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+<title>A Tour in Ireland</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">A Tour in Ireland, by Arthur Young</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Tour in Ireland, by Arthur Young, Edited by
+Henry Morley
+
+
+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: A Tour in Ireland
+ 1776-1779
+
+
+Author: Arthur Young
+
+Editor: Henry Morley
+
+Release Date: August 25, 2007 [eBook #22387]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TOUR OF IRELAND***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler.</p>
+<h1>A TOUR IN IRELAND.<br />
+1776-1779.</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">By</span><br />
+ARTHUR YOUNG.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">CASSELL &amp; COMPANY, <span
+class="smcap">Limited</span>:<br />
+<i><span class="smcap">london</span></i>, <i><span
+class="smcap">paris</span></i>, <i><span class="smcap">new york &amp;
+melbourne</span></i>.<br />
+1897.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+5</span>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+<p>Arthur Young was born in 1741, the son of a clergyman, at Bradfield, in
+Suffolk.&nbsp; He was apprenticed to a merchant at Lynn, but his activity
+of mind caused him to be busy over many questions of the day.&nbsp; He
+wrote when he was seventeen a pamphlet on American politics, for which a
+publisher paid him with ten pounds&rsquo; worth of books.&nbsp; He started
+a periodical, which ran to six numbers.&nbsp; He wrote novels.&nbsp; When
+he was twenty-eight years old his father died, and, being free to take his
+own course in life, he would have entered the army if his mother had not
+opposed.&nbsp; He settled down, therefore, to farming, and applied to
+farming all his zealous energy for reform, and all the labours of his busy
+<!-- page 6--><a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+6</span>pen.&nbsp; In 1768, a year before his father&rsquo;s death, he had
+published &ldquo;A Six Weeks&rsquo; Tour through the Southern Counties of
+England and Wales,&rdquo; which found many readers.</p>
+<p>Between 1768 and 1771 Arthur Young produced also &ldquo;The
+Farmer&rsquo;s Letters to the People of England, containing the Sentiments
+of a Practical Husbandman on the present State of Husbandry.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In 1770 he published, in two thick quartos, &ldquo;A Course of Experimental
+Agriculture, containing an exact Register of the Business transacted during
+Five Years on near 300 Acres of various Soils;&rdquo; also in the same year
+appeared &ldquo;Rural Economy; or, Essays on the Practical Part of
+Husbandry;&rdquo; also in the same year &ldquo;The Farmer&rsquo;s Guide in
+Hiring and Stocking Farms,&rdquo; in two volumes, with plans.&nbsp; Also in
+the same year appeared his &ldquo;Farmer&rsquo;s Kalendar,&rdquo; of which
+the 215th edition was published in 1862.&nbsp; There had been a second
+edition of the &ldquo;Six Weeks&rsquo; Tour in <!-- page 7--><a
+name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 7</span>the South of
+England,&rdquo; with enlargements, in 1769, and Arthur Young was encouraged
+to go on with increasing vigour to the publication of &ldquo;The
+Farmer&rsquo;s Tour through the East of England: being a Register of a
+Journey through various Counties, to inquire into the State of Agriculture,
+Manufactures, and Population.&rdquo;&nbsp; This extended to four volumes,
+and appeared in the years 1770 and 1771.&nbsp; In 1771 also appeared, in
+four volumes, with plates, &ldquo;A Six Months&rsquo; Tour through the
+North of England, containing an Account of the Present State of
+Agriculture, Manufactures, and Population in several Counties of this
+Kingdom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus Arthur Young took all his countrymen into counsel while he was
+learning his art, as a farmer who brought to his calling a vigorous spirit
+of inquiry with an activity in the diffusion of his thoughts that is a part
+of God&rsquo;s gift to the men who have thoughts to diffuse; the instinct
+for utterance being almost invariably <!-- page 8--><a
+name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>joined to the power of
+suggesting what may help the world.</p>
+<p>Whether he was essentially author turned farmer, or farmer turned
+author, Arthur Young has the first place in English literature as a
+farmer-author.&nbsp; Other practical men have written practical books of
+permanent value, which have places of honour in the literature of the farm;
+but Arthur Young&rsquo;s writings have won friends for themselves among
+readers of every class, and belong more broadly to the literature of the
+country.</p>
+<p>Between 1766 and 1775 he says that he made &pound;3,000 by his
+agricultural writings.&nbsp; The pen brought him more profit than the
+plough.&nbsp; He took a hundred acres in Hertfordshire, and said of them,
+&ldquo;I know not what epithet to give this soil; sterility falls short of
+the idea; a hungry vitriolic gravel&mdash;I occupied for nine years the
+jaws of a wolf.&nbsp; A nabob&rsquo;s fortune would sink in the attempt to
+raise good arable crops in such a country.&nbsp; <!-- page 9--><a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>My experience and
+knowledge had increased from travelling and practice, but all was lost when
+exerted on such a spot.&rdquo;&nbsp; He tried at one time to balance his
+farm losses by reporting for the <i>Morning Post</i>, taking a
+seventeen-mile walk home to his farm every Saturday night.</p>
+<p>In 1780 Arthur Young published this &ldquo;Tour in Ireland, with General
+Observations on the Present State of that Kingdom in 1776-78.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The general observations, which give to all his books a wide general
+interest, are, in this volume, of especial value to us now.&nbsp; It is
+here reprinted as given by Pinkerton.</p>
+<p>In 1784 Arthur Young began to edit &ldquo;Annals of Agriculture,&rdquo;
+which were continued through forty-five volumes.&nbsp; All writers in it
+were to sign their names, but when His Majesty King George III. contributed
+a description of Mr. Duckett&rsquo;s Farm at Petersham, he was allowed to
+sign himself &ldquo;Ralph Robinson of Windsor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>In
+1792 Arthur Young published the first quarto volume, and in 1794 the two
+volumes of his &ldquo;Travels during the years 1787-8-9 and 1790,
+undertaken more particularly with a view of ascertaining the Cultivation,
+Wealth, Resources and National Prosperity of the Kingdom of
+France.&rdquo;&nbsp; This led to the official issue in France in 1801, by
+order of the Directory, of a translation of Young&rsquo;s agricultural
+works, under the title of &ldquo;Le Cultivateur Anglais.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Arthur Young also corresponded with Washington, and received recognition
+from the Empress Catherine of Russia, who sent him a gold snuff-box, and
+ermine cloaks for his wife and daughter.&nbsp; He was made a Fellow of the
+Royal Society.</p>
+<p>In 1793 his labours led to the formation of a Board of Agriculture, of
+which he was appointed secretary.</p>
+<p>When he was set at ease by this appointment, with a house and &pound;400
+a year, Arthur Young had <!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 11</span>been about to experiment on the reclaiming of
+four thousand acres of Yorkshire moorland.&nbsp; The Agricultural Board was
+dissolved in 1816, four years before surveys of the agriculture of each
+county were made for the Agricultural Board, Arthur Young himself
+contributing surveys of Hertfordshire, Lincolnshire, Oxfordshire, Norfolk,
+Suffolk, and Sussex.</p>
+<p>Arthur Young&rsquo;s sight became dim in 1808, and blindness gradually
+followed.&nbsp; He died in 1820 at his native village of Bradfield, in
+Suffolk, at the age of seventy-nine years.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">H. M.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 13--><a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>A
+TOUR IN IRELAND.</h2>
+<p>June 19, 1776.&nbsp; Arrived at Holyhead, after an instructive journey
+through a part of England and Wales I had not seen before.&nbsp; Found the
+packet, the <i>Claremont</i>, Captain Taylor, would sail very soon.&nbsp;
+After a tedious passage of twenty-two hours, landed on the 20th in the
+morning, at Dunlary, four miles from Dublin, a city which much exceeded my
+expectation.&nbsp; The public buildings are magnificent, very many of the
+streets regularly laid out, and exceedingly well built.&nbsp; The front of
+the Parliament-house is grand, though not so light as a more open finishing
+of the roof would have made it.&nbsp; The apartments are spacious, elegant,
+and convenient, much beyond that heap of confusion at Westminster, so
+inferior to the magnificence to be looked for in the seat of empire.&nbsp;
+I was so fortunate as to arrive just in time to see Lord Harcourt, with the
+usual ceremonies, prorogue the Parliament.&nbsp; Trinity College is a
+beautiful building, and a numerous society; the library is a very fine
+room, and well filled.&nbsp; The new Exchange will be another edifice to do
+honour in Ireland; it is elegant, cost forty thousand pounds, <!-- page
+14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>but deserves a
+better situation.&nbsp; From everything I saw, I was struck with all those
+appearances of wealth which the capital of a thriving community may be
+supposed to exhibit.&nbsp; Happy if I find through the country in diffused
+prosperity the right source of this splendour!&nbsp; The common computation
+of inhabitants 200,000, but I should suppose exaggerated.&nbsp; Others
+guessed the number 140,000 or 150,000.</p>
+<p>June 21.&nbsp; Introduced by Colonel Burton to the Lord Lieutenant, who
+was pleased to enter into conversation with me on my intended journey, made
+many remarks on the agriculture of several Irish counties, and showed
+himself to be an excellent farmer, particularly in draining.&nbsp; Viewed
+the Duke of Leinster&rsquo;s house, which is a very large stone edifice,
+the front simple but elegant, the pediment light; there are several good
+rooms; but a circumstance unrivalled is the court, which is spacious and
+magnificent, the opening behind the house is also beautiful.&nbsp; In the
+evening to the Rotunda, a circular room, ninety feet diameter, an imitation
+of Ranelagh, provided with a band of music.</p>
+<p>The barracks are a vast building, raised in a plain style, of many
+divisions; the principal front is of an immense length.&nbsp; They contain
+every convenience for ten regiments.</p>
+<p>June 23.&nbsp; Lord Charlemont&rsquo;s house in Dublin is equally
+elegant and convenient, the apartments large, handsome, and well disposed,
+containing some good <!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 15</span>pictures, particularly one by Rembrandt, of
+Judas throwing the money on the floor, with a strong expression of guilt
+and remorse; the whole group fine.&nbsp; In the same room is a portrait of
+C&aelig;sar Borgia, by Titian.&nbsp; The library is a most elegant
+apartment of about forty by thirty, and of such a height as to form a
+pleasing proportion; the light is well managed, coming in from the cove of
+the ceiling, and has an exceeding good effect; at one end is a pretty
+ante-room, with a fine copy of the Venus de Medicis, and at the other two
+small rooms, one a cabinet of pictures and antiquities, the other
+medals.&nbsp; In the collection also of Robert Fitzgerald, Esq., in Merion
+Square, are several pieces which very well deserve a traveller&rsquo;s
+attention; it was the best I saw in Dublin.&nbsp; Before I quit that city I
+observe, on the houses in general, that what they call their two-roomed
+ones are good and convenient.&nbsp; Mr. Latouche&rsquo;s, in
+Stephen&rsquo;s Green, I was shown as a model of this sort, and I found it
+well contrived, and finished elegantly.&nbsp; Drove to Lord
+Charlemont&rsquo;s villa at Marino, near the city, where his lordship has
+formed a pleasing lawn, margined in the higher part by a well-planted
+thriving shrubbery, and on a rising ground a banqueting-room, which ranks
+very high among the most beautiful edifices I have anywhere seen; it has
+much elegance, lightness, and effect, and commands a fine prospect.&nbsp;
+The rising ground on which it stands slopes off to an agreeable
+accompaniment of wood, <!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 16</span>beyond which on one side is Dublin Harbour,
+which here has the appearance of a noble river crowded with ships moving to
+and from the capital.&nbsp; On the other side is a shore spotted with white
+buildings, and beyond it the hills of Wicklow, presenting an outline
+extremely various.&nbsp; The other part of the view (it would be more
+perfect if the city was planted out) is varied, in some places nothing but
+wood, in others breaks of prospect.&nbsp; The lawn, which is extensive, is
+new grass, and appears to be excellently laid down, the herbage a fine crop
+of white clover (<i>trifolium repens</i>), trefoil, rib-grass (<i>plantago
+lanceolata</i>), and other good plants.&nbsp; Returned to Dublin, and made
+inquiries into other points, the prices of provisions, etc.&nbsp; The
+expenses of a family in proportion to those of London are, as five to
+eight.</p>
+<p>Having the year following lived more than two months in Dublin, I am
+able to speak to a few points, which as a mere traveller I could not have
+done.&nbsp; The information I before received of the prices of living is
+correct.&nbsp; Fish and poultry are plentiful and very cheap.&nbsp; Good
+lodgings almost as dear as they are in London; though we were well
+accommodated (dirt excepted) for two guineas and a-half a week.&nbsp; All
+the lower ranks in this city have no idea of English cleanliness, either in
+apartments, persons, or cookery.&nbsp; There is a very good society in
+Dublin in a Parliament winter: a great round of dinners and parties; and
+balls and suppers every <!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 17</span>night in the week, some of which are very
+elegant; but you almost everywhere meet a company much too numerous for the
+size of the apartments.&nbsp; They have two assemblies on the plan of those
+of London, in Fishamble Street, and at the Rotunda; and two
+gentlemen&rsquo;s clubs, Anthry&rsquo;s and Daly&rsquo;s, very well
+regulated: I heard some anecdotes of deep play at the latter, though never
+to the excess common at London.&nbsp; An ill-judged and unsuccessful
+attempt was made to establish the Italian Opera, which existed but with
+scarcely any life for this one winter; of course they could rise no higher
+than a comic one.&nbsp; <i>La Buona Figliuola</i>, <i>La Frascatana</i>,
+and <i>Il Geloso in Cimento</i>, were repeatedly performed, or rather
+murdered, except the parts of Sestini.&nbsp; The house was generally empty,
+and miserably cold.&nbsp; So much knowledge of the state of a country is
+gained by hearing the debates of a Parliament, that I often frequented the
+gallery of the House of Commons.&nbsp; Since Mr. Flood has been silenced
+with the Vice-Treasurership of Ireland, Mr. Daly, Mr. Grattan, Sir William
+Osborn, and the prime serjeant Burgh, are reckoned high among the Irish
+orators.&nbsp; I heard many very eloquent speeches, but I cannot say they
+struck me like the exertion of the abilities of Irishmen in the English
+House of Commons, owing perhaps to the reflection both on the speaker and
+auditor, that the Attorney-General of England, with a dash of his pen, can
+reverse, alter, or entirely do away the matured <!-- page 18--><a
+name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>result of all the
+eloquence, and all the abilities of this whole assembly.&nbsp; Before I
+conclude with Dublin I shall only remark, that walking in the streets
+there, from the narrowness and populousness of the principal thoroughfares,
+as well as from the dirt and wretchedness of the canaille, is a most uneasy
+and disgusting exercise.</p>
+<p>June 24.&nbsp; Left Dublin, and passed through the Ph&oelig;nix Park, a
+very pleasing ground, at the bottom of which, to the left, the Liffey forms
+a variety of landscapes: this is the most beautiful environ of
+Dublin.&nbsp; Take the road to Luttrel&rsquo;s Town, through a various
+scenery on the banks of the river.&nbsp; That domain is a considerable one
+in extent, being above four hundred acres within the wall, Irish measure;
+in the front of the house is a fine lawn bounded by rich woods, through
+which are many ridings, four miles in extent.&nbsp; From the road towards
+the house they lead through a very fine glen, by the side of a stream
+falling over a rocky bed, through the dark woods, with great variety on the
+sides of steep slopes, at the bottom of which the Liffey is either heard or
+seen indistinctly.&nbsp; These woods are of great extent, and so near the
+capital, form a retirement exceedingly beautiful.&nbsp; Lord Irnham and
+Colonel Luttrel have brought in the assistance of agriculture to add to the
+beauties of the place; they have kept a part of the lands in cultivation in
+order to lay them down the better to grass; one hundred and fifty acres
+have been done, and above two hundred acres <!-- page 19--><a
+name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>most effectually
+drained in the covered manner filled with stones.&nbsp; These works are
+well executed.&nbsp; The drains are also made under the roads in all wet
+places, with lateral short ones to take off the water instead of leaving
+it, as is common, to soak against the causeway, which is an excellent
+method.&nbsp; Great use has been made of limestone gravel in the
+improvements, the effect of which is so considerable, that in several spots
+where it was laid on ten years ago, the superiority of the grass is now
+similar to what one would expect from a fresh dunging.</p>
+<p>Leaving Luttrel&rsquo;s Town I went to St. Wolstan&rsquo;s, which Lord
+Harcourt had been so obliging as to desire I would make my quarters, from
+whence to view to the right or left.</p>
+<p>June 25.&nbsp; To Mr. Clement&rsquo;s, at Killadoon, who has lately
+built an excellent house, and planted much about it, with the satisfaction
+of finding that all his trees thrive well.&nbsp; I remarked the beech and
+larch seemed to get beyond the rest.&nbsp; He is also a good farmer.</p>
+<p>June 26.&nbsp; Breakfasted with Colonel Marlay, at Cellbridge, found he
+had practised husbandry with much success, and given great attention to it
+from the peace of 1763, which put a period to a gallant scene of service in
+Germany.&nbsp; Walked through his grounds, which I found in general very
+well cultivated; his fences excellent; his ditches five by six and seven by
+<!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>six;
+the banks well made, and planted with quicks; the borders dug away, covered
+with lime till perfectly slacked, them mixed with dung and carried into the
+fields, a practice which Mr. Marlay has found of very great benefit.</p>
+<p>Viewed Lucan, the seat of Agmondisham Vesey, Esq., on the banks of the
+Liffey.&nbsp; The house is rebuilding, but the wood on the river, with
+walks through it, is exceedingly beautiful.&nbsp; The character of the
+place is that of a sequestered shade.&nbsp; Distant views are everywhere
+shut out, and the objects all correspond perfectly with the impression they
+were designed to raise.&nbsp; It is a walk on the banks of the river,
+chiefly under a variety of fine wood, which rises on varied slopes, in some
+parts gentle, in others steep, spreading here and there into cool meadows,
+on the opposite shore, rich banks of wood or shrubby ground.&nbsp; The walk
+is perfectly sequestered, and has that melancholy gloom which should ever
+dwell in such a place.&nbsp; The river is of a character perfectly suited
+to the rest of the scenery, in some places breaking over rocks, in other
+silent, under the thick shade of spreading wood.&nbsp; Leaving Lucan, the
+next place is Leixlip, a fine one, on the river, with a fall, which in a
+wet season is considerable.&nbsp; Then St. Wolstan&rsquo;s, belonging to
+the Dean of Derry, a beautiful villa, which is also on the river; the
+grounds gay and open, though not without the advantage of much wood,
+disposed with judgment.&nbsp; A winding <!-- page 21--><a
+name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>shrubbery quits the
+river, and is made to lead through some dressed ground that is pretty and
+cheerful.</p>
+<p>Mr. Conolly&rsquo;s, at Castle Town, to which all travellers resort, is
+the finest house in Ireland, and not exceeded by many in England.&nbsp; It
+is a large handsome edifice, situated in the middle of an extensive lawn,
+which is quite surrounded with fine plantations disposed to the best
+advantage.&nbsp; To the north these unite into very large woods, through
+which many winding walks lead, with the convenience of several ornamented
+seats, rooms, etc.&nbsp; On the other side of the house, upon the river, is
+a cottage, with a shrubbery, prettily laid out; the house commands an
+extensive view, bounded by the Wicklow mountains.&nbsp; It consists of
+several noble apartments.&nbsp; On the first floor is a beautiful gallery,
+eighty feet long, elegantly fitted up.</p>
+<p>June 27.&nbsp; Left Lord Harcourt&rsquo;s, and having received an
+invitation from the Duke of Leinster, passed through Mr. Conolly&rsquo;s
+grounds to his Grace&rsquo;s seat at Cartown.&nbsp; The park ranks among
+the finest in Ireland.&nbsp; It is a vast lawn, which waves over gentle
+hills, surrounded by plantations of great extent, and which break and
+divide in places so as to give much variety.&nbsp; A large but gentle vale
+winds through the whole, in the bottom of which a small stream has been
+enlarged into a fine river, which throws a cheerfulness through most of the
+scenes: over it a handsome stone bridge.&nbsp; There is a great variety on
+the banks of this vale; part of it <!-- page 22--><a
+name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>consists of mild and
+gentle slopes, part steep banks of thick wood.&nbsp; In another place they
+are formed into a large shrubbery, very elegantly laid out, and dressed in
+the highest order, with a cottage, the scenery about which is uncommonly
+pleasing: and farther on this vale takes a stronger character, having a
+rocky bank on one side, and steep slopes scattered irregularly, with wood
+on the other.&nbsp; On one of the most rising grounds in the park is a
+tower, from the top of which the whole scenery is beheld; the park spreads
+on every side in fine sheets of lawn, kept in the highest order by eleven
+hundred sheep, scattered over with rich plantations, and bounded by a large
+margin of wood, through which is a riding.</p>
+<p>From hence took the road to Summerhill, the seat of the Right Hon. H. L.
