIETOR.~ + + + * * * * * + + +~Castleconnell, CO. LIMERICK.~ + +"One of Ireland's beauty spots." Seven miles from Limerick. + +[Illustration] + +~SHANNON HOTEL.~ + +(Mrs. K. Enright, Proprietress.) + +_ANGLERS' AND TOURIST RESORT._ + +Head-Quarters C.T.C. + +Five miles walk along the banks of the Shannon. MAGNIFICENT RIVER +SCENERY, Including "FAR-FAMED RAPIDS OF DOONASS." + +~Cycling.~ ~Boating.~ ~Driving.~ ~Pretty Walks.~ + +~Castleconnell~ can be reached from + + London in 13-1/2 hours. + Liverpool under 11 " + Leeds 13 " + Manchester 11-1/4 " + Birmingham 12 " + York 14 hours, 20 mins. + Bristol 15 hours. + Dublin 3 " + Cork 2 hours, 55 mins. + Killarney under 4 hours. + Waterford 3 hours, 20 mins. + Killaloe -- 20 minutes. + +N.B.--Salmon Fishing by arrangement; Trout Fishing FREE; also +good Pike, Perch, and Roach Fishing FREE. + +Telephone 502, Limerick. + + + * * * * * + + +[Illustration] + +ROYAL HOTEL, + +VALENCIA ISLAND, CO. KERRY. + +This Hotel has been patronised by H. M. The KING And Their +Royal Highnesses The PRINCE and PRINCESS OF WALES. + +~It is now considered the Most Comfortable and Up-to-Date Hotel in +Ireland.~ + +~HOT AND COLD SEA WATER BATHS.~ + +CHARGES FIXED AND MODERATE. + + + * * * * * + + +CUNARD LINE, + +INAUGURATED JULY 4th, 1840. + +NOTICE.--The Steamers of this Line come alongside the Prince's Stage, +Liverpool, to land or embark Passengers without the intervention of +Tenders, and London Passengers depart from or arrive at the Riverside +Railway Station on the Quay adjoining. + +[Illustration] + +FLEET. + + CAMPANIA. + LUCANIA. + ETRURIA. + UMBRIA. + AURANIA. + IVERNIA. + SAXONIA. + ULTONIA. + SYLVANIA. + VERIA. + CYPRIA. + PAVIA. + TYRIA. + SAMARIA. + SARAGOSSA. + ALEPPO. + CHERBOURG. + CARPATHIA, Building + +~Sailings to and from New York and Boston on Saturdays and Tuesdays.~ + +~FASTEST SHIPS BETWEEN LIVERPOOL AND NEW YORK.~ + +~LARGEST SHIPS BETWEEN LIVERPOOL AND BOSTON.~ + +~Fitted with Marconi's System of Wireless Telegraphy.~ + +The Twin-Screw Ships "IVERNIA" and "SAXONIA," which sail between +Liverpool and Boston, are among the largest Ships afloat, and their +remarkable steadiness makes sea-sickness practically impossible. + +UNSURPASSED ACCOMMODATION AT MODERATE FARES FOR ALL CLASSES AND FOR ALL +STEAMERS. + + * * * * * + +~MEDITERRANEAN SERVICE.~ + +FREQUENT FREIGHT SAILINGS FROM LIVERPOOL + +~For Syria, Smyrna, Constantinople, Malta, Genoa, Leghorn, Naples, +Brindisi, Trieste, Venice, Fiume, Bari, Ancona, Palermo, Messina, +Catania, Patras, and Corfu.~ + + * * * * * + +HAVRE SERVICE. + +~Freight Steamers from Liverpool and Havre weekly.~ + + * * * * * + +* * * For full particulars apply at the Company's Offices: in New York, at +29, Broadway; in Boston, at 99, State-street; in Havre, at 28, Quai +d'Orleans; in Paris, at 2, bis Rue Scribe; in London, at 32, +Cockspur-street, S.W., and 93, Bishopsgate-street, E.C.; in Manchester, +at 18, Brazennose-street; in Glasgow, at 30, Jamaica-street; in Leith, +at Exchange Buildings; in Belfast, at 49, Queen's-square; in Queenstown, +at Cunard Wharf; or to + +~THE CUNARD STEAM SHIP COMPANY, LIMITED~, + +8, WATER-STREET, LIVERPOOL. + + + * * * * * + + +Great Western Railway of England. + + SHORTEST ROUTE + BETWEEN + ~ENGLAND~ + AND THE + SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND. + + FAST AND COMFORTABLE NEW STEAMERS + SAIL REGULARLY BETWEEN + ~WATERFORD AND CORK~ + AND + ~NEW MILFORD~. + + ~OPEN SEA PASSAGE~ + BETWEEN + Waterford and New Milford. + Under 5 Hours. + + ~THE BOAT TRAINS~ + RUNNING BETWEEN + NEW MILFORD AND PADDINGTON + In connection with the Steamers are provided with + + ~Central Corridors.~ + ~Lighted by Electricity.~ + ~Lavatory Accommodation.~ + + _Direct Communication with Guard._ + +REFRESHMENTS may be obtained in the trains by First, Second, and Third +Class Passengers. + +For further information as to train service, fares, &c., see the +Company's time tables. + +Full particulars will be supplied on application to Mr. H. J. NICHOLLS, +Great Western Railway Company's Offices, Waterford; Mr. A. W. PERKS, +Adelphi Wharf, Waterford; Mr. E. FOGG, Railway Chambers, King Street, +Cork; Mr. ALFRED DODD, Great Western Agent, Limerick Terminus; Messrs. +COOK & SON, Main Street, Killarney; or to Mr. T. I. ALLEN, +Superintendent of the Line, Paddington Station, London. + +~J. L. WILKINSON, General Manager.~ + +_July, 1902._ + + + * * * * * + + +~WATERFORD.~ + +~_IMPERIAL HOTEL._~ + +~FIRST CLASS HOTEL,~ + +Patronised by the Aristocracy, Tourists and Commercial Gentlemen. + + ~Spacious Drawing, + Coffee, Commercial, + Billiard and Bath Rooms. + Smoking, Stock, and Rent Rooms.~ + +Sanitation Certified. The Hotel has been recently enlarged, +re-furnished, and decorated. + +~TARIFF MODERATE.~ + +~_COMMERCIAL ROOM DINNER_~ from 1.45 to 3.30 daily. + +~Table d'Hote at 7.30 daily.~ + +_Omnibus meets all Trains and Steamers._ + +Telephone, No. 22. Telegrams--"IMPERIAL," Waterford. + +~W. A. MURRAY, Proprietor.~ + + + * * * * * + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] Permission to visit Adare Manor may be obtained (on application) +from the Head Steward, Adare. + +[2] The other places of worship in Cork are as follows:--_Roman +Catholic:_ St. Mary's Cathedral, Clarence-street; SS. Peter and Paul's, +Patrick-street (designed by Pugin); St. Patrick's, King-street (Military +Mass); St. Finbarr's, Dunbar-street (here Hogan's masterpiece, "The Dead +Christ," may be seen under High Altar); St. Joseph's, Mayfield; St. +Finbarr's, West, Lough-road; St. Augustine's Priory (Augustinians), +Great George-street; St. Mary's (Dominicans), Pope's-quay; St. Francis' +(Franciscans), Liberty-street; Holy Trinity (Friars Minors Capuchins), +Charlotte-quay; St. Vincent's (Congregation of the Mission), Sunday's +Well; and Chapel of Convent of St. Mary's of the Isle, Fitton-street. +_Church of Ireland:_ Christ Church, South Main-street; St. Ann's, +Church-street; St. Luke's, Summer Hill; St. Mary's, Shanakiel-road; St. +Nicholas', Cove-street; St. Paul's, Paul-street; St. Peter's, North +Main-street; Cork Episcopal Free Church, Langford-row; St. Michael's, +Blackrock; and Frankfield Church. _Other Denominations:_ Baptist Church, +King-street; Congregational Church, George-street; Patrick-street +Methodist Chapel; Society of Friends, Grattan-street; Presbyterian, +Summer Hill; Plymouth Brethren, Prince's-street; and Cork Hebrews, 10, +South Terrace. + +[3] "Amber water." It recently passed from the representatives of the +late Sir John Pope Hennessy into the possession of Sir Henry Blake. +Permission to visit the house may be obtained on application to Mr. +French, Land Agent, South Mall, Cork. + +[4] To be seen in the National Gallery, Dublin. + +[5] Heights of the Principal Mountains, According to the Ordnance +Survey. + + Carrantual, 3,414 feet. + Mangerton, 2,756 " + Purple Mount, 2,739 " + Toomies, 2,413 " + Torc, 1,764 " + Eagle's Nest, 1,103 " + + Elevation of Loughs above the Sea. + + Devil's Punch Bowl, 2,206 feet. + Gum-Meem-Na-Copasta 2,156 " + Gouragh, 1,226 " + Callee, 1,096 " + Black Lough, 587 " + Cush Valley, 337 " + Kittane, 256 " + Coom-a-Dhuv, 197 " + Upper Lake, 70 " + Lower Lake, 66 " + + + PRINTED BY ALEX. THOM & CO., LIMITED, + 87, 88, & 89, ABBEY STREET, + DUBLIN. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sunny Side of Ireland, by +John O'Mahony and R. 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Lloyd Praeger + +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: The Sunny Side of Ireland + How to see it by the Great Southern and Western Railway + +Author: John O'Mahony and R. Lloyd Praeger + +Release Date: September 19, 2006 [EBook #19329] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUNNY SIDE OF IRELAND *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Janet Blenkinship and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/imgcover.jpg" alt="Cover" title="Cover" /></div> + + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img002.jpg" alt="Frontis" title="Frontis" /></div> + +<h4><span class="left">Second Edition. </span><span class="right">Re-written and Enlarged.</span><br /></h4> + + +<h1>THE SUNNY SIDE<br /><br /> + +OF<br /><br /> + +IRELAND.<br /><br /></h1> + + + +<h3>HOW TO SEE IT BY</h3> + <h3><span class="smcap">The Great Southern and Western Railway.</span></h3> + + <h4>BY</h4> + + <h2>JOHN O'MAHONY.<br /><br /></h2> + + <h4>With Seven Maps and over 160 Illustrations.<br /><br /></h4> + + <h4>AND A CHAPTER ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF<br /> + THE SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND,</h4> + + <h4>BY</h4> + + <h3> R. LLOYD PRAEGER, B.A., B.E., &c.<br /><br /></h3> + + <p class='center'>ALEX. THOM & CO. (Limited),<br /> + 87, 88, & 89, Abbey Street,<br /> + DUBLIN.</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p> + +<div class="trans-note"> + Transcriber's Note: Inconsistent spelling of place +names are left as in the original. + </div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.</h2> + + +<p>These pages attempt to make better known the large part of Ireland which +is served by the Great Southern and Western Railway Company, and while +doing so to realise Shakespeare's words:</p> + +<p class='center'> +"An honest tale speeds best being plainly told." +</p> + +<p>If they succeed in these endeavours, they will satisfy the compiler. No +inexorable route is insisted upon, but no suggestion is stinted which +may help the tourist to enjoy fully the beautiful country he passes +through—and a beautiful country it truly is, be it approached from +Athlone, its north-western gate, by the Shannon, where,</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"In the quiet watered land, the land of roses,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Stands Saint Kieran's city fair,"</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>or from its south-western side, in the kingdom of Kerry, where the ocean +leans against the mountains, and the storm-swept peak of Skellig Michael +makes the most westerly citadel of Christ in the Old World! Everywhere +within its broad borders, swift-rushing rivers, mirror-like lakes, and +mountains tiaraed in the skies, delight the vision and gladden the +heart.</p> + +<p>The Gaelic names of places are usually word pictures reflecting with +fidelity the physical features of each place, or "tell sad stories of +the death of kings." Where possible, the equivalents have been given in +English.</p> + +<p>With these forewords, nothing further remains but to offer an Irish +welcome—</p> + +<p class='author'> +FAILTÈ. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span><br /><br /></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION.</h2> + + +<p>Since "The Sunny Side of Ireland" was issued the Royal Assent has been +given to an Act of Parliament which makes the Great Southern and Western +Railway foremost in every sense amongst Irish Railways. The two +Provinces of Munster and Connaught are now knit together by a huge +network of railway lines comprised in their amalgamated system.</p> + +<p>The several counties thus included are dealt with in this Second +Edition. The volume is further enhanced by more particular information +as to the sports and pastimes of the country, and by a valuable chapter +on the Natural History of the South and West of Ireland, by writers of +authority on such subjects.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap06" id="imgmap06"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap06.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap06-tb.jpg" + alt="Map of the Great Southern and Western Railway" /></a><br /> + <b>Map of the Great Southern and Western Railway<br /> +and its Connections in Ireland.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + +<h2>LIST OF MAPS.</h2> + + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="3" width="70%" cellspacing="0" summary="List of Maps"> +<tr><td align='left' valign="top">Map of the Great Southern and Western Railway</td><td align='right'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='left' valign="top">and its Connections in Ireland</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap06'><b>6</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left' valign="top">Map Showing Connections of the Great Southern and Western</td><td align='right'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='left' valign="top">Railway in Great Britain</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap6b'><b>7</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Map of Dublin City</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap014'><b>14</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Map of Environs of Dublin</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap015'><b>15</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Map of Cork City</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap072'><b>72</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Map of Environs of Cork</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap73'><b>73</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Pictorial Map of Killarney District</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap132'><b>132</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Pictorial Map of Clare District</td><td align='right'><a href='#imgmap220'><b>220</b></a></td></tr> + +</table> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p> +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap6b" id="imgmap6b"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap6b.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap6b-tb.jpg" + alt="Map Showing Connections of the Great Southern and Western" /></a><br /> + <b>Map Showing Connections of the Great Southern and Western<br /> +Railway in Great Britain.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + +<h2>CONTENTS.</h2> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" width="70%" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents"> +<tr><td align='left'> </td><td align='right'>Page</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_8'><b>8</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Dublin and District</span>—</td><td align='right'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Dublin</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_15'><b>15</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Dublin District</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_24'><b>24</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Limerick and District</span>—</td><td align='right'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Limerick</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_46'><b>46</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Limerick District</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_53'><b>53</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Shannon Lakes</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Cork and District</span>—</td><td align='right'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Cork</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_73'><b>73</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Cork District</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_85'><b>85</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The River Blackwater, Youghal, &c.</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_98'><b>98</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Waterford and District</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_112'><b>112</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Killarney and Glengarriff</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_133'><b>133</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Lakes and Fjords of Kerry</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_175'><b>175</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">County Clare</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_221'><b>221</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Galway and District</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_235'><b>235</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Connemara and Sligo</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_245'><b>245</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Summer and Winter Resorts</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_256'><b>256</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Natural History of the South and West Of Ireland</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_260'><b>260</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Sports</span>—</td><td align='right'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Cycling</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_278'><b>278</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Golf</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_291'><b>291</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">River Fishing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_295'><b>295</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Lake Fishing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_299'><b>299</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 3em;">Shooting</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_303'><b>303</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_306'><b>306</b></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Advertisements</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_309'><b>309</b></a></td></tr> +</table> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img008.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> +<h2>Introduction.</h2> + +<p>Travelling through Ireland in the good old times was at best a +precarious and inconvenient diversion. Those who had to do so regretted +the necessity, and those who had not, praised Providence. Many "persons +of quality," to use Dr. Johnson's phrase, have written narratives of +their adventures and experiences in "the most damnable country." No man +of position, even early in the nineteenth century, would dream of +travelling threescore miles from his residence without having signed and +sealed his last will and testament. The highways were beset by +"Gentlemen of the Road," such as that fascinating felon, "Brennan on the +Moor," of whom the ballad tells—</p> + +<p class='center'> +"A brace of loaded pistols he carried night and day." +</p> + +<p>The coach roads were dangerous, the stage was deplorable, and everything +but the scenery unpleasant. The interior and west of the country were +connected<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> with Dublin by canals cut in the time of the Irish +Parliament, which followed the enterprise of the Dutch. They were looked +upon at the time as feats of engineering skill, somewhat in the light +that we view the Suez or Panama Canals to-day. Neville, the engineer, +was the recipient of extravagant encomiums from the Lords and Commons, +and his fame is embalmed in a street ballad which sings the praise of—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Bold Neville,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Who made the streams run level</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In that bounding river</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Called the Grand Canal."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Nowadays we have changed all that, and Neville and his skill are as +little remembered in Ireland as the military-road cutter in Scotland, of +whom, to show that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> +Ireland had not the monopoly in "bulls," an English admirer wrote:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"If you had seen those roads before they</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Were made,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">You would hold up your hands and bless</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">General Wade."</span><br /> +</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> + <img src="images/img009.jpg" + alt="W. R. Corridor Train." /><br /> + <b>G. S. & W. R. Corridor Train.</b> + </div> + +<p>A poor Italian boy—Charles Bianconi—who tramped through the country as +a print-seller, was the first, in the days of Waterloo, in the south of +Ireland, to begin really that healthy competition with the mail-coaches +which made straight the way for the Iron Horse.</p> + +<p>The Great Southern and Western Railway was incorporated in 1845. Mr. +Under-Secretary Drummond, the English statesman who got closest to the +Irish heart, was identified with the construction of the line.</p> + +<p>Year after year the Company prospered and increased, gradually absorbing +the smaller lines adjoining it until the year 1901, when it amalgamated +the only two other systems of broad gauge lines in their district which +had remained independent. Practically the two provinces of Munster and +Connaught are now knit together by the great network of railway lines +which comprise the Great Southern and Western System. The total length +is about 1,100 miles. The main line stretches from Dublin, through Cork, +to Queenstown, forming the route for the American Mails and the great +transatlantic passenger traffic. Branches extend to Waterford, Limerick, +Killarney, and Kerry, and every place of importance in the South of +Ireland, while in the west the line extends from Tralee, through +Limerick,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> to Sligo. The carriages which the Company provide are of the +very latest design; vestibule corridor trains, with dining and breakfast +cars, are run daily, and the speed of the trains will bear comparison +with any. The journey, Dublin to Cork (165 miles) is performed in four +hours; to Killarney (189 miles) in about fifteen minutes more, and all +the important tourist centres can be reached within a very short time. +The comfort of passengers is well arranged for; refreshment rooms are +provided at the principal stations, and breakfast, luncheon, and tea +baskets can always be had, as well as pillows, rugs, and all the modern +conveniences of travel. Besides all this, the enterprise of the Company +has provided at Killarney, Parknasilla, Kenmare,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> Caragh Lake, and +Waterville, hotels, which for appearance and luxury, tempered by +economy, are the equals of any in Europe.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> + <img src="images/img011.jpg" + alt="W. R. Dining Carriage." /><br /> + <b>Interior of G. S. & W. R. Dining Carriage.</b> + </div> + +<p>The scenery of Ireland surpasses the most roseate expectations. Within a +comparatively small compass her scenic beauties include mountains, +lakes, and seas, and it is the good fortune of the Great Southern and +Western Company to have within its borders the finest scenery in the +country. The "Skies of Erin" have been paid tribute to by artists again +and again. Turner said the sun never seemed to set so beautifully +anywhere as in Ireland, and Lady Butler, the well-known painter, has +expressed the opinion that nowhere, except in the valley of the Nile, +does the firmament put forth such varied changes of beauty as in +Ireland. To the Gulf Stream, which strikes the south-western coast, +scientists attribute the mildness of the climate. From Queenstown to +Leenane the coast-line contains countless health resorts, where invalids +may be recommended winter quarters as salubrious as many of the +continental districts.</p> + +<p>The sportsman has always found himself at home here. The fine hunting +counties of Kildare, Tipperary, Kilkenny, and Waterford are familiar to +every son of Nimrod. Shooting and fishing, although the preserves are +not so many or so well kept as in Scotland, may be called the staple +sports of Ireland. Golf has come to stay, and within recent years links +have been laid in the vicinity of most of the tourist districts.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p> + +<p>One word for Irish industries will not be out of place. Ireland has no +industries in the sense in which England has. With the exception of +Belfast, there is no place in the country which approaches to a factory +town in the sense in which that phrase is understood across the channel. +Agriculture, of course, is the backbone of Ireland, and in connection +with it the creamery system of the south may be mentioned. Anyone +anxious to find a line of industry in Ireland which has beaten the Dane +in his own market should visit Cleeves' famous factory at Limerick. The +woollen industry in the country has withstood destructive legislature, +and a typical example of modern success is the great tweed factory of +Morroghs, at Douglas, County Cork. The Blarney tweeds have become a +household word, but Douglas is shouldering them in the keen competition +for public recognition. The great bacon-curing houses of Denny, at +Waterford, are well worth seeing, as is also the thriving wholesome +Co-operative Factory at Tralee. In Dublin the mammoth brewery of +Guinness and Sons can be viewed under the conductorship of a servant of +the firm employed for the sole purpose of showing visitors through the +great concern. But it is the lesser industries in Ireland which are +really attractive. The law of the survival of the fittest stands to +these—the homespuns woven in the cottages, the beautiful Dublin poplin, +the delicate lace of Youghal and Limerick, the exquisite pottery of +Belleek, these good things are beyond compare.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img014.jpg" alt="Sackville-street" title="Sackville-street" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Sackville-street, Dublin.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap014" id="imgmap014"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap014.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap014-tb.jpg" + alt="Map of Dublin City" /></a><br /> + <b>Map of Dublin City.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img015.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p> + + +<h2>Dublin and District.</h2> + +<h3>DUBLIN.</h3> + + +<p>The Tourist too often hurries away from Dublin to the south or west with +but a superficial knowledge of the attractions of the city. It will well +repay a stay, and if the visitor happens to come at Horse Show week he +can easily believe himself sojourning in the capital of one of the +wealthiest countries in Europe. During that short carnival each autumn +the tears are brushed aside, and Erin is all smiles and welcomes for her +guests. The hotels are good, the lodging-houses are clean, and moderate +in price. The restaurants have much improved within recent years. +Readers of Lord Mayo's encouraging articles to would-be Irish tourists +will do well to test his tribute to "The Dolphin" in Essex-street. If +anyone wants to see the ladies of fashion at their tea, Mitchell's in +Grafton-street is a sure find, and the well-equipped D.B.C. tea-houses, +which are established in several parts of the city, will meet the +requirements of moderate purses.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap015" id="imgmap015"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap015.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap015-tb.jpg" + alt="Map of Environs of Dublin" /></a><br /> + <b>Map of Environs of Dublin.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + +<p>To attempt to mention more than a few of the more important places worth +seeing in this city would be beyond the intention of these pages. +Stretched beneath<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> the beautiful Dublin Mountains the city scatters +itself about the sides of the River Liffey. To get from one place to +another in Dublin is simplicity itself. The electric-tram system is +equal to any in Europe, and excels most in the cheapness of its fares. +The cars run through the principal streets and along the quay sides to +the suburbs. A good view of the city may be had from the top of a tram +on a fine day. Those who wish to suit their own convenience, however, +will always avail themselves of the outside car. The jaunting car is to +Dublin what the gondola is to Venice—at least an imaginative Irish +Member of Parliament has said so, and that settles the matter. When +selecting an "outside" take care that you secure one equipped with a +pneumatic tyre. The Dublin driver is much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> maligned, he is generally +courteous, and not without humour. The municipal authorities supply him +with a list of fares and distances. He is bound to produce it should any +difficulty arise as to the financial relations, which sometimes happens.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img016.jpg" alt="Shelbourne Hotel" title="Shelbourne Hotel" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Shelbourne Hotel, Stephen's-green.</h4> + +<p>Dublin was an old fortress of the Danes. They held the whole eastern +seaboard of Ireland until 1014 when Brian Boru defeated them and broke +their power at the battle of Clontarf. Historic remains of the old +city—the Ford of the Hurdles the Irish call it—there are none. The +Danes, the Normans, the Elizabethan, the Cromwellian, the Jacobite, all +made history in Dublin in their day, but the city as it stands is +practically modern. Between the Rotunda, one of the finest maternity +hospitals in the world, and St. Stephen's Green, the beautiful park +presented to the citizens by Lord Ardilaun, the principal buildings in +the city lie. The College Green, however, forms a natural centre from +which to make a short tour. The magnificent portico of the Bank of +Ireland—formerly the Irish House of Parliament—is characterized by +surprising dignity of proportion. Visitors can witness the printing of +bank notes. The Irish House of Lords, which remains unaltered, is an +oblong room with recess for throne at one end. Within may be seen two +valuable Dutch tapestries, the one representing the famous Siege of +Derry, and the second the Battle of the Boyne. Immediately outside "The +Old House at Home," as the historic building is affectionately called by +Irishmen, is a noble statue of Henry Grattan. He was the people's +darling from 1782, when the Volunteers mustered in College-green, up to +1800, when the Act of Union was passed. Behind Grattan stands the old +leaden statue of William III., erected in 1701. This equestrian figure +of "King Billy," as the prince of glorious, pious, and immortal memory +is familiarly known, has been the centre of, in its time, much mischief +and merriment. Up to 1822 His Majesty was annually decorated with orange +ribbons to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> celebrate the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne. This +party demonstration was always resented by the populace, and King Billy +came in for no end of ill-treatment. However, he has braved the battle +and the breeze.</p> + +<p>Turning from the Bank we face the University, in front of which stand +fine bronze statues of its distinguished sons, Edmund Burke and Oliver +Goldsmith. The University, unlike its sisters, Oxford and Cambridge, +contains but a single college—that of the Holy and Undivided +Trinity—founded by Adam Loftus in Elizabeth's reign. Visitors to the +College should be shown the chapel halls, museum, and library, and grand +quadrangles, including Lever's notorious "Botany Bay." While in the +library the world-famous "Book of Kells" may be inspected, and the +enduring qualities of its marvellous illuminations admired. The College +park is very beautiful, and during the College races at midsummer +presents quite a gala sight.</p> + + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img019.jpg" alt="Dublin Castle." title="Dublin Castle." /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Dublin Castle.</h4> + +<p>In Dame-street most of the Irish banks have their offices. At the end of +the street furthest from the College is the City Hall. The building was +originally the Royal Exchange, but in the middle of the nineteenth +century it was handed over to the Dublin Corporation. The Corinthian +columns which form the portico are very handsome. The entrance is +modern, the older structure having given way in "the troubled times," +while a crowd of citizens were beguiling the time watching a public +whipping of a malefactor from the steps. The centre hall is crowned with +a decorated dome. The hall contains statues of O'Connell, +Under-Secretary Drummond, Grattan, and Dr. Lucas, a publicist in +eighteen-century Dublin. The Council Chamber is well furnished, and some +of the portraits of former Lords Mayor are very fine. Immediately behind +the City Hall is Dublin Castle, far from being the imposing structure +those familiar with its history may suppose. The Lower Castle Yard is +entered from Palace-street.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> It contains the Birmingham Tower, a modern +structure replacing the fortress, some of the walls of which still +stand, from which the fiery Red Hugh O'Donel, Prince of Tyrone, escaped. +The Castle Chapel is beside the Tower, and permission to visit it is +easily obtained. Among the things of interest in the chapel are the +emblazoned arms of all the Irish viceroys. The wood work throughout is +Irish oak, and there are ninety heads in marble to represent the +sovereigns of England. St. Patrick's Hall, the Throne-room, and the Long +Drawing-room are the most important of the State apartments. While in +the vicinity of the Castle, St. Patrick's Cathedral should be visited. +Founded so long ago as 1190, this cathedral, dedicated to the Apostle of +Ireland, has had a chequered history. Mostly Early English in +architecture, modern styles have been grafted on the building without +consistency or unity of ideal. The monuments are many. Dean Swift's +bears an inscription written by himself and breathing the hatred of +oppression and love of liberty characteristic of the writer—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Hic depositum est corpus</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">JONATHAN SWIFT, s. t. d.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hujus Ecclesiae Cathedralis Decani</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ubi saeva indignatio</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ulterius cor lacerare nequit</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Abe Viator</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Et imitare si poteris</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Strenuum, pro virili,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Libertatis vindicatorem,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Obiit 19° die mensis Octobris, A.D. 1745,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Anno Aetatis 78."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Hard by is a white marble slab in memory of her whose name must be for +ever associated with that of Swift—"Stella." Ten minutes' walk through +Patrick-street will bring one from St. Patrick's to the most interesting +ecclesiastical structure in Dublin—Christ Church Cathedral. An old +Danish foundation, fire and time laid<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> hands upon the original +building. Its restoration is a triumph of architectural genius in the +reproduction of thirteenth-century English Gothic. Strongbow's tomb is +the famous monument of the place. The Crypt contains, besides other +antiquities, the old City stocks, which is some three centuries old. +Other places worth seeing in the city are the Four Courts, the Custom +House, the Pro-Cathedral, Marlborough-street, St. Michan's Church and +Churchyard, and the Church of St. Francis Xavier, Gardiner-street. The +general architecture in the streets is incongruous, and the modern +"improvements" not always desirable. In the back streets here and there +the quaint gables as old as Queen Anne still survive, but the Dutch +houses have almost entirely, and the Cage houses have entirely, +disappeared.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img021.jpg" alt="Custom House" title="Custom House" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Custom House, Dublin.</h4> + + +<p>Leinster Lawn, or the Duke's Lawn, as the man in the street in Dublin +still calls it, contains, among other attractions, the National Gallery, +Museum, and Public Library. These are store houses of treasure. The +catalogue of the Gallery reveals a valuable collection of paintings, and +the Museum contains an unique exhibition of gold, silver, and bronze +ornaments, collars, brooches, shields, clasps, and spears, which were +found from time to time throughout Ireland, and are evidence of her +former civilization. The Royal Irish Academy, in Dawson-street, +possesses a rich collection of ancient Irish manuscript.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img023.jpg" alt="National Library and Four +Courts" title="National Library and Four +Courts" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>National Library and Four Courts, Dublin.</h4> + +<p>The cemeteries of Dublin are small, except Glasnevin. A drive through +the Phœnix Park will bring one by the embanked river or through the +northern side of the city. An inquisitive tourist asked an Irish driver +why the Park was so called, when there was no such bird ever in the +world. "Sure that's the reason," said the driver. "Sure there's no such +Park in the world either." Lord Chesterfield put up a column with a +Phœnix in the Park, but of old its name was Parc-na-Fionniake (the +field of the clear water). It lies on the northern bank of the river +celebrated by Sir Samuel Ferguson:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Delicious Liffey, from the bosoming-hills</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">What man who sees thee issuing strong and pure</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But with some wistful, fresh emotion fills,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Akin to nature's own sweet temperature;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And haply thinks:—On this green bank 'twere sweet</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">To make one's mansion sometime of the year,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For health and pleasure on these uplands meet,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And all the Isle's amenities are here."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Long ago the St. John's Hospitallers had their house at Kilmainham, and +the lands belonging to the Order lay about either side of the stream. +The Hospice is now the Old Man's House—an Asylum for Disabled Soldiers, +designed by Sir Christopher Wren—and possesses one of the finest halls +in Europe. The lands have been built over at Inchicore, and on the other +side of the river formed into the Phœnix Park, containing close on +two thousand acres, and bounded by a circumference of seven miles. The +Park contains the lodges of the Viceroy and the Chief Secretary for +Ireland, and the monuments to Lord Gough, Lord Carlisle, and the +"overgrown milestone," as the obelisk to the Duke of Wellington has been +called. The People's Gardens have been laid out with great taste, but +they cannot compare with the natural beauty of the Furze Glen with its +deep shade and silent lake. Visitors in the summer time should not fail +to drive from Knockmaroon gate, beside the Liffey, to "The Strawberry +Beds." Here, in the season, delicious fruit, fresh from the gardens, and +rich cream, can be had in most of the cottages beside the road.</p> + + +<h3>DUBLIN DISTRICT.</h3> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img025.jpg" alt="Church at Clondalkin" title="Church at Clondalkin" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Round Tower and Church at Clondalkin.</h4> + + +<p>The country in the immediate vicinity of Dublin contains much that is +picturesque. The scenery along the coast has in general been already +referred to. But Killiney, Bray, and Howth, if time permits, should be +visited. The train and tram facilities<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> are sufficient. Wicklow County +has been called the Garden of Erin, and on no account should a visit to +Glendalough or "The Meeting of the Waters" in the Vale of Avoca be +deferred. But those who wish to speed on to the south or west will do so +from the Kingsbridge Terminus. From here we pass through Inchicore, the +busy thriving hive of industry, where the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> Great Southern and Western +Railway have their engineering works. The first station we come to is +that of <b>Clondalkin</b>. The old village sits snuggled up at the foot of +its round tower, which is one of the best specimens of that early +architecture in Ireland, of which the poet says:</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Two favourites hath Time—the Pyramids of Nile</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the old mystic temples of our own dear Isle."</span><br /></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img026.jpg" alt="Salmon Leap" title="Salmon Leap" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Salmon Leap, Lucan.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img027.jpg" alt="Castletown House" title="Castletown House" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Castletown House.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img028.jpg" alt="Carton House" title="Carton House" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Carton House, Maynooth.</h4> + + +<p>Irish antiquaries for generations have squabbled over these famous +"Pillar Towers of Ireland," but the general trend of scientific opinion +is that they are of early Christian origin. Father Matt Horgan, a famous +Munster antiquary, humorously started the theory that they were built to +puzzle posterity, which they have very successfully done. <b>Lucan</b> is a +health resort,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> possessing a sulphur spa, and situated in a well-wooded +country above the Liffey. The Hydropathic stands well sheltered and +commanding a splendid view. The drives in the district are many, and the +antiquarian will find much of interest. In Lord Annaly's demesne are the +remains of an early Norman castle, and in the vicinity is an ancient +Rath and souterraine. The drive to the Salmon Leap, at Leixlip, should +not be missed. Near by is <b>Castletown</b>, the palatial mansion of the +Connolly family, and a grotesque structure known as "Connolly's Folly," +which was built in the time of the famine of "Black '47" to give +employment. Here, too, the great Dean of St. Patrick's beguiled his time +at "The Abbey," the home of Esther Vanhomrigh, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> "Vanessa" of his +strange life. From Lucan Maynooth may be reached. Here is St. Patrick's +National College for the education of priests for the Catholic Church, +originally founded on a Government grant. "Carton House," in the +vicinity, is the residence of the Dukes of Leinster. It is surrounded by +beautiful parks, well planted, among the trees the royal oaks, for which +Kildare was celebrated, being conspicuous. <b>Straffan</b> may be called a +"hunting village," as the meets of the famous "Killing Kildares" most +usually take place in its neighbourhood. Here, too, are the seats of +Lords Cloncurry and Mayo. The thriving market town of <b>Naas</b> is two +miles from Sallins, and is the railway station for Punchestown, the +great steeplechase<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> meeting of the Kildare Hunt. Long centuries ago it +was an historic spot—"Naas of the Kings." From the station may be seen +the Hill of Allen, rising like a sentinel on the mearings of the "Great +Plain of Ireland." <b>Harristown</b>, the second station on a branch line, is +about three miles from Poulaphouca Waterfall. The road to the Falls +leads through the picturesque village of Ballymore-Eustace, situated on +a bank at a bend in the river Liffey. The view from the river below the +Falls is very impressive. Tullow is the terminus of this branch of the +line. It is a good business town, and the river Slaney affords excellent +trout fishing. Within half-an-hour's walk from Sallins is Bodenstown +Churchyard, where Theobald Wolfe Tone, the founder of the United Irish +Organisation of 1798, is buried. He was the most desperate man who ever +crossed the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> path of the English Government in Ireland. "The most +extraordinary man I ever met," is the verdict of the Duke of Wellington. +"He went to France with but one hundred guineas in his pocket, and +induced Bonaparte, by his single unaided efforts, to send three +armaments to Ireland." Six and twenty miles from Dublin, the town of +<b>Newbridge</b> exists as a kind of aide-de-camp to the Commissariat +Department of the <b>Curragh Camp</b>. The Curragh, a great plain over twelve +miles square, was once a common, the property of the Geraldine tenants, +but the Crown quietly seized upon it, and "their right there is none to +dispute." It has been made a camp of instruction, and can accommodate, +under more or less permanent cover, ten thousand men. It is in a good +fox-hunting, sporting country, "the country of the short grass," and +several times a year is the scene of race meetings. It is the Newmarket +of Ireland, for here are the training stables for Punchestown, +Fairyhouse, Leopardstown, Baldoyle, and all the lesser meetings in the +Green Isle, and many of the greater ones across the water. The Curragh +was the scene of more than one battle in centuries past, and, like Tara, +was one of the historic places chosen in the minds of the insurgents of +Ninety-eight as an ideal mustering point. The Curragh District Golf Club +has been formed by the military stationed there. <b>Kildare</b>, some thirty +miles from Dublin, is the junction for the Kilkenny branch of the line. +The town is very old, being, in the early Christian era, a cell of St. +Bride, a patroness of Ireland. The ancient cathedral has been partly +rebuilt, and in the south transept is the vault of the Earls of Kildare, +progenitors of the Leinster line. These Geraldines were the most famous +of the Norman invaders:</p> + + + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"And, oh! through many a dark campaign</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">They proved their prowess stern,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In Leinster's plains and Munster's vales</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 3em;">On king, and chief, and kern;</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But noble was the cheer within</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">The halls so rudely won,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And generous was the steel-gloved hand</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">That had such slaughter done.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">How gay their laugh, how proud their mien,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">You'd ask no herald's sign—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Amid a thousand, you had known</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">The princely Geraldine."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img029.jpg" alt="The Liffey" title="The Liffey" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Liffey, near Celbridge.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img030.jpg" alt="Poulafouca Falls" title="The Liffey" /></div> + +<h4>Poulafouca Falls.</h4> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img032.jpg" alt="Curragh Military Camp" title="Curragh Military Camp" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Curragh Military Camp.</h4> + + +<p>The Round Tower in the graveyard, which is one hundred and three feet +high, is perfect, except that the original cap has been replaced with a +battlement, out of character with the rest. The old castle stood by, to +guard the church and tower, and what remains of it has been turned to +use as a tenement. The Earls of Kildare were often warring with the +Kings of England. The Archbishop of Cashel one time protested to the +King against the Earl burning down his cathedral, and the Earl, when +reprimanded, explained to the King in person that he would not have done +so had he not thought that the Archbishop was inside the church at the +time. This was the same Earl of whom the Parliament complained that "all +Ireland could not govern the Earl of Kildare." "Then," said the King, +"let the Earl of Kildare govern all Ireland," and he was appointed Lord +Deputy, and made an excellent one. From Kildare, Carlow, twenty-six +miles distant, and Kilkenny, fifty-one, are the principal stations on +the line which terminates at Waterford. <b>Carlow</b> is an old town which +belonged to the hereditary enemies of the Fitzgeralds, the Butlers of +Ormonde. It is beautifully situated, surrounded by fine trees, and built +on the picturesque Barrow. There is splendid water-power above the town, +and it was the first place in Ireland that was lighted with electricity. +<b>Kilkenny</b>, the marble city, easily induces the visitor to linger within +its walls and enjoy fully the attractions of the river Nore. Long ago it +was a keep of "Dermott of the Foreigners," "who had grown hoarse from +many shoutings in the battle," and was given by him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> as a dowry with +his beautiful daughter Eva to Strongbow. Afterwards it passed, by +purchase, into the possession of the Butlers, Lords of Ormonde. Here a +Parliament was held in 1367, which endeavoured by law to prevent the +absorption of the newcomers by the old Irish race. It tainted the blood +of all who gave their children into fosterage with Irish women, and +penalised the usage of Irish dress and customs. It made it a capital +offence for any of English blood to marry an Irish woman, which was +humorous enough when we remember that Strongbow, "the first of the +foreigners," did so. But the statute was of no avail, and the Butlers in +time became as big rebels as the Geraldines. Here, in 1642, the +Confederate Catholics held their Parliament. Among other things they +drafted a scheme of local government for the country, and set up the +first printing press in Ireland. <b>St. Canice's Cathedral</b>, the Round +Tower, one hundred feet high, the Black Abbey, and Franciscan Friary, +are the principal ecclesiastical objects of interest. The Round Tower is +at the southern side of the Cathedral. This latter building, which is of +an Early Pointed Style, was founded in the twelfth or thirteenth +century. The pavement is of the famous Kilkenny marble. The principal +object of interest in the building is St. Kieran's Chair, against the +wall in the northern transept.</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img034.jpg" alt="Carlow" title="Carlow" /></div> + +<h4>Carlow.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img035.jpg" alt="Kilkenny Castle" title="Kilkenny Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Kilkenny Castle.</h4> + + +<p>The grounds of the Franciscan Friary have been overbuilt by a brewery, +but the fine seven-light window and tower still stand. The <b>Black +Abbey</b>, a thirteenth century foundation, has come back into the +possession of the Order of Preachers, or Dominicans, who have restored +it. The small parish church near the northern transept of St. Canice's +contains a window commemorative of Lieutenant Hamilton, V.C., of +Inistioge, who was killed in the massacre of the Cavagnari Expedition by +the Afghans in 1879. From the market place, Kilkenny Castle, the noble +seat of the Butlers, may be entered.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> In the absence of the family of +the Marquis of Ormonde, the public are allowed to visit the castle. It +is a practically modern residence, built into the ancient walls; and +three of the imposing watch towers of bygone years survive. The hall of +the castle is decorated with beautiful Spanish leather work, and the +rich tapestries on the staircase were wrought in the sixteenth century, +on looms set up in the town by Flemings. Besides the family plate, +jewels, and heirlooms—which are displayed in several apartments—the +picture gallery is exceptionally attractive. Among its treasures are +Murillo's "St. John," Corregio's "Marriage of St. Catherine," and +Giordano's "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin." From St. John's Bridge, +above the Nore, a splendid view of the castle may be seen. There is a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> +pleasant pathway under the castle wall, along the river side from the +bridge. From Kilkenny many interesting excursions may be made. To +<b>Kells</b>, twelve statute miles, where there are the ruins of an important +twelfth century priory. Two miles from Kells is Kilree, where are +situate a ruined church, Round Tower, and Celtic cross, and a remarkable +tomb slab in the church, on which is an ancient symbolic sculpture of a +cock-in-a-pot crowing. Three miles from Kilree is Aghavillar, with +ruined church, attached castellated house, and Round Tower. About seven +miles from the city is the Cave of Dunmore, a stalactite cavern worth +seeing. <b>Thomastown</b>, on the line to Waterford, was formerly a walled +town. It is less than two miles from Jerpoint Abbey, the ruins of which +are interesting. It was founded by Donough Tiernach, Chief of Ossory, in +1180. The style is Early Norman, but the turrets and battlements are +fifteenth century work.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img037.jpg" alt="Picture Gallery" title="Picture Gallery" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Picture Gallery, Kilkenny Castle.</h4> + +<p>Cromwell, who is discredited with destroying places in Ireland where he +never was, is said to have passed by Jerpoint without molesting it, but +when the peal of bells rang out in thanksgiving, he took it for a +challenge, and returned and sacked the place. In Cork he melted down the +chapel bells, saying that "as it was a priest that invented gunpowder, +the best thing that could be done with chapel bells was to make them +into cannons," which he did.</p> + +<p>If, instead of branching off the main line at Kildare, we continue along +it in the south-western direction.</p> + +<p><b>Monasterevan</b>, which was an old ecclesiastical place of importance, now +insignificant except for its malting houses and distillery. The Marquis +of Drogheda's demesne and residence, Moore Abbey, stands in the centre +of the well-wooded lands, which were formerly monastic property. +<b>Portarlington</b>, a small town on the Barrow, has the seat of the Earl of +Portarlington. The river divides the town, and is the boundary here +between Kildare and the Queen's County. The Irish<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> name of this place is +Coltody; but in the time of the "Merrie Monarch" it was given to a court +favourite, Lord Arlington, who here built a little harbour on the +Barrow, whence its name. In the townland of Deer Park, near the town, +there is still a colony of pure Huguenot descent. Portarlington is the +junction of the branch line running to Athlone.</p> + +<p><b>Maryborough</b> is pleasantly situated on the river side. From the Rock of +Dunamaise, an old fort of "Dermot of the Foreigners" in an almost +impregnable position, there is a splendid view of the Slieve Bloom +mountain ranges. At Ballybrophy is the junction for the Parsonstown and +Roscrea and Nenagh branches. <b>Roscrea</b>, under the Devil's Bit mountains, +has celebrated ecclesiastical remains and a modern Cistercian Monastery, +the parent house of which is the famous Mount Melleray Abbey. Among the +ruins of interest to the antiquary are the remains of Augustinian and +Franciscan foundations, and a Round Tower, about the foot of which St. +Cronan had one of the early schools in Ireland in the sixth century. A +square tower of the Butlers and a tower of Prince John's Castle will +repay attention. <b>Birr Castle</b>, the seat of the Earl of Rosse at +Parsonstown, is surrounded by a fine park. It is remarkable for its +mammoth telescopes, one of which is fifty-two feet long, with a speculum +six feet in diameter. Nenagh, at the foot of the Silvermines and Keeper +mountains (2,278 feet), is a stirring market town, and possesses a +Norman keep in fair preservation. Birdhill brings us to the Shannon, the +attractions of which are dealt with in another chapter.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img040.jpg" alt="Birr Castle" title="Birr Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Birr Castle.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img041.jpg" alt="Lord Rosse's Telescopes" title="Lord Rosse's Telescopes" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lord Rosse's Telescopes at Birr.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img042.jpg" alt="The Bridge, Athlone" title="The Bridge, Athlone" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Bridge, Athlone.</h4> + +<p>The branch line which runs from Portarlington to Athlone, runs right +through the Bog of Allen. It is available for through passengers for +Connemara. For miles, the undulating bog land, green and brown. The +<b>King's County</b> still remains out of the primeval forests, and its great +peat fields are the only source of wealth to the surrounding peasantry. +<b>Athlone</b>, some two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> miles below Lough Ree, on the Shannon, is the +military key to the Province of Connaught. The keep of the old Castle, +dating from King John's reign, remains, but the bridge and salmon weir +are of more interest. In 1691 Ginckle besieged the town on the eastern +bank, but a handful of Irish troops held the Connaught side, desiring to +keep the position until St. Ruth arrived. The defence of the bridge is +one of the most gallant exploits in Irish history. Colonel Richard +Grace, who held the position for the Jacobites, was offered security in +his estates and military honours, if he surrendered, by the Duke of +Schomberg. At night, when the offer reached the Jacobite general, he was +in his quarters, playing the familiar Irish card game of spoil-five with +his officers. The six-of-hearts happened to be the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> "deckhead." Grace +took it from the pack and wrote on the back, "It ill becomes a gentleman +to betray his trust," and gave it to the Williamite messenger. The +"six-of-hearts" is still known as "The Grace's Card," especially in +Kilkenny, where the general's estates were. From Athlone excursions may +be made to Auburn, eight miles; Clonmacnoise, ten Irish miles; and to +Lough Ree. Lissoy, where Goldsmith spent his childhood, there can be +little doubt, was the original of—</p> + +<p class='center'> +"Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain." +</p> + +<p>It is a pleasant drive, the road from Ballykeeran skirting Lough +Killinure. Lough Ree, three miles from Athlone, is low-lying, some ten +miles long, and in parts prettily wooded. There is a small archipelago +in the northern<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> end, of which pretty "Hare Island" is the residence of +Lord Castlemaine. The Seven Churches of Clonmacnoise formed the old city +of St. Kieran, whose feast day is the 9th September. There are two Round +Towers, O'Rourke's and M'Carthy's; a Holy Well, the Cairn of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> Three +Crosses, Relich Calliagh, founded by Devorgilla, who bewitched Dermot of +the Foreigners. Teampul-Kieran is a small cell. Teampul-Connor has an +interesting tenth century doorway, and in Teampul-Fineen the chancel +arch still remains, and the piscina can be traced. Teampul-Ree has two +round-headed lights and a lancet window, twelfth century work. The +<b>Great Cross of the Scriptures</b> is inscribed with Gaelic, "a prayer for +Flan, son of Malseclyn," and "a prayer for Colman, who made this cross +for St. Flan," referring to the ninth century monarch of Meath, and to +Colman, Abbot, early in the tenth century, of Clonmacnoise. The cross is +fifteen feet high, and its panels were sculptured with Scriptural +scenes, interlined with Celtic tracery.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img043.jpg" alt="The Shannon" title="The Shannon" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Shannon at Athlone.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img044.jpg" alt="At Clonmacnoise" title="At Clonmacnoise" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Clonmacnoise.</h4> + + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"In a quiet, watered land, a land of roses,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Stands St. Kieran's city fair;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the warriors of Erin in their famous generations</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Slumber there.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"There, beneath the dewy hillside, sleep the noblest</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Of the Clan of Conn;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Each below his stone with name in branching Ogham,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And the sacred knot thereon."</span><br /> +</p> + +<blockquote><h4>For information as to Sport to be had in the Dublin District, see end +of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, +Shooting, &c.</h4></blockquote> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img045.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img046.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>Limerick and District</h2> + +<h3>LIMERICK.</h3> + + +<p>Leaving <b>Limerick Junction</b>, between it and Limerick City, there are few +places of interest. The country side is very rich, and is the centre of +the Creamery Co-operative system. At Boher is Glenstal, the residence of +Sir Charles Barrington. The demesne contains the Ilchester Oaks, with +which the country people associate a romance. The story is told in +detail in Lefanu's "Seventy Years of Irish Life." At Caghercullen, which +is now part of Glenstal Demesne, early in the last century lived Squire +O'Grady, an old <i>grandee</i> of Limerick; he was a fox-hunting widower, and +his beautiful and only daughter was the cynosure of all eyes. When she +came out at a Limerick hunt ball the little beauty captivated Lord +Stourdale—eldest son to Lord Ilchester who was then with his regiment +at Limerick. O'Grady's keen eye soon discerned that the young people +were falling in love with each other. Proud of his family as the +Irishman was, he feared his position was such that an English lord may +not look on an alliance with favour. He wrote a friendly letter to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> Lord +Ilchester—in order to prevent trouble—saying that, as an elder man, he +perceived that his son was about getting into a scrape, and it would be +well to have him brought home or sent on active service. Stourdale +disappeared; and Lord Ilchester wrote thanking the squire, and notifying +that an old military friend—a Colonel Prendergast—would call and thank +him personally. The colonel came in good time, and partook of O'Grady's +hospitality. As he was leaving, he mentioned to the squire that he +thought his beautiful daughter was falling into bad health. O'Grady, +with brusque confidence, said that she had been fooling about Stourdale, +but would soon forget him. Lovers will rejoice at the sequel of the +romance. Colonel Prendergast discovered himself as Lord Ilchester, and +expressed his gratification at the possibility of having such a wife for +his son. There was the usual happy marriage; and the present Earl of +Ilchester and the present Earl of Lansdowne, can claim descent from +Maureen O'Grady.</p> + +<p><b>Limerick</b>.—Like most of the Munster seaboard towns, it was built by +the Danes; and it was the cock-pit of the fights between the Ostmen and +the warlike clans who followed O'Brien's banner in the early centuries. +It made history in Cromwell's days, and until recently the old house +occupied by Ireton stood within its streets. Ireton sentenced many men +of eminence to death during the short triumph of Cromwell. Among the +most noble of the cavaliers who died at Limerick was Geoffrey Barron of +Clonmel, a young Irish lawyer who acted as civil secretary to the +Confederates. With exquisite cruelty he was sentenced to be executed +upon the morning which had previously been fixed for his wedding. He +asked, as a favour, that he should be permitted to wear his bridegroom +attire on the scaffold, and Ireton granted the boon.</p> + +<p>He made a brave show amid the crop-eared Roundheads.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img048.jpg" alt="Treaty Stone" title="Treaty Stone" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Treaty Stone, Limerick.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Taffeta as white as milk,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Made all his suit.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Threads of silver in the silk</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Trailed like moonlight through it.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Silver cap and white feather,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Stepping proud and high,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In his shoon of white leather,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Came Geoffrey Barron to die.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Then the Roundhead general said,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fingering his sword—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Art thou coming to be wed,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Like a heathen lord?</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Go! thy pride thy scaffold is,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Give her sigh for sigh.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Breath for breath, and kiss for kiss,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For Geoffrey Barron must die.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But he laughed out as he ran</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Up the black steps;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Never happier bridegroom man,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">With his wife's lips.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">If for mortal woman's sake,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In silks should go I,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I shall for heaven the same pains take,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Now, Geoffrey Barron must die."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>But the name of Limerick scintillates in those glowing chapters in its +country's history, when it stoutly withstood the valour and prowess of +the great soldier-king, William of Orange. Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, the +beloved of damsels and dames, was the hero of this period. A handsome, +large-limbed, brawny soldier, towering over the tallest of his dragoons, +and true as the steel he wore, he was a fitting leader of a forlorn +hope. Originally, one of the "Gentlemen of the Guard" under the Merrie +Monarch, his defence of Limerick was a military achievement worthy of +the ambition of any general; nor were his Williamite opponents slow to +cordially appreciate his valour. But he was fated to die, "on a far, +foreign field." The sieges of Limerick led up to its name of the City of +the Broken Treaty. William of Nassau, having routed King James in +August, 1690, invested the city with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> 35,000 men. Tyrconnel and Lauzun, +Commander of the French allies, had cleared out, considering that the +place could not be defended. Sarsfield, although not in command, with +other kindred spirits, decided to defend the position. The heavy +ordnance of the Williamites, while on the way to the scene of siege, was +surprised at night at Ballyneety by Sarsfield and a hero called<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> +"Galloping O'Hogan," and the guns spiked and the ammunition mined and +fired. Auxiliary artillery was, however, brought into camp, and the +assault delivered. The guns breached the walls, the outworks were +carried, but before the garrison could pour in, the townspeople—men and +women—the latter, vieing in valour, flowed out and swept away all +opposition. The siege was raised. But a year later, Ginckle again +invested the place by land and sea. After three months' defence, +Sarsfield agreed to capitulate, the chief conditions of the treaty +being, that Catholics should be admitted to practice their religion +without hindrance, and that the Jacobite garrison should march out with +the honours of war. The latter condition was kept, but when Sarsfield +and his regiments had gone beyond the seas, the former was shamefully +violated. By the Thomond may be seen the Treaty Stone, on which the +capitulation papers were signed, October 3rd, 1691. In the Cathedral +place is the modern monument to Sarsfield. The castle, which was built +by King John—now a store—is an excellent example of the military +architecture introduced into Ireland by the Normans. The Shannon, the +largest river in Ireland, flows through the city. Limerick lace is +valued wherever people of taste are. The industry still thrives; but the +former greatness of the glove manufacturers has departed. Bacon curing +is the great industry of the city to-day, and the names of Denny, +Matterson, and Shaw—the principal manufacturers—have become household +words. The greatest factory in Limerick, however, is belonging to the +famous Condensed Milk Company, organized through the enterprise of Sir +Thomas Cleeve. The milk of some 15,000 cows contributes to the huge +output of this great concern.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img050.jpg" alt="Sarsfield Statue" title="Sarsfield Statue" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Sarsfield Statue, Limerick.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img052.jpg" alt="At Castleconnell" title="At Castleconnell" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Castleconnell, near Limerick.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img053.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>LIMERICK DISTRICT.</h2> + +<p>From Limerick tours may be made into North Kerry by rail, or by combined +steamer and coach service along the Shannon lakes and shores. The +amalgamation of the railway services in the south and west of Ireland +has contributed greatly to the many facilities which, with an improved +railway accommodation, now await the tourist.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img054.jpg" alt="Falls of Doonass-River" title="Falls of Doonass-River" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Falls of Doonass-River Shannon.</h4> + + +<p>Some seven miles from Limerick, and about the same distance from +Killaloe, is the pretty little town of <b>Castleconnell</b>. The place was of +yore a stronghold of the O'Brien's, and to-day the remains of the old +castle from which the village takes the name still stand. During the +Jacobite wars the place was of importance as one of the military keys to +the Province of Connaught, and Sarsfield and Ginkel alternately +garrisoned and fought for its possession. The village is situated +delightfully beside "The lordly Shannon," and is famous as a resort for +anglers. The scenery in the immediate vicinity is unsurpassed, and the +Shannon here has been described as possessing "The majesty of the Amazon +with the grandeur of the Rhine." Taking the well-appointed Shannon Hotel +as our centre many most enjoyable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> excursions can be made to the +beautiful places in the adjoining district. The hotel itself is only +five minutes' walk from the far-famed Rapids of Doonass, and beside the +celebrated Chalybeate Spa. Beneath a list of excursions is given of some +of the pleasant driving and boating trips that may be made. It cannot +pretend to be exhaustive, however, and is only offered as suggestive. +Assume that the visitor has three days at his disposal—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><b>First Day.</b>—Start from Hotel, walk to Chalybeate Spa, World's +End, Old Castle and Grounds (admission by pass), cross River at +Ferry, walk to "Old Turrett," from which a grand view of the +"Rapids" may be obtained—the Scenery at this particular point is +unsurpassed—visit St. Synan's Well, return to Hotel, drive to +"Clare Glens," see the Cascades—this is one of the most +picturesque spots imaginable and well repays a visit.</p> + +<p><b>Second Day.</b>—<span class="smcap">Day Trip on the Lordly Shannon</span> (<span class="smcap">Lough +Derg</span>).—Take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. +for Killaloe where the Shannon Development Co.'s Steamer awaits the +arrival of the Train to convey passengers for a Cruise on Lough +Derg. Steamer returns to Killaloe about 5.30 p.m., the Train leaves +Killaloe at 6.10 p.m. for Castleconnell, arriving at 6.41 p.m.; or +take car from Hotel to meet the 8.15 a.m. Steamer at Killaloe for +Portumna, return by down Steamer to Killaloe, thence by 6.10 p.m. +Train for Castleconnell. This Cruise embraces the whole length of +Lough Derg, and affords a grand combination of lake and mountain +scenery.</p> + +<p><b>Third Day.</b>—A selection from the following may be made:—</p> + +<p> +(<i>a</i>) Drive to Limerick City. See its magnificent Churches,<br /> +Treaty Stone, etc, etc.<br /> +<br /> +(<i>b</i>) To Killaloe. St. Flannan's Cathedral, a very ancient edifice,<br /> +Oratory with stone roof, Brian Boru's Fort, and Cragg<br /> +Hill, from which a very pretty view of Lough Derg may be<br /> +obtained.<br /> +<br /> +(<i>c</i>) To Glenstal Castle and Grounds (admission by pass).<br /> +<br /> +(<i>d</i>) To Keeper Hill. A splendid panoramic view of the<br /> +surrounding country afforded from the summit of this Hill,<br /> +including Lough Derg and "reaches" of the Shannon below<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>Limerick.<br /> +<br /> +(<i>e</i>) To Adare Manor (admission by pass).<br /> +<br /> +(<i>f</i>) Or take Row Boat from Castleconnell to Killaloe <i>via</i><br /> +O'Brien's Bridge, or to Limerick <i>via</i> Plassy.<br /> +<br /> +(<i>g</i>) Take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. for<br /> +Nenagh, drive from Nenagh to Dromineer, take Steamer<br /> +from Dromineer to Killaloe, thence rail or car to Castleconnell.<br /> +<br /> +(<i>h</i>) Or take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. for<br /> +Killaloe, take Steamer Killaloe to Dromineer, drive from<br /> +Dromineer to Nenagh, thence rail to Castleconnell.<br /> +<br /> +(<i>i</i>) Lower Shannon Steamer Trip to Kilrush (see special programme<br /> +of Sailings).<br /> +</p> + +</div> + +<p>Above a bend in the river at the Falls of Doonass the "Rapids" begin, +and eddying and whirling through the rocks run for nearly half a mile +along the surface of the river. It is to the angler, however, +Castleconnell will prove most attractive. The season commences on the +1st February, and closes on the 31st October. Trout, pike, and perch +fishing free; salmon and grilse fishing by arrangement. The fishing-rods +manufactured at Castleconnell have won a world-wide reputation for +Messrs. Enright and Sons, and Mr. Jack Enright has himself won the +record as a long distance fly caster. A writer in <i>The Fishing Gazette</i> +having dealt in an appreciative article with Castleconnell gives +valuable information as to the names and situations of the more +important pools on the river.</p> + +<p>The fisheries in the Castleconnell district taken in rotation from +below, are: the Prospect or Clareville Fishery, on the Limerick side of +the river (this means that the fishery extends to midstream; adjoining +it on the Clare side, and immediately opposite, is the Landscape +Fishery. Both of these are well-known salmon and peel catches. A few of +the best pools in Prospect are Pinnee, Salahoughe, Feemoor, and +Commogue. On Landscape the best pools are Poulahoo, Pallaherro, and +Filebegs).<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p> + +<p>Adjoining the Prospect Fishery, on the Limerick side of the river, is +the New Garden Fishery, which contains the pools of Moreagh, Glassogue, +Black Weir, and Sporting Eddy. Next to this, on the Limerick side, is +the Hermitage Fishery, which contains some famous catches, such as Back +of Leap, Fallahassa, Poolbeg, the Commodore, Bunnymoor, and Head of +Moreagh. Still on the Limerick side, we next reach the Woodland's +Fishery, a picturesque portion of the Shannon, and here are the pools of +Panlaides, Drarhus, Thunnavullion, and Long Eddy. Next is reached the +Castle Fishery, and the pools here are Balcraheen, Lackaleen, and the +Lough, the last affording several courses of fly fishing. Still on the +Limerick side the World's End Fishery adjoins the Castle Fishery, and +the pools here are the Pantry, the Kitchen, and the Over the Weir.</p> + +<p>Returning to the Clare side of the river the fishery next to Landscape +is the famous Doonas, the lower part of which contains the pools of +Poolcoom, the Stand, Black Weir, Faalgorribs, Franklin's Eddy, and the +Old Door, while the upper part includes Lickenish, the Dancing Hole, Old +Turf, Lurgah, Lacka, and Sallybush. Next on the Clare side we reach the +Summer Hill Fishery, part of which is opposite the Woodland's Fishery +and part opposite the Castle Fishery. The pools on Summer Hill are the +Black Eddy, Clare side of Drarhus, Thunahancha, Figar, Clare side of +Lackaleen, and Clare side of the Lough. After this the Erinagh Fishery +is reached, and here the pools are Gorribs and side of the big Eddy.</p> + +<p>In the spring salmon fishing is pursued principally with Devon minnows +as lures, the "cullough" running a good second favourite. Phantom +minnows and the very large spinning Shannon flies are also useful. A bit +later on the prawn takes precedence, the bigger the prawn the better. As +the season advances the lure, whatever it may be—fly, minnow, prawn, or +what not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>—should decrease in size until October, when again they should +assume larger proportions, but not so big as in the spring. Towards the +latter end of March, and onwards for the rest of the season, artificial +flies are are almost exclusively used. Truly wonderful specimens of the +fly dresser's art are some of the Shannon patterns. Fancy a salmon fly +dressed on an 8-o hook! Yet this is at times absolutely necessary to +ensure success. The best patterns for various times of the year are—For +February, March, and April, big Shannon Blue Fly, the Black Goldfinch, +the Jock Scot, and the Yellow Lahobber; for May, June, and July, Purple +Mixture, tinsel bodied Green Parrot, purple bodied Green Parrot, Silver +and Blue Doctors, Purple Widgeon, Orange and Grouse, and Thunder and +Lightning. Towards the end of the season here, as elsewhere, strange +fancy patterns will frequently prove successful. The most suitable +patterns of trout flies (the size of which depends entirely upon the +height of the water) are—Orange and Grouse, Green Rail, Purple Rail, +Black Rail, Orange Rail, March Brown, Hare's Ear, silver-tinselled body +Black Rail, and Orange and Grouse with a sprig of Guinea Fowl or Green +Parrot in wing.</p> + +<p>The tackle for the coarse fish is of the ordinary character.</p> + +<p>At the foot of Lough Derg stands <b>Killaloe</b>, an ideal resting place for +an angler. The cathedral is of some interest, and in the vicinity the +Protestant Bishop's palace stands. The bridge connecting the town with +the village of Ballina has thirteen arches, and the huge weir helps as a +breakwater. Shortly above the bridge of old time stood Kincora, the +fortified palace of Brian Boru; its glory has departed, and all that +remains is a mound, crowned with a grove of trees. Here Brian of the +Tribes held his sway; and still the peasant in Munster, wishing to +express his welcome, says in Gaelic—"Were mine the boire of the Dane or +the wine<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> of Kincora, it would be poured for you." Here it was that the +Norse King, Magnus, wintered early in the twelfth century, and found a +wife for his son, Sigurd, in the house of Brian. M'Laig, the bard of +Brian Boru, after the death of his king in 1014, made a lamentation, +which Mangan thus translated:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Oh! where Kincora is Brian the Great?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And where is the beauty that once was thine?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oh! where are the princes and nobles that sate</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">At the feast in thy halls, and drank the red wine?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Where! oh, Kincora.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">They are gone, those heroes of royal birth,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Who plundered no church and broke no trust,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">It is weary for me to be living on earth,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">When they, oh, Kincora, are below in the dust.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Lo, of Kincora."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>From Killaloe, northwards for twenty-five miles, Lough Derg at times +expands in width over eight miles, where its distant shores form a sky +line—hedged in with Tipperary and Clare Mountains. The lough loses none +of its picturesque attractiveness to the sportsman, who is informed that +the whole of the fishing is free.</p> + +<p>From Limerick as centre, as we have said, tours may be made into North +Kerry.</p> + +<p>To the average tourist North Kerry is a <i>terra incognita</i>, and yet from +the pleasant pasture lands around "Sweet Adare" in Limerick to where the +distant mountain of Caherconree sees his regal head reflected in the +sea—there lies a beautiful land. Beyond Patrickswell, on the Maigue, is +the little village of Adare, once the camping ground and stronghold of +"those very great scorners of death," the Desmond Geraldines. Still the +ruins of Desmond Castle, and of three abbeys, tell the tale that here +once, beside a citadel of strength, were places of religion and refuge. +Now, in the depth of the retreat of sylvan splendour, the Earl of +Dunraven has his noble mansion.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> At Adare, as well as at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> Ballingrane, +six miles away, still are many evidences of the Palatine plantations, +which were effected here in the eighteenth century. In 1709 a fleet was +sent to Rotterdam by Queen Anne, and brought to England some 7,000 +refugees from the German Palatinate. Of these, over 3,000 were settled +in this part of the County Limerick. They were allowed eight acres of +land for each man, woman, and child, at <i>5s.</i> per acre; and the +Government engaged to pay their rent for twenty years, and supplied +every man with a musket to protect himself. Industrious and frugal, the +exiles throve in the land of their adoption; many of them emigrated to +America, and only a comparatively small number of families still remain. +These, however, preserve, besides the names, many of the characteristics +of their predecessors<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>—as Dr. R. T. Mitchell, Inspector of +Registration in Ireland, testifies in his survey of this very +district:—"Differing originally in language, though even the oldest of +the present generation know nothing of the German tongue spoken or +written, as well as in race and religion, from the natives amongst whom +they were planted, these Palatines still cling together like the members +of a clan, and worship together. Most of them have a distinctly foreign +type of features, and are strongly built, swarthy in complexion, dark +haired, and brown eyed. The comfortable houses built in 1709 are in +ruins now. The original square of Court Matrix in the ruined wall can be +traced, and also, in the very centre of this square the foundations of +the little Meeting House in which John Wesley occasionally preached to +them in the interval, 1750-1765. Modern houses stand there now, but not +closely grouped together. They are all comfortable in appearance, some +thatched, some slated, some with one story, others with two; nearly all +have a neat little flower garden in front, and very many have an orchard +beside or immediately behind the house. There is all the appearance of +thrift and industry among them." From <b>Ballingrane</b>, a branch line +passing Askeaton, with its ruined Castle and Abbey ruins, to <b>Foynes</b>, a +good harbour, from which passage can be made to Kilrush, and thence per +rail to Kilkee. From the junction the main line runs by <b>Rathkeale</b> and +<b>Newcastle</b>, where there is a ruined castle of the Knights Templars, and +by Abbeyfeale and Kilmorna, where Mr. Pierce Mahony bred and kept his +stud of famous Kerry cattle, to Listowel, an old market town which +figured in the Desmond rebellion.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img060.jpg" alt="Adare Abbey" title="Adare Abbey" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Adare Abbey, Croom.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img061.jpg" alt="Adare Manor" title="Adare Manor" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo— Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Adare Manor.</h4> + +<p>From Listowel the Lartigue railway, unique in the British Isles, runs to +<b>Ballybunion</b>, a beautiful watering place, remarkable for its sea-caves +and old castle. <b>Ardfert</b> is remarkable for its ruined Abbey and +Cathedral, both dedicated to St. Brendon, the story of whose voyage to +the New World was one of the subjects<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> mentioned at the court of +Ferdinand and Isabella by Columbus, when inducing them to assist him in +his mission of discovery. <b>Tralee</b> is the largest town in the Kingdom of +Kerry. It is one of the most thriving towns in the south of Ireland, and +is situated in the vicinity of marine and mountain scenery. Those +interested in the revival of industry in Ireland will do well to visit +the Kerry Knitting Co.'s Factory, as well as the fine bacon-curing +establishment of the Wholesale Co-operative Society which has been +erected under the management of the well known Mr. Joseph Prosser. At +Spa and Fenit there is good sea-bathing, and on the Dingle Promontory +the ascent of Mount Brandon may be made. From Dingle excursions can +easily be taken to Slea Head, by Ventry, and under the Eagles' Mountain, +and within sight of the Blasket Islands. <b>Smerwick</b> has in its +neighbourhood a coast line of mighty cliffs, the most remarkable of +which is called the <b>Three Sisters</b>. Smerwick was the scene of the +massacre of seven hundred Spaniards, who had surrendered in the +sixteenth century to Lord Deputy Grey's forces. The bloody affair is the +blackest stain in the careers of the gallant Raleigh and the gentle +Spenser. Between Smerwick and Ballydavid Head the well preserved remains +of the <b>Oratory of Gallerius</b> may be seen.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img062.jpg" alt="Lartique Railway" title="Lartique Railway" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lartique Railway, Ballybunion.</h4> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img064.jpg" alt="At Ballybunion" title="At Ballybunion" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Ballybunion.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img065.jpg" alt="At Ballybunion" title="At Ballybunion" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Ballybunion.</h4> + +<blockquote><h4>For information as to Sport to be had in the Limerick District, see end +of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, +Shooting, Cycling, &c.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></h4> +</blockquote> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img067.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + + +<h2>The Shannon Lakes.</h2> + +<h3>DUKE OF YORK ROUTE.</h3> + + +<p>The Shannon Development Company run during the season a service of +steamers between Killaloe and Dromod (county Leitrim). The whole of the +journey from <b>Killaloe</b> to Dromod—about one hundred miles—is +interesting and full of variety, the shores and lakes of the lordly +river presenting an ever-changing panorama of beautiful scenes. About +Killaloe the views are very fine. The mountains of Clare and Tipperary +shadow the town on either side, and away to the north for twenty-three +miles stretches Lough Derg. Going up the lake, the first stopping place +is at Scariff, which overlooks the beautiful Inniscattery or Holy +Island. The reach from here to Portumna is crowded with islands, and on +both shores are ruined castles and finely wooded demesnes. Dromineer, on +the opposite bank, four and a quarter miles from Nenagh, is the next +station. Nearly opposite Portumna, with its ruined and blackened castle, +are the ruins of the monastery of Tirdaglass.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img068.jpg" alt="Sailing on the Shannon" title="Sailing on the Shannon" /></div> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img069.jpg" alt="Kincora" title="Kincora" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Kincora, Killaloe.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img070.jpg" alt="Shannon Steamer" title="Shannon Steamer" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Shannon Steamer.</h4> + + +<p>The ancient city of Portumna was once the chief pass and means of +communication between Connaught and North Munster. Between Portumna, at +the head of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> Lough Derg and Banagher, are the rich meadow lands of +Galway, along which the river winds tranquilly, passing beautifully +wooded islands; its banks green with rich, low-lying pastures. A few +miles from Shannon Bridge is Clonmacnoise, over which hang many ancient +memories of learning, of wars, and of worship. Near Athlone is a point +in the river where the Counties of Westmeath, Roscommon, and King's +County meet, and the waters of Lough Ree wash the shores of County +Roscommon on the one side and of Westmeath and Longford on the other. +Lough Ree is but little known to the tourist; and yet this lake, with +its rocky shores full of indentations, and its shoals of sparkling +islands, is one of the loveliest in Ireland. King John's Castle, on the +Roscommon side of the lake, is a magnificent Norman ruin, and the town +of Roscommon—which is not far from the brink of the lake—also contains +the remains of a fine castle and of a Dominican Friary. The castle, +which is flanked by four towers of massive masonry, was built in the +thirteenth century by Sir Robert de Ufford, and afterwards suffered many +changes of fortune; it is now the property of The O'Conor Don. The abbey +is chiefly interesting as containing the sculptured tomb of Phelim +Cathal O'Connor.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img071.jpg" alt="Lough Ree" title="Lough Ree" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lough Ree, Shannon Lakes.</h4> + + +<p>Circular tourist tickets for one day trips are issued by the Railway +Company. Details will be seen on summer time tables.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img046.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + + +<h2>Cork and District.</h2> + +<h3>CORK.</h3> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap072" id="imgmap072"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap72.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap72-tb.jpg" + alt="Map of Cork City" /></a><br /> + <b>Map of Cork City.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + + +<p>Enshrined in song and <i>saga</i>, set in the beautiful valley of a romantic +river, Cork is one of the pleasantest places within the four shores of +"the most distressful country." It is the capital of the rich Province +of Munster, "the wheat of Ireland," says a Gaelic proverb, and while it +preserves the characteristics of an old Irish town, here, too, the +traveller, familiar with the quaint cities of the Continent, will meet +with much that is suggestive of foreign scenes.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap73" id="imgmap73"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap73.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap73-tb.jpg" + alt="Map of Environs of Cork" /></a><br /> + <b>Map of Environs of Cork.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + + +<p>Cork sits snugly at the foot of, and leans her back up against, high +hills that shelter her from the north, and the breeze that blows up from +the sea is fresh and mildly bracing. From a height to the north +overlooking the city a bird's-eye view can be had of the entire +surroundings, and of what the poet Spenser called—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"The pleasant Lee, that like an island fayre</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Encloseth Cork in his divided flood."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Away to the west the eye can easily trace the river, winding with haste +to the sea, through the barony of Muskerry, "the fair country," from its +fountain home over the hills and far away.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img074.jpg" alt="Patrick-street" title="Patrick-street" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Patrick-street, Cork.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p> + +<p>More than halfway along the Mardyke Walk there is a sidepath leading +down to a ferry across the Lee. Here a good view may be had of the river +looking towards the city, with Sunday's Well, Blair's Castle, and +Shandon standing high on the hill.</p> + +<p>The history of the foundation of Cork City, and its progress through the +centuries, is well authenticated. Towards the close of the sixth +century, the place was founded by Lochan, son of Amirgin, the great +smith to Tiernach M'Hugh, the proud chief of the O'Mahonys. Lochan has +since come to be called St. Finbarr. His feast day is a retrenched +holiday in the diocese of Cork, and his patron day is kept by the +peasantry at the shrine of Gougane Barra, by the cradle of the river +Lee. The Irish name, Cork, signifies that the locality was a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> marsh, and +in the life of its founder it is described as a "land of many waters."</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img075.jpg" alt="The Marina" title="The Marina" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Marina, Cork.</h4> + + +<p>For less than three hundred years the little city throve, and then came +the Sea Rovers, hungry for spoil. In 820 they burned down Cork, carrying +away as pillage the silver coffin wherein St. Finbarr was buried. +Shortly afterwards they returned, and seized on the marshes lying +beneath Gill Abbey Rock, fortified them, and founded another little +city—but their own. There they sang their "Mass of the Lances; it began +at the rising of the sun," and, as the Four Masters assure us, +"wheresoever they marched they were escorted by fire."</p> + +<p>But in time the Rovers were absorbed, and race hatreds died out. They +paid tribute to the MacCarthys, and were married and given in marriage +to the Irish. Merovingian Kings came to buy and sell in Cork, and the +Sagas of the North tell of many a hardy Norseman who fell captive to the +maidens of Munster. To this day the Danish blood moulds the nature of +many in Cork, and among the men especially the passionate affection for +the sea is a characteristic. When the Normans invaded Ireland they found +Cork a Danish fortress. They broke the power of the Danes in a sea +fight, and won over the allegiance of MacCarthy, the old King of Cork, +through the wiles of a woman. The strangers had not been long in the +city when they, like the Danes before them, were absorbed, and became +more Irish than the Irish themselves. As their island city grew in +opulence, they began to assert an independence similar to the free +cities of the Continent. A historical writer of repute points out that +they were practically independent of external authority. Their edicts +had nearly the force of laws. They levied taxes, and regulated commerce. +They judged, pilloried, and hanged offenders. To suit themselves they +modified the English laws of property. They set up a mint of their own, +and their money had to be declared by the English Parliament to be +"utterly damned."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p> + +<p>Their audacity can be imagined from the part they played in Perkin +Warbeck's rebellion of 1492. They decked him out "with some clothes of +silk," and John Walters, the Mayor, insisting that the poor Fleming was +son to the Duke of Clarence, demanded that the Lord Deputy should +declare him King. Failing in this a number of Cork merchants sent him to +France, where they duped the King, and induced the Duchess of Burgundy +to give them armament and money. They then sailed for Kent, and having +landed there, proclaimed their foundling "Richard the Fourth, King of +England and Lord of Ireland." But the sequel of all this bravura +behaviour was not so happy, as Warbeck and Walters lost their heads, and +Cork lost its charter.</p> + +<p>In 1847 the city suffered fearfully from the ravages of famine and +famine fever. The failure of the potato crop drove the unfortunate, +hunger-stricken peasantry into the city for sustenance; and it has been +estimated that upwards of a million of people emigrated in these unhappy +years through the port of Cork. During the Fenian movement, 1865-67, +Cork was a hotbed of treason, and more prisoners were sentenced from +there than from all the other parts of Ireland put together. Thus, in +the nineteenth century, the name of "Rebel Cork," which was earned so +far back as the time of Perkin Warbeck, was still deserved.</p> + +<p>The manners of the people, gentle and simple, rich and poor, are +perfect. There is, perhaps, too often a tendency to adopt your view of +anything or everything with the most accommodating agreeableness. This +is very pleasant, if not always sincere, but in this respect a thing +never to be forgotten is that Cork is only a few miles from Blarney, and</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"There is a stone there, whoever kisses,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Oh! he never misses to grow eloquent.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Tis he may clamber to a lady's chamber,</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Or become a Member of Parliament.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">A clever spouter, he'll sure turn out, or</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">An 'out-an'-outer' to be let alone;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Don't hope to hinder him, or to bewilder him,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Sure he's a pilgrim from the Blarney Stone."