+Rowley.&nbsp; The country is cheerful and rich; and if the Irish cabins
+continue like what I have hitherto seen, I shall not hesitate to pronounce
+their inhabitants as well off as most English cottagers.&nbsp; They are
+built of mud walls eighteen inches or two feet thick, and well thatched,
+which are far warmer than the thin clay walls in England.&nbsp; Here are
+few cottars without a cow, and some of them two.&nbsp; A bellyful
+invariably of potatoes, and generally turf for fuel from a bog.&nbsp; It is
+true they have not always chimneys to their cabins, the door serving for
+that and window too.&nbsp; If their eyes are not affected with the smoke,
+it may be an advantage in warmth.&nbsp; <!-- page 23--><a
+name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>Every cottage swarms
+with poultry, and most of them have pigs.</p>
+<p>Went in the evening to Lord Mornington&rsquo;s at Dangan, who is making
+many improvements, which he showed me.&nbsp; His plantations are extensive,
+and he has formed a large water, having five or six islands much varied,
+and promontories of high land shoot so far into it as to form almost
+distant lakes; the effect pleasing.&nbsp; There are above a hundred acres
+under water, and his lordship has planned a considerable addition to
+it.&nbsp; Returned to Summerhill.</p>
+<p>June 29.&nbsp; Left it, taking the road to Slaine, the country very
+pleasant all the way; much of it on the banks of the Boyne, variegated with
+some woods, planted hedgerows, and gentle hills.&nbsp; The cabins continue
+much the same, the same plenty of poultry, pigs, and cows.&nbsp; The cattle
+in the road have their fore legs all tied together with straw to keep them
+from breaking into the fields; even sheep, and pigs, are all in the same
+bondage.</p>
+<p>Lord Conyngham&rsquo;s seat, Slaine Castle, on the Boyne, is one of the
+most beautiful places I have seen; the grounds are very bold and various,
+rising round the castle in noble hills or beautiful inequalities of
+surface, with an outline of flourishing plantations.&nbsp; Under the castle
+flows the Boyne, in a reach broken by islands, with a very fine shore of
+rock on one side, and wood on the other.&nbsp; Through the lower
+plantations are <!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 24</span>ridings, which look upon several beautiful
+scenes formed by the river, and take in the distant country, exhibiting the
+noblest views of waving Cultinald hills, with the castle finely situated in
+the midst of the planted domain, through which the Boyne winds its
+beautiful course.</p>
+<p>Under Mr. Lambert&rsquo;s house on the same river is a most romantic and
+beautiful spot; rocks on the side, rising in peculiar forms very boldly;
+the other steep wood, the river bending short between them like a
+land-locked basin.</p>
+<p>Lord Conyngham&rsquo;s keeping up Slaine Castle, and spending great
+sums, though he rarely resides there, is an instance of magnificence not
+often met with; while it is so common for absentees to drain the kingdom of
+every shilling they can, so contrary a conduct ought to be held in the
+estimation which it justly deserves.</p>
+<p>June 30.&nbsp; Rode out to view the country and some improvements in the
+neighbourhood: the principal of which are those of Lord Chief Baron Foster,
+which I saw from Glaston hill, in the road from Slaine to Dundalk.</p>
+<p>In conversation with Lord Longford I made many inquiries concerning the
+state of the lower classes, and found that in some respects they were in
+good circumstances, in others indifferent; they have, generally speaking,
+such plenty of potatoes as always to <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>command a bellyful;
+they have flax enough for all their linen, most of them have a cow, and
+some two, and spin wool enough for their clothes; all a pig, and numbers of
+poultry, and in general the complete family of cows, calves, hogs, poultry,
+and children pig together in the cabin; fuel they have in the utmost
+plenty.&nbsp; Great numbers of families are also supported by the
+neighbouring lakes, which abound prodigiously with fish.&nbsp; A child with
+a packthread and a crooked pin will catch perch enough in an hour for the
+family to live on the whole day, and his lordship has seen five hundred
+children fishing at the same time, there being no tenaciousness in the
+proprietors of the lands about a right to the fish.&nbsp; Besides perch,
+there is pike upwards of five feet long, bream, tench, trout of ten pounds,
+and as red as salmon, and fine eels.&nbsp; All these are favourable
+circumstances, and are very conspicuous in the numerous and healthy
+families among them.</p>
+<p>Reverse the medal: they are ill clothed, and make a wretched appearance,
+and what is worse, are much oppressed by many who make them pay too dear
+for keeping a cow, horse, etc.&nbsp; They have a practice also of keeping
+accounts with the labourers, contriving by that means to let the poor
+wretches have very little cash for their year&rsquo;s work.&nbsp; This is a
+great oppression, farmers and gentlemen keeping accounts with the poor is a
+cruel abuse: so many days&rsquo; work for a cabin; so many for a potato
+garden; so many for keeping a <!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 26</span>horse, and so many for a cow, are clear
+accounts which a poor man can understand well, but farther it ought never
+to go; and when he has worked out what he has of this sort, the rest of his
+work ought punctually to be paid him every Saturday night.&nbsp; Another
+circumstance mentioned was the excessive practice they have in general of
+pilfering.&nbsp; They steal everything they can lay their hands on, and I
+should remark, that this is an account which has been very generally given
+me: all sorts of iron hinges, chains, locks, keys, etc.; gates will be cut
+in pieces, and conveyed away in many places as fast as built; trees as big
+as a man&rsquo;s body, and that would require ten men to move, gone in a
+night.&nbsp; Lord Longford has had the new wheels of a car stolen as soon
+as made.&nbsp; Good stones out of a wall will be taken for a fire-hearth,
+etc., though a breach is made to get at them.&nbsp; In short, everything,
+and even such as are apparently of no use to them; nor is it easy to catch
+them, for they never carry their stolen goods home, but to some
+bog-hole.&nbsp; Turnips are stolen by car-loads, and two acres of wheat
+plucked off in a night.&nbsp; In short, their pilfering and stealing is a
+perfect nuisance.&nbsp; How far it is owing to the oppression of laws aimed
+solely at the religion of these people, how far to the conduct of the
+gentlemen and farmers, and how far to the mischievous disposition of the
+people themselves, it is impossible for a passing traveller to
+ascertain.&nbsp; I am apt to believe that a better system of law and <!--
+page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>management
+would have good effects.&nbsp; They are much worse treated than the poor in
+England, are talked to in more opprobrious terms, and otherwise very much
+oppressed.</p>
+<p>Left Packenham Hall.</p>
+<p>Two or three miles from Lord Longford&rsquo;s in the way to Mullingar
+the road leads up a mountain, and commands an exceeding fine view of Lock
+Derrevaragh, a noble water eight miles long, and from two miles to half a
+mile over; a vast reach of it, like a magnificent river, opens as you rise
+the hill.&nbsp; Afterwards I passed under the principal mountain, which
+rises abruptly from the lake into the boldest outline imaginable.&nbsp; The
+water there is very beautiful, filling up the steep vale formed by this and
+the opposite hills.</p>
+<p>Reached Mullingar.</p>
+<p>It was one of the fair days.&nbsp; I saw many cows and beasts, and more
+horses, with some wool.&nbsp; The cattle were of the same breed that I had
+generally seen in coming through the country.</p>
+<p>July 5.&nbsp; Left Mullingar, which is a dirty ugly town, and taking the
+road to Tullamore, stopped at Lord Belvidere&rsquo;s, with which place I
+was as much struck as with any I had ever seen.&nbsp; The house is perched
+on the crown of a very beautiful little hill, half surrounded with others,
+variegated and melting into one another.&nbsp; It is one of the most
+singular places that is <!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 28</span>anywhere to be seen, and spreading to the eye a
+beautiful lawn of undulating ground margined with wood.&nbsp; Single trees
+are scattered in some places, and clumps in others; the general effect so
+pleasing, that were there nothing further, the place would be beautiful,
+but the canvas is admirably filled.&nbsp; Lake Ennel, many miles in length,
+and two or three broad, flows beneath the windows.&nbsp; It is spotted with
+islets, a promontory of rock fringed with trees shoots into it, and the
+whole is bounded by distant hills.&nbsp; Greater and more magnificent
+scenes are often met with, but nowhere a more beautiful or a more singular
+one.</p>
+<p>From Mullingar to Tullespace I found rents in general at twenty
+shillings an acre, with much relet at thirty shillings, yet all the crops
+except bere were very bad, and full of weeds.&nbsp; About the latter-named
+place the farms are generally from one hundred to three hundred acres; and
+their course: 1. fallow; 2. bere; 3. oats; 4. oats; 5. oats.&nbsp; Great
+quantities of potatoes all the way, crops from forty to eighty barrels.</p>
+<p>The road before it comes to Tullamore leads through a part of the bog of
+Allen, which seems here extensive, and would make a noble tract of
+meadow.&nbsp; The way the road was made over it was simply to cut a drain
+on each side, and then lay on the gravel, which, as fast as it was laid and
+spread, bore the ears.&nbsp; Along the edges is fine white clover.</p>
+<p>In conversation upon the subject of a union with <!-- page 29--><a
+name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>Great Britain, I was
+informed that nothing was so unpopular in Ireland as such an idea; and that
+the great objection to it was increasing the number of absentees.&nbsp;
+When it was in agitation, twenty peers and sixty commoners were talked of
+to sit in the British Parliament, which would be the resident of eighty of
+the best estates in Ireland.&nbsp; Going every year to England would, by
+degrees, make them residents; they would educate their children there, and
+in time become mere absentees: becoming so they would be unpopular, others
+would be elected, who, treading in the same steps, would yield the place
+still to others; and thus by degrees, a vast portion of the kingdom now
+resident would be made absentees, which would, they think, be so great a
+drain to Ireland, that a free trade would not repay it.</p>
+<p>I think the idea is erroneous, were it only for one circumstance, the
+kingdom would lose, according to this reasoning, an idle race of country
+gentlemen, and in exchange their ports would fill with ships and commerce,
+and all the consequences of commerce, an exchange that never yet proved
+disadvantageous to any country.</p>
+<p>Viewed Mount Juliet, Lord Carrick&rsquo;s seat, which is beautifully
+situated on a fine declivity on the banks of the Nore, commanding some
+extensive plantations that spread over the hills, which rise in a various
+manner on the other side of the river.&nbsp; A knoll of lawn rises <!--
+page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>among them
+with artificial ruins upon it, but the situation is not in unison with the
+idea of a ruin, very rarely placed to effect, unless in retired and
+melancholy spots.</p>
+<p>The river is a very fine one, and has a good accompaniment of well grown
+wood.&nbsp; From the cottage a more varied scene is viewed, cheering and
+pleasing; and from the tent in the farther plantation a yet gayer one,
+which looks down on several bends of the river.</p>
+<p>July 11.&nbsp; Left Kilsaine.&nbsp; Mr. Bushe accompanied me to
+Woodstock, the seat of Sir W. Fownes.&nbsp; From Thomastown hither is the
+finest ride I have yet had in Ireland.&nbsp; The road leaving Thomastown
+leads on the east side of the river, through some beautiful copse woods,
+which before they were cut must have had a most noble effect, with the
+river Nore winding at the bottom.&nbsp; The country then opens somewhat,
+and you pass most of the way for six or seven miles to Innisteague, on a
+declivity shelving down to the river, which takes a varied winding course,
+sometimes lively, breaking over a rocky bottom, at others still and deep
+under the gloom of some fine woods, which hang down the sides of steep
+hills.&nbsp; Narrow slips of meadow of a beautiful verdure in some places
+form the shore, and unite with cultivated fields that spread over the
+adjoining hills, reaching almost the mountain tops.&nbsp; These are large
+and bold, and give in general to the scenes features of great
+magnificence.&nbsp; Passed Sir John <!-- page 31--><a
+name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>Hasler&rsquo;s on the
+opposite side of the river, finely situated, and Mr. Nicholson&rsquo;s farm
+on this side, who has very extensive copses which line the river.&nbsp;
+Coming in sight of Sir W. Fownes&rsquo;s, the scenery is striking; the road
+mounts the side of the hill, and commands the river at the bottom of the
+declivity, with groups of trees prettily scattered about, and the little
+borough of Innisteague in a most picturesque situation, the whole bounded
+by mountains.&nbsp; Cross the bridge, and going through the town, take a
+path that leads to a small building in the woods, called Mount
+Sandford.&nbsp; It is at the top of a rocky declivity almost perpendicular,
+but with brush wood growing from the rocks.&nbsp; At the bottom is the
+river, which comes from the right from behind a very bold hanging wood,
+that seems to unite with the hill on the opposite shore.&nbsp; At this pass
+the river fills the vale, but it widens by degrees, and presents various
+reaches, intermixed with little tufts of trees.&nbsp; The bridge we passed
+over is half hid.&nbsp; Innisteague is mixed with them, and its buildings
+backed by a larger wood, give variety to the scene.&nbsp; Opposite to the
+point of view there are some pretty enclosures, fringed with wood, and a
+line of cultivated mountain sides, with their bare tops limit the
+whole.</p>
+<p>Taking my leave of Mr. Bushe, I followed the road to Ross.&nbsp; Passed
+Woodstock, of which there is a very fine view from the top of one of the
+hills, the house in the centre of a sloping wood of five hundred English
+<!-- page 32--><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+32</span>acres, and hanging in one noble shade to the river, which flows at
+the bottom of a winding glen.&nbsp; From the same hill in front it is seen
+in a winding course for many miles through a great extent of enclosures,
+bounded by mountains.&nbsp; As I advanced the views of the river Nore were
+very fine, till I came to Ross, where from the hill before you go down to
+the ferry is a noble scene of the Barrow, a vast river flowing through bold
+shores.&nbsp; In some places trees on the bank half obscure it, in others
+it opens in large reaches, the effect equally grand and beautiful.&nbsp;
+Ships sailing up to the town, which is built on the side of a hill to the
+water&rsquo;s edge, enliven the scene not a little.&nbsp; The water is very
+deep and the navigation secure, so that ships of seven hundred tons may
+come up to the town; but these noble harbours on the coast of Ireland are
+only melancholy capabilities of commerce: it is languid and trifling.&nbsp;
+There are only four or five brigs and sloops that belong to the place.</p>
+<p>Having now passed through a considerable extent of country, in which the
+Whiteboys were common, and committed many outrages, I shall here review the
+intelligence I received concerning them throughout the county of
+Kilkenny.&nbsp; I made many inquiries into the origin of those
+disturbances, and found that no such thing as a leveller or Whiteboy was
+heard of till 1760, which was long after the landing of Thurot, or the
+intending expedition of M. Conflans.&nbsp; That no foreign <!-- page
+33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 33</span>coin was ever
+seen among them, though reports to the contrary were circulated; and in all
+the evidence that was taken during ten or twelve years, in which time there
+appeared a variety of informers, none was ever taken, whose testimony could
+be relied on, that ever proved any foreign interposition.&nbsp; Those very
+few who attempted to favour it, were of the most infamous and perjured
+characters.&nbsp; All the rest, whose interest it was to make the
+discovery, if they had known it, and who concealed nothing else, pretended
+to no such knowledge.&nbsp; No foreign money appeared, no arms of foreign
+construction, no presumptive proof whatever of such a connection.&nbsp;
+They began in Tipperary, and were owing to some inclosures of commons,
+which they threw down, levelling the ditches, and were first known by the
+name of Levellers.&nbsp; After that, they began with the tithe-proctors
+(who are men that hire tithes of the rectors), and these proctors either
+screwed the cottars up to the utmost shilling, or relet the tithes to such
+as did it.&nbsp; It was a common practice with them to go in parties about
+the country, swearing many to be true to them, and forcing them to join by
+menaces, which they very often carried into execution.&nbsp; At last they
+set up to be general redressers of grievances, punished all obnoxious
+persons who advanced the value of lands, or hired farms over their heads;
+and, having taken the administration of justice into their hands, were not
+very exact in the distribution <!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 34</span>of it.&nbsp; Forced masters to release their
+apprentices, carried off the daughters of rich farmers, and ravished them
+into marriages, of which four instances happened in a fortnight.&nbsp; They
+levied sums of money on the middling and lower farmers in order to support
+their cause, by paying attorneys, etc., in defending prosecutions against
+them; and many of them subsisted for some years without work, supported by
+these contributions.&nbsp; Sometimes they committed several considerable
+robberies, breaking into houses, and taking the money, under pretence of
+redressing grievances.&nbsp; In the course of these outrages they burnt
+several houses, and destroyed the whole substance of men obnoxious to
+them.&nbsp; The barbarities they committed were shocking.&nbsp; One of
+their usual punishments (and by no means the most severe) was taking people
+out of their beds, carrying them naked in winter on horseback for some
+distance, and burying them up to their chin in a hole filled with briars,
+not forgetting to cut off their ears.&nbsp; In this manner the evil existed
+for eight or ten years, during which time the gentlemen of the country took
+some measures to quell them.&nbsp; Many of the magistrates were active in
+apprehending them; but the want of evidence prevented punishments, for many
+of those who even suffered by them had no spirit to prosecute.&nbsp; The
+gentlemen of the country had frequent expeditions to discover them in arms;
+but their intelligence was so uncommonly good by their influence over the
+<!-- page 35--><a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+35</span>common people, that not one party that ever went out in quest of
+them was successful.&nbsp; Government offered large rewards for
+informations, which brought a few every year to the gallows, without any
+radical cure for the evil.&nbsp; The reason why it was not more effective
+was the necessity of any person that gave evidence against them quitting
+their houses and country, or remaining exposed to their resentment.&nbsp;
+At last their violence arose to a height which brought on their
+suppression.&nbsp; The popish inhabitants of Ballyragget, six miles from
+Kilkenny, were the first of the lower people who dared openly to associate
+against them; they threatened destruction to the town, gave notice that
+they would attack it, were as good as their word, came two hundred strong,
+drew up before a house in which were fifteen armed men, and fired in at the
+windows; the fifteen men handled their arms so well, that in a few rounds
+they killed forty or fifty.&nbsp; They fled immediately, and ever after
+left Ballyragget in peace: indeed, they have never been resisted at all
+without showing a great want of both spirit and discipline.&nbsp; It
+should, however, be observed, that they had but very few arms, those in bad
+order, and no cartridges.&nbsp; Soon after this they attacked the house of
+Mr. Power in Tipperary, the history of which is well known.&nbsp; His
+murder spirited up the gentlemen to exert themselves in suppressing the
+evil, especially in raising subscriptions to give private rewards to
+whoever would <!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+36</span>give evidence or information concerning them.&nbsp; The private
+distribution had much more effect than larger sums which required a public
+declaration; and Government giving rewards to those who resisted them,
+without having previously promised it, had likewise some effect.&nbsp; Laws
+were passed for punishing all who assembled, and (what may have a great
+effect) for recompensing, at the expense of the county or barony, all
+persons who suffered by their outrages.&nbsp; In consequence of this
+general exertion, above twenty were capitally convicted, and most of them
+executed; and the gaols of this and the three neighbouring counties,
+Carlow, Tipperary, and Queen&rsquo;s County, have many in them whose trials
+are put off till next assizes, and against whom sufficient evidence for
+conviction, it is supposed, will appear.&nbsp; Since this all has been
+quiet, and no outrages have been committed: but before I quit the subject,
+it is proper to remark that what coincided very much to abate the evil was
+the fall in the price of lands which has taken place lately.&nbsp; This is
+considerable, and has much lessened the evil of hiring farms over the heads
+of one another; perhaps, also, the tithe-proctors have not been quite so
+severe in their extortions: but this observation is by no means general;
+for in many places tithes yet continue to be levied with all those
+circumstances which originally raised the evil.</p>
+<p>July 15.&nbsp; Leaving Courtown, took the Arklow road; <!-- page 37--><a
+name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>passed a finely wooded
+park of Mr. Ram&rsquo;s, and a various country with some good corn in
+it.&nbsp; Flat lands by the coast let very high, and mountain at six or
+seven shillings an acre, and some at eight shillings or ten
+shillings.&nbsp; Passed to Wicklow, prettily situated on the sea, and from
+Newrybridge walked to see Mr. Tye&rsquo;s, which is a neat farm, well
+wooded, with a river running through the fields.</p>
+<p>Reached in the evening Mount Kennedy, the seat of General Cunninghame,
+who fortunately proved to me an instructor as assiduous as he is
+able.&nbsp; He is in the midst of a country almost his own, for he has
+10,000 Irish acres here.&nbsp; His domain, and the grounds about it, are
+very beautiful; not a level can be seen; every spot is tossed about in a
+variety of hill and dale.&nbsp; In the middle of the lawn is one of the
+greatest natural curiosities in the kingdom: an immense arbutus tree,
+unfortunately blown down, but yet vegetating.&nbsp; One branch, which parts
+from the body near the ground, and afterwards into many large branches, is
+six feet two inches in circumference.&nbsp; The General buried part of the
+stem as it laid, and it is from several branches throwing out fine young
+shoots: it is a most venerable remnant.&nbsp; Killarney, the region of the
+arbutus, boasts of no such tree as this.</p>
+<p>July 16.&nbsp; Rode in the morning to Drum; a large extent of mountains
+and wood on the General&rsquo;s estate.&nbsp; It is a very noble scenery; a
+vast rocky glen; one side <!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 38</span>bare rocks to an immense height, hanging in a
+thousand whimsical yet frightful forms, with vast fragments tumbled from
+them, and lying in romantic confusion; the other a fine mountain side
+covered with shrubby wood.&nbsp; This wild pass leads to the bottom of an
+amphitheatre of mountain, which exhibits a very noble scenery.&nbsp; To the
+right is an immense sweep of mountain completely wooded; taken as a single
+object it is a most magnificent one, but its forms are picturesque in the
+highest degree; great projections of hill, with glens behind all wooded,
+have a noble effect.&nbsp; Every feature of the whole view is great, and
+unites to form a scene of natural magnificence.&nbsp; From hence a riding
+is cut through the hanging wood, which rises to a central spot, where the
+General has cleared away the rubbish from under the wood, and made a
+beautiful waving lawn with many oaks and hollies scattered about it: here
+he has built a cottage, a pretty, whimsical oval room, from the windows of
+which are three views, one of distant rich lands opening to the sea, one
+upon a great mountain, and a third upon a part of the lawn.&nbsp; It is
+well placed, and forms upon the whole a most agreeable retreat.</p>
+<p>July 17.&nbsp; Took my leave of General Cunninghame, and went through
+the glen of the downs in my way to Powerscourt.&nbsp; The glen is a pass
+between two vast ridges of mountains covered with wood, which have a very
+noble effect.&nbsp; The vale is no wider than to admit <!-- page 39--><a
+name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>the road, a small
+gurgling river almost by its side, and narrow slips of rocky and shrubby
+ground which part them.&nbsp; In the front all escape seems denied by an
+immense conical mountain, which rises out of the glen and seems to fill it
+up.&nbsp; The scenery is of a most magnificent character.&nbsp; On the top
+of the ridge to the right Mr. La Touche has a banqueting-room.&nbsp;
+Passing from this sublime scene, the road leads through cheerful grounds
+all under corn, rising and falling to the eye, and then to a vale of
+charming verdure broken into inclosures, and bounded by two rocky
+mountains, distant darker mountains filling up the scene in front.&nbsp;
+This whole ride is interesting, for within a mile and a half of
+&ldquo;Tinnyhinch&rdquo; (the inn to which I was directed), you come to a
+delicious view on the right: a small vale opening to the sea, bounded by
+mountains, whose dark shade forms a perfect contrast to the extreme beauty
+and lively verdure of the lower scene, consisting of gently swelling lawns
+rising from each other, with groups of trees between, and the whole so
+prettily scattered with white farms, as to add every idea of
+cheerfulness.&nbsp; Kept on towards Powerscourt, which presently came in
+view from the edge of a declivity.&nbsp; You look full upon the house,
+which appears to be in the most beautiful situation in the world, on the
+side of a mountain, half-way between its bare top and an irriguous vale at
+its foot.&nbsp; In front, and spreading among woods on either side, is a
+lawn whose surface is <!-- page 40--><a name="page40"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 40</span>beautifully varied in gentle declivities,
+hanging to a winding river.</p>
+<p>Lowering the hill the scenery is yet more agreeable.&nbsp; The near
+inclosures are margined with trees, through whose open branches are seen
+whole fields of the most lively verdure.&nbsp; The trees gather into
+groups, and the lawn swells into gentle inequalities, while the river
+winding beneath renders the whole truly pleasing.</p>
+<p>Breakfasted at the inn at Tinnyhinch, and then drove to the park to see
+the waterfall.&nbsp; The park itself is fine; you enter it between two vast
+masses of mountain, covered with wood, forming a vale scattered with trees,
+through which flows a river on a broken rocky channel.&nbsp; You follow
+this vale till it is lost in a most uncommon manner; the ridges of
+mountain, closing, form one great amphitheatre of wood, from the top of
+which, at the height of many hundred feet, bursts the water from a rock,
+and tumbling down the side of a very large one, forms a scene singularly
+beautiful.&nbsp; At the bottom is a spot of velvet turf, from which rises a
+clump of oaks, and through their stems, branches and leaves, the falling
+water is seen as a background, with an effect more picturesque than can be
+well imagined.&nbsp; These few trees, and this little lawn, give the
+finishing to the scene.&nbsp; The water falls behind some large fragments
+of rock, and turns to the left, down a stony channel, under the shade of a
+wood.</p>
+<p>Returning to Tinnyhinch, I went to Inniskerry, and <!-- page 41--><a
+name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>gained by this detour
+in my return to go to the Dargle, a beautiful view which I should otherwise
+have lost.&nbsp; The road runs on the edge of a declivity, from whence
+there is a most pleasing prospect of the river&rsquo;s course through the
+vale and the wood of Powerscourt, which here appear in large masses of dark
+shade, the whole bounded by mountains.&nbsp; Turn to the left into the
+private road that leads to the Dargle, and presently it gives a specimen of
+what is to be expected by a romantic glen of wood, where the high lands
+almost lock into each other, and leave scarce a passage for the river at
+bottom, which rages as if with difficulty forcing its way.&nbsp; It is
+topped by a high mountain, and in front you catch a beautiful plat of
+inclosures bounded by the sea.&nbsp; Enter the Dargle, which is the name of
+a glen near a mile long, come presently to one of the finest ranges of wood
+I have anywhere seen.&nbsp; It is a narrow glen or vale formed by the sides
+of two opposite mountains; the whole thickly spread with oak wood.&nbsp; At
+the bottom (and the depth is immense), it is narrowed to the mere channel
+of the river, which rather tumbles from rock to rock than runs.&nbsp; The
+extent of wood that hangs to the eye in every direction is great, the depth
+of the precipice on which you stand immense, which with the roar of the
+water at bottom forms a scene truly interesting.&nbsp; In less than a
+quarter of a mile, the road passing through the wood leads to another point
+of view to the right.&nbsp; It is the crown of <!-- page 42--><a
+name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>a vast projecting rock,
+from which you look down a precipice absolutely perpendicular, and many
+hundred feet deep, upon the torrent at the bottom, which finds its noisy
+way over large fragments of rock.&nbsp; The point of view is a great
+projection of the mountain on this side, answered by a concave of the
+opposite, so that you command the glen both to the right and left.&nbsp; It
+exhibits on both immense sheets of forest, which have a most magnificent
+appearance.&nbsp; Beyond the wood to the right, are some inclosures hanging
+on the side of a hill, crowned by a mountain.&nbsp; I knew not how to leave
+so interesting a spot; the impressions raised by it are strong.&nbsp; The
+solemnity of such an extent of wood unbroken by any intervening objects,
+and the whole hanging over declivities, is alone great; but to this the
+addition of a constant roar of falling water, either quite hid, or so far
+below as to be seen but obscurely, united to make those impressions
+stronger.&nbsp; No contradictory emotions are raised; no ill-judged temples
+appear to enliven a scene that is gloomy rather than gay.&nbsp; Falling or
+moving water is a lively object; but this being obscure the noise operates
+differently.&nbsp; Following the road a little further, there is another
+bold rocky projection from which also there is a double view to the right
+and left.&nbsp; In front so immense a sweep of hanging wood, that a nobler
+scene can hardly be imagined; the river as before, at the bottom of the
+precipice, which is so <!-- page 43--><a name="page43"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 43</span>steep and the depth so great as to be quite
+fearful to look down.&nbsp; This horrid precipice, the pointed bleak
+mountains in view, with the roar of the water, all conspire to raise one
+great emotion of the sublime.&nbsp; You advance scarcely twenty yards
+before a pretty scene opens to the left&mdash;a distant landscape of
+inclosures, with a river winding between the hills to the sea.&nbsp;
+Passing to the right, fresh scenes of wood appear; half-way to the bottom,
+one different from the preceding is seen; you are almost inclosed in wood,
+and look to the right through some low oaks on the opposite bank of wood,
+with an edging of trees through which the sky is seen, which, added to an
+uncommon elegance in the outline of the hill, has a most pleasing
+effect.&nbsp; Winding down to a thatched bench on a rocky point, you look
+upon an uncommon scene.&nbsp; Immediately beneath is a vast chasm in the
+rock, which seems torn asunder to let the torrent through that comes
+tumbling over a rocky bed far sunk into a channel embosomed in wood.&nbsp;
+Above is a range of gloomy obscure woods, which half overshadow it, and
+rising to a vast height, exclude every object.&nbsp; To the left the water
+rolls away over broken rocks&mdash;a scene duly romantic.&nbsp; Followed
+the path: it led me to the water&rsquo;s edge, at the bottom of the glen,
+where is a new scene, in which not a single circumstance hurts the
+principal character.&nbsp; In a hollow formed of rock and wood (every
+object excluded but those and water) the torrent breaks forth from <!--
+page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>fragments
+of rock, and tumbles through the chasm, rocks bulging over it as if ready
+to fall into the channel and stop the impetuous water.&nbsp; The shade is
+so thick as to exclude the heavens; all is retired and gloomy, a brown
+horror breathing over the whole.&nbsp; It is a spot for melancholy to muse
+in.</p>
+<p>Return to the carriage, and quit the Dargle, which upon the whole is a
+very singular place, different from all I have seen in England, and I think
+preferable to most.&nbsp; Cross a murmuring stream, clear as crystal, and,
+rising a hill, look back on a pleasing landscape of inclosures, which,
+waving over hills, end in mountains of a very noble character.&nbsp; Reach
+Dublin.</p>
+<p>July 20.&nbsp; To Drogheda, a well-built town, active in trade, the
+Boyne bringing ships to it.&nbsp; It was market-day, and I found the
+quantity of corn, etc., and the number of people assembled, very great; few
+country markets in England more thronged.&nbsp; The Rev. Mr. Nesbit, to
+whom recommended, absent, which was a great loss to me, as I had several
+inquiries which remained unsatisfied.</p>
+<p>To the field of battle on the Boyne.&nbsp; The view of the scene from a
+rising ground which looks down upon it is exceedingly beautiful, being one
+of the completest landscapes I have seen.&nbsp; It is a vale, losing itself
+in front between bold declivities, above which are some thick woods and
+distant country.&nbsp; Through the vale the river winds and forms an
+island, the point of which <!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 45</span>is tufted with trees in the prettiest manner
+imaginable; on the other side a rich scenery of wood, among which is Dr.
+Norris&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; To the right, on a rising ground on the banks
+of the river, is the obelisk, backed by a very bold declivity.&nbsp;
+Pursued the road till near it, quitted my chaise, and walked to the foot of
+it.&nbsp; It is founded on a rock which rises boldly from the river.&nbsp;
+It is a noble pillar, and admirably placed.&nbsp; I seated myself on the
+opposite rock, and indulged the emotions which, with a melancholy not
+unpleasing, filled my bosom, while I reflected on the consequences that had
+sprung from the victory here obtained.&nbsp; Liberty was then
+triumphant.&nbsp; May the virtues of our posterity secure that prize which
+the bravery of their ancestors won!&nbsp; Peace to the memory of the Prince
+to whom, whatever might be his failings, we owed that day memorable in the
+annals of Europe!</p>
+<p>Returned part of the way, and took the road to Cullen, where the Lord
+Chief Baron Forster received me in the most obliging manner, and gave me a
+variety of information uncommonly valuable.&nbsp; He has made the greatest
+improvements I have anywhere met with.&nbsp; The whole country twenty-two
+years ago was a waste sheep-walk, covered chiefly with heath, with some
+dwarf furze and fern.&nbsp; The cabins and people as miserable as can be
+conceived; not a Protestant in the country, nor a road passable for a
+carriage.&nbsp; In a word, perfectly resembling other mountainous tracts,
+<!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>and
+the whole yielding a rent of not more than from three shillings to four
+shillings an acre.&nbsp; Mr. Forster could not bear so barren a property,
+and determined to attempt the improvement of an estate of five thousand
+acres till then deemed irreclaimable.&nbsp; He encouraged the tenants by
+every species of persuasion and expense, but they had so ill an opinion of
+the land that he was forced to begin with two or three thousand acres in
+his own hands; he did not, however, turn out the people, but kept them in
+to see the effects of his operations.</p>
+<p>To Dundalk.&nbsp; The view down on this town also very beautiful:
+swelling hills of a fine verdure, with many rich inclosures backed by a
+bold outline of mountain that is remarkable.&nbsp; Laid at the Clanbrassil
+Arms, and found it a very good inn.&nbsp; The place, like most of the Irish
+towns I have been in, full of new buildings, with every mark of increasing
+wealth and prosperity.&nbsp; A cambric manufacture was established here by
+Parliament, but failed; it was, however, the origin of that more to the
+north.</p>
+<p>July 22.&nbsp; Left Dundalk, took the road through Ravensdale to Mr.