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Thackeray, like many another man before his time and since, has paid +tribute to the loveliness of the girls of Cork. There is a graceful +charm about them before which the most inveterate bachelor succumbs. The +accents of the Siren singers were never so insinuating and caressing as +the Munster brogue as it slips off the tongue of a gentlewoman. Blue +eyes predominate, but are excelled in lustre by what Froude has been +pleased to call "the cold grey eyes of the dark Celt of the south of +Ireland." Edmund Spencer, when he was not busy "undertaking" Rapparees, +or smoking Raleigh's fragrant weed—"than which there is no more fair +herb under the broad canopy of heaven"—wooed and won and wedded a fair +woman of Cork; not of the city, though, but of the county. She was a +country lass, as he is at pains to point out to the Shandon belles who +fain would vie with her:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Tell me, ye merchant daughters, did ye see</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">So fayre a creature in your town before?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Her goodlie eyes, like sapphyres shining bright;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Her forehead, ivory white;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Her lips like cherries charming men to byte."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>There is nothing of peculiar interest about the streets of Cork but +their number, their narrowness, and the irregularity of the houses. St. +Patrick's-street, which is the principal thoroughfare, has many handsome +shops, and winds its way in three curves through the city.</p> + +<p>From the "Dyke," as it is locally known, through the "Band Field"—the +baby park of Cork—we can cross to an entrance to the Queen's College on +the Western-road. The College itself is a handsome building of white +Cork limestone, in the later Tudor style, forming three sides of a +quadrangle, and consisting of lecture-rooms, museum, examination hall, +&c. It is built in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> the centre of well-laid pleasure grounds, which are +open to the public, and which formerly were the site of St. Finbarr's +old monastery. During the session proper, practically from November to +June, visitors will not be admitted through the building without an +official order, which may be had at the Registrar's office.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img079.jpg" alt="Queen's College" title="Queen's College" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Queen's College, Cork.</h4> + + +<p>During the vacation the steward or assistant officials are in attendance +to conduct visitors. The large palm-house is one of the most successful +in Ireland, and the Crawford Observatory will repay a visit. The grounds +were laid out under the personal supervision of the late president, Dr. +W. K. Sullivan, a distinguished scientist. While at the south side of +the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> city, St. Finbarr's Cathedral<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> (Church of Ireland), eastward from +the College, should be seen. It is a very dignified design of the French +Early Pointed style. The nave, aisles, and transepts are grouped under +three lofty towers with spires.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img080.jpg" alt="St. Finbarr's Cathedral" title="St. Finbarr's Cathedral" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>St. Finbarr's Cathedral, Cork.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p> + +<p>From the foot of the street a few minutes' walk will bring us under the +old bi-coloured steeple, which contains the famous Shandon Bells. The +church was built in 1772. The steeple is unique, inasmuch as the +southern and western sides are of white limestone, and the northern and +eastern red sandstone—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Parti-coloured, like Cork people,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Red and white, stands Shandon steeple."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>But the "Bells" are the chief attraction, and the quaint inscriptions on +them amuse the curious. In the stillness of a summer night their sweet +chimes sound with peculiar cadence across the waters which encircle the +old city of the Lee. The charter song of Cork is:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;"><b>THE BELLS OF SHANDON.</b></span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">With deep affection and recollection</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">I often think of the Shandon bells—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Whose sounds so wild would, in days of childhood,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Fling round my cradle their magic spells;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">On this I ponder, where'er I wander,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">With thy bells of Shandon,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">That sound so grand on</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 2em;">The pleasant waters of the river Lee.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I have heard bells chiming full many a clime in,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Tolling sublime in cathedral shrine;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">While at a glib rate brass tongues would vibrate,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">But all their music spoke nought to thine;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For memory dwelling on each proud swelling</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Of thy belfry knelling its bold notes free,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Made the bells of Shandon</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sound far more grand on</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The pleasant waters of the river Lee.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img082.jpg" alt="Shandon Church" title="Shandon Church" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Shandon Church, Cork.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p> + +<p>Francis Sylvester Mahony, author of this ballad, known in the world of +literature as "Father Prout," was born in Cork in 1804. He was educated +for the priesthood, but spent the best years of his life in London, as a +magazine writer.</p> + +<p>Further north than Shandon is St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral, an +ample piece of architecture, not particularly attractive. Coming down +the hill towards the city on Pope's-quay, St. Mary's Dominican Church +may be seen. It is a very beautiful church, of the composite style of +architecture. The Grecian portico is remarkable for the gracefulness and +justness of its proportions, and is very much admired. It is, perhaps, +the most chaste building of its kind in the kingdom.</p> + +<p>Besides the churches and public buildings already enumerated, the +Courthouse and the Municipal Schools of Science and Art should be seen. +The Courthouse is in Great George-street. In a recent fire there many +valuable records were destroyed. Courthouses seem to be ill-fated in +Cork. The old Courthouse fell during the trial for treason in the Penal +days of the Catholic Bishop of Cork. The present Courthouse was burnt on +Good Friday, 1891.</p> + +<p>The punning, duel-fighting, hanging judge, Lord Norbury, of whom the +country people still say, "He'd hang a man as soon as knock the head off +a rush," often dispensed with an escort in the most exciting times, and +rode here on circuit with a brace of pistols at his saddle-bow. But he +was a man of uncommon determination. Once, when his acts were unusually +unjudicial, he was reprimanded from Dublin Castle and threatened with +compulsory retirement. He rode instanter to Dublin, and never stopped +until he drew rein at the Castle gate. He demanded to see the Lord +Lieutenant, but the then Viceroy, Lord Talbot, was in England. He was +ushered into the presence of a courteous official, who was a little +astonished to be authoritatively asked, "Who are you?" "I, sir," said +the Under Secretary,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> whom he addressed, "am Mr. Gregory." "Then you be +d——d, and don't Sir me," said his Lordship. "Fifty-two years ago I +began life at the Irish Bar with fifty guineas and a case of pistols. +Here it is! I have fought my way to preferment. Within a few months I +expect a letter of an unpleasant character from the Castle. Tell the +writer he may take his choice of these, and send me his second." History +does not record whether "the letter of an unpleasant character" was ever +written.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img084.jpg" alt="Cork Exhibition" title="Cork Exhibition" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Guy and Co., Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Cork Exhibition.</h4> + + +<p>The Municipal Buildings of Science and Art in Emmet-place can bear +comparison with those of any town of the same size in Great Britain or +Ireland. The sculpture and picture galleries are open to visitors. The +splendid collection of casts from the antiques in the Vatican Gallery +were executed under the superintendence of Canova, and sent by Pope Pius +VII. to George IV. The ship which carried them by long sea from Italy +put into Cork, and was there detained for harbour dues. The King, +instead of paying, transferred the Papal gift to the Cork Society of +Arts.</p> + +<p>A paltry exhibit of coins, antiquities, and fossils forms the Museum. +Although Cork County has been one of the richest in Ireland in "finds" +of gold and metal work of the ancient Irish, they are absolutely +unrepresented.</p> + + +<h3>CORK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>The county of Cork is the largest shire in Ireland. The pleasure seeker, +the artist, the antiquary, the sportsman, the invalid, will each find +within its broad barriers much to meet his wants. Sir Walter Scott is +credited with the statement that the history of this single county +contains more romance than the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> history of the lowlands and highlands of +his own dear land of the mountain and the flood.</p> + +<p>The surface of the county Cork is as diversified as the people. In some +places, such as Kilworth, Mushera, and Ballyhoura, the elevation is +considerable, elsewhere it sinks to a low-lying plain, such as at +Kilcrea, where the bog is that tradition says saw the last wolf in +Ireland killed, and Imokilly, where the sea is yearly eating into the +lowlands. The county is watered by no less than twenty rivers of +importance.</p> + +<p>Making the city the headquarters for a few days, there are many places +of interest in the vicinity which may with ease be visited. The +excellent tram system may be availed of by visitors to the sights in its +immediate vicinity. A drive by Douglas and Vernamount can be +recommended. Douglas was an old town, famous for its manufacture of sail +cloth, and in recent years a village providence in the person of the +late Mr. John Morrogh has resuscitated industry in the district by the +establishment of a splendidly equipped tweed factory. With a fine day +and a good "outside jaunting-car" to travel the five miles' drive to +<b>Blarney Castle</b> will be found most enjoyable. The famous stone, which +no one should miss kissing, is set in the parapet wall. The word +"Blarney," meaning pleasant "deluderin' talk," is said to have +originated at the Court of Queen Elizabeth. MacCarthy, the then +chieftain over the clan of that name, resided at Blarney, and was +repeatedly asked to come in from "off his keeping," as the phrase in the +State Papers goes, to abjure the system of Tanistry by which the clan +elected the chief, and take tenure of his lands direct from the Crown. +He was always promising with fair words and soft speech to do what was +desired, but never could be got to come to the sticking point. The +Queen, it is told, when one of his speeches was brought to her, said, +"This is all Blarney; what he says he never means."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p> + +<p>By the Great Southern and Western Railway the castle can also be +reached. By this route a good stretch of the Upper Lee is seen, with +Carrigrohane Castle, which belonged to the M'Sweeneys, beetling high on +a rock, and the line runs through the picturesque valley of the +Sournagh, which may be likened to a Swiss ravine. All the remains of the +former greatness of Blarney consists of the ruins of two mansions, one +of the fifteenth century, and the other of the Elizabethan period. In +its time the place was one of considerable strength, and was erected by +Cormac MacCarthy Laider, or the Strong-handed chief of his name. Most of +the outworks and defences are gone. The old square keep, ivy-crowned, +rises from a huge limestone rock, around which the Coomaun or crooked +river winds. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> Castle is over 120 feet high; the great staircase at +the right-hand side leads through the entire building, here and there +small vaulted chambers being set in the massive walls, which are in +places nine feet thick. The arched room, of which the projecting window +with three lights overlooks the streamlet below, is known as the Earl's +Chamber. The last fight in which Blarney Castle figured, was that in +which the Confederates held out for King Charles in 1642. It fell before +the superior ordnance of Cromwell's commander, Ireton. It was never +afterwards used for a dwelling-house, being almost completely +dismantled. From the summit of the Castle a good view of the surrounding +country can be had. To the west lies Muskerry, with what Ruskin calls +"the would-be hills" rising towards Mushera Mountain. To the north is +St. Ann's Hydropathic Establishment, on a gentle slope, surrounded by +well-wooded parks. In the village beneath is the well-known Blarney +Tweed Factory of Messrs. Martin Mahony Brothers, through which visitors +may be shown when convenient to the courteous proprietors. The "Rock +Close," which is at the foot of the Castle at the southern side, is one +beautiful jungle of foliage, in which myrtle, ivy, and arbutus +intertwine with the rowan tree and the silver hazel.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img087.jpg" alt="Blarney Castle" title="Blarney Castle" /></div> + +<h4>Blarney Castle.</h4> + + +<p>If we have gone to Blarney on the "outside jaunting-car," the return +journey may be made by Bawnafinny, Kerry Pike, and the Sournagh Valley, +and Northern Lee road. Beneath Bawnafinny, "the pastures of beauty," we +get a glimpse of Blarney Lake, a broad sheet of water bordered with tall +trees, above which the old Castle raises its head. It would gladden the +heart of Izaak Walton, as it is full of fish, among which is the famous +gillaroo trout, which will not rise to the tantalising fly. The +peasantry have a legend, that within the lake lies hidden the treasure +and plate of the last of the MacCarthys, who hid them there sooner than +allow his conquerors to gain possession of it. The secret is said to be +known to three of the old family, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> before one dies he tells it to +the other, so that it may be recovered when the MacCarthy "comes to his +own again." The milk girls also on May mornings are said to have +frequently seen fairy cows along the banks of the lake, which vanish +into thin mists when approached by human footsteps!</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img089.jpg" alt="Blackrock Castle" title="Blackrock Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Blackrock Castle, Cork.</h4> + + +<p><b>Ballincollig</b> is a place of some interest. The powder mill is a +long-established factory, and gives considerable employment in the +neighbourhood. The large cavalry barracks is amongst the finest in the +south of Ireland.</p> + +<p><b>Blackrock</b> is little better than a fishing village; but the suburbs +between it and Cork are filled with villa residences, pleasure grounds, +and market gardens.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> Beside the road, between the city and the village, +are situated the well-known nursery gardens belong to Hartland. The +daffodil farm, when the flowers are full, is a sight very difficult to +surpass in the three Kingdoms. Maxwellstown House, on the slope of a +southern hill, was the scene of a tragedy, not yet forgotten in Cork. +After a marriage <i>dejeuner</i>, the bride retired to her dressing-room to +don her going-away dress, but the bridegroom waited in vain for her +return. She had died suddenly in the arms of those who attended her; and +the story goes that the disconsolate lover dismissed the servants, shut +up the house with everything just as it was, and went on his way out +into the wide world alone. Long years afterwards, when news of his death +came from a far-off land, his next-of-kin had the house re-opened, and +found everything just as it had been left half a century before, after +the wedding breakfast. The dust and cobwebs were cleared away, and all +went to the hammer.</p> + +<p>Eastward, towards the harbour's mouth, there is much to be enjoyed. +Excursionists may take the train direct from the Great Southern and +Western Railway terminus, or by Passage from the Albert Station, and +then by steamer to Queenstown. Taking the direct line the train runs +almost parallel with the promenade called the Marina, which separates +from the river side the broad pasture known as Cork Park, which is the +local race course. A race meeting at Cork is well worth witnessing. The +gay young bucks, described long ago by Arthur Young, still are with us, +and they and their lady friends make a fine flutter during race week.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img091.jpg" alt="Queenstown Harbour" title="Queenstown Harbour" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Queenstown Harbour.</h4> + + +<p><b>Passage</b> (<b>West</b>) was once the busy site of ship-building and +dock-yards, but the industry is no longer of anything like its original +proportions. The town is an old-fashioned place, and has not escaped the +pen of Father Prout, who, in what he calls "manifestly an imitation of +that unrivalled dithyramb," The Groves of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> Blarney—with little of its +humours and all its absurdity—signs the attractions of what he styles a +fashionable Irish watering-place:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"The town of Passage</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Is both large and spacious,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And situate</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Upon the say;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Tis nate and dacent,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And quite adjacent</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">To come from Cork</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">On a summer's day."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Steamers ply between the railway station at Passage and the many little +towns around the port. <b>Glenbrook</b> and <b>Monkstown</b> are particularly +picturesque. Above the latter, nestling in the trees, may be seen +Monkstown Castle, the legend attached to which says it was built for one +groat. The owner of the site, one of the Archdeckens, an Anglo-Irish +family, having gone away to the wars in the Lowlands, his better-half +promised him a pleasant surprise on his return. She employed a number of +workmen to build the castle, a condition of the contract being that they +should buy their food from her while so engaged. Truly, she was a shrewd +woman. Her profits were such, that she had enough to pay the entire cost +of the work, less one solitary groat.</p> + +<p><b>Spike Island</b> is mentioned in Church History as a present given by a +Munster King to St. Cartach, of Lismore. In modern times it was used as +a convict prison, the convicts' labour being employed in the +construction of the fortifications around the harbour.</p> + +<p><b>Queenstown</b>, or, to give it its old Irish name, Cove, is built upon an +island. It is the paradise of naval pensioners, and the home of all +nationalities, yet Irish is still a spoken tongue not a mile away, +behind "Spy Hill." The magnificent Cathedral to St. Colman, the patron +Saint of Cloyne, occupies a commanding position over the harbour. It is +in the later florid Gothic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> architecture, and within one of its +transepts is buried the celebrated Dr. Coppinger, a learned writer and +member of the most famous and enduring of the Danish families to whom +Ireland became a native land. In an old graveyard on the island, Charles +Wolfe, the writer of the elegy on Sir John Moore, and Tobin, the +dramatist, are buried. The panorama from Spy Hill embraces the +enchanting river and the wide harbour, which is capable of holding all +the ships in the British Navy within the line drawn from the two forts, +Camden and Carlisle, which guard the entrance. Of Queenstown, the +<i>Dublin Health Record</i> says:—"The climate is remarkably mild and +equable, and, at the same time, fairly dry and tonic, and is especially +suitable as a winter and spring residence for persons with delicate +chests, to sufferers from chronic catarrhal throat affections, and to +convalescents from acute diseases. It is particularly appropriate as a +seaside resort to persons requiring a soothing and sedative atmosphere. +From the position of Queenstown, winds from the colder points are very +little felt, and it is completely protected from the north, north-east, +and north-west winds. The mean temperatures of the seasons are exactly +similar to those at Torquay, the noted winter health resort in the south +of England, and higher than those of Bournemouth, Hastings, and Ventnor. +As a winter health resort, Queenstown possesses all the best natural and +climatic advantages."</p> + +<p>The beach presents the most varied and motley sights to be seen anywhere +in northern Europe. Merchant seamen from every port of the world +congregate here; military and man-of-war sailors are ever present, +pleasure-seeking yachtsmen, pilots and fishers mix with the melancholy +groups of emigrants, or the irrepressible vendors of impossible wares. +Beyond in the blue waters, His Majesty's flagship rides at anchor, one +or more of the "ocean greyhounds," with dead slow engines, are steaming +out between the forts; tenders,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> whale-boats, small steamers, tugs, and +every craft that sails the sea, down to the familiar Munster "hooker," +are hurrying to ports far and near, or lying "idle as painted ships upon +a painted ocean." Most of the Atlantic liners have offices here. Tenders +convey the mails from the deep-water quays at the Great Southern and +Western terminus out to the steamers, which usually ride in the fair way +by the harbour's mouth. Queenstown is the principal port through which +the emigrants leave Ireland. Young and old, when the "emigration fever" +is rife, the tides of people may be seen flowing oceanwards. Sometimes +they have a little money, and are going to better themselves; but most +usually they are going out penniless to relatives abroad, or "just +trusting in God." Not an unfrequent sight is to see bare-footed peasant +children waiting for their turn to cross the gangway which leads to the +New World. Perhaps they have nothing with them but "a pot of shamrock," +or a little mountain thrush or orange-billed blackbird, in a wicker +cage, to make friends with "beyant the herring-pond." It is very +curious, but very Irish, that they do not at all seem to want the +sympathy that is lavished upon them by the onlookers. When they are +leaving their native place, the "neighbours" hold an "American wake," +and in the morning, with heartrending embraces and wild caioning, give +them the last "Bannact Dea Leat"—"God's blessing be on your way"; but +when they come to Cove, the sorrow is smothered; they are buoyed up by +that trusting faith in the future which is the first fibre in the Irish +nature. They may look melancholy to us, but they themselves make merry, +and before the "big ship" is but on the "Old Sea," as the Atlantic is +called, the girls and young men are slipping through rollicking reels to +improvised music "to show their heart's deep sorrow they are scorning." +Perhaps, as the Gaelic proverb expresses it, "'Tis the heavy heart that +has the lightest foot." But a truce to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> trouble. They tell a story of an +emigrant and a grand trunk merchant at Queenstown which shows alike the +hapless condition and happy-go-lucky heart of the Irishman. "Pat," said +the merchant, "you're going to travel; will you buy a trunk?" "A trunk," +answered Pat, "an' for what, yerra?" "To put your clothes in, of +course." "And meself go naked, is it? Och! lave off your gladiatoring; +sure it's took up I'd be if I did that!"</p> + +<p><b>Crosshaven</b> and <b>Aghada</b>, two watering places inside the harbour, are +within easy reach of Cove by steamer, which calls at Currabinny Pier. +The Owenabwee<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> river runs between Currabinny and Crosshaven; it is a +beautiful, well-wooded stream which has been celebrated in a +plaintive-aired Jacobite ballad, the "Lament of the Irish Maiden."</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"On Carrigdhoun the heath is brown,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">The clouds are dark on Ardnalee,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And many a stream comes rushing down</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">To swell the angry Owenabwee.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The moaning blast is whistling fast</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Through many a leafless tree,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But I'm alone, for he is gone,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">My hawk is flown, ochone machree."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>A few hundred yards from Crosshaven river there is a fiord of the +Owenabwee, known as Drake's Pool. Here the great soldier-sailor, Sir +Francis Drake, with his five little sloops, hid in 1587 from a +formidable Spanish fleet. The Spaniards entered the harbour, but failing +to find their quarry, put to sea again in high dudgeon.</p> + +<p>Near <b>Aghada</b>, at the other side of the harbour, is Rostellan Castle, +formerly the residence of the Lords of Thomond. <b>Cloyne</b> is only four +miles' drive "on the long car" through a rich countryside, and on the +way may be seen a Druidical cromlech, at Castlemartyr, in a very fair +state of preservation. Cloyne Round Tower "points its long fingers to +the sky" above the ancient<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> church wherein there is a fine alabaster +statue of the metaphysician, Dr. Berkeley, who was Bishop of Cloyne. +<b>Ballycotton</b> is seven miles from Cloyne. The cliffs here are high and +wild, and Youghal, shining white in the sun in summer weather, can be +easily seen at the mouth of the far-famed Blackwater. There are modern +hotels and moderate lodgings at Ballycotton. In the season splendid +deep-sea fishing can be had in the vicinity, and the opportunities of +sea-bathing are enticing.</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img096.jpg" alt="Ballycotton" title="Ballycotton" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Ballycotton.</h4> + + +<div class="blockquot"><p>For information as to Sport to be had in the Cork District, see end +of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, +Shooting, Cycling, &c.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img097.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img098.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>The River Blackwater, Youghal, Etc.</h2> + + +<p>Edmund Spenser spent most of his time in Cork County, at Kilcoleman +Castle in the vicinity of Buttevant. The place was well chosen as the +house of a poet. The surrounding country is very beautiful, and every +mountain and glen has its story.</p> + +<p>The town of <b>Buttevant</b> took its name from the battle-cry of the +Barrymores—"Boutez-en-avant," "push forward." The ruins of the +beautiful Abbey remain. At the time of the supervision of monasteries it +was described as "a nest of abbots." Buttevant is the railway station +for Doneraile, and hard by is Cahirmee, where the greatest horse fair in +the British Isles is annually held. The fair lasts for two days. It is +held about midsummer, and attracts buyers not only from all parts of +these countries, but from as far away as Vienna and Stockholm. Spenser +pays tribute to the beautiful Blackwater which flows through Mallow to +Youghal—</p> + +<p class='center'> +"Swift Annsduff, which of the English is called Blackwater." +</p> + +<p>Far away in the highland country between Cork and Kerry the stream +rises, and comes floating and pushing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> down from the haunt of the +fairies and the outlaw, through the wild country of Meelin. Here is a +remarkable cave, the hiding place of Donald O'Keeffe, last of the old +chiefs of the land of Duhallow, who was outlawed after the fall of the +Jacobites.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img099.jpg" alt="In the Woods at Buttevant" title="In the Woods at Buttevant" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>In the Woods at Buttevant.</h4> + +<p>The river flows through Newmarket, the birthplace of Curran, and +Kanturk, the birthplace of Barry Yelverton, to <b>Mallow</b> which is the +centre of the lines of railway radiating into Kerry, Fermoy, and +Lismore, as well as to Cork city. The town is very beautifully situated. +In the distance are the Kilworth mountains, which seem afar off to join +the ample deer-park at Mallow Castle. It was once one of the liveliest +and most fashionable resorts in Ireland, but its famous spas, to which +gentlewomen and gallants came in the last <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>century, are now unfrequented +and almost forgotten. When abductions, duelling, and such pastimes were +in vogue, "The Rakes of Mallow" were in their heyday. As Lysaght sang:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Beauing, belleing, dancing, drinking,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Breaking windows, damning, sinking,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ever raking, never thinking,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Live the rakes of Mallow.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spending faster than it comes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Beating waiters, bailiffs, duns,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bacchus' true-begotten sons,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Live the rakes of Mallow.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Living short, but merry lives.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Going where the devil drives:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Having sweethearts, but no wives,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Live the rakes of Mallow."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img100.jpg" alt="Mallow Castle" title="Mallow Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Mallow Castle.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>The Blackwater</b> flows past Mallow through a rich country surrounded by +soft-breasted hills and well-planted lawns, to Fermoy, a garrison town +of importance, from which Mitchelstown, eleven miles away, may be +reached by a light railway. The caves at Mitchelstown are described +elsewhere (Waterford section). We will part the branch line here and +return, <i>via</i> Cork, to Youghal, the point from which to become familiar +with the Blackwater at its best.</p> + +<p><b>Youghal</b>, except in summer-time, when the visitors to its splendid +strand enliven its appearance, is a sombre old place with an air of +retired respectability. It is full of memories of other days, for here +the Dane and the Christian came together; the Norman made it a walled +town, and the Spaniards came into its harbour.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img101.jpg" alt="View on the Blackwater, Youghal" title="View on the Blackwater, Youghal" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>View on the Blackwater, Youghal.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img102.jpg" alt="The Clock Tower, Youghal" title="The Clock Tower, Youghal" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Clock Tower, Youghal.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img103.jpg" alt="Sir Walter Raleigh's House" title="Sir Walter Raleigh's House" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Sir Walter Raleigh's House at Youghal.</h4> + +<p>From here Sir Walter Raleigh, its Mayor, went forth to found +Virginia—and to the scaffold. It was a chartered city, and grew in +wealth and importance from 1183 to 1579, when it was sacked by Gerald, +sixteenth Earl of Desmond, then out "upon his keeping." Ormonde drove +the Geraldines out of the town, and hanged the then Mayor outside his +own door for aiding them. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> rebuilt its walls, and placed here a +strong garrison. In 1641 it was again besieged, but held out for six +weeks until relieved. In 1645, Castlehaven attacked it, but was repulsed +by Broghill, fifth son of the Earl of Cork. Here, during the war with +the Confederates, money was struck. On the execution of Charles I., +Ormonde proclaimed his son King, but the Puritans in the town<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> revolted +to Cromwell, who wintered here in 1649. In 1660, the Cavaliers and +broken followers of the Geraldines captured the town, and ten days +before his actual succession proclaimed Charles II. King. With varying +fortunes of war, the town passed into the hands of the Jacobites and +Williamites. The objects of interest, besides the picturesque +attractions of the strand and beautiful bay, are very many. The Clock +Tower remains where the old South Gate to the town stood. Tynte's Castle +was built by Norman settlers in the fifteenth century. St. Mary's +Cathedral is cruciform, consisting of nave, aisle, transepts, choir, and +massive tower. In the chantry of Our Blessed Saviour, or south transept, +besides the memorial to the founder and his countess, is the grotesque +mausoleum, in florid, glaring Italian style, to the Earl of Cork and his +family. At Boyle's feet is the kneeling figure of his first wife, Joan; +at his head is that of his second, Catherine. Over the arch is his +mother, Joan, and along the margin of the plinth are nine diminutive +effigies—his children. The tower was evidently constructed rather as a +defence than simply for a belfry. The churchyard, where there are many +ancient gravestones, is the chief centre of local superstition, and here +all local ghostly visitations are alleged to take place. <b>Myrtle Grove</b>, +whilom the residence of the ill-fated Elizabethan soldier, Raleigh, is +an unpretentious, ancient gabled dwelling. The interior is remarkable +for its beautiful oak wainscoting.</p> + +<p>During his sojourn in Munster, "Captain Sir Walter Raleigh" performed +many deeds of dering-do, albeit some of them were far from being like +Bayard's, without reproach. He was Mayor of Youghal, 1588-9; and, with +Spenser, was granted the greater<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> part of the forfeited estates of the +Earl of Desmond. Raleigh's grant comprised property at Youghal and along +the Blackwater to Affane, already mentioned. In the garden attached to +Myrtle Grove he is supposed to have planted the potato, the first +planted in Ireland.</p> + +<p>The strand at Youghal is very fine, and sea-bathers are afforded every +opportunity of enjoying themselves. In summer time the watering-place is +much patronized, and every year is becoming more attractive. There are +good hotels, and plenty of residences and lodgings to accommodate +visitors during the season. In the morning the whole fore-shore is given +over to the bathers, and in the evenings it is mostly "Oh, listen to the +band" along the Promenade and in the Green Park. The inroads of the sea +at Claycastle are at length being successfully encountered by the Case +groining system, which has been found so efficient elsewhere.</p> + +<p>The coast-line from Youghal to Cork is indented with splendid sea +cliffs, fiords, and strands. Garryvoe lies between Youghal and +Ballycotton. The sea for miles along this district has been eating into +the clay cliffs, and threatens to fulfil a Gaelic prophecy that it will +yet reach Killeagh, a town six miles inland. Near Killeagh is a very +beautiful scene of sylvan splendour, Glenbower.</p> + +<p>The railway line runs direct from Youghal to Cork, passing the thriving +market town of Midleton, the granary of Cork County, and Carrigtwohill, +where there are the ruins of a Norman Castle.</p> + +<p>A ferry from Youghal brings the passenger into Waterford County. The +road above Whiting Bay leads to the fishing village of <b>Ardmore</b>. It was +perhaps, the first place in Ireland where the light of Christianity +shone, as St. Declan is generally agreed to have been a precursor of the +National apostle. In the country districts surrounding, as in the +fishing village itself, the language most in use is Gaelic. The round +tower, said to be of later date than any other in Ireland, is unique in +many respects. The Cathedral,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> with its exquisite chancel arch and +elaborate exterior arcading, will delight the antiquary and architect. +Other interesting objects are the Ogham stones in its chancel, and the +narrow lintelled "Bed" of St. Declan.</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img106.jpg" alt="Strancally Castlee" title="Strancally Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Strancally Castle, Co. Waterford.</h4> + + +<p>The service of steamers from Youghal to Cappoquin up the <b>River +Blackwater</b> depends at present mainly on the state of the tide. But +despite this and other things, the scenery on the river side will well +repay inconvenience. Having left the ferry behind, the first place of +interest is Rhincrew (The Bloody Point), and on the wooded hill the +ruins of a preceptory of the Knights Templars still remain. Higher up on +the western bank of the Glendine tributary stands Temple Michael,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> an +old fortalice of the Geraldines, which Cromwell battered down for "dire +insolence."</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img107.jpg" alt="Blackwater River" title="Blackwater River" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Blackwater River.</h4> + + +<p>There is a legend which tells that the last of the Geraldines was buried +at Ardmore, far from his young bride, who lost her life during the siege +by the regicides. The story says, after his burial, at night his voice +could be heard clearly, calling across the river, to bring him back and +bury him by his own. For seven years the awe-struck peasants heard the +plaintive voice calling, in the tender tongue of the Gael, "Garault, +come to me,"—"Gerald, a ferry!" At last, some young men of his clan +went to Ardmore and brought his dead body to Temple Michael, where his +wife was buried, and henceforth his spirit no longer troubled the silent +vigils of the fishermen at night.</p> + +<p>The bend in the waterway brings one into sight of rich pastures and fine +demesnes. Ballintray, "The Town of the Strand" has in its vicinity +Molana Abbey, where the warrior, Raymond Le Gros, lies buried. At the +broads of Clashmore, the highest water-mark to which the inflowing tide +comes, one can easily imagine themselves upon an inland lake. Beyond is +Strancally Castle, beetling over the river, set firmly in a foundation +of crags. The local tradition carriers will gladly point out "The +Murdering Hole," a natural fissure in the rocks, and here they will tell +you that the departed Desmonds destroyed their guests after robbing +them! Above the confluence of the Bride with the Blackwater, +Villierstown and Camphire villages are passed, then the Awbeg joins its +little flood, and beyond the island Dromana Ford is reached. Near is +Dromana Castle, where "the old Countess of Desmond" was born. In the +table-book of Robert Sydney, second Earl of Leyicester, written when +Ambassador at Paris, about 1640, there is the following reference to +her:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"The old Countess of Desmond was a marryed woman in Edward IV. time +of England, and lived till towards the end of Queen Elizabeth, so +as she must needes be neare one hundred and forty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> years old. She +had a new sett of teeth not long afore her death, and might have +lived much longer had she not mett with a kind of violent death, +for she would needes climbe a nut-tree to gather nuts, so falling +down she hurt her thigh, which brought a fever, and that fever +brought death. This my cousin, Walter Fitzwilliam, told me. This +old lady, Mr. Haniot told me, came to petition the Queen, and, +landing at Bristoll, she came on foot to London, being then so old +that her daughter was decrepit, and not able to come with her."</p></div> + +<p>Dromana House, on the eastern branch of the river, is situated on a +beautiful height, which commands the reaches of the river from Cappoquin +to Youghal. At more than one point on the river there were opportunities +of seeing in the distance the cloisters of <b>Mount Melleray</b>—"the little +town of God," lonely above the mists and shadows of the hills. As we +walk<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> or drive, the hillside behind the river winds its way through +cliffs and well-wooded lands in front, the mountains unfold themselves +range behind range. No one who has ever visited Mount Melleray will +forget it or the generous Brothers. The Trappists, expelled from France +in 1830, first settled on the borders of Kerry, but subsequently +colonised this barren hillside, and already they have transformed it +into a fine farm, containing rich pastures and thriving plantations. The +monastery may be visited by gentlemen visitors, and cannot fail to prove +of extraordinary interest. There are two guest houses, one for gentlemen +and the other for ladies. No charge is made for their bed or board, and +all creeds, classes, and nationalities are received with a <i>caed mille +failté</i>. Every week a sermon in Irish is preached to the mountaineers.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img109.jpg" alt="Mount Melleray" title="Mount Melleray" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Mount Melleray—View from South.</h4> + +<p>Either from Melleray or Cappoquin, <b>Lismore</b> may be reached by car or +train. It was the home of learning of old, and to-day, not only its +beautiful position but historic Castle command attention. It is the +birthplace of Boyle, the philosopher. Ptolemy is asserted very +confidently by some authorities to have mentioned this place and its +river. It is certain, however, that the place was long in existence in +631, when St. Carthage, of Rahan, fled thither. Nothing could be +prettier than the appearance of the town, and it is a comfortable, +well-to-do place, monopolising the trade of a large countryside. St. +Machuda's Cathedral will repay inspection. The Castle is the Irish seat +of the Duke of Devonshire. It was an ancient fortress, dating back to +the reign of King John. It stands in a pre-eminently commanding +position, over the Blackwater, and was the scene of many a hard-fought +fight, especially in the wars of the Commonwealth, when Castlehaven +captured it from the Roundheads. A magnificent view of the surrounding +country may be had from its higher-storied windows. The public are +freely admitted. From one of the high windows, it is said, when James +II. was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> asked to look, he accused the maker of the suggestion of +desiring to throw him from the dizzy height.</p> + +<p>From the Railway Station at Lismore, the most interesting object in view +is the new Roman Catholic Cathedral, dedicated to St. Carthage, the +founder of the See, and believed to occupy the site of his cell. Thickly +surrounded by beautiful lime trees, the warm red sandstones of the +walling, with the limestone dressing of the windows and doorways, forms +a brilliant picture. The interior is richly furnished, and altogether +the church is well worthy of a visit.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img111.jpg" alt="The Guest House" title="The Guest House" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Guest House, Mount Melleray.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img112.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + + +<h2>Waterford and District.</h2> + + +<p>Waterford is the port of call for most of the shipping from the West and +South of England and Wales. The projected system by which steamers will +run direct from Fishguard to Rosslare Harbour, whatever effect it may +have upon Waterford as a port, will bring it by many hours nearer to the +English markets. It is only a question of a few years until this route +will be at the disposal of tourists and travellers from across the +Channel. Under the Amalgamation of Railways Act of 1900, Waterford has +the additional advantage of becoming a terminus of the system. With it +as centre, railway services are supplied to Cork County and Lismore, to +Limerick <i>via</i> Carrick-on-Suir and Clonmel, and to Kilkenny <i>via</i> +Kilmacow and Thomastown.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img113.jpg" alt="Waterford" title="Waterford" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Waterford, from North Side of River.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img114.jpg" alt="Waterford" title="Waterford" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Waterford, from North Side of River.</h4> + +<p>"The Star of the Suir"—the City of <b>Waterford</b>—derived its name from +the Danish words, Vedr-fiord, given to it by its original founders, the +hardy Norsemen. From whatever side we approach the old town, whether +land or sea, the sight is equally delightful. From without, approaching +by the broad waterway, the city stretches forth to meet us, with the +quaint wooden bridge spanning the noble river, and the hills forming a +zone behind. Surely the Danes had an eye for beauty, as for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> maritime +advantage, in selecting this happy spot for their fortress. In the ninth +century, when the ploughers of the sea seized on the mouth of the Suir, +they fortified a little delta some twenty acres in size, having the +present Quay as its long side. From this little triangle the town grew, +and in the last century was one of the first seaport towns in Ireland. +Here, in 1171, Strongbow landed, defeated the Danes and Irish, who had +confederated to repel him, and sacked the town. It is a strange +historical coincidence that the Feast of St. Bartholomew was the day on +which Strongbow landed and countenanced the massacre of the inhabitants. +Under Raymond Le Gros the carnage was carried out, and in St. Lawrence +O'Toole's address to the Irish princes at peace with the invader, which +has been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> versified by Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, it is referred to in the +lines:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Tell me not of leagues and treaties,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Treaties sealed in faith as true</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">As Black Raymond's, on the bloody</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Feast of St. Bartholomew."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img115.jpg" alt="The Quays" title="The Quays" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>The Quays, Waterford.</h4> + +<p>King John landed here, and the town was walled in and fortified against +the Irish, who hung like wolves around a fold in the outlying country. +In the Revolution the town adhered to the King. It was the port most +used by the Confederates, and here many of their proclamations were +printed. It was the one place in Ireland which successfully resisted the +all-conquering Cromwell, and hence received the name from the Cavaliers +of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> <i>Urbs intacta</i>. An object of historic interest which has been +restored within the present century is Reginald's Tower. It was built +originally by Reginald the Dane, son of Sitrius, the great Danish King +of Dublin and Fingal (The Fair Strangers), whom Brian Boru defeated at +Clontarf. Here, it is said, DeClair married Eva, whose fair face induced +him to join his forces to her father's fallen fortunes. Maclise, in his +wonderful historical picture "Bartered Away,"<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> represents the nuptials +as taking place on the battlefield, dyed with the blood of the +vanquished Irish. There could not have been much love in the match after +all. Strongbow was scarcely dead when his young widow wrote to Raymond +Le Gros that "a great tooth had fallen out," which he understood to mean +that the time had arrived for him to come and make her his own, which he +did. The patron saints of the diocese of Waterford and Lismore are Saint +Cartach and Saint Otteran, the latter being a Dane who embraced +Christianity. The Cathedral (Episcopalian) occupies the site of the old +Danish Cathedral, the existence of which, together with that of Christ +Church in Dublin, bears testimony to the zeal with which the Danes +embraced Christianity. The Quay is the most characteristic bit of +Waterford. Across the bridge, from Mount Misery or Cromwell's Rock, two +points of vantage, excellent views of the surroundings can be had. The +Suir, shining silvery, steals in and out among the hills and by the old +town into the sea. The most interesting of the ancient monuments in +Waterford is what is commonly called the "French Church," which, more +correctly, is entitled "The Holy Ghost Friary." Authorities agree in +assigning the date of its foundation to 1240, but its history has never +been written. After the Edict of Nantes, the fugitive Huguenots formed a +little colony in Waterford. The Corporation granted a salary to their +minister, and they were provided with a place of worship in the choir of +the old church. All<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> that remain of this once gorgeous pile of +buildings are the ruins of the tower, Lady Chapel, chancel, and nave. +The style is Early English, and the most attractive feature is the +graceful three-lighted east window. The Catholic Cathedral is worth a +visit. Within easy reach of the Quay is Ballybricken, the heart of the +bacon industry, and the home of the best known body of pig-buyers in +Ireland. These men are almost a community to themselves. They have their +own traditions, and are more like an organisation which would have +sprung up from a church guild centuries ago than in any way a modern +trades union. Formerly Waterford was remarkable for the manufacture of +beautiful cut glass, but the industry has died away. The housekeeper who +possesses specimens of the art considers herself lucky indeed in her +possession, as collectors are continually on the alert to procure them. +In the immediate vicinity of Waterford itself there are many beauty +spots and places of interest. In the suburb of Newtown stands the +paternal home of Lord Roberts of Waterford and Candahar, besides whom on +its roll of famous children Waterford includes the names of Charles +Keane and Vincent Wallace. Portlaw, four and a half miles away, on the +south bank of the Suir, was once the centre of a thriving cotton +industry. Here an order may be had at the estate office to visit +Curraghmore, the residence of the Marquis of Waterford. The magnificent +demesne includes over four thousand acres, and Curraghmore is possessed +of the best-blooded stud of hunters in Ireland.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img117.jpg" alt="Imperial Hotel" title="Imperial Hotel" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Imperial Hotel, Waterford.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img118.jpg" alt="Curraghmore" title="Curraghmore" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Curraghmore.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img119.jpg" alt="Tramore" title="Tramore" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Tramore.</h4> + +<p><b>Tramore</b>, seven miles away, is reached by train in fifteen minutes. It +is one of the most popular watering places in the South of Ireland, and +in the height of the season it is estimated that about four thousand +visitors augment the normal population of two thousand. Many of the +Waterford merchants live there, and their villas and the houses of the +town, rising one street above another on the side of the hill, make a +pretty picture when viewed from the strand. The hotels are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> numerous, +the Grand Hotel can be recommended as being specially comfortable, while +there are three or four other hotels where very good accommodation can +be had. The lodging-house accommodation is equal to that to be obtained +at any Irish seaside resort.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img121.jpg" alt="Evening at Tramore" title="Evening at Tramore" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Evening at Tramore.</h4> + + +<p>In addition to capital sea and trout fishing, the visitor can enjoy the +pleasures of golf and lawn-tennis, and during the summer months races +are frequently held at the Tramore Flying Course, which is situated +within view of the town. The views of this pleasantly situated holiday +reunion will recall to many minds happy days spent by the Sounding Sea.</p> + +<p>The Rabbit Burrow, a little further on, is a mile in length, and helps +to divide the Back Strand from the spacious bay. Just before reaching +this Burrow, the visitor will see a tombstone erected to the memory of +those who were lost in the "Sea Horse" transport, in January, 1816, when +returning from the Peninsular Campaign. No less than 362 lost their +lives in this terrible disaster. At the western side of Tramore there +are many places along the rock-bound coast well worth a visit. Passing +along in the Newtown direction we come in view of the Ladies' Cove; +here, years ago, a fishing pier was built by the Board of Works. It was +swept right away one stormy night over two decades ago, and has not been +replaced since. Along the Cliff Road we catch views of Gun's Cove, and +the Gillameen Cove, where excellent bathing facilities, free of charge, +can be availed of by the visitor.</p> + +<p>On the western shore, twelve miles by road from Waterford, is the pretty +watering place of <b>Dunmore</b>. It is situated at the mouth of the river +Suir in a valley gently sloping to the sea, and is protected from the +north winds by a wood which, in the hot summer days, is a most +delightful resort for visitors. There is also a public park and tennis +ground, and the facilities for bathing, particularly for gentlemen, +leave nothing to be desired.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img117.jpg" alt="Evening at Tramore" title="Evening at Tramore" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Evening at Tramore.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img123.jpg" alt="Dunmore" title="Dunmore" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Dunmore.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p> + +<p>In the early part of the last century the place was a mail packet +station for the mails to and from England. The harbour was built by the +Government at a cost of about £100,000, and is at present under the +control of the Board of Works. Here, in the fishing season, are boats +from all parts of the Kingdom fishing for herring and mackerel, and +special steamers are constantly running to and from Milford with the +harvest of the sea.</p> + +<p>There are some particularly good villas and houses which can be rented +in the season, and there is a good hotel just over the harbour, while +rooms are to be had on reasonable terms at many houses in the town. For +persons who desire a select quiet place to spend a holiday in, it can be +recommended strongly, while for those who are fond of sea-fishing or +yachting no better place in Ireland can be had. Although there is no +railway connection with Waterford cars run daily, the fare being only +<i>1s.</i> for the twelve miles.</p> + +<p>Above the confluence of the Barrow and Suir, six and a half miles from +the city, from the top of the hill over Cheekpoint (Side a fairy)—where +"the river Rosse meets the river of Waterford"—a grand panorama +presents itself. In the distance the mountains shoulder one another for +prominence; the Comeraghs, the many peaked Galtees, and</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Sweet Slievenamon, the darling and pride,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">With soft flowing bosom and brow like a bride."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>This beautiful mountain owes its name, "The Hill of the Women," to a +Finnian legend, which tells that Finn M'Cool promised to make his wife +of whichever of the fair women of Ireland could reach its summit first, +when all were started from the foot. Grainne Oge, the Gaelic Helen, of +course was heroine of the day, and Finn's taking her was the origin of +one of the most enthralling of the Celtic romances.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img125.jpg" alt="Dunmore Harbour" title="Dunmore Harbour" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Croker, Waterford.</i></p> + +<h4>Dunmore Harbour.</h4> + + +<p>Among the more interesting objects at Dunbrody are St. Catherine's +Church, an old time dependency of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> Abbey, and the splendid remains +of the Cistercian Monastery, rising above the meadows by which the +Campile Stream flows. The monastic church in general style is Early +English, and is fairly preserved. It dates from the twelfth century, and +was founded by Henri de Montmorenzi, Marshal to Henry II.—the same who +was killed at the Curragh.</p> + +<p>There is a severe simplicity about its lines which gives an impression +of great dignity. The crenelated Tower springs from the nave and +transept. The Abbots of Dunbrody sat as Lords in Parliament, and +exercised civil jurisdiction. Above Dunbrody, on the river opposite "The +Little Island," where was an ancient hermitage, in a straight line is +Ballinakill House, where James II. spent his last night in Ireland, on +the day before that celebrated in the ballad, which tells:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Righ Shemus he has gone to France,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And left his crown behind,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ill luck be their's, both day and night,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Put running in his mind."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><b>Passage East</b> (seven miles), now a fishing village, with spider-legged +spit light, was reduced by Cromwell in 1649. The old mole still stands. +At Ballyhack, across the ferry, a strong, square castle is well +preserved. "New Geneva," in the vicinity, was garrisoned with Hessians +during the Rebellion of '98. It is mentioned in the well-known Irish +song, "The Croppy Boy." The place received its name in 1786, when a +colony of Genoese exiles were established there. On the Waterford coast, +from the city to where the Blackwater kisses the sea, beside a range of +noble cliffs, there are many points of interest. The Tower of Hook, +standing one hundred feet high, on the promontory of the same name on +the Wexford side, is attributed amongst others to Reginald the Dane, +Ross MacRume, the founder of New Ross, and Florence de la Hague (1172). +Its circular walls are of great thickness and strength. When Strongbow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> +heard of this Tower of Hook, with Crook (Norse, Krok a nook) on the +western side, he is alleged to have said "He would take Waterford by +Hook or Crook," and thus originated a common saying which has come down +to our own days. The Saltees, two islands off the Wexford coast, were +the refuge to which Colclough and Bagnall Harvey hastened in vain after +the suppression of the Rebellion in '98. Helvick Head, the name of which +also betrays its Danish origin, marks the entrance to Dungarvan Bay. The +line running from Waterford to Limerick Junction contains many places of +interest, from which short tours may be made. As we come near to +<b>Carrick-on-Suir</b> the castle comes into view. The present building was +mainly erected by the former Earl of Ormonde, "Black Tom," as he is +known in history. He was one of the many Irish gallants who found favour +in the eyes of Queen Elizabeth. From Carrick, a drive of eight miles +brings us to Lough Coumshinawn, a lonely tarn lying high among the +Comeragh mountains, on one side of which the cliff rises perpendicularly +to a height of seven hundred feet. The railway from Carrick runs through +the beautiful valley of the Suir to Kilsheelan, and then passes to the +left of the Knockmealdown mountains to <b>Clonmel</b>, the capital of the +"premier county." The town is pleasantly placed in a thriving centre of +local trade. It figured largely in the fights between Cromwellian and +Confederate, and some of the old battlements still stand witness to its +strength in bygone times. The peasantry have a tradition that a cloud +will ever hang above the town since Father Sheehy's death in the last +century. The tradition is hinted at in the beautiful emigrant ballad +"Shameen Dhu," by Katherine Tynan:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Now, God watch over you, Shameen,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">An' His blessed Mother Mary!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Twas you that had the lightest heart</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 3em;">In all sweet Tipperary—</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Twas you could sing the blackbird's song,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">In dry or rainy weather:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Avic, the long-road wasn't long</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Whin we thravelled it together.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sure, scores of times in the mornin' bright</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">You sung this very road,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">You med the mare's heart bate so light</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">She never felt her load;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Twas you could lilt wid the thrush's trill,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ah, well, avic machree!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">God grant you may be singin' still</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">In that lonely far counthrie!"</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img129.jpg" alt="Holy Cross Abbey" title="Holy Cross Abbey" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Holy Cross Abbey at Thurles.</h4> + + +<p>The name of Laurence Sterne, author of "Tristram Shandy," and of the +gorgeous Countess of Blessington, are both associated with Clonmel as +their birthplace. Through a mountain cut, appropriately called "The +Wilderness," the railway line runs aside to Thurles. The little church +of Rathronan, standing high on the hill, was the scene of the +sensational Arbuthnot abduction in the last century. Those who wish for +details of that unhappy love affair will find the story told in faithful +words elsewhere. The demesne lands between Clonmel and Fethard are many. +<b>Fethard</b> was an old walled town, it defied the Cromwellians, and +surrendered with all the honours of war. After treaty and terms were +agreed on, the Roundheads found that what they had mistaken as gaping +mouths of cannon on the fortress were nothing more dangerous than +innocent churns placed in positions of pretence, not defence. The +bogland from Fethard to Thurles is uninteresting; the intermediate +stations are Farranalleen, Laffan's Bridge, and Horse and Jockey, at +which collieries are still being worked. At Thurles we meet the main +line of the Great Southern and Western. <b>Thurles</b>, originally a Danish +town and the scene of the battle between the Norsemen and Irish, +afterwards became a fortalice of the Knights Templars. Here, by the +bridge across the Suir, the remains of the old settlement are still to +be seen. Four miles distant, standing by the banks of the river,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> +surrounded by tall trees, are the remains of the once great Cistercian +<b>Holy Cross Abbey</b>. It was built in 1168-69 to house the relic of the +True Cross sent by the Pope to Brian Boru's grandson, Donald, King of +Thomond. This interesting relic, after centuries of vicissitudes, is now +enshrined at the Convent of the Ursulines, in Blackrock, Cork. On the +feasts of the Finding of the True Cross (May 3rd), and of the Exaltation +of the Holy Cross (September 14th), and on every Friday in Lent, it is +presented for public veneration. Thurles is the seat of Episcopal +residence of the Archdiocese of Cashel. On the main line higher than +Thurles is Templemore, founded by the Knights Templars. Between Thurles +and the Limerick Junction is Goold's Cross station, six miles from +Cashel. The noblest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> evidence of the early civilization of Ireland is to +be found in <b>Cashel Of the Kings</b>. Generally the buildings date from the +early twelfth century, the Round Tower being much earlier and the +Cathedral later. Cormac's Chapel was consecrated in 1134, being built by +the Saint King of Munster. It is rich Norman work, comprising nave, +chancel, and towers at the transepts. The doorways and chancel arch are +elaborate. The Round Tower is unique when compared with the other +buildings, as it is of sandstone. It is connected with the transept of +the Cathedral. The pointed windows, choir, transepts, and tower are very +beautiful. In the burial-ground outside is the famous Cross of Cashel, +with a sculptured effigy of St. Patrick. The whole group gathered +together on the massive Rock of Cashel, whose firmness<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> is a proverb in +Ireland, presents an imposing array. This Cathedral was the one burnt by +the Earl of Kildare in 1495, when his excuse was that he thought the +Archbishop was within. Here, in 1647, a bloody tragedy fell out. +Murragh-an-Theathaun, "Murrough of the Burnings," as the peasantry still +call Lord Inchiquin, massacred a number of women and children, who +sought sanctuary here when Cashel had fallen before his siege train. At +the foot of the rock are the cruciform remains of the Abbey of the +Cistercians. If, instead of diverging from Clonmel to Thurles, we +continue to the Limerick Junction, we pass Cahir, a military station +with an ancient Castle in excellent repair. From Cahir, tourists can +drive to Cashel, to Ardfinane, or to <b>Mitchelstown</b> <i>via</i> Clogheen. The +Caves at Mitchelstown may be visited from Fermoy, Lismore, or Clogheen, +and if the visitor is sojourning at any of these places he should find +his way to these wonderful formations. Besides the caves, Mitchelstown +contains Caherderinny Castle, Kilbehiny, and Mitchelstown Castle, the +residence of the Kingston family. Leaving the village of Kilbehiny we +cross to Skereenarinka, "the height for dancing," and follow a narrow +hilly road on the Galtee side which leads to the caves, in the townland +of Coolagarranroe. The different chambers of the larger caves, of which +the Kingston gallery is most beautiful, have been named: "the House of +Lords," "the House of Commons," "the Cross of the Four Roads," "the +Scotchman's," "O'Leary's," and "O'Callaghan's" caves, "the Altar," "the +Closet," "the Cellar," and "the Garret." The smaller objects of interest +within have been called: "Lot's Wife," "Mary Queen of Scots," "the Bed +of Honour," "the Cat and Kittens," "the Flitch of Bacon," &c. From +Clogheen to Tipperary we cross the Suir, and follow the foot of the +Galtees. The surrounding country is picturesque and contains some of the +finest pasture land in Ireland, being part of what is known in Munster +as the "Golden Vale." Four miles away by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> a beautiful road, through the +rising-grounds, the Glen of Aherlow can be reached. The glen is richly +wooded, and from Newbridge over the Aherlow river, Galteemore (3,015 +feet), the highest peak of the range may be reached. Tipperary town is a +good market place, and is pleasantly situated beneath Slievenamon. The +only relic of its former grandeur is that of the Augustinian Friary, a +foundation of Henry the Third's reign.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img130.jpg" alt="Rock of Cashel" title="Rock of Cashel" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Roche, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Rock of Cashel.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img132.jpg" alt="Dungarvan" title="Dungarvan" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Dungarvan.</h4> + + +<div class="blockquot"><p>For information as to Sport to be had in the Waterford District, +see end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, +Fishing, Shooting, Cycling, &c.</p></div> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img015.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>Killarney and Glengarriff.</h2> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap132" id="imgmap132"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap132.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap132-tb.jpg" + alt="Pictorial Map of Killarney District" /></a><br /> + <b>Pictorial Map of Killarney District.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + + + +<p>Killarney.—From Limerick Junction to Mallow, where the branch line runs +into Kerry, the tourist to Killarney runs by many places of interest. +<b>Emly</b>, now a dwindled village, was once a diocesan city. During the +wars of the Commonwealth, Terence Albertus O'Brien, Bishop of Emly, was +executed in Limerick by Ireton. His stole and pectoral cross are still +in the possession of representatives of the family to which he belonged +at Mitchelstown.</p> + +<p>In the rich plain under the Ballyhoura hills, "the land flowing with +milk," is the ancient town of <b>Kilmallock</b>. It was the citadel of the +Earls of Desmond when they held high their crests, and every stone in +the place is historical.</p> + +<p>Two of its four gates still remain, and among the ruins, which have +secured it the name of the "Baalbec of Ireland," are those of the old +Dominican Priory and Abbey Church. In the former is the mutilated grave +of the White Knight, a name still loathsome in the peasant's ear, and on +whom the bards have let fall their choicest curses.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p> + +<p>Lough Gur is of interest to the antiquary. It is ten miles to the north, +and was the centre of the Desmond country. Here of old, the Kings of +Cashel kept their Grenan or "Sunny Place" for feasting. The cyclopean +structure in the vicinity points to the place as being of importance in +pre-historic times. From Charleville, a thriving town, runs a line of +railway direct to Limerick. Buttevant and Mallow are particularly +referred to elsewhere. Millstreet is the border town on the mearings of +Cork and Kerry.</p> + +<p>Beyond the bogland country outside Millstreet is the village of Cullen, +where tradition says no smith has been known to thrive. Saint Lateerin, +a virgin of early Christian days, near here made her recluse, and every +day she walked across the bog, and took "living fire" in her kirtle from +the forge to her home. The smith once remarking the prettiness of her +white feet, she momentarily forgot her vow of chastity, and the fire +burnt through the homespun and blistered her feet. She went back to her +cell, and prayed that no smith should ever thrive in Cullen, and none +has ever tried to do so!</p> + +<p><b>Rathmore</b> is on the high road to Gneeveguillia mountain, and to the +north of the station, and at Christmas time, 1896, occurred the fearful +<i>débâcle</i> of the bog, which struck terror into the simple inhabitants, +and, not unnaturally, was attributed by them to super-natural causes. +Two hundred acres of Bogach-na-Mine formed a landslip and rolled in a +huge mass southwards, sweeping away several little farmsteads and +suffocating the inhabitants and cattle. At <b>Headford</b>, the junction for +Kenmare, the scenery is very wild, and all around</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Kerry is pushing her high headlands out</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">To give us the kindly greeting."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>At last, after about a four hours' run, if we came by the special +tourist train from Dublin, we have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span> completed our one hundred and +eighty-six miles, and are in sight of</p> + +<h3>KILLARNEY,</h3> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img135.jpg" alt="Boating at Killarney" title="Boating at Killarney" /></div> + +<p>the home of lakes, which has well been called "the Gem of the Western +World": its magnificent mountain peaks, its green swards and gushing +cascades, all surrounded with an atmosphere of romance and tradition. +Outside the railway station, we are face to face with the finest hotel +in the south of Ireland. Well placed, well managed, it combines all the +comforts of a home with the convenience of a well-appointed hostelry. It +is within easy reach of the principal points of interest.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img136.jpg" alt="Great Southern Hotel" title="Great Southern Hotel" /></div> + +<h4>Great Southern Hotel—Killarney.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img137.jpg" alt="Lakes of Killarney" title="Lakes of Killarney" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Guy & Co., Cork.</i></p> + +<h4>Lakes of Killarney.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p> + +<p>The grounds adjoin Lord Kenmare's beautiful demesne and Deer Park, which +skirts the lake shores, and contain the splendid Golf Links.</p> + +<p>Killarney, or "the Church of the Sloetrees," lies on a flat plateau, +within a mile from the shores of the far-famed Lough Lene, as the three +lakes, popularly known as the Lakes of Killarney, are called in Irish. +The town possesses an Episcopal Palace, a cathedral and churches of +interest, besides a monastery and School of Arts and Crafts. Otherwise +it deserves little attention; but on fair days, when the peasantry from +the neighbouring parishes crowd in, it presents a lively and varying +aspect. If the town is insignificant, not so its surroundings, for +nowhere else in the wide world is there such a combination of charms and +variety of beauty, in mountain and lake scenery, thrown together.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"For how could river, lake, and sea</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In softer sister hues agree?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Or hills of passionate purple glow</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Far and near more proudly flow?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And when will summer kiss awake</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lovelier flowers by lawn or brake?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Or brighter berries blush between</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Foliage of a fresher green?"</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>There is a story of a tourist who, lingering long in the Holy Land, was +pained at the irreverent hurry of an American, who arrived there one +afternoon, scurried over the sacred places, and prepared to depart +betimes on the morrow. He timidly inquired of the swift-foot why he, who +had come so far, rushed away so quickly. "Sir," said the American, "I am +timed to do Europe in a fortnight. I have thrown in the Holy Land, but +if I stay here longer than one night I cannot see Killarney, which takes +three days." He was a wise man in his generation. Although enterprising +people have attempted to do the tour of the Lakes in a day, they have +always gone away more than satisfied with what they saw, but with hearts +hungry to return at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> a future date, and behold the beauties they had +left unseen.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img139.jpg" alt="On the Upper Lake" title="On the Upper Lake" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>On the Upper Lake, Killarney.</h4> + + +<p>The <b>Lakes Of Killarney</b> are three in number, connected by a +swift-flowing stream, the Long Range, and emptying their waters through +the river Laune into Castle Haven, on the Kerry coast. The entire +journey can be performed by boat, but in the suggested tours given, both +car, and boat, and ponies are pressed into our service.</p> + +<p>The divisions of the Lough Lene are:—The Upper Lake (extreme length, +two-and-a-half miles; extreme breadth, half-a-mile); the Torc, or Middle +Lake (extreme length, two miles; extreme breadth, seven-eighths of a +mile); and the Lower Lake (extreme length, five and one-eighth miles; +extreme breadth, three miles). The first glimpse caught of the lakes, +lying like broad mirrors beneath the high mountains, is a vision of fair +delight. Like tall clansmen, Mangerton, Carnthoul, and the gathering +Cruacha dhu M'Gillicuddy—the black reeks of the McGillicuddy—muster +around, as it were, to re-tell us</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">"The tale of the spell-stricken band,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">All entranced, with their bridles and broad swords in hand,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Who await but the word to give Erin her own"—</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>that old legend of the sleeping warriors garrisoned within the +mountain's sides, which is met with in more than one Irish county. The +Upper Lake is characterised by an untamed, peerless outline, and so near +to the mountains does it lie, that the fissures in their rugged sides +are almost countable, and the fingers of fancy almost touch the gorse on +their slopes. Gliding over its waters, we readily see in them a +land-locked sea. A ridge of the Glena mountains shuts it out from the +north, the many-peaked reeks guard the passes to the west, and to the +south stands up Derrycunnihy—"The Oak Wood of the Rabbits"—between +which and Torc is the fair bend of a Glen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> Coumagloun. Between the lips +of the Lakes and the feet of the hills there appears no distance</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Save just a trace of silver sand</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Marks where the water meets the land."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Muffling the boatmen's oars for a moment, we can realise that +indescribable solemnity with which silent nature hushes everything. Even +the countless streams that have lost their way across the highlands, in +their hurry to join the Lakes, seem to cease from babbling. But +following the sinuous Long Range when we reach the still water beneath +the Eagle's Nest, Nadanullar, is the psychological moment to awaken the +echoes that eternally haunt the frowning eyry. A bugle-call sounded here +is taken up by the barricades of rock, and is repeated even ten times +over. Small wonder that the fairy hosts are credited with passing it +along their lines! The mountains take up their dying tones of sweet +sounds, and answer it one to the other until the ear can no longer +follow it through space. The ferns and rich foliage of the mountain side +trail their long fingers in the water, and cluster and quicken among the +crevices of the rocks. Recently the Laureate visited Ireland for the +first time; hitherto this land of poetry had been to him but "the +damnable country" of the politician. He came, he saw, but Killarney +conquered; and he, like all others who have gazed upon its beauty, +renders tribute where it rightly belongs. "Damnable" is not the +adjective to apply to a heavenly land, of which he truly says:—</p> + +<p>"Such varied and vigorous vegetation I have seen no otherwhere; and when +one has said that, one has gone far towards awarding the prize for +natural beauty. But vegetation, at once robust and graceful, is but the +fringe and decoration of that enchanting district. The tender grace of +wood and water is set in a frame-work of hills—now stern, now ineffably +gentle, now dimpling with smiles; now frowning and rugged with impending +storm; now muffled and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> mysterious with mist, only to gaze out on you +again with clear and candid sunshine. Here the trout leaps; there the +eagle soars; and there beyond the wild deer dash through the arbutus +coverts, through which they have come to the margin of the lake to +drink, and, scared by your footstep or your oar, are away back to +crosiered bracken or heather covered moorland. But the first, the final, +the deepest and most enduring impression of Killarney is that of beauty +unspeakably tender, which puts on at times a garb of grandeur and a look +of awe, only in order to heighten by passing contrast the sense of soft +insinuating loveliness. How the missel thrushes sing, as well they may! +How the streams and runnels gurgle, and leap, and laugh! For the sound +of journeying water is never out of your ears; the feeling of the moist, +the fresh, the vernal, is never out of your heart. My companion agreed +with me, that there is nothing in England or Scotland as beautiful as +Killarney—meaning by Killarney its lakes, its streams, its hills, its +vegetation; and if mountain, wood, and water—harmoniously +blent—constitute the most perfect and adequate loveliness that nature +presents, it surely must be owned that it has all the world over no +superior."</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img143.jpg" alt="Shooting the Rapids" title="Shooting the Rapids" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Shooting the Rapids.</h4> + + + +<p>Leaving the <b>Upper Lake</b> behind, and bidding adieu to the green islands +that stud its breast with arbutus and the cedars of Lebanon, the Old +Weir Bridge meets the eye. 'Neath its arch the waters come down with +foam and force, the oars are shipped, and we shoot straight through the +eye of the rapid, thanks to the strong arm and sure nerve of the +oarsmen. The beautiful reach here is the bosom "where the bright waters +meet." Amid exquisite combination of colour, a Vallambrosa strewed with +ferns, lichens, mosses, rich green hollies and arbutus with many +coloured berries, we tread our way by a passage of beauty round Dinis +Island into the <b>Middle</b> or <b>Torc Lake</b>, sheltered by the broad breast +of the mountain from which it takes its name. Like "Muckross," the +"Pleasant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> Point of Wild Swine," the name Torc is called after the wild +boars, which in former years went "gerasening" over its slopes. Rising +abruptly, the mountain stands clear between Mangerton and Glena, the +lower sides well wooded. <b>Innis Dinish</b>, the island at the "beginning of +the waters," is the port for boats. The Cottage may be visited. The +Whirlpool, between the waters of the lake and river, has been called +O'Sullivan's Punch Bowl. Drohid-na-Brickeen, "The Bridge of Little +Trout," or Brickeen Bridge, and Doolah, where the disused marble +quarries and copper mines are still pointed out, are within a short +distance. At the estuary of the Devil's Stream, which flows through the +ravines on the mountain side, is the Devil's Island—almost +inaccessible—on which a few stunted trees manage to secure a precarious +existence. Within the little bay of Dundag is Goose Island. The rocks +and caves along the lake shores are shrouded with traditions of +O'Donoghue, Chieftain of the Glens. A long cave is called "The Wine +Cellar"; at the end is "O'Donoghue's Arm Chair"; his Butler, a solitary +crag, is called "Jackybwee." The most interesting of the fissures made +by the waters in the rock side are what the enterprising boatmen have +agreed to call "Colleen Bawn Rock." By the beautiful Glena Bay, we enter +the Lower Lake, which is the largest and most charming of the group. It +sleeps beneath the guardian heights of the Toomies Hills, and a vision +of more loveliness is nowhere to be found. Low-lying shores, to the east +and north, are jungled with the fronds of the hill ferns.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Oh, the Fern! the fresh hill Fern!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That girds our blue lakes from Lough Ine to Lough Erne;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That waves on the crags, like the plume of a King,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And bends like a nun, over clear well and spring;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The fairy's tall palm-tree, the heath birds fresh nest,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the couch the red deer deems the sweetest and best;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">With the free winds to fan it, and dew-drops to gem,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oh, what can ye match with its beautiful stem!"</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img145.jpg" alt="Eagle's Nest Mountain" title="Eagle's Nest Mountain" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Eagle's Nest Mountain, Killarney.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p> + +<p>The highest mountain in Ireland, <b>Carrantual</b>,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> at one side lifts its +lofty brow, "crowned with tiaras fashioned in the sky." On its summit an +outlaw, known in Munster as the "Shon" or Hawk, after many sleepless +nights, footsore and weary, slept here with a prayer, "Thank God, at +last I am above all my enemies." The peasantry pronounce the name +"Carntwohill," which translated means, the left-handed or inverted +sickle. The expansiveness of the Lower Lake appears at first to minimise +its beauty, when compared with its smaller companions. But the more its +loveliness is explored, the greater the revelation of the harmony and +luxuriance of the landscape. No less than thirty-five islands, like +beauty spots of a fairy "drop scene," bedeck the silver sheen of its +surface. The largest of these, <b>Innisfallen</b>, almost midway between the +eastern and western shores, is some thirty acres in extent, and is +engirdled by leafy bowers of green trees. Shaggy sheep are couched in +repose, or are busy with its verdant lawn. In the early morning, or +tender gloaming which closes the Munster day, the holy place is</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Quiet as a nun,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Breathless with adoration."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img147.jpg" alt="Innisfallen" title="Innisfallen" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Innisfallen. and The Turnpike Cap of Dunloe.</h4> + + +<p>Shafts of the dawning or waning sun, as the hour may be, illumine the +fair pageant. The wavering outlines<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> of the hills make the turret-tops +to the dark green of the woods and the emerald of the meadows. The +richest of colours from hill, tree, and rock accumulate on the surface +of the Lake, burnished like silver. To-day the natural scenery is the +same as of old, and few will wonder that here a saint found delights to +prepare him in some degree for the pleasures stored in eternity. Of St. +Finian Labra we know little beyond that he was a native of Ely +O'Carroll, then a part of Munster, and was a disciple of St. Brendan. +But his spirit loiters around Innisfallen, and the most casual of +travellers will tread lightly on the ground hallowed by his footsteps. +The monastic remains are many, but by the enthusiastic antiquary alone +can their fragments and chief features be traced. "<i>The Annals of +Innisfallen</i>," which form one of the chief sources of Irish history, +were written here 600 years ago. Leaving the "Holy Island," we cross the +lake and land at the foot of the Toomies Mountains, famous in +pre-historic myths, to visit the O'Sullivan Cascade. The legend, which +is too often wasted on sceptical ears, tells that O'Sullivan, a captain +of his people, renowned amongst them for fleetness of foot and prowess +as a hunter, on one occasion went to hunt the red deer. The faint yellow +rays of morning were lighting up the eastern sky as he went forth. Gaily +the deep-mouthed dogs obeyed, sniffing the fresh breeze across the +mountain purpled with heather. Scarce had he left home when a +magnificent stag bounded across his path. Swift as the lightning flash +the dogs sprung upon the track—away across the moors and down the +glens, on the scent they went. Throughout that livelong day O'Sullivan +followed the chase, weary, tired, and thirsty, but still determined to +make the prize his own. At length night, and darkness with it, came; the +stag could be seen no more, the dogs, too, were at fault, and the scent +was lost. Disappointed, and spent with the labour of the chase, the +huntsman blew a shrill blast on his horn to call the dogs to him, and +faced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> for home across the hills. But there was a voice that, loud and +clear, called upon him—"O'Sullivan, O'Sullivan, turn back!" Brave and +fearless, like his race, he turned round, to behold before him the +centre of so many cycles of romance—Finn MacCool. "Why do you dare +chase my stag?" asked Finn. "Because it was the finest that man ever +saw," answered O'Sullivan. The answer pleased Finn MacCool. +"O'Sullivan," said he, "you are a valiant man, and have been wasted in +the long chase. You thirst, and I will give you to drink." So saying, he +stamped his huge heel upon the hard rock, and forth burst the waters, +seething and dashing as they do to this day. O'Sullivan quenched his +thirst and sped on his way.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img149.jpg" alt="Meeting of the Waters" title="Meeting of the Waters" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Meeting of the Waters, Killarney.</h4> + +<p>From the innermost recess of the glen the water flows down, in one of +the most fascinating spots to be found within all the delicious realm of +Kerry. The ivy hangs in dense draperies from the rocks, a sweet disorder +of arbutus, evergreens, and all the flowers that grow in a radiant land, +daringly lean across the canyon, and vainly try to trip the rushing +stream, which, in cascade after cascade, flings itself with passionate +energy, and a ceaseless murmur, over the rocks. The placidness of the +huge lake is in strange contrast to the noisy stream which so excitedly +hastens to meet it, and, as if awed by its dignity, as it comes nearer +and nearer the mountain stream, sinks its voice, until in a subdued sigh +it falls into the breast of the lake. Underneath the projecting rock, +and overhung with luxuriant herbs, O'Sullivan's Grotto offers a quiet +retreat. Following the wooded shores of Glena Bay, we pass Stags, Burnt, +and other islands, and come to Glena Cottage, hiding in the foliage of +leafy trees. Glena means "the valley of good fortune," and a name more +suggestive of happier thoughts than weird Glownamorra across the +lake—"the glen of the dead."</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img151.jpg" alt="Muckross Abbey" title="Muckross Abbey" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Muckross Abbey, Killarney.</h4> + + +<p>A mile's drive through the pleasant demesne lands of Muckross brings us +to the water's edge at Castlelough<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> Bay, in the middle lake, on a +promontry of which the ruins of <b>Muckross Abbey</b> are to be seen. Here, +in the fifteenth century, Donald M'Carthy founded an Abbey for +Franciscan friars. The quiet cloisters in the northwest transept, with +their varying pointed and rounded arches, are unique. The recessed +doorway by which we enter is very beautiful. The towers and east window +are in fair preservation. The monuments within the ruined pile tell us +that it</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 13em;">"contains</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">In death's embrace M'Carthy More's remains,"</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>and also reminds us that</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">"If Erin's chiefs deserve a generous tear,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Heir of their worth, O'Donoghue lies here."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>In the centre of the cloisters there grows a great yew tree, spreading +its many branches and shade over them, and above the side walls, forming +a dark cowl, which overshadows the old house of the monks. In ancient +Erin the yew tree was regarded as sacred, and in its shade the Druids +performed their mystic rites. With the early Christians, as an +evergreen, it was a symbol of Life Eternal.</p> + +<p>The peasants still inherit some of the awe with which the sacred tree +was held in former days, and they are loth to hurt it with the loss of a +single leaf. All impressive is the desolate majesty of Muckross, +whatever time it is visited!</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">"But the gay beams of lightsome day</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Gild but to flout the ruins grey."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>At night, when the pale ghost of the moon looks across the lake, when +the mountains are shrouded in shadows, when the waters are lulling the +slumbering land,</p> + +<p class='center'> +"And the owlet hoots o'er the dead man's grave,"</p> + +<p>the solemnity of the scene surpasses even that of fair<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> Melrose, by the +distant Tweed, of which Sir Walter Scott tells.</p> + +<p>Driving past the modern mansion in the demesne, along <b>Torc Lake</b>, by +the groves of Dinis, and through the arches of the Old Weir Bridge, the +river glistens and sparkles in the sun, while the distant calmer water +lies deep in sleepy shadows. Beyond the peculiar rock<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> known as the +White Deer we pass through the Tunnel cut under the huge slope of the +mountains. Here is a point of view which fascinates all visitors, and +from which an ample picture of the surroundings may be secured. A mile +further we cross the Galway river, rushing down a well-worn channel +through Cournaglown, the valley sides of which are covered with oak +trees. Already the ceaseless chorus of Derrycunnihy Cascade fills our +ears. With tumult and cries of havoc, the water springs from an altitude +on the mountain side, dividing its force into many minor cataracts, as +it forces the passage barricaded by rocks and boulders, to unite them +again in a deep pool, and after a second's rest, it musters its full +strength, and falls in a torrent towards the Middle Lake. Colman's Leap, +across the stream beneath the Eagle's Nest, is shown here, and of it a +legend similar to others in many parts of Ireland is told. A mile +eastward, along the Kenmare road, we come to <b>Torc Waterfall</b>, lovely as +a capricious <i>colleen</i>, whose modes are all the more "deludering" for +their uncertainty—Torc, whether tripping gently or rushing angrily, "to +one thing constant never," makes its bed in a fairy realm, a leafy +garden of ever-changing beauty. Larch and alder, arbutus, oak, and hazel +thickly curtain the Fall from the passing glance. But a sylvan path +o'erstrewn with leaves, and bordered with many fronded ferns, discovers +the fountain in full bearing. White with foam, and angry for its long +delay in the grip of Mangerton, and the hollow of the Devil's Punch +Bowl, the flood breaks through the wall of rocks seventy feet high, and +spits a shower of spray on every futile thing which attempts to stem its +course or stay its purpose. The panorama spread out beneath the rocks of +Torc comprehends, in all their glory of colour and contrast, the Middle +and Lower Lakes beneath the mountains.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img153.jpg" alt="Torc Waterfall" title="Torc Waterfall" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Torc Waterfall, Killarney.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img155.jpg" alt="Ross Castle" title="Ross Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Ross Castle, Killarney.</h4> + + +<p>Two and a-half miles northwards by the King's Bridge, or about one mile +direct from Killarney, within sight of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> the <b>Lower Lake</b> and the Purple +Mountains, are the ruins of Aghadoe, the "Church of the two Yew Trees," +founded under the blessing of Saint Finian. The remains of the Round +Tower and Abbot's Castle can still be seen, but these and the eighth +century doorway of the old church are all that have weathered the wind +of centuries. The summit of the old tower is a vantage point for a +vista. Dr. Todhunter has written a beautiful ballad, in imitation of the +passionate Irish laments, for an outlaw who was buried there.</p> + + +<h3>AGHADOE.</h3> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There's a glade in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There's a green and silent glade in Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Where we met, my love and I, love's fair planet in the sky,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O'er that sweet and silent glade in Aghadoe.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There's a glen in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There's a deep and secret glen in Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Where I hid him from the eyes of the redcoats and their spies</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That year the trouble came to Aghadoe.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oh! my curse on one black heart in Aghadoe, Aghadoe;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">On Shaun Dhuv, my mother's son, in Aghadoe!