+Fortescue, to whom I had a letter, but unfortunately he was in the South of
+Ireland.&nbsp; Here I saw many good stone and slate houses, and some bleach
+greens; and I was much pleased to see the inclosures creeping high up the
+sides of the mountains, stony as they are.&nbsp; Mr. Fortescue&rsquo;s
+situation is very <!-- page 47--><a name="page47"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 47</span>romantic&mdash;on the side of a mountain, with
+fine wood hanging on every side, with the lawn beautifully scattered with
+trees spreading into them, and a pretty river winding through the vale,
+beautiful in itself, but trebly so on information that before he fixed
+there it was all a wild waste.&nbsp; Rents in Ravensdale ten shillings;
+mountain land two shillings and sixpence to five shillings.&nbsp; Also
+large tracts rented by villages, the cottars dividing it among themselves,
+and making the mountain common for their cattle.</p>
+<p>Breakfasted at Newry&mdash;the Globe, another good inn.&nbsp; This town
+appears exceedingly flourishing, and is very well built; yet forty years
+ago, I was told, there were nothing but mud cabins in it.&nbsp; This great
+rise has been much owing to the canal to Loch Neagh.&nbsp; I crossed it
+twice; it is indeed a noble work.&nbsp; I was amazed to see ships of one
+hundred and fifty tons and more lying in it, like barges in an English
+canal.&nbsp; Here is a considerable trade.</p>
+<p>Reached Armagh in the evening, and waited on the Primate.</p>
+<p>July 23.&nbsp; His Grace rode out with me to Armagh, and showed me some
+of the noble and spirited works by which he has perfectly changed the face
+of the neighbourhood.&nbsp; The buildings he has erected in seven years,
+one would suppose, without previous information, to be the work of an
+active life.&nbsp; A list of them will justify this observation.</p>
+<p><!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>He
+has erected a very elegant palace, ninety feet by sixty, and forty high, in
+which an unadorned simplicity reigns.&nbsp; It is light and pleasing,
+without the addition of wings or lesser parts, which too frequently wanting
+a sufficient uniformity with the body of the edifice, are unconnected with
+it in effect, and divide the attention.&nbsp; Large and ample offices are
+conveniently placed behind a plantation at a small distance.&nbsp; Around
+the palace is a large lawn, which spreads on every side over the hills, and
+is skirted by young plantations, in one of which is a terrace, which
+commands a most beautiful view of cultivated hill and dale.&nbsp; The view
+from the palace is much improved by the barracks, the school, and a new
+church at a distance, all which are so placed as to be exceedingly
+ornamental to the whole country.</p>
+<p>The barracks were erected under his Grace&rsquo;s directions, and form a
+large and handsome edifice.&nbsp; The school is a building of considerable
+extent, and admirably adapted for the purpose: a more convenient or a
+better contrived one is nowhere to be seen.&nbsp; There are apartments for
+a master, a school-room fifty-six feet by twenty-eight, a large
+dining-room, and spacious, airy dormitories, with every other necessary,
+and a spacious playground walled in; the whole forming a handsome front:
+and attention being paid to the residence of the master (the salary is four
+hundred pounds a year), the school flourishes, and must prove one of the
+greatest advantages to the country <!-- page 49--><a
+name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>of anything that could
+have been established.&nbsp; This edifice entirely at the Primate&rsquo;s
+expense.&nbsp; The church is erected of white stone, and having a tall
+spire makes a very agreeable object in a country where churches and spires
+do not abound&mdash;at least, such as are worth looking at.&nbsp; Three
+other churches the Primate has also built, and done considerable
+reparations to the cathedral.</p>
+<p>He has been the means also of erecting a public infirmary, which was
+built by subscription, contributing amply to it himself.</p>
+<p>A public library he has erected at his own expense, given a large
+collection of books, and endowed it.&nbsp; The room is excellently adapted,
+forty-five feet by twenty-five, and twenty high, with a gallery, and
+apartments for a librarian.</p>
+<p>He has further ornamented the city with a market-house and shambles, and
+been the direct means, by giving leases upon that condition, of almost
+new-building the whole place.&nbsp; He found it a nest of mud cabins, and
+he will leave it a well-built city of stone and slate.&nbsp; I heard it
+asserted in common conversation that his Grace, in these noble
+undertakings, had not expended less than thirty thousand pounds, besides
+what he had been the means of doing, though not directly at his own
+expense.</p>
+<p>In the evening reached Mr. Brownlow&rsquo;s at Lurgan, to whom I am
+indebted for some valuable information.&nbsp; <!-- page 50--><a
+name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>This gentleman has made
+very great improvements in his domain.&nbsp; He has a lake at the bottom of
+a slight vale, and around are three walks, at a distance from each other;
+the centre one is the principal, and extends two miles.&nbsp; It is well
+conducted for leading to the most agreeable parts of the grounds, and for
+commanding views of Loch Neagh, and the distant country.&nbsp; There are
+several buildings, a temple, green-house, etc.&nbsp; The most beautiful
+scene is from a bench on a gently swelling hill, which rises almost on
+every side from the water.&nbsp; The wood, the water, and the green slopes,
+here unite to form a very pleasing landscape.&nbsp; Let me observe one
+thing much to his honour; he advances his tenants money for all the lime
+they choose, and takes payment in eight years with rent.</p>
+<p>Upon inquiring concerning the emigrations, I found that in 1772 and 1773
+they were at the height; that some went from this neighbourhood with
+property, but not many.&nbsp; They were in general poor and
+unemployed.&nbsp; They find here that when provisions are very cheap, the
+poor spend much of their time in whisky-houses.&nbsp; All the drapers wish
+that oatmeal was never under one penny a pound.&nbsp; Though farms are
+exceedingly divided, yet few of the people raise oatmeal enough to feed
+themselves; all go to market for some.&nbsp; The weavers earn by coarse
+linens one shilling a day, by fine one shilling and fourpence, and it is
+the same with the spinners&mdash;the finer the yarn, the more they <!--
+page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>earn; but
+in common a woman earns about threepence.&nbsp; For coarse linens they do
+not reckon the flax hurt by standing for seed.&nbsp; Their own flax is much
+better than the imported.</p>
+<p>This country is in general beautiful, but particularly so about the
+straits that lead into Strangford Loch.&nbsp; From Mr. Savage&rsquo;s door
+the view has great variety.&nbsp; To the left are tracts of hilly grounds,
+between which the sea appears, and the vast chain of mountains in the Isle
+of Man distinctly seen.&nbsp; In front the hills rise in a beautiful
+outline, and a round hill projects like a promontory into the strait, and
+under it the town amidst groups of trees; the scene is cheerful of itself,
+but rendered doubly so by the ships and herring-boats sailing in and
+out.&nbsp; To the right the view is crowned by the mountains of Mourne,
+which, wherever seen, are of a character peculiarly bold, and even
+terrific.&nbsp; The shores of the loch behind Mr. Savage&rsquo;s are bold
+ground, abounding with numerous pleasing landscapes; the opposite coast,
+consisting of the woods and improvements of Castle Ward, is a fine
+scenery.</p>
+<p>Called at Lord Bangor&rsquo;s, at Castle Ward, to deliver a letter of
+recommendations but unfortunately he was on a sailing party to England;
+walked through the woods, etc.&nbsp; The house was built by the present
+lord.&nbsp; It is a very handsome edifice, with two principal fronts, but
+not of the same architecture, for the one is Gothic and the other
+Grecian.&nbsp; From the temple is a fine <!-- page 52--><a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>wooded scene: you look
+down on a glen of wood, with a winding hill quite covered with it, and
+which breaks the view of a large bay.&nbsp; Over it appears the peninsula
+of Strangford, which consists of enclosures and wood.&nbsp; To the right
+the bay is bounded by a fine grove, which projects into it.&nbsp; A ship at
+anchor added much.&nbsp; The house well situated above several rising
+woods; the whole scene a fine one.&nbsp; I remarked in Lord Bangor&rsquo;s
+domains a fine field of turnips, but unhoed.&nbsp; There were some cabbages
+also.</p>
+<p>Belfast is a very well built town of brick, they having no stone quarry
+in the neighbourhood.&nbsp; The streets are broad and straight, and the
+inhabitants, amounting to about fifteen thousand, make it appear lively and
+busy.&nbsp; The public buildings are not numerous nor very striking, but
+over the exchange Lord Donegal is building an assembly room, sixty feet
+long by thirty broad, and twenty-four high; a very elegant room.&nbsp; A
+card-room adjoining, thirty by twenty-two, and twenty-two high; a tea-room
+of the same size.&nbsp; His lordship is also building a new church, which
+is one of the lightest and most pleasing I have anywhere seen: it is
+seventy-four by fifty-four, and thirty high to the cornice, the aisles
+separated by a double row of columns; nothing can be lighter or more
+pleasing.&nbsp; The town belongs entirely to his lordship.&nbsp; Rent of it
+&pound;2,000 a year.&nbsp; His estate extends from Drumbridge, near
+Lisburn, to Larne, twenty miles in a right line, <!-- page 53--><a
+name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>and is ten broad.&nbsp;
+His royalties are great, containing the whole of Loch Neagh, which is, I
+suppose, the greatest of any subject in Europe.&nbsp; His eel fishery at
+Tome, and Port New, on the river Ban, lets for &pound;500 a year; and all
+the fisheries are his to the leap at Coleraine.&nbsp; The estate is
+supposed to be &pound;31,000 a year, the greatest at present in
+Ireland.&nbsp; Inishowen, in Donegal, is his, and is &pound;11,000 of
+it.&nbsp; In Antrim, Lord Antrim&rsquo;s is the most extensive property,
+being four baronies, and one hundred and seventy-three thousand
+acres.&nbsp; The rent &pound;8,000 a year, but re-let for &pound;64,000 a
+year, by tenants that have perpetuities, perhaps the cruellest instance in
+the world of carelessness for the interests of posterity.&nbsp; The present
+lord&rsquo;s father granted those leases.</p>
+<p>I was informed that Mr. Isaac, near Belfast, had four acres, Irish
+measure, of strong clay land not broken up for many years, which being
+amply manured with lime rubbish and sea shells, and fallowed, was sown with
+wheat, and yielded &pound;87 9s. at 9s. to 12s. per cwt.&nbsp; Also that
+Mr. Whitley, of Ballinderry, near Lisburn, a tenant of Lord
+Hertford&rsquo;s, has rarely any wheat that does not yield him &pound;18 an
+acre.&nbsp; The tillage of the neighbourhood for ten miles round is doubled
+in a few years.&nbsp; Shall export one thousand tons of corn this year from
+Belfast, most of it to the West Indies, particularly oats.</p>
+<p>August 1.&nbsp; To Arthur Buntin&rsquo;s, Esq., near Belfast; <!-- page
+54--><a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 54</span>the soil a
+stiff clay; lets at old rents 10s., new one 18s., the town parks of that
+place 30s. to 70s., ten miles round it 10s. to 20s., average 13s.&nbsp; A
+great deal of flax sown, every countryman having a little, always on potato
+land, and one ploughing: they usually sow each family a bushel of
+seed.&nbsp; Those who have no land pay the farmers 20s. rent for the land a
+bushel of seed sows, and always on potato land.&nbsp; They plant many more
+potatoes than they eat, to supply the market at Belfast; manure for them
+with all their dung, and some of them mix dung, earth, and lime, and this
+is found to do better.&nbsp; There is much alabaster near the town, which
+is used for stucco plaster; sells from &pound;1 1s. to 25s. a ton.</p>
+<p>On my way to Antrim, viewed the bleach green of Mr. Thomas Sinclair; it
+is the completest I have seen here.&nbsp; I understood that the bleaching
+season lasted nine months, and that watering on the grass was quite left
+off.&nbsp; Mr. Sinclair himself was not at home, or I should probably have
+gained some intelligence that might have been useful.</p>
+<p>Crossed the mountains by the new road to Antrim, and found them to the
+summits to consist of exceeding good loam, and such as would improve into
+good meadow.&nbsp; It is all thrown to the little adjoining farms, with
+very little or any rent paid for it.&nbsp; They make no other use of it
+than turning their cows on.&nbsp; Pity they do not improve; a work more
+profitable <!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+55</span>than any they could undertake.&nbsp; All the way to Antrim lands
+let, at an average, at 8s.&nbsp; The linen manufacture spreads over the
+whole country, consequently the farms are very small, being nothing but
+patches for the convenience of weavers.</p>
+<p>From Antrim to Shanes Castle the road runs at the end of Loch Neagh,
+commanding a noble view of it; of such an extent that the eye can see no
+land over it.&nbsp; It appears like a perfect sea, and the shore is broken
+sand-banks, which look so much like it, that one can hardly believe the
+water to be fresh.&nbsp; Upon my arrival at the castle, I was most
+agreeably saluted with four men hoeing a field of turnips round it, as a
+preparation for grass.&nbsp; These were the first turnip-hoers I have seen
+in Ireland, and I was more pleased than if I had seen four emperors.</p>
+<p>The castle is beautifully situated on the lake, the windows commanding a
+very noble view of it; and this has the finer effect, as the woods are
+considerable, and form a fine accompaniment to this noble inland sea.</p>
+<p>Rode from Mr. Lesly&rsquo;s to view the Giant&rsquo;s Causeway.&nbsp; It
+is certainly a very great curiosity as an object for speculation upon the
+manner of its formation; whether it owes its origin to fire, and is a
+species of lava, or to crystallisation, or to whatever cause, is a point
+that has employed the attention of men much more able to decide upon it
+than I am; and has been <!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 56</span>so often treated, that nothing I could say
+could be new.&nbsp; When two bits of these basalts are rubbed together
+quick, they emit a considerable scent like burnt leather.&nbsp; The scenery
+of the Causeway, nor of the adjacent mountains, is very magnificent, though
+the cliffs are bold; but for a considerable distance there is a strong
+disposition in the rocks to run into pentagonal cylinders, and even at a
+bridge by Mr. Lesly&rsquo;s is a rock in which the same disposition is
+plainly visible.&nbsp; I believe the Causeway would have struck me more if
+I had not seen the prints of Staffa.</p>
+<p>Returned to Lesly Hill, and on August 5th departed for Coleraine.&nbsp;
+There the Right Hon. Mr. Jackson assisted me with the greatest politeness
+in procuring the intelligence I wished about the salmon fishery, which is
+the greatest in the kingdom, and viewed both fisheries, above and below the
+town, very pleasantly situated on the river Ban.&nbsp; The salmon spawn in
+all the rivers that run into the Ban about the beginning of August, and as
+soon as they have done, swim to the sea, where they stay till January, when
+they begin to return to the fresh water, and continue doing it till August,
+in which voyage they are taken.&nbsp; The nets are set in the middle of
+January, but by Act of Parliament no nets nor weirs can be kept down after
+the 12th of August.&nbsp; All the fisheries on the river Ban let at
+&pound;6,000 a year.&nbsp; From the sea to the rock above Coleraine, where
+the weirs are built, belongs to <!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 57</span>the London companies; the greatest part of the
+rest to Lord Donegal.&nbsp; The eel fisheries let at &pound;1,000 a year,
+and the salmon fisheries at Coleraine at &pound;1,000.&nbsp; The eels make
+periodical voyages, as the salmon, but instead of spawning in the fresh
+water, they go to the sea to spawn, and the young fry return against the
+stream; to enable them to do which with greater ease at the leap straw
+ropes are hung in the water for them.&nbsp; When they return to sea they
+are taken.&nbsp; Many of them weigh nine or ten pounds.&nbsp; The young
+salmon are called <i>grawls</i>, and grow at a rate which I should suppose
+scarce any fish commonly known equals; for within the year some of them
+will come to sixteen and eighteen pounds, but in general ten or twelve
+pounds.&nbsp; Such as escape the first year&rsquo;s fishery are salmon; and
+at two years old will generally weigh twenty to twenty-five pounds.&nbsp;
+This year&rsquo;s fishery has proved the greatest that ever was known, and
+they had the largest haul, taking 1,452 salmon at one drag of one
+net.&nbsp; In the year 1758 they had 882, which was the next greatest
+haul.&nbsp; I had the pleasure of seeing 370 drawn in at once.&nbsp; They
+have this year taken 400 tons of fish; 200 sold fresh at a penny and
+three-halfpence a pound, and two hundred salted, at &pound;18 and &pound;20
+per ton, which are sent to London, Spain, and Italy.&nbsp; The fishery
+employs eighty men, and the expenses in general are calculated to equal the
+rent.</p>
+<p>The linen manufacture is very general about <!-- page 58--><a
+name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>Coleraine, coarse
+ten-hundred linen.&nbsp; It is carried to Dublin in cars, one hundred and
+ten miles, at 5s. per cwt. in summer, and 7s. 6d. in winter.</p>
+<p>From Limavady to Derry there is very little uncultivated land.&nbsp;
+Within four miles of the latter, rents are from 12s. to 20s.; mountains
+paid for but in the gross.&nbsp; Reached Derry at night, and waited two
+hours in the dark before the ferry-boat came over for me.</p>
+<p>August 7.&nbsp; In the morning went to the bishop&rsquo;s palace to
+leave my letters of recommendation; for I was informed of my misfortune in
+his being out of the kingdom.&nbsp; He was upon a voyage to Staffa, and had
+sent home some of the stones of which it consists.&nbsp; They appeared
+perfectly to resemble in shape, colour, and smell, those of the
+Giant&rsquo;s Causeway.</p>
+<p>August 8.&nbsp; Left Derry, and took the road by Raphoe to the Rev. Mr.
+Golding&rsquo;s at Clonleigh, who favoured me with much valuable
+information.&nbsp; The view of Derry at the distance of a mile or two is
+the most picturesque of any place I have seen.&nbsp; It seems to be built
+on an island of bold land rising from the river, which spreads into a fine
+basin at the foot of the town; the adjacent country hilly.&nbsp; The scene
+wants nothing but wood to make it a perfect landscape.</p>
+<p>August 11.&nbsp; Left Mount Charles, and passing through Donegal took
+the road to Ballyshannon; came presently to several beautiful landscapes,
+swelling hills cultivated, with the bay flowing up <!-- page 59--><a
+name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>among them.&nbsp; They
+want nothing but more wood, and are beautiful without it.&nbsp; Afterwards
+likewise to the left they rise in various outlines, and die away insensibly
+into one another.&nbsp; When the road leads to a full view of the bay of
+Donegal, these smiling spots, above which the proud mountains rear their
+heads, are numerous, the hillocks of almost regular circular forms.&nbsp;
+They are very pleasing from form, verdure, and the water breaking in their
+vales.</p>
+<p>Before I got to Ballyshannon, remarked a bleach green, which indicates
+weaving in the neighbourhood.&nbsp; Viewed the salmon-leap at Ballyshannon,
+which is let for &pound;400 a year.&nbsp; The scenery of it is very
+beautiful.&nbsp; It is a fine fall, and the coast of the river very bold,
+consisting of perpendicular rocks with grass of a beautiful verdure to the
+very edge.&nbsp; It projects in little promontories, which grew longer as
+they approach the sea, and open to give a fine view of the ocean.&nbsp;
+Before the fall in the middle of the river, is a rocky island on which is a
+curing house, instead of the turret of a ruined castle for which it seems
+formed.&nbsp; The town prettily situated on the rising ground on each side
+of the river.&nbsp; To Sir James Caldwell&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Crossing the
+bridge, stopped for a view of the river, which is a very fine one, and was
+delighted to see the salmon jump, to me an unusual sight; the water was
+perfectly alive with them.&nbsp; Rising the hill, look back on the town;
+the situation beautiful, the river presents <!-- page 60--><a
+name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>a noble view.&nbsp;
+Come to Belleek, a little village with one of the finest water-falls I
+remember anywhere to have seen; viewed it from the bridge.&nbsp; The river
+in a very broad sheet comes from behind some wood, and breaks over a bed of
+rocks, not perpendicular, but shelving in various directions, and foams
+away under the arches, after which it grows more silent and gives a
+beautiful bend under a rock crowned by a fine bank of wood.&nbsp; Reached
+Castle Caldwell at night, where Sir James Caldwell received me with a
+politeness and cordiality that will make me long remember it with
+pleasure.</p>
+<p>August 15.&nbsp; To Belleisle, the charming seat of the Earl of
+Ross.&nbsp; It is an island in Loch Earne, of two hundred Irish acres,
+every part of it hill, dale, and gentle declivities; it has a great deal of
+wood, much of which is old, and forms both deep shades and open, cheerful
+groves.&nbsp; The trees hang on the slopes, and consequently show
+themselves to the best advantage.&nbsp; All this is exceedingly pretty, but
+it is rendered trebly so by the situation.&nbsp; A reach of the lake passes
+before the house, which is situated near the banks among some fine woods,
+which give both beauty and shelter.&nbsp; This sheet of water, which is
+three miles over, is bounded in front by an island of thick wood, and by a
+bold circular hill which is his lordship&rsquo;s deer park; this hill is
+backed by a considerable mountain.&nbsp; To the right are four or five fine
+clumps of dark wood&mdash;so <!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 61</span>many islands which rise boldly from the lake;
+the water breaks in straits between them, and forms a scene extremely
+picturesque.&nbsp; On the other side the lake stretches behind wood in a
+strait which forms Belleisle.&nbsp; Lord Ross has made walks round the
+island, from which there is a considerable variety of prospect.&nbsp; A
+temple is built on a gentle hill, commanding the view of the wooded islands
+above-mentioned, but the most pleasing prospect of them is coming out from
+the grotto.&nbsp; They appear in an uncommon beauty; two seem to join, and
+the water which flows between takes the appearance of a fine bay,
+projecting deep into a dark wood: nothing can be more beautiful.&nbsp; The
+park hill rises above them, and the whole is backed with mountains.&nbsp;
+The home scene at your feet also is pretty; a lawn scattered with trees
+that forms the margin of the lake, closing gradually in a thick wood of
+tall trees, above the tops of which is a distant view of Cultiegh mountain,
+which is there seen in its proudest solemnity.</p>
+<p>They plough all with horses three or four in a plough, and all
+abreast.&nbsp; Here let it be remarked that they very commonly plough and
+harrow with their horses drawing by the tail: it is done every
+season.&nbsp; Nothing can put them beside this, and they insist that, take
+a horse tired in traces and put him to work by the tail, he will draw
+better: quite fresh again.&nbsp; Indignant reader, this is no jest of mine,
+<!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 62</span>but
+cruel, stubborn, barbarous truth.&nbsp; It is so all over Cavan.</p>
+<p>At Clonells, near Castlerea, lives O&rsquo;Connor, the direct descendant
+of Roderick O&rsquo;Connor, who was king of Connaught six or seven hundred
+years ago; there is a monument of him in Roscommon Church, with his
+sceptre, etc.&nbsp; I was told as a certainty that this family were here
+long before the coming of the Milesians.&nbsp; Their possessions, formerly
+so great, are reduced to three or four hundred pounds a year, the family
+having fared in the revolutions of so many ages much worse than the
+O&rsquo;Niels and O&rsquo;Briens.&nbsp; The common people pay him the
+greatest respect, and send him presents of cattle, etc., upon various
+occasions.&nbsp; They consider him as the prince of a people involved in
+one common ruin.</p>
+<p>Another great family in Connaught is Macdermot, who calls himself Prince
+of Coolavin.&nbsp; He lives at Coolavin, in Sligo, and though he has not
+above one hundred pounds a year, will not admit his children to sit down in
+his presence.&nbsp; This was certainly the case with his father, and some
+assured me even with the present chief.&nbsp; Lord Kingsborough, Mr.