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">When your throat fries in hell's drouth, salt the flame be in your mouth,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For the treachery you did in Aghadoe!</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For they tracked me to that glen in Aghadoe, Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">When the price was on his head in Aghadoe;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O'er the mountain, through the wood, as I stole to him with food,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Where in hiding lone he lay in Aghadoe.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But they never took him living in Aghadoe, Aghadoe;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">With the bullets in his heart in Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There he lay, the head—my breast keeps the warmth where once 'twould rest—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Gone, to win the traitor's gold, from Aghadoe!</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oh! to creep into that cairn in Aghadoe, Aghadoe,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There to rest upon his breast in Aghadoe!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sure your dog for you could die with no truer heart than I,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Your own love, cold on your cairn in Aghadoe.</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img157.jpg" alt="The Gap of Dunloe" title="The Gap of Dunloe" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>The Gap of Dunloe.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p> + +<p>The nearest boat place for Innisfallen is at <b>Ross Castle</b>. We approach +it from the high road across the moat, where once the drawbridge was let +up and down. The old keep, wearing a cotamore of ivy, still guards the +water's edge. By a spiral stone staircase we reach the battlements and +look out across the lake.</p> + +<p>The Castle held out for Charles the First, but was dismantled by Ludlow. +It was originally a fort of "The O'Donoghue," the chief who centres in +the many traditions which the boatmen weave around every object of +interest in Killarney. He lies enchanted beneath the lake, with a city +full of his people. But at times he has come across the water on his +fiery steed, or danced to the Rincead-fadda on the shores. Whoever sees +him is fortunate, because he gives "good luck, which is better than +money," to all whose eyes meet his.</p> + +<p>The <b>Gap of Dunloe</b> is a gloomy mountain pass cut through the rough +rocky slope in the hills between the Toomies and the Macgillicuddy's +Reeks. It is a magnificent defile, four miles long. The rough +bridle-path running through it, at times almost on the edge of +precipices, beneath which the wild goats flock. It is approached by a +winding road, embroidered on one side by a shady little grove of fir, +larch, stunted oaks, and mountain ash. Through the little windows +between the trees, when the sun shines, the reflection of the river Loe +is caught, as it creeps humbly on its way to the lakes. On the other +side, the mountains throw up a huge wall. Bidding good-bye to the little +grove, vegetation seems to fear to enter the desolate, sterile places in +the throat of the Gap. Where the river widens, at Cushvalley Lough, the +industrious echo-makers most usually greet the visitor. One has scarcely +recovered from the warmth of their courteous welcome, when some +suggestive volunteer, aborigine to the place, with a "Mr. Bugler, God +spare you your wind," secures their services; although you do not call +the tune, you are expected to pay the musicians. But the trifle spent +on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span> the gunpowder for their cannons, or the breath from their lungs, is +well repaid by the mighty mass of air they start into waves of music. +Here, too, the "auxiliary forces," or pony boys, besiege us with their +sure-footed, shaggy "coppaleens." They have come galloping down the pass +at break-neck speed to lend us the assistance of their light cavalry. +Wonderful creatures they are, these horses and riders. The peasant boys +are for all the world the modern prototypes of those "rake-helly horse +boys" of Queen Elizabeth's reign, who filled so many pages of the State +papers. Sinew and muscle knit their loose limbs together, and, in their +eyes, mild and calm as those of the quiet cattle in the field, but like +the surface of their native lakes, covering unfathomed depths, they +conceal souls swept by deep thoughts, and minds clouded by many +memories. The long unrenewed, but still to be distinguished, Spanish +strain is shown in many of their olive-tinted faces and dark features. +But guides safe, and true, and courteous are they, who know every perch +of the dark Pass, where at times the craggy cliffs shut out the canopy +of the sky, and attempt to precipitate themselves across the track. The +point where the path is narrowest, the peasants have called the "Pike." +From it onward the mountains begin to recede, and the Pass is more open +until, crossing a shoulder of the <b>Purple Mountain</b> past the three great +expansions of the Commeen Thomeen Lakes, into which St. Patrick is said +to have driven the last serpent, we suddenly come on a surprising +spectacle of magnificent scenery. Here, from the head of the Gap, we see +the Upper Lake spread beneath, to the west, Coomeenduff, or the Black +Valley, dark as the valley of the shadow of death, in charming contrast +with the stern grandeur of the mountains. Their melancholy seems to +reign supreme; the long valley is steeped with shadows in which several +lakes are set, the light upon which only heightens the sublime darkness +of the surroundings. The longest of these lakes is called<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> Lough +Nabricderg, or the "Pool of the Red Trout." Far and wide beneath us lies +what, in the old times, was MacCarthy More's country, and into which so +often the Fiery Cross was sped, when the chief of the great clan went +into action.</p> + +<p>Ruskin's ideals of mountains as the great cathedrals of the earth, with +their gates of rock, pavements of cloud, choirs of stream and stone, +altars of snow, and vaults of purple, traversed by the continual stars, +can nowhere be realized more readily than in Killarney. Here the +mysterious summits, warm with the morning tints or evening's glow, will +delight and refresh again and again, and reflect to us imperishable +memories. Crossing the Flesk, if <b>Mangerton</b> be the desired point, seven +good miles are to be traversed. From the Muckross, a short detour will, +if desired, lead to Flesk Castle, standing on a finely wooded hill above +the wide sweeping river. Eastward, along the Kenmare road, and southward +for a mile, the mountain path is met. From here, either on foot or on a +pony, the ascent of Mangerton may be made. The first important object +that comes in view is Lough Kittane, at the eastern base of the +mountain. It is nearly five miles in circumference, and its waters +contain four islands. The ravine behind the lake, with Mangerton on the +west and Crohane mountain on the east, is the "mustering place of the +winds," Coomnageeha. In this ravine the Blackwater flows. There are two +small lakes, Loughnabraude and "the Lake of Beech-crowned Rock," Lough +Carrigaveha. Away in the bed of the mountains is Keimva Lochlin—the +pass of the Danes—reminding the historian of "Stern Lochlin's sons of +roving war," and Dereenanawlar, or "the little oakwood of eagles." +Moving still higher, eastward the mountains melt into the distant +counties of Cork and Limerick, and beneath, the smaller highlands recall +the Psalmist's description of</p> + +<p class='center'> +"The hills like the lambs of the flock." +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img161.jpg" alt="The Gap of Dunloe" title="The Gap of Dunloe" /></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p> + +<p>To the left, Glown-a-Coppal, the "Horse's Glen," invites the adventurous +to fathom its depths. The dark lakes lying in its shadows are shoreless, +but for the gloomy rocks which overhang the water's edge. Where the +ground becomes more broken and rugged, suddenly a less inaccessible path +arises, and leads to the Devil's Punch Bowl, a dark tarn, beset with +strange echoes that strike a death-song on the heart-strings of the +superstitious. The view from the summit is very wonderful; in the +foreground of the huge picture, the forest of mountain tops, while +westward in the distance is the fabled and saint-blessed Mare +Brendanicum of the old writers, where the fiords embroider the coast +line.</p> + +<p>Descents from Mangerton may be made due south from the eastern angle +along the Oubeg to Kilgarvan, five miles east from Kenmare; by the +"Horse's Glen," from Lough Garagary, across the moor to the commencement +of the bridle-path. Neither way is recommended in the afternoon or +without a guide. The best route to Carntuol is from the entrance to the +Gap of Dunloe. There is a beaten track by the side of the waterway of +the mountain stream, called "Giddagh," the bed of which is filled with +glacial moraines, leading into a romantic valley, the Hag's Glen, which +is shut in by the Reeks and Knocknabinaneen. The dark tarn in the Glen, +as well as every object of prominence, has been seized upon by the +imaginative peasants, and associated in some wise with the witch who +here had her local habitation and left it its name. The track across the +heather leads to the junction of two rivulets from Lough Gonvogh on the +right, and Lough Callee on the left. The beginning of the summit is +reached by the rough moraine pavement, and with a little perseverance +the "parkeen," or "little pasture," on top is reached. Here on the +wind-swept height it is interesting to find the <i>London Pride</i>, or <i>St. +Patrick's Cabbage</i>, and the common <i>Thrift</i> flourishing The view is +indescribable. Like the jaws of some huge monster, the teeth of the +Reeks close in everywhere,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> each with its own blue lake behind. Of +Killarney we see little; but seawards "everything between this end of +the world and America," descent may be made, either following the flank +of the hill, and half way between the two largest lakes beneath, +striking for the Gap of Dunloe road, or through Coomduff to the shores +of the Upper Lake.</p> + +<p>When the tourist's time is limited, the following excursions, extending +over three days, will enable him to see a good many of the points of +interest:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<h4>TOUR <span class="smcap">No. 1. Fare</span>, <i>8s.</i> <span class="smcap">Estate Tolls</span>, <i>1s.</i></h4> + +<p>Well-appointed coaches, or other conveyances, leave the Hotel +(weather permitting) at about 9.30 a.m., for a visit to the +celebrated Gap of Dunloe and the grand tour of the Lakes. The route +lies along the northern side of the Lower Lake for about six miles, +when the exquisite mountain scenery comes in full view, rapidly +assuming more interesting features until "Arbutus" Cottage is +reached. Here the party must alight, and proceed on ponies, or on +foot, at discretion, through the Pass to Lord Brandon's Cottage, at +the head of the Upper Lake, where the boats will be in readiness. +Arrangements can be made with the Manager of the Hotel, before +starting, to provide ponies for <i>3s.</i> each to this point. Some +wonderful echoes are produced in various parts of the Pass. +Luncheon will be served, before entering the boat, on one of the +adjoining islands, after which the party will proceed by the Upper +Lake and Long Range to the Eagle's Nest Mountain. The boat will +then shoot the Rapids under the rustic Old Weir Bridge; stop a +short time at the "Meeting of the Waters"; pass through the Middle +Lake, and across the Lower Lake to "Sweet Innisfallen Island," to +enable the party to view the ruins of the old Abbey, Abbot's Grave, +and Bed of Honour; thence to Ross Castle, where the party will +resume their drive to the Hotel, which is usually reached about +5.30 p.m.</p> + +<h4>TOUR <span class="smcap">No. 2. Fare</span>, <i>4s. 6d.</i> <span class="smcap">Estate Tolls</span>, <i>2s.</i></h4> + +<p>The conveyances leave the Hotel about 10 a.m. for the drive through +Mr. H. A. Herbert's beautiful demesne. The ancient ruins of +Muckross Abbey are soon reached, and, after a short delay to +inspect them, the party proceed by the shore of the Middle Lake, +over Brickeen Bridge, pass the Colleen Bawn<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> Rocks for Dinis +Island; thence, passing the Torc Mountain, to the Cottage and +Waterfall of Derrycunihy (Queen's Cottage), the property of the +Earl of Kenmare, where luncheon is usually served. Returning, the +party will pass under the tunnel on the Kenmare Road, and through +fine scenery by road, mountain, and lake to Torc Cascade, where, by +an easy footpath, fine views can be obtained of the Waterfall and +Lakes; thence to the Hotel, which is usually reached about 3 p.m.</p> + +<h4>TOUR No. 3. <span class="smcap">Fare</span>, <i>4s. 6d.</i> <span class="smcap">Estate Tolls</span>, <i>1s.</i></h4> + +<p>The conveyances leave the Hotel at about 9.30 a.m., passing through +the Earl of Kenmare's Deer Park to the Heights of Aghadoe, +obtaining grand views of the Lower Lake, Macgillicuddy's Reeks, and +Carran Tual (the highest mountain in Ireland), as also the ruins of +the round tower of Aghadoe Church, thence through the Earl of +Kenmare's beautiful West and Home Parks, which skirt the +north-eastern shores of the Lower Lake, round Ross Island, and to +the Hotel, which is usually reached about 2.30 p.m.</p></div> + + +<h3>KENMARE AND GLENGARRIFF.</h3> + +<p>The coach drive from Killarney to Kenmare is over a fine broad mountain +road, and from Mulgrove Barrack, about half way, a splendid view of the +lake country can be obtained. Kenmare, as its name signifies in Irish, +is at the head of the sea or beautiful bay to which it gives its name on +the Roughty river. Sir William Pettie, in the seventeenth century, +founded the town on lands confiscated from the O'Sullivan More. It is a +market place of importance, and the Convent of the Poor Clares is famous +the world over for the beautiful lace made here. The town stands on the +highway between Killarney and Glengarriff, known as "The Prince of +Wales' route." The coach drives through the town past the Lansdowne +Arms' Hotel and into the beautiful spot which has been selected for the +new hotel belonging to the Southern Hotels Company. Already young groves +and plantations teem about the mansion, which is built on a natural +terrace overlooking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> the bay, and facing the high hills of Glenaroughty, +behind which the Red River rises, and the bare mountain slopes of +Mucksna.</p> + +<p>No visitor should fail, if time permits, to visit the Convent of the +Poor Clares, and see the lace-makers at work. From Kenmare the train or +coach may be taken to Killarney.</p> + + +<h3>DRIVING EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF KENMARE.</h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>No. 1.—Car to Goulane on old road to Killarney, walk to summit of +mountain, from which a magnificent view is obtained, returning by +Inchamore Cross Roads, Roughty Falls, and Suspension Bridge. <i>6s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 2.—Car to Kilgarvan, thence to the Bird Mountain, on the +Borlin Road, returning by Lounihan and Letter. Grand panoramic +views of the Mangerton Mountains and Roughty Valley. <i>10s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 3.—Car to Windy Gap on the Killarney Road, view of Gap of +Dunloe and M'Gillicuddy Reeks, thence by Dirreenfeenlahid Lake and +Bouchill Mountain, returning by Slieveaduff and Templemore Road. +<i>10s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 4.—Car to Blackwater Bridge and Waterfall, thence by Old +Dromore and Valley of the Blackwater, returning by old road over +Coomnakilla; magnificent sea and mountain scenery. <i>12s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 5.—Car to Clonee Lakes and Glen of Inchiquin, thence to +cascade at head of glen; beautiful drive along the southern shore +of Kenmare Bay, affording splendid views of mountain, lake, and +river. <i>15s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 6.—Car to Derreen by the Lansdowne Road, along the shore of +Kenmare Bay and Kilmackillogue Harbour, thence to Glanmore Lake by +road skirting Lord Lansdowne's demesne, returning by Furniss +(ancient smelting works) and Carriganine Road. <i>20s.</i></p> + +<p>It is particularly requested that visitors requiring cars will give +not less than an hour's notice at the office.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>SOUTHERN HOTEL, KENMARE.</h3> + +<h4><span class="smcap">Hire for Fixed Distances</span> (Driver's fee included)</h4> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" width="75%" cellspacing="0" summary="Hire for Fixed Distances"> +<tr><td align='left'> </td><td align='right'>Two-horse carriage.</td><td align='right'>One-horse car.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>From Kenmare to Parknasilla,</td><td align='right'><i>20s.</i></td><td align='right'><i>10s.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>From Kenmare to Killarney,</td><td align='right'><i>28s.</i></td><td align='right'><i>14s.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>From Kenmare to Glengarriff,</td><td align='right'><i>28s.</i></td><td align='right'><i>14s.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>From Kenmare to Caragh Lake,</td><td align='right'>—</td><td align='right'><i>25s.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>From Kenmare to Waterville,</td><td align='right'><i>50s.</i></td><td align='right'><i>2s.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="3" align='center'>Fifty per cent. additional for return journey.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p>To Glengarriff the coach runs by very beautiful scenery, terminating in +the lovely creek of the bay at <b>Eccles' Hotel</b> and by the fair height +where <b>Roche's Hotel</b> commands the view. From Glengarriff the coach may +be continued to Bantry, and the train then taken direct to Cork, along +the East Bandon line; or the road may be taken through the beautiful +Pass of Keimaneigh—the "Pass of the Deer"—and by the lovely lake of +Gougane Barra to Macroom. Here the Cork and Macroom Railway brings the +tourist back into the City of the Lee.</p> + +<p>The road from Kenmare leads high out of the valley up the hill sides. We +command a good view of Kenmare Sound, and having passed under a number +of tunnels through the rock we cross the mearings into county Cork.</p> + + +<h3>GLENGARRIFF</h3> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img167.jpg" alt="At Glengarriff" title="At Glengarriff" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Glengarriff. and Otter Island, Glengarriff.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img168.jpg" alt="Glengarriff Harbour" title="Glengarriff Harbour" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Glengarriff Harbour. and Otter Rock Glengarriff.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img169.jpg" alt="Gougane Barra" title="Gougane Barra" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Gougane Barra, Co. Cork.</h4> + + +<p>In a fair spot above the blue waters of the Bay of Bantry, +<b>Glengarriff</b>, as a health resort, vies with its charming young rival, +Parknasilla. Its climate, too, is softened by the nearness of the Gulf +Stream, and yew and arbutus, as well as tropical cryptogamia and Alpine +plants, overgrow every available spot along the sides of the rough +defile. It is come-at-able from Cork by train to Bantry and then coach, +or by coach from Killarney or Kenmare. Apart from the beauty of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> +situation and the mildness of its climate, Glengarriff possesses +splendid facilities for sea bathing and boating. There is excellent +hotel accommodation both at Eccles', on the shore of the bay, and at +Roche's, in the midst of beautiful grounds, through which the Owvane, or +"fair river," flows, making on its way a wild cascade. The drive from +Glengarriff to Gougane Barra, through the Pass of Keimaneigh, "the path +of the deer," is one of the great excursions to be made. <b>Gougane +Barra</b>, the shrine of Saint Finbarr, is in the midst of a lonely lake +near the source of the Lee. It is still the scene of "patrons" on Saint +Finbarr's day, and Mass is celebrated in the open air in the middle of +the lake. There is good trout fishing in the Allua and other streams in +the Desmond Valley. Callaghan, the poet, has sung of it—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"There is a green island in lone Gougane Barra,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Where Allua of songs rushes forth as an arrow;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In deep-valleyed Desmond—a thousand wild fountains</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Come down to that lake, from their home in the mountains;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There grows the wild ash, and a time-stricken willow</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Looks chidingly down on the mirth of the billow;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">As, like some gay child, that sad monitor scorning,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">It lightly laughs back to the laugh of the morning.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And its zone of dark hills—oh! to see them all bright'ning;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">When the tempest flings out its red banner of lightning;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the waters rush down, mid the thunders deep rattle,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Like clans from their hills at the voice of the battle;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And brightly the fire-crested billows are gleaming,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And wildly from Mullagh the eagles are screaming."...</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>The "green island" is a little over half an acre in extent. In its +centre is a quadrangle, with walls at parts fourteen feet thick, in +which are eight cells or cloisters rudely arched over. Within, on a +raised platform, is a large cross with five steps ascending to it. There +is a large flagstone here with an inscription, giving directions how +"the rounds" are to be performed on the vigil and forenoon of the feast +days of St. Finbarr and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> St. John the Baptist, to whom there is a +special cultos all over Munster. The road from Gougane runs through +Inchigeela and Ballingeary by a wild stretch of river inches, called the +Gearagh, to Macroom, where the old Castle and Convent are worth +visiting. In the latter the kindergarten system has been introduced with +great success. It is also here that the Gaelic Feis or Festival is held +for the locality, which contains a large percentage of Irish-speaking +people, including numbers of children. From Macroom train runs direct to +Cork. In the visitors' book at Inchigeela Hotel some vagabond rhymester +penned the following farewell:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sweet Inchigeela, fare thee well, to-morrow we depart</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">On Mrs. Brophy's outside car, for Gougane B. we start;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I add my mite of doggerel to all I have read here,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And put my X to all that's writ of this hotel's good cheer.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O charming Inchigeela, were mine the poet's pen,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">How I would do the Longfellow, in praising rock and glen;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Among thy mountains, hills, and lakes, six happy days we passed,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And sigh to think the day draws near that's doomed to be the last.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">We've climbed the rocky mountains, we've plodded o'er the plain,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">We've bid a wild defiance to the drizzling, drenching rain;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And yielding to the influence of your coquettish weather,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">We've grilled beneath the sunshine on thy "tick" infected heather.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O lovely Inchigeela! O cosy Lake Hotel!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O Hannah! best of waiting-maids, and civilest as well;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O were I not so sleepy, a great deal more I'd say,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But I must grasp my pilgrim's staff and wend my onward way.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>From <b>Cromwell's Bridge</b>, at Glengarriff, the road runs to Berehaven, +where there is an old Castle of the O'Sullivan's and some splendid +caves. Cromwell's Bridge, of which one arch only now remains intact, is +said to have been built here to facilitate the march of the Protector on +his return from Dunboy Castle, he having threatened, if the bridge was +not erected on his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> return, he would hang a man for every hour he was +delayed. <b>Bantry</b>, or the White Strand, is a thriving town, a pleasant +drive from Glengarriff. Here the French fleet, with Wolfe Tone on board, +purported landing in the winter of 1797; but, like the Armada, were +scattered by a hurricane. Bantry House, the residence of the +White-Hedges family, is beautifully situated on the side of the bay.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img172.jpg" alt="Cromwell's Bridge" title="Cromwell's Bridge" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Cromwell's Bridge, Glengarriff.</h4> + + +<p>The Cork and Bandon Railway from Bantry is connected with most of the +towns on the Cork coast. From Skibberreen, the famous fishing village of +<b>Baltimore</b> may be visited. The Piscatorial School is doing good work, +and is an enduring monument to the philanthropy of the Baroness +Burdett-Coutts. Innisherin Island, in Baltimore Harbour, was an old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> +fortress of the O'Driscolls—and in particular of "Finnen O'Driscoll, +the Rover"—of whom it is told:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"The men of Clan-London brought over</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Their strong ships to make him a slave;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">He met them by Mizen's wild headlands,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And the sharks gnaw their bones 'neath the wave."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Baltimore was sacked in the early seventeenth century by Algerine +pirates, and all the able-bodied inhabitants sold into slavery. These +pirates were finally put down by the intrepidity of the Commonwealth +seamen. Kinsale, also on the coast, is a remarkable old town; there +James II. landed on his ill-fated visit to Ireland. Bandon, beautifully +situated on the broad river of that name, was long the Derry of the +South. The memory of these "good old times" only now remains, and Bandon +is the centre of many successful industries.</p> + +<blockquote><p><b>For information as to Sport to be had in the Killarney District, see +end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Cycling, Fishing, +&c.</b></p></blockquote> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img173.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p> + + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img067.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>The Lakes and Fiords of Kerry.</h2> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img174.jpg" alt="Coaching in Kerry" title="Coaching in Kerry" /></div> + + +<p>The Grand Atlantic Tour—Caragh, Cahirciveen, Valencia, Waterville, +Parknasilla, Kenmare, &c.</p> + + +<p>The beauty of Killarney is not without a rival, and that even "next +door" to it in its very own kingdom of Kerry. Leaving behind the +soft-swelling hills, deep-eyed lakes and dark mountains, we speed +southward and westward to other lakes and mountains kindred to what we +have already seen. It is for these lovely lands that the Gulf Stream +crosses the Atlantic to kiss, that we are making over the wide-armed +railway which clasps the most picturesque scenery in the country within +its embrace. Starting from Killarney for Valencia, we leave the train to +continue its journey northwards to Tralee, at Farranfore Junction. While +changing into the carriages for the south-west coast, where</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"The mountains kiss high heaven,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the waves clasp one another,"</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>one look round reveals the amphitheatre of hills. Westward, whither we +are going, the hills above<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> Glenbeigh point our road to where the +Atlantic meets the shore. To the eastward, where the morn, in russet +mantle clad, walks o'er the dew, the line of far-piercing spears, +Mangerton, Torc, Glena, Toomies, and the Reeks extend. At Killorglin +(twenty-four miles rail), with a wide-spanning viaduct, we cross the +Laune, wending its way from the Lakes to Dingle Bay. Here the ruins of +an old Knights Templar Castle remain to remind us of the historic past. +For five-and-twenty miles from this place onward, the route runs over +the southern shore-line of Dingle Bay. Some five miles from Killorglin, +in a secluded nest of old trees beneath the mountains, lies <b>Caragh +Lake</b>.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Long, long ago, beyond the space</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Of twice ten hundred years;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In Erin old there lived a race</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Taller than Roman spears."</span><br /> +</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img176.jpg" alt="Fishing in Caragh River" title="Fishing in Caragh River" /></div> + + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img177.jpg" alt="Caragh River and Lake" title="Caragh River and Lake" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Caragh River and Lake.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img179.jpg" alt="Southern Hotel" title="Southern Hotel" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Southern Hotel, Caragh Lake.</h4> + + +<p>And in their romances and love-songs, Caragh was tenderly mentioned, for +was it not here that Dermot sheltered Grania in the bowers of the +quicken-trees? All who have read the fine old Finnian romance, "The +Pursuit of Diarmuid and Grainne," which tells the iliad of their flight +across ancient Erin, will remember that here on the shores of Kerry he +met his enemies and discomfited them. In the mists westward from the +lake is the hill-summit, Seefin, where the disconsolate son of MacCool +sat. For long this little paradise has remained forgotten by +scenery-seeking men, but now that it is re-discovered, it will enthral +all comers. The lake, sheltered under the cloak of the hills, is six +miles long, and all around its coasts are things of beauty, green velvet +mosses, dark broom and heather-clad hills, with rowan trees interspersed +throughout. The grisly mountains are glistening with silver +threads—small streams that hasten to see themselves reflected in the +lake. Far from the busy haunts of men, in a sleepy hollow only five +minutes' walk from the railway station, the <b>Southern Hotel</b><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> Company +has secured a delightful site for their fine hotel. If nature has done +great things for Caragh, "filthy lucre," too, has done much, and here is +everything to help the invalid, the sportsman, or "the common or garden" +tourist to take advantage of the charming pleasure and health resort. +For the fisherman there are almost endless opportunities. There is +excellent salmon and trout fishing in the Caragh Lake, and also in the +Caragh, Carahbeg, Ougarriv, and Meelagh Rivers, while within easy reach +are Lakes Acoose, Cloon, Coomlonkir, Oulagh, Loughnakirkna, Corravoula, +and Nabrackdarrig, all of which would gladden the heart of old Izaac +Walton. Over twenty-five thousand acres of the best shooting in Kerry is +reserved for the use of guests. It comprises principally grouse, +woodcock, snipe, duck, wild goose, and plover. Both banks of the Caragh +River, which is carefully preserved, have also been secured. <b>Dooks</b>, in +the vicinity, has been selected for an excellent nine-hole golf course, +of which guests, as honorary members, are entitled to take advantage. A +flag-station on the railway brings the links within easy walking +distance. The grand strand along the shore gives every opportunity of +bathing. Across the beautiful Dingle Bay rises Mount Brandon (3,127 +feet), and Dunmore Head, out at the edge of the ocean, has the Blasket +Islands scattered around its coast, the treacherous rocks of which were +so fatal to the Spanish Armada. By car from the hotel to Blackstones +Bridge, returning by boat through the lake, is a short tour of many +attractions. Beneath, at one side, lie the bright waters of the bay; on +the other the dark waters of the lake. The Killorglin road is reached +about a mile from Acoose Lake, and then following the declivity by a +mountain stream, we get a good view of Gort-na-gloran Mountain, on the +east of the lake, and see in the distance the fishing hamlet of Glencar, +with the Glencar Hotel high up on pasture ground, surrounded by a cordon +of green fir trees. Except in the Swiss valleys<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> and parts of Norway, +there is no scenery in Europe to compare with an inland route from +Caragh to Parknasilla. It lies across the mountains</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Where the wandering water gushes</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">In the hills above Glencar;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In pools among the rushes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">That scarce could bathe a star,"</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>through wild scenery between the gorges of the mountains, and into +Ballaghbeama Pass. Beneath, in a winding valley, lies Lough Brin, +turning from which we come into the valley of the Eskdhu, or Blackwater, +and follow it amid the beeches until it falls into the sea.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img181.jpg" alt="Pass of Ballaghbeama" title="Pass of Ballaghbeama" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Pass of Ballaghbeama.</h4> + + +<p>Leaving Caragh Lake, the railway line follows the flow of the river, the +next station being <b>Glenbeigh</b>, where there is a growing watering-place. +The strand is particularly fine, extending over two miles. There is a +good hotel, with golf links, beside plenty of fishing and boating. +<b>Coomasaharn</b>—the wonderful lake in the vicinity—it has been correctly +said is surrounded by precipices more awful than anything to be found +nearer home than the Alps or Pyrenees—clinging to the mountain side, at +a height of several hundred feet above the sea, with here a cutting or +embankment, and there a mountain gorge, in which a lovely waterfall is +almost lost to sight in a labyrinth of foliage.</p> + +<p><b>Mountain Stage</b> and <b>Kells</b> are passed, and the train glides down an +incline to Cahirciveen and Valentia Harbour. <b>Cahirciveen</b>, the +birthplace of Daniel O'Connell, is the most westerly town in the three +kingdoms. It lies with its back up against the Iveragh Mountains, and +facing the blue waters of Dingle Bay. Only since the road was cut across +the hills to Valentia in later years has it come to be of importance. In +1803 there were only fifteen houses here, and the beginning of its +uprise in the world was when O'Connell got it made a market town. But in +legends<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> of the past it is a place of fame, and received its name from +Sive, one of the beautiful daughters of the great monarch, Owen More. +<b>Carhan House</b>, where the Liberator spent his childhood (but was not +actually born, as alleged), the ruins of which now only remain, may be +seen a short distance outside the town.</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img183.jpg" alt="On the Coast near Glenbeigh" title="On the Coast near Glenbeigh" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>On the Coast near Glenbeigh.</h4> + + +<p>Two charming fishing harbours under Knocktubber Mountain are worth +seeing, Councroum, "the Haven's Bend," and Coonana, which is called +after the woman who bore the great Finn. Here, the mighty fighter of the +old days, "Conn of the Hundred Battles," fought no less than thirteen of +his fields, and three pre-historic forts remain to bear testimony to the +past—Cahir-na-cahal, Cahirgal, and Castlequinn.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img185.jpg" alt="At Glenbeigh" title="At Glenbeigh" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Glenbeigh.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img186.jpg" alt="Lake Coomasaharn" title="Lake Coomasaharn" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lake Coomasaharn.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img187.jpg" alt="Cahirciveen" title="Cahirciveen" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Cahirciveen.</h4> + + +<p>Ballycarbery's ruined castle, too, deserves attention. In ancient times +it was the fortress of Carbery O'Shea, whose tide-swept tomb is still to +be seen. Then it passed into the hands of Owen More's descendants, and +from them to the O'Connells. When the Spaniards sent their "ale" over to +Erin, and the Kerry women borrowed one another's cloaks to go to Spain +to sell eggs and dulisc, Ballycarbery, commanding the harbour's mouth, +was a place frequented by mariners and merchantmen from many a Spanish +port. There is a story of Morgan of the Wine and a Spanish Captain worth +re-telling. Two O'Connells lived in Ballycarbery together, one brother, +Shawn, occupying the lower portion, and the other, Morgan, living in the +upper apartments. Both at the same moment invited a Spanish captain, who +had come into the port, to dine with them. The foreigner, embarrassed by +their hospitality, and not wishing to show an undue preference—as +neither brother would give way—agreed to give his company to whichever +gentleman had his repast cooked first. The brothers repaired with speed +to the castle, and Morgan was chagrined when he had mounted to his +rooms, to find that Shawn had barricaded the entrance behind him, to +prevent his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> servants from drawing water to cook the dinner. But he +was not to be foiled, for, broaching a cask of wine, he cooked in it +what he wanted, and as his dinner was first prepared, the Spaniard and +his brother Shawn were his guests! In the wars of the Commonwealth the +castle was reduced. <b>Derriana Lake</b>, in the bed of the mountains—with +wisps of mist on its further shores—is like a dream picture. The fair +isle floating in its centre is freighted down with oak and arbutus trees +standing out in relief against the mountain, and reflected in the +mirror-faced waters. The coloured setting of the surroundings is +exquisite. The cliffs bristle crest high with rigid firs, the young oak +copse is entangled with an undergrowth of guelder rose, and in the +sedges near the heron-frequented reeds, white water lilies open their +wonderful eyes. Close by, <b>Cloonaghlin Lake</b>, when it is dark with +mountain shadows and frowning clouds, is sufficiently desolate to awe +the least susceptible, but when auspiciously the sky is brightened, we +feel—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Truly the light is sweet, and</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">A pleasant thing it is for the</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Eyes to behold the sun."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>The shadows recede into the depths of the water or the hollows of the +hills, the many colours of the trees show themselves; and song-birds +begin anew their music, as though a great hawk had been near, and had +passed them by scathless.</p> + + +<h3>VALENCIA ISLAND</h3> + +<p>May truly be termed the "Next parish to America," and should be visited +for its noble cliffs, wild headlands, and wonderful jungle of fuschia +trees. From Valencia Harbour a ferry, manned for upwards of a century by +the O'Neills, brings passengers and mails across to Knightstown, the +principal village, and a busy port of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span> industry during the fishing +season. Glenleam, the Knight of Kerry's residence—about one mile +inland—is surrounded by beautiful gardens, where, besides arbutus and +myrtle, many tropical exotics thrive. The fuschias form a thick glade, +and the trunks of several of them almost defy the ordinary axe or saw. +There are on the island, besides holy wells, a number of soutterains and +cairns, that</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Sit upon the ground</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">To tell sad stories of the death of kings."</span><br /> +</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img189.jpg" alt="At Valencia" title="At Valencia" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Valencia.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img190.jpg" alt="Valencia Harbour" title="Valencia Harbour" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Cuthbert, Valencia.</i></p> + +<h4>Valencia Harbour.—Fishing +Fleet.—Entrance to Valencia Harbour.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img191.jpg" alt="Cliffs at Valencia" title="Cliffs at Valencia" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Cliffs at Valencia.</h4> + +<p>Irish is freely spoken on the island, and if properly introduced, the +visitor may be able to hear many old stories of Finn and his companions, +the Gabawn Saior, and other heroes of the peasants' heart. Thick as +mists at morn legends hover about the island, and beyond the great Slate +quarries may be seen many caves of great interest. There is a tradition +on the island that St. Vincent Ferrar landed there. The harbour offers a +deep and sheltered anchorage, and was formerly much frequented by +smugglers, whose cave is still shown. Paul Jones often put in here, and +on one occasion pressed into his service a number of fishermen, whom he +took from the neighbouring fishing grounds. None of them returned except +one, who had long been imprisoned in France, but he came home "with a +stocking full of doubloons," and his children's children are still known +as "The Paul Jones's."</p> + +<p>At <b>Brayhead</b>,</p> + +<p class='center'> +"Where the broad ocean leans against the land," +</p> + +<p>there is a splendid view from nearly eight hundred feet above the sea. +The rocks around the coast, encircled with white foam, make a beautiful +contrast to the grey and emerald and gold of the sandy coves and green +hills.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img193.jpg" alt="Cliffs at Valencia" title="Cliffs at Valencia" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Cliffs at Valencia.</h4> + +<p>Dolus and Bolus Heads reach far into the ocean. The <b>Skelligs</b>, "the +most western of Christ's fortresses in the ancient world," raise their +heads to the south, while northwards the Great Blasket, a mountainous +island, and its eleven brothers, with Innisvic Killane, may be seen. On +the 10th September, 1588, the Armada ship, <i>Our Lady of the Rosary</i>, of +1,000 tons, was wrecked in the Blasket Sound; among the many who +perished was the Prince of Askule, natural son to King Philip of Spain. +Around the coast line there have been many wrecks, and not a few are the +pathetic stories still told of them on the island.</p> + +<p>The last wreck of importance gave another opportunity for the intrepid +islanders to show what stern stuff they were made of. Under the +captaincy of Mr. Alexander O'Driscoll, the volunteers put off to the +wreck, and despite of a sea running high, and the buffeting of a great +storm, saved the lives of the crew, and rendered full salvage. While on +the island, a visit should be paid to the Anglo-American Cable Company's +Station, care being taken beforehand to go through the formality of +applying to the Managing Director (26, Old Bond-street, London, E.C.) +for an order. Every facility is extended by the courteous local +officials.</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>THE SKELLIGS—ST. MICHAEL'S ROCK.</h3> + +<p>From Valencia, or from across the channel at Portmagee, where there is a +thriving fish-curing industry, the Skelligs can be reached in favourable +weather. Standing high above the green billows that encircle them with +collars of white foam, they repay every trouble taken to inspect them. +The <b>Little Skellig</b>, a fantastic rock, with a great arch like a flying +buttress under which for centuries the seas have churned deep, is almost +inaccessible. It is a great breeding ground for gannet, with which, +during the breeding season, its sides are white as the waves below.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img195.jpg" alt="Skellig" title="Skellig" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Skellig.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p> + +<p>So unused are these magnificent birds to being disturbed by intruders +that even when within oar's length of them, they remain passive and +unscared. The <b>Great Skellig</b> swings high its cliffs seven hundred feet +above the water. Clinging to the ridge of its impressive rocks "like +swallows' nests" are the round roofs of the beehive cells which of old +formed a citadel of Christianity. To Saint Michael the Archangel, +guardian against all the powers of darkness, the isle is dedicated. Its +history is of old date, for here Milesius buried the beloved son, Ir, +that the thieving waters robbed of his soul. Here "the slanting, +full-sailing ships" of Daire, on their way to the great battle of Ventry +Harbour, paused in their march along the deep. Here, too, in recording +times, was the great hero-king of the Norse, Olaf Iryggveson, baptized.</p> + +<p>A little cove, deep in the recess of a cavern, makes a landing stage, +only to be attempted at favourable times. An easy path leads halfway +round the island; then, mounting a flight of steps, the visitor beholds, +spread before him, a green valley, the one patch of richness on the +desolate rock. This is Christ's Saddle, from which, with reverent +hearts, the "Way of the Cross" may be traversed, ending in the heart of +Skellig-Michael. Each of the fourteen Stations have descriptive Gaelic +names, such as "The Stone of Pain," where our Saviour falls the first +time; "The Rock of the Woman's Piercing Caoine," where His Mother and +the Holy Women have met. Lonely and deserted, none should enter these +hallowed places but with feelings of reverence.</p> + + +<h3>WATERVILLE.</h3> + +<p>The morning stillness, broken by the clear blast of the postillion's +horn, reminds the visitor lingering lovingly over the shores at +Cahirciveen that the coach for the coast tour is ready. With a crack of +the whip<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> that would do credit to Will Goldfinch, in the coaching days +of old, the driver urges on his team, and the blooded four-in-hand cut +their way clear of the town. The tour along the Atlantic between +Cahirciveen and Kenmare is nearly fifty miles, and passes through the +most diversified country. The eleven miles as far as Waterville is first +inland, passing through dreary stretches of moorland, where the small +black Kerry cattle manage to thrive, until Ballinskelligs Bay suddenly +comes in sight. Bolus Head reaches out its great arm into the sea, to +shelter the Bay from the winds. At one side may be seen the little town +of Ballinskelligs, with its white Cable Station; and in at the head of +the waters, beyond where the Inny river joins the sea, Waterville +spreads itself out around the long shore. Here it lies on the little +streak of land which protects Lough Currane from the embrace of the +ocean. Coming down the hill, out of the town, the delusion is that this +great fresh-water lake is but itself a bay, the mouth of which is +concealed from view, but not so, for its waters run clear and fresh, and +as fishful as the Erne. It is the best free fishing lake in Ireland. +Just outside Waterville the Commercial Cable Company (Mackay-Bennett +system) have their extensive offices.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img197.jpg" alt="Gannets on Little Skelligs" title="Gannets on Little Skelligs" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Cuthbert, Valencia.</i></p> + +<h4>Kilkenny Castle.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img199.jpg" alt="Southern Hotel, Waterville" title="Southern Hotel, Waterville" /></div> + +<h4>Kilkenny CastleSouthern Hotel, Waterville.</h4> + +<p>The road leads across the Inny, and we enter the little town by the +pleasantly-situated Butler Arms Hotel. On going further, fronting the +shore line, we pass the Bay View Hotel, and, following a bend in the +hill, come suddenly in view of the beautiful Lough Currane, beside +which, in the midst of plantations, more like a home than a +well-equipped hostelry, which it is, the <b>Southern Hotel</b> is built. +Lough Currane is eight miles in circumference, and its shores are +fretted with thousands of inlets. Through the windows of the Hotel, a +charming view is had of the mountains which encircle the lake. On one +side green slopes and pleasantly wooded heights meet the eye, and on the +other, old familiar grey-faced mountains, with their heads raised<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> on +high among the clouds, shining, changing, and fading in the silver +mists. The surface of the lake, calm-faced and deep-welled, here and +there lifts up to be admired beautiful islands. Here a saint made his +temporal home, and in Church Island is the beehive cell where St. Finian +prayed, "in whose orisons were all our sins remembered." The ruins of +the sixth century church deserve the attention of the antiquary. Away at +the head of Lough Currane is Coppal, where sea trout and small brown +trout abound. It, too, has charms all its own, in parts wild and +untamed, but again, calm as the race of a sleeping child. Full +information as to the flies suitable for the lake, and the places well +to troll, may be had from the best known angler in Kerry, Teigue +M'Carthy. Like Sir Roger de Coverley's friend, Will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> Wimble, he can tie +a fly "to a miracle," and he is an enthusiastic devotee of the "gentle +art." Besides the attractions for fishermen, there are thousands of +acres of shooting in the vicinity. There is plenty of opportunity and +accommodation for bathing by the bay, and a new Golf Links, laid out +under the best professional<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> advice, affords a further source of +healthful amusement. Over the hills from Waterville the pre-historic +remains of Staigue Fort may be visited. It is the best example of +cyclopean stone forts that remains in Ireland, and by authoritative +antiquaries is said to be at least 2,000 years old.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img200.jpg" alt="Lake Currane" title="Lake Currane" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Cuthbert, Valencia.</i></p> + +<h4> Lake Currane.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img201.jpg" alt="Raheen" title="Raheen" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Cuthbert, Valencia.</i></p> + +<h4>Raheen, Lake Currane.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img202.jpg" alt="Arbutus Rock" title="Arbutus Rock" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Cuthbert, Valencia.</i></p> + +<h4>Arbutus Rock, Lake Currane.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF WATERVILLE.</h3> + +<p><span class="smcap">Tour</span> 1.—The conveyance will leave the Hotel at 11 a.m. for a +drive to Derrynane, the historic home of the Liberator, On reaching +Coomakista Pass—the highest point of the road—a gradual descent brings +the party to Derrynane House, and further on to Derrynane Hotel, close +to the remains of the old Abbey. Those who wish to walk can get off the +car at Coomakista, and walk one and-a-half miles to Lord Dunraven's +cottage, where they can meet the cars. The path winds along the shore of +Derrynane Bay, and well repays those who follow it on their way to the +Abbey, The party can lunch at Derrynane Hotel, and may return by the +path, and meet the car at Coomakista, or drive the whole way back to +Waterville. Fare for four persons, <i>12s.</i></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Tour</span> 2.—The conveyance will leave the Hotel at 11 a.m., and +drive along the northern shore of Lough Currane. Crossing the Coomeragh +by the Ivy Bridge, the road leads us as far as Isknamaclery Lake. At +this point a unique view is obtained of Isknamaclery Lake and Lough +Nabrackderrag on the right, and Loughs Namona and Cloonaghlin on the +left. The party can have the option of proceeding on foot to Derriana +Lake, or returning and driving along the Coomeragh to Derriana Lodge, +and from thence returning to Waterville, or they can cross the Dromad +Hills, and return by the river Inny. Fare for four persons, <i>12s.</i></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Tour</span> 3.—The conveyance leaves the Hotel at 11 a.m. for Saint +Finan's Glen. Before entering the Glen, a fine view is obtained of the +Iveragh Mountains, and even the M'Gillicuddy Reeks, and later, the Lemon +Rock and the Skelligs. After luncheon in the Glen, the party will return +by Bolus Head, visiting the old Abbey of Saint Michael's and +Ballinskellias Castle, and (with the permission of the Superintendent) +the Atlantic Cable Station. For sea and mountain combined this view +cannot be surpassed. Fare for four persons, <i>16s.</i></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Tour</span> No. 4.—The conveyance will leave the Hotel at about 11 +a.m., for the remarkable fort of Staigue-an-or. The route lies along the +southern shore of Lough Currane for about six miles, (passing the +Waterfall) as far as Isknagahenny (Coppal) Lake, and good views are +obtained of both lakes. At Isknagahenny Lake the party alights, and +proceeds on foot for about four miles to the fort. When the highest +point of the ascent is reached, a magnificent view is obtained of +Kenmare river and the islands off the coast of Beara Peninsula. The +descent to the foot is easy.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span> After luncheon the party may return either +by West Cove and Derrynane to Waterville, or again ascend the mountain +and return by Lake Road. Fare for four persons, <i>16s.</i></p> + +<p>Shorter excursions can be arranged.</p> + + +<h3>HIRE OF BOATS</h3> + +<p>Boat and one man, <i>1s.</i> per hour, <i>5s.</i> per day. Boat and two men, <i>2s.</i> +per hour, <i>10s.</i> per day.</p> + +<p>In no case will the charge be for less than two hours.</p> + +<h3>POSTING ARRANGEMENTS.</h3> + +<h4>Hire by Time (Driver's Fee included).</h4> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" width="75%" cellspacing="0" summary="Hire by Time"> +<tr><td align='left'> </td><td align='right'>Two-horse carriage.</td><td align='right'>One-horse car.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>For the first hour,</td><td align='right'><i>7s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>3s. 6d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>For two hours,</td><td align='right'><i>14s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>7s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>For each additional hour or fraction of an hour</td><td align='right'><i>3s. 6d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>2s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +</table> + + +<h4>Hire for Fixed Distances (Driver's Fee included).</h4> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" width="75%" cellspacing="0" summary="Hire for Fixed Distances"> +<tr><td align='left'> </td><td align='right'>Two-horse carriage.</td><td align='right'>One-horse car.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterville to Caragh Lake,</td><td align='right'>—</td><td align='right'><i>25s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterville to Caherciveen,</td><td align='right'><i>15s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>8s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterville to Valentia,</td><td align='right'><i>15s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>8s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterville to Portmagee,</td><td align='right'><i>18s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>10s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterville to Derrynane,</td><td align='right'><i>15s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>8s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterville to Parknasilla,</td><td align='right'><i>30s. 0d.</i></td><td align='right'><i>16s. 0d.</i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Fifty per cent. additional for return journey.</td></tr> +</table> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img205.jpg" alt="Coomakisteen Hill" title="Coomakisteen Hill" /></div> + + +<p>The coach road from Waterville, following the outskirts of +Ballinskelligs Bay, insinuates itself up a dizzy height. Looking +backwards, Waterville, "standing with reluctant feet" between the sea +and the lake, seems to wonder which is more bewitching. Forging ahead +through the mountain gaps, we pass under <b>Coomakiska</b>, 1,500 feet, and +<b>Beenarourke</b>, 1,000 feet above the sea level. Clearing the gates of the +mountains,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> we come into the open highlands above <b>Derrynane</b>, watching +out from its post over the sea. Truly the home for a chief. Here +O'Connell spent his happiest days, within the roar of the Atlantic +billows, but far from the turmoil and stress of the great agitation in +which his figure looms large as a giant form. Here his hospitable door +flew open wide to the passing stranger, and across the hills, with the +fleet-footed hound, he enjoyed the most delightful of sports, coursing! +Several interesting relics of the Liberator are shown at the house of +his descendant, the present proprietor. The ruins of <b>Derrynane Abbey</b>, +in the vicinity of O'Connell's home, stand on a small peninsula, at some +seasons transformed into an island by the divorcing rush of the high +tides. It was a foundation of the monks of St. Finbarr, called +Aghermore, such a place as that described in the life of St. Brendan, +who, first of the old-world mariners, discovered the great Land of the +West.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I grew to manhood by the western wave,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Among the mighty mountains on the shore;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">My bed, the rock within some natural cave,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">My food, whate'er the sea or seasons bore.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And there I saw the mighty sea expand,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Like Time's unmeasured and unfathomed waves;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">One with its tide-marks on the ridgy strand,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">The other with its line of weedy graves.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And, as beyond the outstretched waves of Time,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">The eye of Faith a brighter land may meet;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">So did I dream of some more sunny clime,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Beyond the waste of waters at my feet.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>From Cahirdaniel village, the site of a Danish fort, the route extends +directly along the Kenmare Fiord, under the foot of Crohan Mountain. The +Slieve Misk and Cahar Mountains separate themselves out to win our +admiration the better. They recall<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> Lady Dufferin's words, addressed +to other sweet mountains, where</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">"The sunlight sleeping</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">On your green banks is a picture rare,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">You crowd around me like young girls peeping,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And puzzling me to say which is most fair;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">As though you'd see your own sweet faces</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Reflected in that smooth and silver sea</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">O! my blessing on those lovely places,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Though no one cares how dear they are to me."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img207.jpg" alt="Sneem" title="Sneem" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Sneem.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img208.jpg" alt="At Sneem" title="At Sneem" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Sneem.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img209.jpg" alt="At Sneem" title="At Sneem" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Sneem.</h4> + + +<p>On the road beneath Crohan, a mile north from Coad Church is St. +Kiernan's Cell, eaten into the face of the sheer rock. In this district +formerly the mines were worked and copper smelted. As the road winds +along we can see Staigue-an-or, with its cyclopean mounds, lying low and +dwarfed on the hillside. By the high mountains, where the coach-horn +sounds sweet and awakens echoes, the road comes down into the lowlands, +and from the bridge is seen beautiful landscape, with <b>Sneem</b> spread out +in the foreground. Under lovely beechen boughs, and through a glade of +oak and first we are ushered into</p> + + +<h3>PARKNASILLA,</h3> + +<p>An ideal residence, hidden from the summer sun by a variegated veil of +the rocky garden foliage; sheltered from the winter's blast by the +Askeve Mountains and the kind shores that button themselves around its +inlet sea, of which Mr. A. P. Graves has written:</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Ocean before, the summer sky above</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Who could pourtray the mountains' purple smiles—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And all the opal hues of earth and heaven,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Foam fringing forests, heather-tufted Isles;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The roseate dawn—purpureal pomps of even—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">And young Atlantic's petulant, shifting wiles?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Who could do aught but mar the true expression</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Where all is change? Then why a record shape</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Of scenes whose nature glories in succession</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">From wood to wave—from wave to distant cape—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Like the young poet's dream, fair beyond all possession."</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img211.jpg" alt="At Parknasilla" title="At Parknasilla" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Parknasilla.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p> + +<p>Here in the demesne lands of a Bishop's Old Palace, the <b>Southern Hotel</b> +new palace has been built. The green turf of its lawn extends down to +the water's edge. It is a land of arbutus and myrtle, of glades laden +with the pink and white blossoms of oleander and rhododendron, and thick +with bells of fuschias, the fair daffodils of Shakespeare and Herrick, +that fade away too soon:</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Daffodils that come</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Before the swallow dares, and take</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The winds of March with beauty."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Derreen, away in the lap of the landscape, found favour of Froude, and +at Kilmackilloge he found material for his novel. The beautiful +<b>Garinish</b> Island is like a little paradise, lost in a land where all is +lovely. Around the shores, and in the sandy caves, the beautiful seals +cluster, and at times are so tame as to answer the shrill whistle of the +boatman, and show their lovely forms on the water's surface near at +hand. We live in sceptical times, when</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"The powder, the beauty, and the majesty,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That had their haunts in dale, or piney mountain,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Or forests by slow stream, or pebbly spring,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Or chasms and watery depths—all these have vanished.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">They live no longer in the faith of reason."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>But still here, along the old-world shores, where daylight dies, the +superstitions and traditions of the pagan past still linger among them, +and there is none more interesting than that which teaches the fishermen +to regard these beautiful-eyed, plaintive-voiced creatures with +tenderness. The souls of the dead, drowned at sea, who die out of +friendship with God, go into the bodies of the seals, and there through +the ages await the Trump of the Archangel to call them before the Great +White Throne.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img213.jpg" alt="Southern Hotel" title="Southern Hotel" /></div> + +<h4>Southern Hotel, Parknasilla.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Parknasilla is situated on the northern shore of Kenmare Bay, a bay +rich in beauty, and with singularly-indented coast lines. Its +well-sheltered position amidst a number of islets, thickly wooded down +to the water's edge, has endowed it with unique advantages. This +protective area gives to Parknasilla claims of a special character, and +prevents the access to it of all winds except those coming from the +warmer points, viz., south and south-west; these winds, before reaching +the southern coast of Ireland, having travelled over the Gulf Stream, +and being thus subjected to its moderating and balmy influence. We all +recognise what elevation of the land will do for any place, particularly +if it shelters that place from winds blowing from the cold quarters. +Thus, mountain protection is of supreme importance in the choice of a +health resort, more especially in the winter and spring seasons of the +year. In this regard Parknasilla is exceptionally favoured, a +mountainous range closely guarding and protecting it from the northerly +and easterly winds. The combination of mountain, wood, and water gives a +special charm to this locality; and a convincing evidence of the +mildness of the winter and early spring here is the forward character of +the vegetation, the early budding of the trees, shrubs, and flowers—all +bearing testimony to the mildness of the climate. Temperature rapidly +tells its tale on the vegetable world, and there can be no more +reassuring proof of the equable and balmy character of the climate of a +district than the early growth of flowering shrubs, plants, and table +produce. The position of this favoured and sheltered sea inlet upon the +isothermal map shows it to have a mean annual temperature of 52 degrees, +being similar in this regard to its neighbour, Glengarriff, and +registering a higher mean annual temperature than Ventnor or Torquay. +The mildness of the climate in the earlier spring months is of such a +character that exercise can be freely partaken of in the open air daily, +without risk of chill; and this to the invalid is of paramount +importance. No record has, as yet, been regularly taken of the daily +sunshine, or of the rainfall, but so far as could be ascertained, the +rainfall does not appear to be excessive. To sufferers from chronic or +recurrent affections of the respiratory organs, Parknasilla, in the +winter and early spring months, would appear to be indicated as a most +desirable place of residence. I have had the advantage of two recent +visits to this district, and feel convinced that, when it becomes better +known, Parknasilla will prove a veritable haven of health and rest to +the chronic invalid and the convalescent, as well as a delightful +retreat to the busy man of the 'world's mart,' who may need a temporary +repose from the worries and cares of daily life. Parknasilla is about a +two hours' drive or thereabouts from Kenmare, the drive being one of +exceptional beauty and interest."—<i>Dublin Journal of Medical Science</i>, +May, 1896.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img215.jpg" alt="Garinish Island" title="Garinish Island" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Garinish Island, Parknasilla.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>DRIVING AND BOATING EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF PARKNASILLA.</h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>No. 1—Car to Sneem, and by Killarney Road to Letterfinish; thence +to Tahilla Chapel, and return by Dunquilla (ancient fort), or +direct. <i>8s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 2.—Car to Sneem and Letterfinish; on to Geragh Bridge, and by +Blackwater Valley and Coast Road to Tahilla, returning by +Dunquilla, or direct, <i>12s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 3.—Car to Sneem and Coomyauna Bridge, pony (cost <i>5s.</i>, to top +and back not included), or walk to summit of Beoun Mountain, view +of Glencar and M'Gillicuddy Reeks, Cloon, Lakes, and Coomlumina +Glen with Dingle Bay in the distance. Return same way. <i>12s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 4.—Car to Sneem and Glorah, pony (cost <i>5s.</i>, to top and back +not included), or walk to summit of Finnavagough, view of +Foylenagearough, Cloonaghlin, Derriana, and Waterville Lakes. +Return same way. <i>12s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 5.—Car to Staigue Fort and back. This ancient round stone +Fort, in a wonderful state of preservation, is well worth a visit. +<i>16s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 6.—Car to Blackwater Bridge and Waterfall; along the +Blackwater Valley to Lough Erin, view of Ballaghbeama Pass, +returning by Geragh Bridge, Sneem Road, and Tahilla. <i>16s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 7.—By boat to Reenkilla, car to Glanmore Lake, and by Furniss +to Killmakillogue, skirting Derreen, Lord Lansdowne's demesne (fare +<i>5s.</i>, not included). Return by boat (four-oared). <i>20s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 8.—By boat to Ormonde's Island; car along shore of Clonea Lake +to Inchiquin, Glen and Cascade, thence by Derreen or coast road. +(Fare, <i>10s.</i>, not included.) Return by boat (four-oared). <i>20s.</i></p> + +<p>No. 9.—By boat to the Caves, and into Ardgroom Harbour; car by +Eyeries to Castletown-Bere, Dunboy Castle, and back (fare <i>10s.</i>, +not included). Return by boat (four-oared). <i>20s.</i></p> + +<p>Excursions by Steam Launch will also be organised to the Caves, +Ardgroom, Derrynane, and other places of interest on the Kenmare +River.</p></div> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img217.jpg" alt="Cycling at Parknasilla" title="Cycling at Parknasilla" /></div> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img218.jpg" alt="G S Hotel, Kenmare" title="G S Hotel, Kenmare" /></div> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img219.jpg" alt="Blackwater at Kenmare" title="Blackwater at Kenmare" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Blackwater at Kenmare.</h4> + + +<p>The demesne around the hotel comprises one hundred acres of beautiful +land, where tropical flora flourish all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span> the year round. The meadows +trim, with daisies pied, there are on every mossy bank the dewy lips of</p> + +<p class='center'><i>"Violets dim, But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes, Or Cytherea's +breath."</i></p> + +<p>The road to Kenmare lies high above the sea. Ardgroom is hiding under +the Caha mountains, with Glenbeg Lake behind, in the little valley. +Beneath Derrenamackan the lashing seas wage perpetual warfare against +the rocks. By the Eskdhu, or Blackwater Bridge, amid the dense foliage +of the trees, a waterfall bleats from the thicket with plaintive murmur. +Then it breaks itself free, and amid rocks, and briars, and tangled +underwood, rushes wildly towards the sea. Between us and the ocean is +Dromore Castle, the residence of one of the heads of a sept of the +O'Mahony clan. In the demesne are the ruins of Cappacross, a stronghold +of the O'Sullivans. Dunkerron Castle, on the shore, gives its name to +the islands in the bay.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img220.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img098.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>County Clare.</h2> + +<p><br /></p> +<p><a name="imgmap220" id="imgmap220"></a></p> +<div class="figcenter"> + <a href="images/imgmap220.jpg"><img + src="images/imgmap220-tb.jpg" + alt="Pictorial Map of Clare District" /></a><br /> + <b>Pictorial Map of Clare District.</b> + </div> +<p><br /></p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img222.jpg" alt="Dromoland Castle" title="Dromoland Castle" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Dromoland Castle.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img223.jpg" alt="Ennistymon" title="Ennistymon" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Ennistymon.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img224.jpg" alt="Lisdoonvarna Spa" title="Lisdoonvarna Spa" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lisdoonvarna Spa.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img225.jpg" alt="Kilkee" title="Kilkee" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Kilkee.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img225.jpg" alt="Kilkee" title="Kilkee" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Kilkee.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img226.jpg" alt="Amphitheatre at Kilkee" title="Amphitheatre at Kilkee" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Amphitheatre at Kilkee.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img227.jpg" alt="Look-out Cliff, Kilkee" title="Look-out Cliff, Kilkee" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Look-out Cliff, Kilkee.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img229.jpg" alt="Golfing at Lahinch" title="Golfing at Lahinch" /></div> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img230.jpg" alt="Golfing, Lahinch" title="Golfing, Lahinch" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Golfing, Lahinch.</h4> + + +<p>Clare County possesses the finest cliff scenery in Ireland. From +Limerick or Galway the county may be explored. On the journey by rail +from Limerick, beyond Long Pavement, we come on a fine view of Cratloe +woods. An ancient saint referred to Cratloe as "a pleasant seclusion +from sin"; but in later times it became a haunt of rapparees, and its +thick foliage provided what Spenser would call "a meet house for +rebels." In later times Freney, a noted highwayman, whose exploits +delighted the Irish peasant, here found a refuge. Bunratty Castle was a +strong place in feudal times. Here Rinuccini, the Papal Legate to +Ireland in 1641, sojourned, and his papers contain many references to +the picturesqueness of the surrounding country, and its herds of wild +deer. Between Newmarket and Ardsollus is Dromoland, the seat of Lord +Inchiquin, and the birthplace of William Smith O'Brien, the aristocratic +leader of the revolutionists of 1848. Crossing the Ardsollus river, we +are near Quin Abbey, an old Franciscan Priory, and Clare Castle, which +took its name from an old watch tower in the river Fergus. <b>Ennis</b> is +the chief town in the County Clare. It is more quaint than important. It +is pleasantly placed on the river Fergus, and is a clean town, doing a +thriving business with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> country. The principal monument in the +town is to Daniel O'Connell, who was returned for Clare in the famous +election of 1828. The ashes of the controversy that raged around +O'Connell in his lifetime are long since dead, and if one wanted proof +of this it is in the recent biography of the great agitator which +appears in the "Heroes of the Nation" series. In that, the famous Clare +election is treated with true historic discrimination by the writer, who +compares the bravery of the Clare peasants at Ennis to the gallant +Covenanters standing up against Claverhouse's Dragoons at Bothwell +Bridge. From Ennis, by car and light railway, Ennistymon, Lehinch, +Lisdoonvarna, and Ballyvaughan may be reached. At Ennistymon there is a +splendid cascade on the Innagh river. <b>Lisdoonvarna</b> possesses the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> +best known Spa in Ireland. It is come-at-able from Milltown-Malbay or +Ennistymon. Its friends have called it "The Cheltenham of Ireland." It +cannot be pretended that the immediate scenery is attractive, but there +are many interesting drives in the vicinity. The hotels and lodgings are +good. The sixth century Church of Saint Cronan, pleasantly placed in an +ash-grove, will give those of an antiquarian taste opportunity of +beguiling their time during a stay at the beneficial chalybeate and +sulphurous springs. The drives from Lisdoonvarna may include tours to +Ballyvaughan and the Cliffs of Moher. The drive by Black Head, the +north-eastern promontory of county Clare, gives one a fine view as far +north as the Arran; then we approach Ballyvaughan, in Galway Bay, an +out-of-the-way old world village. Its approach is by a spiral hill, over +two miles in length, called "The Corkscrew-road." The sides of the stony +hills are interspersed with the most delicate maiden-hair fern, growing +wild. There are two small but neat hotels in Ballyvaughan. From this +little town Galway might be visited by steamer and the Arran Isles by +hooker. <b>Kilkee</b> is admittedly the best bathing-place in these islands. +It is dashed into with the full force of the Atlantic, but with the +countless nooks fitted into the rocky coast-line, there are numbers of +sandy strands suitable for bathing. Here, situated in the very outpost +of the West of Ireland, it is as up-to-date and as go-a-head as some of +its more fashionable rivals, while in natural advantages it excels them +all. It is easy of access by land and sea. The town is protected by a +long reef of rock, called "Duggerna." The cliff scenery is very +beautiful. The spots to visit are The Puffing Hole, Saint Senanus' Holy +Well, Bishop's Island, with its beehive cells and Green Rock. A tour to +Loophead will bring one in sight of a long line of cliff scenery. +<b>Lehinch</b> and Liscanor Bay promise to become the best patronised golf +links in Ireland. Right in front<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> of the little town is a splendid +strand, and local enterprise has been auxiliary to nature in making the +spot attractive. <b>Spanish Point</b> also possesses splendid strands, where +sea-bathing may be enjoyed with safety. Two miles away is +<b>Milltown-Malbay</b>. The town is business-like, and the coast-line in the +vicinity is associated with weird tales of wreckers; there some of the +unfortunate Spaniards came to grief in 1588. The <b>Cliffs of Moher</b> may +be visited from Milltown, Lehinch, or Lisdoonvarna. Going up the road +from Lehinch to <b>Liscanor</b> we pass a Holy Well dedicated to Saint +Brigid. The only cliff scenery in the British Isles to compare with that +of Moher is at the Orkney islands. They make a magnificent embroidery +into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> the red sandstone along the coast-line for four miles, rising in +heights varying from 440 to 700 feet. From their height on a clear day +the distant Isles of Arran may be seen, and the whole surroundings make +as gorgeous a seascape as is to be found anywhere in the world. An +observer will readily recognise that the quaint craft which the +fishermen still use in the vicinity of Moher, as indeed elsewhere in +Clare, is the ancient coracle. <b>Kilrush</b>, on the Lower Shannon, is +chiefly of interest to the antiquary. It can be reached from Limerick, +by the Shannon, as pointed out already, and from Kilkee by Rail. By a +ferry from a slip at the foot of the little town, the holy island, +Scattery, the shrine of Saint Senanus, may be reached. The Round Tower +is in good preservation, and the remains of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> Seven Churches can +still be traced. Saint Senanus' bed is still pointed out. No peasant +woman who wishes to be a mother will ever enter this hallowed spot. The +legend of Saint Senanus is similar to that of Saint Kevin. He was +haunted by the love of a woman from whom he flew. Thomas Moore in verse +tells us the hard-heartedness of both the anchorites:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Oh! haste, and leave this sacred isle,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Unholy bark, e'er morning smile,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For on thy deck, though dark it be,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">A female form I see.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And I have sworn this sainted sod</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shall ne'er by woman's feet be trod."</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Oh! Father, send not hence my bark,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Through wintry winds and billows dark;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I come with humble heart to share</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Thy morn and evening-prayer;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nor mine the feet, oh! holy Saint,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The brightness of thy sod to taint."</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The lady's prayer Senanus spurned,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The wind blew fresh, the bark returned;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But legends hint that had the maid</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Till morning's light delay'd,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And given the Saint one rosy smile,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">She ne'er had left his lonely isle.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img231.jpg" alt="Cliffs of Moher" title="Cliffs of Moher" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Cliffs of Moher.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img232.jpg" alt="Kilrush" title="Kilrush" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Kilrush.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img233.jpg" alt="Country Car" title="Country Car" /></div> + + +<h4>Country Car.</h4> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img045.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img046.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h2>Galway and District.</h2> + + +<p>Leaving the County Clare by rail we cross into Galway, between Crusheen +and Tubber. Beyond the marshy country on the right, away in the +woodlands, nestles Loughcootra Castle. The great lake from which the +place takes its name covers eight square miles. The hundreds of islets +here scattered about its surface are the homes of thousands of herons. +The country people have a belief that this bird is a messenger of good +omen, and never interfere with it or its young. There is a beautiful +legend in Irish of a heron which visited St. Columba, at Iona, a +traveller from his own country. This story is recorded in the +interesting life of the saint written in the seventh century by Adamnan, +one of his successors; a beautiful version in English tells of the saint +rising at dawn of day after a dream of the coming of the bird:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"He looked out over the dreary moor,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Over the hill so bleak and hoar—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'A bird from the land I revisit no more</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Has come to visit me,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dear Innisfail from thy fragrant shore—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Land of my own I shall see no more—</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Across the driving sea.'</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Then he left his prayer, and 'Brother,' he said,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Take to thee corn, and oil, and bread,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">A bird has alit—half frozen, half dead—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Upon our southern strand.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Then warm him and feed him with gentle care,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And chafe his wing's and anoint him there,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">He comes from my own loved land—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">From my own loved land,' and the old Saint wept;</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But the Monk arose, while the others slept,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And warmed the heron, and fed and kept</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">The bird for a day and night.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">So Columb feeling, though far away,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">For Ireland's soil—like the Gael to-day—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">One favour in heaven's sight."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>The magnificent residence was designed and erected similarly to East +Comer Castle (by Nash, who remodelled Windsor) for Lord Gort, the head +of the Vereker family, at a cost of £70,000. The black hand of the +famine of 1847 fed on this property, like many another in Ireland, and +it passed from its owners under the Encumbered Estates Act. Cove Park, +the residence of Lady Gregory, is just outside Gort. Her Ladyship has +found a way to the hearts of the country people by her sympathy with the +Irish language movement. Her volume, "Mr. Gregory's Letter Box," is a +valuable contribution to the history of Ireland in the first three +decades of the nineteenth century. Sir William Gregory's Memoirs it is +that contain the circumstantial version of the Cabinet scandal, in which +the name of the Hon. Mrs. Norton (George Meredith's "Diana of the +Crossways") figures. The story of the leakage of the State secret is as +follows:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"When Sir Robert Peel determined to repeal the Corn Laws he +consulted a portion of his Cabinet. They were Sidney Herbert, Lord +Lincoln, Sir Jas. Graham, and Lord Aberdeen, all of whom determined +that the repeal of the Corn Laws should be kept a profound secret +until the whole of the Cabinet had assembled. That same evening +Sidney Herbert dined <i>tête-à-tête</i> with Mrs. Norton, the well-known +object of his attachment, and with whom he was infatuated. Before +dinner was over she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> wormed out of him the secret of the Cabinet. +After dinner she pretended to go to see a sick friend for a short +time, and returned in half-an-hour. In the meantime she had taken a +cab and driven down to the <i>Times</i> Office, and saw Barnes, the +Editor, and told him the Government were going to repeal the Corn +Laws. Barnes said to her, "If you have no proof I shall not detain +you, but if you have you shall have £500." She gave him the chapter +and verse, and returned to poor Sidney Herbert with the cheque in +her pocket. The next day the announcement was made in the <i>Times</i> +which astounded all England. This was on the 5th December, 1845. +The other papers disbelieved it. Lord Derby and the Duke of +Richmond left the Government."</p></div> + +<p>In the heart of a stony country beset with high fences and rough copple +stones, stands the little town of <b>Gort</b>, The military stationed there +now add to its importance. Kilmacduagh, at the base of the Burren Hills, +contains a church (seventh century) of St. Colman, the Blue-eyed, and a +Round Tower leaning out of the perpendicular. In pre-historic times all +this country side at the foot of Burren, from Gort to Loughrea, and for +miles apart, is said to have been the favourite hunting-ground of Queen +Maev. <b>Kinvara</b>, away on an inlet of Galway Bay, is a fishing village, +and the locality is celebrated for the "succulent oysters"—which in the +season are to be found in every restaurant in Dublin. The antiquary will +find his way easily to Corcomroe Abbey—the church is still in a good +state of preservation. Donald More O'Brien, King of Limerick, is +commonly believed to have built it in the twelfth century. It +subsequently became subject to Furness, in Lancashire. Donough O'Brien, +King of Thomond—killed in battle in 1267—is buried here; his monument +discloses the rude magnificence of his attire. The effigy is looked upon +by scientists as an example of the attire of an Irish King of the +thirteenth century.</p> + +<p><b>Athenry</b>, as its name, the "Ford of the Kings," signifies, and its +ruins testify, was of old a place of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> renown. The tower is entered by a +small gate tower; before it stands the quaint market cross, on one side +is the Virgin and Child, on the other the figure of the Crucified. The +base is relieved with deer and wolf hounds, and at the corner an angel +holds a scroll, the legend of which is defaced. The Franciscan Priory +(1464), despite the attempt to modernise it, has still two thirteenth +century windows, and the south transept has the remains of a very +beautiful window. The Dominican Priory is said to have been erected at +the personal request of St. Dominick in 1241. So late as 1644 it was the +seat of a university acknowledged by Rome.</p> + +<p><b>Tuam</b> is now of little importance. It is to ecclesiastics, however, of +interest, as the centre of an Archiepiscopal See. The statue to John +MacHale is worth seeing. He was well known in the first part of the +nineteenth century as "John of Tuam." An uncompromising Ultramontane, he +translated Homer into Gaelic, and O'Connell in one of his speeches +called this great patriot bishop "The Lion of the Fold of Judah." The +ancient cross in the square is a good specimen of the Irish stone +crosses.</p> + +<p><b>Galway</b> still possesses the evidence of its former greatness. To-day it +is simply an old world city in the midst of a sporting county. Of old it +was a strong-walled town, ever on the alert against alarm and foray, +with its harbour crowded with the warships of Spain and the merchantmen +of many a foreign port. There is a famous map of the city, dating back +to 1651, when the then Lord Deputy Clanricarde pledged the town to the +Duke of Lorraine. It shows a walled-in town with fourteen gates, each +guarded by a watch-tower.</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img239.jpg" alt="At Galway" title="At Galway" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>At Galway.</h4> + + +<p>In the twelfth century, when De Burgo conquered O'Connor, he made Galway +the citadel of his western possessions. During the next century there +gathered into the prosperous town from far and near adventurers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> and +merchants—the Blakes and the Bodkins, the Lynches, the Morrises, the +Martins, the Joyces, &c.; founders of the great families, whose names +have since been inseparable from Galway. In after times the clanship and +attachment of these families to their members and each other, drew from +the Scripture-loving Puritans the scornful appellation—"The Tribes of +Galway"; but the expression was afterwards adopted by the Galway men as +an honourable mark of distinction between themselves and their cruel +oppressors. In old times the merchant princes of the place were renowned +for their hospitality, which they carried to such an excess that the +civil authorities interfered with it, in 1518, with a law to the effect +that</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"No man of this town shall oste or receive into their houses at</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Christmas, Easter, nor no feaste elles, any of the Burkes,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">MacWilliams, the Kellies, nor no cepte elles without license of</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">the Mayor and Councill, on payn to forfeit £5; that neither O nor</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mac shall strutte nor swaggere through the street of Gallway."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Indeed, the O's and Mac's seem to have made their history by more than +enjoying the hospitality of their neighbours, and what was not given +them willingly they at times took by the strength of their right hands. +Over the western gate of the city was the following meaningful +inscription:—</p> + +<p class='center'> +"From the fury of the O'Flaherties, good Lord, deliver us." +</p> + +<p>The trade with Spain was for centuries a source of great prosperity to +the town, and those familiar with the characteristics of Spanish +architecture will see much in Galway to remind them of it. The sympathy +of the townspeople seems always to have been with the leaders of forlorn +hopes in Irish history. It was almost destroyed by Ludlow for its +fidelity to the King in 1652, and having been rebuilt, it again fell +before the siege trains of the victorious Ginckle in 1691 after the +battle<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> of Aughrim, the Culloden of Ireland. With the fall of the +Jacobite standard in that battle, the hopes of the western Irish +declined. The surviving sons of most of the old families sought service +abroad in the armies of France, Spain, and Austria. There are many love +songs of the time in Irish, which have been translated, such as—</p> + + +<h3>AFTER AUGHRIM.</h3> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Do you remember long-ago,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Kathaleen!</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">When your lover whispered low—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Shall I stay or shall I go,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Kathaleen?"</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And you answered proudly, "Go,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And join King James and strike a blow</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">For the Green."</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mavrone! your hair is white as snow,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Kathaleen,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Your heart is sad and full of woe—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Do you repent you bade him go,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Kathaleen?</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">But still you answer proudly, "No,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Far better die with Sarsfield so,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Than live a slave without a blow</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">For the Green."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Many of the old houses remain. Far and away the most interesting is +Lynch's mansion at the corner of Abbey Gate-street. On the walls are the +arms of the Lynches and their crest, a lynx, which it is said was given +them for the watchfulness with which they guarded a besieged Austrian +town in the middle ages. Behind Saint Nicholas' Church, in +Market-street, is the Lynch stone, inscribed with a skull and +crossbones, and "Vanity of vanity, and all is but vanity," above which +is an inscription:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"This memorial of the stern and unbending justice of the Chief +Magistrate of this city, James Lynch Fitzstephen, elected Mayor,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> +A.D. 1493, who condemned and executed his own guilty son, Walter, +on this spot, has been restored to its ancient site A.D. 1854, with +the approval of the Town Commissioners, by their Chairman, Very +Rev. Peter Daly, P.P., and Vicar of Saint Nicholas."</p></div> + +<p>The stern and unbending justice relates to the Mayor's execution of his +own son. The story tells how a young Spaniard, who was the Mayor's +guest, crossed in love the Mayor's son. One night, heated with wine and +inflamed with jealousy, young Lynch drove a stiletto through the heart +of his rival. His father tried and condemned him for the crime. His +mother roused the sympathy of the townspeople to such an extent that +none could be found to act as executioner, but the old Mayor was +even-handed with them, and hanged the unfortunate culprit with his own +hands.</p> + +<p>No visitor to Galway will fail to find out the Claddagh. It is the most +conservative community in Ireland, and with them neither old times are +changed nor old manners gone. The colony inhabit a number of +low-thatched cottages apart from the town. They live mostly by fishing. +The Claddagh women dress in blue cloaks and red petticoats, and their +rings, which visitors procure as keepsakes, represent two hands holding +a harp. Hardman, in his "Rare History of Galway," wrote of them as +follows:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"The colony, from time immemorial, has been ruled by one of their +own body, periodically elected, who is dignified with the title of +Mayor, regulates the community according to their own peculiar laws +and customs, and settles all their fishery disputes. His decisions +are so decisive and so much respected that the parties are seldom +known to carry their differences before a legal tribunal or to +trouble the civil magistrates."