+Ponsonby, Mr. O&rsquo;Hara, Mr. Sandford, etc., came to see him, and his
+address was curious: &ldquo;O&rsquo;Hara, you are welcome!&nbsp; Sandford,
+I am glad to see your mother&rsquo;s son&rdquo; (his mother was an
+O&rsquo;Brien): &ldquo;as to the rest of ye, come in as ye
+can.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr. O&rsquo;Hara, of Nymphsfield, is in <!-- page 63--><a
+name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>possession of a
+considerable estate in Sligo, which is the remains of great possessions
+they had in that country.&nbsp; He is one of the few descendants of the
+Milesian race.</p>
+<p>To Lord Kingston&rsquo;s, to whom I had a letter, but unfortunately for
+me he was at Spa.&nbsp; Walked down to Longford Hill to view the
+lake.&nbsp; It is one of the most delicious scenes I ever beheld; a lake of
+five miles by four, which fills the bottom of a gentle valley almost of a
+circular form, bounded very boldly by the mountains.&nbsp; Those to the
+left rise in a noble slope; they lower rather in front, and let in a view
+of Strand mountain, near Sligo, above twenty miles off.&nbsp; To the right
+you look over a small part of a bog to a large extent of cultivated hill,
+with the blue mountains beyond.&nbsp; Were this little piece of bog
+planted, the view would be more complete; the hill on which you stand has a
+foliage of well-grown trees, which form the southern shore.&nbsp; You look
+down on six islands, all wooded, and on a fine promontory to the left,
+which shoots far into the lake.&nbsp; Nothing can be more pleasing than
+their uncommon variety.&nbsp; The first is small (Rock Island), tufted with
+trees, under the shade of which is an ancient building, once the residence
+of Macdermot.&nbsp; The next a mixture of lawn and wood.&nbsp; The third,
+which appears to join this, is of a darker shade, yet not so thick but you
+can see the bright lawn under the trees.&nbsp; House Island is one fine,
+thick <!-- page 64--><a name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+64</span>wood, which admits not a gleam of light, a contrast to the silver
+bosom of the lake.&nbsp; Church Island is at a greater distance; this is
+also a clump, and rises boldly.&nbsp; Rock Island is of wood; it opens in
+the centre and shows a lawn with a building on it.&nbsp; It is impossible
+to imagine a more pleasing and cheerful scene.&nbsp; Passed the chapel to
+Smithfield Hill, which is a fine rising ground, quite surrounded with
+plantations.&nbsp; From hence the view is changed; here the promontory
+appears very bold, and over its neck you see another wooded island in a
+most picturesque situation.&nbsp; Nothing can be more picturesque than Rock
+Island, its ruin overhung with ivy.&nbsp; The other islands assume fresh
+and varied outlines, and form upon the whole one of the most luxuriant
+scenes I have met with.</p>
+<p>The views of the lake and environs are very fine as you go to Boyle; the
+woods unite into a large mass, and contrast the bright sheet of water with
+their dark shades.</p>
+<p>The lands about Kingston are very fine, a rich, dry, yellow, sandy loam,
+the finest soil that I have seen in Ireland; all grass, and covered with
+very fine bullocks, cows, and sheep.&nbsp; The farms rise to five hundred
+acres, and are generally in divisions, parted by stone walls, for oxen,
+cows, young cattle, and sheep separate.&nbsp; Some of the lands will carry
+an ox and a wether per acre; rents, 15s. to 20s.</p>
+<p>Dined at Boyle, and took the road to Ballymoat.&nbsp; <!-- page 65--><a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>Crossed an immense
+mountainy bog, where I stopped and made inquiries; found that it was ten
+miles long, and three and a half over, containing thirty-five square miles;
+that limestone quarries were around and in it, and limestone gravel in many
+places to be found, and used in the lands that join it.&nbsp; In addition
+to this I may add that there is a great road crossing it.&nbsp; Thirty-five
+miles are twenty-two thousand four hundred acres.&nbsp; What an immense
+field of improvement!&nbsp; Nothing would be easier than to drain it (vast
+tracts of land have such a fall), that not a drop of water could
+remain.&nbsp; These hilly bogs are extremely different from any I have seen
+in England.&nbsp; In the moors in the north the hills and mountains are all
+covered with heath, like the Irish bogs, but they are of various soils,
+gravel, shingle, moor, etc., and boggy only in spots, but the Irish bog
+hills are all pure bog to a great depth without the least variation of
+soil; and the bog being of a hilly form, is a proof that it is a growing
+vegetable mass, and not owing merely to stagnant water.&nbsp; Sir Laurence
+Dundass is the principal proprietor of this.</p>
+<p>Reached Ballymoat in the evening, the residence of the Hon. Mr.
+Fitzmaurice, where I expected great pleasure in viewing a manufactory, of
+which I heard much since I came to Ireland.&nbsp; He was so kind as to give
+me the following account of it in the most liberal manner:&mdash;</p>
+<p><!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>&ldquo;Twenty years ago the late Lord Shelburne came to Ballymoat,
+a wild uncultivated region without industry or civility, and the people all
+Roman Catholics, without an atom of a manufacture, not even spinning.&nbsp;
+In order to change this state of things, his lordship contracted with
+people in the north to bring Protestant weavers and establish a
+manufactory, as the only means of making the change he wished.&nbsp; This
+was done, but falling into the hands of rascals he lost &pound;5,000 by the
+business, with only seventeen Protestant families and twenty-six or
+twenty-seven looms established for it.&nbsp; Upon his death Lady Shelburne
+wished to carry his scheme into execution, and to do it gave much
+encouragement to Mr. Wakefield, the great Irish factor in London, by
+granting advantageous leases under the contract of building and colonising
+by weavers from the north, and carrying on the manufactory.&nbsp; He found
+about twenty looms working upon their own account, and made a considerable
+progress in this for five years, raising several buildings, cottages for
+the weavers, and was going on as well as the variety of his business would
+admit, employing sixty looms.&nbsp; He then died, when a stand was made to
+all the works for a year, in which everything went much to ruin.&nbsp; Lady
+Shelburne then employed a new manager to carry on the manufacture upon his
+own account, giving him very profitable grants of lands to encourage him to
+do it with spirit.&nbsp; He continued for five years, employing <!-- page
+67--><a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>sixty looms
+also, but his circumstances failing, a fresh stop was put to the work.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then it was that Mr. Fitzmaurice, in the year 1774, determined to
+exert himself in pushing on a manufactory which promised to be of such
+essential service to the whole country.&nbsp; To do this with effect, he
+saw that it was necessary to take it entirely into his own hands.&nbsp; He
+could lend money to the manager to enable him to go on, but that would be
+at best hazardous, and could never do it in the complete manner in which he
+wished to establish it.&nbsp; In this period of consideration, Mr.
+Fitzmaurice was advised by his friends never to engage in so complex a
+business as a manufacture, in which he must of necessity become a merchant,
+also engage in all the hazard, irksomeness, etc., of commerce, so totally
+different from his birth, education, ideas, and pursuits; but tired with
+the inactivity of common life, he determined not only to turn manufacturer,
+but to carry on the business in the most spirited and vigorous manner that
+was possible.&nbsp; In the first place he took every means of making
+himself a complete master of the business; he went through various
+manufactures, inquired into the minuti&aelig;, and took every measure to
+know it to the bottom.&nbsp; This he did so repeatedly and with such
+attention in the whole progress, from spinning to bleaching and selling,
+that he became as thorough a master of it as an experienced manager; he has
+wove <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+68</span>linen, and done every part of the business with his own
+hands.&nbsp; As he determined to have the works complete, he took Mr.
+Stansfield the engineer, so well known for his improved saw-mills, into his
+pay.&nbsp; He sent him over to Ballymoat in the winter of 1774, in order to
+erect the machinery of a bleach mill upon the very best construction; he
+went to all the great mills in the north of Ireland to inspect them, to
+remark their deficiencies, that they might be improved in the mills he
+intended to erect.&nbsp; This knowledge being gained, the work was begun,
+and as water was necessary, a great basin was formed by a dam across a
+valley, by which means thirty-four acres were floated, to serve as a
+reservoir for dry seasons, to secure plenty at all times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>August 30.&nbsp; Rode to Rosshill, four miles off, a headland that
+projects into the Bay of Newport, from which there is a most beautiful view
+of the bay on both sides; I counted thirty islands very distinctly, all of
+them cultivated under corn and potatoes, or pastured by cattle.&nbsp; At a
+distance Clare rises in a very bold and picturesque style; on the left Crow
+Patrick, and to the right other mountains.&nbsp; It is a view that wants
+nothing but wood.</p>
+<p>September 5.&nbsp; To Drumoland, the seat of Sir Lucius O&rsquo;Brien,
+in the county of Clare, a gentleman who had been repeatedly assiduous to
+procure me every sort of information.&nbsp; I should remark, as I have now
+left <!-- page 69--><a name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+69</span>Galway, that that county, from entering it in the road to Tuam
+till leaving it to-day, has been, upon the whole, inferior to most of the
+parts I have travelled in Ireland in point of beauty: there are not
+mountains of a magnitude to make the view striking.&nbsp; It is perfectly
+free from woods, and even trees, except about gentlemen&rsquo;s houses, nor
+has it a variety in its face.&nbsp; I do not, however, speak without
+exception; I passed some tracts which are cheerful.&nbsp; Drumoland has a
+pleasing variety of grounds about the house; it stands on a hill gently
+rising from a lake of twenty-four acres, in the middle of a noble wood of
+oak, ash, poplar, etc.; three beautiful hills rise above, over which the
+plantations spread in a varied manner; and these hills command very fine
+views of the great rivers Fergus and Shannon at their junction, being each
+of them a league wide.</p>
+<p>There is a view of the Shannon from Limerick to Foynes Island, which is
+thirty miles, with all its bays, bends, islands, and fertile shores.&nbsp;
+It is from one to three miles broad, a most noble river, deserving regal
+navies for its ornament, or, what are better, fleets of merchantmen, the
+cheerful signs of far-extended commerce, instead of a few miserable
+fishing-boats, the only canvas that swelled upon the scene; but the want of
+commerce in her ports is the misfortune not the fault of
+Ireland&mdash;thanks for the deficiency to that illiberal spirit of trading
+jealousy, which has at times actuated and disgraced so many nations.&nbsp;
+The prospect <!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>has a noble outline in the bold mountains of Tipperary, Cork,
+Limerick, and Kerry.&nbsp; The whole view magnificent.</p>
+<p>At the foot of this hill is the castle of Bunratty, a very large
+edifice, the seat of the O&rsquo;Briens, princes of Thomond; it stands on
+the bank of a river, which falls into the Shannon near it.&nbsp; About this
+castle and that of Rosmanagher the land is the best in the county of Clare;
+it is worth &pound;1 13s. an acre, and fats a bullock per acre in summer,
+besides winter feed.</p>
+<p>To Limerick, through a cheerful country, on the banks of the river, in a
+vale surrounded by distant mountains.&nbsp; That city is very finely
+situated, partly on an island formed by the Shannon.&nbsp; The new part,
+called Newtown Pery, from Mr. Pery the speaker, who owns a considerable
+part of the city, and represents it in Parliament, is well built.&nbsp; The
+houses are new ones, of brick, large, and in right lines.&nbsp; There is a
+communication with the rest of the town by a handsome bridge of three large
+arches erected at Mr. Pery&rsquo;s expense.&nbsp; Here are docks, quays,
+and a custom-house, which is a good building, faces the river, and on the
+opposite banks is a large quadrangular one, the house of industry.&nbsp;
+This part of Limerick is very cheerful and agreeable, and carries all the
+marks of a flourishing place.</p>
+<p>The exports of this port are beef, pork, butter, hides, and
+rape-seed.&nbsp; The imports are rum, sugar, timber, <!-- page 71--><a
+name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 71</span>tobacco, wines, coals,
+bark, salt, etc.&nbsp; The customs and excise, about sixteen years ago,
+amounted to &pound;16,000, at present &pound;32,000, and rather more four
+or five years ago.</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Whole revenue</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1751</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;16,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1775</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;51,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Revenue of the Port of Limerick.&nbsp;
+Year ending</i></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>March 25, 1759</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;20,494</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; 1760</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>29,197</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; 1761</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>20,727</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; 1762</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>20,650</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; 1763</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>20,525</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; 1764</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>32,635</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;&nbsp; &nbsp; 1765</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>31,099</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <i>Com. Jour</i>.,</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>vol. xiv., p. 71.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Price of Provisions</i>.</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Wheat, 1s. 1d. a stone</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Wild ducks, 20d. to 2s. a couple.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Barley and oats, 5&frac34;d. to 6d.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Teal, 10d. a couple.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Scotch coals, 18s.; Whitehaven, 20s.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Plover, 6d. a couple.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A boat-load of turf, 20 tons, 45s.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Widgeon, 10d. ditto.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Salmon, three-halfpence.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Hares, 1s. each, commonly sold all year.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Trout, 2d., very fine, per lb.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Woodcocks, 20d. to 2s. 2d. a brace.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Eels, 2d. a pound.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Oysters, 4d. to 1s. a 100.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Rabbits, 8d. a couple.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Lobsters, 1s. to 1s. 6d., if good.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p>Land sells at twenty years&rsquo; purchase.&nbsp; Rents were at the
+highest in 1765; fell since, but in four years have fallen 8s. to 10s. an
+acre about Limerick.&nbsp; They are at a stand at present, owing to the
+high price of provisions from pasture.&nbsp; The number of people in <!--
+page 72--><a name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>Limerick
+is computed at thirty-two thousand; it is exceedingly populous for the
+size, the chief street quite crowded; many sedan chairs in town, and some
+hackney chaises.&nbsp; Assemblies the year round, in a new assembly-house
+built for the purpose, and plays and concerts common.</p>
+<p>Upon the whole, Limerick must be a very gay place, but when the usual
+number of troops are in town much more so.&nbsp; To show the general
+expenses of living, I was told of a person&rsquo;s keeping a carriage, four
+horses, three men, three maids, a good table, a wife, three children, and a
+nurse, and all for &pound;500 a year:</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p> </p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;.&nbsp; s.&nbsp; d.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;.&nbsp; s.&nbsp; d.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A footman</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>4&nbsp; 4&nbsp; 0 to</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>6&nbsp; 6&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A professed woman-cook</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>6&nbsp; 6&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A house-maid</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>3&nbsp; 0&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A kitchen-maid</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2&nbsp; 0&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A butler</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>10&nbsp; 0&nbsp; 0 to</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>12&nbsp; 0&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p>A barrel of beef or pork, 200lb. weight.&nbsp; Vessels of 400 tons can
+come up with spring tides, which rise fourteen feet.</p>
+<p>September 9.&nbsp; To Castle Oliver; various country, not so rich to
+appearance as the Caucasus, being fed bare; much hilly sheep walk, and for
+a considerable way a full third of it potatoes and corn: no sign of
+depopulation.&nbsp; Just before I got to the hills a field of ragwort
+(<i>senesio jacob&oelig;a</i>) buried the cows.&nbsp; The first hill of
+Castle Oliver interesting.&nbsp; After rising a <!-- page 73--><a
+name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>mountain so high that
+no one could think of any house, you come in view of a vale, quite filled
+with fine woods, fields margined with trees, and hedge plantations climbing
+up the mountains.&nbsp; Having engaged myself to Mr. Oliver, to return from
+Killarney by his house, as he was confined to Limerick by the assizes, I
+shall omit saying anything of it at present.</p>
+<p>September 16.&nbsp; To Cove by water, from Mr. Trent&rsquo;s quay.&nbsp;
+The view of Lota is charming; a fine rising lawn from the water, with noble
+spreading woods reaching on each side; the house a very pleasing front,
+with lawn shooting into the woods.&nbsp; The river forms a creek between
+two hills, one Lota, the other opening to another hill of inclosures well
+wooded.&nbsp; As the boat leaves the shore nothing can be finer than the
+view behind us; the back woods of Lota, the house and lawn, and the high
+bold inclosures towards Cork, form the finest shore imaginable, leading to
+Cork, the city appearing in full view, Dunkettle wooded inclosures, a fine
+sweep of hill, joining Mr. Hoare&rsquo;s at Factory Hill, whose woods have
+a beautiful effect.&nbsp; Dunkettle House almost lost in a wood.&nbsp; As
+we advance, the woods of Lota and Dunkettle unite in one fine mass.&nbsp;
+The sheet of water, the rising lawns, the house in the most beautiful
+situation imaginable, with more woods above it than lawns below it, the
+west shore of Loch Mahon, a very fine rising hill cut into inclosures but
+without wood, land-locked on every side with high <!-- page 74--><a
+name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>lands, scattered with
+inclosures, woods, seats, etc., with every cheerful circumstance of lively
+commerce, have altogether a great effect.&nbsp; Advancing to Passage the
+shores are various, and the scenery enlivened by fourscore sail of large
+ships; the little port of Passage at the water&rsquo;s edge, with the hills
+rising boldly above it.&nbsp; The channel narrows between the great island
+and the hills of Passage.&nbsp; The shores bold, and the ships scattered
+about them, with the inclosures hanging behind the masts and yards
+picturesque.&nbsp; Passing the straits a new basin of the harbour opens,
+surrounded with high lands.&nbsp; Monkstown Castle on the hill to the
+right, and the grounds of Ballybricken, a beautiful intermixed scene of
+wood and lawn.&nbsp; The high shore of the harbour&rsquo;s mouth opens
+gradually.&nbsp; The whole scene is land-locked.&nbsp; The first view of
+Haulbowline Island and Spike Island, high rocky lands, with the channel
+opening to Cove, where are a fleet of ships at anchor, and Rostellan, Lord
+Inchiquin&rsquo;s house, backed with hills, a scenery that wants nothing
+but the accompaniment of wood.&nbsp; The view of Ballybricken changes; it
+now appears to be unfortunately cut into right lines.&nbsp; Arrived at the
+ship at Cove; in the evening returned, leaving Mr. Jefferys and family on
+board for a voyage to Havre, in their way to Paris.</p>
+<p>Dunkettle is one of the most beautiful places I have seen in
+Ireland.&nbsp; It is a hill of some hundred acres <!-- page 75--><a
+name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 75</span>broken into a great
+variety of ground by gentle declivities, with everywhere an undulating
+outline and the whole varied by a considerable quantity of wood, which in
+some places is thick enough to take the appearance of close groves, in
+others spreads into scattered thickets and a variety of single
+groups.&nbsp; This hill, or rather cluster of hills, is surrounded on one
+side by a reach of Cork Harbour, over which it looks in the most
+advantageous manner; and on the other by an irriguous vale, through which
+flows the river Glanmire; the opposite shore of that river has every
+variety that can unite to form pleasing landscapes for the views from
+Dunkettle grounds; in some places narrow glens, the bottoms of which are
+quite filled with water, and the steep banks covered with thick woods that
+spread a deep shade; in others the vale opens to form the site of a pretty
+cheerful village, overhung by hill and wood: here the shore rises gradually
+into large inclosures, which spread over the hills, stretching beyond each
+other; and there the vale melts again into a milder variety of
+fields.&nbsp; A hill thus situated, and consisting in itself of so much
+variety of surface, must necessarily command many pleasing views.&nbsp; To
+enjoy these to the better advantage, Mr. Trent (than whom no one has a
+better taste, both to discover and describe the beauties of natural scenes)
+is making a walk around the whole, which is to bend to the inequalities of
+the ground, so as to take the <!-- page 76--><a name="page76"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 76</span>principal points in view.&nbsp; The whole is so
+beautiful, that if I were to make the regular detour, the description might
+be too minute; but there are some points which gave me so much pleasure
+that I know not how to avoid recommending to others that travel this way to
+taste the same satisfaction.&nbsp; From the upper part of the orchard you
+look down a part of the river, where it opens into a regular basin, one
+corner stretching up to Cork, lost behind the hill of Lota, the lawn of
+which breaks on the swelling hills among the woods; the house obscured, and
+therefore seeming a part of your home scene; the losing the river behind
+the beautiful projection of Lota is more pleasing than can be
+expressed.&nbsp; The other reach, leading to the harbour&rsquo;s mouth, is
+half hidden by the trees, which margin the foot of the hill on which you
+stand; in front a noble range of cultivated hills, the inclosures broken by
+slight spots of wood, and prettily varied with houses, without being so
+crowded as to take off the rural effect.&nbsp; The scene is not only
+beautiful in those common circumstances which form a landscape, but is
+alive with the cheerfulness of ships and boats perpetually moving.&nbsp;
+Upon the whole, it is one of the most luxuriant prospects I have anywhere
+seen.&nbsp; Leaving the orchard, pass on the brow of a hill which forms the
+bank of the river of Glanmire, commanding the opposite woods of Lota in all
+their beauty.&nbsp; Rise to the top of the high hill which joins the deer
+park, and exhibits a <!-- page 77--><a name="page77"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 77</span>scene equally extensive and beautiful; you look
+down on a vale which winds almost around at your feet, finishing to the
+left in Cork river, which here takes the appearance of a lake, bounded by
+wood and hills, and sunk in the bottom of a vale, in a style which painting
+cannot imitate; the opposite hills of Lota, wood, and lawn, seem formed as
+objects for this point of view: at your feet a hill rises out of the vale,
+with higher ones around it, the margins scattered wood; to the right,
+towards Riverstown, a vale; the whole backed by cultivated hills to
+Kallahan&rsquo;s field.&nbsp; Milder scenes follow: a bird&rsquo;s-eye view
+of a small vale sunk at your feet, through which the river flows; a bridge
+of several arches unites two parts of a beautiful village, the meadow
+grounds of which rise gently, a varied surface of wood and lawn, to the
+hills of Riverstown, the whole surrounded by delicious sweeps of cultivated
+hills.&nbsp; To the left a wooded glen rising from the vale to the horizon,
+the scenery sequestered, but pleasing; the oak wood which hangs on the
+deer-park hills, an addition.&nbsp; Down to the brow of the hill, where it
+hangs over the river, a picturesque interesting spot.&nbsp; The inclosures
+of the opposite bank hang beautifully to the eye, and the wooded glen winds
+up the hill.&nbsp; Returning to the house I was conducted to the hill,
+where the grounds slope off to the river of Cork, which opens to view in
+noble reaches of a magnitude that fills the eye and the imagination; a
+whole country of a character truly <!-- page 78--><a
+name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>magnificent, and behind
+the winding vale which leads between a series of hills to Glanmire.</p>
+<h3>Pictures at Dunkettle.</h3>
+<p>A St. Michael, etc., the subject confused, by Michael Angelo.&nbsp; A
+St. Francis on wood, a large original of Guido.&nbsp; A St. Cecilia,
+original of Romanelli.&nbsp; An Assumption of the Virgin, by L.
+Carracci.&nbsp; A Quaker&rsquo;s meeting, of above fifty figures, by Egbert
+Hemskerk.&nbsp; A sea view and rock piece, by Vernet.&nbsp; A small
+flagellation, by Sebastian del Piombo.&nbsp; A Madonna and Child, small, by
+Rubens.&nbsp; The Crucifixion, many figures in miniature, excellent, though
+the master is unknown.&nbsp; An excellent copy of the famous Dan&aelig; of
+Titian, at Monte Cavallo, near Naples, by Cioffi of Naples.&nbsp; Another
+of the Venus of Titian, at the Tribuna in Florence.&nbsp; Another of Venus
+blinding Cupid, by Titian, at the Palazzo Borghese in Rome.&nbsp; Another
+of great merit of the Madonna della Sedia of Raphael, at the Palazzo Pitti
+in Florence, by Stirn, a German, lately at Rome.&nbsp; Another of a Holy
+Family, from Raphael, of which there are said to be three originals, one at
+the king&rsquo;s palace in Naples, one in the Palais Royal in Paris, and
+the third in the collection of Lord Exeter, lately purchased at Rome.&nbsp;
+A portrait of Sir Patrick Trent, by Sir P. Lely.&nbsp; An excellent
+portrait of a person unknown, by Dahl.</p>
+<p>September 17.&nbsp; To Castlemartyr, the seat of the Earl <!-- page
+79--><a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>of Shannon, one
+of the most distinguished improvers in Ireland; in whom I found the most
+earnest desire to give me every species of information, with a knowledge
+and ability which enabled him to do it most effectually.&nbsp; Passed
+through Middleton, a well-built place, which belongs to the noble lord to
+whom it gives title.&nbsp; Castlemartyr is an old house, but much added to
+by the present earl; he has built, besides other rooms, a dining one
+thirty-two feet long by twenty-two broad, and a drawing one, the best rooms
+I have seen in Ireland, a double cube of twenty-five feet, being fifty
+long, twenty-five broad, and twenty-five high.&nbsp; The grounds about the
+house are very well laid out; much wood well grown, considerable lawns, a
+river made to wind through them in a beautiful manner, an old castle so
+perfectly covered with ivy as to be a picturesque object.&nbsp; A winding
+walk leads for a considerable distance along the banks of this river, and
+presents several pleasing landscapes.</p>
+<p>From Rostellan to Lota, the seat of Frederick Rogers, Esq.&nbsp; I had
+before seen it in the highest perfection from the water going from
+Dunkettle to Cove, and from the grounds of Dunkettle.&nbsp; Mrs. Rogers was
+so obliging as to show me the back grounds, which are admirably wooded, and
+of a fine varied surface.</p>
+<p>Got to Cork in the evening, and waited on the Dean, who received me with
+the most flattering attention.&nbsp; Cork is one of the most populous
+places I have <!-- page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+80</span>ever been in; it was market-day, and I could scarce drive through
+the streets, they were so amazingly thronged: on the other days the number
+is very great.&nbsp; I should suppose it must resemble a Dutch town, for
+there are many canals in the streets, with quays before the houses.&nbsp;
+The best built part is Morrison&rsquo;s Island, which promises well; the
+old part of the town is very close and dirty.&nbsp; As to its commerce, the
+following particulars I owe to Robert Gordon, Esq., the
+surveyor-general:</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Average of Nineteen Years&rsquo; Export,
+ending March</i> 24, 1773.</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Hides, at &pound;1 each</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;64,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Bay and woollen yarn</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>294,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Butter, at 30s. per cwt. from 56s. to 72s.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>180,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Beef, at 20s. a barrel</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>291,970</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Camlets, serges, etc.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>40,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Candles</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>34,220</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Soap</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>20,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Tallow</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>20,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Herrings, 18 to 35,000l. all their own</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>21,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Glue 20 to 25,000</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>22,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Pork</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>64,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Wool to England</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>14,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Small exports, Gottenburg herrings, horns, hoofs, etc., feather-beds,
+palliasses, feathers, etc.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>35,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;1,100,190</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p>Average prices of the nineteen years on the custom books.&nbsp; All
+exports on those books are rated at the <!-- page 81--><a
+name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>value of the reign of
+Charles II.; but the imports have always 10 per cent. on the sworn price
+added to them.&nbsp; Seventy to eighty sail of ships belong to Cork.&nbsp;
+Average of ships that entered that port in those nineteen years, eight
+hundred and seventy-two per annum.&nbsp; The number of people at Cork
+mustered by the clergy by hearth-money, and by the number of houses,
+payments to minister, average of the three, sixty-seven thousand souls, if
+taken before the 1st of September, after that twenty thousand
+increased.&nbsp; There are seven hundred coopers in the town.&nbsp; Barrels
+all of oak or beech, all from America: the latter for herrings, now from
+Gottenburg and Norway.&nbsp; The excise of Cork now no more than in Charles
+the Second&rsquo;s reign.&nbsp; Ridiculous!</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Cork old duties, in 1751, produced</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;62,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Now the same </p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>140,000</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p>Bullocks, 16,000 head, 32,000 barrels; 41,000 hogs, 20,000
+barrels.&nbsp; Butter, 22,000 firkins of half a hundredweight each, both
+increase this year, the whole being</p>
+<p>240,000 firkins of butter,<br />
+&nbsp; 120,000 barrels of beef.</p>
+<p>Export of woollen yarn from Cork, &pound;300,000 a year in the Irish
+market.&nbsp; No wool smuggled, or at least very little.&nbsp; The wool
+comes to Cork, etc., and is delivered out to combers, who make it into
+balls.&nbsp; These balls <!-- page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 82</span>are bought up by the French agents at a vast
+price, and exported; but even this does not amount to &pound;40,000 a
+year.</p>
+<h3>Prices.</h3>
+<p>Beef, 21s. per cwt., never so high by 2s. 6d.; pork, 30s., never higher
+than 18s. 6d., owing to the army demand.&nbsp; Slaughter dung, 8d. for a
+horse load.&nbsp; Country labourer, 6d.; about town, 10d.&nbsp; Milk, seven
+pints a penny.&nbsp; Coals, 3s. 8d. to 5s. a barrel, six of which make a
+ton.&nbsp; Eggs, four a penny.</p>
+<p>Cork labourers.&nbsp; Cellar ones, twenty thousand; have 1s. 1d. a day,
+and as much bread, beef, and beer as they can eat and drink, and seven
+pounds of offals a week for their families.&nbsp; Rent for their house,
+40s.&nbsp; Masons&rsquo; and carpenters&rsquo; labourers, 10d. a day.&nbsp;
+Sailors now &pound;3 a month and provisions: before the American war,
+28s.&nbsp; Porters and coal-heavers paid by the great.&nbsp; State of the
+poor people in general incomparably better off than they were twenty years
+ago.&nbsp; There are imported eighteen thousand barrels annually of Scotch
+herrings, at 18s. a barrel.&nbsp; The salt for the beef trade comes from
+Lisbon, St. Ube&rsquo;s, etc.&nbsp; The salt for the fish trade from
+Rochelle.&nbsp; For butter English and Irish.</p>
+<p>Particulars of the woollen fabrics of the county of Cork received from a
+manufacturer.&nbsp; The woollen trade, serges and camlets, ratteens,
+friezes, druggets, and narrow cloths, the last they make to 10s. and 12s.
+<!-- page 83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>a
+yard; if they might export to 8s. they are very clear that they could get a
+great trade for the woollen manufactures of Cork.&nbsp; The wool comes from
+Galway and Roscommon, combed here by combers, who earn 8s. to 10s. a week,
+into balls of twenty-four ounces, which is spun into worsteds of twelve
+skeins to the ball, and exported to Yarmouth for Norwich; the export price,
+&pound;30 a pack to &pound;33, never before so high; average of them,
+&pound;26 to &pound;30.&nbsp; Some they work up at home into serges,
+stuffs, and camlets; the serges at 12d. a yard, thirty-four inches wide;
+the stuffs sixteen inches, at 18d., the camlets at 9&frac12;d. to 13d.; the
+spinners at 9d. a ball, one in a week; or a ball and half 12d. a week, and
+attend the family besides; this is done most in Waterford and Kerry,
+particularly near Killarney; the weavers earn 1s. a day on an
+average.&nbsp; Full three-fourths of the wool is exported in yarn, and only
+one-fourth worth worked up.&nbsp; Half the wool of Ireland is combed in the
+county of Cork.</p>
+<p>A very great manufacture of ratteens at Carrick-on-Suir; the bay worsted
+is for serges, shalloons, etc.&nbsp; Woollen yarn for coarse cloths, which
+latter have been lost for some years, owing to the high price of
+wool.&nbsp; The bay export has declined since 1770, which declension is
+owing to the high price of wool.</p>
+<p>No wool smuggled, not even from Kerry; not a sloop&rsquo;s cargo in
+twenty years, the price too high; the declension has been
+considerable.&nbsp; For every <!-- page 84--><a name="page84"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 84</span>eighty-six packs that are exported, a licence
+from the Lord Lieutenant, for which &pound;20 is paid.</p>
+<p>From the Act of the last sessions of Great Britain for exporting woollen
+goods for the troops in the pay of Ireland, Mr. Abraham Lane, of Cork,
+established a new manufacture of army clothing for that purpose, which is
+the first at Cork, and pays &pound;40 a week in labour only.&nbsp; Upon the
+whole there has been no increase of woollen manufacture within twenty
+years.&nbsp; Is clearly of opinion that many fabrics might be worked up
+here much cheaper than in France, of cloths that the French have beat the
+English out of; these are, particularly, broadcloths of one yard and half
+yard wide, from 3s. to 6s. 6d. a yard for the Levant trade.&nbsp; Friezes
+which are now supplied from Carcassone in Languedoc.&nbsp; Friezes, of
+twenty-four to twenty-seven inches, at 10d. to 13d. a yard.&nbsp; Flannels,
+twenty-seven to thirty-six, from 7d. to 14d.&nbsp; Serges of twenty-seven
+to thirty-six inches, at 7d. to 12d. a yard; these would work up the coarse
+wool.&nbsp; At Ballynasloe Fair, in July, &pound;200,000 a year bought in
+wool.&nbsp; There is a manufactory of knit-stocking by the common women
+about Cork, for eight or ten miles around; the yarn from 12d. to 18d. a
+pair, and the worsted from 16d. to 20d., and earn from 12d. to 18d. a
+week.&nbsp; Besides their own consumption, great quantities are sent to the
+north of Ireland.</p>
+<p>All the weavers in the country are confined to towns, <!-- page 85--><a
+name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>have no land, but small
+gardens.&nbsp; Bandle, or narrow linen, for home consumption, is made in
+the western part of the county.&nbsp; Generally speaking, the circumstances
+of all the manufacturing poor are better than they were twenty years
+ago.&nbsp; The manufactures have not declined, though the exportation has,
+owing to the increased home consumptions.&nbsp; Bandon was once the seat of
+the stuff, camlet, and shag manufacture, but has in seven years declined
+above three-fourths.&nbsp; Have changed it for the manufacture of coarse
+green linens, for the London market, from 6d. to 9d. a yard, twenty-seven
+inches wide; but the number of manufactures in general much lessened.</p>
+<p>Rode to the mouth of Cork Harbour; the grounds about it are all fine,
+bold, and varied, but so bare of trees, that there is not a single view but
+what pains one in the want of wood.&nbsp; Rents of the tract south of the
+river Caragoline, from 5s. to 30s.; average, 10s.&nbsp; Not one man in five
+has a cow, but generally from one to four acres, upon which they have
+potatoes, and five or six sheep, which they milk, and spin their
+wool.&nbsp; Labour 5d. in winter, 6d. in summer; many of them for three
+months in the year live on potatoes and water, the rest of it they have a
+good deal of fish.&nbsp; But it is remarked, at Kinsale, that when sprats
+are most plentiful, diseases are most common.&nbsp; Rent for a mere cabin,
+10s.&nbsp; Much paring and burning; paring twenty-eight men a day, sow
+wheat on it and then potatoes; <!-- page 86--><a name="page86"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 86</span>get great crops.&nbsp; The soil a sharp, stony
+land; no limestone south of the above river.&nbsp; Manure for potatoes,
+with sea-weed, for 26s., which gives good crops, but lasts only one
+year.&nbsp; Sea-sand much used; no shells in it.&nbsp; Farms rise to two or
+three hundred acres, but are hired in partnership.</p>
+<p>Before I quit the environs of Cork, I must remark that the country on
+the harbour I think preferable, in many respects, for a residence, to
+anything I have seen in Ireland.&nbsp; First, it is the most southerly part
+of the kingdom.&nbsp; Second, there are very great beauties of
+prospect.&nbsp; Third, by much the most animated, busy scene of shipping in
+all Ireland, and consequently, fourth, a ready price for every
+product.&nbsp; Fifth, great plenty of excellent fish and wild fowl.&nbsp;
+Sixth, the neighbourhood of a great city for objects of convenience.</p>
+<p>September 25.&nbsp; Took the road to Nedeen, through the wildest region
+of mountains that I remember to have seen; it is a dreary but an
+interesting road.&nbsp; The various horrid, grotesque, and unusual forms in
+which the mountains rise and the rocks bulge; the immense height of some
+distant heads, which rear above all the nearer scenes, the torrents roaring
+in the vales, and breaking down the mountain sides, with here and there a
+wretched cabin, and a spot of culture yielding surprise to find human
+beings the inhabitants of such a scene of wildness, altogether keep the
+traveller&rsquo;s mind <!-- page 87--><a name="page87"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 87</span>in an agitation and suspense.&nbsp; These rocks
+and mountains are many of them no otherwise improvable than by planting,
+for which, however, they are exceedingly well adapted.</p>
+<p>Sir John Colthurst was so obliging as to send half a dozen labourers
+with me, to help my chaise up a mountain side, of which he gave a
+formidable account: in truth it deserved it.&nbsp; The road leads directly
+against a mountain ridge, and those who made it were so incredibly stupid,
+that they kept the straight line up the hill, instead of turning aside to
+the right to wind around a projection of it.&nbsp; The path of the road is
+worn by torrents into a channel, which is blocked up in places by huge
+fragments, so that it would be a horrid road on a level; but on a hill so
+steep, that the best path would be difficult to ascend&mdash;it may be
+supposed terrible: the labourers, two passing strangers, and my servant,
+could with difficulty get the chaise up.&nbsp; It is much to be regretted
+that the direction of the road is not changed, as all the rest from Cork to
+Nedeen is good enough.&nbsp; For a few miles towards the latter place the
+country is flat on the river Kenmare, much of it good, and under grass or
+corn.&nbsp; Passed Mr. Orpine&rsquo;s at Ardtilly, and another of the same
+name at Killowen.</p>
+<p>Nedeen is a little town, very well situated, on the noble river Kenmare,
+where ships of one hundred and fifty tons may come up; there are but three
+or four <!-- page 88--><a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+88</span>good houses.&nbsp; Lord Shelburne, to whom the place belongs, has
+built one for his agent.&nbsp; There is a vale of good land, which is here
+from a mile and a half to a mile broad; and to the north and south, great
+ridges of mountains said to be full of mines.</p>
+<p>At Nedeen, Lord Shelburne had taken care to have me well informed by his
+people in that country, which belongs for the greatest part to himself, he
+has above one hundred and fifty thousand Irish acres in Kerry; the greatest
+part of the barony of Glanrought belongs to him, most of Dunkerron and
+Ivragh.&nbsp; The country is all a region of mountains, inclosed by a vale
+of flat land on the river; the mountains to the south come to the
+water&rsquo;s edge, with but few variations, the principal of which is
+Ardee, a farm of Lord Shelburne&rsquo;s to the north of the river, the flat
+land is one-half to three-quarters of a mile broad.&nbsp; The mountains to
+the south reach to Bear-haven, and those to the north to Dingle Bay; the
+soil is extremely various; to the south of the river all are sandstones,
+and the hills loam, stone, gravel, and bog.&nbsp; To the north there is a
+slip of limestone land, from Kilgarvon to Cabbina-cush, that is six miles
+east of Nedeen, and three to the west, but is not more than a quarter of a
+mile broad, the rest, including the mountains, all sandstone.&nbsp; As to
+its rents, it is very difficult to tell what they are; for land is let by
+the plough-land and gineve, twelve gineves to the plough-land; but the
+latter <!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+89</span>denomination is not of any particular quantity, for no two
+plough-lands are the same.&nbsp; The size of farms is various, from forty
+acres to one thousand; less quantities go with cabins, and some farms are
+taken by labourers in partnership.</p>
+<p>Soon entered the wildest and most romantic country I had anywhere seen;
+a region of steep rocks and mountains which continued for nine or ten
+miles, till I came in view of Mucruss.&nbsp; There is something
+magnificently wild in this stupendous scenery, formed to impress the mind
+with a certain species of terror.&nbsp; All this tract has a rude and
+savage air, but parts of it are strikingly interesting; the mountains are
+bare and rocky, and of a great magnitude; the vales are rocky glens, where
+a mountain stream tumbles along the roughest bed imaginable, and receives
+many torrents, pouring from clefts, half overhung with shrubby wood; some
+of these streams are seen, and the roar of others heard, but hid by vast
+masses of rock.&nbsp; Immense fragments, torn from the precipices by storms
+and torrents, are tumbled in the wildest confusion, and seem to hang rather
+than rest upon projecting precipices.&nbsp; Upon some of these fragments of
+rock, perfectly detached from the soil, except by the side on which they
+lie, are beds of black turf, with luxuriant crops of heath, etc., which
+appeared very curious to me, having nowhere seen the like; and I observed
+very high in the mountains&mdash;much higher than any <!-- page 90--><a
+name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>cultivation is at
+present, on the right hand&mdash;flat and cleared spaces of good grass
+among the ridges of rock, which had probably been cultivated, and proved
+that these mountains were not incapable from climate of being applied to
+useful purposes.</p>
+<p>From one of these heights I looked forward to the Lake of Killarney at a
+considerable distance, and backward to the river Kenmare; came in view of a
+small part of the upper lake, spotted with several islands, and surrounded
+by the most tremendous mountains that can be imagined, of an aspect savage
+and dreadful.&nbsp; From this scene of wild magnificence, I broke at once
+upon all the glories of Killarney; from an elevated point of view I looked
+down on a considerable part of the lake, which gave me a specimen of what I
+might expect.&nbsp; The water you command (which, however, is only a part
+of the lake) appears a basin of two or three miles round; to the left it is
+inclosed by the mountains you have passed, particularly by the Turk, whose
+outline is uncommonly noble, and joins a range of others, that form the
+most magnificent shore in the world: on the other side is a rising scenery
+of cultivated hills, and Lord Kenmare&rsquo;s park and woods; the end of