</p></div> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img243.jpg" alt="Arran Island" title="Arran Island" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Arran Island, Claddagh.</h4> + + +<p>Salthill, to the west of the town, is a well-sheltered bathing-place, +with pleasant villas for visitors. The Queen's College will repay a +visit. At the bridge in the town excellent salmon fishing is to be had. +When<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> the fish are making up the river for Corrib or Lough Mask the +sight is very interesting. From Galway the old Franciscan Monastery at +Claregalway may be driven to, or an excursion made down the bay to the +Arran Islands. They are twenty-seven miles from the harbour. There are +three principal islands, Innismore, Innismaan, and Innisheen, and +several small isles. Two centuries ago they were described as paved over +with stones, with wide openings between them for cattle to break their +legs, and the modern description by Hon. Emily Lawless does not far +differ.</p> + +<p>The dress of the people is mostly white, homespun flannel "bawneens," +and sandals of cowhide, fastened across the instep, which they call +"pampooties."</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img244.jpg" alt="Queen's College" title="Queen's College" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Queen's College, Galway.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img008.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + + +<h2>Connemara and Sligo.</h2> + + +<p>The Great Southern and Western Railway line runs northward from Tuam to +Sligo. To the westward lies Iar Connaught and Connemara, the capital of +which is Clifden, standing high above Ardhear Bay. If we go direct from +Galway to Clifden we pass Oughterard and the ruins of Aughnanure Castle, +formerly the stronghold of "The furious O'Flahertys." From its Tower we +can get a view of Lough Corrib, with its famous Caislean-no-Circe, long +the lair of Grace O'Malley, of whom the western peasant may say she</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Fought, and sailed, and ruled,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And loved, and made our world."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Oughterard nowadays is given over to fishermen instead of the fighting +followers of the western chieftains. The Connaught Glendalough differs +much from its Leinster namesake, but the Maamturk Mountains and the Glen +of Innagh have a panorama of scenes difficult, indeed, to rival. Clifden +is an excellent centre from which to make excursions. Wherever we look +the Twelve Bens of Bumabeola spring up like uplifted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> lances. The +coast-line is beautiful, and from the promontories we see distant Slyne +Head and the Isles of the West. Mountain climbers will find on the +summit of Urrisbeg a curious plateau. The district is a good one for +lake and sea fishing.</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img244.jpg" alt="Queen's College" title="Queen's College" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Queen's College, Galway.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img246.jpg" alt="Achill Head" title="Achill Head" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Achill Head, Mayo.</h4> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img247.jpg" alt="Diamond Mountain" title="Diamond Mountain" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Diamond Mountain, Letterfrack.</h4> + + +<p>The coast drive to Leenane should not be missed. Leenane itself is on +the outer flank of "Joyce's County," as a fiord of Killery Bay. +Letterfrack is but ten miles from Clifden. The mountain scenery in the +immediate vicinity of the town is delightful. Within easy reach is +Little Killery Bay and the beautiful valley, The Pass of Kylemore, near +which is Kylemore Castle, where Mitchell Henry started his model farm in +1864. The mountain pass of Lehinch cuts through the hills to the sea. A +journey by Ballinakill brings the adventuresome to Renvyle Bay, where +there is a comfortable hotel. Leenane is the best starting ground for an +expedition up the Twelve Bens; from it also a tour may be made to Cong.</p> + +<p>About eight miles beyond Leenane is Errig Bridge, from which the best +view of Croagh Patrick Mountain may be had. But an ascent of the +mountain is best made from Murrisk Abbey, six miles outside Westport. +From the mountain side the expansive country from island-set Clew Bay to +Nephin and Slievemore, in Achill, spreads out to best advantage. The +famous coach road from Clifden cuts into Westport from the south. The +Quay and Mall and the Marquis of Sligo's demesne are the "sights" of the +town. It is a convenient centre from which to visit Achill Island. The +drive through Newport, Mallaranny, and Achill Sound to Dingort, although +across an exposed country, on a fine day will more than repay the +tourist.</p> + +<p>The views of Clew Bay are like the changing scenes in a panorama. +Newport will clamour for the attention of fishermen; and lavish on them +opportunities for sport. The Glens on the way to Mallaranny will tempt +excursions, and beyond Burrishoole Bridge the antiquary will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> deviate +to Carrighooley Castle, and lend his ears to the peasant tales of Grace +O'Malley and her husband, the MacWilliam.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img249.jpg" alt="Glendalough" title="Glendalough" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Glendalough.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img250.jpg" alt="Lough Corrib" title="Lough Corrib" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lough Corrib.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img251.jpg" alt="Killery Bay" title="Killery Bay" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Killery Bay.</h4> + + +<p>Mallaranny is a home of rest. It hides beside a promontory in the bay, +and its splendid strand faces the south. The direct way to Achill is +through Dingort. For scenery and sport few places in the west surpass +the island. The mountain cliff scenery is superb. The seals breed in the +cliffs, and the rocks are the homes of countless seabirds. At Meenawn, +the eagles on the island mostly nest. The great horned wild goats offer +good sport to the marksman, and the deep-sea fisher will delight in the +shoals and "schools" of herring and mackerel which in the seasons strike +the coast and into the bays of the island. Did Izaac Walton but live in +our days he would be sure to find his way to Ballina, because of the Moy +River and the salmon which "most do congregate there." Loughs Conn and +Cullin are open free fishing, and on the preserves the terms are most +liberal. Foxford, beside Lough Conn, will gladden the hearts of those +interested in philanthropic schemes for the benefit of "the very poor" +in rural Ireland. Within a few years, enterprises well directed, has +transformed the district from being a "most distressful country" into a +thriving, self-respecting, self-advancing locality. Killala, six miles +from Ballina, is of interest as the point at which General Humbert and +1,100 Frenchmen invaded Ireland in 1798. Sligo is the most thriving town +in the west of Ireland. Its public buildings, its commerce, and its +picturesque position, are one and all notable. Sligo Abbey, a structure +of the thirteenth century, is a very remarkable pile of ruins. Lough +Gill contains most beautiful sylvan and sea pictures. There is sea, +lake, and river fishing <i>galore</i>, and mostly free. The point from which +to see Lough Gill in all its glory is Dooine Rock. Excursions may be +made to Hazelwood, Glencar, and even to Bundoran, the most deservedly +patronised watering-place in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> the north-west of Ireland. Those who +desire an exquisite souvenir of a visit to Ireland, should not fail to +procure a piece of Belleek ware, remarkable for its elegance and +delicacy; and if in the vicinity of Belleek village, permission may be +obtained to visit the interesting pottery.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img253.jpg" alt="Kylemore" title="Kylemore" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Kylemore.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img254.jpg" alt="Lough Gill" title="Lough Gill" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Lawrence, Dublin.</i></p> + +<h4>Lough Gill.</h4> + + +<p>For information as to Sport to be had in the Sligo District, see end of +this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, Shooting, +Cycling, &c.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img255.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>Summer and Winter Resorts</h2> + +<p>The health resorts of Ireland are so many, their attractions and +advantages so varied, that one wonders why it is that they are +comparatively so little patronised. The explanation is not far to seek. +Hitherto they have been but little known, one cause and another have +helped to keep Ireland a <i>terra incognita</i>. The "faculty," however, has +been for long acquainted with the benefits which the Green Isle +possesses, and many an insular invalid, consumed with the desire to +visit some continental resort, has taken the common sense advice of the +family physician and learned to appreciate the advantages Providence has +bestowed nearer home.</p> + +<p>Winter quarters we have a good store, and beauty spots abound on the +coast, where summer delights can be enjoyed <i>galore</i>, to use an Irish +expression.</p> + +<p>Most of the places referred to beneath have already been described in +the foregoing pages, but it will, perhaps, be convenient for those in +search of particular information as to health resorts and seaside +watering places, to have them collected in one chapter and listed +alphabetically—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><b>ARDMORE.</b>—Fishing village, five miles from Youghal, growing as a +watering place. Beautifully situated on southern shore of Bay. +Splendid strand, good opportunities for bathing. Deep-sea fishing, +mackerel, and herring "schools," plenty of lobsters. Cliff scenery +in vicinity; the bay is frequented by seals. Gaelic-speaking +peasantry. Round tower and ancient church. Good cottage +accommodation.</p> + +<p><b>ARRAN ISLANDS.</b>—Three in number—Innismore, Innismaan, +Innisheer—standing out in the Atlantic, a sort of long harbour bar +to Galway Bay. Scenery cannot pretend to be attractive. Bathing and +deep-sea fishing. Splendid views of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> cliff scenery on Clare Coast. +Steam trip up Galway Bay delightful. An enjoyable inn at Kilronan.</p> + +<p><b>BALLYBUNION.</b>—Good watering place, splendid strand, fine cliff +scenery, sheer on Atlantic Ocean, plenty bathing accommodation. +Castle Hotel is comfortable, lodgings clean and cheap. Eight miles +from Listowel.</p> + +<p><b>BLARNEY.</b>—Hydro, at St. Ann's Hill, on the side of pleasant uplands +overlooking old castle. Nicely wooded, with lake and trout stream. +Cottage homes, within grounds which are between six and seven +hundred acres in extent. Sandy soil and pine forests. The +residences well sheltered. Six miles from City Cork and Muskerry +tram; two miles G. S. W. Railway. Terms and particulars of +treatment, &c., to be had from the medical officer, Dr. Altdorfer.</p> + +<p><b>CAHIRCIVEEN.</b>—An inlet of Valencia Harbour, well sheltered, mild +winters. Coach drives through mountain scenery or along coast to +Waterville. Valencia three miles.</p> + +<p><b>CASTLECONNELL.</b>—Fishing village on the Shannon, outside Limerick, +six miles. Possesses chalybeate spring. Beautiful river scenery, +and splendid fishing. The Shannon Hotel can be recommended.</p> + +<p><b>DUNMORE EAST.</b>—Pleasant, quiet, and select seaside resort, eleven +miles from Waterford, at the mouth of the River Suir. Good strand, +well sheltered. Splendid sea fishing and exceptionally good harbour +for yachting or boating. Plenty of villa and lodging-accommodation, +demand for same on increase in season. Good bathing; good hotel.</p> + +<p><b>GLENGARRIFF.</b>—Coach from Kenmare or Bantry. Beautiful scenery. +Inlet of Bantry Bay. Well wooded, mild climate, winter resort +beyond compare. Gulf Stream strikes coast in vicinity. Excellent +hotel accommodation. Good cottage accommodation. Plenty coaching +and boating facilities in summer; splendid sea bathing. Arbutus +grows wild.</p> + +<p><b>KENMARE.</b>—One of the starting-points for the Grand Atlantic Coast +Drive. Thriving pleasant town at the head of the fiord. +Macgillicuddy Reeks stand out behind the town. Mountain climbers +will make ascent best from point beyond Sohaleen Bridge. Both the +Cork and Kerry sides of the bay are very beautiful and worthy of +investigation. The Southern Hotels Company has one of its branches +outside the railway station. The Lansdowne Arms is an old coaching +inn, famed for its mountain mutton and good claret.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p> + +<p><b>KILKEE.</b>—The best bathing-resort in the three kingdoms. Splendid +facilities. The cliff scenery and coast walks attractive. Good +villa and cottage accommodation. Modern hotels on esplanade.</p> + +<p><b>KILLARNEY</b>, see page 136.</p> + +<p><b>LEHINCH.</b>—Bracing air from Atlantic. Good bathing. Bold coast +line. New hotel, fine golf links. Promises to be the most +up-to-date watering place in Clare.</p> + +<p><b>LEENANE.</b>—The pleasant place on Killary Harbour. It has the +Mweelrea mountains behind it and the sea in front. The bay is +remarkable for sea fishing, while the salmon and trout angler will +have his heart's desire in Errif Lake. The Leenane Hotel stands +close to the shore, and the Aasleagh Hotel, high above the Errif, +is surrounded by demesne lands. The mountain scenery is remarkable.</p> + +<p><b>LISDOONVARNA.</b>—Inland watering place. An old favourite health +resort now more easy of access than hitherto. The spas are +sulphurous and chalybeate. The hotel accommodation is unusually +good, but still insufficient for the summer and early autumn +visitors. The driving tours in the locality take in the most +delightful scenery in county Clare.</p> + +<p><b>LUCAN.</b>—A very old spa. Beautiful sylvan retreat within nine +miles of Dublin. Scenery on upper Liffey and drives in vicinity +through charming country. The Hydro, equipped with every modern +advantage.</p> + +<p><b>PARKNASILLA.</b>—THE PREMIER WINTER RESORT OF IRELAND. Hotel well +sheltered on fiord of Kenmare Bay. The grounds around beautifully +wooded and planted with luxuriant shrubs. Absolutely free from +winter cold. This country side the pride of Kerry. The seascape and +islands in vicinity delightful. Admirable arrangements for boating, +fishing, and coaching.</p> + +<p><b>POULAPHOUCA.</b>—Approached from Harristown on the Tullow branch. The +upper Liffey winds here through a beautiful glen with a splendid +fall beyond Poulaphouca bridge. Splendid facilities for shooting and +fishing are afforded in the surrounding mountain country. +Convenient centre for pedestrian and cycle tours. Hotel immediately +above the Fall, also good hotel at Blessington: and four miles +higher up in the Wicklow Highlands, at Lacken, excellent hotel.</p> + +<p><b>QUEENSTOWN.</b>—"The Paradise of Pensioners." The port of Cork +Harbour. Centre of American tourist traffic. Well sheltered. Long +the winter quarters of invalids. Every facility<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span> for visitors. +Within easy reach of Cork city. Excellent train service. In summer +steamer trips on beautiful river. Several good hotels; splendid +villa accommodation. A bright cheerful town, full of life and +change of colour. A well known specialist (Dr. A. Thomson), in his +"Physician's Note Book," puts the query—"Where should a +consumptive patient pass the winter months if he can't go abroad?" +and answers himself, "There is no place within Great Britain and +Ireland so well adapted for the residence of a consumptive patient +as Queenstown."</p> + +<p><b>RECESS.</b>—Midway between Clifden and Kylemore, on the edge of the +western Glendalough, guarded behind by mountain scenery, secluded, +but all the more attractive to those weary of the busy haunts of +men. The lake and mountain scenery exceptionally wild. It is an +ideal resort for sportsmen.</p> + +<p><b>TRAMORE.</b>—One of the most attractive watering places in Ireland. +Its name in English signifies "the great strand," and it is no +misnomer. The bathing facilities are the best on southern coast, +and are not, indeed, surpassed on any other coast. Splendid new +hotel up-to-date in every respect, and other hotels to suit all +classes, with fine race-course, plenty of lodgings and houses to be +had in the season. Twenty minutes run from Waterford by train. +Military bands in the summer. Exceptionally good place for +families. Tramore is a delightful seaside resort, built on a +gradual incline, with a southerly aspect, on the shores of the +broad Atlantic. The air is almost proverbial for its restorative +qualities, not only in popular but also in scientific opinion. It +is beyond all doubt that Tramore has as many hours of sunshine, +less rainfall, and more even temperature than any other seaside +town in the United Kingdom.</p> + +<p><b>VALENCIA.</b>—The next parish to America, the home of Atlantic cable +stations. The island remarkable for the number of tropical plants +which grow in the open. Climate unusually mild. Boating, sailing, +and bathing in the season. Deep-sea fishing with islanders. Good +hotel, comfortable, clean, and cheap. Other accommodation difficult +to obtain.</p> + +<p><b>WATERFORD</b>, see page 112.</p> + +<p><b>WATERVILLE.</b>—Principal posting place on Atlantic coast tour. +Splendid watering place, beautifully situated on strip of land +dividing mountain lake from sea. Fine strand. Sea and lake fishing. +The station for Mackey Bennet cable system. Three good hotels, +M'Elligott's and Galvin's, on the coast, and the Southern Hotel on +the shore of the picturesque Lough Currane, within a stone's throw +of the sea. Very good cottage accommodation in summer season.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span></p> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img046.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + + +<h2>Natural History of the South and West of Ireland.</h2> + +<p class='center'>By R. <span class="smcap">Lloyd Praeger</span>, B.A., B.E., &c.</p> + + +<p>The Natural History of the South and West of Ireland possesses a special +and peculiar interest in the occurrence in this region of a number of +plants and animals which are rare in or absent from Great Britain and +the adjoining portions of Europe. Let us first consider the general +geographical features of this area, and the geological characters which +have produced those features. Ireland has often been likened to a +saucer, consisting as it does of a great central plain, fringed with +mountain groups disposed around the coast. The plain has a slightly +undulating floor of Carboniferous limestone; the groups of hills are +mostly formed of older rocks, which break through the level limestones. +On our journey from Dublin to Athlone, or from Dublin to Mallow, we pass +across typical portions of the central plain; and the brown ridges of +Slieve Bloom and Devil's Bit, and the greener heights of the Galtees, +furnish good examples of the masses of older rocks that rise out of the +plain.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p> + +<p>In considering the features and natural history of this wide area, it +will be convenient to divide it into districts, which we shall treat of +in the following order:—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">1. Wicklow and Wexford.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">2. Waterford and East Cork.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">3. West Cork and Kerry.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">4. Clare and East Galway.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">5. West Galway and West Mayo.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">6. Sligo.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">7. The Central Plain and River Shannon.</span><br /> +</p> + + +<p>1. <b>WICKLOW AND WEXFORD.</b>—Here we are on the East Coast, looking across +St. George's Channel towards the shores of Wales. The lovely county of +Wicklow is the most mountainous in Ireland, having 180 square miles over +1,000 feet elevation, and 25 square miles over 2,000. Wexford is lower +and more fertile. The coasts of both counties are in great measure flat +and sandy, and are the home of many rare plants. A number of species of +light soils and of gravelly shores have here their Irish headquarters, +such as the Round-headed Trefoil (<i>Trifolium glomeratum</i>) the Sea-Stock +(<i>Matthiola sinuata</i>), the rare Sea-Cudweed (<i>Diotis candidissima</i>), and +the Wild Asparagus (<i>A. officinalis</i>). The Murrough, a great gravel +beach backed by salt marshes which extends from Greystones to Wicklow, +and the marshes of the River Slaney, may be specially recommended to the +naturalist. These coasts are the only Irish locality for the handsome +ground-beetle, <i>Nebria complanata</i>, a typical South European animal. The +Wicklow mountains, which reach in Lugnaquilla a height of 3,039 feet, +are the main portion of the Leinster highlands, formed by a great mass +of granite which stretches from Dublin into county Kilkenny. Considering +their elevation this range is singularly devoid of alpine plants and +animals, but many interesting species inhabit the lower grounds, famous +on account of the beauty of the scenery.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p> + +<p>Among the Lepidoptera several rare species are characteristic of the +district, such as the "Bath White" butterfly (<i>Pontia daplidice</i>), and +the "Four-spotted Footman" moth (<i>Œnistis quadra</i>).</p> + +<p>2. <b>WATERFORD AND EAST CORK.</b>—This is a picturesque district, formed +largely of slates and sandstones of Old Red Sandstone age. The coast +is mostly of very bold character, with towering cliff ranges. The +country is generally undulating and fertile, with occasional mountain +ranges, of which the Comeraghs are rendered especially interesting and +picturesque by the deep "cooms," embosoming tarns, which give them their +name. The Comeraghs and the lovely valley of the Blackwater furnish +particularly attractive ground for the naturalist. The flora and fauna +of this area are intermediate in character between that of the district +last considered and of the surpassingly interesting country that lies to +the westward, and which will next claim attention. Thus, the coasts +yield several of the rare plants mentioned in the last paragraph—for +instance, <i>Diotis</i> and <i>Asparagus</i> grow at Tramore; while at the same +time we first meet in this area with some of the most famous plants of +the south-west—London Pride (<i>Saxifraga umbrosa</i>), Kidney-leaved +Saxifrage (<i>S. Geum</i>), Great Butterwort (<i>Pinguicula grandiflora</i>), +Irish Spurge (<i>Euphorbia hiberna</i>). Two rare butterflies of this +district are <i>Dianthæcia cæsia</i> and <i>D. luteago</i> var. <i>Barrettii</i>; and +the largest of the British leaf-beetles, <i>Timarcha lævigata</i>, has been +taken near Waterford, and at Tipperary.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img263.jpg" alt="Geological Section from Bantry Bay to Killarney" title="Geological Section from Bantry Bay to Killarney" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Drawing J. St. J. Phillips.</i></p> + +<h4>Geological Section from Bantry Bay to Killarney.</h4> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img264.jpg" alt="A Kerry ditchbank" title="A Kerry ditchbank" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Welch, Belfast.</i></p> + +<h4>A Kerry ditchbank showing Pennywort two feet in height.</h4> + + +<p>3. <b>WEST CORK AND KERRY.</b>—This is one of the most beautiful and +interesting districts in the British Isles, and indeed in Europe. The +ancient Devonian rocks which prevail have been folded into a grand +series of simple arches and troughs, the axes running north-east and +south-west. The arches form noble mountain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> ranges, which on the coast +project far into the Atlantic in a series of grand promontories, and +inland form picturesque highlands, of which Macgillicuddy's Reeks, which +rise to 3,404, constitute the highest land in Ireland. The valleys in +their lower portions are occupied by the sea, in the form of long +island-studded fiords; their upper parts are often filled with +Carboniferous limestone, and offer a pleasant contrast of tillage and +green pasture between the gaunt brown mountain-ribs. Here we stand on +the most western outpost of the European Continent, with the Atlantic on +three sides. The effect of the encompassing ocean, and the western winds +which constantly blow in from it, is to produce here and along the whole +western coast the most uniform annual temperature to be found in Europe. +Frosts are almost unknown, and great heat and drought likewise. These +peculiar climatic conditions have resulted in the acquisition and +preservation of a fauna and flora which spread here from more southern +latitudes at some time now long gone by, and which in these favoured +spots still remain to remind us of a period when a state of things +prevailed very different from what obtains at present. For naturalists +tell us that there can be no doubt that these southern plants and +animals migrated to Ireland over land-surfaces now<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> destroyed, having +spread along the old-time coast line which long ago extended from the +Pyrenean highlands to Ireland; and as a relic of their march, we find +some of the species still surviving in the south-west of England,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> while +all of them are absent from the rest of England and from the adjoining +parts of continental Europe.</p> + +<p>An enumeration of a few of the most remarkable of the plants, with a +definition of their range, will make clearer this peculiar feature of +the natural history of the West of Ireland:—</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img265.jpg" alt="Saxifraga umbrosa" title="Saxifraga umbrosa" /></div> + + +<h4>Saxifraga umbrosa.</h4> + + +<p>London Pride (<i>Saxifraga umbrosa</i>). In Ireland along the west and south +coasts. Absent from England. On the Continent it is found only in the +south.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p> + +<p>Kidney-leaved Saxifrage (<i>S. Geum</i>). In Ireland in the south-west. +Unknown in England. On the Continent confined to the Pyrenean district</p> + +<p>Strawberry-tree (<i>Arbutus unedo</i>). In Ireland in the south-west. Unknown +in England. On the Continent it grows all along the Mediterranean.</p> + +<p>Great Butter wort (<i>Pinguicula grandiflora</i>). In Ireland in the +south-west. Unknown in England. On the Continent it grows on the Alps +and in the south-west.</p> + +<p>Irish Spurge (<i>Euphorbia hiberna</i>). In Ireland along the south and west +coasts. In England it is confined to Devonshire. On the Continent it +occurs only in the south-west.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img266.jpg" alt="Among the Arbutus" title="Among the Arbutus" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—J. St. J. Phillips.</i></p> + +<h4>Among the Arbutus, Cloonee Lakes.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img267.jpg" alt="Arbutus Islands" title="Arbutus Islands" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Welch, Belfast.</i></p> + +<h4>Arbutus Islands, Upper Lake, and the Reeks, Killarney.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p> + +<p>Going for a moment further north, we find in Connemara, and there only, +a group of three kinds of Heath with the same peculiar distribution:—</p> + + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img268.jpg" alt="The Irish Spurge" title="The Irish Spurge" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Welch, Belfast.</i></p> + +<h4>The Irish Spurge.</h4> + + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">St. Dabeoc's Heath (<i>Dabeocia polifolia</i>). In Ireland</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in Connemara. Unknown in England. On the</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Continent confined to the south-west.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mediterranean Heath (<i>Erica mediterranea</i>). In</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ireland in Connemara. Unknown in England.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">On the Continent confined to the south-west.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mackay's Heath (<i>E. Mackaiana</i>). In Ireland in</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Connemara. Unknown in England. On the</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Continent in Spain only.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>Nor is it the plants alone that exhibit the peculiar relation existing +between the Natural History of Ireland<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> and of the Pyrenean region. +Among the animals the same features may be observed, the most striking +instance being the peculiar Kerry Slug (<i>Geomalacus maculosus</i>), which +is abundant in many parts of the extreme south-west of Ireland, and is +elsewhere found only in Portugal.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img269.jpg" alt="The Kerry Slug" title="The Kerry Slug" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Drawing—Dr. R. F. Scharff.</i></p> + +<h4>The Kerry Slug.</h4> + + +<p>Mixed with these southern forms in the West of Ireland we find another +group of still stranger affinities. In pools and lakes from Kerry to +Donegal grows the curious Pipe-wort (<i>Eriocaulon septangulare</i>). It may +be also found in the Island of Skye, in the West of Scotland, but +nowhere else in Europe; to see it again we must go to the northern +regions of North America, where it flourishes under conditions much more +rigorous than those which obtain in its mild Irish home. The deliciously +fragrant orchid, <i>Spiranthes Romanzoviana</i>, grows in the counties of +Cork, Armagh, Antrim, and Londonderry; elsewhere only in sub-arctic +America and the portion of Asia which most nearly approaches the Alaskan +shores. The "Blue-eyed Grass" of Canada (<i>Sisyrinchium angustifolium</i>) +is likewise confined to the West of Ireland and to North America; and +further instances might be quoted. In the animal kingdom, too, parallel +cases have been noted, the most interesting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span> being the discovery of no +less than three American species of fresh-water sponge, which are +unknown in the rest of Europe.</p> + +<p>To account for the presence of this American group naturalists are +driven, as in the case of the southern species, to the conclusion that +these represent one of the very oldest components of our existing fauna +and flora, and point to a period when the edge of Europe was prolonged +far to the north-west, forming a continuous land area, presumably by way +of Iceland and Greenland, to America. And here on the wild western coast +of Ireland these last inhabitants of the lost lands of Europe still +survive.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img270.jpg" alt="The Kerry Slug" title="The Kerry Slug" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Drawing—Dr. R. F. Scharff.</i></p> + +<h4>The Kerry Slug, showing the manner in which its<br /> +coloration mimics clusters of lichen among which it lives.</h4> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span></p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img271.jpg" alt="Nest of Wood Ant" title="Nest of Wood Ant" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Welch, Belfast.</i></p> + +<h4>Nest of Wood Ant at Killarney.</h4> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span></p> + + +<p>4. <b>CLARE AND EAST GALWAY.</b>—Our last district—West Cork and Kerry—was +characterised by great ribs of slate and sandstone, and by an absence of +limestone and the numerous plants which follow in its train. The present +district forms a marked contrast, being largely composed of +Carboniferous limestone. And the remarkable thing about these limestones +is that they are over many miles totally devoid of any covering of soil +or clay; the grey gnarled rock, fantastically carved and crevassed by +the action of rain and weather, lies naked and bare. But in the crevices +of the rock a wonderful variety of rare and beautiful plants abound. One +or two of these have their home in the far south, like the plants we +have lately considered, notably the little Close-flowered Orchid, +<i>Neotinea intacta</i>, whose nearest station is about Nice. But the +majority of the interesting species of these limestones are alpine +plants, usually found at high elevations on mountains, which here form +sheets of verdure down to the very edge of the sea. The Mountain Dryas +(<i>D. octopetala</i>), the Bearberry (<i>Arctostaphylos Uva-ursi</i>), the lovely +Spring Gentian (<i>G. verna</i>), and the Blue Moor-grass (<i>Sesleria +cærulea</i>) are good examples, all of them growing in great abundance from +the hill-tops down to the shore. It is this strange mingling of plants +from the far south, from the far north, and from the mountains, which +renders the West of Ireland so fascinating a field for the botanist. In +the barren district of Clare, and in the adjoining Isles of Arran and +south-west portion of county Galway, this peculiar flora may be seen in +its greatest perfection. Some very rare insects have been taken in +eastern Galway, including the Lepidoptera <i>Nallia ancilla</i> and <i>Lycæna +artexerus</i>.</p> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img273.jpg" alt="Wolf Spider" title="Wolf Spider" /></div> + +<p class='center'><i>Photo—Welch, Belfast.</i></p> + +<h4>Wolf Spider (<i>Pisaura +mirabilis</i>) spinning nest for young.</h4> + + +<p>5. <b>WEST GALWAY AND WEST MAYO</b>.—In this district we have again a +complete change of geology and of scenery. The grey limestones with rich +grass and rare flowers filling every crevice are gone, and we are in a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span> +wild region of ancient metamorphic rocks—schists, quartzites, gneisses, +and granites—which form wide moorlands, dotted with innumerable +lakelets, with noble mountain groups rising over the wild boggy +lowlands. To the student of metamorphism the geology of this area is of +very high interest. The botanist finds himself once again, as in Kerry, +in a focus of the southern flora already discussed. As stated above, +Connemara contributes to the list of Pyrenean plants three Heaths, of +which St. Dabeoc's Heath is the loveliest of the British representatives +of the order. Here we may also meet again our old Kerry friends the +London Pride, and on Inisbofin the Irish Spurge—plants which strictly +avoid the limestone, as do the Heaths. The American element is +represented by the Pipe-wort, which is common, and the little water +plant, <i>Naias flexilis</i>, which grows near Roundstone. Of the three +famous Heaths, St. Dabeoc's is abundant throughout Connemara, becoming +rarer in Mayo. The Mediterranean Heath grows near Roundstone, and in +immense abundance on the north side of Clew Bay, and again near the +north-west corner of Mayo, extending inland as far as Lough Conn. +Mackay's Heath is the rarest, being confined to the neighbourhood of +Roundstone. As regards its fauna, Connemara and West Mayo yield fewer +peculiar species than the south-west; but much remains to be done before +it can be said that the zoology of this area is thoroughly known, and it +offers a most promising field for the explorer.</p> + + +<p>6. <b>SLIGO.</b>—The visitor who makes Sligo his headquarters finds himself +in a district of much variety and interest. This is a district that +cannot be too highly recommended to the naturalist. To the geologist the +fossiliferous limestones and the metamorphic rocks are alike of +interest. The botanist naturally turns to the Ben Bulben Mountains, +which harbour the richest group of alpine plants to be found in Ireland, +including the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> pretty <i>Arenaria ciliata</i>, which does not grow elsewhere +in the British Isles. To the zoologist a rich field lies waiting. A +recent exploration of the limestone glens by a party of English and +Irish conchologists has shown that in variety of land mollusca this +district surpasses almost any other in these islands; and good results +may be confidently expected in other invertebrate groups.</p> + + +<p>7. <b>THE CENTRE.</b>—The area comprised in the field of operations of the +Great Southern and Western Railway Company include the southern half of +the great Central Plain of Ireland and the lower course of the Shannon, +the largest river in the British Isles. Towards the east the counties of +Carlow and Kilkenny include much picturesque ground, especially along +the courses of the rivers Nore and Barrow; and as picturesque ground +implies the existence of hill and valley, wood and rock, the naturalist +will find himself at home here. The flora is rich, though without any +very marked features; the Nettle-leaved Bell-flower (<i>Campanula +Trachelium</i>) being the most characteristic species. Regarding the fauna +much has still to be learned. In Tipperary, Queen's County, and King's +County we are in typical central plain country—great tracts of slightly +undulating drift-covered Carboniferous limestone, the surface including +wide pastures, cultivated ridges, and large areas of peat bog and marsh. +The bogs, which form so peculiar a feature of the surface of Ireland, +may be studied here over many miles of country. The noble Shannon, which +winds slowly southward across the plain, widens at intervals into great +lake-like expanses, of which Lough Derg is the largest, a place of much +interest to the student of natural history. One plant which grows here, +the Willow-leaved Inula (<i>I. salicina</i>), is found nowhere else in the +British Isles; other characteristic Shannon plants are the Water +Germander (<i>Teucrium Scordium</i>) and the rare Stone wort <i>Chara<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> +tomentosa</i>. Further west, in Limerick, a more varied surface prevails. +Like Waterford and Cork, Limerick is a great centre for animals of the +"Southern" distributional type, such as the Wood White Butterfly +(<i>Leptidia sinapis</i>) the Brimstone Butterfly (<i>Gonapteryx rhamm</i>), and +the Purple Hair-streak (<i>Thecla quercus</i>). The small but handsome +Ground-beetle, <i>Panogæus crux-major</i>, is known in Ireland only from +Finlough. This species has a typically "germanic" distribution in Great +Britain. The Water-beetle <i>Pelobius Hermanni</i>, a very rare species, and +the only British member of its family, occurs near Limerick and Cork. +Cratloe Wood, by the Shannon near Limerick, may be specially recommended +as a hunting-ground.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img045.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2>SPORT.</h2> + + +<p>For sportsmen Ireland is a happy land, ready to supply their every want. +Royal Meath, Kildare, Waterford, Tipperary, and Cork County are hunted +by several good packs during-each season, and "the meets" are duly +published in the local newspapers.</p> + +<p>In the large tracts of bog, moorland, river reaches, and mountain lands +there is splendid shooting; in Kerry especially, where poaching is put +down with a heavy hand, there are plenty of opportunities for sport.</p> + +<p>In most cases the hosts of the hotels have secured the shooting of many +thousands of acres in their vicinity.</p> + +<p>When the weather is "hard," excellent sport can be had along the +southern districts.</p> + +<p>The gentry most usually preserve their estates with great vigilance, but +they are generous in giving permission to bona-fide sportsmen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img278.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h3>GENERAL HINTS</h3> + +<h4>(<span class="smcap">From Mecredy's Road Book of Ireland</span>.)</h4> + + +<p>June and September are the driest months in Ireland. Tourists will find +the Royal Irish Constabulary the best source of information, and they +cannot do better than inquire at the various police barracks on the way +for advice as to places of interest to be visited, and the condition of +the roads. In unfrequented country districts the footpaths as a rule may +be taken with impunity, but it is never absolutely safe to do so. It is +always well to enquire of other cyclists met <i>en route</i>. The roads are +very variable, some being grand and others very bad. Intercourse with +the peasantry will be found interesting and amusing. Nothing can exceed +their civility and courtesy; and for those who are not too particular it +will be found an excellent plan to lunch in their cottages, excellent +tea, home-made bread, butter and eggs being procurable for 1/-per head. +There is little use questioning them as to distances, however. They are +nearly always wrong, and in any case they calculate in Irish miles—11 +Irish equal 14 English. The police, however, are reliable, and give the +distances in statute miles. Repairers are few and far between, but the +local blacksmiths are often clever and handy men. The by-roads are +generally better than the main roads, and the surface is better at the +edge than in the middle. The mountain roads are as a rule very good, and +not nearly so hilly as one would expect. The country people are rather +stupid about getting out of one's way, and live stock on the road are a +frequent source of danger, especially pigs, sheep, donkeys, and Kerry +cows. Mountain passes should be negotiated carefully, as mountain +torrents sometimes sweep away short<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span> stretches of otherwise excellent +roads, and one comes on these spots unexpectedly. The corners, too, are +excessively sharp, and steep pitches occur unexpectedly.</p> + +<p>In most small Provincial towns the Hotels are not good, but in tourists' +districts, such as Kerry, they are really excellent and the charges are +reasonable. Where lodgings are required it is a good plan to ask the +local Head Constable for advice.</p> + + +<h3>CORK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Cork is an excellent centre for cycling. The roads are in fair order and +the inclines moderate. There is abundance of fine scenery, and notably +in the extreme south and south-west where there are some entrancing +tit-bits. Magnificent tracts of inland mountain scenery are to be found, +and many important historical and archæological ruins. There are hotels +nearly everywhere within easy reach, many of them very good, and in most +cases affording fair accommodation at reasonable cost.</p> + +<h4>One Day Tours from Cork.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—To Queenstown, road 14 miles or rail 12 miles. Thence to East +Ferry, 5 miles, cross the Ballinacurragh River by ferry. Thence by road +to Midleton, 4 miles, back to Cork, road or rail, 12 miles. Fine views +of the River Lee, Lough Mahon, the lovely Harbour of Queenstown, +Ballinacurragh River, &c.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—To Youghal, road or rail, 27 miles. Thence by road to Ardmore, 6 +miles—a watering place with a ruined chapel where there are some +curious carvings in stone, and a fine and perfect specimen of the old +Irish round tower, Return same road.</p> + +<p>No. 3.—To Midleton, 12 miles, road or rail. Thence to Cloyne, 6 miles, +where there is an ancient Cathedral still in use. Thence to Ballycotton, +6 miles, a small watering place. Back by Cloyne and Aghada, on +Queenstown Harbour, 12 miles. Thence by steamer to Queenstown, or across +the East Ferry by road to Queenstown, 6 miles. Back by road or rail, 12 +miles.</p> + +<p>Hotels at Midleton, Cloyne, and Ballycotton.</p> + +<p>No. 4.—To Queenstown, road or rail, then by steamer, 20 minutes across +the harbour to Crosshaven. Thence by road, 2 miles, to Church Bay. Fine +view of mouth of the harbour and open Atlantic. Thence by Carrigaline +and Douglas, back to Cork, 12 miles.</p> + +<p>Good hotels at Crosshaven and Church Bay.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p> + +<p>No. 5.—Cork to Blarney, by the Valley of the Lee and Carrigrohane, 9 +miles. Famous Castle of Blarney with the "Kissing Stone." The Groves of +Blarney round the Castle may be seen, also St. Ann's Hydropathic +establishment. Return by Rathpeacon and Blackpool to Cork, 6 miles.</p> + +<p>No. 6.—Cork to Dunkettle, 3 miles, road or rail, thence along the +Glanmire River to Glanmire, 2 miles. Thence by Sallybrook and Kilcully, +back to Cork, 6 miles.</p> + +<h4>Two Day Tours from Cork.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—Cork to Macroom, road or rail, 25 miles. Thence to Inchigeela, +10 miles, and Gougane Barra, 10 miles. Beautiful lake scenery, and the +hermitage at Gougane Barra; a chapel on the Holy Lake is well worth +seeing. The Pass of Keimaneigh is 3 miles further. From this point the +traveller can return to sleep at Inchigeela or Macroom, where, at both +places, there are good hotels; or may continue his journey to +Glengarriff, Kenmare, or Killarney. If returning to Cork from Macroom, +the journey may be made by Coachford and Dripsey, distance about 25 +miles.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Cork to Bandon, 20 miles by rail or road. Thence to +Courtmacsherry and the Old Head of Kinsale, each about 7 miles by road. +The tourist can sleep at either place, and return to Cork by Kinsale and +Innishannon, or continue his journey to Bantry, 37-1/2 miles by road or +rail. Thence to Glengarriff, Killarney, &c.</p> + +<h4>Tours for Three or more Days from Cork.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—Cork to Youghal, 28 miles by road or rail. Thence to Temple +Michael, 3 miles along left bank of the River Blackwater, through +Dromana to Cappoquin, 11 miles. From Cappoquin the Trappist Monastery of +Mount Melleray, 3-1/2 miles, can be visited. Returning to Cappoquin the +tourist can take either bank of the Blackwater, along a beautiful and +level road to Lismore, 3-1/2 miles. The distance from Lismore to Fermoy +is 16 miles by road or rail; the road along the Valley of the Blackwater +being very fine throughout, and most picturesque. At Lismore the +beautiful castle belonging to the Duke of Devonshire can be seen. The +tourist can return from Fermoy to Mallow 16 miles, and thence to Cork, +21 miles. Good hotels at Youghal, Lismore, Fermoy, and Mallow.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Two day tour, No. 1, can be extended to three or more days, by +proceeding from Inchigeela to Glengarriff, 23 miles, and Killarney, 39 +miles. Good hotels at Inchigeela, Glengarriff, Kenmare, and Killarney.</p> + +<p>Two day tour, No. 2, can be similarly extended to three or more days, by +continuing the journey from Bandon to Bantry,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span> 37-1/2 miles. Thence 10 +miles by road to Glengarriff, thence to Killarney, 39 miles. Good hotels +at Bantry, Glengarriff, Kenmare, and Killarney. Or from Kenmare, 20 +miles, or from Glengarriff the tourist can ride to Parknasilla, 16 miles +from Kenmare, where there is an excellent modern hotel and some of the +loveliest scenery in Ireland.</p> + + +<h3>LIMERICK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>To the cyclist on tour, Limerick and the surrounding districts offer +many scenic attractions in wood, lake, and river. The roads are not good +as a rule, owing in a great measure, to the fact that the city is the +centre of a large agricultural district. The hotels in the city are +good, and in the surrounding towns and villages the tourist will find +good accommodation in hotels and otherwise.</p> + +<h4>One Day Tours from Limerick.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—Perhaps the easiest one day tour which the cyclist can enjoy +from Limerick, as his head quarters, is to Doonass Falls <i>via</i> Clonlara. +Five miles thence by O'Brien's Bridge, 7 miles, to Killaloe, where an +excellent lunch can be had. The return home can be made by +Castleconnell, the popular resort of the devotees of "Izaak Walton," +where an excellent tea can be had at the Shannon Hotel.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Castleconnell and Clare Glens, and lengthened visit to +Castleconnell to view the waterfalls, "The World's End"—a remarkably +fine reach of the River Shannon. There is much to interest the visitor +in the gigantic eel fishery, and here also is the renowned Enright, +whose fishing rods are used all over the world. The Clare Glen, situated +by the way in Limerick county, is not far from Castleconnell; and if +liberty is obtained beforehand, the Glenstal Demesne, seat of the +Barrington family, can be visited. Sir Charles Barrington, the present +baronet, has never yet refused permission to the cycling tourist to view +the charming scenery surrounding the Glenstal Castle.</p> + +<p>No. 3.—Askeaton, 16-1/2 miles, splendid road, one of the best from +Limerick; famous old abbey to be visited, with excellent fishing on the +Deel, granted that the tourist has obtained the requisite permission.</p> + +<p>No. 4.—Adare, 9 miles; roads pretty good. Mr. P. Fitzgerald, J.P., +Agent to Lord Dunraven, should be written to beforehand for a permit to +visit the demesne, where some fine old ruins are in an excellent state +of preservation. The Manor House is a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span> magnificent building, but +visitors are only allowed to enter when the family are away. This is +well known as the district which inspired Gerald Griffin to write one of +his famous poems. Lunch can be had at very moderate terms at the +Dunraven Arms Hotel. The demesne wall turns eastward to Croom. The name +of this village is derived from the old war cry of the Geraldines, +"Munster Branch "—<i>Crom-a-boo</i>. To Limerick, from Croom, <i>via</i> +Patrick's Well, there is a pretty good road, 10 miles.</p> + +<h4>Two Days Tours from Limerick.</h4> + +<p>Ballybunion. Good roads generally, but slightly up-hill when the Kingdom +is reached. This charming seaside resort is rapidly coming to rival +Kilkee. It has splendid bathing accommodation, and the coast scenery and +caves equal to those of any other watering place in Ireland. The visitor +for the first time makes his acquaintance with the Lartique, or "Single +Line," Railway—the only one in the United Kingdom—from Listowel to +Ballybunion, a distance of 8 miles.</p> + +<p>Returning to Limerick, a digression can be made to Shanid Castle, near +Shanagolden. This towering mass of masonry, perched high on a +hill—three sides of which are precipitous—is almost ignored by +tourists. It was one of the strongholds of the Desmonds. The other spots +on the Shannon—homeward bound—are Glinn, where the hereditary Knight +of Glin has his seat, and where Gerald Griffin resided in his young +days, near the pretty little village of Loughill. Foynes and Foynes +Island, seat of Sir Aubrey de Vere, will repay a visit. Hotels are good +on this line, also roads.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Waterford and Tramore. Decent roads and accommodation, as good +as can be got once outside Limerick county, border at the Limerick +Junction, a distance of 20 miles from the Treaty Stone. Splendid views +of the Galtee ranges can be had, and on towards Clonmel the wooded +slopes of the minor ranges and hills are a delightful picture. If time +affords, the tourist can digress from the main road and visit the famous +Glen of Aherlow. Back to Tipperary for lunch, good hotels, and splendid +roads. Visit the Kickham monument, and then on to Clonmel. Excellent +accommodation to be had at Clonmel. Next day Waterford and Tramore, and +back.</p> + +<h4>Tours for Three or more Days from Limerick.</h4> + +<p>Ballybunion, Tarbert, Kilrush, Kilkee, Lisdoonvarna, from Ballybunion. +See "No. 1 Day Tours." Tarbert is only a few miles from Ballybunion. +There is a steamboat service across the Shannon estuary to Kilrush. +Thence to Kilkee by road, where first night out can be had. Next day to +Spanish Point,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span> Milltownmalbay, Lisdoonvarna, to the famous "Spa"; home +<i>via</i> Ennis, splendid roads.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Killaloe, Scariff, Portumna, and Upper Shannon. A most enjoyable +trip can be had from Killaloe. See "No. 1 Day Tour." There is a constant +steamboat service on Lough Derg, which will take a cyclist and his +machine, and land him at Scariff—on the Clare side—or Portumna, +"Galway." From either of these towns a tourist can have his chance of +the most diversified lake and river scenery to be had in the kingdom. +Without doubt the praises of Lough Derg and the Upper Shannon have not +been sung sufficiently. From Portumna to Dromineer, on the Tipperary +shore, by lake steamer, thence to Nenagh on bike; splendid roads home to +Limerick, 27 miles.</p> + + +<h3>KILLARNEY DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Killarney is an ideal centre for the cyclist. Good roads proceed in +every direction, and mounted on his favourite machine the wheelman will +be able to discover and investigate scenic treasures unknown to the +ordinary tourist.</p> + +<h4>One Day Tours from Killarney.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—Killarney to Gap of Dunloe, 10 miles; Owenreagh Glen, 18 miles; +Windy Gap, 30 miles. Killarney, total, 36 miles. Care should be taken to +keep on the proper road through the Glen; there are many crossings. Any +of the local folk will point out the road.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Killarney to Torc Waterfall, 3 miles; return to Muckross Hotel, +4 miles; enter demesne at Dinis, 10 miles; on to Kenmare road and home +to Killarney, 17 miles. The road through Muckross Demesne is in some +places dangerous owing to its steep and winding character.</p> + +<p>No. 3.—Killarney to Ross Castle, 1-1/2 miles; through demesne to +Library Point, 2-1/2 miles. Back through Ross Island and demesne to +Mahony's Point, 9-1/2 miles; Killarney, 12-1/2 miles. This road is +perfectly safe and good, except two descents in Ross Island. Returning +from Mahony's Point to Killarney by Aghadoe, about 15 miles, splendid +view of Lower Lake and mountains can be had from the old ruins of +Aghadoe.</p> + +<p>No. 4.—Killarney to Glenflesk <i>via</i> Lough Guittane. Visit Robbers' Den, +9 miles, home <i>via</i> Headford and Barraduff, 26 miles. Roads good, +scenery wild and romantic. There are many short and beautiful trips +which can be made in and about the neighbourhood.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p> + +<h4>Two Day Tours from Killarney.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—Killarney to Windy Gap, 16 miles; thence to Parknasilla across +mountain. Total, 30 miles. Remain for night at Southern Hotel, +Parknasilla. Parknasilla to Kenmare, 14 miles, and back to Killarney +<i>via</i> Kilgarvan. Total, 35 miles. Roads fairly good, but in places very +steep, so that riders must keep a careful watch.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Killarney to Beaufort, 6 miles; thence to Glencar, 19 miles, and +on to Caragh Lake Hotel, 27 miles. Remain at Caragh Lake Hotel for the +night. Return to Killarney <i>via</i> Windy Gap and Gerah Cross. There are +some sharp turns and steep descents requiring care.</p> + +<h4>Tours for Three or more Days from Killarney.</h4> + +<p>No. 1.—Killarney to Kenmare, 20 miles. Thence by Glengarriff, 40 miles, +to Macroom, <i>via</i> Inchigeela, Pass of Keimaneigh to Millstreet, and back +to Killarney. Hotels at Kenmare (Southern Hotel), Glengarriff, +Inchigeela, Macroom, and Millstreet.</p> + +<p>No. 2.—Killarney to Killorglin. Caragh Lake, Cahirciveen, visit +Valentia, Waterville, Parknasilla, Kenmare, and back to Killarney by +either rail or road.</p> + + +<h3>WATERFORD DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Waterford can be recommended as a cycling centre, as the scenery in many +districts of the South-east of Ireland is beautiful in the extreme, and +can compare favourably with any in the country, and the roads are first +rate. The hotels, too, are generally very good, and have been improved +wonderfully of late, and the tariffs have been so arranged by the +South-eastern Branch of the Irish Cyclist Association, that all +requirements of the most slender purse can be satisfactorily arranged.</p> + +<p>Below we sketch out a few very enjoyable Tours which can be made, taking +Waterford as the starting point:—</p> + +<h4>First Tour from Waterford.</h4> + +<p>Leaving-Waterford by the Newtown-road, we pass the house in which Lord +Roberts spent his early days, and where his father and mother lived for +many years. This is actually in the Borough<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span> and, from the grounds +surrounding it, a capital view of the river and part of the City can be +had. After passing by Newtown we keep along to the left until Parkswood +is reached, when we run under a bridge and up a hill to Checkpoint, and +here a magnificent view can be obtained. From the hill overlooking this +pretty little village seven counties can be seen. Dunbrody Abbey, one of +the most famous ecclesiastical ruins in Ireland, is situated immediately +opposite on the other side of the river. Duncannon Fort, a short +distance from here, comes into view, and we are enabled to see the +joining of the three rivers—Suir, Nore, and Barrow. We pass from +Checkpoint, and we reach Passage, a famous fishing station since the +herring industry has become so prosperous in this part of Ireland. A +little further on is Woodstown, and right opposite on the far side of +the river can be seen Duncannon Fort, a fortified place in the days of +old. Turning to the right by Ballyglan, we mount a steep incline, and we +then come in view of Hook Tower, a beacon light which is said to be the +oldest in the kingdom. Dunmore, about five miles from Woodstown, is one +of the most picturesque, beautiful, and delightful resorts in the whole +of Ireland. Here there is a magnificent pier, and boating and fishing +can be enjoyed to one's heart's content. Wheeling back in the Waterford +direction we make for Tramore, ten miles away. It is beautifully +situated, and the visitor here can spend several hours in viewing the +most attractive scenery. Close to the town are the Golf Links and the +Race Course.</p> + +<p>From Tramore to Waterford the run is over a splendid level road, and the +distance seven miles.</p> + +<p>The full distance of this run is 33 miles, and at all the principal +points capital hotel accommodation can be had.</p> + +<h4>Tour Two, from Waterford.</h4> + +<p>The first part of this run is to Passage. At the Half-way House take the +turn over the bridge, up the hill and down a steep decline to Passage. +At the latter place the ordinary ferryboat can be taken to Ballyhack, +which is directly opposite. The run from Ballyhack to Duncannon is over +a fairly surfaced road. At the latter place M'Gonnigal's hotel is well +appointed. From Duncannon the run to the famous Hook Tower is about +seven miles, and the surface of the road generally is very good. Along +this run a splendid view of the Harbour can be obtained, and on the way +there are several places of interest—Loftus Hall, the Irish seat of the +Marquis of Ely, stands on the edge of the river unprotected by a single +tree. It was modernised within the last 25 years, and is now a +splendidly appointed mansion. Bag-an-Bun, a little distance off, will +well repay a visit—the coast line at this point being the principal +attraction. From Hook we run to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span> Fethard, 6 miles to the left, and here +a very pleasant hour can be spent. Tintern Abbey is the next point to be +visited. This is one of the most famous Abbeys in the country. From +Tintern to Dunbrody the distance is 8 miles, and here we can spend a +considerable time in viewing the great historical ruin, said to be one +of the finest in the whole of Ireland. Leaving Dunbrody we come to the +ferry of Ballinlaw, and crossing here ride by Snow-hill and Bellview +into Waterford. The full distance of this ride is 41 miles.</p> + +<h4>Tour Three from Waterford.</h4> + +<p>Proceeding up the Cork road we ride up Ballyaneeshagh Hill, and on the +left see Butlerstown Castle, an ancient building: which, in the days of +Cromwell, held out for sometime against his forces. At the Sweep we turn +round to the right and run to the bottom of the hill. A little way from +the end of the hill the right turn is to be taken again to Kilmeaden, 8 +miles. The ride then is to Portlaw four miles away. Some fifty years ago +this town was the seat of a great cotton industry. It has since fallen +into decay, and the place looks like Goldsmith's "Deserted Village." +Just outside the town is the magnificent demesne of Curraghmore, said to +be the finest in the three kingdoms. The variety of scenery here is +almost unsurpassed. Curraghmore is the property of the Marquis of +Waterford. It is one of the great points of vantage to tourists and +pic-nic parties. Passing through the demesne we come to the house +itself, a modern and rather unpretentious structure. The court-yard is, +however, very large, and is said to be capable of accommodating close +upon 100 horses. Clonegam Church, where Lord William Beresford, uncle to +the present Marquis of Waterford, was laid to rest, can be seen on the +right glistening in the trees on the hill side. Through Curraghmore we +ride to Clonea, about 5 miles further on, and then to the foot of the +Comeragh Mountains, which occupy a centre of the county, and which are +to be seen from all parts, as well as from a considerable portion of +Tipperary. The greatest natural curiosity in this range is the +appearance and site of an almost circular lake, by name Coomshinawin. +From Coomshinawin to Kilmacthomas the distance is about 8 miles. +Kilmacthomas Woollen Factory may be visited, and a good hotel +accommodation can be had at Walsh's. From Kilmacthomas to Waterford is +16-1/2 miles over a good road, the full distance being 45 miles.</p> + +<h4>Tour Four, from Waterford.</h4> + +<p>Our next tour will be from Waterford, <i>via</i> the Sweep, to Knockaderry, 9 +miles away. At the latter place there is a very fine lake which amply +supplies the City. Leaving Knockaderry we reach Dunhill, close to which +place is the Castle of Donile,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span> still distinguished for its peculiar and +romantic situation, and in ancient times the property of De-La-Poer, +from whom the present Marquis is descended. The village of Annestown, +distant about one mile, is on the sea coast, and from it a magnificent +view of rock and ocean scenery can be had. The run from Annestown to +Tramore is over a beautiful road, and many pretty views of the coast can +be seen. The spin to Waterford completes this tour, which is one of +nearly thirty miles.</p> + + +<h4>Two Day Tours from Waterford. No. 1.</h4> + +<p>Waterford, Dunmore, Annestown, Bonmahon, Stradbally, and Dungarvan.</p> + +<p class='center'><b>FIRST DAY.</b></p> + +<p>This is rather a long run of 47 miles, but as the roads are generally +good and the scenery delightful it should be most enjoyable to the +Cyclist who may feel in good form. We have already spoken of Annestown. +From Annestown to Bonmahon the distance is over 5 miles. The road is +very hilly, but the surface is splendid. At Bonmahon the once famous +Knockmahon Mines are situated. These mines were the most valuable in the +country about fifty years ago, but when the value of the metal (copper) +fell operations were discontinued. Stradbally, 4 miles further on, is a +delightful little village, said to be the most health-restoring place on +the south-eastern coast. Here Whelan's Hotel is recommended. Dungarvan +is 8 miles further on, and the road by the sea is well surfaced and very +picturesque. At Dungarvan Lawlor's Hotel will be found very comfortable.</p> + +<p class='center'><b>SECOND DAY.</b></p> + +<p>A good run can be taken through Ardmore, Youghal, Lismore, and +Cappoquin, part of which tour embraces the delightful Valley of the +Blackwater. This complete run will tot about 50 miles.</p> + +<p>At Ardmore a very comfortable hotel is kept by Miss Prendergast. At +Youghal, the Greenpark Hotel is a capital one. In Lismore, the +Devonshire Arms and Blackwater Vale Hotels are recommended; and Kenny's +at Cappoquin is also a good one.</p> + + +<h4>Two Day Tours from Waterford. No. 2.</h4> + +<p class='center'><b>FIRST DAY.</b></p> + +<p>Piltown to Curraghmore, round by Coomshinawin. This complete run will be +about 40 miles. The roads generally are capital, and the scenery as fine +as can be seen in this part of the country.</p> + +<p class='center'><b>SECOND DAY.</b></p> + +<p>From Dungarvan, round by Ballymacarbery, Newcastle, Ardfinan, Clogheen, +Melleray Abbey, to Dungarvan. This ride<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span> runs close upon 60 miles, and +to undertake it the tourist must have been in cycling form for a +considerable time. The roads, however, are generally very good. +Ballymacarbery is 15 miles from Dungarvan; Ardfinan, about 26; then from +Ardfinan to Clogheen the ride is 6 miles, and from that to Melleray +about 13. At Melleray, from the Abbey, a grand view can be had of some +of the most beautiful scenery in the whole of the county.</p> + +<p>The following are the best places of refreshment <i>en +route</i>:—Ballymacarbery (Miss Power's), Newcastle, and Ardfinan. Two +good licensed houses. Clogheen—The Hotel. Melleray—The traveller will +always be hospitably received here.</p> + +<h4>Three or more Day Tours from Waterford. No. 1.</h4> + +<p>Waterford, Dunmore, 11; Tramore, 22; Dunhill, 27; Annestown, 28; +Bonmahon, 34; Stradbally, 38; and Dungarvan, 47 miles.</p> + +<p class='center'><b>SECOND AND THIRD DAYS.</b></p> + +<p>To Dungarvan—have been previously referred to.</p> + +<p>Instead of returning to Waterford by rail, the tourist on the fourth day +may enjoy a most entertaining tour, <i>via</i> the Pike, +Coomshinawin—previously referred to—Curraghmore, Piltown, and +Waterford. This run measures something like 40 miles.</p> + +<p><b>Three or more Day Tours from Waterford, No. 2.</b></p> + +<p>Waterford, Mullinavat, 8; Ballyhack, 16; Stoneyford, 21; Danesfort, 25; +Kilkenny, 30; Thomastown, 40; and Inistioge, 47-1/2 miles.</p> + +<p class='center'><b>SECOND DAY.</b></p> + +<p>New Ross, 10; Waterford, 33; and Rosslare, 42 miles.</p> + +<p class='center'><b>THIRD DAY.</b></p> + +<p>Lady's Island, 4; Kilmore, 11; Fethard, 20; Hooktower, 26; Duncannon, +35; and Waterford, 46 miles.</p> + +<p>This latter tour embraces some of the finest scenery on the +south-eastern coast, and the inland scenery at Inistioge is equal to any +to be seen in any part of Ireland.</p> + + +<p class='center'><i>IMPORTANT NOTE.</i></p> + +<p>The tariffs for Members of the Irish Cyclists' Association and Cyclists' +Touring-Club are at most of the hotels in the south-eastern districts:—</p> + +<p>Breakfast.—Tea, coffee, or cocoa, with bread and butter, toast and +preserve, ham and eggs, chops, steaks, cold meat, or fish, <i>2s.</i> +Substantial Luncheon, <i>1s. 6d.</i> Table d'Hote Dinner, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Bed, +<i>2s. 6d.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>SLIGO DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p class='center'>(<span class="smcap">From Mecredy's Road Book</span>).</p> + +<h4>One Day Tour from Sligo. No. 1.</h4> + +<p class='center'>Sligo, Dromahaire, 12; Ballysadare, 24; Knockanree Glen, 28; Sligo, 33.</p> + +<p>Keeping along the north shore of the lake, Hazlewood Park, 2 miles from +Sligo, is well worth visiting. The public are admitted, and the tourist +should ride right down to the shore, which is here very beautiful. The +road now winds over the hills, and is undulating with fairly good but +rather loose surface, and it is some miles until the lake is reached +again. The scene here is indescribably beautiful, and reminds one +forcibly of Killarney. The lake is studded with islands, and the shores +are densely wooded, whilst northwards extends one of the most +fascinating districts we have ever toured in. It consists of a regular +jumble of mountains, densely wooded, and often most precipitous. The +gapes of the hills are extremely picturesque, and the scene can be +revisited time and again without its palling. Those who would like to +thoroughly explore this lovely neighbourhood should stop at Dromahaire, +where they will find a most excellent hotel, remarkable alike for +moderate charges and a cuisine which could not be surpassed. There is +also an ancient abbey here, well worthy of inspection. Dromahaire is +some little distance from the lake, and on leaving it the road, now +excellent, winds round a mountain, and a few miles farther, after taking +a sharp turn to the right, reaches the lake shore again at its +southern-most point. Farther on it branches inland again, and at a point +2 miles from Sligo a sharp turn to the left has to be taken for +Ballysadare, and if time permits the tourist might proceed on through +Collooney to Mackree Castle (3 miles), which will mean an addition of 6 +miles to the day's ride. At Ballysadare there are some really beautiful +waterfalls. Retracing your steps towards Sligo for a short distance, +proceed along the north shore of Ballysadare Bay. The road is good. +Presently it begins to ascend a spur of Knockanree Hill, and a narrow +lane and gate to the right admit to the Glen of the same name. It should +on no account be missed. It is one of the most extraordinary natural +phenomenon we have ever seen, and is exceedingly beautiful besides. It +is very narrow, densely wooded, and the sides are quite precipitous. The +path wanders through a wealth of undergrowth, and in most places we +fancy the Glen is not forty feet wide, while here and there it is much +narrower. In some of these spots the foliage actually meets overhead, +and we noticed in one place a fallen tree had made a natural bridge +across. Just at the beginning of the Glen there is a little glade where +a house once stood.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p> + +<p>Keeping-round Knockanree Hill the road comes out on the shore of Sligo +Bay. The surface is excellent, and the scenery pretty right into Sligo.</p> + +<h4>One Day Tour from Sligo. No. 2.</h4> + +<p class='center'>Sligo, Drumcliff, 5; Carney, 7; Lissadill House, 9; Carney, 11; +Drumcliff, 13; Rathcormack Chapel, 14; Glencar, 18-1/2; Manorhamilton, +27, Sligo, 41.</p> + +<p>The road is indifferent for some miles, but gradually improves. At +Drumcliff there is an interesting round tower. Lissadill House is +delightfully situated on the seashore. The grounds are open to the +public, and it is a very pleasant ride through on the well-kept avenues.</p> + +<p>Retracing your steps to the main road, after passing Rathcormack Chapel, +turn off to the left for Glencar, along a fairly level by-road, with +fast, but stony, surface. After 2 miles turn to the left again. In due +course Glencar is reached. Keeping along the north shore of the lake an +extraordinary waterfall will be seen on the left. A thin sheet of water +falls from the top of the cliff, and when the wind is from a particular +quarter it catches the falling water every few minutes, and scattering +it in minute particles makes it have the appearance of being suddenly +cut off. Then all of a sudden it comes with a rush again, and apparently +with renewed vigour. It is a very strange phenomenon, and fascinating +withal.</p> + +<p>Wheeling along the shores of the lake we come to a larger waterfall at +the extreme extremity, to which our measurement of 18-1/2 miles is +taken. There is a fine volume of water here, and the neighbourhood being +well wooded, gives a pretty effect. A cup of tea can be had at Mr. +Siberry's, hard by.</p> + +<p>From this on to Manorhamilton the road, though good, is uninteresting, +but if time presses the cyclist can ride direct back to Sligo, round +Glencar Lake. By adopting this route, however, some beautiful scenery +will be missed, and we should strongly advise following what is known as +the old road from Manorhamilton to Sligo (14). Unless a meal is required +it is better not to go as far as Manorhamilton, but to turn to the +right, 1-1/2 miles out. This will reduce the day's journey by 3 miles. +From this turn there is a stiff climb of 2 miles, but the surface is +good the entire way. At the top of this incline a grand prospect bursts +on the view. A confusion of miniature mountains, densely wooded, extend +in every direction, while, as we descend, the waters of Lough Gill come +into view beneath.</p> + +<p>A short distance from the summit the road forks. To the right leads to +Sligo, while the turn to the left runs direct to the lake's shores, and +then joins the other road some miles farther on. Both routes lead +through beautiful scenery. The first is the shortest, but the second the +prettiest.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img291.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h3>DUBLIN DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>There are a number of splendid Golf Courses round Dublin, but on the +Dublin District lines of the Great Southern and Western Railway the only +courses open to visitors are the following:—</p> + +<h4>Tullamore.</h4> + +<p>The course is of the inland description, and the period of play is from +October to June. The hazards consist of hedges, ditches, and whins, &c., +which are well distributed. Visitors, <i>5s.</i> per month.</p> + +<h4>Athlone.</h4> + +<p>Visitors, <i>2s.</i> <i>6d.</i> per week, <i>5s.</i> per month, 9 holes; Par score, 74.</p> + +<p>The length of the course is about 1-1/2 miles, and the grass is never +long. The greens are not large, and the lies are somewhat heavy. +Straight play is necessary to avoid heavy punishment. The course is +beautifully situated and commands fine views of the Shannon and Lough +Ree.</p> + +<h4>Banagher.</h4> + +<p>The course is situated 1/2 a mile out of the Town, and commands fine +views of the distant hills. The distance round is about 1 mile. The +grass is short, and the hazards consist of ruins, walls, and fences. +Number of holes, 9.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span></p> + +<h4>Birr.</h4> + +<p>Visitors, <i>2s. 6d.</i> per week. Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>The course is situated 2-1/2 miles from Birr. The holes are of a very +sporting character, the hazards being numerous and varied, consisting of +rocks, hedges, walls, and running water. The grass is short and wiry, +and good lies are obtained.</p> + + +<h3>LIMERICK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<h4>Lehinch.</h4> + +<p>Visitors, <i>5s.</i> per week, or <i>1s. 6d.</i> per day. Number of holes 18. Par +score, 81.</p> + +<p>The course is laid over fine natural Golfing country. The lies are good, +as the soil is sandy with very short sea grass. The hazards consist of +natural sand bunkers and sandhills with bent, and are ideal. The greens +are excellent, and there probably is not in the United Kingdom a finer +natural Golf Links.</p> + +<p>Accommodation at Lehinch Golf Links Hotel and Aberdeen Arms. There are +some lodges to be had, capable of accommodating small families. Golfers' +cheap tickets are issued to Members and Visitors at Kingsbridge, Dublin, +Limerick, and other stations.</p> + +<h4>Adare Manor Club.</h4> + +<p>Play on this course is confined to Members. Members can introduce a +Visitor for a few days, but the Links are not open to paying Visitors. +Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>This is a very nice course, laid out in the demesne at Adare; the lies +are perfect, and the greens small and well kept.</p> + +<h4>Killaloe.</h4> + +<p>Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>Accommodation, the Lakeside Hotel. The Links are situated about 1 mile +from the Lakeside Hotel, and comprise a very nice sporting course. The +hazards are varied, and the lies excellent.</p> + + +<h3>WATERFORD DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Tramore.</p> + +<p>Visitors, <i>2s. 6d.</i> per week. Number of holes, 18.</p> + +<p>The course is a seaside one, and commands magnificent views of the bay. +The grass is crisp and short, and the soil sandy.</p> + +<p>Accommodation at Grand Hotel and Hibernian Hotel.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p> + +<h4>Lismore.</h4> + +<p>Visitors, <i>2s. 6d.</i> per week; <i>5s.</i> per month. Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>High pastures interspersed with natural bunkers consisting of quarries, +gorse, ridges, and roads. The greens are moderate, but the play through +the course is very sporting.</p> + +<p>Accommodation at Devonshire Arms Hotel and Blackwater Vale Hotel.</p> + + +<h3>CORK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p><b>Littleisland (on G.S. & W.R., 4-3/4 miles from Cork).</b></p> + +<p>Visitors, <i>1s.</i> per day; or <i>5s.</i> per week, on application to Secretary. +Par score, 74 for 18 holes.</p> + +<p>Fine grass of a down nature. Hazards, banks, roads, etc., requiring +skilled play. Greens in first-rate order. Beautiful scenery. Handsome +pavilion, with every accommodation. Professional attendant.</p> + +<p><b>Youghal (on G.S. & W R., 27 miles from Cork).</b></p> + +<p>Visitors, easy Terms by week or month.</p> + +<p>Number of holes, 6 at present.</p> + +<p>Seaside course. Good turf. Hazards, water, land, peat banks. Owing to +inroads of the sea, ground has been greatly limited; but will be +extended, when works now in progress are completed.</p> + +<p><b>Mallow (on G.S, & W.R., 21 miles from Cork).</b></p> + +<p>Visitors staying with Members free for one week; <i>2s. 6d.</i> weekly +afterwards. Living at hotels, <i>5s.</i> first week; <i>2s. 6d.</i> afterwards.</p> + +<p>Number of holes, 9; Par score, 36.</p> + +<p>Pasture land, limestone bed. Hazards: fences, ditches, roads, a large +quarry, grass grown. Greens in first-rate order. Good pavilion. Tea +three times a week free. Grass grows too long for summer play.</p> + +<p><b>Bandon (on C.B. and S.C.R., 20 miles from Cork).</b></p> + +<p>Visitors free, if introduced by a Member.</p> + +<p>Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>The turf is composed of short grass. The distance between the holes +varies from 120 to 360 yards, and the hazards are stone walls, etc.</p> + +<p><b>Clonakilty (on C.B. and S.C.R., 29-1/4 miles from Cork).</b></p> + +<p>Visitors, <i>2s. 6d.</i> per month; or <i>10s.</i> per annum.</p> + +<p>Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>Finely situated; commanding extensive views of surrounding: landscape. +The course is all grass; rather long-for summer play,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span> but first-rate +from October to May. The hazards are stone walls and ditches.</p> + +<h4>Rushbrooke (on G.S. & W.R., 10-1/2 miles from Cork).</h4> + +<p>Visitors residing with Members free for fourteen days. Committee can +elect temporary Members for a month, on payment of <i>5s.</i> Number of +holes, 9.</p> + +<p>Grass on hill, fine view, good pavilion. Greens in good order. Long +hazards.</p> + + +<h3>SLIGO DISTRICT.</h3> + +<h4>Bundoran.</h4> + +<p>Station—Bundoran, on G.N.R.</p> + +<p>Hotels—The Great Northern Railway, Sweeney's, Hamilton's, etc.</p> + +<p>Visitors—<i>10s.</i> per month, <i>5s.</i> per week. Ladies half price.</p> + +<p>Number of holes—9. Par score—75.</p> + +<p>The course is partly sandy, and partly inland in character. It is finely +situated, and commands views of the Atlantic and the mountain ranges. +The distance round is about 1-1/2 miles, and the holes vary in length +from 100 to 250 yards. The hazards consist of a cliff, sandbanks, pits, +stone walls, and water.</p> + +<h4>Sligo.</h4> + +<p>Station—Sligo, thence by car or steamer. During the season public cars +and a steamer run four times daily between Sligo and the course; fare, +<i>6d.</i> each way.</p> + +<p>Hotels—In Sligo there are good hotels, and good accommodation at +Ross's.</p> + +<p>Visitors—<i>1s.</i> per day, <i>2s. 6d.</i> per week (if introduced); not +introduced <i>5s.</i> per week, <i>15s.</i> per month.</p> + +<p>Number of holes, 9. Amateur record, 84.</p> + +<p>The air and scenery at the Links are splendid. The grass is ideal turf. +The distance round is 1-1/2 miles. The hazards are natural sand bunkers, +broken ground, bent, walls, etc. The lies are good.</p> + + +<h3>GALWAY</h3> + +<h4>Galway.</h4> + +<p>Visitors, <i>5s.</i> per week. Number of holes, 9.</p> + +<p>Accommodation at the Railway, Mack's, and Leane's Hotels.</p> + +<p>The Salt Hill tram brings the golfer within a mile of the Links, which +are situated on a hill running out into the sea.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img295.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + + +<h3>DUBLIN DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>River.—Liffey. Station.—Lucan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, +6-3/4 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Spa Hotel. Salmon and trout +free.</p> + +<p>River.—Liffey. Station.—Hazelhatch, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 10 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon and +trout free.</p> + +<p>River.—Liffey. Station.—Sallins, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 18 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Healy's Hotel. Splendid +trout fishing free.</p> + +<p>River.—Liffey. Station.—Harristown, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 25-1/2 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation at Ballymore +Eustace and Poulaphouca. Splendid trout fishing at Kilcullen: at +Ballymore Eustace by permission of Mr. John Royce, Stonebrooke House.</p> + +<p>River.—Slaney. Station.—Rathvilly, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 47 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation moderate. Trout +fishing free.</p> + +<p>River.—Barrow. Station.—Bagnalstown, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 66 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Ward's Hotel. Salmon and +trout free.</p> + +<p>River.—Slaney. Station.—Baltinglass, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 42 miles from Dublin. Accommodation good. Trout fishing free.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span></p> + +<p>River.—Shannon. Station.—Banagher, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 84 miles from Dublin. Accommodation good. Splendid salmon and +trout fishing free.</p> + +<p>River.—Barrow. Station.—Monasterevan, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 37 miles from Dublin. Trout, perch, and pike free.</p> + +<p>River.—Shannon. Station—Athlone on Great Southern and Western Railway, +80 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon, trout, pike, and +perch free.</p> + + +<h3>LIMERICK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>River.—Maigue. Station.—Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway. +Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Maigue View Hotel. Salmon, trout, and +pike fishing by permission of the owners.</p> + +<p>River.—Mulcair. Station.—Dromkeen, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 11 miles from Limerick. Accommodation good. Salmon and trout in +abundance, free.</p> + +<p>Rivers.—Shannon, Maigue, Camoge. Station.—Patrickswell, on the Great +Southern and Western Railway, 6 miles from the Shannon, 1-1/2 miles from +the Maigue, and 4 miles from the Camoge. Accommodation.—Good lodgings +and small hotel. Salmon and trout in the Maigue, and in Shannon and +Camoge very fine trout. There are small tributaries which afford very +good trout fishing free.</p> + +<p>River.—Shannon. Station.—Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Lakeside Hotel, Royal +Hotel, Shannon View Hotel, Grace's Hotel, Lough Derg Hotel, and Hurley's +Hotel. Salmon and trout. The fishing is excellent. During the past few +seasons salmon varying from 20 to 40 lbs. have been taken by anglers. +About 400 yards below and 20 yards above the bridge is a free stretch of +salmon and trout water, where the catches compare favourably with those +on preserved waters. Fishings may be hired for a month or longer.</p> + +<p>River.—Shannon. Station.—Castleconnell, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 9 miles from Limerick. Accommodation good. Castleconnell has a +high reputation as an angling centre. Salmon fishing may be rented by +the month, fortnight, week, or day, and the district is noted for the +heavy fish taken. Trout, pike, and perch fishing is free.</p> + +<p>River.—Deel. Station.—Rathkeale, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 19 miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Pigott Arms, Eagle +Hotel, and Hibernian Hotel. Good brown trout fishing, particularly in +early months of the season—April,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span> May, and June. Also salmon fishing +by payment of ordinary licence.</p> + +<p>River.—Maigue. Station—Adare, on Great Southern and Western Railway. +Accommodation at Dunraven Arms Hotel. Trout and salmon, permission from +Mr. P. Fitzgerald, Agent, Adare.</p> + +<p>Rivers.—Brosna and Shannon. Station.—Birr, on Great Southern and +Western Railway. Accommodation at Dooley's and Mathew's Hotels. Other +private lodgings to be had in the town. Trout and salmon free.</p> + +<p>River.—Shannon. Station.—Nenagh, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Good hotels at Dromineer and Nenagh. Splendid salmon and trout +fishing.</p> + +<p>River.—Mulcair. Station.—Boher, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Good salmon and trout fishing free.</p> + + +<h3>CORK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Salmon fishing is as a rule strictly preserved.</p> + +<p>Trout fishing is everywhere plentiful, and as a rule free.</p> + +<p>Rivers.—Lee, Sullane, Bride, &c. Station.—Macroom, on Cork and Macroom +Railway, 25 miles from Cork. Accommodation at four or five small hotels; +moderate. Salmon and trout.</p> + +<p>River.—Blackwater. Station.—Mallow, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 21 miles from Cork. Hotel accommodation good at the Royal +Hotel, Central Hotel, and others. Salmon and trout.</p> + +<p>River.—Bandon. Station.—Bandon, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway, 20 miles from Cork. Accommodation.—Moderate; Angel Hotel, +Railway Hotel, and Devonshire Arms. Good salmon and trout.</p> + +<p>River.—Dripsey. Station.—Dripsey, on Muskerry Railway, 10 miles from +Cork. Accommodation.—None nearer than St. Ann's Hydropathic, Blarney, +or Cork. Salmon and trout.</p> + +<p>River.—Bandon. Upton, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast Railway, 15-1/2 +miles from Cork. Accommodation.—None nearer than Bandon. Good salmon +and trout.</p> + +<p>River.—Ballylechy. Station.—Bantry, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway, 57-3/4 miles from Cork. Good accommodation at Vickery's, +Railway, and Terminus Hotels. Salmon and trout.</p> + + +<h3>WATERFORD DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>River.—Blackwater. Station.—Kilmacow, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 4-1/2 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Farmell's Hotel. +Trout fishing free.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span></p> + +<p>River.—Blackwater. Station.—Mullinavat, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 7-3/4 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at M'Donald's and +Healy's Hotels. Trout free.</p> + +<p>Rivers.—Nore, Arigilla, Jerpoint Brook. Station—Thomastown, on Great +Southern and Western Railway, 20 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at +Globe Hotel, Commercial Hotel, Hibernian Hotel. Small portion of Nore +free. Arigilla River and Jerpoint Brook free.</p> + +<p>River.—Nore. Station.—Bennettsbridge on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 25 miles from Waterford. Accommodation.—None nearer than +Kilkenny or Thomastown. Salmon and trout; partly free.</p> + +<p>River—Blackwater. Station.—Lismore, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 43 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Devonshire Arms Hotel +and Blackwater View Hotel. Salmon and trout. Charges for salmon rod +fishing.—For season, <i>£2</i>; for one week, <i>15s.</i>; for one day, <i>5s.</i></p> + +<p>River.—Blackwater. Station—Cappoquin, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 39 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at three hotels, also +private accommodation. Salmon and trout.</p> + +<p>River.—Mahon. Station.—Kilmacthomas, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at E. J. Walsh's and P. +Cullinan's. Salmon and trout, free.</p> + + +<h3>KILLARNEY DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>River.—Flesk. Station.—Killarney. Accommodation at Killarney. Trout +and salmon free by permission of Lord Kenmare.</p> + +<p>River.—Eirk. Station.—Killarney; thence by car 7 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Brown trout free.</p> + +<p>River.—Erhagh. Station.—Killarney; thence by car 6-1/2 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout; permission required.</p> + + +<h3>SLIGO DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>River.—Ballysadare. Station.—Ballysadare, on Midland Great Western +Railway. Hotels at Sligo and Ballysadare. Salmon and sea trout +preserved, also brown trout, for which permission can be had.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img299.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h3>DUBLIN DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Lake.—Lough Ree, Station.—Athlone, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 80 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon, trout, +pike, and perch free.</p> + + +<h3>LIMERICK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Lake.—Lough Derg. Station.—Nenagh, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation at Lough Derg Hotel, Miss Mill's Private Hotel, +O'Meara's Hotel, Nenagh, and Hibernian Hotels. Some good trout and +salmon fishing; some by permission, and some fishings may be hired.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Inchiquin Lake. Station.—Corofin, on West Clare Railway, 33 +miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Lake Hotel. Famous for trout +fishing.</p> + +<p>Station.—Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Lakes.—Tony +Hill Lake, 1-1/2 miles from Croom, and Loughgor Lake, 7 miles from +Croom. Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Maigue View Hotel. Pike free by +permission of owners.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span></p> + +<p>Lake.—Lough Derg. Station.—Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Limerick. Hotel accommodation excellent. Lough +Derg is one of the prettiest pieces of water in Ireland, it is within +ten minutes row of Killaloe, and the trout fishing is about the best in +the United Kingdom. In favourable weather large baskets of trout are +taken, and the fish weigh from 1 lb. to 7 lbs. Pike and perch also +abound in the lake, the former grows very large.</p> + + +<h3>CORK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>There is a chain of lakes near Inchigeela (Lake Allan and Gougane Barra) +where some salmon and pike fishing may be had. There is also a small +lake near Bruff (Loch Ghur) where trout, pike, etc., may be killed; also +there are small lakes near Bantry well stocked with trout, &c.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Inchigeela. Station.—Macroom, on Cork and Macroom Railway, 25 +miles from Cork. Good hotel, provided with boats, fishermen, etc. Pike +and trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Loch Ghur. Station.—Kilmallock, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 42 miles from Cork. Good accommodation at O'Sullivan's Hotel. +Pike and trout free.</p> + + +<h3>KILLARNEY DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Killarney for the Angler is a paradise. He can fish a different stream +or lake every day for a month or longer. The best fishing season is +March, April, May, and September. Close season, November to February.</p> + +<p>Lakes.—Lakes of Killarney, Lough Leane, Muckross Lake, the Long Range, +Upper Lake. Station.—Killarney, thence by car. Accommodation at +Killarney. Trout and salmon. Licence required for salmon, cost <i>20s.</i></p> + +<p>Lake.—Guitane. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 5 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown and red trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Looscannagh. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 10-1/2 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout, etc., free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Glas Lake. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 5 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout, etc., free.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span></p> + +<p>Lake.—Gourggh. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 9 miles, walk two +more. Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Cushvalley. Station.—Killarney, thence by car about 8 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Garagarry. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 6 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Cummeenduff. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 13 miles through +Gap of Dunloe. Accommodation at Killarney. Amply stocked with trout +free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Curraghmore. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 15 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Augur. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 9 miles. Brown trout +free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Callee. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 8 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Fine stock of trout free.</p> + +<p>Lake.—Managh. Station.—Killarney, thence by car 6 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Brown trout free.</p> + + +<h3>SLIGO DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Lake.—Lough Gill. Station.—Sligo, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, thence by car 3 miles. Good hotel accommodation at Sligo. +Salmon, white and brown trout and pike free, by permission, which may be +obtained without difficulty.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img302.jpg" alt="Chapter header" title="Chapter header" /></div> + +<h3>DUBLIN DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Station.—Lucan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 6-3/4 miles from +Dublin. Accommodation at Spa hotel. Rough shooting by permission of +owners.</p> + +<p>Station.—Athlone, on Great Southern and Western Railway. 80 miles from +Dublin. Good hotels. Wild fowl shooting on River Shannon and Lough Ree +free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Monasterevan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 37 miles +from Dublin. Good hotels. Rough shooting free along the River Barrow.</p> + +<p>Station.—Banagher, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 84 miles from +Dublin. Good hotel. Wild fowl very plentiful along Rivers Shannon and +Brosna, free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Dunlavin, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 32 miles from +Dublin. Good hotel. Rough shooting free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Rathvilly, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 47 miles +from Dublin. Good hotel. Snipe and duck fairly abundant, free.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>LIMERICK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Station.—Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 11 English miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Murgue View Hotel. +Rabbits, plover, snipe, duck, at Tory Hill, by permission of owner of +land.</p> + +<p>Station.—Dromkeen, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 11 miles from +Limerick. Accommodation good. Snipe, duck, plover; free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Castleconnell, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 9 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation good. Wild fowl; shooting on the river.</p> + +<p>Station.—Patrickswell, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 7 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Patrickswell Hotel or Dunraven Arms, +Adare. Geese, duck, widgeon, teal, snipe, and cock; by permission of Mr. +Peter Fitzgerald, J.P., Mondela House.</p> + +<p>Station.—Rathkeale, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 19 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Pigott Arms and Eagle Hotel. Good duck +shooting; free.</p> + +<p>Station.—- Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation excellent. In winter Lough Derg is visited +by large quantities of wild fowl, which afford capital sport; and the +bogs and marshes around Killaloe hold snipe in fair numbers.</p> + + +<h3>CORK DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>There is excellent wild fowl shooting all along the sea coasts, and +along the rivers for a few miles from the sea. The Youghal coast, the +Lower Lee, Blackwater, and Bandon Rivers, afford excellent sport of this +kind; also the deeply indented coasts of Kinsale, Courtmacsherry, +Skibbereen, and Baltimore.</p> + +<p>Station.—Bandon, 20 miles from Cork, on South Coast Railway. +Accommodation fair at the Angel and Devonshire Arms. Snipe, wild fowl, +and plover; free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Blarney, 5 miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation excellent at St. Ann's Hydropathic Establishment. +Snipe and plover fairly abundant; free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Clonakilty, 33 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South +Coast Railway. Accommodation fairly good at Imperial or Shannon Arms. +Snipe and plover; free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Mitchelstown, miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation fair at Ahearn's or Fitzgerald's. Snipe and +plover may be had on the slopes of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span> Kilworth Hills, by permission of +Officer Commanding Kilworth Camp.</p> + +<p>Station.—Kinsale, 24 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway. Accommodation good at Kinsale Arms or Sea View Hotels. Wild +fowl mostly preserved, but permission may be had.</p> + +<p>Station.—Skibbereen, 53-3/4 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South +Coast Railway. Accommodation fair at Commercial, Eldon, and Ilen Valley +Hotels. Duck, teal, widgeon, snipe, and plover; free.</p> + +<p>Station.—Youghal, 26-3/4 miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation good at Adelphi, Devonshire Arms, Green Park, +Imperial, and Strand Hotels. Wild fowl very plentiful along the sea +coast and at mouth of Blackwater; free.</p> + + +<h3>WATERFORD DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Station.—Horse and Jockey, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 48 +miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Thurles, about 4 miles distant. +Grouse, hares, duck, &c., &c., in Liskeveen Bogs, by permission of D. J. +Mansergh, Esq., Grallagh Castle, Thurles.</p> + +<p>Station.—Ballyhale, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at Mrs. Hayes, Knocktopher Hotel, +Thomastown. Rough shooting to be had at Courisk and Castlecasker Bogs, +about 1 mile from the station, in the direction of Innistiogue, but game +not plenty, being a common; this would be free. A preserve at +Knocktopher. For permission apply to Captain Langrishe. A preserve at +Castlemorris. For permission apply to Rev. Wm. D'Montmorency, +Castlemorris. Applications as to payment and otherwise should be made to +above-mentioned gentlemen.</p> + +<p>Station.—Attanagh, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 45 miles from +Waterford. Accommodation at Griffith's Hotel, Durrow. About 1,000 acres, +almost adjoining station; duck, rabbit, snipe, woodcock; free, if with +permission of occupiers (tenant farmers).</p> + +<p>Station.—Kilmacthomas, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at E. J. Walsh's Hotel. There is no +preserved ground in this vicinity, on which permission is given to +shoot; snipe are fairly plentiful on surrounding bogs, and this is about +all the shooting there is. By permission of Charles Mansfield, +Kilmacthomas, and P. Power, Faithlegg, Waterford.</p> + +<p>Station.—Durrow, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 22 miles from +Waterford. Accommodation at Whelan's and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span> Riley's Hotels. Waterfowl; +grey and green plover; also duck and snipe, rabbits, &c., by permission +of farmers.</p> + +<p>Station.—Lismore, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Accommodation +at Devonshire Arms Hotel and Blackwater Vale Hotel. Partridge, grouse, +woodcock. Permission to be obtained from James Penrose, Esq., Lismore +Castle.</p> + +<p>Station.—Carrick, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Accommodation +at Bessborough Arms and Kirwan's Hotels. Duck, rabbits, rooks. Free, and +by permission.</p> + +<p>Station.—Mullinavat, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 7-3/4 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at M'Donald's Hotel and Hely's Hotel. +Duck, widgeon, teal, and snipe; shooting free on Bishop's Mountain and +Moenrin. By permission.</p> + + +<h3>SLIGO DISTRICT.</h3> + +<p>Station.—Sligo, on Great Southern and Western Railway, thence by car. +Place, Rosse's Point. Accommodation—Hotels good. Shooting—free below +high water mark.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img045.jpg" alt="Chapter footer" title="Chapter footer" /></div> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>INDEX.</h2> + + +<p> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Achill Head, <a href='#Page_246'><b>246</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Adare, <a href='#Page_59'><b>59</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Adare Abbey, <a href='#Page_60'><b>60</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Adare Manor, <a href='#Page_61'><b>61</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Adare Manor Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Aghada, <a href='#Page_95'><b>95</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Aghadoe, <a href='#Page_156'><b>156</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Among the Arbutus, <a href='#Page_266'><b>266</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Arbutus Island, Killarney, <a href='#Page_267'><b>267</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Arbutus Rock, Lake Currane, <a href='#Page_202'><b>202</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ardfert, <a href='#Page_62'><b>62</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ardmore, <a href='#Page_105'><b>105</b></a>, <a href='#Page_256'><b>256</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Arran Islands, <a href='#Page_243'><b>243</b></a>, <a href='#Page_256'><b>256</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Athenry, <a href='#Page_237'><b>237</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Athlone, <a href='#Page_39'><b>39</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Athlone Golf Links, <a href='#Page_291'><b>291</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ballincollig, <a href='#Page_89'><b>89</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ballingrane, <a href='#Page_62'><b>62</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ballybunion, <a href='#Page_62'><b>62</b></a>, <a href='#Page_65'><b>65</b></a>, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ballycotton, <a href='#Page_96'><b>96</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Baltimore, <a href='#Page_172'><b>172</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Banagher Golf Links, <a href='#Page_291'><b>291</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bandon Golf Links, <a href='#Page_293'><b>293</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bank of Ireland, <a href='#Page_17'><b>17</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bantry, <a href='#Page_172'><b>172</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Beenarourke, <a href='#Page_204'><b>204</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Birr Castle, <a href='#Page_39'><b>39</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Birr Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Black Abbey, <a href='#Page_36'><b>36</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blackrock, <a href='#Page_89'><b>89</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blackrock Castle, Cork, <a href='#Page_89'><b>89</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blackwater River, <a href='#Page_101'><b>101</b></a>, <a href='#Page_107'><b>107</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blackwater River, Youghal, &c., <a href='#Page_98'><b>98</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blackwater at Kenmare, <a href='#Page_219'><b>219</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blarney, <a href='#Page_77'><b>77</b></a>, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Blarney Castle, <a href='#Page_86'><b>86</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Boating at Killarney, <a href='#Page_135'><b>135</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Boher, <a href='#Page_46'><b>46</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Brayhead, <a href='#Page_192'><b>192</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bundoran Golf Links, <a href='#Page_294'><b>294</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bunratty Castle, <a href='#Page_221'><b>221</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Buttevant, <a href='#Page_98'><b>98</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cahirciveen, <a href='#Page_182'><b>182</b></a>, <a href='#Page_187'><b>187</b></a>, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Caragh Lake, <a href='#Page_178'><b>178</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Caragh Lake, Southern Hotel, <a href='#Page_178'><b>178</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Carlow, <a href='#Page_33'><b>33</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Carrantual, Killarney, <a href='#Page_146'><b>146</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Carrick-on-Suir, <a href='#Page_127'><b>127</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Carton House, Maynooth, <a href='#Page_28'><b>28</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cashel, <a href='#Page_130'><b>130</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Castleconnell, <a href='#Page_53'><b>53</b></a>, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Castletown, <a href='#Page_27'><b>27</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Castletown House, <a href='#Page_27'><b>27</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Caves of Mitchelstown, <a href='#Page_131'><b>131</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Charleville, <a href='#Page_134'><b>134</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Christ Church Cathedral, <a href='#Page_20'><b>20</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Claddagh, <a href='#Page_243'><b>243</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clare and East Galway Natural History, <a href='#Page_272'><b>272</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clew Bay, <a href='#Page_248'><b>248</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clifden, <a href='#Page_245'><b>245</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cliffs of Moher, <a href='#Page_231'><b>231</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cliffs at Valencia, <a href='#Page_191'><b>191</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clock Tower, Youghal, <a href='#Page_102'><b>102</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clonakilty Golf Links, <a href='#Page_293'><b>293</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clondalkin, <a href='#Page_26'><b>26</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clonmacnoise, <a href='#Page_44'><b>44</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clonmel, <a href='#Page_127'><b>127</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cloonaghlin Lake, <a href='#Page_188'><b>188</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cloyne, <a href='#Page_95'><b>95</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Connemara and Sligo, <a href='#Page_245'><b>245</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Coomakista, <a href='#Page_204'><b>204</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Coomakisteen Hill, <a href='#Page_205'><b>205</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Coomasaharn, <a href='#Page_182'><b>182</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cork, <a href='#Page_73'><b>73</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cork District, <a href='#Page_85'><b>85</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cork District—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Cycling, <a href='#Page_279'><b>279</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Fishing, <a href='#Page_297'><b>297</b></a>, <a href='#Page_300'><b>300</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Shooting, <a href='#Page_303'><b>303</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cork Exhibition, <a href='#Page_84'><b>84</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">County Clare, <a href='#Page_221'><b>221</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cratloe Woods, <a href='#Page_221'><b>221</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cromwell's Bridge, <a href='#Page_171'><b>171</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Crosshaven, <a href='#Page_95'><b>95</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Curragh Camp, <a href='#Page_31'><b>31</b></a>, <a href='#Page_32'><b>32</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Curraghmore Ho., <a href='#Page_118'><b>118</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Custom Ho., Dublin, <a href='#Page_21'><b>21</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cycling, <a href='#Page_278'><b>278</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dame St., Dublin, <a href='#Page_18'><b>18</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Derriana Lake, <a href='#Page_188'><b>188</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Derrynane, <a href='#Page_206'><b>206</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Derrynane Abbey, <a href='#Page_206'><b>206</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Diamond Mountain, <a href='#Page_247'><b>247</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dinish Island, Killarney, <a href='#Page_144'><b>144</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dooks, <a href='#Page_180'><b>180</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dromod, <a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dromoland Castle, <a href='#Page_222'><b>222</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dublin Castle, <a href='#Page_19'><b>19</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dublin and District, <a href='#Page_15'><b>15</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dublin District—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Fishing, <a href='#Page_295'><b>295</b></a>, <a href='#Page_299'><b>299</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Golfing, <a href='#Page_291'><b>291</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Shooting, <a href='#Page_302'><b>302</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Duke of York Route, <a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dungarvan, <a href='#Page_132'><b>132</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dunmore, <a href='#Page_122'><b>122</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dunmore East, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Eagle's Nest, Killarney, <a href='#Page_145'><b>145</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Eccles' Hotel, Glengarriff, <a href='#Page_166'><b>166</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Emly, <a href='#Page_133'><b>133</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ennis, <a href='#Page_221'><b>221</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ennistymon, <a href='#Page_223'><b>223</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Falls of Doonass, <a href='#Page_54'><b>54</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fenit, <a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fethard, <a href='#Page_128'><b>128</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fishing, <a href='#Page_295'><b>295</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Four Courts, Dublin, <a href='#Page_23'><b>23</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Foynes, <a href='#Page_62'><b>62</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Galteemore, <a href='#Page_132'><b>132</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Galway, <a href='#Page_238'><b>238</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Galway and Dist., <a href='#Page_235'><b>235</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Galway Golf Links, <a href='#Page_294'><b>294</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Galway, Queen's College, <a href='#Page_244'><b>244</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Gannets on Little Skellig, <a href='#Page_197'><b>197</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Gap of Dunloe, <a href='#Page_157'><b>157</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Garinish Island, <a href='#Page_212'><b>212</b></a>, <a href='#Page_215'><b>215</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Geological Section, Bantry to Killarney, <a href='#Page_263'><b>263</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Glenbeigh, <a href='#Page_182'><b>182</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Glenbrook, <a href='#Page_92'><b>92</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Glendalough, <a href='#Page_249'><b>249</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Glengarriff, <a href='#Page_166'><b>166</b></a>, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Golfing, <a href='#Page_291'><b>291</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Golfing at Lehinch, <a href='#Page_229'><b>229</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Gort, <a href='#Page_237'><b>237</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Gougane Barra, <a href='#Page_169'><b>169</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Grattan, <a href='#Page_17'><b>17</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Great Cross of the Scriptures, <a href='#Page_45'><b>45</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Guest House, Mount Melleray, <a href='#Page_111'><b>111</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Harristown, <a href='#Page_29'><b>29</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Headford, <a href='#Page_134'><b>134</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Holy Cross Abbey, <a href='#Page_129'><b>129</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Imperial Hotel, Waterford, <a href='#Page_117'><b>117</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Inchigeela, <a href='#Page_171'><b>171</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Innisfallen, Killarney, <a href='#Page_146'><b>146</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Irish Spurge, <a href='#Page_268'><b>268</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kells, <a href='#Page_38'><b>38</b></a>, <a href='#Page_182'><b>182</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kenmare, <a href='#Page_257'><b>257</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kenmare and Glengarriff, <a href='#Page_164'><b>164</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kenmare, Southern Hotel, <a href='#Page_166'><b>166</b></a>, <a href='#Page_218'><b>218</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kerry Ditchbank, <a href='#Page_264'><b>264</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kerry Slug, <a href='#Page_269'><b>269</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kildare, <a href='#Page_31'><b>31</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kilkee, <a href='#Page_225'><b>225</b></a>, <a href='#Page_228'><b>228</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kilkenny, <a href='#Page_33'><b>33</b></a>, <a href='#Page_34'><b>34</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kilkenny Castle, <a href='#Page_35'><b>35</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killaloe, <a href='#Page_58'><b>58</b></a>, <a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killaloe Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killery Bay, <a href='#Page_251'><b>251</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, <a href='#Page_136'><b>136</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Arbutus Island, <a href='#Page_267'><b>267</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Carrantual, <a href='#Page_146'><b>146</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Dinish, <a href='#Page_144'><b>144</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Eagle's Nest, <a href='#Page_145'><b>145</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Gap of Dunloe, <a href='#Page_157'><b>157</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Innisfallen, <a href='#Page_146'><b>146</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Meeting of the Waters, <a href='#Page_149'><b>149</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Muckross Abbey, <a href='#Page_151'><b>151</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Shooting the Rapids, <a href='#Page_143'><b>143</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Torc, <a href='#Page_153'><b>153</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Up. Lake, <a href='#Page_139'><b>139</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney District, Cycling, <a href='#Page_283'><b>283</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney District, Fishing, <a href='#Page_298'><b>298</b></a>, <a href='#Page_300'><b>300</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney and Glengarriff, <a href='#Page_133'><b>133</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killarney, Southern Hotel, <a href='#Page_136'><b>136</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Killorglin, <a href='#Page_178'><b>178</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kilmallock, <a href='#Page_133'><b>133</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kilrush, <a href='#Page_232'><b>232</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kincora, <a href='#Page_69'><b>69</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kinvara, <a href='#Page_237'><b>237</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Kylemore, <a href='#Page_253'><b>253</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lake Coomasaharn, <a href='#Page_186'><b>186</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lake Currane, <a href='#Page_200'><b>200</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lakes and Fjords of Kerry, <a href='#Page_175'><b>175</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lartigue Railway, <a href='#Page_63'><b>63</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Leenane, <a href='#Page_248'><b>248</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lehinch, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lehinch Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Letterfrack, <a href='#Page_248'><b>248</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Limerick, <a href='#Page_47'><b>47</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Limerick District, Cycling, <a href='#Page_281'><b>281</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Limerick District, Fishing, <a href='#Page_296'><b>296</b></a>, <a href='#Page_299'><b>299</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Limerick District, Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Limerick District, Shooting, <a href='#Page_303'><b>303</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Limerick Junction, <a href='#Page_46'><b>46</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Liscanor, <a href='#Page_232'><b>232</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lisdoonvarna, <a href='#Page_224'><b>224</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lismore, <a href='#Page_110'><b>110</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lismore Golf Links, <a href='#Page_293'><b>293</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Littleisland Golf Links, <a href='#Page_293'><b>293</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Look-out Cliff, Kilkee, <a href='#Page_227'><b>227</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lough Corrib, <a href='#Page_245'><b>245</b></a>, <a href='#Page_250'><b>250</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lough Gill, <a href='#Page_252'><b>252</b></a>, <a href='#Page_254'><b>254</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lough Gur, <a href='#Page_134'><b>134</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lough Ree, <a href='#Page_71'><b>71</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lucan, <a href='#Page_26'><b>26</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mallaranny, <a href='#Page_252'><b>252</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mallow, <a href='#Page_99'><b>99</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mallow Castle, <a href='#Page_100'><b>100</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mallow Golf Links, <a href='#Page_293'><b>293</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mangerton, <a href='#Page_160'><b>160</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Marina, Cork, <a href='#Page_75'><b>75</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Maryborough, <a href='#Page_39'><b>39</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Meeting of the Waters, Killarney, <a href='#Page_149'><b>149</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Midleton, <a href='#Page_105'><b>105</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Milltown Malbay, <a href='#Page_232'><b>232</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mitchelstown, <a href='#Page_131'><b>131</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Monasterevan, <a href='#Page_38'><b>38</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Monkstown, <a href='#Page_92'><b>92</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mount Melleray, <a href='#Page_109'><b>109</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mount Melleray, Guest House, <a href='#Page_111'><b>111</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mountain Stage, <a href='#Page_182'><b>182</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Muckross Abbey, <a href='#Page_151'><b>151</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Myrtle Grove, <a href='#Page_104'><b>104</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Naas, <a href='#Page_28'><b>28</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">National Library, Dublin, <a href='#Page_23'><b>23</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Natural History, <a href='#Page_260'><b>260</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nest of Wood Ant, <a href='#Page_271'><b>271</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Newcastle, <a href='#Page_62'><b>62</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Newbridge, <a href='#Page_31'><b>31</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Newport, <a href='#Page_248'><b>248</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">North Kerry, <a href='#Page_59'><b>59</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oughterard, <a href='#Page_245'><b>245</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oratory of Gallerius,<a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Parknasilla, <a href='#Page_210'><b>210</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Parknasilla, Southern Hotel, <a href='#Page_212'><b>212</b></a>, <a href='#Page_213'><b>213</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Passage (East), <a href='#Page_126'><b>126</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Passage (West), <a href='#Page_90'><b>90</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pass of Ballaghbeama, <a href='#Page_181'><b>181</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Patrick Street, Cork, <a href='#Page_74'><b>74</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pennywort, <a href='#Page_264'><b>264</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Portarlington, <a href='#Page_38'><b>38</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Portumna, <a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Poulaphouca, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Poulaphouca Waterfall, <a href='#Page_30'><b>30</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Purple Mountain, Killarney, <a href='#Page_159'><b>159</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Queen's College, Cork, <a href='#Page_79'><b>79</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Queen's College, Galway, <a href='#Page_244'><b>244</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Queenstown, <a href='#Page_92'><b>92</b></a>, <a href='#Page_258'><b>258</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Queenst'n Harbour, <a href='#Page_91'><b>91</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Raheen Lake, Currane, <a href='#Page_201'><b>201</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Rathkeale, <a href='#Page_62'><b>62</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Rathmore, <a href='#Page_134'><b>134</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Recess, <a href='#Page_259'><b>259</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Roche's Hotel, Glengarriff, <a href='#Page_166'><b>166</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Roscrea, <a href='#Page_39'><b>39</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ross Castle, Killarney, <a href='#Page_155'><b>155</b></a>, <a href='#Page_158'><b>158</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Round Tower, Clondalkin, <a href='#Page_25'><b>25</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Rushbrook Golf Links, <a href='#Page_294'><b>294</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Salmon Leap, Lucan, <a href='#Page_26'><b>26</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Salthill, Galway, <a href='#Page_242'><b>242</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sarsfield Statue, Limerick, <a href='#Page_50'><b>50</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Saxifraga umbrosa, <a href='#Page_265'><b>265</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Scariff, <a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shandon Church, Cork, <a href='#Page_82'><b>82</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shannon Development Company, <a href='#Page_67'><b>67</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shannon Steamer, <a href='#Page_70'><b>70</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shooting, <a href='#Page_302'><b>302</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shooting the Rapids, Killarney, <a href='#Page_143'><b>143</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sir Walter Raleigh's House, <a href='#Page_103'><b>103</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Skelligs, <a href='#Page_194'><b>194</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Slea Head, <a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sligo District—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Cycling, <a href='#Page_289'><b>289</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Fishing, <a href='#Page_298'><b>298</b></a>, <a href='#Page_301'><b>301</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Shooting, <a href='#Page_305'><b>305</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sligo Golf Links, <a href='#Page_294'><b>294</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sligo, Nat. History, <a href='#Page_274'><b>274</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Smerwick, <a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Southern Hotel, Caragh Lake, <a href='#Page_178'><b>178</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Southern Hotel, Kenmare, <a href='#Page_166'><b>166</b></a>, <a href='#Page_218'><b>218</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Southern Hotel, Killarney, <a href='#Page_136'><b>136</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Southern Hotel, Parknasilla, <a href='#Page_212'><b>212</b></a>, <a href='#Page_213'><b>213</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Southern Hotel, Waterville, <a href='#Page_198'><b>198</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spa, <a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spanish Point, <a href='#Page_232'><b>232</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spike Island, <a href='#Page_92'><b>92</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sport, <a href='#Page_277'><b>277</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Staigue Fort, <a href='#Page_202'><b>202</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">St. Canice's Cathedral, <a href='#Page_36'><b>36</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">St. Finbarr's Cathedral, <a href='#Page_80'><b>80</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">St. Michael's Rock, <a href='#Page_194'><b>194</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">St. Patrick's Cathedral, <a href='#Page_20'><b>20</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Straffan, <a href='#Page_28'><b>28</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Strancally Castle, <a href='#Page_106'><b>106</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">St. Stephen's Green, <a href='#Page_17'><b>17</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sneem, <a href='#Page_207'><b>207</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Suir, <a href='#Page_116'><b>116</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Summer and Winter Resort, <a href='#Page_256'><b>256</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thomastown, <a href='#Page_38'><b>38</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Three Sisters, <a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thurles, <a href='#Page_128'><b>128</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Torc, <a href='#Page_153'><b>153</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tralee, <a href='#Page_66'><b>66</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tramore, <a href='#Page_119'><b>119</b></a>, <a href='#Page_259'><b>259</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tramore Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Treaty Stone, Lim'k. <a href='#Page_48'><b>48</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Trinity College, <a href='#Page_18'><b>18</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tuam, <a href='#Page_238'><b>238</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tullamore Golf Links, <a href='#Page_291'><b>291</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tullow, <a href='#Page_29'><b>29</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Twelve Bens, <a href='#Page_245'><b>245</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Upper Lake, Killarney, <a href='#Page_139'><b>139</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Valencia, <a href='#Page_259'><b>259</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Valencia Harbour, <a href='#Page_190'><b>190</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Valencia Island, <a href='#Page_188'><b>188</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterford, <a href='#Page_112'><b>112</b></a>, <a href='#Page_259'><b>259</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterford and District, <a href='#Page_112'><b>112</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterford District—</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Cycling, <a href='#Page_284'><b>284</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Fishing, <a href='#Page_297'><b>297</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Golf Links, <a href='#Page_292'><b>292</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Shooting, <a href='#Page_304'><b>304</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterford and East Cork, Natural History, <a href='#Page_262'><b>262</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterford, The Quays, <a href='#Page_115'><b>115</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterville, <a href='#Page_196'><b>196</b></a>, <a href='#Page_259'><b>259</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waterville, Southern Hotel, <a href='#Page_199'><b>199</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">West Cork, &c., Natural History, <a href='#Page_262'><b>262</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">West Galway and West Mayo, Natural History, <a href='#Page_272'><b>272</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Westport, <a href='#Page_248'><b>248</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wicklow and Wexford, Natural History, <a href='#Page_261'><b>261</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wolf Spider, <a href='#Page_273'><b>273</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Youghal, <a href='#Page_101'><b>101</b></a>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Youghal Golf Links, <a href='#Page_293'><b>293</b></a>.</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span><br /><br /></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span></p> +<h2>Advertisements.<br /><br /></h2> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>Gresham Hotel,<br />DUBLIN.</h2> + +<p><br /></p> +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img310.jpg" alt="Gresham Hotel" title="Gresham Hotel" /></div> + + +<p>This Old Established and First Class Hotel is situate in +Sackville-street, one of the finest thoroughfares in the world. Many +improvements have of late been made—Electric Light, &c. Visitors to +Dublin will find their Requirements catered for at the Gresham in a +manner unsurpassed by any Hotel in the City. No efforts are spared to +ensure in every possible way the comfort of its Patrons.</p> + +<h4>120 BEDROOMS.</h4> + +<h4>Spacious Saloons and Ball Room on Ground Floor.</h4> + +<h4>FIRST CLASS CUISINE. MODERATE CHARGES.</h4> + +<p class='author'>JAMES FARRELLY, Manager.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img311.jpg" alt="Shelbourne Hotel" title="Shelbourne Hotel" /></div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>The "Hammam" Hotel AND Turkish Baths,</h3> + +<h4>SACKVILLE ST. DUBLIN,</h4> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img312a.jpg" alt="Hammam Hotel" title="Hammam Hotel" /></div> + +<h4>"Three Days' Guide to Dublin" free on application.</h4> + +<h4>Daily Terms from 8/6.</h4> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p class='center'><i>By Special Permission of Her late Most Gracious Majesty Queen +Victoria.</i></p> + +<h3>The ROYAL VICTORIA Hotel,</h3> + +<p><span class="smcap">Patronised by</span> <i>His Majesty King Edward VII., H.R.H. the Duke of +Connaught, the Royal Families of France and Belgium, the Nobility and +Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, and leading American Families.</i></p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img312b.jpg" alt="Hammam Hotel" title="Hammam Hotel" /></div> + +<h4>KILLARNEY</h4> + +<p>MAGNIFICENTLY situated on Lower Lake, facing Innisfallen. Highly +recommended for its superior comfort. The only Hotel in Killarney at +which King Edward VII. stayed when Prince of Wales.</p> + +<p class='author'>JOHN O'LEARY, <span class="smcap">Proprietor</span>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h3>LAKE HOTEL,<br />KILLARNEY LAKES.</h3> + +<p class='center'><i>Patronised by HIS MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY THE KING.</i></p> + +<p class='center'><b>Under New Management. Standing in its own Grounds upwards of 60 acres +on the Shore of the Lower Lake.</b></p> + +<p class='center'>Unrivalled in situation, concentrating in one view all that is +picturesque and sublime in the scenery.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img313.jpg" alt="Lake Hotel" title="Lake Hotel" /></div> + + +<p>NEWLY FURNISHED; Electric Light throughout (Bedrooms included). Boating, +Fishing, and Shooting. Conveyances Daily for Local Tours at fixed rates +for each Person, also for Private Hiring. Billiards, Tennis.</p> + +<h4>THE ONLY HOTEL IN THE DISTRICT DIRECTLY ON THE LAKE SHORE.</h4> + +<p>Hotel Omnibus meets all Trains. The Glengarriff Coach stops at Entrance +Gates to take up and set down Passengers.</p> + +<p>The Railway Company allow only the Porters of their own Hotel on the +Arrival Platform. The Lake Hotel Porters will be found at the Station +Entrance.</p> + +<p class='author'>Address THE MANAGER.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<h2>WEST END HOTEL,<br />KILKEE.</h2> + +<h3>First-Class Accommodation.</h3> + +<h4>Beautifully Situated. Overlooking Bay. Magnificent Coast Scenery.</h4> + +<h4>Nearest Bathing Resorts.</h4> + +<h4>Recently Furnished. Board per Week or per Day.</h4> + +<h5>'Bus and Porter await arrival of all Trains.</h5> + +<p class='center'>Coupons of The Irish Railway Companies Tourist Office,<br />2, Charing Cross, +London.</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<h3>KILKEE, CO. CLARE.</h3> + +<h2>Royal Marine Hotel.</h2> + +<p>Extensive additions have been made for the coming season. It is the most +central Hotel in Kilkee, commanding full view of Bay and Cliffs. Is +within two minutes' walk of Railway Station, principal Bathing Resorts, +Post Office, and places of Worship. This Hotel contains all facilities +and convenience of a First-Class Hotel, with the quiet and comforts of +home. Tourists and Visitors will find it to their advantage to patronise +the above Hotel.</p> + +<h4>Arrangements made for Private Families.</h4> + +<p class='center'><i>The Hotel Omnibus attends the trains.</i></p> + +<h4>OWN DAIRY.</h4> + +<p class='author'>Address: PROPRIETOR.</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2>Castleconnell,<br />CO. LIMERICK.</h2> + +<h4>"One of Ireland's beauty spots." Seven miles from Limerick.</h4> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img315.jpg" alt="Castleconnell" title="Castleconnell" /></div> + + +<h3>SHANNON HOTEL.</h3> + +<h5>(Mrs. K. Enright, Proprietress.)</h5> + +<h3><i>ANGLERS' AND TOURIST RESORT.</i></h3> + +<h4>Head-Quarters C.T.C.</h4> + +<p class='center'>Five miles walk along the banks of the Shannon. <span class="smcap">Magnificent River +Scenery</span>, Including "<span class="smcap">far-famed Rapids of Doonass</span>."</p> + +<h3>Cycling.—Boating.—Driving.—Pretty Walks.</h3> + +<p class='center'><b>Castleconnell</b> can be reached from</p> + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" width="60%" cellspacing="0" summary="Castleconnell can be reached from"> +<tr><td align='left'>London in</td><td align='right'>13½ hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Liverpool under</td><td align='right'>11½ hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Leeds</td><td align='right'>13½ hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Manchester</td><td align='right'>11¼ hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Birmingham</td><td align='right'>12¼ hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>York</td><td align='right'>14 hours, 20 mins.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Bristol</td><td align='right'>15 hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Dublin</td><td align='right'>3 hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Cork</td><td align='right'>2 hours, 55 mins.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Killarney under</td><td align='right'>4 hours.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Waterford</td><td align='right'>3 hours, 20 mins.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Killaloe</td><td align='right'>20 minutes.</td></tr> +</table> + + +<p class='center'>N.B.—Salmon Fishing by arrangement; Trout Fishing <span class="smcap">FREE</span>; also +good Pike, Perch, and Roach Fishing <span class="smcap">FREE</span>.</p> + +<p class='center'>Telephone 502, Limerick.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img316.jpg" alt="Royal Hotel" title="Royal Hotel" /></div> + + +<h2>ROYAL HOTEL,</h2> + +<h3>VALENCIA ISLAND, CO. KERRY.</h3> + +<p class='center'>This Hotel has been patronised by H. M. The <span class="smcap">King</span> And Their +Royal Highnesses The <span class="smcap">Prince</span> and <span class="smcap">Princess of Wales</span>.</p> + +<h5>It is now considered the Most Comfortable and Up-to-Date Hotel in +Ireland.</h5> + +<h4>HOT AND COLD SEA WATER BATHS.</h4> + +<h4>CHARGES FIXED AND MODERATE.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></h4> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2>CUNARD LINE,</h2> + +<h4>INAUGURATED JULY 4th, 1840.</h4> + +<p>NOTICE.—The Steamers of this Line come alongside the Prince's Stage, +Liverpool, to land or embark Passengers without the intervention of +Tenders, and London Passengers depart from or arrive at the Riverside +Railway Station on the Quay adjoining.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img317.jpg" alt="Cunard Line" title="Cunard Line" /></div> + + +<h3>FLEET.</h3> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="1" width="90%" cellspacing="0" summary="Fleet"> +<tr><td align='left'>CAMPANIA.</td><td align='left'>UMBRIA.</td><td align='left'>SAXONIA.</td><td align='left'>VERIA.</td><td align='left'>TYRIA.</td><td align='left'>ALEPPO.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>LUCANIA.</td><td align='left'>ULTONIA.</td><td align='left'>AURANIA.</td><td align='left'>CYPRIA.</td><td align='left'>SAMARIA.</td><td align='left'>CHERBOURG.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>ETRURIA.</td><td align='left'>IVERNIA.</td><td align='left'>SYLVANIA.</td><td align='left'>PAVIA.</td><td align='left'>SARAGOSSA.</td><td align='left'>CARPATHIA, Building</td></tr> +</table> + + + +<h4>Sailings to and from New York and Boston on Saturdays and Tuesdays.</h4> + +<h4>FASTEST SHIPS BETWEEN LIVERPOOL AND NEW YORK.</h4> + +<h4>LARGEST SHIPS BETWEEN LIVERPOOL AND BOSTON.</h4> + +<p class='center'><b>Fitted with Marconi's System of Wireless Telegraphy.</b></p> + +<p>The Twin-Screw Ships "IVERNIA" and "SAXONIA," which sail between +Liverpool and Boston, are among the largest Ships afloat, and their +remarkable steadiness makes sea-sickness practically impossible.</p> + +<h4>UNSURPASSED ACCOMMODATION AT MODERATE FARES FOR ALL CLASSES AND FOR ALL +STEAMERS.</h4> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h3>MEDITERRANEAN SERVICE.</h3> + +<h4>FREQUENT FREIGHT SAILINGS FROM LIVERPOOL</h4> + +<p><b>For Syria, Smyrna, Constantinople, Malta, Genoa, Leghorn, Naples, +Brindisi, Trieste, Venice, Fiume, Bari, Ancona, Palermo, Messina, +Catania, Patras, and Corfu.</b></p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h3>HAVRE SERVICE.</h3> + +<h4>Freight Steamers from Liverpool and Havre weekly.</h4> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<p>* * * For full particulars apply at the Company's Offices: in New York, at +29, Broadway; in Boston, at 99, State-street; in Havre, at 28, Quai +d'Orleans; in Paris, at 2, bis Rue Scribe; in London, at 32, +Cockspur-street, S.W., and 93, Bishopsgate-street, E.C.; in Manchester, +at 18, Brazennose-street; in Glasgow, at 30, Jamaica-street; in Leith, +at Exchange Buildings; in Belfast, at 49, Queen's-square; in Queenstown, +at Cunard Wharf; or to</p> + +<h4>THE CUNARD STEAM SHIP COMPANY, LIMITED,</h4> + +<p class='author'>8, WATER-STREET, LIVERPOOL.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h3>Great Western Railway of England.</h3> + + + <h3>SHORTEST ROUTE</h3> + <h4>BETWEEN</h4> + <h3>ENGLAND</h3> + <h4>AND THE</h4> + <h3>SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND.</h3> + + <h4>FAST AND COMFORTABLE NEW STEAMERS</h4> + <h5>SAIL REGULARLY BETWEEN</h5> + <h3>WATERFORD AND CORK</h3> + <h5>AND</h5> + <h3>NEW MILFORD.</h3> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + + <h3>OPEN SEA PASSAGE</h3> + <h5>BETWEEN</h5> + <h3>Waterford and New Milford.</h3> + <h4>Under 5 Hours.</h4> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + + <h3>THE BOAT TRAINS</h3> + <h4>RUNNING BETWEEN</h4> + <h3>NEW MILFORD AND PADDINGTON</h3> + <p class='center'>In connection with the Steamers are provided with</p> + +<p class='center'>Central Corridors.<br /> +Lighted by Electricity.<br /> +Lavatory Accommodation.</p> + + + <p class='center'><i>Direct Communication with Guard.</i></p> + + +<p>REFRESHMENTS may be obtained in the trains by First, Second, and Third +Class Passengers.</p> + +<p>For further information as to train service, fares, &c., see the +Company's time tables.</p> + +<p>Full particulars will be supplied on application to Mr. <span class="smcap">H. J. +Nicholls</span>, Great Western Railway Company's Offices, Waterford; Mr. +<span class="smcap">A. W. Perks</span>, Adelphi Wharf, Waterford; Mr. <span class="smcap">E. Fogg</span>, +Railway Chambers, King Street, Cork; Mr. <span class="smcap">Alfred Dodd</span>, Great +Western Agent, Limerick Terminus; Messrs. <span class="smcap">Cook & Son</span>, Main +Street, Killarney; or to Mr. <span class="smcap">T. I. Allen</span>, Superintendent of the +Line, Paddington Station, London.</p> + +<p class='author'><b>J. L. WILKINSON, General Manager.</b></p> + +<p><i><span style="margin-left: 2em;">July, 1902.</span></i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h3>WATERFORD.</h3> + +<h2><i>IMPERIAL HOTEL.</i></h2> + +<h3>FIRST CLASS HOTEL,</h3> + +<p class='center'>Patronised by the Aristocracy, Tourists and Commercial Gentlemen.</p> + + + + + <p class='center'>Spacious Drawing,<br /> + Coffee, Commercial,<br /> + Billiard and Bath Rooms.<br /> + Smoking, Stock, and Rent Rooms.</p> + + + +<p class='center'>Sanitation Certified. The Hotel has been recently enlarged, +re-furnished, and decorated.</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h4>TARIFF MODERATE.</h4> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> + +<h3>COMMERCIAL ROOM DINNER<br /><span style="margin-left: 6em;">from 1.45 to 3.30 daily.</span></h3> + +<h4>Table d'Hote at 7.30 daily.</h4> + +<p class='center'><i>Omnibus meets all Trains and Steamers.</i></p> + +<p><span class="left">Telephone, No. 22.</span><span class="right">Telegrams—"IMPERIAL," Waterford.</span><br /></p> + +<p class='author'>W. A. MURRAY, Proprietor.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span></p> + + + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Permission to visit Adare Manor may be obtained (on +application) from the Head Steward, Adare.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The other places of worship in Cork are as follows:—<i>Roman +Catholic:</i> St. Mary's Cathedral, Clarence-street; SS. Peter and Paul's, +Patrick-street (designed by Pugin); St. Patrick's, King-street (Military +Mass); St. Finbarr's, Dunbar-street (here Hogan's masterpiece, "The Dead +Christ," may be seen under High Altar); St. Joseph's, Mayfield; St. +Finbarr's, West, Lough-road; St. Augustine's Priory (Augustinians), +Great George-street; St. Mary's (Dominicans), Pope's-quay; St. Francis' +(Franciscans), Liberty-street; Holy Trinity (Friars Minors Capuchins), +Charlotte-quay; St. Vincent's (Congregation of the Mission), Sunday's +Well; and Chapel of Convent of St. Mary's of the Isle, Fitton-street. +<i>Church of Ireland:</i> Christ Church, South Main-street; St. Ann's, +Church-street; St. Luke's, Summer Hill; St. Mary's, Shanakiel-road; St. +Nicholas', Cove-street; St. Paul's, Paul-street; St. Peter's, North +Main-street; Cork Episcopal Free Church, Langford-row; St. Michael's, +Blackrock; and Frankfield Church. <i>Other Denominations:</i> Baptist Church, +King-street; Congregational Church, George-street; Patrick-street +Methodist Chapel; Society of Friends, Grattan-street; Presbyterian, +Summer Hill; Plymouth Brethren, Prince's-street; and Cork Hebrews, 10, +South Terrace.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> "Amber water." It recently passed from the representatives +of the late Sir John Pope Hennessy into the possession of Sir Henry +Blake. Permission to visit the house may be obtained on application to +Mr. French, Land Agent, South Mall, Cork.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> To be seen in the National Gallery, Dublin.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a></p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" width="75%" cellspacing="0" summary="Principal Mountains"> +<tr><th colspan="2">Heights of the Principal Mountains, According to the +Ordnance Survey.</th></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Carrantual,</td><td align='right'>3,414</td><td align='center'>feet.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Mangerton,</td><td align='right'>2,756</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Purple Mount,</td><td align='right'>2,739</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Toomies,</td><td align='right'>2,413</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Torc,</td><td align='right'>1,764</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Eagle's Nest,</td><td align='right'>1,103</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2"> </td></tr> +<tr><th colspan="2">Elevation of Loughs above the Sea.</th></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Devil's Punch Bowl,</td><td align='right'>2,206</td><td align='center'>feet.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Gum-Meem-Na-Copasta</td><td align='right'>2,156</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Gouragh,</td><td align='right'>1,226</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Callee,</td><td align='right'>1,096</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Black Lough,</td><td align='right'>587</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Cush Valley,</td><td align='right'>337</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Kittane,</td><td align='right'>256</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Coom-a-Dhuv,</td><td align='right'>197</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Upper Lake,</td><td align='right'>70</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Lower Lake,</td><td align='right'>66</td><td align='center'>"</td></tr> +</table> + +</div></div> + +<p class='center'>PRINTED BY ALEX. THOM & CO., LIMITED,<br /> +87, 88, & 89, ABBEY STREET,<br /> +DUBLIN.</p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sunny Side of Ireland, by +John O'Mahony and R. Lloyd Praeger + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUNNY SIDE OF IRELAND *** + +***** This file should be named 19329-h.htm or 19329-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/9/3/2/19329/ + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Janet Blenkinship and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Lloyd Praeger + +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: The Sunny Side of Ireland + How to see it by the Great Southern and Western Railway + +Author: John O'Mahony and R. Lloyd Praeger + +Release Date: September 19, 2006 [EBook #19329] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SUNNY SIDE OF IRELAND *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Janet Blenkinship and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + ++------------------------------------------------------------+ +|Transcriber's Note: Inconsistent spelling of place names | +|are left as in the original. | ++------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + + THE SUNNY SIDE + + OF + + IRELAND. + + [Illustration] + + + + + Second Edition. Re-written and Enlarged. + + THE SUNNY SIDE + + OF + + IRELAND. + + HOW TO SEE IT BY + THE GREAT SOUTHERN AND WESTERN RAILWAY. + + BY + + JOHN O'MAHONY. + + With Seven Maps and over 160 Illustrations. + + + AND A CHAPTER ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF + THE SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND, + + BY + + R. LLOYD PRAEGER, B.A., B.E., &c. + + + ALEX. THOM & CO. (LIMITED), + 87, 88, & 89, ABBEY STREET, + DUBLIN. + + + + +PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION. + + +These pages attempt to make better known the large part of Ireland which +is served by the Great Southern and Western Railway Company, and while +doing so to realise Shakespeare's words: + + "An honest tale speeds best being plainly told." + +If they succeed in these endeavours, they will satisfy the compiler. No +inexorable route is insisted upon, but no suggestion is stinted which +may help the tourist to enjoy fully the beautiful country he passes +through--and a beautiful country it truly is, be it approached from +Athlone, its north-western gate, by the Shannon, where, + + "In the quiet watered land, the land of roses, + Stands Saint Kieran's city fair," + +or from its south-western side, in the kingdom of Kerry, where the ocean +leans against the mountains, and the storm-swept peak of Skellig Michael +makes the most westerly citadel of Christ in the Old World! Everywhere +within its broad borders, swift-rushing rivers, mirror-like lakes, and +mountains tiaraed in the skies, delight the vision and gladden the +heart. + +The Gaelic names of places are usually word pictures reflecting with +fidelity the physical features of each place, or "tell sad stories of +the death of kings." Where possible, the equivalents have been given in +English. + +With these forewords, nothing further remains but to offer an Irish +welcome-- + FAILTE. + + + + +PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION. + + +Since "The Sunny Side of Ireland" was issued the Royal Assent has been +given to an Act of Parliament which makes the Great Southern and Western +Railway foremost in every sense amongst Irish Railways. The two +Provinces of Munster and Connaught are now knit together by a huge +network of railway lines comprised in their amalgamated system. + +The several counties thus included are dealt with in this Second +Edition. The volume is further enhanced by more particular information +as to the sports and pastimes of the country, and by a valuable chapter +on the Natural History of the South and West of Ireland, by writers of +authority on such subjects. + + + + + LIST OF MAPS. + + + MAP OF THE GREAT SOUTHERN AND + WESTERN RAILWAY AND ITS CONNECTIONS + IN IRELAND 6 + + MAP SHOWING CONNECTIONS OF THE + GREAT SOUTHERN AND WESTERN + RAILWAY IN GREAT BRITAIN 7 + + MAP OF DUBLIN CITY 14 + + MAP OF ENVIRONS OF DUBLIN 15 + + MAP OF CORK CITY 72 + + MAP OF ENVIRONS OF CORK 73 + + PICTORIAL MAP OF KILLARNEY DISTRICT 132 + + + + + CONTENTS. Page + + + INTRODUCTION 8 + + DUBLIN AND DISTRICT-- + + DUBLIN 15 + + DUBLIN DISTRICT 24 + + LIMERICK AND DISTRICT-- + + LIMERICK 46 + + LIMERICK DISTRICT 53 + + THE SHANNON LAKES 67 + + CORK AND DISTRICT-- + + CORK 73 + + CORK DISTRICT 85 + + THE RIVER BLACKWATER, YOUGHAL, &C. 98 + + WATERFORD AND DISTRICT 112 + + KILLARNEY AND GLENGARRIFF 133 + + LAKES AND FJORDS OF KERRY 175 + + COUNTY CLARE 221 + + GALWAY AND DISTRICT 235 + + CONNEMARA AND SLIGO 245 + + SUMMER AND WINTER RESORTS 256 + + NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND 260 + + + SPORTS-- + + CYCLING 278 + + GOLF 291 + + RIVER FISHING 295 + + LAKE FISHING 299 + + SHOOTING 303 + + + INDEX 306 + + + ADVERTISEMENTS 309 + + + + +Introduction. + + +Travelling through Ireland in the good old times was at best a +precarious and inconvenient diversion. Those who had to do so regretted +the necessity, and those who had not, praised Providence. Many "persons +of quality," to use Dr. Johnson's phrase, have written narratives of +their adventures and experiences in "the most damnable country." No man +of position, even early in the nineteenth century, would dream of +travelling threescore miles from his residence without having signed and +sealed his last will and testament. The highways were beset by +"Gentlemen of the Road," such as that fascinating felon, "Brennan on the +Moor," of whom the ballad tells-- + + "A brace of loaded pistols he carried night and day." + +The coach roads were dangerous, the stage was deplorable, and everything +but the scenery unpleasant. The interior and west of the country were +connected with Dublin by canals cut in the time of the Irish +Parliament, which followed the enterprise of the Dutch. They were looked +upon at the time as feats of engineering skill, somewhat in the light +that we view the Suez or Panama Canals to-day. Neville, the engineer, +was the recipient of extravagant encomiums from the Lords and Commons, +and his fame is embalmed in a street ballad which sings the praise of-- + + "Bold Neville, + Who made the streams run level + In that bounding river + Called the Grand Canal." + +Nowadays we have changed all that, and Neville and his skill are as +little remembered in Ireland as the military-road cutter in Scotland, of +whom, to show that + +[Illustration: G. S. & W. R. Corridor Train.] + +Ireland had not the monopoly in "bulls," an English admirer wrote:-- + + "If you had seen those roads before they + Were made, + You would hold up your hands and bless + General Wade." + +A poor Italian boy--Charles Bianconi--who tramped through the country as +a print-seller, was the first, in the days of Waterloo, in the south of +Ireland, to begin really that healthy competition with the mail-coaches +which made straight the way for the Iron Horse. + +The Great Southern and Western Railway was incorporated in 1845. Mr. +Under-Secretary Drummond, the English statesman who got closest to the +Irish heart, was identified with the construction of the line. + +Year after year the Company prospered and increased, gradually absorbing +the smaller lines adjoining it until the year 1901, when it amalgamated +the only two other systems of broad gauge lines in their district which +had remained independent. Practically the two provinces of Munster and +Connaught are now knit together by the great network of railway lines +which comprise the Great Southern and Western System. The total length +is about 1,100 miles. The main line stretches from Dublin, through Cork, +to Queenstown, forming the route for the American Mails and the great +transatlantic passenger traffic. Branches extend to Waterford, Limerick, +Killarney, and Kerry, and every place of importance in the South of +Ireland, while in the west the line extends from Tralee, through +Limerick, to Sligo. The carriages which the Company provide are of the +very latest design; vestibule corridor trains, with dining and breakfast +cars, are run daily, and the speed of the trains will bear comparison +with any. The journey, Dublin to Cork (165 miles) is performed in four +hours; to Killarney (189 miles) in about fifteen minutes more, and all +the important tourist centres can be reached within a very short time. +The comfort of passengers is well arranged for; refreshment rooms are +provided at the principal stations, and breakfast, luncheon, and tea +baskets can always be had, as well as pillows, rugs, and all the modern +conveniences of travel. Besides all this, the enterprise of the Company +has provided at Killarney, Parknasilla, Kenmare, Caragh Lake, and +Waterville, hotels, which for appearance and luxury, tempered by +economy, are the equals of any in Europe. + +[Illustration: Interior of G. S. & W. R. Dining Carriage.] + +The scenery of Ireland surpasses the most roseate expectations. Within a +comparatively small compass her scenic beauties include mountains, +lakes, and seas, and it is the good fortune of the Great Southern and +Western Company to have within its borders the finest scenery in the +country. The "Skies of Erin" have been paid tribute to by artists again +and again. Turner said the sun never seemed to set so beautifully +anywhere as in Ireland, and Lady Butler, the well-known painter, has +expressed the opinion that nowhere, except in the valley of the Nile, +does the firmament put forth such varied changes of beauty as in +Ireland. To the Gulf Stream, which strikes the south-western coast, +scientists attribute the mildness of the climate. From Queenstown to +Leenane the coast-line contains countless health resorts, where invalids +may be recommended winter quarters as salubrious as many of the +continental districts. + +The sportsman has always found himself at home here. The fine hunting +counties of Kildare, Tipperary, Kilkenny, and Waterford are familiar to +every son of Nimrod. Shooting and fishing, although the preserves are +not so many or so well kept as in Scotland, may be called the staple +sports of Ireland. Golf has come to stay, and within recent years links +have been laid in the vicinity of most of the tourist districts. + +One word for Irish industries will not be out of place. Ireland has no +industries in the sense in which England has. With the exception of +Belfast, there is no place in the country which approaches to a factory +town in the sense in which that phrase is understood across the channel. +Agriculture, of course, is the backbone of Ireland, and in connection +with it the creamery system of the south may be mentioned. Anyone +anxious to find a line of industry in Ireland which has beaten the Dane +in his own market should visit Cleeves' famous factory at Limerick. The +woollen industry in the country has withstood destructive legislature, +and a typical example of modern success is the great tweed factory of +Morroghs, at Douglas, County Cork. The Blarney tweeds have become a +household word, but Douglas is shouldering them in the keen competition +for public recognition. The great bacon-curing houses of Denny, at +Waterford, are well worth seeing, as is also the thriving wholesome +Co-operative Factory at Tralee. In Dublin the mammoth brewery of +Guinness and Sons can be viewed under the conductorship of a servant of +the firm employed for the sole purpose of showing visitors through the +great concern. But it is the lesser industries in Ireland which are +really attractive. The law of the survival of the fittest stands to +these--the homespuns woven in the cottages, the beautiful Dublin poplin, +the delicate lace of Youghal and Limerick, the exquisite pottery of +Belleek, these good things are beyond compare. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Sackville-street, Dublin.] + + + + +Dublin and District. + +DUBLIN. + + +The Tourist too often hurries away from Dublin to the south or west with +but a superficial knowledge of the attractions of the city. It will well +repay a stay, and if the visitor happens to come at Horse Show week he +can easily believe himself sojourning in the capital of one of the +wealthiest countries in Europe. During that short carnival each autumn +the tears are brushed aside, and Erin is all smiles and welcomes for her +guests. The hotels are good, the lodging-houses are clean, and moderate +in price. The restaurants have much improved within recent years. +Readers of Lord Mayo's encouraging articles to would-be Irish tourists +will do well to test his tribute to "The Dolphin" in Essex-street. If +anyone wants to see the ladies of fashion at their tea, Mitchell's in +Grafton-street is a sure find, and the well-equipped D.B.C. tea-houses, +which are established in several parts of the city, will meet the +requirements of moderate purses. + +To attempt to mention more than a few of the more important places worth +seeing in this city would be beyond the intention of these pages. +Stretched beneath the beautiful Dublin Mountains the city scatters +itself about the sides of the River Liffey. To get from one place to +another in Dublin is simplicity itself. The electric-tram system is +equal to any in Europe, and excels most in the cheapness of its fares. +The cars run through the principal streets and along the quay sides to +the suburbs. A good view of the city may be had from the top of a tram +on a fine day. Those who wish to suit their own convenience, however, +will always avail themselves of the outside car. The jaunting car is to +Dublin what the gondola is to Venice--at least an imaginative Irish +Member of Parliament has said so, and that settles the matter. When +selecting an "outside" take care that you secure one equipped with a +pneumatic tyre. The Dublin driver is much maligned, he is generally +courteous, and not without humour. The municipal authorities supply him +with a list of fares and distances. He is bound to produce it should any +difficulty arise as to the financial relations, which sometimes happens. + +[Illustration: _Photo,, Lawrence, Dublin._ Shelbourne Hotel, +Stephen's-green.] + +Dublin was an old fortress of the Danes. They held the whole eastern +seaboard of Ireland until 1014 when Brian Boru defeated them and broke +their power at the battle of Clontarf. Historic remains of the old +city--the Ford of the Hurdles the Irish call it--there are none. The +Danes, the Normans, the Elizabethan, the Cromwellian, the Jacobite, all +made history in Dublin in their day, but the city as it stands is +practically modern. Between the Rotunda, one of the finest maternity +hospitals in the world, and St. Stephen's Green, the beautiful park +presented to the citizens by Lord Ardilaun, the principal buildings in +the city lie. The College Green, however, forms a natural centre from +which to make a short tour. The magnificent portico of the Bank of +Ireland--formerly the Irish House of Parliament--is characterized by +surprising dignity of proportion. Visitors can witness the printing of +bank notes. The Irish House of Lords, which remains unaltered, is an +oblong room with recess for throne at one end. Within may be seen two +valuable Dutch tapestries, the one representing the famous Siege of +Derry, and the second the Battle of the Boyne. Immediately outside "The +Old House at Home," as the historic building is affectionately called by +Irishmen, is a noble statue of Henry Grattan. He was the people's +darling from 1782, when the Volunteers mustered in College-green, up to +1800, when the Act of Union was passed. Behind Grattan stands the old +leaden statue of William III., erected in 1701. This equestrian figure +of "King Billy," as the prince of glorious, pious, and immortal memory +is familiarly known, has been the centre of, in its time, much mischief +and merriment. Up to 1822 His Majesty was annually decorated with orange +ribbons to celebrate the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne. This +party demonstration was always resented by the populace, and King Billy +came in for no end of ill-treatment. However, he has braved the battle +and the breeze. + +Turning from the Bank we face the University, in front of which stand +fine bronze statues of its distinguished sons, Edmund Burke and Oliver +Goldsmith. The University, unlike its sisters, Oxford and Cambridge, +contains but a single college--that of the Holy and Undivided +Trinity--founded by Adam Loftus in Elizabeth's reign. Visitors to the +College should be shown the chapel halls, museum, and library, and grand +quadrangles, including Lever's notorious "Botany Bay." While in the +library the world-famous "Book of Kells" may be inspected, and the +enduring qualities of its marvellous illuminations admired. The College +park is very beautiful, and during the College races at midsummer +presents quite a gala sight. + +[Illustration: _Photo,, Lawrence, Dublin._ Dublin Castle.] + +In Dame-street most of the Irish banks have their offices. At the end of +the street furthest from the College is the City Hall. The building was +originally the Royal Exchange, but in the middle of the nineteenth +century it was handed over to the Dublin Corporation. The Corinthian +columns which form the portico are very handsome. The entrance is +modern, the older structure having given way in "the troubled times," +while a crowd of citizens were beguiling the time watching a public +whipping of a malefactor from the steps. The centre hall is crowned with +a decorated dome. The hall contains statues of O'Connell, +Under-Secretary Drummond, Grattan, and Dr. Lucas, a publicist in +eighteen-century Dublin. The Council Chamber is well furnished, and some +of the portraits of former Lords Mayor are very fine. Immediately behind +the City Hall is Dublin Castle, far from being the imposing structure +those familiar with its history may suppose. The Lower Castle Yard is +entered from Palace-street. It contains the Birmingham Tower, a modern +structure replacing the fortress, some of the walls of which still +stand, from which the fiery Red Hugh O'Donel, Prince of Tyrone, escaped. +The Castle Chapel is beside the Tower, and permission to visit it is +easily obtained. Among the things of interest in the chapel are the +emblazoned arms of all the Irish viceroys. The wood work throughout is +Irish oak, and there are ninety heads in marble to represent the +sovereigns of England. St. Patrick's Hall, the Throne-room, and the Long +Drawing-room are the most important of the State apartments. While in +the vicinity of the Castle, St. Patrick's Cathedral should be visited. +Founded so long ago as 1190, this cathedral, dedicated to the Apostle of +Ireland, has had a chequered history. Mostly Early English in +architecture, modern styles have been grafted on the building without +consistency or unity of ideal. The monuments are many. Dean Swift's +bears an inscription written by himself and breathing the hatred of +oppression and love of liberty characteristic of the writer-- + + "Hic depositum est corpus + JONATHAN SWIFT, s. t. d. + Hujus Ecclesiae Cathedralis Decani + Ubi saeva indignatio + Ulterius cor lacerare nequit + Abe Viator + Et imitare si poteris + Strenuum, pro virili, + Libertatis vindicatorem, + Obiit 19 deg. die mensis Octobris, A.D. 1745, + Anno Aetatis 78." + +Hard by is a white marble slab in memory of her whose name must be for +ever associated with that of Swift--"Stella." Ten minutes' walk through +Patrick-street will bring one from St. Patrick's to the most interesting +ecclesiastical structure in Dublin--Christ Church Cathedral. An old +Danish foundation, fire and time laid hands upon the original +building. Its restoration is a triumph of architectural genius in the +reproduction of thirteenth-century English Gothic. Strongbow's tomb is +the famous monument of the place. The Crypt contains, besides other +antiquities, the old City stocks, which is some three centuries old. +Other places worth seeing in the city are the Four Courts, the Custom +House, the Pro-Cathedral, Marlborough-street, St. Michan's Church and +Churchyard, and the Church of St. Francis Xavier, Gardiner-street. The +general architecture in the streets is incongruous, and the modern +"improvements" not always desirable. In the back streets here and there +the quaint gables as old as Queen Anne still survive, but the Dutch +houses have almost entirely, and the Cage houses have entirely, +disappeared. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Custom House, Dublin.] + +Leinster Lawn, or the Duke's Lawn, as the man in the street in Dublin +still calls it, contains, among other attractions, the National Gallery, +Museum, and Public Library. These are store houses of treasure. The +catalogue of the Gallery reveals a valuable collection of paintings, and +the Museum contains an unique exhibition of gold, silver, and bronze +ornaments, collars, brooches, shields, clasps, and spears, which were +found from time to time throughout Ireland, and are evidence of her +former civilization. The Royal Irish Academy, in Dawson-street, +possesses a rich collection of ancient Irish manuscript. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ National Library, Dublin. Four +Courts, Dublin.] + +The cemeteries of Dublin are small, except Glasnevin. A drive through +the Phoenix Park will bring one by the embanked river or through the +northern side of the city. An inquisitive tourist asked an Irish driver +why the Park was so called, when there was no such bird ever in the +world. "Sure that's the reason," said the driver. "Sure there's no such +Park in the world either." Lord Chesterfield put up a column with a +Phoenix in the Park, but of old its name was Parc-na-Fionniake (the +field of the clear water). It lies on the northern bank of the river +celebrated by Sir Samuel Ferguson:-- + + "Delicious Liffey, from the bosoming-hills + What man who sees thee issuing strong and pure + But with some wistful, fresh emotion fills, + Akin to nature's own sweet temperature; + And haply thinks:--On this green bank 'twere sweet + To make one's mansion sometime of the year, + For health and pleasure on these uplands meet, + And all the Isle's amenities are here." + +Long ago the St. John's Hospitallers had their house at Kilmainham, and +the lands belonging to the Order lay about either side of the stream. +The Hospice is now the Old Man's House--an Asylum for Disabled Soldiers, +designed by Sir Christopher Wren--and possesses one of the finest halls +in Europe. The lands have been built over at Inchicore, and on the other +side of the river formed into the Phoenix Park, containing close on +two thousand acres, and bounded by a circumference of seven miles. The +Park contains the lodges of the Viceroy and the Chief Secretary for +Ireland, and the monuments to Lord Gough, Lord Carlisle, and the +"overgrown milestone," as the obelisk to the Duke of Wellington has been +called. The People's Gardens have been laid out with great taste, but +they cannot compare with the natural beauty of the Furze Glen with its +deep shade and silent lake. Visitors in the summer time should not fail +to drive from Knockmaroon gate, beside the Liffey, to "The Strawberry +Beds." Here, in the season, delicious fruit, fresh from the gardens, and +rich cream, can be had in most of the cottages beside the road. + + +DUBLIN DISTRICT. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Round Tower and Church at +Clondalkin.] + +The country in the immediate vicinity of Dublin contains much that is +picturesque. The scenery along the coast has in general been already +referred to. But Killiney, Bray, and Howth, if time permits, should be +visited. The train and tram facilities are sufficient. Wicklow County +has been called the Garden of Erin, and on no account should a visit to +Glendalough or "The Meeting of the Waters" in the Vale of Avoca be +deferred. But those who wish to speed on to the south or west will do so +from the Kingsbridge Terminus. From here we pass through Inchicore, the +busy thriving hive of industry, where the Great Southern and Western +Railway have their engineering works. The first station we come to is +that of ~Clondalkin~. The old village sits snuggled up at the foot of +its round tower, which is one of the best specimens of that early +architecture in Ireland, of which the poet says: + + "Two favourites hath Time--the Pyramids of Nile + And the old mystic temples of our own dear Isle." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Salmon Leap, Lucan.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Castletown House.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Carton House, Maynooth.] + +Irish antiquaries for generations have squabbled over these famous +"Pillar Towers of Ireland," but the general trend of scientific opinion +is that they are of early Christian origin. Father Matt Horgan, a famous +Munster antiquary, humorously started the theory that they were built to +puzzle posterity, which they have very successfully done. ~Lucan~ is a +health resort, possessing a sulphur spa, and situated in a well-wooded +country above the Liffey. The Hydropathic stands well sheltered and +commanding a splendid view. The drives in the district are many, and the +antiquarian will find much of interest. In Lord Annaly's demesne are the +remains of an early Norman castle, and in the vicinity is an ancient +Rath and souterraine. The drive to the Salmon Leap, at Leixlip, should +not be missed. Near by is ~Castletown~, the palatial mansion of the +Connolly family, and a grotesque structure known as "Connolly's Folly," +which was built in the time of the famine of "Black '47" to give +employment. Here, too, the great Dean of St. Patrick's beguiled his time +at "The Abbey," the home of Esther Vanhomrigh, the "Vanessa" of his +strange life. From Lucan Maynooth may be reached. Here is St. Patrick's +National College for the education of priests for the Catholic Church, +originally founded on a Government grant. "Carton House," in the +vicinity, is the residence of the Dukes of Leinster. It is surrounded by +beautiful parks, well planted, among the trees the royal oaks, for which +Kildare was celebrated, being conspicuous. ~Straffan~ may be called a +"hunting village," as the meets of the famous "Killing Kildares" most +usually take place in its neighbourhood. Here, too, are the seats of +Lords Cloncurry and Mayo. The thriving market town of ~Naas~ is two +miles from Sallins, and is the railway station for Punchestown, the +great steeplechase meeting of the Kildare Hunt. Long centuries ago it +was an historic spot--"Naas of the Kings." From the station may be seen +the Hill of Allen, rising like a sentinel on the mearings of the "Great +Plain of Ireland." ~Harristown~, the second station on a branch line, is +about three miles from Poulaphouca Waterfall. The road to the Falls +leads through the picturesque village of Ballymore-Eustace, situated on +a bank at a bend in the river Liffey. The view from the river below the +Falls is very impressive. Tullow is the terminus of this branch of the +line. It is a good business town, and the river Slaney affords excellent +trout fishing. Within half-an-hour's walk from Sallins is Bodenstown +Churchyard, where Theobald Wolfe Tone, the founder of the United Irish +Organisation of 1798, is buried. He was the most desperate man who ever +crossed the path of the English Government in Ireland. "The most +extraordinary man I ever met," is the verdict of the Duke of Wellington. +"He went to France with but one hundred guineas in his pocket, and +induced Bonaparte, by his single unaided efforts, to send three +armaments to Ireland." Six and twenty miles from Dublin, the town of +~Newbridge~ exists as a kind of aide-de-camp to the Commissariat +Department of the ~Curragh Camp~. The Curragh, a great plain over twelve +miles square, was once a common, the property of the Geraldine tenants, +but the Crown quietly seized upon it, and "their right there is none to +dispute." It has been made a camp of instruction, and can accommodate, +under more or less permanent cover, ten thousand men. It is in a good +fox-hunting, sporting country, "the country of the short grass," and +several times a year is the scene of race meetings. It is the Newmarket +of Ireland, for here are the training stables for Punchestown, +Fairyhouse, Leopardstown, Baldoyle, and all the lesser meetings in the +Green Isle, and many of the greater ones across the water. The Curragh +was the scene of more than one battle in centuries past, and, like Tara, +was one of the historic places chosen in the minds of the insurgents of +Ninety-eight as an ideal mustering point. The Curragh District Golf Club +has been formed by the military stationed there. ~Kildare~, some thirty +miles from Dublin, is the junction for the Kilkenny branch of the line. +The town is very old, being, in the early Christian era, a cell of St. +Bride, a patroness of Ireland. The ancient cathedral has been partly +rebuilt, and in the south transept is the vault of the Earls of Kildare, +progenitors of the Leinster line. These Geraldines were the most famous +of the Norman invaders: + + + "And, oh! through many a dark campaign + They proved their prowess stern, + In Leinster's plains and Munster's vales + On king, and chief, and kern; + + But noble was the cheer within + The halls so rudely won, + And generous was the steel-gloved hand + That had such slaughter done. + How gay their laugh, how proud their mien, + You'd ask no herald's sign-- + Amid a thousand, you had known + The princely Geraldine." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Liffey, near Celbridge.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Curragh Military Camp.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Curragh Military Camp.] + +The Round Tower in the graveyard, which is one hundred and three feet +high, is perfect, except that the original cap has been replaced with a +battlement, out of character with the rest. The old castle stood by, to +guard the church and tower, and what remains of it has been turned to +use as a tenement. The Earls of Kildare were often warring with the +Kings of England. The Archbishop of Cashel one time protested to the +King against the Earl burning down his cathedral, and the Earl, when +reprimanded, explained to the King in person that he would not have done +so had he not thought that the Archbishop was inside the church at the +time. This was the same Earl of whom the Parliament complained that "all +Ireland could not govern the Earl of Kildare." "Then," said the King, +"let the Earl of Kildare govern all Ireland," and he was appointed Lord +Deputy, and made an excellent one. From Kildare, Carlow, twenty-six +miles distant, and Kilkenny, fifty-one, are the principal stations on +the line which terminates at Waterford. ~Carlow~ is an old town which +belonged to the hereditary enemies of the Fitzgeralds, the Butlers of +Ormonde. It is beautifully situated, surrounded by fine trees, and built +on the picturesque Barrow. There is splendid water-power above the town, +and it was the first place in Ireland that was lighted with electricity. +~Kilkenny~, the marble city, easily induces the visitor to linger within +its walls and enjoy fully the attractions of the river Nore. Long ago it +was a keep of "Dermott of the Foreigners," "who had grown hoarse from +many shoutings in the battle," and was given by him as a dowry with +his beautiful daughter Eva to Strongbow. Afterwards it passed, by +purchase, into the possession of the Butlers, Lords of Ormonde. Here a +Parliament was held in 1367, which endeavoured by law to prevent the +absorption of the newcomers by the old Irish race. It tainted the blood +of all who gave their children into fosterage with Irish women, and +penalised the usage of Irish dress and customs. It made it a capital +offence for any of English blood to marry an Irish woman, which was +humorous enough when we remember that Strongbow, "the first of the +foreigners," did so. But the statute was of no avail, and the Butlers in +time became as big rebels as the Geraldines. Here, in 1642, the +Confederate Catholics held their Parliament. Among other things they +drafted a scheme of local government for the country, and set up the +first printing press in Ireland. ~St. Canice's Cathedral~, the Round +Tower, one hundred feet high, the Black Abbey, and Franciscan Friary, +are the principal ecclesiastical objects of interest. The Round Tower is +at the southern side of the Cathedral. This latter building, which is of +an Early Pointed Style, was founded in the twelfth or thirteenth +century. The pavement is of the famous Kilkenny marble. The principal +object of interest in the building is St. Kieran's Chair, against the +wall in the northern transept. + +[Illustration:] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kilkenny Castle.] + +The grounds of the Franciscan Friary have been overbuilt by a brewery, +but the fine seven-light window and tower still stand. The ~Black +Abbey~, a thirteenth century foundation, has come back into the +possession of the Order of Preachers, or Dominicans, who have restored +it. The small parish church near the northern transept of St. Canice's +contains a window commemorative of Lieutenant Hamilton, V.C., of +Inistioge, who was killed in the massacre of the Cavagnari Expedition by +the Afghans in 1879. From the market place, Kilkenny Castle, the noble +seat of the Butlers, may be entered. In the absence of the family of +the Marquis of Ormonde, the public are allowed to visit the castle. It +is a practically modern residence, built into the ancient walls; and +three of the imposing watch towers of bygone years survive. The hall of +the castle is decorated with beautiful Spanish leather work, and the +rich tapestries on the staircase were wrought in the sixteenth century, +on looms set up in the town by Flemings. Besides the family plate, +jewels, and heirlooms--which are displayed in several apartments--the +picture gallery is exceptionally attractive. Among its treasures are +Murillo's "St. John," Corregio's "Marriage of St. Catherine," and +Giordano's "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin." From St. John's Bridge, +above the Nore, a splendid view of the castle may be seen. There is a +pleasant pathway under the castle wall, along the river side from the +bridge. From Kilkenny many interesting excursions may be made. To +~Kells~, twelve statute miles, where there are the ruins of an important +twelfth century priory. Two miles from Kells is Kilree, where are +situate a ruined church, Round Tower, and Celtic cross, and a remarkable +tomb slab in the church, on which is an ancient symbolic sculpture of a +cock-in-a-pot crowing. Three miles from Kilree is Aghavillar, with +ruined church, attached castellated house, and Round Tower. About seven +miles from the city is the Cave of Dunmore, a stalactite cavern worth +seeing. ~Thomastown~, on the line to Waterford, was formerly a walled +town. It is less than two miles from Jerpoint Abbey, the ruins of which +are interesting. It was founded by Donough Tiernach, Chief of Ossory, in +1180. The style is Early Norman, but the turrets and battlements are +fifteenth century work. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Picture Gallery, Kilkenny +Castle.] + +Cromwell, who is discredited with destroying places in Ireland where he +never was, is said to have passed by Jerpoint without molesting it, but +when the peal of bells rang out in thanksgiving, he took it for a +challenge, and returned and sacked the place. In Cork he melted down the +chapel bells, saying that "as it was a priest that invented gunpowder, +the best thing that could be done with chapel bells was to make them +into cannons," which he did. + +If, instead of branching off the main line at Kildare, we continue along +it in the south-western direction. + +~Monasterevan~, which was an old ecclesiastical place of importance, now +insignificant except for its malting houses and distillery. The Marquis +of Drogheda's demesne and residence, Moore Abbey, stands in the centre +of the well-wooded lands, which were formerly monastic property. +~Portarlington~, a small town on the Barrow, has the seat of the Earl of +Portarlington. The river divides the town, and is the boundary here +between Kildare and the Queen's County. The Irish name of this place is +Coltody; but in the time of the "Merrie Monarch" it was given to a court +favourite, Lord Arlington, who here built a little harbour on the +Barrow, whence its name. In the townland of Deer Park, near the town, +there is still a colony of pure Huguenot descent. Portarlington is the +junction of the branch line running to Athlone. + +~Maryborough~ is pleasantly situated on the river side. From the Rock of +Dunamaise, an old fort of "Dermot of the Foreigners" in an almost +impregnable position, there is a splendid view of the Slieve Bloom +mountain ranges. At Ballybrophy is the junction for the Parsonstown and +Roscrea and Nenagh branches. ~Roscrea~, under the Devil's Bit mountains, +has celebrated ecclesiastical remains and a modern Cistercian Monastery, +the parent house of which is the famous Mount Melleray Abbey. Among the +ruins of interest to the antiquary are the remains of Augustinian and +Franciscan foundations, and a Round Tower, about the foot of which St. +Cronan had one of the early schools in Ireland in the sixth century. A +square tower of the Butlers and a tower of Prince John's Castle will +repay attention. ~Birr Castle~, the seat of the Earl of Rosse at +Parsonstown, is surrounded by a fine park. It is remarkable for its +mammoth telescopes, one of which is fifty-two feet long, with a speculum +six feet in diameter. Nenagh, at the foot of the Silvermines and Keeper +mountains (2,278 feet), is a stirring market town, and possesses a +Norman keep in fair preservation. Birdhill brings us to the Shannon, the +attractions of which are dealt with in another chapter. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Birr Castle.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lord Rosse's Telescopes at +Birr.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Bridge, Athlone.] + +The branch line which runs from Portarlington to Athlone, runs right +through the Bog of Allen. It is available for through passengers for +Connemara. For miles, the undulating bog land, green and brown. The +~King's County~ still remains out of the primeval forests, and its great +peat fields are the only source of wealth to the surrounding peasantry. +~Athlone~, some two miles below Lough Ree, on the Shannon, is the +military key to the Province of Connaught. The keep of the old Castle, +dating from King John's reign, remains, but the bridge and salmon weir +are of more interest. In 1691 Ginckle besieged the town on the eastern +bank, but a handful of Irish troops held the Connaught side, desiring to +keep the position until St. Ruth arrived. The defence of the bridge is +one of the most gallant exploits in Irish history. Colonel Richard +Grace, who held the position for the Jacobites, was offered security in +his estates and military honours, if he surrendered, by the Duke of +Schomberg. At night, when the offer reached the Jacobite general, he was +in his quarters, playing the familiar Irish card game of spoil-five with +his officers. The six-of-hearts happened to be the "deckhead." Grace +took it from the pack and wrote on the back, "It ill becomes a gentleman +to betray his trust," and gave it to the Williamite messenger. The +"six-of-hearts" is still known as "The Grace's Card," especially in +Kilkenny, where the general's estates were. From Athlone excursions may +be made to Auburn, eight miles; Clonmacnoise, ten Irish miles; and to +Lough Ree. Lissoy, where Goldsmith spent his childhood, there can be +little doubt, was the original of-- + + "Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain." + +It is a pleasant drive, the road from Ballykeeran skirting Lough +Killinure. Lough Ree, three miles from Athlone, is low-lying, some ten +miles long, and in parts prettily wooded. There is a small archipelago +in the northern end, of which pretty "Hare Island" is the residence of +Lord Castlemaine. The Seven Churches of Clonmacnoise formed the old city +of St. Kieran, whose feast day is the 9th September. There are two Round +Towers, O'Rourke's and M'Carthy's; a Holy Well, the Cairn of Three +Crosses, Relich Calliagh, founded by Devorgilla, who bewitched Dermot of +the Foreigners. Teampul-Kieran is a small cell. Teampul-Connor has an +interesting tenth century doorway, and in Teampul-Fineen the chancel +arch still remains, and the piscina can be traced. Teampul-Ree has two +round-headed lights and a lancet window, twelfth century work. The +~Great Cross of the Scriptures~ is inscribed with Gaelic, "a prayer for +Flan, son of Malseclyn," and "a prayer for Colman, who made this cross +for St. Flan," referring to the ninth century monarch of Meath, and to +Colman, Abbot, early in the tenth century, of Clonmacnoise. The cross is +fifteen feet high, and its panels were sculptured with Scriptural +scenes, interlined with Celtic tracery. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Shannon at Athlone.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Clonmacnoise.] + + "In a quiet, watered land, a land of roses, + Stands St. Kieran's city fair; + And the warriors of Erin in their famous generations + Slumber there. + + "There, beneath the dewy hillside, sleep the noblest + Of the Clan of Conn; + Each below his stone with name in branching Ogham, + And the sacred knot thereon." + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Dublin District, see + end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +Limerick and District + +[Illustration] + +LIMERICK. + + +Leaving ~Limerick Junction~, between it and Limerick City, there are few +places of interest. The country side is very rich, and is the centre of +the Creamery Co-operative system. At Boher is Glenstal, the residence of +Sir Charles Barrington. The demesne contains the Ilchester Oaks, with +which the country people associate a romance. The story is told in +detail in Lefanu's "Seventy Years of Irish Life." At Caghercullen, which +is now part of Glenstal Demesne, early in the last century lived Squire +O'Grady, an old _grandee_ of Limerick; he was a fox-hunting widower, and +his beautiful and only daughter was the cynosure of all eyes. When she +came out at a Limerick hunt ball the little beauty captivated Lord +Stourdale--eldest son to Lord Ilchester who was then with his regiment +at Limerick. O'Grady's keen eye soon discerned that the young people +were falling in love with each other. Proud of his family as the +Irishman was, he feared his position was such that an English lord may +not look on an alliance with favour. He wrote a friendly letter to Lord +Ilchester--in order to prevent trouble--saying that, as an elder man, he +perceived that his son was about getting into a scrape, and it would be +well to have him brought home or sent on active service. Stourdale +disappeared; and Lord Ilchester wrote thanking the squire, and notifying +that an old military friend--a Colonel Prendergast--would call and thank +him personally. The colonel came in good time, and partook of O'Grady's +hospitality. As he was leaving, he mentioned to the squire that he +thought his beautiful daughter was falling into bad health. O'Grady, +with brusque confidence, said that she had been fooling about Stourdale, +but would soon forget him. Lovers will rejoice at the sequel of the +romance. Colonel Prendergast discovered himself as Lord Ilchester, and +expressed his gratification at the possibility of having such a wife for +his son. There was the usual happy marriage; and the present Earl of +Ilchester and the present Earl of Lansdowne, can claim descent from +Maureen O'Grady. + +~Limerick~.--Like most of the Munster seaboard towns, it was built by +the Danes; and it was the cock-pit of the fights between the Ostmen and +the warlike clans who followed O'Brien's banner in the early centuries. +It made history in Cromwell's days, and until recently the old house +occupied by Ireton stood within its streets. Ireton sentenced many men +of eminence to death during the short triumph of Cromwell. Among the +most noble of the cavaliers who died at Limerick was Geoffrey Barron of +Clonmel, a young Irish lawyer who acted as civil secretary to the +Confederates. With exquisite cruelty he was sentenced to be executed +upon the morning which had previously been fixed for his wedding. He +asked, as a favour, that he should be permitted to wear his bridegroom +attire on the scaffold, and Ireton granted the boon. + +He made a brave show amid the crop-eared Roundheads. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Treaty Stone, Limerick.] + + "Taffeta as white as milk, + Made all his suit. + Threads of silver in the silk + Trailed like moonlight through it. + Silver cap and white feather, + Stepping proud and high, + In his shoon of white leather, + Came Geoffrey Barron to die. + Then the Roundhead general said, + Fingering his sword-- + Art thou coming to be wed, + Like a heathen lord? + + "Go! thy pride thy scaffold is, + Give her sigh for sigh. + Breath for breath, and kiss for kiss, + For Geoffrey Barron must die. + But he laughed out as he ran + Up the black steps; + Never happier bridegroom man, + With his wife's lips. + If for mortal woman's sake, + In silks should go I, + I shall for heaven the same pains take, + Now, Geoffrey Barron must die." + +But the name of Limerick scintillates in those glowing chapters in its +country's history, when it stoutly withstood the valour and prowess of +the great soldier-king, William of Orange. Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, the +beloved of damsels and dames, was the hero of this period. A handsome, +large-limbed, brawny soldier, towering over the tallest of his dragoons, +and true as the steel he wore, he was a fitting leader of a forlorn +hope. Originally, one of the "Gentlemen of the Guard" under the Merrie +Monarch, his defence of Limerick was a military achievement worthy of +the ambition of any general; nor were his Williamite opponents slow to +cordially appreciate his valour. But he was fated to die, "on a far, +foreign field." The sieges of Limerick led up to its name of the City of +the Broken Treaty. William of Nassau, having routed King James in +August, 1690, invested the city with 35,000 men. Tyrconnel and Lauzun, +Commander of the French allies, had cleared out, considering that the +place could not be defended. Sarsfield, although not in command, with +other kindred spirits, decided to defend the position. The heavy +ordnance of the Williamites, while on the way to the scene of siege, was +surprised at night at Ballyneety by Sarsfield and a hero called +"Galloping O'Hogan," and the guns spiked and the ammunition mined and +fired. Auxiliary artillery was, however, brought into camp, and the +assault delivered. The guns breached the walls, the outworks were +carried, but before the garrison could pour in, the townspeople--men and +women--the latter, vieing in valour, flowed out and swept away all +opposition. The siege was raised. But a year later, Ginckle again +invested the place by land and sea. After three months' defence, +Sarsfield agreed to capitulate, the chief conditions of the treaty +being, that Catholics should be admitted to practice their religion +without hindrance, and that the Jacobite garrison should march out with +the honours of war. The latter condition was kept, but when Sarsfield +and his regiments had gone beyond the seas, the former was shamefully +violated. By the Thomond may be seen the Treaty Stone, on which the +capitulation papers were signed, October 3rd, 1691. In the Cathedral +place is the modern monument to Sarsfield. The castle, which was built +by King John--now a store--is an excellent example of the military +architecture introduced into Ireland by the Normans. The Shannon, the +largest river in Ireland, flows through the city. Limerick lace is +valued wherever people of taste are. The industry still thrives; but the +former greatness of the glove manufacturers has departed. Bacon curing +is the great industry of the city to-day, and the names of Denny, +Matterson, and Shaw--the principal manufacturers--have become household +words. The greatest factory in Limerick, however, is belonging to the +famous Condensed Milk Company, organized through the enterprise of Sir +Thomas Cleeve. The milk of some 15,000 cows contributes to the huge +output of this great concern. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Sarsfield Statue, Limerick.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Castleconnell, near +Limerick.] + + +LIMERICK DISTRICT. + +From Limerick tours may be made into North Kerry by rail, or by combined +steamer and coach service along the Shannon lakes and shores. The +amalgamation of the railway services in the south and west of Ireland +has contributed greatly to the many facilities which, with an improved +railway accommodation, now await the tourist. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Falls of Doonass-River +Shannon.] + +Some seven miles from Limerick, and about the same distance from +Killaloe, is the pretty little town of ~Castleconnell~. The place was of +yore a stronghold of the O'Brien's, and to-day the remains of the old +castle from which the village takes the name still stand. During the +Jacobite wars the place was of importance as one of the military keys to +the Province of Connaught, and Sarsfield and Ginkel alternately +garrisoned and fought for its possession. The village is situated +delightfully beside "The lordly Shannon," and is famous as a resort for +anglers. The scenery in the immediate vicinity is unsurpassed, and the +Shannon here has been described as possessing "The majesty of the Amazon +with the grandeur of the Rhine." Taking the well-appointed Shannon Hotel +as our centre many most enjoyable excursions can be made to the +beautiful places in the adjoining district. The hotel itself is only +five minutes' walk from the far-famed Rapids of Doonass, and beside the +celebrated Chalybeate Spa. Beneath a list of excursions is given of some +of the pleasant driving and boating trips that may be made. It cannot +pretend to be exhaustive, however, and is only offered as suggestive. +Assume that the visitor has three days at his disposal-- + + ~First Day.~--Start from Hotel, walk to Chalybeate Spa, World's + End, Old Castle and Grounds (admission by pass), cross River at + Ferry, walk to "Old Turrett," from which a grand view of the + "Rapids" may be obtained--the Scenery at this particular point is + unsurpassed--visit St. Synan's Well, return to Hotel, drive to + "Clare Glens," see the Cascades--this is one of the most + picturesque spots imaginable and well repays a visit. + + ~Second Day.~--DAY TRIP ON THE LORDLY SHANNON (LOUGH + DERG).--Take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. + for Killaloe where the Shannon Development Co.'s Steamer awaits the + arrival of the Train to convey passengers for a Cruise on Lough + Derg. Steamer returns to Killaloe about 5.30 p.m., the Train leaves + Killaloe at 6.10 p.m. for Castleconnell, arriving at 6.41 p.m.; or + take car from Hotel to meet the 8.15 a.m. Steamer at Killaloe for + Portumna, return by down Steamer to Killaloe, thence by 6.10 p.m. + Train for Castleconnell. This Cruise embraces the whole length of + Lough Derg, and affords a grand combination of lake and mountain + scenery. + + ~Third Day.~--A selection from the following may be made:-- + + (_a_) Drive to Limerick City. See its magnificent Churches, + Treaty Stone, etc, etc. + + (_b_) To Killaloe. St. Flannan's Cathedral, a very ancient edifice, + Oratory with stone roof, Brian Boru's Fort, and Cragg + Hill, from which a very pretty view of Lough Derg may be + obtained. + + (_c_) To Glenstal Castle and Grounds (admission by pass). + + (_d_) To Keeper Hill. A splendid panoramic view of the + surrounding country afforded from the summit of this Hill, + including Lough Derg and "reaches" of the Shannon below + Limerick. + + (_e_) To Adare Manor (admission by pass). + + (_f_) Or take Row Boat from Castleconnell to Killaloe _via_ + O'Brien's Bridge, or to Limerick _via_ Plassy. + + (_g_) Take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. for + Nenagh, drive from Nenagh to Dromineer, take Steamer + from Dromineer to Killaloe, thence rail or car to Castleconnell. + + (_h_) Or take train from Castleconnell Station at 10.40 a.m. for + Killaloe, take Steamer Killaloe to Dromineer, drive from + Dromineer to Nenagh, thence rail to Castleconnell. + + (_i_) Lower Shannon Steamer Trip to Kilrush (see special programme + of Sailings). + + +Above a bend in the river at the Falls of Doonass the "Rapids" begin, +and eddying and whirling through the rocks run for nearly half a mile +along the surface of the river. It is to the angler, however, +Castleconnell will prove most attractive. The season commences on the +1st February, and closes on the 31st October. Trout, pike, and perch +fishing free; salmon and grilse fishing by arrangement. The fishing-rods +manufactured at Castleconnell have won a world-wide reputation for +Messrs. Enright and Sons, and Mr. Jack Enright has himself won the +record as a long distance fly caster. A writer in _The Fishing Gazette_ +having dealt in an appreciative article with Castleconnell gives +valuable information as to the names and situations of the more +important pools on the river. + +The fisheries in the Castleconnell district taken in rotation from +below, are: the Prospect or Clareville Fishery, on the Limerick side of +the river (this means that the fishery extends to midstream; adjoining +it on the Clare side, and immediately opposite, is the Landscape +Fishery. Both of these are well-known salmon and peel catches. A few of +the best pools in Prospect are Pinnee, Salahoughe, Feemoor, and +Commogue. On Landscape the best pools are Poulahoo, Pallaherro, and +Filebegs). + +Adjoining the Prospect Fishery, on the Limerick side of the river, is +the New Garden Fishery, which contains the pools of Moreagh, Glassogue, +Black Weir, and Sporting Eddy. Next to this, on the Limerick side, is +the Hermitage Fishery, which contains some famous catches, such as Back +of Leap, Fallahassa, Poolbeg, the Commodore, Bunnymoor, and Head of +Moreagh. Still on the Limerick side, we next reach the Woodland's +Fishery, a picturesque portion of the Shannon, and here are the pools of +Panlaides, Drarhus, Thunnavullion, and Long Eddy. Next is reached the +Castle Fishery, and the pools here are Balcraheen, Lackaleen, and the +Lough, the last affording several courses of fly fishing. Still on the +Limerick side the World's End Fishery adjoins the Castle Fishery, and +the pools here are the Pantry, the Kitchen, and the Over the Weir. + +Returning to the Clare side of the river the fishery next to Landscape +is the famous Doonas, the lower part of which contains the pools of +Poolcoom, the Stand, Black Weir, Faalgorribs, Franklin's Eddy, and the +Old Door, while the upper part includes Lickenish, the Dancing Hole, Old +Turf, Lurgah, Lacka, and Sallybush. Next on the Clare side we reach the +Summer Hill Fishery, part of which is opposite the Woodland's Fishery +and part opposite the Castle Fishery. The pools on Summer Hill are the +Black Eddy, Clare side of Drarhus, Thunahancha, Figar, Clare side of +Lackaleen, and Clare side of the Lough. After this the Erinagh Fishery +is reached, and here the pools are Gorribs and side of the big Eddy. + +In the spring salmon fishing is pursued principally with Devon minnows +as lures, the "cullough" running a good second favourite. Phantom +minnows and the very large spinning Shannon flies are also useful. A bit +later on the prawn takes precedence, the bigger the prawn the better. As +the season advances the lure, whatever it may be--fly, minnow, prawn, or +what not--should decrease in size until October, when again they should +assume larger proportions, but not so big as in the spring. Towards the +latter end of March, and onwards for the rest of the season, artificial +flies are are almost exclusively used. Truly wonderful specimens of the +fly dresser's art are some of the Shannon patterns. Fancy a salmon fly +dressed on an 8-o hook! Yet this is at times absolutely necessary to +ensure success. The best patterns for various times of the year are--For +February, March, and April, big Shannon Blue Fly, the Black Goldfinch, +the Jock Scot, and the Yellow Lahobber; for May, June, and July, Purple +Mixture, tinsel bodied Green Parrot, purple bodied Green Parrot, Silver +and Blue Doctors, Purple Widgeon, Orange and Grouse, and Thunder and +Lightning. Towards the end of the season here, as elsewhere, strange +fancy patterns will frequently prove successful. The most suitable +patterns of trout flies (the size of which depends entirely upon the +height of the water) are--Orange and Grouse, Green Rail, Purple Rail, +Black Rail, Orange Rail, March Brown, Hare's Ear, silver-tinselled body +Black Rail, and Orange and Grouse with a sprig of Guinea Fowl or Green +Parrot in wing. + +The tackle for the coarse fish is of the ordinary character. + +At the foot of Lough Derg stands ~Killaloe~, an ideal resting place for +an angler. The cathedral is of some interest, and in the vicinity the +Protestant Bishop's palace stands. The bridge connecting the town with +the village of Ballina has thirteen arches, and the huge weir helps as a +breakwater. Shortly above the bridge of old time stood Kincora, the +fortified palace of Brian Boru; its glory has departed, and all that +remains is a mound, crowned with a grove of trees. Here Brian of the +Tribes held his sway; and still the peasant in Munster, wishing to +express his welcome, says in Gaelic--"Were mine the boire of the Dane or +the wine of Kincora, it would be poured for you." Here it was that the +Norse King, Magnus, wintered early in the twelfth century, and found a +wife for his son, Sigurd, in the house of Brian. M'Laig, the bard of +Brian Boru, after the death of his king in 1014, made a lamentation, +which Mangan thus translated:-- + + "Oh! where Kincora is Brian the Great? + And where is the beauty that once was thine? + Oh! where are the princes and nobles that sate + At the feast in thy halls, and drank the red wine? + Where! oh, Kincora. + They are gone, those heroes of royal birth, + Who plundered no church and broke no trust, + It is weary for me to be living on earth, + When they, oh, Kincora, are below in the dust. + Lo, of Kincora." + +From Killaloe, northwards for twenty-five miles, Lough Derg at times +expands in width over eight miles, where its distant shores form a sky +line--hedged in with Tipperary and Clare Mountains. The lough loses none +of its picturesque attractiveness to the sportsman, who is informed that +the whole of the fishing is free. + +From Limerick as centre, as we have said, tours may be made into North +Kerry. + +To the average tourist North Kerry is a _terra incognita_, and yet from +the pleasant pasture lands around "Sweet Adare" in Limerick to where the +distant mountain of Caherconree sees his regal head reflected in the +sea--there lies a beautiful land. Beyond Patrickswell, on the Maigue, is +the little village of Adare, once the camping ground and stronghold of +"those very great scorners of death," the Desmond Geraldines. Still the +ruins of Desmond Castle, and of three abbeys, tell the tale that here +once, beside a citadel of strength, were places of religion and refuge. +Now, in the depth of the retreat of sylvan splendour, the Earl of +Dunraven has his noble mansion.[1] At Adare, as well as at Ballingrane, +six miles away, still are many evidences of the Palatine plantations, +which were effected here in the eighteenth century. In 1709 a fleet was +sent to Rotterdam by Queen Anne, and brought to England some 7,000 +refugees from the German Palatinate. Of these, over 3,000 were settled +in this part of the County Limerick. They were allowed eight acres of +land for each man, woman, and child, at _5s._ per acre; and the +Government engaged to pay their rent for twenty years, and supplied +every man with a musket to protect himself. Industrious and frugal, the +exiles throve in the land of their adoption; many of them emigrated to +America, and only a comparatively small number of families still remain. +These, however, preserve, besides the names, many of the characteristics +of their predecessors--as Dr. R. T. Mitchell, Inspector of +Registration in Ireland, testifies in his survey of this very +district:--"Differing originally in language, though even the oldest of +the present generation know nothing of the German tongue spoken or +written, as well as in race and religion, from the natives amongst whom +they were planted, these Palatines still cling together like the members +of a clan, and worship together. Most of them have a distinctly foreign +type of features, and are strongly built, swarthy in complexion, dark +haired, and brown eyed. The comfortable houses built in 1709 are in +ruins now. The original square of Court Matrix in the ruined wall can be +traced, and also, in the very centre of this square the foundations of +the little Meeting House in which John Wesley occasionally preached to +them in the interval, 1750-1765. Modern houses stand there now, but not +closely grouped together. They are all comfortable in appearance, some +thatched, some slated, some with one story, others with two; nearly all +have a neat little flower garden in front, and very many have an orchard +beside or immediately behind the house. There is all the appearance of +thrift and industry among them." From ~Ballingrane~, a branch line +passing Askeaton, with its ruined Castle and Abbey ruins, to ~Foynes~, a +good harbour, from which passage can be made to Kilrush, and thence per +rail to Kilkee. From the junction the main line runs by ~Rathkeale~ and +~Newcastle~, where there is a ruined castle of the Knights Templars, and +by Abbeyfeale and Kilmorna, where Mr. Pierce Mahony bred and kept his +stud of famous Kerry cattle, to Listowel, an old market town which +figured in the Desmond rebellion. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Adare Abbey, Croom.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin_ Adare Manor.] + +From Listowel the Lartigue railway, unique in the British Isles, runs to +~Ballybunion~, a beautiful watering place, remarkable for its sea-caves +and old castle. ~Ardfert~ is remarkable for its ruined Abbey and +Cathedral, both dedicated to St. Brendon, the story of whose voyage to +the New World was one of the subjects mentioned at the court of +Ferdinand and Isabella by Columbus, when inducing them to assist him in +his mission of discovery. ~Tralee~ is the largest town in the Kingdom of +Kerry. It is one of the most thriving towns in the south of Ireland, and +is situated in the vicinity of marine and mountain scenery. Those +interested in the revival of industry in Ireland will do well to visit +the Kerry Knitting Co.'s Factory, as well as the fine bacon-curing +establishment of the Wholesale Co-operative Society which has been +erected under the management of the well known Mr. Joseph Prosser. At +Spa and Fenit there is good sea-bathing, and on the Dingle Promontory +the ascent of Mount Brandon may be made. From Dingle excursions can +easily be taken to Slea Head, by Ventry, and under the Eagles' Mountain, +and within sight of the Blasket Islands. ~Smerwick~ has in its +neighbourhood a coast line of mighty cliffs, the most remarkable of +which is called the ~Three Sisters~. Smerwick was the scene of the +massacre of seven hundred Spaniards, who had surrendered in the +sixteenth century to Lord Deputy Grey's forces. The bloody affair is the +blackest stain in the careers of the gallant Raleigh and the gentle +Spenser. Between Smerwick and Ballydavid Head the well preserved remains +of the ~Oratory of Gallerius~ may be seen. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lartique Railway, Ballybunion.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Ballybunion.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Ballybunion.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Limerick District, see + end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +The Shannon Lakes. + +DUKE OF YORK ROUTE. + + +The Shannon Development Company run during the season a service of +steamers between Killaloe and Dromod (county Leitrim). The whole of the +journey from ~Killaloe~ to Dromod--about one hundred miles--is +interesting and full of variety, the shores and lakes of the lordly +river presenting an ever-changing panorama of beautiful scenes. About +Killaloe the views are very fine. The mountains of Clare and Tipperary +shadow the town on either side, and away to the north for twenty-three +miles stretches Lough Derg. Going up the lake, the first stopping place +is at Scariff, which overlooks the beautiful Inniscattery or Holy +Island. The reach from here to Portumna is crowded with islands, and on +both shores are ruined castles and finely wooded demesnes. Dromineer, on +the opposite bank, four and a quarter miles from Nenagh, is the next +station. Nearly opposite Portumna, with its ruined and blackened castle, +are the ruins of the monastery of Tirdaglass. + +[Illustration: Sailing on the Shannon.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kincora, Killaloe.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Shannon Steamer.] + +The ancient city of Portumna was once the chief pass and means of +communication between Connaught and North Munster. Between Portumna, at +the head of Lough Derg and Banagher, are the rich meadow lands of +Galway, along which the river winds tranquilly, passing beautifully +wooded islands; its banks green with rich, low-lying pastures. A few +miles from Shannon Bridge is Clonmacnoise, over which hang many ancient +memories of learning, of wars, and of worship. Near Athlone is a point +in the river where the Counties of Westmeath, Roscommon, and King's +County meet, and the waters of Lough Ree wash the shores of County +Roscommon on the one side and of Westmeath and Longford on the other. +Lough Ree is but little known to the tourist; and yet this lake, with +its rocky shores full of indentations, and its shoals of sparkling +islands, is one of the loveliest in Ireland. King John's Castle, on the +Roscommon side of the lake, is a magnificent Norman ruin, and the town +of Roscommon--which is not far from the brink of the lake--also contains +the remains of a fine castle and of a Dominican Friary. The castle, +which is flanked by four towers of massive masonry, was built in the +thirteenth century by Sir Robert de Ufford, and afterwards suffered many +changes of fortune; it is now the property of The O'Conor Don. The abbey +is chiefly interesting as containing the sculptured tomb of Phelim +Cathal O'Connor. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lough Ree, Shannon Lakes.] + +Circular tourist tickets for one day trips are issued by the Railway +Company. Details will be seen on summer time tables. + + + + +[Illustration] + +Cork and District. + +CORK. + + +Enshrined in song and _saga_, set in the beautiful valley of a romantic +river, Cork is one of the pleasantest places within the four shores of +"the most distressful country." It is the capital of the rich Province +of Munster, "the wheat of Ireland," says a Gaelic proverb, and while it +preserves the characteristics of an old Irish town, here, too, the +traveller, familiar with the quaint cities of the Continent, will meet +with much that is suggestive of foreign scenes. + +Cork sits snugly at the foot of, and leans her back up against, high +hills that shelter her from the north, and the breeze that blows up from +the sea is fresh and mildly bracing. From a height to the north +overlooking the city a bird's-eye view can be had of the entire +surroundings, and of what the poet Spenser called-- + + "The pleasant Lee, that like an island fayre + Encloseth Cork in his divided flood." + +Away to the west the eye can easily trace the river, winding with haste +to the sea, through the barony of Muskerry, "the fair country," from its +fountain home over the hills and far away. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Patrick-street, Cork.] + +More than halfway along the Mardyke Walk there is a sidepath leading +down to a ferry across the Lee. Here a good view may be had of the river +looking towards the city, with Sunday's Well, Blair's Castle, and +Shandon standing high on the hill. + +The history of the foundation of Cork City, and its progress through the +centuries, is well authenticated. Towards the close of the sixth +century, the place was founded by Lochan, son of Amirgin, the great +smith to Tiernach M'Hugh, the proud chief of the O'Mahonys. Lochan has +since come to be called St. Finbarr. His feast day is a retrenched +holiday in the diocese of Cork, and his patron day is kept by the +peasantry at the shrine of Gougane Barra, by the cradle of the river +Lee. The Irish name, Cork, signifies that the locality was a marsh, and +in the life of its founder it is described as a "land of many waters." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Marina, Cork.] + +For less than three hundred years the little city throve, and then came +the Sea Rovers, hungry for spoil. In 820 they burned down Cork, carrying +away as pillage the silver coffin wherein St. Finbarr was buried. +Shortly afterwards they returned, and seized on the marshes lying +beneath Gill Abbey Rock, fortified them, and founded another little +city--but their own. There they sang their "Mass of the Lances; it began +at the rising of the sun," and, as the Four Masters assure us, +"wheresoever they marched they were escorted by fire." + +But in time the Rovers were absorbed, and race hatreds died out. They +paid tribute to the MacCarthys, and were married and given in marriage +to the Irish. Merovingian Kings came to buy and sell in Cork, and the +Sagas of the North tell of many a hardy Norseman who fell captive to the +maidens of Munster. To this day the Danish blood moulds the nature of +many in Cork, and among the men especially the passionate affection for +the sea is a characteristic. When the Normans invaded Ireland they found +Cork a Danish fortress. They broke the power of the Danes in a sea +fight, and won over the allegiance of MacCarthy, the old King of Cork, +through the wiles of a woman. The strangers had not been long in the +city when they, like the Danes before them, were absorbed, and became +more Irish than the Irish themselves. As their island city grew in +opulence, they began to assert an independence similar to the free +cities of the Continent. A historical writer of repute points out that +they were practically independent of external authority. Their edicts +had nearly the force of laws. They levied taxes, and regulated commerce. +They judged, pilloried, and hanged offenders. To suit themselves they +modified the English laws of property. They set up a mint of their own, +and their money had to be declared by the English Parliament to be +"utterly damned." + +Their audacity can be imagined from the part they played in Perkin +Warbeck's rebellion of 1492. They decked him out "with some clothes of +silk," and John Walters, the Mayor, insisting that the poor Fleming was +son to the Duke of Clarence, demanded that the Lord Deputy should +declare him King. Failing in this a number of Cork merchants sent him to +France, where they duped the King, and induced the Duchess of Burgundy +to give them armament and money. They then sailed for Kent, and having +landed there, proclaimed their foundling "Richard the Fourth, King of +England and Lord of Ireland." But the sequel of all this bravura +behaviour was not so happy, as Warbeck and Walters lost their heads, and +Cork lost its charter. + +In 1847 the city suffered fearfully from the ravages of famine and +famine fever. The failure of the potato crop drove the unfortunate, +hunger-stricken peasantry into the city for sustenance; and it has been +estimated that upwards of a million of people emigrated in these unhappy +years through the port of Cork. During the Fenian movement, 1865-67, +Cork was a hotbed of treason, and more prisoners were sentenced from +there than from all the other parts of Ireland put together. Thus, in +the nineteenth century, the name of "Rebel Cork," which was earned so +far back as the time of Perkin Warbeck, was still deserved. + +The manners of the people, gentle and simple, rich and poor, are +perfect. There is, perhaps, too often a tendency to adopt your view of +anything or everything with the most accommodating agreeableness. This +is very pleasant, if not always sincere, but in this respect a thing +never to be forgotten is that Cork is only a few miles from Blarney, and + + "There is a stone there, whoever kisses, + Oh! he never misses to grow eloquent. + 'Tis he may clamber to a lady's chamber, + Or become a Member of Parliament. + + A clever spouter, he'll sure turn out, or + An 'out-an'-outer' to be let alone; + Don't hope to hinder him, or to bewilder him, + Sure he's a pilgrim from the Blarney Stone." + +Thackeray, like many another man before his time and since, has paid +tribute to the loveliness of the girls of Cork. There is a graceful +charm about them before which the most inveterate bachelor succumbs. The +accents of the Siren singers were never so insinuating and caressing as +the Munster brogue as it slips off the tongue of a gentlewoman. Blue +eyes predominate, but are excelled in lustre by what Froude has been +pleased to call "the cold grey eyes of the dark Celt of the south of +Ireland." Edmund Spencer, when he was not busy "undertaking" Rapparees, +or smoking Raleigh's fragrant weed--"than which there is no more fair +herb under the broad canopy of heaven"--wooed and won and wedded a fair +woman of Cork; not of the city, though, but of the county. She was a +country lass, as he is at pains to point out to the Shandon belles who +fain would vie with her:-- + + "Tell me, ye merchant daughters, did ye see + So fayre a creature in your town before? + Her goodlie eyes, like sapphyres shining bright; + Her forehead, ivory white; + Her lips like cherries charming men to byte." + +There is nothing of peculiar interest about the streets of Cork but +their number, their narrowness, and the irregularity of the houses. St. +Patrick's-street, which is the principal thoroughfare, has many handsome +shops, and winds its way in three curves through the city. + +From the "Dyke," as it is locally known, through the "Band Field"--the +baby park of Cork--we can cross to an entrance to the Queen's College on +the Western-road. The College itself is a handsome building of white +Cork limestone, in the later Tudor style, forming three sides of a +quadrangle, and consisting of lecture-rooms, museum, examination hall, +&c. It is built in the centre of well-laid pleasure grounds, which are +open to the public, and which formerly were the site of St. Finbarr's +old monastery. During the session proper, practically from November to +June, visitors will not be admitted through the building without an +official order, which may be had at the Registrar's office. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Queen's College, Cork.] + +During the vacation the steward or assistant officials are in attendance +to conduct visitors. The large palm-house is one of the most successful +in Ireland, and the Crawford Observatory will repay a visit. The grounds +were laid out under the personal supervision of the late president, Dr. +W. K. Sullivan, a distinguished scientist. While at the south side of +the city, St. Finbarr's Cathedral[2] (Church of Ireland), eastward from +the College, should be seen. It is a very dignified design of the French +Early Pointed style. The nave, aisles, and transepts are grouped under +three lofty towers with spires. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ St. Finbarr's Cathedral, Cork.] + +From the foot of the street a few minutes' walk will bring us under the +old bi-coloured steeple, which contains the famous Shandon Bells. The +church was built in 1772. The steeple is unique, inasmuch as the +southern and western sides are of white limestone, and the northern and +eastern red sandstone-- + + "Parti-coloured, like Cork people, + Red and white, stands Shandon steeple." + +But the "Bells" are the chief attraction, and the quaint inscriptions on +them amuse the curious. In the stillness of a summer night their sweet +chimes sound with peculiar cadence across the waters which encircle the +old city of the Lee. The charter song of Cork is:-- + + THE BELLS OF SHANDON. + + With deep affection and recollection + I often think of the Shandon bells-- + Whose sounds so wild would, in days of childhood, + Fling round my cradle their magic spells; + On this I ponder, where'er I wander, + And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee; + With thy bells of Shandon, + That sound so grand on + The pleasant waters of the river Lee. + + I have heard bells chiming full many a clime in, + Tolling sublime in cathedral shrine; + While at a glib rate brass tongues would vibrate, + But all their music spoke nought to thine; + For memory dwelling on each proud swelling + Of thy belfry knelling its bold notes free, + Made the bells of Shandon + Sound far more grand on + The pleasant waters of the river Lee. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Shandon Church, Cork.] + +Francis Sylvester Mahony, author of this ballad, known in the world of +literature as "Father Prout," was born in Cork in 1804. He was educated +for the priesthood, but spent the best years of his life in London, as a +magazine writer. + +Further north than Shandon is St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral, an +ample piece of architecture, not particularly attractive. Coming down +the hill towards the city on Pope's-quay, St. Mary's Dominican Church +may be seen. It is a very beautiful church, of the composite style of +architecture. The Grecian portico is remarkable for the gracefulness and +justness of its proportions, and is very much admired. It is, perhaps, +the most chaste building of its kind in the kingdom. + +Besides the churches and public buildings already enumerated, the +Courthouse and the Municipal Schools of Science and Art should be seen. +The Courthouse is in Great George-street. In a recent fire there many +valuable records were destroyed. Courthouses seem to be ill-fated in +Cork. The old Courthouse fell during the trial for treason in the Penal +days of the Catholic Bishop of Cork. The present Courthouse was burnt on +Good Friday, 1891. + +The punning, duel-fighting, hanging judge, Lord Norbury, of whom the +country people still say, "He'd hang a man as soon as knock the head off +a rush," often dispensed with an escort in the most exciting times, and +rode here on circuit with a brace of pistols at his saddle-bow. But he +was a man of uncommon determination. Once, when his acts were unusually +unjudicial, he was reprimanded from Dublin Castle and threatened with +compulsory retirement. He rode instanter to Dublin, and never stopped +until he drew rein at the Castle gate. He demanded to see the Lord +Lieutenant, but the then Viceroy, Lord Talbot, was in England. He was +ushered into the presence of a courteous official, who was a little +astonished to be authoritatively asked, "Who are you?" "I, sir," said +the Under Secretary, whom he addressed, "am Mr. Gregory." "Then you be +d----d, and don't Sir me," said his Lordship. "Fifty-two years ago I +began life at the Irish Bar with fifty guineas and a case of pistols. +Here it is! I have fought my way to preferment. Within a few months I +expect a letter of an unpleasant character from the Castle. Tell the +writer he may take his choice of these, and send me his second." History +does not record whether "the letter of an unpleasant character" was ever +written. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Guy and Co., Cork._ Cork Exhibition.] + +The Municipal Buildings of Science and Art in Emmet-place can bear +comparison with those of any town of the same size in Great Britain or +Ireland. The sculpture and picture galleries are open to visitors. The +splendid collection of casts from the antiques in the Vatican Gallery +were executed under the superintendence of Canova, and sent by Pope Pius +VII. to George IV. The ship which carried them by long sea from Italy +put into Cork, and was there detained for harbour dues. The King, +instead of paying, transferred the Papal gift to the Cork Society of +Arts. + +A paltry exhibit of coins, antiquities, and fossils forms the Museum. +Although Cork County has been one of the richest in Ireland in "finds" +of gold and metal work of the ancient Irish, they are absolutely +unrepresented. + + +CORK DISTRICT. + +The county of Cork is the largest shire in Ireland. The pleasure seeker, +the artist, the antiquary, the sportsman, the invalid, will each find +within its broad barriers much to meet his wants. Sir Walter Scott is +credited with the statement that the history of this single county +contains more romance than the history of the lowlands and highlands of +his own dear land of the mountain and the flood. + +The surface of the county Cork is as diversified as the people. In some +places, such as Kilworth, Mushera, and Ballyhoura, the elevation is +considerable, elsewhere it sinks to a low-lying plain, such as at +Kilcrea, where the bog is that tradition says saw the last wolf in +Ireland killed, and Imokilly, where the sea is yearly eating into the +lowlands. The county is watered by no less than twenty rivers of +importance. + +Making the city the headquarters for a few days, there are many places +of interest in the vicinity which may with ease be visited. The +excellent tram system may be availed of by visitors to the sights in its +immediate vicinity. A drive by Douglas and Vernamount can be +recommended. Douglas was an old town, famous for its manufacture of sail +cloth, and in recent years a village providence in the person of the +late Mr. John Morrogh has resuscitated industry in the district by the +establishment of a splendidly equipped tweed factory. With a fine day +and a good "outside jaunting-car" to travel the five miles' drive to +~Blarney Castle~ will be found most enjoyable. The famous stone, which +no one should miss kissing, is set in the parapet wall. The word +"Blarney," meaning pleasant "deluderin' talk," is said to have +originated at the Court of Queen Elizabeth. MacCarthy, the then +chieftain over the clan of that name, resided at Blarney, and was +repeatedly asked to come in from "off his keeping," as the phrase in the +State Papers goes, to abjure the system of Tanistry by which the clan +elected the chief, and take tenure of his lands direct from the Crown. +He was always promising with fair words and soft speech to do what was +desired, but never could be got to come to the sticking point. The +Queen, it is told, when one of his speeches was brought to her, said, +"This is all Blarney; what he says he never means." + +By the Great Southern and Western Railway the castle can also be +reached. By this route a good stretch of the Upper Lee is seen, with +Carrigrohane Castle, which belonged to the M'Sweeneys, beetling high on +a rock, and the line runs through the picturesque valley of the +Sournagh, which may be likened to a Swiss ravine. All the remains of the +former greatness of Blarney consists of the ruins of two mansions, one +of the fifteenth century, and the other of the Elizabethan period. In +its time the place was one of considerable strength, and was erected by +Cormac MacCarthy Laider, or the Strong-handed chief of his name. Most of +the outworks and defences are gone. The old square keep, ivy-crowned, +rises from a huge limestone rock, around which the Coomaun or crooked +river winds. The Castle is over 120 feet high; the great staircase at +the right-hand side leads through the entire building, here and there +small vaulted chambers being set in the massive walls, which are in +places nine feet thick. The arched room, of which the projecting window +with three lights overlooks the streamlet below, is known as the Earl's +Chamber. The last fight in which Blarney Castle figured, was that in +which the Confederates held out for King Charles in 1642. It fell before +the superior ordnance of Cromwell's commander, Ireton. It was never +afterwards used for a dwelling-house, being almost completely +dismantled. From the summit of the Castle a good view of the surrounding +country can be had. To the west lies Muskerry, with what Ruskin calls +"the would-be hills" rising towards Mushera Mountain. To the north is +St. Ann's Hydropathic Establishment, on a gentle slope, surrounded by +well-wooded parks. In the village beneath is the well-known Blarney +Tweed Factory of Messrs. Martin Mahony Brothers, through which visitors +may be shown when convenient to the courteous proprietors. The "Rock +Close," which is at the foot of the Castle at the southern side, is one +beautiful jungle of foliage, in which myrtle, ivy, and arbutus +intertwine with the rowan tree and the silver hazel. + +[Illustration: Blarney Castle.] + +If we have gone to Blarney on the "outside jaunting-car," the return +journey may be made by Bawnafinny, Kerry Pike, and the Sournagh Valley, +and Northern Lee road. Beneath Bawnafinny, "the pastures of beauty," we +get a glimpse of Blarney Lake, a broad sheet of water bordered with tall +trees, above which the old Castle raises its head. It would gladden the +heart of Izaak Walton, as it is full of fish, among which is the famous +gillaroo trout, which will not rise to the tantalising fly. The +peasantry have a legend, that within the lake lies hidden the treasure +and plate of the last of the MacCarthys, who hid them there sooner than +allow his conquerors to gain possession of it. The secret is said to be +known to three of the old family, and before one dies he tells it to +the other, so that it may be recovered when the MacCarthy "comes to his +own again." The milk girls also on May mornings are said to have +frequently seen fairy cows along the banks of the lake, which vanish +into thin mists when approached by human footsteps! + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Blackrock Castle, Cork.] + +~Ballincollig~ is a place of some interest. The powder mill is a +long-established factory, and gives considerable employment in the +neighbourhood. The large cavalry barracks is amongst the finest in the +south of Ireland. + +~Blackrock~ is little better than a fishing village; but the suburbs +between it and Cork are filled with villa residences, pleasure grounds, +and market gardens. Beside the road, between the city and the village, +are situated the well-known nursery gardens belong to Hartland. The +daffodil farm, when the flowers are full, is a sight very difficult to +surpass in the three Kingdoms. Maxwellstown House, on the slope of a +southern hill, was the scene of a tragedy, not yet forgotten in Cork. +After a marriage _dejeuner_, the bride retired to her dressing-room to +don her going-away dress, but the bridegroom waited in vain for her +return. She had died suddenly in the arms of those who attended her; and +the story goes that the disconsolate lover dismissed the servants, shut +up the house with everything just as it was, and went on his way out +into the wide world alone. Long years afterwards, when news of his death +came from a far-off land, his next-of-kin had the house re-opened, and +found everything just as it had been left half a century before, after +the wedding breakfast. The dust and cobwebs were cleared away, and all +went to the hammer. + +Eastward, towards the harbour's mouth, there is much to be enjoyed. +Excursionists may take the train direct from the Great Southern and +Western Railway terminus, or by Passage from the Albert Station, and +then by steamer to Queenstown. Taking the direct line the train runs +almost parallel with the promenade called the Marina, which separates +from the river side the broad pasture known as Cork Park, which is the +local race course. A race meeting at Cork is well worth witnessing. The +gay young bucks, described long ago by Arthur Young, still are with us, +and they and their lady friends make a fine flutter during race week. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Queenstown Harbour.] + +~Passage~ (~West~) was once the busy site of ship-building and +dock-yards, but the industry is no longer of anything like its original +proportions. The town is an old-fashioned place, and has not escaped the +pen of Father Prout, who, in what he calls "manifestly an imitation of +that unrivalled dithyramb," The Groves of Blarney--with little of its +humours and all its absurdity--signs the attractions of what he styles a +fashionable Irish watering-place:-- + + "The town of Passage + Is both large and spacious, + And situate + Upon the say; + 'Tis nate and dacent, + And quite adjacent + To come from Cork + On a summer's day." + +Steamers ply between the railway station at Passage and the many little +towns around the port. ~Glenbrook~ and ~Monkstown~ are particularly +picturesque. Above the latter, nestling in the trees, may be seen +Monkstown Castle, the legend attached to which says it was built for one +groat. The owner of the site, one of the Archdeckens, an Anglo-Irish +family, having gone away to the wars in the Lowlands, his better-half +promised him a pleasant surprise on his return. She employed a number of +workmen to build the castle, a condition of the contract being that they +should buy their food from her while so engaged. Truly, she was a shrewd +woman. Her profits were such, that she had enough to pay the entire cost +of the work, less one solitary groat. + +~Spike Island~ is mentioned in Church History as a present given by a +Munster King to St. Cartach, of Lismore. In modern times it was used as +a convict prison, the convicts' labour being employed in the +construction of the fortifications around the harbour. + +~Queenstown~, or, to give it its old Irish name, Cove, is built upon an +island. It is the paradise of naval pensioners, and the home of all +nationalities, yet Irish is still a spoken tongue not a mile away, +behind "Spy Hill." The magnificent Cathedral to St. Colman, the patron +Saint of Cloyne, occupies a commanding position over the harbour. It is +in the later florid Gothic architecture, and within one of its +transepts is buried the celebrated Dr. Coppinger, a learned writer and +member of the most famous and enduring of the Danish families to whom +Ireland became a native land. In an old graveyard on the island, Charles +Wolfe, the writer of the elegy on Sir John Moore, and Tobin, the +dramatist, are buried. The panorama from Spy Hill embraces the +enchanting river and the wide harbour, which is capable of holding all +the ships in the British Navy within the line drawn from the two forts, +Camden and Carlisle, which guard the entrance. Of Queenstown, the +_Dublin Health Record_ says:--"The climate is remarkably mild and +equable, and, at the same time, fairly dry and tonic, and is especially +suitable as a winter and spring residence for persons with delicate +chests, to sufferers from chronic catarrhal throat affections, and to +convalescents from acute diseases. It is particularly appropriate as a +seaside resort to persons requiring a soothing and sedative atmosphere. +From the position of Queenstown, winds from the colder points are very +little felt, and it is completely protected from the north, north-east, +and north-west winds. The mean temperatures of the seasons are exactly +similar to those at Torquay, the noted winter health resort in the south +of England, and higher than those of Bournemouth, Hastings, and Ventnor. +As a winter health resort, Queenstown possesses all the best natural and +climatic advantages." + +The beach presents the most varied and motley sights to be seen anywhere +in northern Europe. Merchant seamen from every port of the world +congregate here; military and man-of-war sailors are ever present, +pleasure-seeking yachtsmen, pilots and fishers mix with the melancholy +groups of emigrants, or the irrepressible vendors of impossible wares. +Beyond in the blue waters, His Majesty's flagship rides at anchor, one +or more of the "ocean greyhounds," with dead slow engines, are steaming +out between the forts; tenders, whale-boats, small steamers, tugs, and +every craft that sails the sea, down to the familiar Munster "hooker," +are hurrying to ports far and near, or lying "idle as painted ships upon +a painted ocean." Most of the Atlantic liners have offices here. Tenders +convey the mails from the deep-water quays at the Great Southern and +Western terminus out to the steamers, which usually ride in the fair way +by the harbour's mouth. Queenstown is the principal port through which +the emigrants leave Ireland. Young and old, when the "emigration fever" +is rife, the tides of people may be seen flowing oceanwards. Sometimes +they have a little money, and are going to better themselves; but most +usually they are going out penniless to relatives abroad, or "just +trusting in God." Not an unfrequent sight is to see bare-footed peasant +children waiting for their turn to cross the gangway which leads to the +New World. Perhaps they have nothing with them but "a pot of shamrock," +or a little mountain thrush or orange-billed blackbird, in a wicker +cage, to make friends with "beyant the herring-pond." It is very +curious, but very Irish, that they do not at all seem to want the +sympathy that is lavished upon them by the onlookers. When they are +leaving their native place, the "neighbours" hold an "American wake," +and in the morning, with heartrending embraces and wild caioning, give +them the last "Bannact Dea Leat"--"God's blessing be on your way"; but +when they come to Cove, the sorrow is smothered; they are buoyed up by +that trusting faith in the future which is the first fibre in the Irish +nature. They may look melancholy to us, but they themselves make merry, +and before the "big ship" is but on the "Old Sea," as the Atlantic is +called, the girls and young men are slipping through rollicking reels to +improvised music "to show their heart's deep sorrow they are scorning." +Perhaps, as the Gaelic proverb expresses it, "'Tis the heavy heart that +has the lightest foot." But a truce to trouble. They tell a story of an +emigrant and a grand trunk merchant at Queenstown which shows alike the +hapless condition and happy-go-lucky heart of the Irishman. "Pat," said +the merchant, "you're going to travel; will you buy a trunk?" "A trunk," +answered Pat, "an' for what, yerra?" "To put your clothes in, of +course." "And meself go naked, is it? Och! lave off your gladiatoring; +sure it's took up I'd be if I did that!" + +~Crosshaven~ and ~Aghada~, two watering places inside the harbour, are +within easy reach of Cove by steamer, which calls at Currabinny Pier. +The Owenabwee[3] river runs between Currabinny and Crosshaven; it is a +beautiful, well-wooded stream which has been celebrated in a +plaintive-aired Jacobite ballad, the "Lament of the Irish Maiden." + + "On Carrigdhoun the heath is brown, + The clouds are dark on Ardnalee, + And many a stream comes rushing down + To swell the angry Owenabwee. + The moaning blast is whistling fast + Through many a leafless tree, + But I'm alone, for he is gone, + My hawk is flown, ochone machree." + +A few hundred yards from Crosshaven river there is a fiord of the +Owenabwee, known as Drake's Pool. Here the great soldier-sailor, Sir +Francis Drake, with his five little sloops, hid in 1587 from a +formidable Spanish fleet. The Spaniards entered the harbour, but failing +to find their quarry, put to sea again in high dudgeon. + +Near ~Aghada~, at the other side of the harbour, is Rostellan Castle, +formerly the residence of the Lords of Thomond. ~Cloyne~ is only four +miles' drive "on the long car" through a rich countryside, and on the +way may be seen a Druidical cromlech, at Castlemartyr, in a very fair +state of preservation. Cloyne Round Tower "points its long fingers to +the sky" above the ancient church wherein there is a fine alabaster +statue of the metaphysician, Dr. Berkeley, who was Bishop of Cloyne. +~Ballycotton~ is seven miles from Cloyne. The cliffs here are high and +wild, and Youghal, shining white in the sun in summer weather, can be +easily seen at the mouth of the far-famed Blackwater. There are modern +hotels and moderate lodgings at Ballycotton. In the season splendid +deep-sea fishing can be had in the vicinity, and the opportunities of +sea-bathing are enticing. + +[Illustration: Ballycotton Harbour] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Ballycotton.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Cork District, see end + of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +[Illustration] + +The River Blackwater, Youghal, Etc. + + +Edmund Spenser spent most of his time in Cork County, at Kilcoleman +Castle in the vicinity of Buttevant. The place was well chosen as the +house of a poet. The surrounding country is very beautiful, and every +mountain and glen has its story. + +The town of ~Buttevant~ took its name from the battle-cry of the +Barrymores--"Boutez-en-avant," "push forward." The ruins of the +beautiful Abbey remain. At the time of the supervision of monasteries it +was described as "a nest of abbots." Buttevant is the railway station +for Doneraile, and hard by is Cahirmee, where the greatest horse fair in +the British Isles is annually held. The fair lasts for two days. It is +held about midsummer, and attracts buyers not only from all parts of +these countries, but from as far away as Vienna and Stockholm. Spenser +pays tribute to the beautiful Blackwater which flows through Mallow to +Youghal-- + + "Swift Annsduff, which of the English is called Blackwater." + +Far away in the highland country between Cork and Kerry the stream +rises, and comes floating and pushing down from the haunt of the +fairies and the outlaw, through the wild country of Meelin. Here is a +remarkable cave, the hiding place of Donald O'Keeffe, last of the old +chiefs of the land of Duhallow, who was outlawed after the fall of the +Jacobites. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ In the Woods at Buttevant.] + +The river flows through Newmarket, the birthplace of Curran, and +Kanturk, the birthplace of Barry Yelverton, to ~Mallow~ which is the +centre of the lines of railway radiating into Kerry, Fermoy, and +Lismore, as well as to Cork city. The town is very beautifully situated. +In the distance are the Kilworth mountains, which seem afar off to join +the ample deer-park at Mallow Castle. It was once one of the liveliest +and most fashionable resorts in Ireland, but its famous spas, to which +gentlewomen and gallants came in the last century, are now unfrequented +and almost forgotten. When abductions, duelling, and such pastimes were +in vogue, "The Rakes of Mallow" were in their heyday. As Lysaght sang:-- + + "Beauing, belleing, dancing, drinking, + Breaking windows, damning, sinking, + Ever raking, never thinking, + Live the rakes of Mallow. + + Spending faster than it comes, + Beating waiters, bailiffs, duns, + Bacchus' true-begotten sons, + Live the rakes of Mallow. + + Living short, but merry lives. + Going where the devil drives: + Having sweethearts, but no wives, + Live the rakes of Mallow." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Mallow Castle.] + +~The Blackwater~ flows past Mallow through a rich country surrounded by +soft-breasted hills and well-planted lawns, to Fermoy, a garrison town +of importance, from which Mitchelstown, eleven miles away, may be +reached by a light railway. The caves at Mitchelstown are described +elsewhere (Waterford section). We will part the branch line here and +return, _via_ Cork, to Youghal, the point from which to become familiar +with the Blackwater at its best. + +~Youghal~, except in summer-time, when the visitors to its splendid +strand enliven its appearance, is a sombre old place with an air of +retired respectability. It is full of memories of other days, for here +the Dane and the Christian came together; the Norman made it a walled +town, and the Spaniards came into its harbour. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ View on the Blackwater Youghal.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Clock Tower, Youghal.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Sir Walter Raleigh's House at +Youghal.] + +From here Sir Walter Raleigh, its Mayor, went forth to found +Virginia--and to the scaffold. It was a chartered city, and grew in +wealth and importance from 1183 to 1579, when it was sacked by Gerald, +sixteenth Earl of Desmond, then out "upon his keeping." Ormonde drove +the Geraldines out of the town, and hanged the then Mayor outside his +own door for aiding them. He rebuilt its walls, and placed here a +strong garrison. In 1641 it was again besieged, but held out for six +weeks until relieved. In 1645, Castlehaven attacked it, but was repulsed +by Broghill, fifth son of the Earl of Cork. Here, during the war with +the Confederates, money was struck. On the execution of Charles I., +Ormonde proclaimed his son King, but the Puritans in the town revolted +to Cromwell, who wintered here in 1649. In 1660, the Cavaliers and +broken followers of the Geraldines captured the town, and ten days +before his actual succession proclaimed Charles II. King. With varying +fortunes of war, the town passed into the hands of the Jacobites and +Williamites. The objects of interest, besides the picturesque +attractions of the strand and beautiful bay, are very many. The Clock +Tower remains where the old South Gate to the town stood. Tynte's Castle +was built by Norman settlers in the fifteenth century. St. Mary's +Cathedral is cruciform, consisting of nave, aisle, transepts, choir, and +massive tower. In the chantry of Our Blessed Saviour, or south transept, +besides the memorial to the founder and his countess, is the grotesque +mausoleum, in florid, glaring Italian style, to the Earl of Cork and his +family. At Boyle's feet is the kneeling figure of his first wife, Joan; +at his head is that of his second, Catherine. Over the arch is his +mother, Joan, and along the margin of the plinth are nine diminutive +effigies--his children. The tower was evidently constructed rather as a +defence than simply for a belfry. The churchyard, where there are many +ancient gravestones, is the chief centre of local superstition, and here +all local ghostly visitations are alleged to take place. ~Myrtle Grove~, +whilom the residence of the ill-fated Elizabethan soldier, Raleigh, is +an unpretentious, ancient gabled dwelling. The interior is remarkable +for its beautiful oak wainscoting. + +During his sojourn in Munster, "Captain Sir Walter Raleigh" performed +many deeds of dering-do, albeit some of them were far from being like +Bayard's, without reproach. He was Mayor of Youghal, 1588-9; and, with +Spenser, was granted the greater part of the forfeited estates of the +Earl of Desmond. Raleigh's grant comprised property at Youghal and along +the Blackwater to Affane, already mentioned. In the garden attached to +Myrtle Grove he is supposed to have planted the potato, the first +planted in Ireland. + +The strand at Youghal is very fine, and sea-bathers are afforded every +opportunity of enjoying themselves. In summer time the watering-place is +much patronized, and every year is becoming more attractive. There are +good hotels, and plenty of residences and lodgings to accommodate +visitors during the season. In the morning the whole fore-shore is given +over to the bathers, and in the evenings it is mostly "Oh, listen to the +band" along the Promenade and in the Green Park. The inroads of the sea +at Claycastle are at length being successfully encountered by the Case +groining system, which has been found so efficient elsewhere. + +The coast-line from Youghal to Cork is indented with splendid sea +cliffs, fiords, and strands. Garryvoe lies between Youghal and +Ballycotton. The sea for miles along this district has been eating into +the clay cliffs, and threatens to fulfil a Gaelic prophecy that it will +yet reach Killeagh, a town six miles inland. Near Killeagh is a very +beautiful scene of sylvan splendour, Glenbower. + +The railway line runs direct from Youghal to Cork, passing the thriving +market town of Midleton, the granary of Cork County, and Carrigtwohill, +where there are the ruins of a Norman Castle. + +A ferry from Youghal brings the passenger into Waterford County. The +road above Whiting Bay leads to the fishing village of ~Ardmore~. It was +perhaps, the first place in Ireland where the light of Christianity +shone, as St. Declan is generally agreed to have been a precursor of the +National apostle. In the country districts surrounding, as in the +fishing village itself, the language most in use is Gaelic. The round +tower, said to be of later date than any other in Ireland, is unique in +many respects. The Cathedral, with its exquisite chancel arch and +elaborate exterior arcading, will delight the antiquary and architect. +Other interesting objects are the Ogham stones in its chancel, and the +narrow lintelled "Bed" of St. Declan. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Strancally Castle, Co. +Waterford.] + +The service of steamers from Youghal to Cappoquin up the ~River +Blackwater~ depends at present mainly on the state of the tide. But +despite this and other things, the scenery on the river side will well +repay inconvenience. Having left the ferry behind, the first place of +interest is Rhincrew (The Bloody Point), and on the wooded hill the +ruins of a preceptory of the Knights Templars still remain. Higher up on +the western bank of the Glendine tributary stands Temple Michael, an +old fortalice of the Geraldines, which Cromwell battered down for "dire +insolence." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Blackwater River.] + +There is a legend which tells that the last of the Geraldines was buried +at Ardmore, far from his young bride, who lost her life during the siege +by the regicides. The story says, after his burial, at night his voice +could be heard clearly, calling across the river, to bring him back and +bury him by his own. For seven years the awe-struck peasants heard the +plaintive voice calling, in the tender tongue of the Gael, "Garault, +come to me,"--"Gerald, a ferry!" At last, some young men of his clan +went to Ardmore and brought his dead body to Temple Michael, where his +wife was buried, and henceforth his spirit no longer troubled the silent +vigils of the fishermen at night. + +The bend in the waterway brings one into sight of rich pastures and fine +demesnes. Ballintray, "The Town of the Strand" has in its vicinity +Molana Abbey, where the warrior, Raymond Le Gros, lies buried. At the +broads of Clashmore, the highest water-mark to which the inflowing tide +comes, one can easily imagine themselves upon an inland lake. Beyond is +Strancally Castle, beetling over the river, set firmly in a foundation +of crags. The local tradition carriers will gladly point out "The +Murdering Hole," a natural fissure in the rocks, and here they will tell +you that the departed Desmonds destroyed their guests after robbing +them! Above the confluence of the Bride with the Blackwater, +Villierstown and Camphire villages are passed, then the Awbeg joins its +little flood, and beyond the island Dromana Ford is reached. Near is +Dromana Castle, where "the old Countess of Desmond" was born. In the +table-book of Robert Sydney, second Earl of Leyicester, written when +Ambassador at Paris, about 1640, there is the following reference to +her:-- + + "The old Countess of Desmond was a marryed woman in Edward IV. time + of England, and lived till towards the end of Queen Elizabeth, so + as she must needes be neare one hundred and forty years old. She + had a new sett of teeth not long afore her death, and might have + lived much longer had she not mett with a kind of violent death, + for she would needes climbe a nut-tree to gather nuts, so falling + down she hurt her thigh, which brought a fever, and that fever + brought death. This my cousin, Walter Fitzwilliam, told me. This + old lady, Mr. Haniot told me, came to petition the Queen, and, + landing at Bristoll, she came on foot to London, being then so old + that her daughter was decrepit, and not able to come with her." + +Dromana House, on the eastern branch of the river, is situated on a +beautiful height, which commands the reaches of the river from Cappoquin +to Youghal. At more than one point on the river there were opportunities +of seeing in the distance the cloisters of ~Mount Melleray~--"the little +town of God," lonely above the mists and shadows of the hills. As we +walk or drive, the hillside behind the river winds its way through +cliffs and well-wooded lands in front, the mountains unfold themselves +range behind range. No one who has ever visited Mount Melleray will +forget it or the generous Brothers. The Trappists, expelled from France +in 1830, first settled on the borders of Kerry, but subsequently +colonised this barren hillside, and already they have transformed it +into a fine farm, containing rich pastures and thriving plantations. The +monastery may be visited by gentlemen visitors, and cannot fail to prove +of extraordinary interest. There are two guest houses, one for gentlemen +and the other for ladies. No charge is made for their bed or board, and +all creeds, classes, and nationalities are received with a _caed mille +failte_. Every week a sermon in Irish is preached to the mountaineers. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Mount Melleray--View from South.] + +Either from Melleray or Cappoquin, ~Lismore~ may be reached by car or +train. It was the home of learning of old, and to-day, not only its +beautiful position but historic Castle command attention. It is the +birthplace of Boyle, the philosopher. Ptolemy is asserted very +confidently by some authorities to have mentioned this place and its +river. It is certain, however, that the place was long in existence in +631, when St. Carthage, of Rahan, fled thither. Nothing could be +prettier than the appearance of the town, and it is a comfortable, +well-to-do place, monopolising the trade of a large countryside. St. +Machuda's Cathedral will repay inspection. The Castle is the Irish seat +of the Duke of Devonshire. It was an ancient fortress, dating back to +the reign of King John. It stands in a pre-eminently commanding +position, over the Blackwater, and was the scene of many a hard-fought +fight, especially in the wars of the Commonwealth, when Castlehaven +captured it from the Roundheads. A magnificent view of the surrounding +country may be had from its higher-storied windows. The public are +freely admitted. From one of the high windows, it is said, when James +II. was asked to look, he accused the maker of the suggestion of +desiring to throw him from the dizzy height. + +From the Railway Station at Lismore, the most interesting object in view +is the new Roman Catholic Cathedral, dedicated to St. Carthage, the +founder of the See, and believed to occupy the site of his cell. Thickly +surrounded by beautiful lime trees, the warm red sandstones of the +walling, with the limestone dressing of the windows and doorways, forms +a brilliant picture. The interior is richly furnished, and altogether +the church is well worthy of a visit. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ The Guest House, Mount Melleray.] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Waterford and District. + + +Waterford is the port of call for most of the shipping from the West and +South of England and Wales. The projected system by which steamers will +run direct from Fishguard to Rosslare Harbour, whatever effect it may +have upon Waterford as a port, will bring it by many hours nearer to the +English markets. It is only a question of a few years until this route +will be at the disposal of tourists and travellers from across the +Channel. Under the Amalgamation of Railways Act of 1900, Waterford has +the additional advantage of becoming a terminus of the system. With it +as centre, railway services are supplied to Cork County and Lismore, to +Limerick _via_ Carrick-on-Suir and Clonmel, and to Kilkenny _via_ +Kilmacow and Thomastown. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Waterford.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Waterford, from North Side of +River.] + +"The Star of the Suir"--the City of ~Waterford~--derived its name from +the Danish words, Vedr-fiord, given to it by its original founders, the +hardy Norsemen. From whatever side we approach the old town, whether +land or sea, the sight is equally delightful. From without, approaching +by the broad waterway, the city stretches forth to meet us, with the +quaint wooden bridge spanning the noble river, and the hills forming a +zone behind. Surely the Danes had an eye for beauty, as for maritime +advantage, in selecting this happy spot for their fortress. In the ninth +century, when the ploughers of the sea seized on the mouth of the Suir, +they fortified a little delta some twenty acres in size, having the +present Quay as its long side. From this little triangle the town grew, +and in the last century was one of the first seaport towns in Ireland. +Here, in 1171, Strongbow landed, defeated the Danes and Irish, who had +confederated to repel him, and sacked the town. It is a strange +historical coincidence that the Feast of St. Bartholomew was the day on +which Strongbow landed and countenanced the massacre of the inhabitants. +Under Raymond Le Gros the carnage was carried out, and in St. Lawrence +O'Toole's address to the Irish princes at peace with the invader, which +has been versified by Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, it is referred to in the +lines:-- + + "Tell me not of leagues and treaties, + Treaties sealed in faith as true + As Black Raymond's, on the bloody + Feast of St. Bartholomew." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ The Quays, Waterford.] + +King John landed here, and the town was walled in and fortified against +the Irish, who hung like wolves around a fold in the outlying country. +In the Revolution the town adhered to the King. It was the port most +used by the Confederates, and here many of their proclamations were +printed. It was the one place in Ireland which successfully resisted the +all-conquering Cromwell, and hence received the name from the Cavaliers +of _Urbs intacta_. An object of historic interest which has been +restored within the present century is Reginald's Tower. It was built +originally by Reginald the Dane, son of Sitrius, the great Danish King +of Dublin and Fingal (The Fair Strangers), whom Brian Boru defeated at +Clontarf. Here, it is said, DeClair married Eva, whose fair face induced +him to join his forces to her father's fallen fortunes. Maclise, in his +wonderful historical picture "Bartered Away,"[4] represents the nuptials +as taking place on the battlefield, dyed with the blood of the +vanquished Irish. There could not have been much love in the match after +all. Strongbow was scarcely dead when his young widow wrote to Raymond +Le Gros that "a great tooth had fallen out," which he understood to mean +that the time had arrived for him to come and make her his own, which he +did. The patron saints of the diocese of Waterford and Lismore are Saint +Cartach and Saint Otteran, the latter being a Dane who embraced +Christianity. The Cathedral (Episcopalian) occupies the site of the old +Danish Cathedral, the existence of which, together with that of Christ +Church in Dublin, bears testimony to the zeal with which the Danes +embraced Christianity. The Quay is the most characteristic bit of +Waterford. Across the bridge, from Mount Misery or Cromwell's Rock, two +points of vantage, excellent views of the surroundings can be had. The +Suir, shining silvery, steals in and out among the hills and by the old +town into the sea. The most interesting of the ancient monuments in +Waterford is what is commonly called the "French Church," which, more +correctly, is entitled "The Holy Ghost Friary." Authorities agree in +assigning the date of its foundation to 1240, but its history has never +been written. After the Edict of Nantes, the fugitive Huguenots formed a +little colony in Waterford. The Corporation granted a salary to their +minister, and they were provided with a place of worship in the choir of +the old church. All that remain of this once gorgeous pile of +buildings are the ruins of the tower, Lady Chapel, chancel, and nave. +The style is Early English, and the most attractive feature is the +graceful three-lighted east window. The Catholic Cathedral is worth a +visit. Within easy reach of the Quay is Ballybricken, the heart of the +bacon industry, and the home of the best known body of pig-buyers in +Ireland. These men are almost a community to themselves. They have their +own traditions, and are more like an organisation which would have +sprung up from a church guild centuries ago than in any way a modern +trades union. Formerly Waterford was remarkable for the manufacture of +beautiful cut glass, but the industry has died away. The housekeeper who +possesses specimens of the art considers herself lucky indeed in her +possession, as collectors are continually on the alert to procure them. +In the immediate vicinity of Waterford itself there are many beauty +spots and places of interest. In the suburb of Newtown stands the +paternal home of Lord Roberts of Waterford and Candahar, besides whom on +its roll of famous children Waterford includes the names of Charles +Keane and Vincent Wallace. Portlaw, four and a half miles away, on the +south bank of the Suir, was once the centre of a thriving cotton +industry. Here an order may be had at the estate office to visit +Curraghmore, the residence of the Marquis of Waterford. The magnificent +demesne includes over four thousand acres, and Curraghmore is possessed +of the best-blooded stud of hunters in Ireland. + +[Illustration: Imperial Hotel, Waterford.] + +[Illustration: Curraghmore.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Tramore.] + +~Tramore~, seven miles away, is reached by train in fifteen minutes. It +is one of the most popular watering places in the South of Ireland, and +in the height of the season it is estimated that about four thousand +visitors augment the normal population of two thousand. Many of the +Waterford merchants live there, and their villas and the houses of the +town, rising one street above another on the side of the hill, make a +pretty picture when viewed from the strand. The hotels are numerous, +the Grand Hotel can be recommended as being specially comfortable, while +there are three or four other hotels where very good accommodation can +be had. The lodging-house accommodation is equal to that to be obtained +at any Irish seaside resort. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Evening at Tramore.] + +In addition to capital sea and trout fishing, the visitor can enjoy the +pleasures of golf and lawn-tennis, and during the summer months races +are frequently held at the Tramore Flying Course, which is situated +within view of the town. The views of this pleasantly situated holiday +reunion will recall to many minds happy days spent by the Sounding Sea. + +The Rabbit Burrow, a little further on, is a mile in length, and helps +to divide the Back Strand from the spacious bay. Just before reaching +this Burrow, the visitor will see a tombstone erected to the memory of +those who were lost in the "Sea Horse" transport, in January, 1816, when +returning from the Peninsular Campaign. No less than 362 lost their +lives in this terrible disaster. At the western side of Tramore there +are many places along the rock-bound coast well worth a visit. Passing +along in the Newtown direction we come in view of the Ladies' Cove; +here, years ago, a fishing pier was built by the Board of Works. It was +swept right away one stormy night over two decades ago, and has not been +replaced since. Along the Cliff Road we catch views of Gun's Cove, and +the Gillameen Cove, where excellent bathing facilities, free of charge, +can be availed of by the visitor. + +On the western shore, twelve miles by road from Waterford, is the pretty +watering place of ~Dunmore~. It is situated at the mouth of the river +Suir in a valley gently sloping to the sea, and is protected from the +north winds by a wood which, in the hot summer days, is a most +delightful resort for visitors. There is also a public park and tennis +ground, and the facilities for bathing, particularly for gentlemen, +leave nothing to be desired. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Dunmore.] + +In the early part of the last century the place was a mail packet +station for the mails to and from England. The harbour was built by the +Government at a cost of about L100,000, and is at present under the +control of the Board of Works. Here, in the fishing season, are boats +from all parts of the Kingdom fishing for herring and mackerel, and +special steamers are constantly running to and from Milford with the +harvest of the sea. + +There are some particularly good villas and houses which can be rented +in the season, and there is a good hotel just over the harbour, while +rooms are to be had on reasonable terms at many houses in the town. For +persons who desire a select quiet place to spend a holiday in, it can be +recommended strongly, while for those who are fond of sea-fishing or +yachting no better place in Ireland can be had. Although there is no +railway connection with Waterford cars run daily, the fare being only +_1s._ for the twelve miles. + +Above the confluence of the Barrow and Suir, six and a half miles from +the city, from the top of the hill over Cheekpoint (Side a fairy)--where +"the river Rosse meets the river of Waterford"--a grand panorama +presents itself. In the distance the mountains shoulder one another for +prominence; the Comeraghs, the many peaked Galtees, and + + "Sweet Slievenamon, the darling and pride, + With soft flowing bosom and brow like a bride." + +This beautiful mountain owes its name, "The Hill of the Women," to a +Finnian legend, which tells that Finn M'Cool promised to make his wife +of whichever of the fair women of Ireland could reach its summit first, +when all were started from the foot. Grainne Oge, the Gaelic Helen, of +course was heroine of the day, and Finn's taking her was the origin of +one of the most enthralling of the Celtic romances. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Croker, Waterford._ Dunmore Harbour.] + +Among the more interesting objects at Dunbrody are St. Catherine's +Church, an old time dependency of the Abbey, and the splendid remains +of the Cistercian Monastery, rising above the meadows by which the +Campile Stream flows. The monastic church in general style is Early +English, and is fairly preserved. It dates from the twelfth century, and +was founded by Henri de Montmorenzi, Marshal to Henry II.--the same who +was killed at the Curragh. + +There is a severe simplicity about its lines which gives an impression +of great dignity. The crenelated Tower springs from the nave and +transept. The Abbots of Dunbrody sat as Lords in Parliament, and +exercised civil jurisdiction. Above Dunbrody, on the river opposite "The +Little Island," where was an ancient hermitage, in a straight line is +Ballinakill House, where James II. spent his last night in Ireland, on +the day before that celebrated in the ballad, which tells:-- + + "Righ Shemus he has gone to France, + And left his crown behind, + Ill luck be their's, both day and night, + Put running in his mind." + +~Passage East~ (seven miles), now a fishing village, with spider-legged +spit light, was reduced by Cromwell in 1649. The old mole still stands. +At Ballyhack, across the ferry, a strong, square castle is well +preserved. "New Geneva," in the vicinity, was garrisoned with Hessians +during the Rebellion of '98. It is mentioned in the well-known Irish +song, "The Croppy Boy." The place received its name in 1786, when a +colony of Genoese exiles were established there. On the Waterford coast, +from the city to where the Blackwater kisses the sea, beside a range of +noble cliffs, there are many points of interest. The Tower of Hook, +standing one hundred feet high, on the promontory of the same name on +the Wexford side, is attributed amongst others to Reginald the Dane, +Ross MacRume, the founder of New Ross, and Florence de la Hague (1172). +Its circular walls are of great thickness and strength. When Strongbow +heard of this Tower of Hook, with Crook (Norse, Krok a nook) on the +western side, he is alleged to have said "He would take Waterford by +Hook or Crook," and thus originated a common saying which has come down +to our own days. The Saltees, two islands off the Wexford coast, were +the refuge to which Colclough and Bagnall Harvey hastened in vain after +the suppression of the Rebellion in '98. Helvick Head, the name of which +also betrays its Danish origin, marks the entrance to Dungarvan Bay. The +line running from Waterford to Limerick Junction contains many places of +interest, from which short tours may be made. As we come near to +~Carrick-on-Suir~ the castle comes into view. The present building was +mainly erected by the former Earl of Ormonde, "Black Tom," as he is +known in history. He was one of the many Irish gallants who found favour +in the eyes of Queen Elizabeth. From Carrick, a drive of eight miles +brings us to Lough Coumshinawn, a lonely tarn lying high among the +Comeragh mountains, on one side of which the cliff rises perpendicularly +to a height of seven hundred feet. The railway from Carrick runs through +the beautiful valley of the Suir to Kilsheelan, and then passes to the +left of the Knockmealdown mountains to ~Clonmel~, the capital of the +"premier county." The town is pleasantly placed in a thriving centre of +local trade. It figured largely in the fights between Cromwellian and +Confederate, and some of the old battlements still stand witness to its +strength in bygone times. The peasantry have a tradition that a cloud +will ever hang above the town since Father Sheehy's death in the last +century. The tradition is hinted at in the beautiful emigrant ballad +"Shameen Dhu," by Katherine Tynan:-- + + "Now, God watch over you, Shameen, + An' His blessed Mother Mary! + 'Twas you that had the lightest heart + In all sweet Tipperary-- + + 'Twas you could sing the blackbird's song, + In dry or rainy weather: + Avic, the long-road wasn't long + Whin we thravelled it together. + + Sure, scores of times in the mornin' bright + You sung this very road, + You med the mare's heart bate so light + She never felt her load; + 'Twas you could lilt wid the thrush's trill, + Ah, well, avic machree! + God grant you may be singin' still + In that lonely far counthrie!" + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Holy Cross Abbey at Thurles.] + +The name of Laurence Sterne, author of "Tristram Shandy," and of the +gorgeous Countess of Blessington, are both associated with Clonmel as +their birthplace. Through a mountain cut, appropriately called "The +Wilderness," the railway line runs aside to Thurles. The little church +of Rathronan, standing high on the hill, was the scene of the +sensational Arbuthnot abduction in the last century. Those who wish for +details of that unhappy love affair will find the story told in faithful +words elsewhere. The demesne lands between Clonmel and Fethard are many. +~Fethard~ was an old walled town, it defied the Cromwellians, and +surrendered with all the honours of war. After treaty and terms were +agreed on, the Roundheads found that what they had mistaken as gaping +mouths of cannon on the fortress were nothing more dangerous than +innocent churns placed in positions of pretence, not defence. The +bogland from Fethard to Thurles is uninteresting; the intermediate +stations are Farranalleen, Laffan's Bridge, and Horse and Jockey, at +which collieries are still being worked. At Thurles we meet the main +line of the Great Southern and Western. ~Thurles~, originally a Danish +town and the scene of the battle between the Norsemen and Irish, +afterwards became a fortalice of the Knights Templars. Here, by the +bridge across the Suir, the remains of the old settlement are still to +be seen. Four miles distant, standing by the banks of the river, +surrounded by tall trees, are the remains of the once great Cistercian +~Holy Cross Abbey~. It was built in 1168-69 to house the relic of the +True Cross sent by the Pope to Brian Boru's grandson, Donald, King of +Thomond. This interesting relic, after centuries of vicissitudes, is now +enshrined at the Convent of the Ursulines, in Blackrock, Cork. On the +feasts of the Finding of the True Cross (May 3rd), and of the Exaltation +of the Holy Cross (September 14th), and on every Friday in Lent, it is +presented for public veneration. Thurles is the seat of Episcopal +residence of the Archdiocese of Cashel. On the main line higher than +Thurles is Templemore, founded by the Knights Templars. Between Thurles +and the Limerick Junction is Goold's Cross station, six miles from +Cashel. The noblest evidence of the early civilization of Ireland is to +be found in ~Cashel Of the Kings~. Generally the buildings date from the +early twelfth century, the Round Tower being much earlier and the +Cathedral later. Cormac's Chapel was consecrated in 1134, being built by +the Saint King of Munster. It is rich Norman work, comprising nave, +chancel, and towers at the transepts. The doorways and chancel arch are +elaborate. The Round Tower is unique when compared with the other +buildings, as it is of sandstone. It is connected with the transept of +the Cathedral. The pointed windows, choir, transepts, and tower are very +beautiful. In the burial-ground outside is the famous Cross of Cashel, +with a sculptured effigy of St. Patrick. The whole group gathered +together on the massive Rock of Cashel, whose firmness is a proverb in +Ireland, presents an imposing array. This Cathedral was the one burnt by +the Earl of Kildare in 1495, when his excuse was that he thought the +Archbishop was within. Here, in 1647, a bloody tragedy fell out. +Murragh-an-Theathaun, "Murrough of the Burnings," as the peasantry still +call Lord Inchiquin, massacred a number of women and children, who +sought sanctuary here when Cashel had fallen before his siege train. At +the foot of the rock are the cruciform remains of the Abbey of the +Cistercians. If, instead of diverging from Clonmel to Thurles, we +continue to the Limerick Junction, we pass Cahir, a military station +with an ancient Castle in excellent repair. From Cahir, tourists can +drive to Cashel, to Ardfinane, or to ~Mitchelstown~ _via_ Clogheen. The +Caves at Mitchelstown may be visited from Fermoy, Lismore, or Clogheen, +and if the visitor is sojourning at any of these places he should find +his way to these wonderful formations. Besides the caves, Mitchelstown +contains Caherderinny Castle, Kilbehiny, and Mitchelstown Castle, the +residence of the Kingston family. Leaving the village of Kilbehiny we +cross to Skereenarinka, "the height for dancing," and follow a narrow +hilly road on the Galtee side which leads to the caves, in the townland +of Coolagarranroe. The different chambers of the larger caves, of which +the Kingston gallery is most beautiful, have been named: "the House of +Lords," "the House of Commons," "the Cross of the Four Roads," "the +Scotchman's," "O'Leary's," and "O'Callaghan's" caves, "the Altar," "the +Closet," "the Cellar," and "the Garret." The smaller objects of interest +within have been called: "Lot's Wife," "Mary Queen of Scots," "the Bed +of Honour," "the Cat and Kittens," "the Flitch of Bacon," &c. From +Clogheen to Tipperary we cross the Suir, and follow the foot of the +Galtees. The surrounding country is picturesque and contains some of the +finest pasture land in Ireland, being part of what is known in Munster +as the "Golden Vale." Four miles away by a beautiful road, through the +rising-grounds, the Glen of Aherlow can be reached. The glen is richly +wooded, and from Newbridge over the Aherlow river, Galteemore (3,015 +feet), the highest peak of the range may be reached. Tipperary town is a +good market place, and is pleasantly situated beneath Slievenamon. The +only relic of its former grandeur is that of the Augustinian Friary, a +foundation of Henry the Third's reign. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Roche, Dublin._ Rock of Cashel.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Waterford District, + see end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, + Fishing, Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Dungarvan.] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Killarney and Glengarriff. + + +Killarney.--From Limerick Junction to Mallow, where the branch line runs +into Kerry, the tourist to Killarney runs by many places of interest. +~Emly~, now a dwindled village, was once a diocesan city. During the +wars of the Commonwealth, Terence Albertus O'Brien, Bishop of Emly, was +executed in Limerick by Ireton. His stole and pectoral cross are still +in the possession of representatives of the family to which he belonged +at Mitchelstown. + +In the rich plain under the Ballyhoura hills, "the land flowing with +milk," is the ancient town of ~Kilmallock~. It was the citadel of the +Earls of Desmond when they held high their crests, and every stone in +the place is historical. + +Two of its four gates still remain, and among the ruins, which have +secured it the name of the "Baalbec of Ireland," are those of the old +Dominican Priory and Abbey Church. In the former is the mutilated grave +of the White Knight, a name still loathsome in the peasant's ear, and on +whom the bards have let fall their choicest curses. + +Lough Gur is of interest to the antiquary. It is ten miles to the north, +and was the centre of the Desmond country. Here of old, the Kings of +Cashel kept their Grenan or "Sunny Place" for feasting. The cyclopean +structure in the vicinity points to the place as being of importance in +pre-historic times. From Charleville, a thriving town, runs a line of +railway direct to Limerick. Buttevant and Mallow are particularly +referred to elsewhere. Millstreet is the border town on the mearings of +Cork and Kerry. + +Beyond the bogland country outside Millstreet is the village of Cullen, +where tradition says no smith has been known to thrive. Saint Lateerin, +a virgin of early Christian days, near here made her recluse, and every +day she walked across the bog, and took "living fire" in her kirtle from +the forge to her home. The smith once remarking the prettiness of her +white feet, she momentarily forgot her vow of chastity, and the fire +burnt through the homespun and blistered her feet. She went back to her +cell, and prayed that no smith should ever thrive in Cullen, and none +has ever tried to do so! + +~Rathmore~ is on the high road to Gneeveguillia mountain, and to the +north of the station, and at Christmas time, 1896, occurred the fearful +_debacle_ of the bog, which struck terror into the simple inhabitants, +and, not unnaturally, was attributed by them to super-natural causes. +Two hundred acres of Bogach-na-Mine formed a landslip and rolled in a +huge mass southwards, sweeping away several little farmsteads and +suffocating the inhabitants and cattle. At ~Headford~, the junction for +Kenmare, the scenery is very wild, and all around + + "Kerry is pushing her high headlands out + To give us the kindly greeting." + +At last, after about a four hours' run, if we came by the special +tourist train from Dublin, we have completed our one hundred and +eighty-six miles, and are in sight of + +KILLARNEY, + +the home of lakes, which has well been called "the Gem of the Western +World": its magnificent mountain peaks, its green swards and gushing +cascades, all surrounded with an atmosphere of romance and tradition. +Outside the railway station, we are face to face with the finest hotel +in the south of Ireland. Well placed, well managed, it combines all the +comforts of a home with the convenience of a well-appointed hostelry. It +is within easy reach of the principal points of interest. + +[Illustration: Boating at Killarney] + +[Illustration: Great Southern Hotel--Killarney.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Guy & Co., Cork._ Lakes of Killarney.] + +The grounds adjoin Lord Kenmare's beautiful demesne and Deer Park, which +skirts the lake shores, and contain the splendid Golf Links. + +Killarney, or "the Church of the Sloetrees," lies on a flat plateau, +within a mile from the shores of the far-famed Lough Lene, as the three +lakes, popularly known as the Lakes of Killarney, are called in Irish. +The town possesses an Episcopal Palace, a cathedral and churches of +interest, besides a monastery and School of Arts and Crafts. Otherwise +it deserves little attention; but on fair days, when the peasantry from +the neighbouring parishes crowd in, it presents a lively and varying +aspect. If the town is insignificant, not so its surroundings, for +nowhere else in the wide world is there such a combination of charms and +variety of beauty, in mountain and lake scenery, thrown together. + + "For how could river, lake, and sea + In softer sister hues agree? + Or hills of passionate purple glow + Far and near more proudly flow? + And when will summer kiss awake + Lovelier flowers by lawn or brake? + Or brighter berries blush between + Foliage of a fresher green?" + +There is a story of a tourist who, lingering long in the Holy Land, was +pained at the irreverent hurry of an American, who arrived there one +afternoon, scurried over the sacred places, and prepared to depart +betimes on the morrow. He timidly inquired of the swift-foot why he, who +had come so far, rushed away so quickly. "Sir," said the American, "I am +timed to do Europe in a fortnight. I have thrown in the Holy Land, but +if I stay here longer than one night I cannot see Killarney, which takes +three days." He was a wise man in his generation. Although enterprising +people have attempted to do the tour of the Lakes in a day, they have +always gone away more than satisfied with what they saw, but with hearts +hungry to return at a future date, and behold the beauties they had +left unseen. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ On the Upper Lake, Killarney.] + +The ~Lakes Of Killarney~ are three in number, connected by a +swift-flowing stream, the Long Range, and emptying their waters through +the river Laune into Castle Haven, on the Kerry coast. The entire +journey can be performed by boat, but in the suggested tours given, both +car, and boat, and ponies are pressed into our service. + +The divisions of the Lough Lene are:--The Upper Lake (extreme length, +two-and-a-half miles; extreme breadth, half-a-mile); the Torc, or Middle +Lake (extreme length, two miles; extreme breadth, seven-eighths of a +mile); and the Lower Lake (extreme length, five and one-eighth miles; +extreme breadth, three miles). The first glimpse caught of the lakes, +lying like broad mirrors beneath the high mountains, is a vision of fair +delight. Like tall clansmen, Mangerton, Carnthoul, and the gathering +Cruacha dhu M'Gillicuddy--the black reeks of the McGillicuddy--muster +around, as it were, to re-tell us + + "The tale of the spell-stricken band, + All entranced, with their bridles and broad swords in hand, + Who await but the word to give Erin her own"-- + +that old legend of the sleeping warriors garrisoned within the +mountain's sides, which is met with in more than one Irish county. The +Upper Lake is characterised by an untamed, peerless outline, and so near +to the mountains does it lie, that the fissures in their rugged sides +are almost countable, and the fingers of fancy almost touch the gorse on +their slopes. Gliding over its waters, we readily see in them a +land-locked sea. A ridge of the Glena mountains shuts it out from the +north, the many-peaked reeks guard the passes to the west, and to the +south stands up Derrycunnihy--"The Oak Wood of the Rabbits"--between +which and Torc is the fair bend of a Glen Coumagloun. Between the lips +of the Lakes and the feet of the hills there appears no distance + + "Save just a trace of silver sand + Marks where the water meets the land." + +Muffling the boatmen's oars for a moment, we can realise that +indescribable solemnity with which silent nature hushes everything. Even +the countless streams that have lost their way across the highlands, in +their hurry to join the Lakes, seem to cease from babbling. But +following the sinuous Long Range when we reach the still water beneath +the Eagle's Nest, Nadanullar, is the psychological moment to awaken the +echoes that eternally haunt the frowning eyry. A bugle-call sounded here +is taken up by the barricades of rock, and is repeated even ten times +over. Small wonder that the fairy hosts are credited with passing it +along their lines! The mountains take up their dying tones of sweet +sounds, and answer it one to the other until the ear can no longer +follow it through space. The ferns and rich foliage of the mountain side +trail their long fingers in the water, and cluster and quicken among the +crevices of the rocks. Recently the Laureate visited Ireland for the +first time; hitherto this land of poetry had been to him but "the +damnable country" of the politician. He came, he saw, but Killarney +conquered; and he, like all others who have gazed upon its beauty, +renders tribute where it rightly belongs. "Damnable" is not the +adjective to apply to a heavenly land, of which he truly says:-- + +"Such varied and vigorous vegetation I have seen no otherwhere; and when +one has said that, one has gone far towards awarding the prize for +natural beauty. But vegetation, at once robust and graceful, is but the +fringe and decoration of that enchanting district. The tender grace of +wood and water is set in a frame-work of hills--now stern, now ineffably +gentle, now dimpling with smiles; now frowning and rugged with impending +storm; now muffled and mysterious with mist, only to gaze out on you +again with clear and candid sunshine. Here the trout leaps; there the +eagle soars; and there beyond the wild deer dash through the arbutus +coverts, through which they have come to the margin of the lake to +drink, and, scared by your footstep or your oar, are away back to +crosiered bracken or heather covered moorland. But the first, the final, +the deepest and most enduring impression of Killarney is that of beauty +unspeakably tender, which puts on at times a garb of grandeur and a look +of awe, only in order to heighten by passing contrast the sense of soft +insinuating loveliness. How the missel thrushes sing, as well they may! +How the streams and runnels gurgle, and leap, and laugh! For the sound +of journeying water is never out of your ears; the feeling of the moist, +the fresh, the vernal, is never out of your heart. My companion agreed +with me, that there is nothing in England or Scotland as beautiful as +Killarney--meaning by Killarney its lakes, its streams, its hills, its +vegetation; and if mountain, wood, and water--harmoniously +blent--constitute the most perfect and adequate loveliness that nature +presents, it surely must be owned that it has all the world over no +superior." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Shooting the Rapids.] + +Leaving the ~Upper Lake~ behind, and bidding adieu to the green islands +that stud its breast with arbutus and the cedars of Lebanon, the Old +Weir Bridge meets the eye. 'Neath its arch the waters come down with +foam and force, the oars are shipped, and we shoot straight through the +eye of the rapid, thanks to the strong arm and sure nerve of the +oarsmen. The beautiful reach here is the bosom "where the bright waters +meet." Amid exquisite combination of colour, a Vallambrosa strewed with +ferns, lichens, mosses, rich green hollies and arbutus with many +coloured berries, we tread our way by a passage of beauty round Dinis +Island into the ~Middle~ or ~Torc Lake~, sheltered by the broad breast +of the mountain from which it takes its name. Like "Muckross," the +"Pleasant Point of Wild Swine," the name Torc is called after the wild +boars, which in former years went "gerasening" over its slopes. Rising +abruptly, the mountain stands clear between Mangerton and Glena, the +lower sides well wooded. ~Innis Dinish~, the island at the "beginning of +the waters," is the port for boats. The Cottage may be visited. The +Whirlpool, between the waters of the lake and river, has been called +O'Sullivan's Punch Bowl. Drohid-na-Brickeen, "The Bridge of Little +Trout," or Brickeen Bridge, and Doolah, where the disused marble +quarries and copper mines are still pointed out, are within a short +distance. At the estuary of the Devil's Stream, which flows through the +ravines on the mountain side, is the Devil's Island--almost +inaccessible--on which a few stunted trees manage to secure a precarious +existence. Within the little bay of Dundag is Goose Island. The rocks +and caves along the lake shores are shrouded with traditions of +O'Donoghue, Chieftain of the Glens. A long cave is called "The Wine +Cellar"; at the end is "O'Donoghue's Arm Chair"; his Butler, a solitary +crag, is called "Jackybwee." The most interesting of the fissures made +by the waters in the rock side are what the enterprising boatmen have +agreed to call "Colleen Bawn Rock." By the beautiful Glena Bay, we enter +the Lower Lake, which is the largest and most charming of the group. It +sleeps beneath the guardian heights of the Toomies Hills, and a vision +of more loveliness is nowhere to be found. Low-lying shores, to the east +and north, are jungled with the fronds of the hill ferns. + + "Oh, the Fern! the fresh hill Fern! + That girds our blue lakes from Lough Ine to Lough Erne; + That waves on the crags, like the plume of a King, + And bends like a nun, over clear well and spring; + The fairy's tall palm-tree, the heath birds fresh nest, + And the couch the red deer deems the sweetest and best; + With the free winds to fan it, and dew-drops to gem, + Oh, what can ye match with its beautiful stem!" + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Eagle's Nest Mountain, +Killarney.] + +The highest mountain in Ireland, ~Carrantual~,[4] at one side lifts its +lofty brow, "crowned with tiaras fashioned in the sky." On its summit an +outlaw, known in Munster as the "Shon" or Hawk, after many sleepless +nights, footsore and weary, slept here with a prayer, "Thank God, at +last I am above all my enemies." The peasantry pronounce the name +"Carntwohill," which translated means, the left-handed or inverted +sickle. The expansiveness of the Lower Lake appears at first to minimise +its beauty, when compared with its smaller companions. But the more its +loveliness is explored, the greater the revelation of the harmony and +luxuriance of the landscape. No less than thirty-five islands, like +beauty spots of a fairy "drop scene," bedeck the silver sheen of its +surface. The largest of these, ~Innisfallen~, almost midway between the +eastern and western shores, is some thirty acres in extent, and is +engirdled by leafy bowers of green trees. Shaggy sheep are couched in +repose, or are busy with its verdant lawn. In the early morning, or +tender gloaming which closes the Munster day, the holy place is + + "Quiet as a nun, + Breathless with adoration." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ The Turnpike Cap of Dunloe.] + +Shafts of the dawning or waning sun, as the hour may be, illumine the +fair pageant. The wavering outlines of the hills make the turret-tops +to the dark green of the woods and the emerald of the meadows. The +richest of colours from hill, tree, and rock accumulate on the surface +of the Lake, burnished like silver. To-day the natural scenery is the +same as of old, and few will wonder that here a saint found delights to +prepare him in some degree for the pleasures stored in eternity. Of St. +Finian Labra we know little beyond that he was a native of Ely +O'Carroll, then a part of Munster, and was a disciple of St. Brendan. +But his spirit loiters around Innisfallen, and the most casual of +travellers will tread lightly on the ground hallowed by his footsteps. +The monastic remains are many, but by the enthusiastic antiquary alone +can their fragments and chief features be traced. "_The Annals of +Innisfallen_," which form one of the chief sources of Irish history, +were written here 600 years ago. Leaving the "Holy Island," we cross the +lake and land at the foot of the Toomies Mountains, famous in +pre-historic myths, to visit the O'Sullivan Cascade. The legend, which +is too often wasted on sceptical ears, tells that O'Sullivan, a captain +of his people, renowned amongst them for fleetness of foot and prowess +as a hunter, on one occasion went to hunt the red deer. The faint yellow +rays of morning were lighting up the eastern sky as he went forth. Gaily +the deep-mouthed dogs obeyed, sniffing the fresh breeze across the +mountain purpled with heather. Scarce had he left home when a +magnificent stag bounded across his path. Swift as the lightning flash +the dogs sprung upon the track--away across the moors and down the +glens, on the scent they went. Throughout that livelong day O'Sullivan +followed the chase, weary, tired, and thirsty, but still determined to +make the prize his own. At length night, and darkness with it, came; the +stag could be seen no more, the dogs, too, were at fault, and the scent +was lost. Disappointed, and spent with the labour of the chase, the +huntsman blew a shrill blast on his horn to call the dogs to him, and +faced for home across the hills. But there was a voice that, loud and +clear, called upon him--"O'Sullivan, O'Sullivan, turn back!" Brave and +fearless, like his race, he turned round, to behold before him the +centre of so many cycles of romance--Finn MacCool. "Why do you dare +chase my stag?" asked Finn. "Because it was the finest that man ever +saw," answered O'Sullivan. The answer pleased Finn MacCool. +"O'Sullivan," said he, "you are a valiant man, and have been wasted in +the long chase. You thirst, and I will give you to drink." So saying, he +stamped his huge heel upon the hard rock, and forth burst the waters, +seething and dashing as they do to this day. O'Sullivan quenched his +thirst and sped on his way. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Meeting of the Waters, +Killarney.] + +From the innermost recess of the glen the water flows down, in one of +the most fascinating spots to be found within all the delicious realm of +Kerry. The ivy hangs in dense draperies from the rocks, a sweet disorder +of arbutus, evergreens, and all the flowers that grow in a radiant land, +daringly lean across the canyon, and vainly try to trip the rushing +stream, which, in cascade after cascade, flings itself with passionate +energy, and a ceaseless murmur, over the rocks. The placidness of the +huge lake is in strange contrast to the noisy stream which so excitedly +hastens to meet it, and, as if awed by its dignity, as it comes nearer +and nearer the mountain stream, sinks its voice, until in a subdued sigh +it falls into the breast of the lake. Underneath the projecting rock, +and overhung with luxuriant herbs, O'Sullivan's Grotto offers a quiet +retreat. Following the wooded shores of Glena Bay, we pass Stags, Burnt, +and other islands, and come to Glena Cottage, hiding in the foliage of +leafy trees. Glena means "the valley of good fortune," and a name more +suggestive of happier thoughts than weird Glownamorra across the +lake--"the glen of the dead." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Muckross Abbey, Killarney.] + +A mile's drive through the pleasant demesne lands of Muckross brings us +to the water's edge at Castlelough Bay, in the middle lake, on a +promontry of which the ruins of ~Muckross Abbey~ are to be seen. Here, +in the fifteenth century, Donald M'Carthy founded an Abbey for +Franciscan friars. The quiet cloisters in the northwest transept, with +their varying pointed and rounded arches, are unique. The recessed +doorway by which we enter is very beautiful. The towers and east window +are in fair preservation. The monuments within the ruined pile tell us +that it + + "contains + In death's embrace M'Carthy More's remains," + +and also reminds us that + + "If Erin's chiefs deserve a generous tear, + Heir of their worth, O'Donoghue lies here." + +In the centre of the cloisters there grows a great yew tree, spreading +its many branches and shade over them, and above the side walls, forming +a dark cowl, which overshadows the old house of the monks. In ancient +Erin the yew tree was regarded as sacred, and in its shade the Druids +performed their mystic rites. With the early Christians, as an +evergreen, it was a symbol of Life Eternal. + +The peasants still inherit some of the awe with which the sacred tree +was held in former days, and they are loth to hurt it with the loss of a +single leaf. All impressive is the desolate majesty of Muckross, +whatever time it is visited! + + "But the gay beams of lightsome day + Gild but to flout the ruins grey." + +At night, when the pale ghost of the moon looks across the lake, when +the mountains are shrouded in shadows, when the waters are lulling the +slumbering land, + + "And the owlet hoots o'er the dead man's grave," + +the solemnity of the scene surpasses even that of fair Melrose, by the +distant Tweed, of which Sir Walter Scott tells. + +Driving past the modern mansion in the demesne, along ~Torc Lake~, by +the groves of Dinis, and through the arches of the Old Weir Bridge, the +river glistens and sparkles in the sun, while the distant calmer water +lies deep in sleepy shadows. Beyond the peculiar rock known as the +White Deer we pass through the Tunnel cut under the huge slope of the +mountains. Here is a point of view which fascinates all visitors, and +from which an ample picture of the surroundings may be secured. A mile +further we cross the Galway river, rushing down a well-worn channel +through Cournaglown, the valley sides of which are covered with oak +trees. Already the ceaseless chorus of Derrycunnihy Cascade fills our +ears. With tumult and cries of havoc, the water springs from an altitude +on the mountain side, dividing its force into many minor cataracts, as +it forces the passage barricaded by rocks and boulders, to unite them +again in a deep pool, and after a second's rest, it musters its full +strength, and falls in a torrent towards the Middle Lake. Colman's Leap, +across the stream beneath the Eagle's Nest, is shown here, and of it a +legend similar to others in many parts of Ireland is told. A mile +eastward, along the Kenmare road, we come to ~Torc Waterfall~, lovely as +a capricious _colleen_, whose modes are all the more "deludering" for +their uncertainty--Torc, whether tripping gently or rushing angrily, "to +one thing constant never," makes its bed in a fairy realm, a leafy +garden of ever-changing beauty. Larch and alder, arbutus, oak, and hazel +thickly curtain the Fall from the passing glance. But a sylvan path +o'erstrewn with leaves, and bordered with many fronded ferns, discovers +the fountain in full bearing. White with foam, and angry for its long +delay in the grip of Mangerton, and the hollow of the Devil's Punch +Bowl, the flood breaks through the wall of rocks seventy feet high, and +spits a shower of spray on every futile thing which attempts to stem its +course or stay its purpose. The panorama spread out beneath the rocks of +Torc comprehends, in all their glory of colour and contrast, the Middle +and Lower Lakes beneath the mountains. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Torc Waterfall, Killarney.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Ross Castle, Killarney.] + +Two and a-half miles northwards by the King's Bridge, or about one mile +direct from Killarney, within sight of the ~Lower Lake~ and the Purple +Mountains, are the ruins of Aghadoe, the "Church of the two Yew Trees," +founded under the blessing of Saint Finian. The remains of the Round +Tower and Abbot's Castle can still be seen, but these and the eighth +century doorway of the old church are all that have weathered the wind +of centuries. The summit of the old tower is a vantage point for a +vista. Dr. Todhunter has written a beautiful ballad, in imitation of the +passionate Irish laments, for an outlaw who was buried there. + + + AGHADOE. + + There's a glade in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + There's a green and silent glade in Aghadoe, + Where we met, my love and I, love's fair planet in the sky, + O'er that sweet and silent glade in Aghadoe. + + There's a glen in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + There's a deep and secret glen in Aghadoe, + Where I hid him from the eyes of the redcoats and their spies + That year the trouble came to Aghadoe. + + Oh! my curse on one black heart in Aghadoe, Aghadoe; + On Shaun Dhuv, my mother's son, in Aghadoe! + When your throat fries in hell's drouth, salt the flame be in your mouth, + For the treachery you did in Aghadoe! + + For they tracked me to that glen in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + When the price was on his head in Aghadoe; + O'er the mountain, through the wood, as I stole to him with food, + Where in hiding lone he lay in Aghadoe. + + But they never took him living in Aghadoe, Aghadoe; + With the bullets in his heart in Aghadoe, + There he lay, the head--my breast keeps the warmth where once + 'twould rest-- + Gone, to win the traitor's gold, from Aghadoe! + + Oh! to creep into that cairn in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, + There to rest upon his breast in Aghadoe! + Sure your dog for you could die with no truer heart than I, + Your own love, cold on your cairn in Aghadoe. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ The Gap of Dunloe.] + +The nearest boat place for Innisfallen is at ~Ross Castle~. We approach +it from the high road across the moat, where once the drawbridge was let +up and down. The old keep, wearing a cotamore of ivy, still guards the +water's edge. By a spiral stone staircase we reach the battlements and +look out across the lake. + +The Castle held out for Charles the First, but was dismantled by Ludlow. +It was originally a fort of "The O'Donoghue," the chief who centres in +the many traditions which the boatmen weave around every object of +interest in Killarney. He lies enchanted beneath the lake, with a city +full of his people. But at times he has come across the water on his +fiery steed, or danced to the Rincead-fadda on the shores. Whoever sees +him is fortunate, because he gives "good luck, which is better than +money," to all whose eyes meet his. + +The ~Gap of Dunloe~ is a gloomy mountain pass cut through the rough +rocky slope in the hills between the Toomies and the Macgillicuddy's +Reeks. It is a magnificent defile, four miles long. The rough +bridle-path running through it, at times almost on the edge of +precipices, beneath which the wild goats flock. It is approached by a +winding road, embroidered on one side by a shady little grove of fir, +larch, stunted oaks, and mountain ash. Through the little windows +between the trees, when the sun shines, the reflection of the river Loe +is caught, as it creeps humbly on its way to the lakes. On the other +side, the mountains throw up a huge wall. Bidding good-bye to the little +grove, vegetation seems to fear to enter the desolate, sterile places in +the throat of the Gap. Where the river widens, at Cushvalley Lough, the +industrious echo-makers most usually greet the visitor. One has scarcely +recovered from the warmth of their courteous welcome, when some +suggestive volunteer, aborigine to the place, with a "Mr. Bugler, God +spare you your wind," secures their services; although you do not call +the tune, you are expected to pay the musicians. But the trifle spent +on the gunpowder for their cannons, or the breath from their lungs, is +well repaid by the mighty mass of air they start into waves of music. +Here, too, the "auxiliary forces," or pony boys, besiege us with their +sure-footed, shaggy "coppaleens." They have come galloping down the pass +at break-neck speed to lend us the assistance of their light cavalry. +Wonderful creatures they are, these horses and riders. The peasant boys +are for all the world the modern prototypes of those "rake-helly horse +boys" of Queen Elizabeth's reign, who filled so many pages of the State +papers. Sinew and muscle knit their loose limbs together, and, in their +eyes, mild and calm as those of the quiet cattle in the field, but like +the surface of their native lakes, covering unfathomed depths, they +conceal souls swept by deep thoughts, and minds clouded by many +memories. The long unrenewed, but still to be distinguished, Spanish +strain is shown in many of their olive-tinted faces and dark features. +But guides safe, and true, and courteous are they, who know every perch +of the dark Pass, where at times the craggy cliffs shut out the canopy +of the sky, and attempt to precipitate themselves across the track. The +point where the path is narrowest, the peasants have called the "Pike." +From it onward the mountains begin to recede, and the Pass is more open +until, crossing a shoulder of the ~Purple Mountain~ past the three great +expansions of the Commeen Thomeen Lakes, into which St. Patrick is said +to have driven the last serpent, we suddenly come on a surprising +spectacle of magnificent scenery. Here, from the head of the Gap, we see +the Upper Lake spread beneath, to the west, Coomeenduff, or the Black +Valley, dark as the valley of the shadow of death, in charming contrast +with the stern grandeur of the mountains. Their melancholy seems to +reign supreme; the long valley is steeped with shadows in which several +lakes are set, the light upon which only heightens the sublime darkness +of the surroundings. The longest of these lakes is called Lough +Nabricderg, or the "Pool of the Red Trout." Far and wide beneath us lies +what, in the old times, was MacCarthy More's country, and into which so +often the Fiery Cross was sped, when the chief of the great clan went +into action. + +Ruskin's ideals of mountains as the great cathedrals of the earth, with +their gates of rock, pavements of cloud, choirs of stream and stone, +altars of snow, and vaults of purple, traversed by the continual stars, +can nowhere be realized more readily than in Killarney. Here the +mysterious summits, warm with the morning tints or evening's glow, will +delight and refresh again and again, and reflect to us imperishable +memories. Crossing the Flesk, if ~Mangerton~ be the desired point, seven +good miles are to be traversed. From the Muckross, a short detour will, +if desired, lead to Flesk Castle, standing on a finely wooded hill above +the wide sweeping river. Eastward, along the Kenmare road, and southward +for a mile, the mountain path is met. From here, either on foot or on a +pony, the ascent of Mangerton may be made. The first important object +that comes in view is Lough Kittane, at the eastern base of the +mountain. It is nearly five miles in circumference, and its waters +contain four islands. The ravine behind the lake, with Mangerton on the +west and Crohane mountain on the east, is the "mustering place of the +winds," Coomnageeha. In this ravine the Blackwater flows. There are two +small lakes, Loughnabraude and "the Lake of Beech-crowned Rock," Lough +Carrigaveha. Away in the bed of the mountains is Keimva Lochlin--the +pass of the Danes--reminding the historian of "Stern Lochlin's sons of +roving war," and Dereenanawlar, or "the little oakwood of eagles." +Moving still higher, eastward the mountains melt into the distant +counties of Cork and Limerick, and beneath, the smaller highlands recall +the Psalmist's description of + + "The hills like the lambs of the flock." + +[Illustration: McCarthy More's Castle--Lake Hotel Landing Stage.] + +To the left, Glown-a-Coppal, the "Horse's Glen," invites the adventurous +to fathom its depths. The dark lakes lying in its shadows are shoreless, +but for the gloomy rocks which overhang the water's edge. Where the +ground becomes more broken and rugged, suddenly a less inaccessible path +arises, and leads to the Devil's Punch Bowl, a dark tarn, beset with +strange echoes that strike a death-song on the heart-strings of the +superstitious. The view from the summit is very wonderful; in the +foreground of the huge picture, the forest of mountain tops, while +westward in the distance is the fabled and saint-blessed Mare +Brendanicum of the old writers, where the fiords embroider the coast +line. + +Descents from Mangerton may be made due south from the eastern angle +along the Oubeg to Kilgarvan, five miles east from Kenmare; by the +"Horse's Glen," from Lough Garagary, across the moor to the commencement +of the bridle-path. Neither way is recommended in the afternoon or +without a guide. The best route to Carntuol is from the entrance to the +Gap of Dunloe. There is a beaten track by the side of the waterway of +the mountain stream, called "Giddagh," the bed of which is filled with +glacial moraines, leading into a romantic valley, the Hag's Glen, which +is shut in by the Reeks and Knocknabinaneen. The dark tarn in the Glen, +as well as every object of prominence, has been seized upon by the +imaginative peasants, and associated in some wise with the witch who +here had her local habitation and left it its name. The track across the +heather leads to the junction of two rivulets from Lough Gonvogh on the +right, and Lough Callee on the left. The beginning of the summit is +reached by the rough moraine pavement, and with a little perseverance +the "parkeen," or "little pasture," on top is reached. Here on the +wind-swept height it is interesting to find the _London Pride_, or _St. +Patrick's Cabbage_, and the common _Thrift_ flourishing The view is +indescribable. Like the jaws of some huge monster, the teeth of the +Reeks close in everywhere, each with its own blue lake behind. Of +Killarney we see little; but seawards "everything between this end of +the world and America," descent may be made, either following the flank +of the hill, and half way between the two largest lakes beneath, +striking for the Gap of Dunloe road, or through Coomduff to the shores +of the Upper Lake. + +When the tourist's time is limited, the following excursions, extending +over three days, will enable him to see a good many of the points of +interest:-- + + TOUR NO. 1. FARE, _8s._ ESTATE TOLLS, _1s._ + + Well-appointed coaches, or other conveyances, leave the Hotel + (weather permitting) at about 9.30 a.m., for a visit to the + celebrated Gap of Dunloe and the grand tour of the Lakes. The route + lies along the northern side of the Lower Lake for about six miles, + when the exquisite mountain scenery comes in full view, rapidly + assuming more interesting features until "Arbutus" Cottage is + reached. Here the party must alight, and proceed on ponies, or on + foot, at discretion, through the Pass to Lord Brandon's Cottage, at + the head of the Upper Lake, where the boats will be in readiness. + Arrangements can be made with the Manager of the Hotel, before + starting, to provide ponies for _3s._ each to this point. Some + wonderful echoes are produced in various parts of the Pass. + Luncheon will be served, before entering the boat, on one of the + adjoining islands, after which the party will proceed by the Upper + Lake and Long Range to the Eagle's Nest Mountain. The boat will + then shoot the Rapids under the rustic Old Weir Bridge; stop a + short time at the "Meeting of the Waters"; pass through the Middle + Lake, and across the Lower Lake to "Sweet Innisfallen Island," to + enable the party to view the ruins of the old Abbey, Abbot's Grave, + and Bed of Honour; thence to Ross Castle, where the party will + resume their drive to the Hotel, which is usually reached about + 5.30 p.m. + + TOUR NO. 2. FARE, _4s. 6d._ ESTATE TOLLS, _2s._ + + The conveyances leave the Hotel about 10 a.m. for the drive through + Mr. H. A. Herbert's beautiful demesne. The ancient ruins of + Muckross Abbey are soon reached, and, after a short delay to + inspect them, the party proceed by the shore of the Middle Lake, + over Brickeen Bridge, pass the Colleen Bawn Rocks for Dinis + Island; thence, passing the Torc Mountain, to the Cottage and + Waterfall of Derrycunihy (Queen's Cottage), the property of the + Earl of Kenmare, where luncheon is usually served. Returning, the + party will pass under the tunnel on the Kenmare Road, and through + fine scenery by road, mountain, and lake to Torc Cascade, where, by + an easy footpath, fine views can be obtained of the Waterfall and + Lakes; thence to the Hotel, which is usually reached about 3 p.m. + + TOUR No. 3. FARE, _4s. 6d._ ESTATE TOLLS, _1s._ + + The conveyances leave the Hotel at about 9.30 a.m., passing through + the Earl of Kenmare's Deer Park to the Heights of Aghadoe, + obtaining grand views of the Lower Lake, Macgillicuddy's Reeks, and + Carran Tual (the highest mountain in Ireland), as also the ruins of + the round tower of Aghadoe Church, thence through the Earl of + Kenmare's beautiful West and Home Parks, which skirt the + north-eastern shores of the Lower Lake, round Ross Island, and to + the Hotel, which is usually reached about 2.30 p.m. + + +KENMARE AND GLENGARRIFF. + +The coach drive from Killarney to Kenmare is over a fine broad mountain +road, and from Mulgrove Barrack, about half way, a splendid view of the +lake country can be obtained. Kenmare, as its name signifies in Irish, +is at the head of the sea or beautiful bay to which it gives its name on +the Roughty river. Sir William Pettie, in the seventeenth century, +founded the town on lands confiscated from the O'Sullivan More. It is a +market place of importance, and the Convent of the Poor Clares is famous +the world over for the beautiful lace made here. The town stands on the +highway between Killarney and Glengarriff, known as "The Prince of +Wales' route." The coach drives through the town past the Lansdowne +Arms' Hotel and into the beautiful spot which has been selected for the +new hotel belonging to the Southern Hotels Company. Already young groves +and plantations teem about the mansion, which is built on a natural +terrace overlooking the bay, and facing the high hills of Glenaroughty, +behind which the Red River rises, and the bare mountain slopes of +Mucksna. + +No visitor should fail, if time permits, to visit the Convent of the +Poor Clares, and see the lace-makers at work. From Kenmare the train or +coach may be taken to Killarney. + + +DRIVING EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF KENMARE. + + No. 1.--Car to Goulane on old road to Killarney, walk to summit of + mountain, from which a magnificent view is obtained, returning by + Inchamore Cross Roads, Roughty Falls, and Suspension Bridge. _6s._ + + No. 2.--Car to Kilgarvan, thence to the Bird Mountain, on the + Borlin Road, returning by Lounihan and Letter. Grand panoramic + views of the Mangerton Mountains and Roughty Valley. _10s._ + + No. 3.--Car to Windy Gap on the Killarney Road, view of Gap of + Dunloe and M'Gillicuddy Reeks, thence by Dirreenfeenlahid Lake and + Bouchill Mountain, returning by Slieveaduff and Templemore Road. + _10s._ + + No. 4.--Car to Blackwater Bridge and Waterfall, thence by Old + Dromore and Valley of the Blackwater, returning by old road over + Coomnakilla; magnificent sea and mountain scenery. _12s._ + + No. 5.--Car to Clonee Lakes and Glen of Inchiquin, thence to + cascade at head of glen; beautiful drive along the southern shore + of Kenmare Bay, affording splendid views of mountain, lake, and + river. _15s._ + + No. 6.--Car to Derreen by the Lansdowne Road, along the shore of + Kenmare Bay and Kilmackillogue Harbour, thence to Glanmore Lake by + road skirting Lord Lansdowne's demesne, returning by Furniss + (ancient smelting works) and Carriganine Road. _20s._ + + It is particularly requested that visitors requiring cars will give + not less than an hour's notice at the office. + + +SOUTHERN HOTEL, KENMARE. + +HIRE FOR FIXED DISTANCES (Driver's fee included) + + Two-horse carriage. One-horse car. + +From Kenmare to Parknasilla, _20s._ _10s._ + + " " Killarney, _28s._ _14s._ + + " " Glengarriff, _28s._ _14s._ + + " " Caragh Lake, -- _25s._ + + " " Waterville, _50s._ _2s._ + +Fifty per cent. additional for return journey. + +To Glengarriff the coach runs by very beautiful scenery, terminating in +the lovely creek of the bay at ~Eccles' Hotel~ and by the fair height +where ~Roche's Hotel~ commands the view. From Glengarriff the coach may +be continued to Bantry, and the train then taken direct to Cork, along +the East Bandon line; or the road may be taken through the beautiful +Pass of Keimaneigh--the "Pass of the Deer"--and by the lovely lake of +Gougane Barra to Macroom. Here the Cork and Macroom Railway brings the +tourist back into the City of the Lee. + +The road from Kenmare leads high out of the valley up the hill sides. We +command a good view of Kenmare Sound, and having passed under a number +of tunnels through the rock we cross the mearings into county Cork. + + +GLENGARRIFF + +[Illustration: At Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: Otter Island, Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Glengarriff.] + +[Illustration: Glengarriff Harbour] + +[Illustration: Otter Rock Glengarriff] + +[Illustration: Gougane Barra. Co Cork] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Gougane Barra.] + +In a fair spot above the blue waters of the Bay of Bantry, +~Glengarriff~, as a health resort, vies with its charming young rival, +Parknasilla. Its climate, too, is softened by the nearness of the Gulf +Stream, and yew and arbutus, as well as tropical cryptogamia and Alpine +plants, overgrow every available spot along the sides of the rough +defile. It is come-at-able from Cork by train to Bantry and then coach, +or by coach from Killarney or Kenmare. Apart from the beauty of the +situation and the mildness of its climate, Glengarriff possesses +splendid facilities for sea bathing and boating. There is excellent +hotel accommodation both at Eccles', on the shore of the bay, and at +Roche's, in the midst of beautiful grounds, through which the Owvane, or +"fair river," flows, making on its way a wild cascade. The drive from +Glengarriff to Gougane Barra, through the Pass of Keimaneigh, "the path +of the deer," is one of the great excursions to be made. ~Gougane +Barra~, the shrine of Saint Finbarr, is in the midst of a lonely lake +near the source of the Lee. It is still the scene of "patrons" on Saint +Finbarr's day, and Mass is celebrated in the open air in the middle of +the lake. There is good trout fishing in the Allua and other streams in +the Desmond Valley. Callaghan, the poet, has sung of it-- + + "There is a green island in lone Gougane Barra, + Where Allua of songs rushes forth as an arrow; + In deep-valleyed Desmond--a thousand wild fountains + Come down to that lake, from their home in the mountains; + There grows the wild ash, and a time-stricken willow + Looks chidingly down on the mirth of the billow; + As, like some gay child, that sad monitor scorning, + It lightly laughs back to the laugh of the morning. + + And its zone of dark hills--oh! to see them all bright'ning; + When the tempest flings out its red banner of lightning; + And the waters rush down, mid the thunders deep rattle, + Like clans from their hills at the voice of the battle; + And brightly the fire-crested billows are gleaming, + And wildly from Mullagh the eagles are screaming."... + +The "green island" is a little over half an acre in extent. In its +centre is a quadrangle, with walls at parts fourteen feet thick, in +which are eight cells or cloisters rudely arched over. Within, on a +raised platform, is a large cross with five steps ascending to it. There +is a large flagstone here with an inscription, giving directions how +"the rounds" are to be performed on the vigil and forenoon of the feast +days of St. Finbarr and St. John the Baptist, to whom there is a +special cultos all over Munster. The road from Gougane runs through +Inchigeela and Ballingeary by a wild stretch of river inches, called the +Gearagh, to Macroom, where the old Castle and Convent are worth +visiting. In the latter the kindergarten system has been introduced with +great success. It is also here that the Gaelic Feis or Festival is held +for the locality, which contains a large percentage of Irish-speaking +people, including numbers of children. From Macroom train runs direct to +Cork. In the visitors' book at Inchigeela Hotel some vagabond rhymester +penned the following farewell:-- + + Sweet Inchigeela, fare thee well, to-morrow we depart + On Mrs. Brophy's outside car, for Gougane B. we start; + I add my mite of doggerel to all I have read here, + And put my X to all that's writ of this hotel's good cheer. + + O charming Inchigeela, were mine the poet's pen, + How I would do the Longfellow, in praising rock and glen; + Among thy mountains, hills, and lakes, six happy days we passed, + And sigh to think the day draws near that's doomed to be the last. + + We've climbed the rocky mountains, we've plodded o'er the plain, + We've bid a wild defiance to the drizzling, drenching rain; + And yielding to the influence of your coquettish weather, + We've grilled beneath the sunshine on thy "tick" infected heather. + + O lovely Inchigeela! O cosy Lake Hotel! + O Hannah! best of waiting-maids, and civilest as well; + O were I not so sleepy, a great deal more I'd say, + But I must grasp my pilgrim's staff and wend my onward way. + +From ~Cromwell's Bridge~, at Glengarriff, the road runs to Berehaven, +where there is an old Castle of the O'Sullivan's and some splendid +caves. Cromwell's Bridge, of which one arch only now remains intact, is +said to have been built here to facilitate the march of the Protector on +his return from Dunboy Castle, he having threatened, if the bridge was +not erected on his return, he would hang a man for every hour he was +delayed. ~Bantry~, or the White Strand, is a thriving town, a pleasant +drive from Glengarriff. Here the French fleet, with Wolfe Tone on board, +purported landing in the winter of 1797; but, like the Armada, were +scattered by a hurricane. Bantry House, the residence of the +White-Hedges family, is beautifully situated on the side of the bay. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cromwell's Bridge, +Glengarriff.] + +The Cork and Bandon Railway from Bantry is connected with most of the +towns on the Cork coast. From Skibberreen, the famous fishing village of +~Baltimore~ may be visited. The Piscatorial School is doing good work, +and is an enduring monument to the philanthropy of the Baroness +Burdett-Coutts. Innisherin Island, in Baltimore Harbour, was an old +fortress of the O'Driscolls--and in particular of "Finnen O'Driscoll, +the Rover"--of whom it is told:-- + + "The men of Clan-London brought over + Their strong ships to make him a slave; + He met them by Mizen's wild headlands, + And the sharks gnaw their bones 'neath the wave." + +Baltimore was sacked in the early seventeenth century by Algerine +pirates, and all the able-bodied inhabitants sold into slavery. These +pirates were finally put down by the intrepidity of the Commonwealth +seamen. Kinsale, also on the coast, is a remarkable old town; there +James II. landed on his ill-fated visit to Ireland. Bandon, beautifully +situated on the broad river of that name, was long the Derry of the +South. The memory of these "good old times" only now remains, and Bandon +is the centre of many successful industries. + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Killarney District, + see end of this volume, where particulars are given as to Cycling, + Fishing, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +[Illustration: Coaching in Kerry] + +[Illustration] + +The Lakes and Fiords of Kerry. + + +The Grand Atlantic Tour--Caragh, Cahirciveen, Valencia, Waterville, +Parknasilla, Kenmare, &c. + +The beauty of Killarney is not without a rival, and that even "next +door" to it in its very own kingdom of Kerry. Leaving behind the +soft-swelling hills, deep-eyed lakes and dark mountains, we speed +southward and westward to other lakes and mountains kindred to what we +have already seen. It is for these lovely lands that the Gulf Stream +crosses the Atlantic to kiss, that we are making over the wide-armed +railway which clasps the most picturesque scenery in the country within +its embrace. Starting from Killarney for Valencia, we leave the train to +continue its journey northwards to Tralee, at Farranfore Junction. While +changing into the carriages for the south-west coast, where + + "The mountains kiss high heaven, + And the waves clasp one another," + +one look round reveals the amphitheatre of hills. Westward, whither we +are going, the hills above Glenbeigh point our road to where the +Atlantic meets the shore. To the eastward, where the morn, in russet +mantle clad, walks o'er the dew, the line of far-piercing spears, +Mangerton, Torc, Glena, Toomies, and the Reeks extend. At Killorglin +(twenty-four miles rail), with a wide-spanning viaduct, we cross the +Laune, wending its way from the Lakes to Dingle Bay. Here the ruins of +an old Knights Templar Castle remain to remind us of the historic past. +For five-and-twenty miles from this place onward, the route runs over +the southern shore-line of Dingle Bay. Some five miles from Killorglin, +in a secluded nest of old trees beneath the mountains, lies ~Caragh +Lake~. + + "Long, long ago, beyond the space + Of twice ten hundred years; + In Erin old there lived a race + Taller than Roman spears." + +[Illustration: Fishing in Caragh River] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Caragh River and Lake.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Southern Hotel, Caragh Lake.] + +And in their romances and love-songs, Caragh was tenderly mentioned, for +was it not here that Dermot sheltered Grania in the bowers of the +quicken-trees? All who have read the fine old Finnian romance, "The +Pursuit of Diarmuid and Grainne," which tells the iliad of their flight +across ancient Erin, will remember that here on the shores of Kerry he +met his enemies and discomfited them. In the mists westward from the +lake is the hill-summit, Seefin, where the disconsolate son of MacCool +sat. For long this little paradise has remained forgotten by +scenery-seeking men, but now that it is re-discovered, it will enthral +all comers. The lake, sheltered under the cloak of the hills, is six +miles long, and all around its coasts are things of beauty, green velvet +mosses, dark broom and heather-clad hills, with rowan trees interspersed +throughout. The grisly mountains are glistening with silver +threads--small streams that hasten to see themselves reflected in the +lake. Far from the busy haunts of men, in a sleepy hollow only five +minutes' walk from the railway station, the ~Southern Hotel~ Company +has secured a delightful site for their fine hotel. If nature has done +great things for Caragh, "filthy lucre," too, has done much, and here is +everything to help the invalid, the sportsman, or "the common or garden" +tourist to take advantage of the charming pleasure and health resort. +For the fisherman there are almost endless opportunities. There is +excellent salmon and trout fishing in the Caragh Lake, and also in the +Caragh, Carahbeg, Ougarriv, and Meelagh Rivers, while within easy reach +are Lakes Acoose, Cloon, Coomlonkir, Oulagh, Loughnakirkna, Corravoula, +and Nabrackdarrig, all of which would gladden the heart of old Izaac +Walton. Over twenty-five thousand acres of the best shooting in Kerry is +reserved for the use of guests. It comprises principally grouse, +woodcock, snipe, duck, wild goose, and plover. Both banks of the Caragh +River, which is carefully preserved, have also been secured. ~Dooks~, in +the vicinity, has been selected for an excellent nine-hole golf course, +of which guests, as honorary members, are entitled to take advantage. A +flag-station on the railway brings the links within easy walking +distance. The grand strand along the shore gives every opportunity of +bathing. Across the beautiful Dingle Bay rises Mount Brandon (3,127 +feet), and Dunmore Head, out at the edge of the ocean, has the Blasket +Islands scattered around its coast, the treacherous rocks of which were +so fatal to the Spanish Armada. By car from the hotel to Blackstones +Bridge, returning by boat through the lake, is a short tour of many +attractions. Beneath, at one side, lie the bright waters of the bay; on +the other the dark waters of the lake. The Killorglin road is reached +about a mile from Acoose Lake, and then following the declivity by a +mountain stream, we get a good view of Gort-na-gloran Mountain, on the +east of the lake, and see in the distance the fishing hamlet of Glencar, +with the Glencar Hotel high up on pasture ground, surrounded by a cordon +of green fir trees. Except in the Swiss valleys and parts of Norway, +there is no scenery in Europe to compare with an inland route from +Caragh to Parknasilla. It lies across the mountains + + "Where the wandering water gushes + In the hills above Glencar; + In pools among the rushes, + That scarce could bathe a star," + +through wild scenery between the gorges of the mountains, and into +Ballaghbeama Pass. Beneath, in a winding valley, lies Lough Brin, +turning from which we come into the valley of the Eskdhu, or Blackwater, +and follow it amid the beeches until it falls into the sea. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Pass of Ballaghbeama.] + +Leaving Caragh Lake, the railway line follows the flow of the river, the +next station being ~Glenbeigh~, where there is a growing watering-place. +The strand is particularly fine, extending over two miles. There is a +good hotel, with golf links, beside plenty of fishing and boating. +~Coomasaharn~--the wonderful lake in the vicinity--it has been correctly +said is surrounded by precipices more awful than anything to be found +nearer home than the Alps or Pyrenees--clinging to the mountain side, at +a height of several hundred feet above the sea, with here a cutting or +embankment, and there a mountain gorge, in which a lovely waterfall is +almost lost to sight in a labyrinth of foliage. + +~Mountain Stage~ and ~Kells~ are passed, and the train glides down an +incline to Cahirciveen and Valentia Harbour. ~Cahirciveen~, the +birthplace of Daniel O'Connell, is the most westerly town in the three +kingdoms. It lies with its back up against the Iveragh Mountains, and +facing the blue waters of Dingle Bay. Only since the road was cut across +the hills to Valentia in later years has it come to be of importance. In +1803 there were only fifteen houses here, and the beginning of its +uprise in the world was when O'Connell got it made a market town. But in +legends of the past it is a place of fame, and received its name from +Sive, one of the beautiful daughters of the great monarch, Owen More. +~Carhan House~, where the Liberator spent his childhood (but was not +actually born, as alleged), the ruins of which now only remain, may be +seen a short distance outside the town. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ On the Coast near Glenbeigh.] + +Two charming fishing harbours under Knocktubber Mountain are worth +seeing, Councroum, "the Haven's Bend," and Coonana, which is called +after the woman who bore the great Finn. Here, the mighty fighter of the +old days, "Conn of the Hundred Battles," fought no less than thirteen of +his fields, and three pre-historic forts remain to bear testimony to the +past--Cahir-na-cahal, Cahirgal, and Castlequinn. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Glenbeigh.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lake Coomasaharn.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cahirciveen.] + +Ballycarbery's ruined castle, too, deserves attention. In ancient times +it was the fortress of Carbery O'Shea, whose tide-swept tomb is still to +be seen. Then it passed into the hands of Owen More's descendants, and +from them to the O'Connells. When the Spaniards sent their "ale" over to +Erin, and the Kerry women borrowed one another's cloaks to go to Spain +to sell eggs and dulisc, Ballycarbery, commanding the harbour's mouth, +was a place frequented by mariners and merchantmen from many a Spanish +port. There is a story of Morgan of the Wine and a Spanish Captain worth +re-telling. Two O'Connells lived in Ballycarbery together, one brother, +Shawn, occupying the lower portion, and the other, Morgan, living in the +upper apartments. Both at the same moment invited a Spanish captain, who +had come into the port, to dine with them. The foreigner, embarrassed by +their hospitality, and not wishing to show an undue preference--as +neither brother would give way--agreed to give his company to whichever +gentleman had his repast cooked first. The brothers repaired with speed +to the castle, and Morgan was chagrined when he had mounted to his +rooms, to find that Shawn had barricaded the entrance behind him, to +prevent his servants from drawing water to cook the dinner. But he +was not to be foiled, for, broaching a cask of wine, he cooked in it +what he wanted, and as his dinner was first prepared, the Spaniard and +his brother Shawn were his guests! In the wars of the Commonwealth the +castle was reduced. ~Derriana Lake~, in the bed of the mountains--with +wisps of mist on its further shores--is like a dream picture. The fair +isle floating in its centre is freighted down with oak and arbutus trees +standing out in relief against the mountain, and reflected in the +mirror-faced waters. The coloured setting of the surroundings is +exquisite. The cliffs bristle crest high with rigid firs, the young oak +copse is entangled with an undergrowth of guelder rose, and in the +sedges near the heron-frequented reeds, white water lilies open their +wonderful eyes. Close by, ~Cloonaghlin Lake~, when it is dark with +mountain shadows and frowning clouds, is sufficiently desolate to awe +the least susceptible, but when auspiciously the sky is brightened, we +feel-- + + "Truly the light is sweet, and + A pleasant thing it is for the + Eyes to behold the sun." + +The shadows recede into the depths of the water or the hollows of the +hills, the many colours of the trees show themselves; and song-birds +begin anew their music, as though a great hawk had been near, and had +passed them by scathless. + + +VALENCIA ISLAND + +May truly be termed the "Next parish to America," and should be visited +for its noble cliffs, wild headlands, and wonderful jungle of fuschia +trees. From Valencia Harbour a ferry, manned for upwards of a century by +the O'Neills, brings passengers and mails across to Knightstown, the +principal village, and a busy port of industry during the fishing +season. Glenleam, the Knight of Kerry's residence--about one mile +inland--is surrounded by beautiful gardens, where, besides arbutus and +myrtle, many tropical exotics thrive. The fuschias form a thick glade, +and the trunks of several of them almost defy the ordinary axe or saw. +There are on the island, besides holy wells, a number of soutterains and +cairns, that + + "Sit upon the ground + To tell sad stories of the death of kings." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Valencia.] + +[Illustration: _Photos, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Valencia Harbour. Fishing +Fleet. Entrance to Valencia Harbour.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cliffs at Valencia.] + +Irish is freely spoken on the island, and if properly introduced, the +visitor may be able to hear many old stories of Finn and his companions, +the Gabawn Saior, and other heroes of the peasants' heart. Thick as +mists at morn legends hover about the island, and beyond the great Slate +quarries may be seen many caves of great interest. There is a tradition +on the island that St. Vincent Ferrar landed there. The harbour offers a +deep and sheltered anchorage, and was formerly much frequented by +smugglers, whose cave is still shown. Paul Jones often put in here, and +on one occasion pressed into his service a number of fishermen, whom he +took from the neighbouring fishing grounds. None of them returned except +one, who had long been imprisoned in France, but he came home "with a +stocking full of doubloons," and his children's children are still known +as "The Paul Jones's." + +At ~Brayhead~, + + "Where the broad ocean leans against the land," + +there is a splendid view from nearly eight hundred feet above the sea. +The rocks around the coast, encircled with white foam, make a beautiful +contrast to the grey and emerald and gold of the sandy coves and green +hills. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cliffs at Valencia.] + +Dolus and Bolus Heads reach far into the ocean. The ~Skelligs~, "the +most western of Christ's fortresses in the ancient world," raise their +heads to the south, while northwards the Great Blasket, a mountainous +island, and its eleven brothers, with Innisvic Killane, may be seen. On +the 10th September, 1588, the Armada ship, _Our Lady of the Rosary_, of +1,000 tons, was wrecked in the Blasket Sound; among the many who +perished was the Prince of Askule, natural son to King Philip of Spain. +Around the coast line there have been many wrecks, and not a few are the +pathetic stories still told of them on the island. + +The last wreck of importance gave another opportunity for the intrepid +islanders to show what stern stuff they were made of. Under the +captaincy of Mr. Alexander O'Driscoll, the volunteers put off to the +wreck, and despite of a sea running high, and the buffeting of a great +storm, saved the lives of the crew, and rendered full salvage. While on +the island, a visit should be paid to the Anglo-American Cable Company's +Station, care being taken beforehand to go through the formality of +applying to the Managing Director (26, Old Bond-street, London, E.C.) +for an order. Every facility is extended by the courteous local +officials. + + +THE SKELLIGS--ST. MICHAEL'S ROCK. + +From Valencia, or from across the channel at Portmagee, where there is a +thriving fish-curing industry, the Skelligs can be reached in favourable +weather. Standing high above the green billows that encircle them with +collars of white foam, they repay every trouble taken to inspect them. +The ~Little Skellig~, a fantastic rock, with a great arch like a flying +buttress under which for centuries the seas have churned deep, is almost +inaccessible. It is a great breeding ground for gannet, with which, +during the breeding season, its sides are white as the waves below. + +[Illustration: GE Skellig.] + +So unused are these magnificent birds to being disturbed by intruders +that even when within oar's length of them, they remain passive and +unscared. The ~Great Skellig~ swings high its cliffs seven hundred feet +above the water. Clinging to the ridge of its impressive rocks "like +swallows' nests" are the round roofs of the beehive cells which of old +formed a citadel of Christianity. To Saint Michael the Archangel, +guardian against all the powers of darkness, the isle is dedicated. Its +history is of old date, for here Milesius buried the beloved son, Ir, +that the thieving waters robbed of his soul. Here "the slanting, +full-sailing ships" of Daire, on their way to the great battle of Ventry +Harbour, paused in their march along the deep. Here, too, in recording +times, was the great hero-king of the Norse, Olaf Iryggveson, baptized. + +A little cove, deep in the recess of a cavern, makes a landing stage, +only to be attempted at favourable times. An easy path leads halfway +round the island; then, mounting a flight of steps, the visitor beholds, +spread before him, a green valley, the one patch of richness on the +desolate rock. This is Christ's Saddle, from which, with reverent +hearts, the "Way of the Cross" may be traversed, ending in the heart of +Skellig-Michael. Each of the fourteen Stations have descriptive Gaelic +names, such as "The Stone of Pain," where our Saviour falls the first +time; "The Rock of the Woman's Piercing Caoine," where His Mother and +the Holy Women have met. Lonely and deserted, none should enter these +hallowed places but with feelings of reverence. + + +WATERVILLE. + +The morning stillness, broken by the clear blast of the postillion's +horn, reminds the visitor lingering lovingly over the shores at +Cahirciveen that the coach for the coast tour is ready. With a crack of +the whip that would do credit to Will Goldfinch, in the coaching days +of old, the driver urges on his team, and the blooded four-in-hand cut +their way clear of the town. The tour along the Atlantic between +Cahirciveen and Kenmare is nearly fifty miles, and passes through the +most diversified country. The eleven miles as far as Waterville is first +inland, passing through dreary stretches of moorland, where the small +black Kerry cattle manage to thrive, until Ballinskelligs Bay suddenly +comes in sight. Bolus Head reaches out its great arm into the sea, to +shelter the Bay from the winds. At one side may be seen the little town +of Ballinskelligs, with its white Cable Station; and in at the head of +the waters, beyond where the Inny river joins the sea, Waterville +spreads itself out around the long shore. Here it lies on the little +streak of land which protects Lough Currane from the embrace of the +ocean. Coming down the hill, out of the town, the delusion is that this +great fresh-water lake is but itself a bay, the mouth of which is +concealed from view, but not so, for its waters run clear and fresh, and +as fishful as the Erne. It is the best free fishing lake in Ireland. +Just outside Waterville the Commercial Cable Company (Mackay-Bennett +system) have their extensive offices. + +[Illustration: _Photos, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Gannets on Little Skelligs.] + +[Illustration: Southern Hotel, Waterville.] + +The road leads across the Inny, and we enter the little town by the +pleasantly-situated Butler Arms Hotel. On going further, fronting the +shore line, we pass the Bay View Hotel, and, following a bend in the +hill, come suddenly in view of the beautiful Lough Currane, beside +which, in the midst of plantations, more like a home than a +well-equipped hostelry, which it is, the ~Southern Hotel~ is built. +Lough Currane is eight miles in circumference, and its shores are +fretted with thousands of inlets. Through the windows of the Hotel, a +charming view is had of the mountains which encircle the lake. On one +side green slopes and pleasantly wooded heights meet the eye, and on the +other, old familiar grey-faced mountains, with their heads raised on +high among the clouds, shining, changing, and fading in the silver +mists. The surface of the lake, calm-faced and deep-welled, here and +there lifts up to be admired beautiful islands. Here a saint made his +temporal home, and in Church Island is the beehive cell where St. Finian +prayed, "in whose orisons were all our sins remembered." The ruins of +the sixth century church deserve the attention of the antiquary. Away at +the head of Lough Currane is Coppal, where sea trout and small brown +trout abound. It, too, has charms all its own, in parts wild and +untamed, but again, calm as the race of a sleeping child. Full +information as to the flies suitable for the lake, and the places well +to troll, may be had from the best known angler in Kerry, Teigue +M'Carthy. Like Sir Roger de Coverley's friend, Will Wimble, he can tie +a fly "to a miracle," and he is an enthusiastic devotee of the "gentle +art." Besides the attractions for fishermen, there are thousands of +acres of shooting in the vicinity. There is plenty of opportunity and +accommodation for bathing by the bay, and a new Golf Links, laid out +under the best professional advice, affords a further source of +healthful amusement. Over the hills from Waterville the pre-historic +remains of Staigue Fort may be visited. It is the best example of +cyclopean stone forts that remains in Ireland, and by authoritative +antiquaries is said to be at least 2,000 years old. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Lake Currane.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Raheen, Lake Currane.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Cuthbert, Valencia._ Arbutus Rock, Lake Currane.] + + +EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF WATERVILLE. + +TOUR 1.--The conveyance will leave the Hotel at 11 a.m. for a +drive to Derrynane, the historic home of the Liberator, On reaching +Coomakista Pass--the highest point of the road--a gradual descent brings +the party to Derrynane House, and further on to Derrynane Hotel, close +to the remains of the old Abbey. Those who wish to walk can get off the +car at Coomakista, and walk one and-a-half miles to Lord Dunraven's +cottage, where they can meet the cars. The path winds along the shore of +Derrynane Bay, and well repays those who follow it on their way to the +Abbey, The party can lunch at Derrynane Hotel, and may return by the +path, and meet the car at Coomakista, or drive the whole way back to +Waterville. Fare for four persons, _12s._ + +TOUR 2.--The conveyance will leave the Hotel at 11 a.m., and +drive along the northern shore of Lough Currane. Crossing the Coomeragh +by the Ivy Bridge, the road leads us as far as Isknamaclery Lake. At +this point a unique view is obtained of Isknamaclery Lake and Lough +Nabrackderrag on the right, and Loughs Namona and Cloonaghlin on the +left. The party can have the option of proceeding on foot to Derriana +Lake, or returning and driving along the Coomeragh to Derriana Lodge, +and from thence returning to Waterville, or they can cross the Dromad +Hills, and return by the river Inny. Fare for four persons, _12s._ + +TOUR 3.--The conveyance leaves the Hotel at 11 a.m. for Saint +Finan's Glen. Before entering the Glen, a fine view is obtained of the +Iveragh Mountains, and even the M'Gillicuddy Reeks, and later, the Lemon +Rock and the Skelligs. After luncheon in the Glen, the party will return +by Bolus Head, visiting the old Abbey of Saint Michael's and +Ballinskellias Castle, and (with the permission of the Superintendent) +the Atlantic Cable Station. For sea and mountain combined this view +cannot be surpassed. Fare for four persons, _16s._ + +TOUR No. 4.--The conveyance will leave the Hotel at about 11 +a.m., for the remarkable fort of Staigue-an-or. The route lies along the +southern shore of Lough Currane for about six miles, (passing the +Waterfall) as far as Isknagahenny (Coppal) Lake, and good views are +obtained of both lakes. At Isknagahenny Lake the party alights, and +proceeds on foot for about four miles to the fort. When the highest +point of the ascent is reached, a magnificent view is obtained of +Kenmare river and the islands off the coast of Beara Peninsula. The +descent to the foot is easy. After luncheon the party may return either +by West Cove and Derrynane to Waterville, or again ascend the mountain +and return by Lake Road. Fare for four persons, _16s._ + +Shorter excursions can be arranged. + + +HIRE OF BOATS + +Boat and one man, _1s._ per hour, _5s._ per day. Boat and two men, _2s._ +per hour, _10s._ per day. + +In no case will the charge be for less than two hours. + +POSTING ARRANGEMENTS. + +Hire by Time (Driver's Fee included). + + Two-horse carriage. One-horse car. + + +For the first hour, _7s. 0d._ _3s. 6d._ + +For two hours, _14s. 0d._ _7s. 0d._ + +For each additional hour or + fraction of an hour _3s. 6d._ _2s. 0d._ + +Hire for Fixed Distances (Driver's Fee included). + +Two-horse One-horse car. +carriage. + +Waterville to Caragh Lake, -- _25s. 0d._ + + " " Caherciveen, _15s. 0d._ _8s. 0d._ + + " " Valentia, _15s. 0d._ _8s. 0d._ + + " " Portmagee, _18s. 0d._ _10s. 0d._ + + " " Derrynane, _15s. 0d._ _8s. 0d._ + + " " Parknasilla, _30s. 0d._ _16s. 0d._ + +Fifty per cent. additional for return journey. + +[Illustration: Coomakisteen Hill.] + +The coach road from Waterville, following the outskirts of +Ballinskelligs Bay, insinuates itself up a dizzy height. Looking +backwards, Waterville, "standing with reluctant feet" between the sea +and the lake, seems to wonder which is more bewitching. Forging ahead +through the mountain gaps, we pass under ~Coomakiska~, 1,500 feet, and +~Beenarourke~, 1,000 feet above the sea level. Clearing the gates of the +mountains, we come into the open highlands above ~Derrynane~, watching +out from its post over the sea. Truly the home for a chief. Here +O'Connell spent his happiest days, within the roar of the Atlantic +billows, but far from the turmoil and stress of the great agitation in +which his figure looms large as a giant form. Here his hospitable door +flew open wide to the passing stranger, and across the hills, with the +fleet-footed hound, he enjoyed the most delightful of sports, coursing! +Several interesting relics of the Liberator are shown at the house of +his descendant, the present proprietor. The ruins of ~Derrynane Abbey~, +in the vicinity of O'Connell's home, stand on a small peninsula, at some +seasons transformed into an island by the divorcing rush of the high +tides. It was a foundation of the monks of St. Finbarr, called +Aghermore, such a place as that described in the life of St. Brendan, +who, first of the old-world mariners, discovered the great Land of the +West. + + I grew to manhood by the western wave, + Among the mighty mountains on the shore; + My bed, the rock within some natural cave, + My food, whate'er the sea or seasons bore. + + And there I saw the mighty sea expand, + Like Time's unmeasured and unfathomed waves; + One with its tide-marks on the ridgy strand, + The other with its line of weedy graves. + + And, as beyond the outstretched waves of Time, + The eye of Faith a brighter land may meet; + So did I dream of some more sunny clime, + Beyond the waste of waters at my feet. + +From Cahirdaniel village, the site of a Danish fort, the route extends +directly along the Kenmare Fiord, under the foot of Crohan Mountain. The +Slieve Misk and Cahar Mountains separate themselves out to win our +admiration the better. They recall Lady Dufferin's words, addressed +to other sweet mountains, where + + "The sunlight sleeping + On your green banks is a picture rare, + You crowd around me like young girls peeping, + And puzzling me to say which is most fair; + As though you'd see your own sweet faces + Reflected in that smooth and silver sea + O! my blessing on those lovely places, + Though no one cares how dear they are to me." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Sneem.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Sneem.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Sneem.] + +On the road beneath Crohan, a mile north from Coad Church is St. +Kiernan's Cell, eaten into the face of the sheer rock. In this district +formerly the mines were worked and copper smelted. As the road winds +along we can see Staigue-an-or, with its cyclopean mounds, lying low and +dwarfed on the hillside. By the high mountains, where the coach-horn +sounds sweet and awakens echoes, the road comes down into the lowlands, +and from the bridge is seen beautiful landscape, with ~Sneem~ spread out +in the foreground. Under lovely beechen boughs, and through a glade of +oak and first we are ushered into + + +PARKNASILLA, + +An ideal residence, hidden from the summer sun by a variegated veil of +the rocky garden foliage; sheltered from the winter's blast by the +Askeve Mountains and the kind shores that button themselves around its +inlet sea, of which Mr. A. P. Graves has written: + + "Ocean before, the summer sky above + Who could pourtray the mountains' purple smiles-- + And all the opal hues of earth and heaven, + Foam fringing forests, heather-tufted Isles; + The roseate dawn--purpureal pomps of even-- + And young Atlantic's petulant, shifting wiles? + Who could do aught but mar the true expression + Where all is change? Then why a record shape + Of scenes whose nature glories in succession + From wood to wave--from wave to distant cape-- + Like the young poet's dream, fair beyond all possession." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Parknasilla.] + +Here in the demesne lands of a Bishop's Old Palace, the ~Southern Hotel~ +new palace has been built. The green turf of its lawn extends down to +the water's edge. It is a land of arbutus and myrtle, of glades laden +with the pink and white blossoms of oleander and rhododendron, and thick +with bells of fuschias, the fair daffodils of Shakespeare and Herrick, +that fade away too soon: + + "Daffodils that come + Before the swallow dares, and take + The winds of March with beauty." + +Derreen, away in the lap of the landscape, found favour of Froude, and +at Kilmackilloge he found material for his novel. The beautiful +~Garinish~ Island is like a little paradise, lost in a land where all is +lovely. Around the shores, and in the sandy caves, the beautiful seals +cluster, and at times are so tame as to answer the shrill whistle of the +boatman, and show their lovely forms on the water's surface near at +hand. We live in sceptical times, when + + "The powder, the beauty, and the majesty, + That had their haunts in dale, or piney mountain, + Or forests by slow stream, or pebbly spring, + Or chasms and watery depths--all these have vanished. + They live no longer in the faith of reason." + +But still here, along the old-world shores, where daylight dies, the +superstitions and traditions of the pagan past still linger among them, +and there is none more interesting than that which teaches the fishermen +to regard these beautiful-eyed, plaintive-voiced creatures with +tenderness. The souls of the dead, drowned at sea, who die out of +friendship with God, go into the bodies of the seals, and there through +the ages await the Trump of the Archangel to call them before the Great +White Throne. + +[Illustration: Southern Hotel, Parknasilla.] + +"Parknasilla is situated on the northern shore of Kenmare Bay, a bay +rich in beauty, and with singularly-indented coast lines. Its +well-sheltered position amidst a number of islets, thickly wooded down +to the water's edge, has endowed it with unique advantages. This +protective area gives to Parknasilla claims of a special character, and +prevents the access to it of all winds except those coming from the +warmer points, viz., south and south-west; these winds, before reaching +the southern coast of Ireland, having travelled over the Gulf Stream, +and being thus subjected to its moderating and balmy influence. We all +recognise what elevation of the land will do for any place, particularly +if it shelters that place from winds blowing from the cold quarters. +Thus, mountain protection is of supreme importance in the choice of a +health resort, more especially in the winter and spring seasons of the +year. In this regard Parknasilla is exceptionally favoured, a +mountainous range closely guarding and protecting it from the northerly +and easterly winds. The combination of mountain, wood, and water gives a +special charm to this locality; and a convincing evidence of the +mildness of the winter and early spring here is the forward character of +the vegetation, the early budding of the trees, shrubs, and flowers--all +bearing testimony to the mildness of the climate. Temperature rapidly +tells its tale on the vegetable world, and there can be no more +reassuring proof of the equable and balmy character of the climate of a +district than the early growth of flowering shrubs, plants, and table +produce. The position of this favoured and sheltered sea inlet upon the +isothermal map shows it to have a mean annual temperature of 52 degrees, +being similar in this regard to its neighbour, Glengarriff, and +registering a higher mean annual temperature than Ventnor or Torquay. +The mildness of the climate in the earlier spring months is of such a +character that exercise can be freely partaken of in the open air daily, +without risk of chill; and this to the invalid is of paramount +importance. No record has, as yet, been regularly taken of the daily +sunshine, or of the rainfall, but so far as could be ascertained, the +rainfall does not appear to be excessive. To sufferers from chronic or +recurrent affections of the respiratory organs, Parknasilla, in the +winter and early spring months, would appear to be indicated as a most +desirable place of residence. I have had the advantage of two recent +visits to this district, and feel convinced that, when it becomes better +known, Parknasilla will prove a veritable haven of health and rest to +the chronic invalid and the convalescent, as well as a delightful +retreat to the busy man of the 'world's mart,' who may need a temporary +repose from the worries and cares of daily life. Parknasilla is about a +two hours' drive or thereabouts from Kenmare, the drive being one of +exceptional beauty and interest."--_Dublin Journal of Medical Science_, +May, 1896. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Garinish Island, Parknasilla.] + + +DRIVING AND BOATING EXCURSIONS IN THE VICINITY OF PARKNASILLA. + + No. 1--Car to Sneem, and by Killarney Road to Letterfinish; thence + to Tahilla Chapel, and return by Dunquilla (ancient fort), or + direct. _8s._ + + No. 2.--Car to Sneem and Letterfinish; on to Geragh Bridge, and by + Blackwater Valley and Coast Road to Tahilla, returning by + Dunquilla, or direct, _12s._ + + No. 3.--Car to Sneem and Coomyauna Bridge, pony (cost _5s._, to top + and back not included), or walk to summit of Beoun Mountain, view + of Glencar and M'Gillicuddy Reeks, Cloon, Lakes, and Coomlumina + Glen with Dingle Bay in the distance. Return same way. _12s._ + + No. 4.--Car to Sneem and Glorah, pony (cost _5s._, to top and back + not included), or walk to summit of Finnavagough, view of + Foylenagearough, Cloonaghlin, Derriana, and Waterville Lakes. + Return same way. _12s._ + + No. 5.--Car to Staigue Fort and back. This ancient round stone + Fort, in a wonderful state of preservation, is well worth a visit. + _16s._ + + No. 6.--Car to Blackwater Bridge and Waterfall; along the + Blackwater Valley to Lough Erin, view of Ballaghbeama Pass, + returning by Geragh Bridge, Sneem Road, and Tahilla. _16s._ + + No. 7.--By boat to Reenkilla, car to Glanmore Lake, and by Furniss + to Killmakillogue, skirting Derreen, Lord Lansdowne's demesne (fare + _5s._, not included). Return by boat (four-oared). _20s._ + + No. 8.--By boat to Ormonde's Island; car along shore of Clonea Lake + to Inchiquin, Glen and Cascade, thence by Derreen or coast road. + (Fare, _10s._, not included.) Return by boat (four-oared). _20s._ + + No. 9.--By boat to the Caves, and into Ardgroom Harbour; car by + Eyeries to Castletown-Bere, Dunboy Castle, and back (fare _10s._, + not included). Return by boat (four-oared). _20s._ + + Excursions by Steam Launch will also be organised to the Caves, + Ardgroom, Derrynane, and other places of interest on the Kenmare + River. + +[Illustration: Cycling at Parknasilla.] + +[Illustration] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Blackwater at Kenmare.] + +The demesne around the hotel comprises one hundred acres of beautiful +land, where tropical flora flourish all the year round. The meadows +trim, with daisies pied, there are on every mossy bank the dewy lips of + +_"Violets dim, But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes, Or Cytherea's +breath."_ + +The road to Kenmare lies high above the sea. Ardgroom is hiding under +the Caha mountains, with Glenbeg Lake behind, in the little valley. +Beneath Derrenamackan the lashing seas wage perpetual warfare against +the rocks. By the Eskdhu, or Blackwater Bridge, amid the dense foliage +of the trees, a waterfall bleats from the thicket with plaintive murmur. +Then it breaks itself free, and amid rocks, and briars, and tangled +underwood, rushes wildly towards the sea. Between us and the ocean is +Dromore Castle, the residence of one of the heads of a sept of the +O'Mahony clan. In the demesne are the ruins of Cappacross, a stronghold +of the O'Sullivans. Dunkerron Castle, on the shore, gives its name to +the islands in the bay. + + + + +[Illustration] + +County Clare. + + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Dromoland Castle.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Ennistymon.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lisdoonvarna Spa.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kilkee.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Amphitheatre at Kilkee.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Look-out Cliff, Kilkee.] + +[Illustration: Golfing at Lahinch] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Golfing, Lahinch.] + +Clare County possesses the finest cliff scenery in Ireland. From +Limerick or Galway the county may be explored. On the journey by rail +from Limerick, beyond Long Pavement, we come on a fine view of Cratloe +woods. An ancient saint referred to Cratloe as "a pleasant seclusion +from sin"; but in later times it became a haunt of rapparees, and its +thick foliage provided what Spenser would call "a meet house for +rebels." In later times Freney, a noted highwayman, whose exploits +delighted the Irish peasant, here found a refuge. Bunratty Castle was a +strong place in feudal times. Here Rinuccini, the Papal Legate to +Ireland in 1641, sojourned, and his papers contain many references to +the picturesqueness of the surrounding country, and its herds of wild +deer. Between Newmarket and Ardsollus is Dromoland, the seat of Lord +Inchiquin, and the birthplace of William Smith O'Brien, the aristocratic +leader of the revolutionists of 1848. Crossing the Ardsollus river, we +are near Quin Abbey, an old Franciscan Priory, and Clare Castle, which +took its name from an old watch tower in the river Fergus. ~Ennis~ is +the chief town in the County Clare. It is more quaint than important. It +is pleasantly placed on the river Fergus, and is a clean town, doing a +thriving business with the country. The principal monument in the +town is to Daniel O'Connell, who was returned for Clare in the famous +election of 1828. The ashes of the controversy that raged around +O'Connell in his lifetime are long since dead, and if one wanted proof +of this it is in the recent biography of the great agitator which +appears in the "Heroes of the Nation" series. In that, the famous Clare +election is treated with true historic discrimination by the writer, who +compares the bravery of the Clare peasants at Ennis to the gallant +Covenanters standing up against Claverhouse's Dragoons at Bothwell +Bridge. From Ennis, by car and light railway, Ennistymon, Lehinch, +Lisdoonvarna, and Ballyvaughan may be reached. At Ennistymon there is a +splendid cascade on the Innagh river. ~Lisdoonvarna~ possesses the +best known Spa in Ireland. It is come-at-able from Milltown-Malbay or +Ennistymon. Its friends have called it "The Cheltenham of Ireland." It +cannot be pretended that the immediate scenery is attractive, but there +are many interesting drives in the vicinity. The hotels and lodgings are +good. The sixth century Church of Saint Cronan, pleasantly placed in an +ash-grove, will give those of an antiquarian taste opportunity of +beguiling their time during a stay at the beneficial chalybeate and +sulphurous springs. The drives from Lisdoonvarna may include tours to +Ballyvaughan and the Cliffs of Moher. The drive by Black Head, the +north-eastern promontory of county Clare, gives one a fine view as far +north as the Arran; then we approach Ballyvaughan, in Galway Bay, an +out-of-the-way old world village. Its approach is by a spiral hill, over +two miles in length, called "The Corkscrew-road." The sides of the stony +hills are interspersed with the most delicate maiden-hair fern, growing +wild. There are two small but neat hotels in Ballyvaughan. From this +little town Galway might be visited by steamer and the Arran Isles by +hooker. ~Kilkee~ is admittedly the best bathing-place in these islands. +It is dashed into with the full force of the Atlantic, but with the +countless nooks fitted into the rocky coast-line, there are numbers of +sandy strands suitable for bathing. Here, situated in the very outpost +of the West of Ireland, it is as up-to-date and as go-a-head as some of +its more fashionable rivals, while in natural advantages it excels them +all. It is easy of access by land and sea. The town is protected by a +long reef of rock, called "Duggerna." The cliff scenery is very +beautiful. The spots to visit are The Puffing Hole, Saint Senanus' Holy +Well, Bishop's Island, with its beehive cells and Green Rock. A tour to +Loophead will bring one in sight of a long line of cliff scenery. +~Lehinch~ and Liscanor Bay promise to become the best patronised golf +links in Ireland. Right in front of the little town is a splendid +strand, and local enterprise has been auxiliary to nature in making the +spot attractive. ~Spanish Point~ also possesses splendid strands, where +sea-bathing may be enjoyed with safety. Two miles away is +~Milltown-Malbay~. The town is business-like, and the coast-line in the +vicinity is associated with weird tales of wreckers; there some of the +unfortunate Spaniards came to grief in 1588. The ~Cliffs of Moher~ may +be visited from Milltown, Lehinch, or Lisdoonvarna. Going up the road +from Lehinch to ~Liscanor~ we pass a Holy Well dedicated to Saint +Brigid. The only cliff scenery in the British Isles to compare with that +of Moher is at the Orkney islands. They make a magnificent embroidery +into the red sandstone along the coast-line for four miles, rising in +heights varying from 440 to 700 feet. From their height on a clear day +the distant Isles of Arran may be seen, and the whole surroundings make +as gorgeous a seascape as is to be found anywhere in the world. An +observer will readily recognise that the quaint craft which the +fishermen still use in the vicinity of Moher, as indeed elsewhere in +Clare, is the ancient coracle. ~Kilrush~, on the Lower Shannon, is +chiefly of interest to the antiquary. It can be reached from Limerick, +by the Shannon, as pointed out already, and from Kilkee by Rail. By a +ferry from a slip at the foot of the little town, the holy island, +Scattery, the shrine of Saint Senanus, may be reached. The Round Tower +is in good preservation, and the remains of the Seven Churches can +still be traced. Saint Senanus' bed is still pointed out. No peasant +woman who wishes to be a mother will ever enter this hallowed spot. The +legend of Saint Senanus is similar to that of Saint Kevin. He was +haunted by the love of a woman from whom he flew. Thomas Moore in verse +tells us the hard-heartedness of both the anchorites:-- + + "Oh! haste, and leave this sacred isle, + Unholy bark, e'er morning smile, + For on thy deck, though dark it be, + A female form I see. + And I have sworn this sainted sod + Shall ne'er by woman's feet be trod." + + "Oh! Father, send not hence my bark, + Through wintry winds and billows dark; + I come with humble heart to share + Thy morn and evening-prayer; + Nor mine the feet, oh! holy Saint, + The brightness of thy sod to taint." + + The lady's prayer Senanus spurned, + The wind blew fresh, the bark returned; + But legends hint that had the maid + Till morning's light delay'd, + And given the Saint one rosy smile, + She ne'er had left his lonely isle. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Cliffs of Moher.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kilrush.] + +[Illustration: Country Car.] + +[Illustration] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Galway and District. + + +Leaving the County Clare by rail we cross into Galway, between Crusheen +and Tubber. Beyond the marshy country on the right, away in the +woodlands, nestles Loughcootra Castle. The great lake from which the +place takes its name covers eight square miles. The hundreds of islets +here scattered about its surface are the homes of thousands of herons. +The country people have a belief that this bird is a messenger of good +omen, and never interfere with it or its young. There is a beautiful +legend in Irish of a heron which visited St. Columba, at Iona, a +traveller from his own country. This story is recorded in the +interesting life of the saint written in the seventh century by Adamnan, +one of his successors; a beautiful version in English tells of the saint +rising at dawn of day after a dream of the coming of the bird:-- + + "He looked out over the dreary moor, + Over the hill so bleak and hoar-- + 'A bird from the land I revisit no more + Has come to visit me, + Dear Innisfail from thy fragrant shore-- + Land of my own I shall see no more-- + Across the driving sea.' + + Then he left his prayer, and 'Brother,' he said, + 'Take to thee corn, and oil, and bread, + A bird has alit--half frozen, half dead-- + Upon our southern strand. + Then warm him and feed him with gentle care, + And chafe his wing's and anoint him there, + He comes from my own loved land-- + From my own loved land,' and the old Saint wept; + But the Monk arose, while the others slept, + And warmed the heron, and fed and kept + The bird for a day and night. + So Columb feeling, though far away, + For Ireland's soil--like the Gael to-day-- + One favour in heaven's sight." + +The magnificent residence was designed and erected similarly to East +Comer Castle (by Nash, who remodelled Windsor) for Lord Gort, the head +of the Vereker family, at a cost of L70,000. The black hand of the +famine of 1847 fed on this property, like many another in Ireland, and +it passed from its owners under the Encumbered Estates Act. Cove Park, +the residence of Lady Gregory, is just outside Gort. Her Ladyship has +found a way to the hearts of the country people by her sympathy with the +Irish language movement. Her volume, "Mr. Gregory's Letter Box," is a +valuable contribution to the history of Ireland in the first three +decades of the nineteenth century. Sir William Gregory's Memoirs it is +that contain the circumstantial version of the Cabinet scandal, in which +the name of the Hon. Mrs. Norton (George Meredith's "Diana of the +Crossways") figures. The story of the leakage of the State secret is as +follows:-- + + "When Sir Robert Peel determined to repeal the Corn Laws he + consulted a portion of his Cabinet. They were Sidney Herbert, Lord + Lincoln, Sir Jas. Graham, and Lord Aberdeen, all of whom determined + that the repeal of the Corn Laws should be kept a profound secret + until the whole of the Cabinet had assembled. That same evening + Sidney Herbert dined _tete-a-tete_ with Mrs. Norton, the well-known + object of his attachment, and with whom he was infatuated. Before + dinner was over she wormed out of him the secret of the Cabinet. + After dinner she pretended to go to see a sick friend for a short + time, and returned in half-an-hour. In the meantime she had taken a + cab and driven down to the _Times_ Office, and saw Barnes, the + Editor, and told him the Government were going to repeal the Corn + Laws. Barnes said to her, "If you have no proof I shall not detain + you, but if you have you shall have L500." She gave him the chapter + and verse, and returned to poor Sidney Herbert with the cheque in + her pocket. The next day the announcement was made in the _Times_ + which astounded all England. This was on the 5th December, 1845. + The other papers disbelieved it. Lord Derby and the Duke of + Richmond left the Government." + +In the heart of a stony country beset with high fences and rough copple +stones, stands the little town of ~Gort~, The military stationed there +now add to its importance. Kilmacduagh, at the base of the Burren Hills, +contains a church (seventh century) of St. Colman, the Blue-eyed, and a +Round Tower leaning out of the perpendicular. In pre-historic times all +this country side at the foot of Burren, from Gort to Loughrea, and for +miles apart, is said to have been the favourite hunting-ground of Queen +Maev. ~Kinvara~, away on an inlet of Galway Bay, is a fishing village, +and the locality is celebrated for the "succulent oysters"--which in the +season are to be found in every restaurant in Dublin. The antiquary will +find his way easily to Corcomroe Abbey--the church is still in a good +state of preservation. Donald More O'Brien, King of Limerick, is +commonly believed to have built it in the twelfth century. It +subsequently became subject to Furness, in Lancashire. Donough O'Brien, +King of Thomond--killed in battle in 1267--is buried here; his monument +discloses the rude magnificence of his attire. The effigy is looked upon +by scientists as an example of the attire of an Irish King of the +thirteenth century. + +~Athenry~, as its name, the "Ford of the Kings," signifies, and its +ruins testify, was of old a place of renown. The tower is entered by a +small gate tower; before it stands the quaint market cross, on one side +is the Virgin and Child, on the other the figure of the Crucified. The +base is relieved with deer and wolf hounds, and at the corner an angel +holds a scroll, the legend of which is defaced. The Franciscan Priory +(1464), despite the attempt to modernise it, has still two thirteenth +century windows, and the south transept has the remains of a very +beautiful window. The Dominican Priory is said to have been erected at +the personal request of St. Dominick in 1241. So late as 1644 it was the +seat of a university acknowledged by Rome. + +~Tuam~ is now of little importance. It is to ecclesiastics, however, of +interest, as the centre of an Archiepiscopal See. The statue to John +MacHale is worth seeing. He was well known in the first part of the +nineteenth century as "John of Tuam." An uncompromising Ultramontane, he +translated Homer into Gaelic, and O'Connell in one of his speeches +called this great patriot bishop "The Lion of the Fold of Judah." The +ancient cross in the square is a good specimen of the Irish stone +crosses. + +~Galway~ still possesses the evidence of its former greatness. To-day it +is simply an old world city in the midst of a sporting county. Of old it +was a strong-walled town, ever on the alert against alarm and foray, +with its harbour crowded with the warships of Spain and the merchantmen +of many a foreign port. There is a famous map of the city, dating back +to 1651, when the then Lord Deputy Clanricarde pledged the town to the +Duke of Lorraine. It shows a walled-in town with fourteen gates, each +guarded by a watch-tower. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ At Galway.] + +In the twelfth century, when De Burgo conquered O'Connor, he made Galway +the citadel of his western possessions. During the next century there +gathered into the prosperous town from far and near adventurers and +merchants--the Blakes and the Bodkins, the Lynches, the Morrises, the +Martins, the Joyces, &c.; founders of the great families, whose names +have since been inseparable from Galway. In after times the clanship and +attachment of these families to their members and each other, drew from +the Scripture-loving Puritans the scornful appellation--"The Tribes of +Galway"; but the expression was afterwards adopted by the Galway men as +an honourable mark of distinction between themselves and their cruel +oppressors. In old times the merchant princes of the place were renowned +for their hospitality, which they carried to such an excess that the +civil authorities interfered with it, in 1518, with a law to the effect +that + + "No man of this town shall oste or receive into their houses at + Christmas, Easter, nor no feaste elles, any of the Burkes, + MacWilliams, the Kellies, nor no cepte elles without license of + the Mayor and Councill, on payn to forfeit L5; that neither O nor + Mac shall strutte nor swaggere through the street of Gallway." + +Indeed, the O's and Mac's seem to have made their history by more than +enjoying the hospitality of their neighbours, and what was not given +them willingly they at times took by the strength of their right hands. +Over the western gate of the city was the following meaningful +inscription:-- + + "From the fury of the O'Flaherties, good Lord, deliver us." + +The trade with Spain was for centuries a source of great prosperity to +the town, and those familiar with the characteristics of Spanish +architecture will see much in Galway to remind them of it. The sympathy +of the townspeople seems always to have been with the leaders of forlorn +hopes in Irish history. It was almost destroyed by Ludlow for its +fidelity to the King in 1652, and having been rebuilt, it again fell +before the siege trains of the victorious Ginckle in 1691 after the +battle of Aughrim, the Culloden of Ireland. With the fall of the +Jacobite standard in that battle, the hopes of the western Irish +declined. The surviving sons of most of the old families sought service +abroad in the armies of France, Spain, and Austria. There are many love +songs of the time in Irish, which have been translated, such as-- + + +AFTER AUGHRIM. + + Do you remember long-ago, + Kathaleen! + When your lover whispered low-- + "Shall I stay or shall I go, + Kathaleen?" + And you answered proudly, "Go, + And join King James and strike a blow + For the Green." + + Mavrone! your hair is white as snow, + Kathaleen, + Your heart is sad and full of woe-- + Do you repent you bade him go, + Kathaleen? + But still you answer proudly, "No, + Far better die with Sarsfield so, + Than live a slave without a blow + For the Green." + +Many of the old houses remain. Far and away the most interesting is +Lynch's mansion at the corner of Abbey Gate-street. On the walls are the +arms of the Lynches and their crest, a lynx, which it is said was given +them for the watchfulness with which they guarded a besieged Austrian +town in the middle ages. Behind Saint Nicholas' Church, in +Market-street, is the Lynch stone, inscribed with a skull and +crossbones, and "Vanity of vanity, and all is but vanity," above which +is an inscription:-- + + "This memorial of the stern and unbending justice of the Chief + Magistrate of this city, James Lynch Fitzstephen, elected Mayor, + A.D. 1493, who condemned and executed his own guilty son, Walter, + on this spot, has been restored to its ancient site A.D. 1854, with + the approval of the Town Commissioners, by their Chairman, Very + Rev. Peter Daly, P.P., and Vicar of Saint Nicholas." + +The stern and unbending justice relates to the Mayor's execution of his +own son. The story tells how a young Spaniard, who was the Mayor's +guest, crossed in love the Mayor's son. One night, heated with wine and +inflamed with jealousy, young Lynch drove a stiletto through the heart +of his rival. His father tried and condemned him for the crime. His +mother roused the sympathy of the townspeople to such an extent that +none could be found to act as executioner, but the old Mayor was +even-handed with them, and hanged the unfortunate culprit with his own +hands. + +No visitor to Galway will fail to find out the Claddagh. It is the most +conservative community in Ireland, and with them neither old times are +changed nor old manners gone. The colony inhabit a number of +low-thatched cottages apart from the town. They live mostly by fishing. +The Claddagh women dress in blue cloaks and red petticoats, and their +rings, which visitors procure as keepsakes, represent two hands holding +a harp. Hardman, in his "Rare History of Galway," wrote of them as +follows:-- + + "The colony, from time immemorial, has been ruled by one of their + own body, periodically elected, who is dignified with the title of + Mayor, regulates the community according to their own peculiar laws + and customs, and settles all their fishery disputes. His decisions + are so decisive and so much respected that the parties are seldom + known to carry their differences before a legal tribunal or to + trouble the civil magistrates." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Arran Island. Claddagh.] + +Salthill, to the west of the town, is a well-sheltered bathing-place, +with pleasant villas for visitors. The Queen's College will repay a +visit. At the bridge in the town excellent salmon fishing is to be had. +When the fish are making up the river for Corrib or Lough Mask the +sight is very interesting. From Galway the old Franciscan Monastery at +Claregalway may be driven to, or an excursion made down the bay to the +Arran Islands. They are twenty-seven miles from the harbour. There are +three principal islands, Innismore, Innismaan, and Innisheen, and +several small isles. Two centuries ago they were described as paved over +with stones, with wide openings between them for cattle to break their +legs, and the modern description by Hon. Emily Lawless does not far +differ. + +The dress of the people is mostly white, homespun flannel "bawneens," +and sandals of cowhide, fastened across the instep, which they call +"pampooties." + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Queen's College, Galway.] + + + + +[Illustration] + +Connemara and Sligo. + + +The Great Southern and Western Railway line runs northward from Tuam to +Sligo. To the westward lies Iar Connaught and Connemara, the capital of +which is Clifden, standing high above Ardhear Bay. If we go direct from +Galway to Clifden we pass Oughterard and the ruins of Aughnanure Castle, +formerly the stronghold of "The furious O'Flahertys." From its Tower we +can get a view of Lough Corrib, with its famous Caislean-no-Circe, long +the lair of Grace O'Malley, of whom the western peasant may say she + + "Fought, and sailed, and ruled, + And loved, and made our world." + +Oughterard nowadays is given over to fishermen instead of the fighting +followers of the western chieftains. The Connaught Glendalough differs +much from its Leinster namesake, but the Maamturk Mountains and the Glen +of Innagh have a panorama of scenes difficult, indeed, to rival. Clifden +is an excellent centre from which to make excursions. Wherever we look +the Twelve Bens of Bumabeola spring up like uplifted lances. The +coast-line is beautiful, and from the promontories we see distant Slyne +Head and the Isles of the West. Mountain climbers will find on the +summit of Urrisbeg a curious plateau. The district is a good one for +lake and sea fishing. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Achill Head Mayo.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Diamond Mountain, Letterfrack.] + +The coast drive to Leenane should not be missed. Leenane itself is on +the outer flank of "Joyce's County," as a fiord of Killery Bay. +Letterfrack is but ten miles from Clifden. The mountain scenery in the +immediate vicinity of the town is delightful. Within easy reach is +Little Killery Bay and the beautiful valley, The Pass of Kylemore, near +which is Kylemore Castle, where Mitchell Henry started his model farm in +1864. The mountain pass of Lehinch cuts through the hills to the sea. A +journey by Ballinakill brings the adventuresome to Renvyle Bay, where +there is a comfortable hotel. Leenane is the best starting ground for an +expedition up the Twelve Bens; from it also a tour may be made to Cong. + +About eight miles beyond Leenane is Errig Bridge, from which the best +view of Croagh Patrick Mountain may be had. But an ascent of the +mountain is best made from Murrisk Abbey, six miles outside Westport. +From the mountain side the expansive country from island-set Clew Bay to +Nephin and Slievemore, in Achill, spreads out to best advantage. The +famous coach road from Clifden cuts into Westport from the south. The +Quay and Mall and the Marquis of Sligo's demesne are the "sights" of the +town. It is a convenient centre from which to visit Achill Island. The +drive through Newport, Mallaranny, and Achill Sound to Dingort, although +across an exposed country, on a fine day will more than repay the +tourist. + +The views of Clew Bay are like the changing scenes in a panorama. +Newport will clamour for the attention of fishermen; and lavish on them +opportunities for sport. The Glens on the way to Mallaranny will tempt +excursions, and beyond Burrishoole Bridge the antiquary will deviate +to Carrighooley Castle, and lend his ears to the peasant tales of Grace +O'Malley and her husband, the MacWilliam. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Glendalough.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lough Corrib.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Killery Bay.] + +Mallaranny is a home of rest. It hides beside a promontory in the bay, +and its splendid strand faces the south. The direct way to Achill is +through Dingort. For scenery and sport few places in the west surpass +the island. The mountain cliff scenery is superb. The seals breed in the +cliffs, and the rocks are the homes of countless seabirds. At Meenawn, +the eagles on the island mostly nest. The great horned wild goats offer +good sport to the marksman, and the deep-sea fisher will delight in the +shoals and "schools" of herring and mackerel which in the seasons strike +the coast and into the bays of the island. Did Izaac Walton but live in +our days he would be sure to find his way to Ballina, because of the Moy +River and the salmon which "most do congregate there." Loughs Conn and +Cullin are open free fishing, and on the preserves the terms are most +liberal. Foxford, beside Lough Conn, will gladden the hearts of those +interested in philanthropic schemes for the benefit of "the very poor" +in rural Ireland. Within a few years, enterprises well directed, has +transformed the district from being a "most distressful country" into a +thriving, self-respecting, self-advancing locality. Killala, six miles +from Ballina, is of interest as the point at which General Humbert and +1,100 Frenchmen invaded Ireland in 1798. Sligo is the most thriving town +in the west of Ireland. Its public buildings, its commerce, and its +picturesque position, are one and all notable. Sligo Abbey, a structure +of the thirteenth century, is a very remarkable pile of ruins. Lough +Gill contains most beautiful sylvan and sea pictures. There is sea, +lake, and river fishing _galore_, and mostly free. The point from which +to see Lough Gill in all its glory is Dooine Rock. Excursions may be +made to Hazelwood, Glencar, and even to Bundoran, the most deservedly +patronised watering-place in the north-west of Ireland. Those who +desire an exquisite souvenir of a visit to Ireland, should not fail to +procure a piece of Belleek ware, remarkable for its elegance and +delicacy; and if in the vicinity of Belleek village, permission may be +obtained to visit the interesting pottery. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Kylemore.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Lawrence, Dublin._ Lough Gill.] + + For information as to Sport to be had in the Sligo District, see end + of this volume, where particulars are given as to Golf, Fishing, + Shooting, Cycling, &c. + +[Illustration] + + + + +Summer and Winter Resorts + + +The health resorts of Ireland are so many, their attractions and +advantages so varied, that one wonders why it is that they are +comparatively so little patronised. The explanation is not far to seek. +Hitherto they have been but little known, one cause and another have +helped to keep Ireland a _terra incognita_. The "faculty," however, has +been for long acquainted with the benefits which the Green Isle +possesses, and many an insular invalid, consumed with the desire to +visit some continental resort, has taken the common sense advice of the +family physician and learned to appreciate the advantages Providence has +bestowed nearer home. + +Winter quarters we have a good store, and beauty spots abound on the +coast, where summer delights can be enjoyed _galore_, to use an Irish +expression. + +Most of the places referred to beneath have already been described in +the foregoing pages, but it will, perhaps, be convenient for those in +search of particular information as to health resorts and seaside +watering places, to have them collected in one chapter and listed +alphabetically-- + + ~ARDMORE.~--Fishing village, five miles from Youghal, growing as a + watering place. Beautifully situated on southern shore of Bay. + Splendid strand, good opportunities for bathing. Deep-sea fishing, + mackerel, and herring "schools," plenty of lobsters. Cliff scenery + in vicinity; the bay is frequented by seals. Gaelic-speaking + peasantry. Round tower and ancient church. Good cottage + accommodation. + + ~ARRAN ISLANDS.~--Three in number--Innismore, Innismaan, + Innisheer--standing out in the Atlantic, a sort of long harbour bar + to Galway Bay. Scenery cannot pretend to be attractive. Bathing and + deep-sea fishing. Splendid views of cliff scenery on Clare Coast. + Steam trip up Galway Bay delightful. An enjoyable inn at Kilronan. + + BALLYBUNION.--Good watering place, splendid strand, fine cliff + scenery, sheer on Atlantic Ocean, plenty bathing accommodation. + Castle Hotel is comfortable, lodgings clean and cheap. Eight miles + from Listowel. + + BLARNEY.--Hydro, at St. Ann's Hill, on the side of pleasant uplands + overlooking old castle. Nicely wooded, with lake and trout stream. + Cottage homes, within grounds which are between six and seven + hundred acres in extent. Sandy soil and pine forests. The + residences well sheltered. Six miles from City Cork and Muskerry + tram; two miles G. S. W. Railway. Terms and particulars of + treatment, &c., to be had from the medical officer, Dr. Altdorfer. + + CAHIRCIVEEN.--An inlet of Valencia Harbour, well sheltered, mild + winters. Coach drives through mountain scenery or along coast to + Waterville. Valencia three miles. + + CASTLECONNELL.--Fishing village on the Shannon, outside Limerick, + six miles. Possesses chalybeate spring. Beautiful river scenery, + and splendid fishing. The Shannon Hotel can be recommended. + + DUNMORE EAST.--Pleasant, quiet, and select seaside resort, eleven + miles from Waterford, at the mouth of the River Suir. Good strand, + well sheltered. Splendid sea fishing and exceptionally good harbour + for yachting or boating. Plenty of villa and lodging-accommodation, + demand for same on increase in season. Good bathing; good hotel. + + GLENGARRIFF.--Coach from Kenmare or Bantry. Beautiful scenery. + Inlet of Bantry Bay. Well wooded, mild climate, winter resort + beyond compare. Gulf Stream strikes coast in vicinity. Excellent + hotel accommodation. Good cottage accommodation. Plenty coaching + and boating facilities in summer; splendid sea bathing. Arbutus + grows wild. + + KENMARE.--One of the starting-points for the Grand Atlantic Coast + Drive. Thriving pleasant town at the head of the fiord. + Macgillicuddy Reeks stand out behind the town. Mountain climbers + will make ascent best from point beyond Sohaleen Bridge. Both the + Cork and Kerry sides of the bay are very beautiful and worthy of + investigation. The Southern Hotels Company has one of its branches + outside the railway station. The Lansdowne Arms is an old coaching + inn, famed for its mountain mutton and good claret. + + ~KILKEE.~--The best bathing-resort in the three kingdoms. Splendid + facilities. The cliff scenery and coast walks attractive. Good + villa and cottage accommodation. Modern hotels on esplanade. + + ~KILLARNEY~, see page 136. + + ~LEHINCH.