+the lake at your feet is formed by the root of Mangerton, on whose side the
+road leads.&nbsp; From hence I looked down on a pretty range of inclosures
+on the lake, and the woods and lawns of Mucruss, forming a large promontory
+of thick wood, shooting <!-- page 91--><a name="page91"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 91</span>far into the lake.&nbsp; The most active fancy
+can sketch nothing in addition.&nbsp; Islands of wood beyond seem to join
+it, and reaches of the lake, breaking partly between, give the most lively
+intermixture of water; six or seven isles and islets form an accompaniment:
+some are rocky, but with a slight vegetation, others contain groups of
+trees, and the whole thrown into forms, which would furnish new ideas to a
+painter.&nbsp; Farther is a chain of wooded islands, which also appear to
+join the mainland, with an offspring of lesser ones scattered around.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Mr. Herbert&rsquo;s at Mucruss, to whose friendly attention I
+owed my succeeding pleasure.&nbsp; There have been so many descriptions of
+Killarney written by gentlemen who have resided some time there, and seen
+it at every season, that for a passing traveller to attempt the like would
+be in vain; for this reason I shall give the mere journal of the remarks I
+made on the spot, in the order I viewed the lake.</p>
+<p>September 27.&nbsp; Walked into Mr. Herbert&rsquo;s beautiful grounds,
+to Oroch&rsquo;s Hill, in the lawn that he has cleared from that profusion
+of stones which lie under the wall; the scene which this point commands is
+truly delicious; the house is on the edge of the lawn, by a wood which
+covers the whole peninsula, fringes the slope at your feet, and forms a
+beautiful shore to the lake.&nbsp; Tomys and Glen&aacute; are vast
+mountainous <!-- page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+92</span>masses of incredible magnificence, the outline soft and easy in
+its swells, whereas those above the eagle&rsquo;s nest are of so broken and
+abrupt an outline, that nothing can be imagined more savage, an aspect
+horrid and sublime, that gives all the impressions to be wished to astonish
+rather than please the mind.&nbsp; The Turk exhibits noble features, and
+Mangerton&rsquo;s huge body rises above the whole.&nbsp; The cultivated
+tracts towards Killarney form a shore in contrast to the terrific scenes I
+have just mentioned; the distant boundary of the lake, a vast ridge of
+distant blue mountains towards Dingle.&nbsp; From hence entered the garden,
+and viewed Mucruss Abbey, one of the most interesting scenes I ever saw; it
+is the ruin of a considerable abbey, built in Henry VI.&rsquo;s time, and
+so entire, that if it were more so, though the building would be more
+perfect, the ruin would be less pleasing; it is half obscured in the shade
+of some venerable ash trees; ivy has given the picturesque circumstance,
+which that plant alone can confer, while the broken walls and ruined
+turrets throw over it</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The last mournful graces of decay;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>heaps of skulls and bones scattered about, with nettles, briars, and
+weeds sprouting in tufts from the loose stones, all unite to raise those
+melancholy impressions, which are the merit of such scenes, and which can
+<!-- page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+93</span>scarcely anywhere be felt more completely.&nbsp; The cloisters
+form a dismal area, in the centre of which grows the most prodigious
+yew-tree I ever beheld, in one great stem, two feet diameter, and fourteen
+feet high, from whence a vast head of branches spreads on every side, so as
+to perform a perfect canopy to the whole space.&nbsp; I looked for its fit
+inhabitant; it is a spot where</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The moping owl doth to the moon complain.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This ruin is in the true style in which all such buildings should
+appear; there is not an intruding circumstance, the hand of dress has not
+touched it, melancholy is the impression which such scenes should kindle,
+and it is here raised most powerfully.</p>
+<p>From the abbey we passed to the terrace, a natural one of grass, on the
+very shore of the lake; it is irregular and winding; a wall of rocks broken
+into fantastic forms by the waves: on the other side a wood, consisting of
+all sorts of plants, which the climate can protect, and through which a
+variety of walks are traced.&nbsp; The view from this terrace consists of
+many parts of various characters, but in their different styles complete;
+the lake opens a spreading sheet of water, spotted by rocks and islands,
+all but one or two wooded; the outlines of them are sharp and distinct;
+nothing can be more smiling than this scene, soft and mild, a perfect
+contrast of beauty to the sublimity of <!-- page 94--><a
+name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>the mountains which
+form the shore: these rise in an outline, so varied, and at the same time
+so magnificent, that nothing greater can be imagined; Tomys and
+Glen&aacute; exhibit an immensity in point of magnitude, but from a large
+hanging wood on the slope, and from the smoothness of the general surface,
+it has nothing savage, whereas the mountains above and near the
+eagle&rsquo;s nest are of the most broken outlines; the declivities are
+bulging rocks, of immense size, which seem to impend in horrid forms over
+the lake, and where an opening among them is caught, others of the same
+rude character rear their threatening heads.&nbsp; From different parts of
+the terrace these scenes are viewed in numberless varieties.</p>
+<p>Returned to breakfast, and pursued Mr. Herbert&rsquo;s new road, which
+he has traced through the peninsula to Dynis Island, three miles in length;
+and it is carried in so judicious a manner through a great variety of
+ground, rocky woods, lawns, etc., that nothing can be more pleasing; it
+passes through a remarkable scene of rocks, which are covered with
+woods.&nbsp; From thence to the marble quarry, which Mr. Herbert is
+working, and where he gains variety of marbles, green, red, white, and
+brown, prettily veined; the quarry is a shore of rocks, which surround a
+bay of the lake, and forms a scene consisting of but few parts, but those
+strongly marked; the rocks are bold, and broken into slight caverns; they
+are fringed with <!-- page 95--><a name="page95"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 95</span>scattered trees, and from many parts of them
+wood shoots in that romantic manner so common at Killarney.&nbsp; Full in
+front Turk Mountain rises with the proudest outline, in that abrupt
+magnificence which fills up the whole space before one, and closes the
+scene.</p>
+<p>The road leads by a place where copper-mines were worked; many shafts
+appear; as much ore was raised as sold for twenty-five thousand pounds, but
+the works were laid aside, more from ignorance in the workmen than any
+defects in the mine.</p>
+<p>Came to the opening on the great lake, which appears to advantage here,
+the town of Killarney on the north-east shore.&nbsp; Look full on the
+mountain Glen&aacute;, which rises in very bold manner, the hanging woods
+spread half way, and are of great extent, and uncommonly beautiful.&nbsp;
+Two very pleasing scenes succeed; that to the left is a small bay, hemmed
+in by a neck of land in front; the immediate shore rocks, which are in a
+picturesque style, and crowned entirely with arbutus, and other wood; a
+pretty retired scene, where a variety of objects give no fatigue to the
+eye.&nbsp; The other is an admirable mixture of the beautiful and sublime:
+a bare rock of an almost regular figure projects from a headland into the
+lake, which, with much wood and highland, forms one side of the scene; the
+other is wood from a rising ground only; the lake open between, in a sheet
+of no great extent, but in <!-- page 96--><a name="page96"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 96</span>front is the hanging wood of Glen&aacute;,
+which appears in full glory.</p>
+<p>Mr. Herbert has built a handsome Gothic bridge, to unite the peninsula
+to the island of Brickeen, through the arch of which the waters of the
+north and south lake flow.&nbsp; It is a span of twenty-seven feet, and
+seventeen high, and over it the road leads to that island.&nbsp; From
+thence to Brickeen nearly finished, and it is to be thrown across a bottom
+into Dynis.</p>
+<p>Returned by the northern path through a thick wood for some distance,
+and caught a very agreeable view of Ash Island, seen through an opening,
+inclosed on both sides with wood.&nbsp; Pursued the way from these grounds
+to Keelbeg, and viewed the bay of the Devil&rsquo;s Island, which is a
+beautiful one, inclosed by a shore, to the right of very noble rocks in
+ledges and other forms, crowned in a striking manner with wood; a little
+rocky islet rises in front; to the left the water opens, and Turk Mountain
+rises with that proud superiority which attends him in all these
+scenes.</p>
+<p>The view of the promontory of Dindog, near this place, closes this part
+of the lake, and is indeed singularly beautiful.&nbsp; It is a large rock,
+which shoots far into the water, of a height sufficient to be interesting,
+in full relief, fringed with a scanty vegetation; the shore on which you
+stand bending to the right, as if to meet that rock, presents a circular
+shade of dark wood: Turk still the background, in a character of <!-- page
+97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 97</span>great
+sublimity, and Mangerton&rsquo;s loftier summit, but less interesting
+outline, a part of the scenery.&nbsp; These views, with others of less
+moment, are connected by a succession of lawns breaking among the wood,
+pleasing the eye with lively verdure, and relieving it from the fatigue of
+the stupendous mountain scenes.</p>
+<p>September 28.&nbsp; Took boat on the lake, from the promontory of Dindog
+before mentioned.&nbsp; I had been under a million of apprehensions that I
+should see no more of Killarney; for it blew a furious storm all night, and
+in the morning the bosom of the lake heaved with agitation, exhibiting few
+marks but those of anger.&nbsp; After breakfast it cleared up, the clouds
+dispersed by degrees, the waves subsided, the sun shone out in all its
+splendour; every scene was gay, and no ideas but pleasure possessed the
+breast.&nbsp; With these emotions sallied forth, nor did they disappoint
+us.</p>
+<p>Rowed under the rocky shore of Dindog, which is romantic to a great
+degree.&nbsp; The base, by the beating of the waves, is worn into caverns,
+so that the heads of the rocks project considerably beyond the base, and
+hang over in a manner which makes every part of it interesting.&nbsp;
+Following the coast, open marble quarry bay, the shore great fragments of
+rock tumbled about in the wildest manner.</p>
+<p>The island of rocks against the copper-mine shore a remarkable
+group.&nbsp; The shore near Casemilan is of a <!-- page 98--><a
+name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>different nature; it is
+wood in some places, in unbroken masses down to the water&rsquo;s edge, in
+others divided from it by smaller tracts of rock.&nbsp; Come to a beautiful
+land-locked bay, surrounded by a woody shore, which, opening in places,
+shows other woods more retired.&nbsp; Tomys is here viewed in a unity of
+form, which gives it an air of great magnificence.&nbsp; Turk was obscured
+by the sun shining immediately above him, and, casting a stream of burning
+light on the water, displayed an effect to describe which the pencil of a
+Claude alone would be equal.&nbsp; Turn out of the bay, and gain a full
+view of the Eagle&rsquo;s Nest, the mountains above it, and Glen&aacute;;
+they form a perfect contrast; the first are rugged, but Glen&aacute;
+mild.&nbsp; Here the shore is a continued wood.</p>
+<p>Pass the bridge, and cross to Dynis, an island Mr. Herbert has improved
+in the most agreeable manner, by cutting walks through it that command a
+variety of views.&nbsp; One of these paths on the banks of the channel to
+the upper lake is sketched with great taste; it is on one side walled with
+natural rocks, from clefts of which shoot a thousand fine arbutuses, that
+hang in a rich foliage of flowers and scarlet berries; a turf bench in a
+delicious spot; the scene close and sequestered, just enough to give every
+pleasing idea annexed to retirement.</p>
+<p>Passing the bridge, by a rapid stream, came presently to the
+Eagle&rsquo;s Nest: having viewed this rock <!-- page 99--><a
+name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>from places where it
+appears only a part of an object much greater than itself, I had conceived
+an idea that it did not deserve the applause given it, but upon coming near
+I was much surprised; the approach is wonderfully fine, the river leads
+directly to its foot, and does not give the turn till immediately under, by
+which means the view is much more grand than it could otherwise be; it is
+nearly perpendicular, and rises in such full majesty, with so bold an
+outline, and such projecting masses in its centre, that the magnificence of
+the object is complete.&nbsp; The lower part is covered with wood, and
+scattered trees climb almost to the top, which (if trees can be amiss in
+Ireland) rather weaken the impression raised by this noble rock.&nbsp; This
+part is a hanging wood, or an object whose character is perfect beauty; but
+the upper scene, the broken outline, rugged sides, and bulging masses, all
+are sublime, and so powerful, that sublimity is the general impression of
+the whole, by overpowering the idea of beauty raised by the wood.&nbsp;
+This immense height of the mountains of Killarney may be estimated by this
+rock; from any distant place that commands it, it appears the lowest crag
+of a vast chain, and of no account; but on a close approach it is found to
+command a very different respect.</p>
+<p>Pass between the mountains called the Great Range, towards the upper
+lake.&nbsp; Here Turk, which has so long appeared with a figure perfectly
+interesting, is <!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 100</span>become, from a different position, an
+unmeaning lump.&nbsp; The rest of the mountains, as you pass, assume a
+varied appearance, and are of a prodigious magnitude.&nbsp; The scenery in
+this channel is great and wild in all its features; wood is very scarce;
+vast rocks seem tossed in confusion through the narrow vale, which is
+opened among the mountains for the river to pass.&nbsp; Its banks are rocks
+in a hundred forms; the mountain-sides are everywhere scattered with
+them.&nbsp; There is not a circumstance but is in unison with the wild
+grandeur of the scene.</p>
+<p>Coleman&rsquo;s Eye, a narrow pass, opens a different scenery.&nbsp;
+Came to a region in which the beautiful and the great are mixed without
+offence.&nbsp; The islands are most of them thickly wooded.&nbsp; Oak Isle
+in particular rises on a pretty base, and is a most beautiful object:
+Macgillicuddy Reeks, with their broken points; Baum, with his perfect cone;
+the Purple Mountain, with his broad and more regular head; and Turk, having
+assumed a new and more interesting aspect, unite with the opposite hills,
+part of which have some wood left on them, to form a scene uncommonly
+striking.&nbsp; Here you look back on a very peculiar spot; it is a parcel
+of rocks which cross the lake, and form a gap that opens to distant water,
+the whole backed by Turk, in a style of the highest grandeur.</p>
+<p>Come to Derry Currily, which is a great sweep of mountain, covered
+partly with wood, hanging in a very <!-- page 101--><a
+name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>noble manner, but
+part cut down, much of it mangled, and the rest inhabited by coopers,
+boat-builders, carpenters, and turners, a sacrilegious tribe, who have
+turned the Dryads from their ancient habitations.&nbsp; The cascade here is
+a fine one; but passed quickly from hence to scenes unmixed with pain.</p>
+<p>Row to the cluster of the Seven Islands, a little archipelago; they rise
+very boldly from the water upon rocky bases, and are crowned in the most
+beautiful manner with wood, among which are a number of arbutuses; the
+channels among them opening to new scenes, and the great amphitheatre of
+rock and mountain that surround them unite to form a noble view.</p>
+<p>Into the river, at the very end of the lake, which winds towards
+Macgillicuddy Reeks in fanciful meanders.</p>
+<p>Returned by a course somewhat different, through the Seven Islands, and
+back to the Eagle&rsquo;s Nest, viewing the scenes already mentioned in new
+positions.&nbsp; At that noble rock fired three cannon for the echo, which
+indeed is prodigious; the report does not consist of direct reverberations
+from one rock to another with a pause between, but has an exact resemblance
+to a peal of thunder rattling behind the rock, as if travelling the whole
+scenery we had viewed, and lost in the immensity of Macgillicuddy
+Reeks.</p>
+<p>Returning through the bridge, turn to the left round Dynis Island, under
+the woods of Glen&aacute;; open on the <!-- page 102--><a
+name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>cultivated country
+beyond the town of Killarney, and come gradually in sight of Innisfallen
+and Ross Island.</p>
+<p>Pass near to the wood of Glen&aacute;, which here takes the appearance
+of one immense sweep hanging in the most beautiful manner imaginable, on
+the side of a vast mountain to a point, shooting into the great lake.&nbsp;
+A more glorious scene is not to be imagined.&nbsp; It is one deep mass of
+wood, composed of the richest shades perfectly dipping in the water,
+without rock or strand appearing, not a break in the whole.&nbsp; The eye
+passing upon the sheet of liquid silver some distance, to meet so entire a
+sweep of every tint that can compose one vast mass of green, hanging to
+such an extent as to fill not only the eye but the imagination, unites in
+the whole to form the most noble scene that is anywhere to be beheld.</p>
+<p>Turn under the north shore of Mucruss; the lake here is one great
+expanse of water, bounded by the woods described, the islands of
+Innisfallen, Ross, etc., and the peninsula.&nbsp; The shore of Mucruss has
+a great variety; it is in some places rocky; huge masses tumbled from their
+base lie beneath, as in a chaos of ruin.&nbsp; Great caverns worn under
+them in a variety of strange forms; or else covered with woods of a variety
+of shades.&nbsp; Meet the point of Ardnagluggen (in English where the water
+dashes on the rocks) and come under Ornescope, a rocky headland of a most
+bold projection <!-- page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 103</span>hanging many yards over its base, with an old
+weather-beaten yew growing from a little bracket of rock, from which the
+spot is called Ornescope, or yew broom.</p>
+<p>Mucruss gardens presently open among the woods, and relieve the eye,
+almost fatigued with the immense objects upon which it has so long gazed;
+these softer scenes of lawn gently swelling among the shrubs and trees
+finished the second day.</p>
+<p>September 29.&nbsp; Rode after breakfast to Mangerton Cascade and
+Drumarourk Hill, from which the view of Mucruss is uncommonly pleasing.</p>
+<p>Pass the other hill, the view of which I described the 27th, and went to
+Colonel Huffy&rsquo;s monument, from whence the scene is different from the
+rest; the foreground is a gentle hill, intersected by hedges, forming
+several small lawns.&nbsp; There are some scattered trees and houses, with
+Mucruss Abbey half obscured by wood, the whole cheerful and backed by
+Turk.&nbsp; The lake is of a triangular form, Ross Island and Innisfallen
+its limits; the woods of Mucruss and the islands take a new position.</p>
+<p>Returning, took a boat again towards Ross Isle, and as Mucruss retires
+from us, nothing can be more beautiful than the spots of lawn in the
+terrace opening in the wood; above it the green hills with clumps, and the
+whole finishing in the noble group of wood about the abbey, which here
+appears a deep shade, and so fine a finishing one, that not a tree should
+be touched.&nbsp; <!-- page 104--><a name="page104"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 104</span>Rowed to the east point of Ross, which is well
+wooded; turn to the south coast.&nbsp; Doubling the point, the most
+beautiful shore of that island appears; it is the well-wooded environs of a
+bay, except a small opening to the castle; the woods are in deep shades,
+and rise on the regular slopes of a high range of rocky coast.&nbsp; The
+part in front of Filekilly point rises in the middle, and sinks towards
+each end.&nbsp; The woods of Tomys here appear uncommonly fine.&nbsp; Open
+Innisfallen, which is composed at this distance of the most various shades,
+within a broken outline, entirely different from the other islands, groups