~--Bracing air from Atlantic. Good bathing. Bold coast + line. New hotel, fine golf links. Promises to be the most + up-to-date watering place in Clare. + + ~LEENANE.~--The pleasant place on Killary Harbour. It has the + Mweelrea mountains behind it and the sea in front. The bay is + remarkable for sea fishing, while the salmon and trout angler will + have his heart's desire in Errif Lake. The Leenane Hotel stands + close to the shore, and the Aasleagh Hotel, high above the Errif, + is surrounded by demesne lands. The mountain scenery is remarkable. + + ~LISDOONVARNA.~--Inland watering place. An old favourite health + resort now more easy of access than hitherto. The spas are + sulphurous and chalybeate. The hotel accommodation is unusually + good, but still insufficient for the summer and early autumn + visitors. The driving tours in the locality take in the most + delightful scenery in county Clare. + + ~LUCAN.~--A very old spa. Beautiful sylvan retreat within nine + miles of Dublin. Scenery on upper Liffey and drives in vicinity + through charming country. The Hydro, equipped with every modern + advantage. + + ~PARKNASILLA.~--THE PREMIER WINTER RESORT OF IRELAND. Hotel well + sheltered on fiord of Kenmare Bay. The grounds around beautifully + wooded and planted with luxuriant shrubs. Absolutely free from + winter cold. This country side the pride of Kerry. The seascape and + islands in vicinity delightful. Admirable arrangements for boating, + fishing, and coaching. + + ~POULAPHOUCA.~--Approached from Harristown on the Tullow branch. The + upper Liffey winds here through a beautiful glen with a splendid + fall beyond Poulaphouca bridge. Splendid facilities for shooting and + fishing are afforded in the surrounding mountain country. + Convenient centre for pedestrian and cycle tours. Hotel immediately + above the Fall, also good hotel at Blessington: and four miles + higher up in the Wicklow Highlands, at Lacken, excellent hotel. + + ~QUEENSTOWN.~--"The Paradise of Pensioners." The port of Cork + Harbour. Centre of American tourist traffic. Well sheltered. Long + the winter quarters of invalids. Every facility for visitors. + Within easy reach of Cork city. Excellent train service. In summer + steamer trips on beautiful river. Several good hotels; splendid + villa accommodation. A bright cheerful town, full of life and + change of colour. A well known specialist (Dr. A. Thomson), in his + "Physician's Note Book," puts the query--"Where should a + consumptive patient pass the winter months if he can't go abroad?" + and answers himself, "There is no place within Great Britain and + Ireland so well adapted for the residence of a consumptive patient + as Queenstown." + + ~RECESS.~--Midway between Clifden and Kylemore, on the edge of the + western Glendalough, guarded behind by mountain scenery, secluded, + but all the more attractive to those weary of the busy haunts of + men. The lake and mountain scenery exceptionally wild. It is an + ideal resort for sportsmen. + + ~TRAMORE.~--One of the most attractive watering places in Ireland. + Its name in English signifies "the great strand," and it is no + misnomer. The bathing facilities are the best on southern coast, + and are not, indeed, surpassed on any other coast. Splendid new + hotel up-to-date in every respect, and other hotels to suit all + classes, with fine race-course, plenty of lodgings and houses to be + had in the season. Twenty minutes run from Waterford by train. + Military bands in the summer. Exceptionally good place for + families. Tramore is a delightful seaside resort, built on a + gradual incline, with a southerly aspect, on the shores of the + broad Atlantic. The air is almost proverbial for its restorative + qualities, not only in popular but also in scientific opinion. It + is beyond all doubt that Tramore has as many hours of sunshine, + less rainfall, and more even temperature than any other seaside + town in the United Kingdom. + + ~VALENCIA.~--The next parish to America, the home of Atlantic cable + stations. The island remarkable for the number of tropical plants + which grow in the open. Climate unusually mild. Boating, sailing, + and bathing in the season. Deep-sea fishing with islanders. Good + hotel, comfortable, clean, and cheap. Other accommodation difficult + to obtain. + + ~WATERFORD~, see page 112. + + ~WATERVILLE.~--Principal posting place on Atlantic coast tour. + Splendid watering place, beautifully situated on strip of land + dividing mountain lake from sea. Fine strand. Sea and lake fishing. + The station for Mackey Bennet cable system. Three good hotels, + M'Elligott's and Galvin's, on the coast, and the Southern Hotel on + the shore of the picturesque Lough Currane, within a stone's throw + of the sea. Very good cottage accommodation in summer season. + + + + +[Illustration] + +Natural History of the South and West of Ireland. + +By R. LLOYD PRAEGER, B.A., B.E., &c. + + +The Natural History of the South and West of Ireland possesses a special +and peculiar interest in the occurrence in this region of a number of +plants and animals which are rare in or absent from Great Britain and +the adjoining portions of Europe. Let us first consider the general +geographical features of this area, and the geological characters which +have produced those features. Ireland has often been likened to a +saucer, consisting as it does of a great central plain, fringed with +mountain groups disposed around the coast. The plain has a slightly +undulating floor of Carboniferous limestone; the groups of hills are +mostly formed of older rocks, which break through the level limestones. +On our journey from Dublin to Athlone, or from Dublin to Mallow, we pass +across typical portions of the central plain; and the brown ridges of +Slieve Bloom and Devil's Bit, and the greener heights of the Galtees, +furnish good examples of the masses of older rocks that rise out of the +plain. + +In considering the features and natural history of this wide area, it +will be convenient to divide it into districts, which we shall treat of +in the following order:-- + + 1. Wicklow and Wexford. + + 2. Waterford and East Cork. + + 3. West Cork and Kerry. + + 4. Clare and East Galway. + + 5. West Galway and West Mayo. + + 6. Sligo. + + 7. The Central Plain and River Shannon. + + +1. ~WICKLOW AND WEXFORD.~--Here we are on the East Coast, looking across +St. George's Channel towards the shores of Wales. The lovely county of +Wicklow is the most mountainous in Ireland, having 180 square miles over +1,000 feet elevation, and 25 square miles over 2,000. Wexford is lower +and more fertile. The coasts of both counties are in great measure flat +and sandy, and are the home of many rare plants. A number of species of +light soils and of gravelly shores have here their Irish headquarters, +such as the Round-headed Trefoil (_Trifolium glomeratum_) the Sea-Stock +(_Matthiola sinuata_), the rare Sea-Cudweed (_Diotis candidissima_), and +the Wild Asparagus (_A. officinalis_). The Murrough, a great gravel +beach backed by salt marshes which extends from Greystones to Wicklow, +and the marshes of the River Slaney, may be specially recommended to the +naturalist. These coasts are the only Irish locality for the handsome +ground-beetle, _Nebria complanata_, a typical South European animal. The +Wicklow mountains, which reach in Lugnaquilla a height of 3,039 feet, +are the main portion of the Leinster highlands, formed by a great mass +of granite which stretches from Dublin into county Kilkenny. Considering +their elevation this range is singularly devoid of alpine plants and +animals, but many interesting species inhabit the lower grounds, famous +on account of the beauty of the scenery. + +Among the Lepidoptera several rare species are characteristic of the +district, such as the "Bath White" butterfly (_Pontia daplidice_), and +the "Four-spotted Footman" moth (_OEnistis quadra_). + +2. ~WATERFORD AND EAST CORK.~--This is a picturesque district, formed +largely of slates and sandstones of Old Red Sandstone age. The coast +is mostly of very bold character, with towering cliff ranges. The +country is generally undulating and fertile, with occasional mountain +ranges, of which the Comeraghs are rendered especially interesting and +picturesque by the deep "cooms," embosoming tarns, which give them their +name. The Comeraghs and the lovely valley of the Blackwater furnish +particularly attractive ground for the naturalist. The flora and fauna +of this area are intermediate in character between that of the district +last considered and of the surpassingly interesting country that lies to +the westward, and which will next claim attention. Thus, the coasts +yield several of the rare plants mentioned in the last paragraph--for +instance, _Diotis_ and _Asparagus_ grow at Tramore; while at the same +time we first meet in this area with some of the most famous plants of +the south-west--London Pride (_Saxifraga umbrosa_), Kidney-leaved +Saxifrage (_S. Geum_), Great Butterwort (_Pinguicula grandiflora_), +Irish Spurge (_Euphorbia hiberna_). Two rare butterflies of this +district are _Dianthaecia caesia_ and _D. luteago_ var. _Barrettii_; and +the largest of the British leaf-beetles, _Timarcha laevigata_, has been +taken near Waterford, and at Tipperary. + +[Illustration: _Drawing, J. St. J. Phillips._ Geological Section from +Bantry Bay to Killarney.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ A Kerry ditchbank showing +Pennywort two feet in height.] + +3. ~WEST CORK AND KERRY.~--This is one of the most beautiful and +interesting districts in the British Isles, and indeed in Europe. The +ancient Devonian rocks which prevail have been folded into a grand +series of simple arches and troughs, the axes running north-east and +south-west. The arches form noble mountain ranges, which on the coast +project far into the Atlantic in a series of grand promontories, and +inland form picturesque highlands, of which Macgillicuddy's Reeks, which +rise to 3,404, constitute the highest land in Ireland. The valleys in +their lower portions are occupied by the sea, in the form of long +island-studded fiords; their upper parts are often filled with +Carboniferous limestone, and offer a pleasant contrast of tillage and +green pasture between the gaunt brown mountain-ribs. Here we stand on +the most western outpost of the European Continent, with the Atlantic on +three sides. The effect of the encompassing ocean, and the western winds +which constantly blow in from it, is to produce here and along the whole +western coast the most uniform annual temperature to be found in Europe. +Frosts are almost unknown, and great heat and drought likewise. These +peculiar climatic conditions have resulted in the acquisition and +preservation of a fauna and flora which spread here from more southern +latitudes at some time now long gone by, and which in these favoured +spots still remain to remind us of a period when a state of things +prevailed very different from what obtains at present. For naturalists +tell us that there can be no doubt that these southern plants and +animals migrated to Ireland over land-surfaces now destroyed, having +spread along the old-time coast line which long ago extended from the +Pyrenean highlands to Ireland; and as a relic of their march, we find +some of the species still surviving in the south-west of England, while +all of them are absent from the rest of England and from the adjoining +parts of continental Europe. + +An enumeration of a few of the most remarkable of the plants, with a +definition of their range, will make clearer this peculiar feature of +the natural history of the West of Ireland:-- + +[Illustration: Saxifraga umbrosa.] + +London Pride (_Saxifraga umbrosa_). In Ireland along the west and south +coasts. Absent from England. On the Continent it is found only in the +south. + +Kidney-leaved Saxifrage (_S. Geum_). In Ireland in the south-west. +Unknown in England. On the Continent confined to the Pyrenean district + +Strawberry-tree (_Arbutus unedo_). In Ireland in the south-west. Unknown +in England. On the Continent it grows all along the Mediterranean. + +Great Butter wort (_Pinguicula grandiflora_). In Ireland in the +south-west. Unknown in England. On the Continent it grows on the Alps +and in the south-west. + +Irish Spurge (_Euphorbia hiberna_). In Ireland along the south and west +coasts. In England it is confined to Devonshire. On the Continent it +occurs only in the south-west. + +[Illustration: _Photo, J. St. J. Phillips._ Among the Arbutus, Cloonee +Lakes.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ Arbutus Islands, Killarney.] + +Going for a moment further north, we find in Connemara, and there only, +a group of three kinds of Heath with the same peculiar distribution:-- + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ The Irish Spurge.] + + St. Dabeoc's Heath (_Dabeocia polifolia_). In Ireland + in Connemara. Unknown in England. On the + Continent confined to the south-west. + + Mediterranean Heath (_Erica mediterranea_). In + Ireland in Connemara. Unknown in England. + On the Continent confined to the south-west. + + Mackay's Heath (_E. Mackaiana_). In Ireland in + Connemara. Unknown in England. On the + Continent in Spain only. + +Nor is it the plants alone that exhibit the peculiar relation existing +between the Natural History of Ireland and of the Pyrenean region. +Among the animals the same features may be observed, the most striking +instance being the peculiar Kerry Slug (_Geomalacus maculosus_), which +is abundant in many parts of the extreme south-west of Ireland, and is +elsewhere found only in Portugal. + +[Illustration: _Drawing, Dr. R. F. Scharff._ The Kerry Slug.] + +Mixed with these southern forms in the West of Ireland we find another +group of still stranger affinities. In pools and lakes from Kerry to +Donegal grows the curious Pipe-wort (_Eriocaulon septangulare_). It may +be also found in the Island of Skye, in the West of Scotland, but +nowhere else in Europe; to see it again we must go to the northern +regions of North America, where it flourishes under conditions much more +rigorous than those which obtain in its mild Irish home. The deliciously +fragrant orchid, _Spiranthes Romanzoviana_, grows in the counties of +Cork, Armagh, Antrim, and Londonderry; elsewhere only in sub-arctic +America and the portion of Asia which most nearly approaches the Alaskan +shores. The "Blue-eyed Grass" of Canada (_Sisyrinchium angustifolium_) +is likewise confined to the West of Ireland and to North America; and +further instances might be quoted. In the animal kingdom, too, parallel +cases have been noted, the most interesting being the discovery of no +less than three American species of fresh-water sponge, which are +unknown in the rest of Europe. + +To account for the presence of this American group naturalists are +driven, as in the case of the southern species, to the conclusion that +these represent one of the very oldest components of our existing fauna +and flora, and point to a period when the edge of Europe was prolonged +far to the north-west, forming a continuous land area, presumably by way +of Iceland and Greenland, to America. And here on the wild western coast +of Ireland these last inhabitants of the lost lands of Europe still +survive. + +[Illustration: The Kerry Slug, showing the manner in which its +coloration mimics clusters of lichen among which it lives.] + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ Nest of Wood Ant at Killarney] + +4. ~CLARE AND EAST GALWAY.~--Our last district--West Cork and Kerry--was +characterised by great ribs of slate and sandstone, and by an absence of +limestone and the numerous plants which follow in its train. The present +district forms a marked contrast, being largely composed of +Carboniferous limestone. And the remarkable thing about these limestones +is that they are over many miles totally devoid of any covering of soil +or clay; the grey gnarled rock, fantastically carved and crevassed by +the action of rain and weather, lies naked and bare. But in the crevices +of the rock a wonderful variety of rare and beautiful plants abound. One +or two of these have their home in the far south, like the plants we +have lately considered, notably the little Close-flowered Orchid, +_Neotinea intacta_, whose nearest station is about Nice. But the +majority of the interesting species of these limestones are alpine +plants, usually found at high elevations on mountains, which here form +sheets of verdure down to the very edge of the sea. The Mountain Dryas +(_D. octopetala_), the Bearberry (_Arctostaphylos Uva-ursi_), the lovely +Spring Gentian (_G. verna_), and the Blue Moor-grass (_Sesleria +caerulea_) are good examples, all of them growing in great abundance from +the hill-tops down to the shore. It is this strange mingling of plants +from the far south, from the far north, and from the mountains, which +renders the West of Ireland so fascinating a field for the botanist. In +the barren district of Clare, and in the adjoining Isles of Arran and +south-west portion of county Galway, this peculiar flora may be seen in +its greatest perfection. Some very rare insects have been taken in +eastern Galway, including the Lepidoptera _Nallia ancilla_ and _Lycaena +artexerus_. + +[Illustration: _Photo, Welch, Belfast._ Wolf Spider (_Pisaura +mirabilis_) spinning nest for young.] + +5. ~WEST GALWAY AND WEST MAYO~.--In this district we have again a +complete change of geology and of scenery. The grey limestones with rich +grass and rare flowers filling every crevice are gone, and we are in a +wild region of ancient metamorphic rocks--schists, quartzites, gneisses, +and granites--which form wide moorlands, dotted with innumerable +lakelets, with noble mountain groups rising over the wild boggy +lowlands. To the student of metamorphism the geology of this area is of +very high interest. The botanist finds himself once again, as in Kerry, +in a focus of the southern flora already discussed. As stated above, +Connemara contributes to the list of Pyrenean plants three Heaths, of +which St. Dabeoc's Heath is the loveliest of the British representatives +of the order. Here we may also meet again our old Kerry friends the +London Pride, and on Inisbofin the Irish Spurge--plants which strictly +avoid the limestone, as do the Heaths. The American element is +represented by the Pipe-wort, which is common, and the little water +plant, _Naias flexilis_, which grows near Roundstone. Of the three +famous Heaths, St. Dabeoc's is abundant throughout Connemara, becoming +rarer in Mayo. The Mediterranean Heath grows near Roundstone, and in +immense abundance on the north side of Clew Bay, and again near the +north-west corner of Mayo, extending inland as far as Lough Conn. +Mackay's Heath is the rarest, being confined to the neighbourhood of +Roundstone. As regards its fauna, Connemara and West Mayo yield fewer +peculiar species than the south-west; but much remains to be done before +it can be said that the zoology of this area is thoroughly known, and it +offers a most promising field for the explorer. + + +6. ~SLIGO.~--The visitor who makes Sligo his headquarters finds himself +in a district of much variety and interest. This is a district that +cannot be too highly recommended to the naturalist. To the geologist the +fossiliferous limestones and the metamorphic rocks are alike of +interest. The botanist naturally turns to the Ben Bulben Mountains, +which harbour the richest group of alpine plants to be found in Ireland, +including the pretty _Arenaria ciliata_, which does not grow elsewhere +in the British Isles. To the zoologist a rich field lies waiting. A +recent exploration of the limestone glens by a party of English and +Irish conchologists has shown that in variety of land mollusca this +district surpasses almost any other in these islands; and good results +may be confidently expected in other invertebrate groups. + + +7. ~THE CENTRE.~--The area comprised in the field of operations of the +Great Southern and Western Railway Company include the southern half of +the great Central Plain of Ireland and the lower course of the Shannon, +the largest river in the British Isles. Towards the east the counties of +Carlow and Kilkenny include much picturesque ground, especially along +the courses of the rivers Nore and Barrow; and as picturesque ground +implies the existence of hill and valley, wood and rock, the naturalist +will find himself at home here. The flora is rich, though without any +very marked features; the Nettle-leaved Bell-flower (_Campanula +Trachelium_) being the most characteristic species. Regarding the fauna +much has still to be learned. In Tipperary, Queen's County, and King's +County we are in typical central plain country--great tracts of slightly +undulating drift-covered Carboniferous limestone, the surface including +wide pastures, cultivated ridges, and large areas of peat bog and marsh. +The bogs, which form so peculiar a feature of the surface of Ireland, +may be studied here over many miles of country. The noble Shannon, which +winds slowly southward across the plain, widens at intervals into great +lake-like expanses, of which Lough Derg is the largest, a place of much +interest to the student of natural history. One plant which grows here, +the Willow-leaved Inula (_I. salicina_), is found nowhere else in the +British Isles; other characteristic Shannon plants are the Water +Germander (_Teucrium Scordium_) and the rare Stone wort _Chara +tomentosa_. Further west, in Limerick, a more varied surface prevails. +Like Waterford and Cork, Limerick is a great centre for animals of the +"Southern" distributional type, such as the Wood White Butterfly +(_Leptidia sinapis_) the Brimstone Butterfly (_Gonapteryx rhamm_), and +the Purple Hair-streak (_Thecla quercus_). The small but handsome +Ground-beetle, _Panogaeus crux-major_, is known in Ireland only from +Finlough. This species has a typically "germanic" distribution in Great +Britain. The Water-beetle _Pelobius Hermanni_, a very rare species, and +the only British member of its family, occurs near Limerick and Cork. +Cratloe Wood, by the Shannon near Limerick, may be specially recommended +as a hunting-ground. + +[Illustration] + + + + +SPORT. + + +For sportsmen Ireland is a happy land, ready to supply their every want. +Royal Meath, Kildare, Waterford, Tipperary, and Cork County are hunted +by several good packs during-each season, and "the meets" are duly +published in the local newspapers. + +In the large tracts of bog, moorland, river reaches, and mountain lands +there is splendid shooting; in Kerry especially, where poaching is put +down with a heavy hand, there are plenty of opportunities for sport. + +In most cases the hosts of the hotels have secured the shooting of many +thousands of acres in their vicinity. + +When the weather is "hard," excellent sport can be had along the +southern districts. + +The gentry most usually preserve their estates with great vigilance, but +they are generous in giving permission to bona-fide sportsmen. + + + + +[Illustration: CYCLING] + +GENERAL HINTS + +(FROM MECREDY'S ROAD BOOK OF IRELAND.) + + +June and September are the driest months in Ireland. Tourists will find +the Royal Irish Constabulary the best source of information, and they +cannot do better than inquire at the various police barracks on the way +for advice as to places of interest to be visited, and the condition of +the roads. In unfrequented country districts the footpaths as a rule may +be taken with impunity, but it is never absolutely safe to do so. It is +always well to enquire of other cyclists met _en route_. The roads are +very variable, some being grand and others very bad. Intercourse with +the peasantry will be found interesting and amusing. Nothing can exceed +their civility and courtesy; and for those who are not too particular it +will be found an excellent plan to lunch in their cottages, excellent +tea, home-made bread, butter and eggs being procurable for 1/-per head. +There is little use questioning them as to distances, however. They are +nearly always wrong, and in any case they calculate in Irish miles--11 +Irish equal 14 English. The police, however, are reliable, and give the +distances in statute miles. Repairers are few and far between, but the +local blacksmiths are often clever and handy men. The by-roads are +generally better than the main roads, and the surface is better at the +edge than in the middle. The mountain roads are as a rule very good, and +not nearly so hilly as one would expect. The country people are rather +stupid about getting out of one's way, and live stock on the road are a +frequent source of danger, especially pigs, sheep, donkeys, and Kerry +cows. Mountain passes should be negotiated carefully, as mountain +torrents sometimes sweep away short stretches of otherwise excellent +roads, and one comes on these spots unexpectedly. The corners, too, are +excessively sharp, and steep pitches occur unexpectedly. + +In most small Provincial towns the Hotels are not good, but in tourists' +districts, such as Kerry, they are really excellent and the charges are +reasonable. Where lodgings are required it is a good plan to ask the +local Head Constable for advice. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +Cork is an excellent centre for cycling. The roads are in fair order and +the inclines moderate. There is abundance of fine scenery, and notably +in the extreme south and south-west where there are some entrancing +tit-bits. Magnificent tracts of inland mountain scenery are to be found, +and many important historical and archaeological ruins. There are hotels +nearly everywhere within easy reach, many of them very good, and in most +cases affording fair accommodation at reasonable cost. + +~One Day Tours from Cork.~ + +No. 1.--To Queenstown, road 14 miles or rail 12 miles. Thence to East +Ferry, 5 miles, cross the Ballinacurragh River by ferry. Thence by road +to Midleton, 4 miles, back to Cork, road or rail, 12 miles. Fine views +of the River Lee, Lough Mahon, the lovely Harbour of Queenstown, +Ballinacurragh River, &c. + +No. 2.--To Youghal, road or rail, 27 miles. Thence by road to Ardmore, 6 +miles--a watering place with a ruined chapel where there are some +curious carvings in stone, and a fine and perfect specimen of the old +Irish round tower, Return same road. + +No. 3.--To Midleton, 12 miles, road or rail. Thence to Cloyne, 6 miles, +where there is an ancient Cathedral still in use. Thence to Ballycotton, +6 miles, a small watering place. Back by Cloyne and Aghada, on +Queenstown Harbour, 12 miles. Thence by steamer to Queenstown, or across +the East Ferry by road to Queenstown, 6 miles. Back by road or rail, 12 +miles. + +Hotels at Midleton, Cloyne, and Ballycotton. + +No. 4.--To Queenstown, road or rail, then by steamer, 20 minutes across +the harbour to Crosshaven. Thence by road, 2 miles, to Church Bay. Fine +view of mouth of the harbour and open Atlantic. Thence by Carrigaline +and Douglas, back to Cork, 12 miles. + +Good hotels at Crosshaven and Church Bay. + +No. 5.--Cork to Blarney, by the Valley of the Lee and Carrigrohane, 9 +miles. Famous Castle of Blarney with the "Kissing Stone." The Groves of +Blarney round the Castle may be seen, also St. Ann's Hydropathic +establishment. Return by Rathpeacon and Blackpool to Cork, 6 miles. + +No. 6.--Cork to Dunkettle, 3 miles, road or rail, thence along the +Glanmire River to Glanmire, 2 miles. Thence by Sallybrook and Kilcully, +back to Cork, 6 miles. + +~Two Day Tours from Cork.~ + +No. 1.--Cork to Macroom, road or rail, 25 miles. Thence to Inchigeela, +10 miles, and Gougane Barra, 10 miles. Beautiful lake scenery, and the +hermitage at Gougane Barra; a chapel on the Holy Lake is well worth +seeing. The Pass of Keimaneigh is 3 miles further. From this point the +traveller can return to sleep at Inchigeela or Macroom, where, at both +places, there are good hotels; or may continue his journey to +Glengarriff, Kenmare, or Killarney. If returning to Cork from Macroom, +the journey may be made by Coachford and Dripsey, distance about 25 +miles. + +No. 2.--Cork to Bandon, 20 miles by rail or road. Thence to +Courtmacsherry and the Old Head of Kinsale, each about 7 miles by road. +The tourist can sleep at either place, and return to Cork by Kinsale and +Innishannon, or continue his journey to Bantry, 37-1/2 miles by road or +rail. Thence to Glengarriff, Killarney, &c. + +~Tours for Three or more Days from Cork.~ + +No. 1.--Cork to Youghal, 28 miles by road or rail. Thence to Temple +Michael, 3 miles along left bank of the River Blackwater, through +Dromana to Cappoquin, 11 miles. From Cappoquin the Trappist Monastery of +Mount Melleray, 3-1/2 miles, can be visited. Returning to Cappoquin the +tourist can take either bank of the Blackwater, along a beautiful and +level road to Lismore, 3-1/2 miles. The distance from Lismore to Fermoy +is 16 miles by road or rail; the road along the Valley of the Blackwater +being very fine throughout, and most picturesque. At Lismore the +beautiful castle belonging to the Duke of Devonshire can be seen. The +tourist can return from Fermoy to Mallow 16 miles, and thence to Cork, +21 miles. Good hotels at Youghal, Lismore, Fermoy, and Mallow. + +No. 2.--Two day tour, No. 1, can be extended to three or more days, by +proceeding from Inchigeela to Glengarriff, 23 miles, and Killarney, 39 +miles. Good hotels at Inchigeela, Glengarriff, Kenmare, and Killarney. + +Two day tour, No. 2, can be similarly extended to three or more days, by +continuing the journey from Bandon to Bantry, 37-1/2 miles. Thence 10 +miles by road to Glengarriff, thence to Killarney, 39 miles. Good hotels +at Bantry, Glengarriff, Kenmare, and Killarney. Or from Kenmare, 20 +miles, or from Glengarriff the tourist can ride to Parknasilla, 16 miles +from Kenmare, where there is an excellent modern hotel and some of the +loveliest scenery in Ireland. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +To the cyclist on tour, Limerick and the surrounding districts offer +many scenic attractions in wood, lake, and river. The roads are not good +as a rule, owing in a great measure, to the fact that the city is the +centre of a large agricultural district. The hotels in the city are +good, and in the surrounding towns and villages the tourist will find +good accommodation in hotels and otherwise. + +~One Day Tours from Limerick.~ + +No. 1.--Perhaps the easiest one day tour which the cyclist can enjoy +from Limerick, as his head quarters, is to Doonass Falls _via_ Clonlara. +Five miles thence by O'Brien's Bridge, 7 miles, to Killaloe, where an +excellent lunch can be had. The return home can be made by +Castleconnell, the popular resort of the devotees of "Izaak Walton," +where an excellent tea can be had at the Shannon Hotel. + +No. 2.--Castleconnell and Clare Glens, and lengthened visit to +Castleconnell to view the waterfalls, "The World's End"--a remarkably +fine reach of the River Shannon. There is much to interest the visitor +in the gigantic eel fishery, and here also is the renowned Enright, +whose fishing rods are used all over the world. The Clare Glen, situated +by the way in Limerick county, is not far from Castleconnell; and if +liberty is obtained beforehand, the Glenstal Demesne, seat of the +Barrington family, can be visited. Sir Charles Barrington, the present +baronet, has never yet refused permission to the cycling tourist to view +the charming scenery surrounding the Glenstal Castle. + +No. 3.--Askeaton, 16-1/2 miles, splendid road, one of the best from +Limerick; famous old abbey to be visited, with excellent fishing on the +Deel, granted that the tourist has obtained the requisite permission. + +No. 4.--Adare, 9 miles; roads pretty good. Mr. P. Fitzgerald, J.P., +Agent to Lord Dunraven, should be written to beforehand for a permit to +visit the demesne, where some fine old ruins are in an excellent state +of preservation. The Manor House is a magnificent building, but +visitors are only allowed to enter when the family are away. This is +well known as the district which inspired Gerald Griffin to write one of +his famous poems. Lunch can be had at very moderate terms at the +Dunraven Arms Hotel. The demesne wall turns eastward to Croom. The name +of this village is derived from the old war cry of the Geraldines, +"Munster Branch "--_Crom-a-boo_. To Limerick, from Croom, _via_ +Patrick's Well, there is a pretty good road, 10 miles. + +~Two Days Tours from Limerick.~ + +Ballybunion. Good roads generally, but slightly up-hill when the Kingdom +is reached. This charming seaside resort is rapidly coming to rival +Kilkee. It has splendid bathing accommodation, and the coast scenery and +caves equal to those of any other watering place in Ireland. The visitor +for the first time makes his acquaintance with the Lartique, or "Single +Line," Railway--the only one in the United Kingdom--from Listowel to +Ballybunion, a distance of 8 miles. + +Returning to Limerick, a digression can be made to Shanid Castle, near +Shanagolden. This towering mass of masonry, perched high on a +hill--three sides of which are precipitous--is almost ignored by +tourists. It was one of the strongholds of the Desmonds. The other spots +on the Shannon--homeward bound--are Glinn, where the hereditary Knight +of Glin has his seat, and where Gerald Griffin resided in his young +days, near the pretty little village of Loughill. Foynes and Foynes +Island, seat of Sir Aubrey de Vere, will repay a visit. Hotels are good +on this line, also roads. + +No. 2.--Waterford and Tramore. Decent roads and accommodation, as good +as can be got once outside Limerick county, border at the Limerick +Junction, a distance of 20 miles from the Treaty Stone. Splendid views +of the Galtee ranges can be had, and on towards Clonmel the wooded +slopes of the minor ranges and hills are a delightful picture. If time +affords, the tourist can digress from the main road and visit the famous +Glen of Aherlow. Back to Tipperary for lunch, good hotels, and splendid +roads. Visit the Kickham monument, and then on to Clonmel. Excellent +accommodation to be had at Clonmel. Next day Waterford and Tramore, and +back. + +~Tours for Three or more Days from Limerick.~ + +Ballybunion, Tarbert, Kilrush, Kilkee, Lisdoonvarna, from Ballybunion. +See "No. 1 Day Tours." Tarbert is only a few miles from Ballybunion. +There is a steamboat service across the Shannon estuary to Kilrush. +Thence to Kilkee by road, where first night out can be had. Next day to +Spanish Point, Milltownmalbay, Lisdoonvarna, to the famous "Spa"; home +_via_ Ennis, splendid roads. + +No. 2.--Killaloe, Scariff, Portumna, and Upper Shannon. A most enjoyable +trip can be had from Killaloe. See "No. 1 Day Tour." There is a constant +steamboat service on Lough Derg, which will take a cyclist and his +machine, and land him at Scariff--on the Clare side--or Portumna, +"Galway." From either of these towns a tourist can have his chance of +the most diversified lake and river scenery to be had in the kingdom. +Without doubt the praises of Lough Derg and the Upper Shannon have not +been sung sufficiently. From Portumna to Dromineer, on the Tipperary +shore, by lake steamer, thence to Nenagh on bike; splendid roads home to +Limerick, 27 miles. + + +~KILLARNEY DISTRICT.~ + +Killarney is an ideal centre for the cyclist. Good roads proceed in +every direction, and mounted on his favourite machine the wheelman will +be able to discover and investigate scenic treasures unknown to the +ordinary tourist. + +~One Day Tours from Killarney.~ + +No. 1.--Killarney to Gap of Dunloe, 10 miles; Owenreagh Glen, 18 miles; +Windy Gap, 30 miles. Killarney, total, 36 miles. Care should be taken to +keep on the proper road through the Glen; there are many crossings. Any +of the local folk will point out the road. + +No. 2.--Killarney to Torc Waterfall, 3 miles; return to Muckross Hotel, +4 miles; enter demesne at Dinis, 10 miles; on to Kenmare road and home +to Killarney, 17 miles. The road through Muckross Demesne is in some +places dangerous owing to its steep and winding character. + +No. 3.--Killarney to Ross Castle, 1-1/2 miles; through demesne to +Library Point, 2-1/2 miles. Back through Ross Island and demesne to +Mahony's Point, 9-1/2 miles; Killarney, 12-1/2 miles. This road is +perfectly safe and good, except two descents in Ross Island. Returning +from Mahony's Point to Killarney by Aghadoe, about 15 miles, splendid +view of Lower Lake and mountains can be had from the old ruins of +Aghadoe. + +No. 4.--Killarney to Glenflesk _via_ Lough Guittane. Visit Robbers' Den, +9 miles, home _via_ Headford and Barraduff, 26 miles. Roads good, +scenery wild and romantic. There are many short and beautiful trips +which can be made in and about the neighbourhood. + +~Two Day Tours from Killarney.~ + +No. 1.--Killarney to Windy Gap, 16 miles; thence to Parknasilla across +mountain. Total, 30 miles. Remain for night at Southern Hotel, +Parknasilla. Parknasilla to Kenmare, 14 miles, and back to Killarney +_via_ Kilgarvan. Total, 35 miles. Roads fairly good, but in places very +steep, so that riders must keep a careful watch. + +No. 2.--Killarney to Beaufort, 6 miles; thence to Glencar, 19 miles, and +on to Caragh Lake Hotel, 27 miles. Remain at Caragh Lake Hotel for the +night. Return to Killarney _via_ Windy Gap and Gerah Cross. There are +some sharp turns and steep descents requiring care. + +~Tours for Three or more Days from Killarney.~ + +No. 1.--Killarney to Kenmare, 20 miles. Thence by Glengarriff, 40 miles, +to Macroom, _via_ Inchigeela, Pass of Keimaneigh to Millstreet, and back +to Killarney. Hotels at Kenmare (Southern Hotel), Glengarriff, +Inchigeela, Macroom, and Millstreet. + +No. 2.--Killarney to Killorglin. Caragh Lake, Cahirciveen, visit +Valentia, Waterville, Parknasilla, Kenmare, and back to Killarney by +either rail or road. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +Waterford can be recommended as a cycling centre, as the scenery in many +districts of the South-east of Ireland is beautiful in the extreme, and +can compare favourably with any in the country, and the roads are first +rate. The hotels, too, are generally very good, and have been improved +wonderfully of late, and the tariffs have been so arranged by the +South-eastern Branch of the Irish Cyclist Association, that all +requirements of the most slender purse can be satisfactorily arranged. + +Below we sketch out a few very enjoyable Tours which can be made, taking +Waterford as the starting point:-- + +~First Tour from Waterford.~ + +Leaving-Waterford by the Newtown-road, we pass the house in which Lord +Roberts spent his early days, and where his father and mother lived for +many years. This is actually in the Borough and, from the grounds +surrounding it, a capital view of the river and part of the City can be +had. After passing by Newtown we keep along to the left until Parkswood +is reached, when we run under a bridge and up a hill to Checkpoint, and +here a magnificent view can be obtained. From the hill overlooking this +pretty little village seven counties can be seen. Dunbrody Abbey, one of +the most famous ecclesiastical ruins in Ireland, is situated immediately +opposite on the other side of the river. Duncannon Fort, a short +distance from here, comes into view, and we are enabled to see the +joining of the three rivers--Suir, Nore, and Barrow. We pass from +Checkpoint, and we reach Passage, a famous fishing station since the +herring industry has become so prosperous in this part of Ireland. A +little further on is Woodstown, and right opposite on the far side of +the river can be seen Duncannon Fort, a fortified place in the days of +old. Turning to the right by Ballyglan, we mount a steep incline, and we +then come in view of Hook Tower, a beacon light which is said to be the +oldest in the kingdom. Dunmore, about five miles from Woodstown, is one +of the most picturesque, beautiful, and delightful resorts in the whole +of Ireland. Here there is a magnificent pier, and boating and fishing +can be enjoyed to one's heart's content. Wheeling back in the Waterford +direction we make for Tramore, ten miles away. It is beautifully +situated, and the visitor here can spend several hours in viewing the +most attractive scenery. Close to the town are the Golf Links and the +Race Course. + +From Tramore to Waterford the run is over a splendid level road, and the +distance seven miles. + +The full distance of this run is 33 miles, and at all the principal +points capital hotel accommodation can be had. + +~Tour Two, from Waterford.~ + +The first part of this run is to Passage. At the Half-way House take the +turn over the bridge, up the hill and down a steep decline to Passage. +At the latter place the ordinary ferryboat can be taken to Ballyhack, +which is directly opposite. The run from Ballyhack to Duncannon is over +a fairly surfaced road. At the latter place M'Gonnigal's hotel is well +appointed. From Duncannon the run to the famous Hook Tower is about +seven miles, and the surface of the road generally is very good. Along +this run a splendid view of the Harbour can be obtained, and on the way +there are several places of interest--Loftus Hall, the Irish seat of the +Marquis of Ely, stands on the edge of the river unprotected by a single +tree. It was modernised within the last 25 years, and is now a +splendidly appointed mansion. Bag-an-Bun, a little distance off, will +well repay a visit--the coast line at this point being the principal +attraction. From Hook we run to Fethard, 6 miles to the left, and here +a very pleasant hour can be spent. Tintern Abbey is the next point to be +visited. This is one of the most famous Abbeys in the country. From +Tintern to Dunbrody the distance is 8 miles, and here we can spend a +considerable time in viewing the great historical ruin, said to be one +of the finest in the whole of Ireland. Leaving Dunbrody we come to the +ferry of Ballinlaw, and crossing here ride by Snow-hill and Bellview +into Waterford. The full distance of this ride is 41 miles. + +~Tour Three from Waterford.~ + +Proceeding up the Cork road we ride up Ballyaneeshagh Hill, and on the +left see Butlerstown Castle, an ancient building: which, in the days of +Cromwell, held out for sometime against his forces. At the Sweep we turn +round to the right and run to the bottom of the hill. A little way from +the end of the hill the right turn is to be taken again to Kilmeaden, 8 +miles. The ride then is to Portlaw four miles away. Some fifty years ago +this town was the seat of a great cotton industry. It has since fallen +into decay, and the place looks like Goldsmith's "Deserted Village." +Just outside the town is the magnificent demesne of Curraghmore, said to +be the finest in the three kingdoms. The variety of scenery here is +almost unsurpassed. Curraghmore is the property of the Marquis of +Waterford. It is one of the great points of vantage to tourists and +pic-nic parties. Passing through the demesne we come to the house +itself, a modern and rather unpretentious structure. The court-yard is, +however, very large, and is said to be capable of accommodating close +upon 100 horses. Clonegam Church, where Lord William Beresford, uncle to +the present Marquis of Waterford, was laid to rest, can be seen on the +right glistening in the trees on the hill side. Through Curraghmore we +ride to Clonea, about 5 miles further on, and then to the foot of the +Comeragh Mountains, which occupy a centre of the county, and which are +to be seen from all parts, as well as from a considerable portion of +Tipperary. The greatest natural curiosity in this range is the +appearance and site of an almost circular lake, by name Coomshinawin. +From Coomshinawin to Kilmacthomas the distance is about 8 miles. +Kilmacthomas Woollen Factory may be visited, and a good hotel +accommodation can be had at Walsh's. From Kilmacthomas to Waterford is +16-1/2 miles over a good road, the full distance being 45 miles. + +~Tour Four, from Waterford.~ + +Our next tour will be from Waterford, _via_ the Sweep, to Knockaderry, 9 +miles away. At the latter place there is a very fine lake which amply +supplies the City. Leaving Knockaderry we reach Dunhill, close to which +place is the Castle of Donile, still distinguished for its peculiar and +romantic situation, and in ancient times the property of De-La-Poer, +from whom the present Marquis is descended. The village of Annestown, +distant about one mile, is on the sea coast, and from it a magnificent +view of rock and ocean scenery can be had. The run from Annestown to +Tramore is over a beautiful road, and many pretty views of the coast can +be seen. The spin to Waterford completes this tour, which is one of +nearly thirty miles. + +~Two Day Tours from Waterford. No. 1.~ + +Waterford, Dunmore, Annestown, Bonmahon, Stradbally, and Dungarvan. + +FIRST DAY. + +This is rather a long run of 47 miles, but as the roads are generally +good and the scenery delightful it should be most enjoyable to the +Cyclist who may feel in good form. We have already spoken of Annestown. +From Annestown to Bonmahon the distance is over 5 miles. The road is +very hilly, but the surface is splendid. At Bonmahon the once famous +Knockmahon Mines are situated. These mines were the most valuable in the +country about fifty years ago, but when the value of the metal (copper) +fell operations were discontinued. Stradbally, 4 miles further on, is a +delightful little village, said to be the most health-restoring place on +the south-eastern coast. Here Whelan's Hotel is recommended. Dungarvan +is 8 miles further on, and the road by the sea is well surfaced and very +picturesque. At Dungarvan Lawlor's Hotel will be found very comfortable. + +SECOND DAY. + +A good run can be taken through Ardmore, Youghal, Lismore, and +Cappoquin, part of which tour embraces the delightful Valley of the +Blackwater. This complete run will tot about 50 miles. + +At Ardmore a very comfortable hotel is kept by Miss Prendergast. At +Youghal, the Greenpark Hotel is a capital one. In Lismore, the +Devonshire Arms and Blackwater Vale Hotels are recommended; and Kenny's +at Cappoquin is also a good one. + +~Two Day Tours from Waterford. No. 2.~ + +FIRST DAY. + +Piltown to Curraghmore, round by Coomshinawin. This complete run will be +about 40 miles. The roads generally are capital, and the scenery as fine +as can be seen in this part of the country. + +SECOND DAY. + +From Dungarvan, round by Ballymacarbery, Newcastle, Ardfinan, Clogheen, +Melleray Abbey, to Dungarvan. This ride runs close upon 60 miles, and +to undertake it the tourist must have been in cycling form for a +considerable time. The roads, however, are generally very good. +Ballymacarbery is 15 miles from Dungarvan; Ardfinan, about 26; then from +Ardfinan to Clogheen the ride is 6 miles, and from that to Melleray +about 13. At Melleray, from the Abbey, a grand view can be had of some +of the most beautiful scenery in the whole of the county. + +The following are the best places of refreshment _en +route_:--Ballymacarbery (Miss Power's), Newcastle, and Ardfinan. Two +good licensed houses. Clogheen--The Hotel. Melleray--The traveller will +always be hospitably received here. + +~Three or more Day Tours from Waterford. No. 1.~ + +Waterford, Dunmore, 11; Tramore, 22; Dunhill, 27; Annestown, 28; +Bonmahon, 34; Stradbally, 38; and Dungarvan, 47 miles. + +SECOND AND THIRD DAYS + +To Dungarvan--have been previously referred to. + +Instead of returning to Waterford by rail, the tourist on the +fourth day may enjoy a most entertaining tour, _via_ the Pike, +Coomshinawin--previously referred to--Curraghmore, Piltown, and +Waterford. This run measures something like 40 miles. + +~Three or more Day Tours from Waterford, No. 2.~ + +Waterford, Mullinavat, 8; Ballyhack, 16; Stoneyford, 21; Danesfort, 25; +Kilkenny, 30; Thomastown, 40; and Inistioge, 47-1/2 miles. + +SECOND DAY. + +New Ross, 10; Waterford, 33; and Rosslare, 42 miles. + +THIRD DAY. + +Lady's Island, 4; Kilmore, 11; Fethard, 20; Hooktower, 26; Duncannon, +35; and Waterford, 46 miles. + +This latter tour embraces some of the finest scenery on the +south-eastern coast, and the inland scenery at Inistioge is equal to any +to be seen in any part of Ireland. + + +_IMPORTANT NOTE._ + +The tariffs for Members of the Irish Cyclists' Association and Cyclists' +Touring-Club are at most of the hotels in the south-eastern districts:-- + +Breakfast.--Tea, coffee, or cocoa, with bread and butter, toast and +preserve, ham and eggs, chops, steaks, cold meat, or fish, _2s._ +Substantial Luncheon, _1s. 6d._ Table d'Hote Dinner, 2_s._ 6_d._ Bed, +_2s. 6d._ + + + + +[Illustration: CYCLING] + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +(FROM MECREDY'S ROAD BOOK). + + +~One Day Tour from Sligo. No. 1.~ + +Sligo, Dromahaire, 12; Ballysadare, 24; Knockanree Glen, 28; Sligo, 33. + +Keeping along the north shore of the lake, Hazlewood Park, 2 miles from +Sligo, is well worth visiting. The public are admitted, and the tourist +should ride right down to the shore, which is here very beautiful. The +road now winds over the hills, and is undulating with fairly good but +rather loose surface, and it is some miles until the lake is reached +again. The scene here is indescribably beautiful, and reminds one +forcibly of Killarney. The lake is studded with islands, and the shores +are densely wooded, whilst northwards extends one of the most +fascinating districts we have ever toured in. It consists of a regular +jumble of mountains, densely wooded, and often most precipitous. The +gapes of the hills are extremely picturesque, and the scene can be +revisited time and again without its palling. Those who would like to +thoroughly explore this lovely neighbourhood should stop at Dromahaire, +where they will find a most excellent hotel, remarkable alike for +moderate charges and a cuisine which could not be surpassed. There is +also an ancient abbey here, well worthy of inspection. Dromahaire is +some little distance from the lake, and on leaving it the road, now +excellent, winds round a mountain, and a few miles farther, after taking +a sharp turn to the right, reaches the lake shore again at its +southern-most point. Farther on it branches inland again, and at a point +2 miles from Sligo a sharp turn to the left has to be taken for +Ballysadare, and if time permits the tourist might proceed on through +Collooney to Mackree Castle (3 miles), which will mean an addition of 6 +miles to the day's ride. At Ballysadare there are some really beautiful +waterfalls. Retracing your steps towards Sligo for a short distance, +proceed along the north shore of Ballysadare Bay. The road is good. +Presently it begins to ascend a spur of Knockanree Hill, and a narrow +lane and gate to the right admit to the Glen of the same name. It should +on no account be missed. It is one of the most extraordinary natural +phenomenon we have ever seen, and is exceedingly beautiful besides. It +is very narrow, densely wooded, and the sides are quite precipitous. The +path wanders through a wealth of undergrowth, and in most places we +fancy the Glen is not forty feet wide, while here and there it is much +narrower. In some of these spots the foliage actually meets overhead, +and we noticed in one place a fallen tree had made a natural bridge +across. Just at the beginning of the Glen there is a little glade where +a house once stood. + +Keeping-round Knockanree Hill the road comes out on the shore of Sligo +Bay. The surface is excellent, and the scenery pretty right into Sligo. + +~One Day Tour from Sligo. No. 2.~ + +Sligo, Drumcliff, 5; Carney, 7; Lissadill House, 9; Carney, 11; +Drumcliff, 13; Rathcormack Chapel, 14; Glencar, 18-1/2; Manorhamilton, +27, Sligo, 41. + +The road is indifferent for some miles, but gradually improves. At +Drumcliff there is an interesting round tower. Lissadill House is +delightfully situated on the seashore. The grounds are open to the +public, and it is a very pleasant ride through on the well-kept avenues. + +Retracing your steps to the main road, after passing Rathcormack Chapel, +turn off to the left for Glencar, along a fairly level by-road, with +fast, but stony, surface. After 2 miles turn to the left again. In due +course Glencar is reached. Keeping along the north shore of the lake an +extraordinary waterfall will be seen on the left. A thin sheet of water +falls from the top of the cliff, and when the wind is from a particular +quarter it catches the falling water every few minutes, and scattering +it in minute particles makes it have the appearance of being suddenly +cut off. Then all of a sudden it comes with a rush again, and apparently +with renewed vigour. It is a very strange phenomenon, and fascinating +withal. + +Wheeling along the shores of the lake we come to a larger waterfall at +the extreme extremity, to which our measurement of 18-1/2 miles is +taken. There is a fine volume of water here, and the neighbourhood being +well wooded, gives a pretty effect. A cup of tea can be had at Mr. +Siberry's, hard by. + +From this on to Manorhamilton the road, though good, is uninteresting, +but if time presses the cyclist can ride direct back to Sligo, round +Glencar Lake. By adopting this route, however, some beautiful scenery +will be missed, and we should strongly advise following what is known as +the old road from Manorhamilton to Sligo (14). Unless a meal is required +it is better not to go as far as Manorhamilton, but to turn to the +right, 1-1/2 miles out. This will reduce the day's journey by 3 miles. +From this turn there is a stiff climb of 2 miles, but the surface is +good the entire way. At the top of this incline a grand prospect bursts +on the view. A confusion of miniature mountains, densely wooded, extend +in every direction, while, as we descend, the waters of Lough Gill come +into view beneath. + +A short distance from the summit the road forks. To the right leads to +Sligo, while the turn to the left runs direct to the lake's shores, and +then joins the other road some miles farther on. Both routes lead +through beautiful scenery. The first is the shortest, but the second the +prettiest. + + + + +[Illustration: GOLFING] + + +~DUBLIN DISTRICT.~ + +There are a number of splendid Golf Courses round Dublin, but on the +Dublin District lines of the Great Southern and Western Railway the only +courses open to visitors are the following:-- + +~Tullamore.~ + +The course is of the inland description, and the period of play is from +October to June. The hazards consist of hedges, ditches, and whins, &c., +which are well distributed. Visitors, _5s._ per month. + +~Athlone.~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week, _5s._ per month, 9 holes; Par score, 74. + +The length of the course is about 1-1/2 miles, and the grass is never +long. The greens are not large, and the lies are somewhat heavy. +Straight play is necessary to avoid heavy punishment. The course is +beautifully situated and commands fine views of the Shannon and Lough +Ree. + +~Banagher.~ + +The course is situated 1/2 a mile out of the Town, and commands fine +views of the distant hills. The distance round is about 1 mile. The +grass is short, and the hazards consist of ruins, walls, and fences. +Number of holes, 9. + +~Birr.~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week. Number of holes, 9. + +The course is situated 2-1/2 miles from Birr. The holes are of a very +sporting character, the hazards being numerous and varied, consisting of +rocks, hedges, walls, and running water. The grass is short and wiry, +and good lies are obtained. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +~Lehinch.~ + +Visitors, _5s._ per week, or _1s. 6d._ per day. Number of holes 18. Par +score, 81. + +The course is laid over fine natural Golfing country. The lies are good, +as the soil is sandy with very short sea grass. The hazards consist of +natural sand bunkers and sandhills with bent, and are ideal. The greens +are excellent, and there probably is not in the United Kingdom a finer +natural Golf Links. + +Accommodation at Lehinch Golf Links Hotel and Aberdeen Arms. There are +some lodges to be had, capable of accommodating small families. Golfers' +cheap tickets are issued to Members and Visitors at Kingsbridge, Dublin, +Limerick, and other stations. + +~Adare Manor Club.~ + +Play on this course is confined to Members. Members can introduce a +Visitor for a few days, but the Links are not open to paying Visitors. +Number of holes, 9. + +This is a very nice course, laid out in the demesne at Adare; the lies +are perfect, and the greens small and well kept. + +~Killaloe.~ + +Number of holes, 9. + +Accommodation, the Lakeside Hotel. The Links are situated about 1 mile +from the Lakeside Hotel, and comprise a very nice sporting course. The +hazards are varied, and the lies excellent. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +Tramore. + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week. Number of holes, 18. + +The course is a seaside one, and commands magnificent views of the bay. +The grass is crisp and short, and the soil sandy. + +Accommodation at Grand Hotel and Hibernian Hotel. + +~Lismore.~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per week; _5s._ per month. Number of holes, 9. + +High pastures interspersed with natural bunkers consisting of quarries, +gorse, ridges, and roads. The greens are moderate, but the play through +the course is very sporting. + +Accommodation at Devonshire Arms Hotel and Blackwater Vale Hotel. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +~Littleisland (on G.S. & W.R., 4-3/4 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors, _1s._ per day; or _5s._ per week, on application to Secretary. +Par score, 74 for 18 holes. + +Fine grass of a down nature. Hazards, banks, roads, etc., requiring +skilled play. Greens in first-rate order. Beautiful scenery. Handsome +pavilion, with every accommodation. Professional attendant. + +~Youghal (on G.S. & W R., 27 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors, easy Terms by week or month. + +Number of holes, 6 at present. + +Seaside course. Good turf. Hazards, water, land, peat banks. Owing to +inroads of the sea, ground has been greatly limited; but will be +extended, when works now in progress are completed. + +~Mallow (on G.S, & W.R., 21 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors staying with Members free for one week; _2s. 6d._ weekly +afterwards. Living at hotels, _5s._ first week; _2s. 6d._ afterwards. + +Number of holes, 9; Par score, 36. + +Pasture land, limestone bed. Hazards: fences, ditches, roads, a large +quarry, grass grown. Greens in first-rate order. Good pavilion. Tea +three times a week free. Grass grows too long for summer play. + +~Bandon (on C.B. and S.C.R., 20 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors free, if introduced by a Member. + +Number of holes, 9. + +The turf is composed of short grass. The distance between the holes +varies from 120 to 360 yards, and the hazards are stone walls, etc. + +~Clonakilty (on C.B. and S.C.R., 29-1/4 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors, _2s. 6d._ per month; or _10s._ per annum. + +Number of holes, 9. + +Finely situated; commanding extensive views of surrounding: landscape. +The course is all grass; rather long-for summer play, but first-rate +from October to May. The hazards are stone walls and ditches. + +~Rushbrooke (on G.S. & W.R., 10-1/2 miles from Cork).~ + +Visitors residing with Members free for fourteen days. Committee can +elect temporary Members for a month, on payment of _5s._ Number of +holes, 9. + +Grass on hill, fine view, good pavilion. Greens in good order. Long +hazards. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +~Bundoran.~ + +Station--Bundoran, on G.N.R. + +Hotels--The Great Northern Railway, Sweeney's, Hamilton's, etc. + +Visitors--_10s._ per month, _5s._ per week. Ladies half price. + +Number of holes--9. Par score--75. + +The course is partly sandy, and partly inland in character. It is finely +situated, and commands views of the Atlantic and the mountain ranges. +The distance round is about 1-1/2 miles, and the holes vary in length +from 100 to 250 yards. The hazards consist of a cliff, sandbanks, pits, +stone walls, and water. + +~Sligo.~ + +Station--Sligo, thence by car or steamer. During the season public cars +and a steamer run four times daily between Sligo and the course; fare, +_6d._ each way. + +Hotels--In Sligo there are good hotels, and good accommodation at +Ross's. + +Visitors--_1s._ per day, _2s. 6d._ per week (if introduced); not +introduced _5s._ per week, _15s._ per month. + +Number of holes, 9. Amateur record, 84. + +The air and scenery at the Links are splendid. The grass is ideal turf. +The distance round is 1-1/2 miles. The hazards are natural sand bunkers, +broken ground, bent, walls, etc. The lies are good. + + +~GALWAY~ + +~Galway.~ + +Visitors, _5s._ per week. Number of holes, 9. + +Accommodation at the Railway, Mack's, and Leane's Hotels. + +The Salt Hill tram brings the golfer within a mile of the Links, which +are situated on a hill running out into the sea. + + + + +[Illustration: FISHING] + + +DUBLIN DISTRICT. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Lucan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, +6-3/4 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Spa Hotel. Salmon and trout +free. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Hazelhatch, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 10 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon and +trout free. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Sallins, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 18 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Healy's Hotel. Splendid +trout fishing free. + +River.--Liffey. Station.--Harristown, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 25-1/2 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation at Ballymore +Eustace and Poulaphouca. Splendid trout fishing at Kilcullen: at +Ballymore Eustace by permission of Mr. John Royce, Stonebrooke House. + +River.--Slaney. Station.--Rathvilly, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 47 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation moderate. Trout +fishing free. + +River.--Barrow. Station.--Bagnalstown, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 66 miles from Dublin. Accommodation at Ward's Hotel. Salmon and +trout free. + +River.--Slaney. Station.--Baltinglass, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 42 miles from Dublin. Accommodation good. Trout fishing free. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Banagher, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 84 miles from Dublin. Accommodation good. Splendid salmon and +trout fishing free. + +River.--Barrow. Station.--Monasterevan, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 37 miles from Dublin. Trout, perch, and pike free. + +River.--Shannon. Station--Athlone on Great Southern and Western Railway, +80 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon, trout, pike, and +perch free. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Maigue. Station.--Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway. +Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Maigue View Hotel. Salmon, trout, and +pike fishing by permission of the owners. + +River.--Mulcair. Station.--Dromkeen, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 11 miles from Limerick. Accommodation good. Salmon and trout in +abundance, free. + +Rivers.--Shannon, Maigue, Camoge. Station.--Patrickswell, on the Great +Southern and Western Railway, 6 miles from the Shannon, 1-1/2 miles from +the Maigue, and 4 miles from the Camoge. Accommodation.--Good lodgings +and small hotel. Salmon and trout in the Maigue, and in Shannon and +Camoge very fine trout. There are small tributaries which afford very +good trout fishing free. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Lakeside Hotel, Royal +Hotel, Shannon View Hotel, Grace's Hotel, Lough Derg Hotel, and Hurley's +Hotel. Salmon and trout. The fishing is excellent. During the past few +seasons salmon varying from 20 to 40 lbs. have been taken by anglers. +About 400 yards below and 20 yards above the bridge is a free stretch of +salmon and trout water, where the catches compare favourably with those +on preserved waters. Fishings may be hired for a month or longer. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Castleconnell, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 9 miles from Limerick. Accommodation good. Castleconnell has a +high reputation as an angling centre. Salmon fishing may be rented by +the month, fortnight, week, or day, and the district is noted for the +heavy fish taken. Trout, pike, and perch fishing is free. + +River.--Deel. Station.--Rathkeale, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 19 miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Pigott Arms, Eagle +Hotel, and Hibernian Hotel. Good brown trout fishing, particularly in +early months of the season--April, May, and June. Also salmon fishing +by payment of ordinary licence. + +River.--Maigue. Station--Adare, on Great Southern and Western Railway. +Accommodation at Dunraven Arms Hotel. Trout and salmon, permission from +Mr. P. Fitzgerald, Agent, Adare. + +Rivers.--Brosna and Shannon. Station.--Birr, on Great Southern and +Western Railway. Accommodation at Dooley's and Mathew's Hotels. Other +private lodgings to be had in the town. Trout and salmon free. + +River.--Shannon. Station.--Nenagh, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Good hotels at Dromineer and Nenagh. Splendid salmon and trout +fishing. + +River.--Mulcair. Station.--Boher, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Good salmon and trout fishing free. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +Salmon fishing is as a rule strictly preserved. + +Trout fishing is everywhere plentiful, and as a rule free. + +Rivers.--Lee, Sullane, Bride, &c. Station.--Macroom, on Cork and Macroom +Railway, 25 miles from Cork. Accommodation at four or five small hotels; +moderate. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Blackwater. Station.--Mallow, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 21 miles from Cork. Hotel accommodation good at the Royal +Hotel, Central Hotel, and others. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Bandon. Station.--Bandon, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway, 20 miles from Cork. Accommodation.--Moderate; Angel Hotel, +Railway Hotel, and Devonshire Arms. Good salmon and trout. + +River.--Dripsey. Station.--Dripsey, on Muskerry Railway, 10 miles from +Cork. Accommodation.--None nearer than St. Ann's Hydropathic, Blarney, +or Cork. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Bandon. Upton, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast Railway, 15-1/2 +miles from Cork. Accommodation.--None nearer than Bandon. Good salmon +and trout. + +River.--Ballylechy. Station.--Bantry, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway, 57-3/4 miles from Cork. Good accommodation at Vickery's, +Railway, and Terminus Hotels. Salmon and trout. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Blackwater. Station.--Kilmacow, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 4-1/2 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Farmell's Hotel. +Trout fishing free. + +River.--Blackwater. Station.--Mullinavat, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 7-3/4 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at M'Donald's and +Healy's Hotels. Trout free. + +Rivers.--Nore, Arigilla, Jerpoint Brook. Station--Thomastown, on Great +Southern and Western Railway, 20 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at +Globe Hotel, Commercial Hotel, Hibernian Hotel. Small portion of Nore +free. Arigilla River and Jerpoint Brook free. + +River.--Nore. Station.--Bennettsbridge on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 25 miles from Waterford. Accommodation.--None nearer than +Kilkenny or Thomastown. Salmon and trout; partly free. + +River--Blackwater. Station.--Lismore, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 43 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Devonshire Arms Hotel +and Blackwater View Hotel. Salmon and trout. Charges for salmon rod +fishing.--For season, _L2_; for one week, _15s._; for one day, _5s._ + +River.--Blackwater. Station--Cappoquin, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 39 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at three hotels, also +private accommodation. Salmon and trout. + +River.--Mahon. Station.--Kilmacthomas, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Waterford. Accommodation at E. J. Walsh's and P. +Cullinan's. Salmon and trout, free. + + +~KILLARNEY DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Flesk. Station.--Killarney. Accommodation at Killarney. Trout +and salmon free by permission of Lord Kenmare. + +River.--Eirk. Station.--Killarney; thence by car 7 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +River.--Erhagh. Station.--Killarney; thence by car 6-1/2 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout; permission required. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +River.--Ballysadare. Station.--Ballysadare, on Midland Great Western +Railway. Hotels at Sligo and Ballysadare. Salmon and sea trout +preserved, also brown trout, for which permission can be had. + + + + +[Illustration: LAKE FISHING] + + +~DUBLIN DISTRICT.~ + +Lake.--Lough Ree, Station.--Athlone, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 80 miles from Dublin. Hotel accommodation good. Salmon, trout, +pike, and perch free. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +Lake.--Lough Derg. Station.--Nenagh, on the Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation at Lough Derg Hotel, Miss Mill's Private Hotel, +O'Meara's Hotel, Nenagh, and Hibernian Hotels. Some good trout and +salmon fishing; some by permission, and some fishings may be hired. + +Lake.--Inchiquin Lake. Station.--Corofin, on West Clare Railway, 33 +miles from Limerick. Accommodation at Lake Hotel. Famous for trout +fishing. + +Station.--Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Lakes.--Tony +Hill Lake, 1-1/2 miles from Croom, and Loughgor Lake, 7 miles from +Croom. Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Maigue View Hotel. Pike free by +permission of owners. + +Lake.--Lough Derg. Station.--Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 15 miles from Limerick. Hotel accommodation excellent. Lough +Derg is one of the prettiest pieces of water in Ireland, it is within +ten minutes row of Killaloe, and the trout fishing is about the best in +the United Kingdom. In favourable weather large baskets of trout are +taken, and the fish weigh from 1 lb. to 7 lbs. Pike and perch also +abound in the lake, the former grows very large. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +There is a chain of lakes near Inchigeela (Lake Allan and Gougane Barra) +where some salmon and pike fishing may be had. There is also a small +lake near Bruff (Loch Ghur) where trout, pike, etc., may be killed; also +there are small lakes near Bantry well stocked with trout, &c. + +Lake.--Inchigeela. Station.--Macroom, on Cork and Macroom Railway, 25 +miles from Cork. Good hotel, provided with boats, fishermen, etc. Pike +and trout free. + +Lake.--Loch Ghur. Station.--Kilmallock, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, 42 miles from Cork. Good accommodation at O'Sullivan's Hotel. +Pike and trout free. + + +~KILLARNEY DISTRICT.~ + +Killarney for the Angler is a paradise. He can fish a different stream +or lake every day for a month or longer. The best fishing season is +March, April, May, and September. Close season, November to February. + +Lakes.--Lakes of Killarney, Lough Leane, Muckross Lake, the Long Range, +Upper Lake. Station.--Killarney, thence by car. Accommodation at +Killarney. Trout and salmon. Licence required for salmon, cost <i>20s.</i> + +Lake.--Guitane. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 5 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown and red trout free. + +Lake.--Looscannagh. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 10-1/2 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout, etc., free. + +Lake.--Glas Lake. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 5 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout, etc., free. + +Lake.--Gourggh. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 9 miles, walk two +more. Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Cushvalley. Station.--Killarney, thence by car about 8 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Garagarry. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 6 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Cummeenduff. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 13 miles through +Gap of Dunloe. Accommodation at Killarney. Amply stocked with trout +free. + +Lake.--Curraghmore. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 15 miles. +Accommodation at Killarney. Brown trout free. + +Lake.--Augur. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 9 miles. Brown trout +free. + +Lake.--Callee. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 8 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Fine stock of trout free. + +Lake.--Managh. Station.--Killarney, thence by car 6 miles. Accommodation +at Killarney. Brown trout free. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +Lake.--Lough Gill. Station.--Sligo, on Great Southern and Western +Railway, thence by car 3 miles. Good hotel accommodation at Sligo. +Salmon, white and brown trout and pike free, by permission, which may be +obtained without difficulty. + + + + +[Illustration: SHOOTING] + + +~DUBLIN DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Lucan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 6-3/4 miles from +Dublin. Accommodation at Spa hotel. Rough shooting by permission of +owners. + +Station.--Athlone, on Great Southern and Western Railway. 80 miles from +Dublin. Good hotels. Wild fowl shooting on River Shannon and Lough Ree +free. + +Station.--Monasterevan, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 37 miles +from Dublin. Good hotels. Rough shooting free along the River Barrow. + +Station.--Banagher, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 84 miles from +Dublin. Good hotel. Wild fowl very plentiful along Rivers Shannon and +Brosna, free. + +Station.--Dunlavin, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 32 miles from +Dublin. Good hotel. Rough shooting free. + +Station.--Rathvilly, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 47 miles +from Dublin. Good hotel. Snipe and duck fairly abundant, free. + + +~LIMERICK DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Croom, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 11 English miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Croom Hotel and Murgue View Hotel. +Rabbits, plover, snipe, duck, at Tory Hill, by permission of owner of +land. + +Station.--Dromkeen, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 11 miles from +Limerick. Accommodation good. Snipe, duck, plover; free. + +Station.--Castleconnell, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 9 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation good. Wild fowl; shooting on the river. + +Station.--Patrickswell, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 7 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Patrickswell Hotel or Dunraven Arms, +Adare. Geese, duck, widgeon, teal, snipe, and cock; by permission of Mr. +Peter Fitzgerald, J.P., Mondela House. + +Station.--Rathkeale, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 19 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation at Pigott Arms and Eagle Hotel. Good duck +shooting; free. + +Station.--- Killaloe, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Limerick. Accommodation excellent. In winter Lough Derg is visited +by large quantities of wild fowl, which afford capital sport; and the +bogs and marshes around Killaloe hold snipe in fair numbers. + + +~CORK DISTRICT.~ + +There is excellent wild fowl shooting all along the sea coasts, and +along the rivers for a few miles from the sea. The Youghal coast, the +Lower Lee, Blackwater, and Bandon Rivers, afford excellent sport of this +kind; also the deeply indented coasts of Kinsale, Courtmacsherry, +Skibbereen, and Baltimore. + +Station.--Bandon, 20 miles from Cork, on South Coast Railway. +Accommodation fair at the Angel and Devonshire Arms. Snipe, wild fowl, +and plover; free. + +Station.--Blarney, 5 miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation excellent at St. Ann's Hydropathic Establishment. +Snipe and plover fairly abundant; free. + +Station.--Clonakilty, 33 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South +Coast Railway. Accommodation fairly good at Imperial or Shannon Arms. +Snipe and plover; free. + +Station.--Mitchelstown, miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation fair at Ahearn's or Fitzgerald's. Snipe and +plover may be had on the slopes of Kilworth Hills, by permission of +Officer Commanding Kilworth Camp. + +Station.--Kinsale, 24 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South Coast +Railway. Accommodation good at Kinsale Arms or Sea View Hotels. Wild +fowl mostly preserved, but permission may be had. + +Station.--Skibbereen, 53-3/4 miles from Cork, on Cork, Bandon, and South +Coast Railway. Accommodation fair at Commercial, Eldon, and Ilen Valley +Hotels. Duck, teal, widgeon, snipe, and plover; free. + +Station.--Youghal, 26-3/4 miles from Cork, on Great Southern and Western +Railway. Accommodation good at Adelphi, Devonshire Arms, Green Park, +Imperial, and Strand Hotels. Wild fowl very plentiful along the sea +coast and at mouth of Blackwater; free. + + +~WATERFORD DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Horse and Jockey, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 48 +miles from Waterford. Accommodation at Thurles, about 4 miles distant. +Grouse, hares, duck, &c., &c., in Liskeveen Bogs, by permission of D. J. +Mansergh, Esq., Grallagh Castle, Thurles. + +Station.--Ballyhale, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at Mrs. Hayes, Knocktopher Hotel, +Thomastown. Rough shooting to be had at Courisk and Castlecasker Bogs, +about 1 mile from the station, in the direction of Innistiogue, but game +not plenty, being a common; this would be free. A preserve at +Knocktopher. For permission apply to Captain Langrishe. A preserve at +Castlemorris. For permission apply to Rev. Wm. D'Montmorency, +Castlemorris. Applications as to payment and otherwise should be made to +above-mentioned gentlemen. + +Station.--Attanagh, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 45 miles from +Waterford. Accommodation at Griffith's Hotel, Durrow. About 1,000 acres, +almost adjoining station; duck, rabbit, snipe, woodcock; free, if with +permission of occupiers (tenant farmers). + +Station.--Kilmacthomas, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 15 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at E. J. Walsh's Hotel. There is no +preserved ground in this vicinity, on which permission is given to +shoot; snipe are fairly plentiful on surrounding bogs, and this is about +all the shooting there is. By permission of Charles Mansfield, +Kilmacthomas, and P. Power, Faithlegg, Waterford. + +Station.--Durrow, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 22 miles from +Waterford. Accommodation at Whelan's and Riley's Hotels. Waterfowl; +grey and green plover; also duck and snipe, rabbits, &c., by permission +of farmers. + +Station.--Lismore, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Accommodation +at Devonshire Arms Hotel and Blackwater Vale Hotel. Partridge, grouse, +woodcock. Permission to be obtained from James Penrose, Esq., Lismore +Castle. + +Station.--Carrick, on Great Southern and Western Railway. Accommodation +at Bessborough Arms and Kirwan's Hotels. Duck, rabbits, rooks. Free, and +by permission. + +Station.--Mullinavat, on Great Southern and Western Railway, 7-3/4 miles +from Waterford. Accommodation at M'Donald's Hotel and Hely's Hotel. +Duck, widgeon, teal, and snipe; shooting free on Bishop's Mountain and +Moenrin. By permission. + + +~SLIGO DISTRICT.~ + +Station.--Sligo, on Great Southern and Western Railway, thence by car. +Place, Rosse's Point. Accommodation--Hotels good. Shooting--free below +high water mark. + +[Illustration] + + + + +INDEX. + + + Achill Head, 246. + + Adare, 59. + + Adare Abbey, 60. + + Adare Manor, 61. + + Adare Manor Golf Links, 292. + + Aghada, 95. + + Aghadoe, 156. + + Among the Arbutus, 266. + + Arbutus Island, Killarney, 267. + + Arbutus Rock, Lake Currane, 202. + + Ardfert, 62. + + Ardmore, 105, 256. + + Arran Islands, 243, 256. + + Athenry, 237. + + Athlone, 39. + + Athlone Golf Links, 291. + + + Ballincollig, 89. + + Ballingrane, 62. + + Ballybunion, 62, 65, 257. + + Ballycotton, 96. + + Baltimore, 172. + + Banagher Golf Links, 291. + + Bandon Golf Links, 293. + + Bank of Ireland, 17. + + Bantry, 172. + + Beenarourke, 204. + + Birr Castle, 39. + + Birr Golf Links, 292. + + Black Abbey, 36. + + Blackrock, 89. + + Blackrock Castle, Cork, 89. + + Blackwater River, 101, 107. + + Blackwater River, Youghal, &c., 98. + + Blackwater at Kenmare, 219. + + Blarney, 77, 257. + + Blarney Castle, 86. + + Boating at Killarney, 135. + + Boher, 46. + + Brayhead, 192. + + Bundoran Golf Links, 294. + + Bunratty Castle, 221. + + Buttevant, 98. + + + Cahirciveen, 182, 187, 257. + + Caragh Lake, 178. + + Caragh Lake, Southern Hotel, 178. + + Carlow, 33. + + Carrantual, Killarney, 146. + + Carrick-on-Suir, 127. + + Carton House, Maynooth, 28. + + Cashel, 130. + + Castleconnell, 53, 257. + + Castletown, 27. + + Castletown House, 27. + + Caves of Mitchelstown, 131. + + Charleville, 134. + + Christ Church Cathedral, 20. + + Claddagh, 243. + + Clare and East Galway Natural History, 272. + + Clew Bay, 248. + + Clifden, 245. + + Cliffs of Moher, 231. + + Cliffs at Valencia, 191. + + Clock Tower, Youghal, 102. + + Clonakilty Golf Links, 293. + + Clondalkin, 26. + + Clonmacnoise, 44. + + Clonmel, 127. + + Cloonaghlin Lake, 188. + + Cloyne, 95. + + Connemara and Sligo, 245. + + Coomakista, 204. + + Coomakisteen Hill, 205. + + Coomasaharn, 182. + + Cork, 73. + + Cork District, 85. + + Cork District-- + Cycling, 279. + Fishing, 297, 300. + Shooting, 303. + + Cork Exhibition, 84. + + County Clare, 221. + + Cratloe Woods, 221. + + Cromwell's Bridge, 171. + + Crosshaven, 95. + + Curragh Camp, 31, 32. + + Curraghmore Ho., 118. + + Custom Ho., Dublin, 21. + + Cycling, 278. + + + Dame St., Dublin, 18. + + Derriana Lake, 188. + + Derrynane, 206. + + Derrynane Abbey, 206. + + Diamond Mountain, 247. + + Dinish Island, Killarney, 144. + + Dooks, 180. + + Dromod, 67. + + Dromoland Castle, 222. + + Dublin Castle, 19. + + Dublin and District, 15. + + Dublin District-- + Fishing, 295, 299. + Golfing, 291. + Shooting, 302. + + Duke of York Route, 67. + + Dungarvan, 132. + + Dunmore, 122. + + Dunmore East, 257. + + + Eagle's Nest, Killarney, 145. + + Eccles' Hotel, Glengarriff, 166. + + Emly, 133. + + Ennis, 221. + + Ennistymon, 223. + + + Falls of Doonass, 54. + + Fenit, 66. + + Fethard, 128. + + Fishing, 295. + + Four Courts, Dublin, 23. + + Foynes, 62. + + + Galteemore, 132. + + Galway, 238. + + Galway and Dist., 235. + + Galway Golf Links, 294. + + Galway, Queen's College, 244. + + Gannets on Little Skellig, 197. + + Gap of Dunloe, 157. + + Garinish Island, 212, 215. + + Geological Section, Bantry to Killarney, 263. + + Glenbeigh, 182. + + Glenbrook, 92. + + Glendalough, 249. + + Glengarriff, 166, 257. + + Golfing, 291. + + Golfing at Lehinch, 229. + + Gort, 237. + + Gougane Barra, 169. + + Grattan, 17. + + Great Cross of the Scriptures, 45. + + Guest House, Mount Melleray, 111. + + + Harristown, 29. + + Headford, 134. + + Holy Cross Abbey, 129. + + + Imperial Hotel, Waterford, 117. + + Inchigeela, 171. + + Innisfallen, Killarney, 146. + + Irish Spurge, 268. + + + Kells, 38, 182. + + Kenmare, 257. + + Kenmare and Glengarriff, 164. + + Kenmare, Southern Hotel, 166, 218. + + Kerry Ditchbank, 264. + + Kerry Slug, 269. + + Kildare, 31. + + Kilkee, 225, 228, 258. + + Kilkenny, 33, 34. + + Kilkenny Castle, 35. + + Killaloe, 58, 67. + + Killaloe Golf Links, 292. + + Killery Bay, 251. + + Killarney, 136, 258. + + Killarney, Arbutus Island, 267. + + Killarney, Carrantual, 146. + + Killarney, Dinish, 144. + + Killarney, Eagle's Nest, 145. + + Killarney, Gap of Dunloe, 157. + + Killarney, Innisfallen, 146. + + Killarney, Meeting of the Waters, 149. + + Killarney, Muckross Abbey, 151. + + Killarney, Shooting the Rapids, 143. + + Killarney, Torc, 153. + + Killarney, Up. Lake, 139. + + Killarney District, Cycling, 283. + + Killarney District, Fishing, 298, 300. + + Killarney and Glengarriff, 133. + + Killarney, Southern Hotel, 136. + + Killorglin, 178. + + Kilmallock, 133. + + Kilrush, 232. + + Kincora, 69. + + Kinvara, 237. + + Kylemore, 253. + + + Lake Coomasaharn, 186. + + Lake Currane, 200. + + Lakes and Fjords of Kerry, 175. + + Lartigue Railway, 63. + + Leenane, 248, 258. + + Lehinch, 258. + + Lehinch Golf Links, 292. + + Letterfrack, 248. + + Limerick, 47. + + Limerick District, Cycling, 281. + + Limerick District, Fishing, 296, 299. + + Limerick District, Golf Links, 292. + + Limerick District, Shooting, 303. + + Limerick Junction, 46. + + Liscanor, 232. + + Lisdoonvarna, 224, 258. + + Lismore, 110. + + Lismore Golf Links, 293. + + Littleisland Golf Links, 293. + + Look-out Cliff, Kilkee, 227. + + Lough Corrib, 245, 250. + + Lough Gill, 252, 254. + + Lough Gur, 134. + + Lough Ree, 71. + + Lucan, 26, 258. + + + Mallaranny, 252. + + Mallow, 99. + + Mallow Castle, 100. + + Mallow Golf Links, 293. + + Mangerton, 160. + + Marina, Cork, 75. + + Maryborough, 39. + + Meeting of the Waters, Killarney, 149. + + Midleton, 105. + + Milltown Malbay, 232. + + Mitchelstown, 131. + + Monasterevan, 38. + + Monkstown, 92. + + Mount Melleray, 109. + + Mount Melleray, Guest House, 111. + + Mountain Stage, 182. + + Muckross Abbey, 151. + + Myrtle Grove, 104. + + + Naas, 28. + + National Library, Dublin, 23. + + Natural History, 260. + + Nest of Wood Ant, 271. + + Newcastle, 62. + + Newbridge, 31. + + Newport, 248. + + North Kerry, 59. + + + Oughterard, 245. + + Oratory of Gallerius,66. + + + Parknasilla, 210, 258. + + Parknasilla, Southern Hotel, 212, 213. + + Passage (East), 126. + + Passage (West), 90. + + Pass of Ballaghbeama, 181. + + Patrick Street, Cork, 74. + + Pennywort, 264. + + Portarlington, 38. + + Portumna, 67. + + Poulaphouca, 258. + + Poulaphouca Waterfall, 30. + + Purple Mountain, Killarney, 159. + + Queen's College, Cork, 79. + + Queen's College, Galway, 244. + + Queenstown, 92, 258. + + Queenst'n Harbour, 91. + + + Raheen Lake, Currane, 201. + + Rathkeale, 62. + + Rathmore, 134. + + Recess, 259. + + Roche's Hotel, Glengarriff, 166. + + Roscrea, 39. + + Ross Castle, Killarney, 155, 158. + + Round Tower, Clondalkin, 25. + + Rushbrook Golf Links, 294. + + + Salmon Leap, Lucan, 26. + + Salthill, Galway, 242. + + Sarsfield Statue, Limerick, 50. + + Saxifraga umbrosa, 265. + + Scariff, 67. + + Shandon Church, Cork, 82. + + Shannon Development Company, 67. + + Shannon Steamer, 70. + + Shooting, 302. + + Shooting the Rapids, Killarney, 143. + + Sir Walter Raleigh's House, 103. + + Skelligs, 194. + + Slea Head, 66. + + Sligo District-- + Cycling, 289. + Fishing, 298, 301. + Shooting, 305. + + Sligo Golf Links, 294. + + Sligo, Nat. History, 274. + + Smerwick, 66. + + + Southern Hotel, Caragh Lake, 178. + + Southern Hotel, Kenmare, 166, 218. + + Southern Hotel, Killarney, 136. + + Southern Hotel, Parknasilla, 212, 213. + + Southern Hotel, Waterville, 198. + + Spa, 66. + + Spanish Point, 232. + + Spike Island, 92. + + Sport, 277. + + Staigue Fort, 202. + + St. Canice's Cathedral, 36. + + St. Finbarr's Cathedral, 80. + + St. Michael's Rock, 194. + + St. Patrick's Cathedral, 20. + + Straffan, 28. + + Strancally Castle, 106. + + St. Stephen's Green, 17. + + Sneem, 207. + + Suir, 116. + + Summer and Winter Resort, 256. + + + Thomastown, 38. + + Three Sisters, 66. + + Thurles, 128. + + Torc, 153. + + Tralee, 66. + + Tramore, 119, 259. + + Tramore Golf Links, 292. + + Treaty Stone, Lim'k. 48. + + Trinity College, 18. + + Tuam, 238. + + Tullamore Golf Links, 291. + + Tullow, 29. + + Twelve Bens, 245. + + + Upper Lake, Killarney, 139. + + + Valencia, 259. + + Valencia Harbour, 190. + + Valencia Island, 188. + + + Waterford, 112, 259. + + Waterford and District, 112. + + Waterford District-- + Cycling, 284. + Fishing, 297. + Golf Links, 292. + Shooting, 304. + + Waterford and East Cork, Natural History, 262. + + Waterford, The Quays, 115. + + Waterville, 196, 259. + + Waterville, Southern Hotel, 199. + + West Cork, &c., Natural History, 262. + + West Galway and West Mayo, Natural History, 272. + + Westport, 248. + + Wicklow and Wexford, Natural History, 261. + + Wolf Spider, 273. + + + Youghal, 101. + + Youghal Golf Links, 293. + + + * * * * * + + +Advertisements. + + + + +~Gresham Hotel, DUBLIN.~ + +[Illustration] + +This Old Established and First Class Hotel is situate in +Sackville-street, one of the finest thoroughfares in the world. Many +improvements have of late been made--Electric Light, &c. Visitors to +Dublin will find their Requirements catered for at the Gresham in a +manner unsurpassed by any Hotel in the City. No efforts are spared to +ensure in every possible way the comfort of its Patrons. + +~120 BEDROOMS.~ + +~Spacious Saloons and Ball Room on Ground Floor.~ + +~FIRST CLASS CUISINE.~ ~MODERATE CHARGES.~ + +~JAMES FARRELLY, Manager.~ + + + * * * * * + + +~DUBLIN SHELBOURNE HOTEL~ + +Charmingly situated facing the beautiful St. Stephen's Green Park. + +FIRST CLASS + +WITH + +MODERATE CHARGES + +CHOICEST WINES + +AND + +FRENCH CUISINE. + +HYDRAULIC LIFT, + +ELECTRIC LIGHT, + +TELEPHONE NO. 150. + +EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE. + + + * * * * * + + +~The "Hammam" Hotel~ AND ~Turkish Baths~, + +SACKVILLE ST. DUBLIN, + +[Illustration] + +"Three Days' Guide to Dublin" free on application. + +Daily Terms from 8/6. + + + * * * * * + + +_By Special Permission of Her late Most Gracious Majesty Queen +Victoria._ + +~The ROYAL VICTORIA Hotel,~ + +PATRONISED BY _His Majesty King Edward VII., H.R.H. the Duke of +Connaught, the Royal Families of France and Belgium, the Nobility and +Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, and leading American Families._ + +[Illustration] + +MAGNIFICENTLY situated on Lower Lake, facing Innisfallen. Highly +recommended for its superior comfort. The only Hotel in Killarney at +which King Edward VII. stayed when Prince of Wales. + +JOHN O'LEARY, PROPRIETOR. + + + * * * * * + + +~LAKE HOTEL, KILLARNEY LAKES.~ + +_Patronised by HIS MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY THE KING._ + +~Under New Management. Standing in its own Grounds upwards of 60 acres +on the Shore of the Lower Lake.~ + +Unrivalled in situation, concentrating in one view all that is +picturesque and sublime in the scenery. + +[Illustration] + +NEWLY FURNISHED; Electric Light throughout (Bedrooms included). Boating, +Fishing, and Shooting. Conveyances Daily for Local Tours at fixed rates +for each Person, also for Private Hiring. Billiards, Tennis. + +THE ONLY HOTEL IN THE DISTRICT DIRECTLY ON THE LAKE SHORE. + +Hotel Omnibus meets all Trains. The Glengarriff Coach stops at Entrance +Gates to take up and set down Passengers. + +The Railway Company allow only the Porters of their own Hotel on the +Arrival Platform. The Lake Hotel Porters will be found at the Station +Entrance. + +~Address THE MANAGER.~ + + + * * * * * + + +~WEST END HOTEL, KILKEE.~ + +~First-Class Accommodation.~ + +Beautifully Situated. Overlooking Bay. Magnificent Coast Scenery. + +Nearest Bathing Resorts. + +Recently Furnished. Board per Week or per Day. + +'Bus and Porter await arrival of all Trains. + +Coupons of The Irish Railway Companies Tourist Office, 2, Charing Cross, +London. + + + * * * * * + + +~KILKEE, CO. CLARE.~ + +~Royal Marine Hotel.~ + +Extensive additions have been made for the coming season. It is the most +central Hotel in Kilkee, commanding full view of Bay and Cliffs. Is +within two minutes' walk of Railway Station, principal Bathing Resorts, +Post Office, and places of Worship. This Hotel contains all facilities +and convenience of a First-Class Hotel, with the quiet and comforts of +home. Tourists and Visitors will find it to their advantage to patronise +the above Hotel. + +~Arrangements made for Private Families.~ + +_The Hotel Omnibus attends the trains._ + +OWN DAIRY. + +~Address: PROPRIETOR.~ + + + * * * * * + + +~Castleconnell, CO. LIMERICK.~ + +"One of Ireland's beauty spots." Seven miles from Limerick. + +[Illustration] + +~SHANNON HOTEL.~ + +(Mrs. K. Enright, Proprietress.) + +_ANGLERS' AND TOURIST RESORT._ + +Head-Quarters C.T.C. + +Five miles walk along the banks of the Shannon. MAGNIFICENT RIVER +SCENERY, Including "FAR-FAMED RAPIDS OF DOONASS." + +~Cycling.~ ~Boating.~ ~Driving.~ ~Pretty Walks.~ + +~Castleconnell~ can be reached from + + London in 13-1/2 hours. + Liverpool under 11 " + Leeds 13 " + Manchester 11-1/4 " + Birmingham 12 " + York 14 hours, 20 mins. + Bristol 15 hours. + Dublin 3 " + Cork 2 hours, 55 mins. + Killarney under 4 hours. + Waterford 3 hours, 20 mins. + Killaloe -- 20 minutes. + +N.B.--Salmon Fishing by arrangement; Trout Fishing FREE; also +good Pike, Perch, and Roach Fishing FREE. + +Telephone 502, Limerick. + + + * * * * * + + +[Illustration] + +ROYAL HOTEL, + +VALENCIA ISLAND, CO. KERRY. + +This Hotel has been patronised by H. M. The KING And Their +Royal Highnesses The PRINCE and PRINCESS OF WALES. + +~It is now considered the Most Comfortable and Up-to-Date Hotel in +Ireland.~ + +~HOT AND COLD SEA WATER BATHS.~ + +CHARGES FIXED AND MODERATE. + + + * * * * * + + +CUNARD LINE, + +INAUGURATED JULY 4th, 1840. + +NOTICE.--The Steamers of this Line come alongside the Prince's Stage, +Liverpool, to land or embark Passengers without the intervention of +Tenders, and London Passengers depart from or arrive at the Riverside +Railway Station on the Quay adjoining. + +[Illustration] + +FLEET. + + CAMPANIA. + LUCANIA. + ETRURIA. + UMBRIA. + AURANIA. + IVERNIA. + SAXONIA. + ULTONIA. + SYLVANIA. + VERIA. + CYPRIA. + PAVIA. + TYRIA. + SAMARIA. + SARAGOSSA. + ALEPPO. + CHERBOURG. + CARPATHIA, Building + +~Sailings to and from New York and Boston on Saturdays and Tuesdays.~ + +~FASTEST SHIPS BETWEEN LIVERPOOL AND NEW YORK.~ + +~LARGEST SHIPS BETWEEN LIVERPOOL AND BOSTON.~ + +~Fitted with Marconi's System of Wireless Telegraphy.~ + +The Twin-Screw Ships "IVERNIA" and "SAXONIA," which sail between +Liverpool and Boston, are among the largest Ships afloat, and their +remarkable steadiness makes sea-sickness practically impossible. + +UNSURPASSED ACCOMMODATION AT MODERATE FARES FOR ALL CLASSES AND FOR ALL +STEAMERS. + + * * * * * + +~MEDITERRANEAN SERVICE.~ + +FREQUENT FREIGHT SAILINGS FROM LIVERPOOL + +~For Syria, Smyrna, Constantinople, Malta, Genoa, Leghorn, Naples, +Brindisi, Trieste, Venice, Fiume, Bari, Ancona, Palermo, Messina, +Catania, Patras, and Corfu.~ + + * * * * * + +HAVRE SERVICE. + +~Freight Steamers from Liverpool and Havre weekly.~ + + * * * * * + +* * * For full particulars apply at the Company's Offices: in New York, at +29, Broadway; in Boston, at 99, State-street; in Havre, at 28, Quai +d'Orleans; in Paris, at 2, bis Rue Scribe; in London, at 32, +Cockspur-street, S.W., and 93, Bishopsgate-street, E.C.; in Manchester, +at 18, Brazennose-street; in Glasgow, at 30, Jamaica-street; in Leith, +at Exchange Buildings; in Belfast, at 49, Queen's-square; in Queenstown, +at Cunard Wharf; or to + +~THE CUNARD STEAM SHIP COMPANY, LIMITED~, + +8, WATER-STREET, LIVERPOOL. + + + * * * * * + + +Great Western Railway of England. + + SHORTEST ROUTE + BETWEEN + ~ENGLAND~ + AND THE + SOUTH AND WEST OF IRELAND. + + FAST AND COMFORTABLE NEW STEAMERS + SAIL REGULARLY BETWEEN + ~WATERFORD AND CORK~ + AND + ~NEW MILFORD~. + + ~OPEN SEA PASSAGE~ + BETWEEN + Waterford and New Milford. + Under 5 Hours. + + ~THE BOAT TRAINS~ + RUNNING BETWEEN + NEW MILFORD AND PADDINGTON + In connection with the Steamers are provided with + + ~Central Corridors.~ + ~Lighted by Electricity.~ + ~Lavatory Accommodation.~ + + _Direct Communication with Guard._ + +REFRESHMENTS may be obtained in the trains by First, Second, and Third +Class Passengers. + +For further information as to train service, fares, &c., see the +Company's time tables. + +Full particulars will be supplied on application to Mr. H. J. NICHOLLS, +Great Western Railway Company's Offices, Waterford; Mr. A. W. PERKS, +Adelphi Wharf, Waterford; Mr. E. FOGG, Railway Chambers, King Street, +Cork; Mr. ALFRED DODD, Great Western Agent, Limerick Terminus; Messrs. +COOK & SON, Main Street, Killarney; or to Mr. T. I. ALLEN, +Superintendent of the Line, Paddington Station, London. + +~J. L. WILKINSON, General Manager.~ + +_July, 1902._ + + + * * * * * + + +~WATERFORD.~ + +~_IMPERIAL HOTEL._~ + +~FIRST CLASS HOTEL,~ + +Patronised by the Aristocracy, Tourists and Commercial Gentlemen. + + ~Spacious Drawing, + Coffee, Commercial, + Billiard and Bath Rooms. + Smoking, Stock, and Rent Rooms.~ + +Sanitation Certified. The Hotel has been recently enlarged, +re-furnished, and decorated. + +~TARIFF MODERATE.~ + +~_COMMERCIAL ROOM DINNER_~ from 1.45 to 3.30 daily. + +~Table d'Hote at 7.30 daily.~ + +_Omnibus meets all Trains and Steamers._ + +Telephone, No. 22. Telegrams--"IMPERIAL," Waterford. + +~W. A. MURRAY, Proprietor.~ + + + * * * * * + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] Permission to visit Adare Manor may be obtained (on application) +from the Head Steward, Adare. + +[2] The other places of worship in Cork are as follows:--_Roman +Catholic:_ St. Mary's Cathedral, Clarence-street; SS. Peter and Paul's, +Patrick-street (designed by Pugin); St. Patrick's, King-street (Military +Mass); St. Finbarr's, Dunbar-street (here Hogan's masterpiece, "The Dead +Christ," may be seen under High Altar); St. Joseph's, Mayfield; St. +Finbarr's, West, Lough-road; St. Augustine's Priory (Augustinians), +Great George-street; St. Mary's (Dominicans), Pope's-quay; St. Francis' +(Franciscans), Liberty-street; Holy Trinity (Friars Minors Capuchins), +Charlotte-quay; St. Vincent's (Congregation of the Mission), Sunday's +Well; and Chapel of Convent of St. Mary's of the Isle, Fitton-street. +_Church of Ireland:_ Christ Church, South Main-street; St. Ann's, +Church-street; St. Luke's, Summer Hill; St. Mary's, Shanakiel-road; St. +Nicholas', Cove-street; St. Paul's, Paul-street; St. Peter's, North +Main-street; Cork Episcopal Free Church, Langford-row; St. Michael's, +Blackrock; and Frankfield Church. _Other Denominations:_ Baptist Church, +King-street; Congregational Church, George-street; Patrick-street +Methodist Chapel; Society of Friends, Grattan-street; Presbyterian, +Summer Hill; Plymouth Brethren, Prince's-street; and Cork Hebrews, 10, +South Terrace. + +[3] "Amber water." It recently passed from the representatives of the +late Sir John Pope Hennessy into the possession of Sir Henry Blake. +Permission to visit the house may be obtained on application to Mr. +French, Land Agent, South Mall, Cork. + +[4] To be seen in the National Gallery, Dublin. + +[5] Heights of the Principal Mountains, According to the Ordnance +Survey. + + Carrantual, 3,414 feet. + Mangerton, 2,756 " + Purple Mount, 2,739 " + Toomies, 2,413 " + Torc, 1,764 " + Eagle's Nest, 1,103 " + + Elevation of Loughs above the Sea. + + Devil's Punch Bowl, 2,206 feet. + Gum-Meem-Na-Copasta 2,156 " + Gouragh, 1,226 " + Callee, 1,096 " + Black Lough, 587 " + Cush Valley, 337 " + Kittane, 256 " + Coom-a-Dhuv, 197 " + Upper Lake, 70 " + Lower Lake, 66 " + + + PRINTED BY ALEX. THOM & CO., LIMITED, + 87, 88, & 89, ABBEY STREET, + DUBLIN. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sunny Side of Ireland, by +John O'Mahony and R. 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