+of different masses rising in irregular tufts, and joined by lower
+trees.&nbsp; No pencil could mix a happier assemblage.&nbsp; Land near a
+miserable room, where travellers dine.&nbsp; Of the isle of Innisfallen, it
+is paying no great compliment to say it is the most beautiful in the
+king&rsquo;s dominions, and perhaps in Europe.&nbsp; It contains twenty
+acres of land, and has every variety that the range of beauty, unmixed with
+the sublime, can give.&nbsp; The general feature is that of wood; the
+surface undulates into swelling hills, and sinks into little vales; the
+slopes are in every direction, the declivities die gently away, forming
+those slight inequalities which are the greatest beauty of dressed
+grounds.&nbsp; The little valleys let in views of the surrounding lake
+between the hills, while the swells break the regular outline of the water,
+and give to the whole an agreeable confusion.&nbsp; The wood has all the
+<!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+105</span>variety into which nature has thrown the surface; in some parts
+it is so thick as to appear impenetrable, and secludes all farther view; in
+others, it breaks into tufts of tall timber, under which cattle feed.&nbsp;
+Here they open, as if to offer to the spectator the view of the naked lawn;
+in others close, as if purposely to forbid a more prying examination.&nbsp;
+Trees of large size and commanding figure form in some places natural
+arches; the ivy mixing with the branches, and hanging across in festoons of
+foliage, while on one side the lake glitters among the trees, and on the
+other a thick gloom dwells in the recesses of the wood.&nbsp; The figure of
+the island renders one part a beautiful object to another; for the coast
+being broken and indented, forms bays surrounded either with rock or wood:
+slight promontories shoot into the lake, whose rocky edges are crowned with
+wood.&nbsp; These are the great features of Innisfallen; the slighter
+touches are full of beauties easily imagined by the reader.&nbsp; Every
+circumstance of the wood, the water, the rocks, and lawn, are
+characteristic, and have a beauty in the assemblage from mere
+disposition.&nbsp; I must, however, observe that this delicious retreat is
+not kept as one could wish.</p>
+<p>Scenes that are great and commanding, from magnitude or wildness, should
+never be dressed; the rugged, and even the horrible, may add to the effect
+upon the mind: but in such as Innisfallen, a degree of dress, that is,
+cleanliness, is even necessary to beauty.&nbsp; I <!-- page 106--><a
+name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 106</span>have spoken of lawn,
+but I should observe that expression indicates what it ought to be rather
+than what it is.&nbsp; It is very rich grass, poached by oxen and cows, the
+only inhabitants of the island.&nbsp; No spectator of taste but will regret
+the open grounds not being drained with hollow cuts; the ruggedness of the
+surface levelled, and the grass kept close shaven by many sheep instead of
+beasts.&nbsp; The bushes and briars, where they have encroached on what
+ought to be lawn, cleared away; some parts of the isle more opened; in a
+word no ornaments given, for the scene wants them not, but obstructions
+cleared, ruggedness smoothed, and the whole cleaned.&nbsp; This is what
+ought to be done; as to what might be made of the island, if its noble
+proprietor (Lord Kenmare) had an inclination, it admits of being converted
+into a terrestrial paradise; lawning with the intermixture of other shrubs
+and wood, and a little dress, would make it an example of what ornamented
+grounds might be, but which not one in a thousand is.&nbsp; Take the
+island, however, as it is, with its few imperfections, and where are we to
+find such another?&nbsp; What a delicious retreat! an emperor could not
+bestow such a one as Innisfallen; with a cottage, a few cows, and a swarm
+of poultry, is it possible that happiness should refuse to be a guest
+here?</p>
+<p>Row to Ross Castle, in order to coast that island; there is nothing
+peculiarly striking in it; return the same way around Innisfallen.&nbsp; In
+this little voyage <!-- page 107--><a name="page107"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 107</span>the shore of Ross is one of the most beautiful
+of the wooded ones in the lake; it seems to unite with Innisfallen, and
+projects into the water in thick woods one beyond another.&nbsp; In the
+middle of the channel a large rock, and from the other shore a little
+promontory of a few scattered trees; the whole scene pleasing.</p>
+<p>The shore of Innisfallen has much variety, but in general it is woody,
+and of the beautiful character which predominates in that island.&nbsp; One
+bay, at taking leave of it, is exceedingly pretty; it is a semicircular
+one, and in the centre there is a projecting knoll of wood within a bay;
+this is uncommon, and has an agreeable effect.</p>
+<p>The near approach to Tomys exhibits a sweep of wood, so great in extent,
+and so rich in foliage, that no person can see without admiring it.&nbsp;
+The mountainous part above is soon excluded by the approach; wood alone is
+seen, and that in such a noble range as to be greatly striking; it just
+hollows into a bay, and in the centre of it is a chasm in the wood; this is
+a bed of a considerable stream, which forms O&rsquo;Sullivan&rsquo;s
+cascade, to which all strangers are conducted, as one of the principal
+beauties of Killarney.&nbsp; Landed to the right of it, and walked under
+the thick shade of the wood, over a rocky declivity, close to the torrent
+stream, which breaks impetuously from rock to rock, with a roar that
+kindles expectation.&nbsp; The picture in your fancy will not exceed the
+reality; a great stream <!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 108</span>bursts from the deep bosom of a wooded glen,
+hollowed into a retired recess of rocks and trees, itself a most pleasing
+and romantic spot, were there not a drop of water: the first fall is many
+feet perpendicularly over a rock; to the eye it immediately makes another,
+the basin into which it pours being concealed; from this basin it forces
+itself impetuously between two rocks.&nbsp; This second fall is also of a
+considerable height; but the lower one, the third, is the most
+considerable; it issues in the same manner from a basin hid from the point
+of view.&nbsp; These basins being large, there appears a space of several
+yards between each fall, which adds much to the picturesque scenery; the
+whole is within an arch of wood, that hangs over it; the quantity of water
+is so considerable, as to make an almost deafening noise, and uniting with
+the torrent below, where the fragments of rock are large and numerous,
+throw an air of grandeur over the whole.&nbsp; It is about seventy feet
+high.&nbsp; Coast from hence the woody shores of Tomys and Glen&aacute;;
+they are upon the whole much the most beautiful ones I have anywhere seen;
+Glen&aacute; woods having more oak, and some arbutuses, are the finer and
+deeper shades; Tomys has a great quantity of birch, whose foliage is not so
+luxuriant.&nbsp; The reader may figure to himself what these woods are,
+when he is informed that they fill an unbroken extent of six miles in
+length, and from half a mile to a mile and a half in breadth, all hanging
+on the <!-- page 109--><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+109</span>sides of two vast mountains, and coming down with a full robe of
+rich luxuriance to the very water&rsquo;s edge.&nbsp; The acclivity of
+these hills is such, that every tree appears full to the eye.&nbsp; The
+variety of the ground is great; in some places great swells in the
+mountain-side, with corresponding hollows, present concave and convex
+masses; in others, considerable ridges of land and rock rise from the
+sweep, and offer to the astonished eye yet other varieties of shade.&nbsp;
+Smaller mountains rise regularly from the immense bosom of the larger, and
+hold forth their sylvan heads, backed by yet higher woods.&nbsp; To give
+all the varieties of this immense scenery of forest is impossible.&nbsp;
+Above the whole is a prodigious mass of mountain, of a gently swelling
+outline and soft appearance, varying as the sun or clouds change their
+position, but never becoming rugged or threatening to the eye.</p>
+<p>The variations are best seen by rowing near the shore, when every stroke
+of the oar gives a new outline, and fresh tints to please the eye: but for
+one great impression, row about two miles from the shore of Glen&aacute;;
+at that distance the inequalities in the surface are no longer seen, but
+the eye is filled with so immense a range of wood, crowned with a mountain
+in perfect unison with itself, that objects, whose character is that of
+beauty, are here, from their magnitude, truly magnificent, and attended
+with a most forcible expression.&mdash;Returned to Mucruss.</p>
+<p><!-- page 110--><a name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+110</span>September 30.&nbsp; This morning I had dedicated to the ascent of
+Mangerton, but his head was so enshrouded in clouds, and the weather so
+bad, that I was forced to give up the scheme: Mr. Herbert has measured him
+with very accurate instruments, of which he has a great collection, and
+found his height eight hundred and thirty-five yards above the level of the
+sea.&nbsp; The Devil&rsquo;s Punch-bowl, from the description I had of it,
+must be the crater of an exhausted volcano: there are many signs of them
+about Killarney, particularly vast rocks on the sides of mountains, in
+streams, as if they had rolled from the top in one direction.&nbsp; Brown
+stone rocks are also sometimes found on lime-quarries, tossed thither
+perhaps in some vast eruption.</p>
+<p>In my way from Killarney to Castle Island, rode into Lord
+Kenmare&rsquo;s park, from whence there is another beautiful view of the
+lake, different from many of the preceding; there is a broad margin of
+cultivated country at your feet, to lead the eye gradually in the lake,
+which exhibits her islands to this point more distinctly than to any other,
+and the backgrounds of the mountains of Glen&aacute; and Tomys give a bold
+relief.</p>
+<p>Upon the whole, Killarney, among the lakes that I have seen, can
+scarcely be said to have a rival.&nbsp; The extent of water in Loch Earne
+is much greater, the islands more numerous, and some scenes near Castle
+Caldwell of perhaps as great magnificence.&nbsp; The rocks <!-- page
+111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 111</span>at Keswick
+are more sublime, and other lakes may have circumstances in which they are
+superior; but when we consider the prodigious woods of Killarney, the
+immensity of the mountains, the uncommon beauty of the promontory of
+Mucruss and the Isle of Innisfallen, the character of the islands, the
+singular circumstance of the arbutus, and the uncommon echoes, it will
+appear, upon the whole, to be in reality superior to all comparison.</p>
+<p>Before I quit it I have one other observation to make, which is relative
+to the want of accommodations and extravagant expense of strangers residing
+at Killarney.&nbsp; I speak it not at all feelingly, thanks to Mr.
+Herbert&rsquo;s hospitality, but from the accounts given me: the inns are
+miserable, and the lodgings little better.&nbsp; I am surprised somebody
+with a good capital does not procure a large well-built inn, to be erected
+on the immediate shore of the lake, in an agreeable situation, at a
+distance from the town; there are very few places where such a one would
+answer better; there ought to be numerous and good apartments.&nbsp; A
+large rendezvous-room for billiards, cards, dancing, music, etc., to which
+the company might resort when they chose it; an ordinary for those that
+like dining in public; boats of all sorts, nets for fishing, and as great a
+variety of amusements as could be collected, especially within doors; for
+the climate being very rainy, travellers wait with great impatience in a
+dirty <!-- page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+112</span>common inn, which they would not do if they were in the midst of
+such accommodations as they meet with at an English spa.&nbsp; But above
+all, the prices of everything, from a room and a dinner to a barge and a
+band of music, to be reasonable, and hung up in every part of the
+house.&nbsp; The resort of strangers to Killarney would then be much
+increased, and their stay would be greatly prolonged; they would not view
+it post-haste, and fly away the first moment to avoid dirt and
+imposition.&nbsp; A man with a good capital and some ingenuity would, I
+think, make a fortune by fixing here upon such principles.</p>
+<p>The state of the poor in the whole county of Kerry represented as
+exceedingly miserable, and owing to the conduct of men of property, who are
+apt to lay the blame on what they call land pirates, or men who offer the
+highest rent, and who, in order to pay this rent, must and do re-let all
+the cabin lands at an extravagant rise, which is assigning over all the
+cabins to be devoured by one farmer.&nbsp; The cottars on a farm cannot go
+from one to another, in order to find a good master, as in England; for all
+the country is in the same system, and no redress to be found.&nbsp; Such
+being the case, the farmers are enabled to charge the price of labour as
+low as they please, and rate the land as high as they like.&nbsp; This is
+an evil which oppresses them cruelly, and certainly has its origin in its
+landlords when they set their farms, setting all the cabins with <!-- page
+113--><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>them,
+instead of keeping them tenants to themselves.&nbsp; The oppression is, the
+farmer valuing the labour of the poor at fourpence or fivepence a day, and
+paying that in land rated much above its value.&nbsp; Owing to this the
+poor are depressed; they live upon potatoes and sour milk, and the poorest
+of them only salt and water to them, with now and then a herring.&nbsp;
+Their milk is bought; for very few keep cows, scarce any pigs, but a few
+poultry.&nbsp; Their circumstances are incomparably worse than they were
+twenty years ago; for they had all cows, but then they wore no linen: all
+now have a little flax.&nbsp; To these evils have been owing emigrations,
+which have been considerable.</p>
+<p>To the west of Tralee are the Mahagree Islands, famous for their corn
+products; they are rock and sand, stocked with rabbits; near them a sandy
+tract, twelve miles long, and one mile broad, to the north, with the
+mountains to the south, famous for the best wheat in Kerry; all under the
+plough.</p>
+<p>Arriving at Ardfert, Lord Crosby, whose politeness I have every reason
+to remember, was so obliging as to carry me by one of the finest strands I
+ever rode upon, to view the mouth of the Shannon at Ballengary, the site of
+an old fort.&nbsp; It is a vast rock, separated from the country by a chasm
+of prodigious depth, through which the waves drive.&nbsp; The rocks of the
+coast here are in the boldest style, and hollowed by the furious Atlantic
+waves into caverns in which they roar.&nbsp; It <!-- page 114--><a
+name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 114</span>was a dead calm, yet
+the swell was so heavy, that the great waves rolled in and broke upon the
+rocks with such violence as to raise an immense foam, and give one an idea
+of what a storm would be; but fancy rarely falls short in her
+pictures.&nbsp; The view of the Shannon is exceedingly noble; it is eight
+miles over, the mouth formed by two headlands of very high and bold cliffs,
+and the reach of the river in view very extensive; it is an immense
+scenery: perhaps the noblest mouth of a river in Europe.</p>
+<p>Ardfert is very near the sea, so near it that single trees or rows are
+cut in pieces with the wind, yet about Lord Glendour&rsquo;s house there
+are extensive plantations exceedingly flourishing, many fine ash and beech;
+about a beautiful Cistercian abbey, and a silver fir of forty-eight
+years&rsquo; growth, of an immense height and size.</p>
+<p>October 3.&nbsp; Left Ardfert, accompanying Lord Crosby to
+Listowel.&nbsp; Called in the way to view Lixnaw, the ancient seat of the
+Earls of Kerry, but deserted for ten years past, and now presents so
+melancholy a scene of desolation, that it shocked me to see it.&nbsp;
+Everything around lies in ruin, and the house itself is going fast off by
+thieving depredations of the neighbourhood.&nbsp; I was told a curious
+anecdote of this estate; which shows wonderfully the improvement of
+Ireland.&nbsp; The present Earl of Kerry&rsquo;s grandfather, Thomas,
+agreed to lease the whole estate for &pound;1,500 a year to a <!-- page
+115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 115</span>Mr. Collis
+for ever, but the bargain went off upon a dispute whether the money should
+be paid at Cork or Dublin.&nbsp; Those very lands are now let at
+&pound;20,000 a year.&nbsp; There is yet a good deal of wood, particularly
+a fine ash grove, planted by the present Earl of Shelburne&rsquo;s
+father.</p>
+<p>Proceeded to Woodford, Robert Fitzgerald&rsquo;s, Esq., passing Listowel
+Bridge; the vale leading to it is very fine, the river is broad, the lands
+high, and one side a very extensive hanging wood, opening on those of
+Woodford in a pleasing style.</p>
+<p>Woodford is an agreeable scene; close to the house is a fine winding
+river under a bank of thick wood, with the view of an old castle hanging
+over it.</p>
+<p>In 1765, Mr. Fitzgerald was travelling from Constantinople to Warsaw,
+and a waggon with his baggage heavily laden overset; the country people
+harnessed two buffaloes by the horns, in order to draw it over, which they
+did with ease.&nbsp; In some very instructive conversation I had with this
+gentleman on the subject of his travels, this circumstance particularly
+struck me.</p>
+<p>October 4.&nbsp; From Woodford to Tarbat, the seat of Edward Leslie,
+Esq., through a country rather dreary, till it came upon Tarbat, which is
+so much the contrary that it appeared to the highest advantage; the house
+is on the edge of a beautiful lawn, with a thick margin of full grown wood,
+hanging on a steep bank <!-- page 116--><a name="page116"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 116</span>to the Shannon, so that the river is seen from
+the house over the tops of this wood, which being of a broken irregular
+outline has an effect very striking and uncommon; the river is two or three
+miles broad here, and the opposite coast forms a promontory which has from
+Tarbat exactly the appearance of a large island.&nbsp; To the east, the
+river swells into a triangular lake, with a reach opening at the distant
+corner of it to Limerick.&nbsp; The union of wood, water, and lawn forms
+upon the whole a very fine scene; the river is very magnificent.&nbsp; From
+the hill on the coast above the island, the lawn and wood appear also to
+great advantage.&nbsp; But the finest point of view is from the higher hill
+on the other side of the house, which looking down on all these scenes,
+they appear as a beautiful ornament to the Shannon, which spreads forth its
+proud course from two to nine miles wide, surrounded by highlands; a
+scenery truly magnificent.</p>
+<p>The state of the poor is something better than it was twenty years ago,
+particularly their clothing, cattle, and cabins.&nbsp; They live upon
+potatoes and milk; all have cows, and when they dry them, buy others.&nbsp;
+They also have butter, and most of them keep pigs, killing them for their
+own use.&nbsp; They have also herrings.&nbsp; They are in general in the
+cottar system, of paying for labour by assigning some land to each
+cabin.&nbsp; The country is greatly more populous than twenty years ago,
+and is now increasing; and if ever <!-- page 117--><a
+name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>so many cabins were
+built by a gradual increase, tenants would be found for them.&nbsp; A cabin
+and five acres of land will let for &pound;4 a year.&nbsp; The industrious
+cottar, with two, three, or four acres, would be exceedingly glad to have
+his time to himself, and have such an annual addition of land as he was
+able to manage, paying a fair rent for it; none would decline it but the
+idle and worthless.</p>
+<p>Tithes are all annually valued by the proctors, and charged very
+high.&nbsp; There are on the Shannon about one hundred boats employed in
+bringing turf to Limerick from the coast of Kerry and Clare, and in
+fishing; the former carry from twenty to twenty-five tons, the latter from
+five to ten, and are navigated each by two men and a boy.</p>
+<p>October 5.&nbsp; Passed through a very unentertaining country (except
+for a few miles on the bank of the Shannon) to Altavilla, but Mr. Bateman
+being from home, I was disappointed in getting an account of the palatines
+settled in his neighbourhood.&nbsp; Kept the road to Adair, where Mrs.
+Quin, with a politeness equalled only by her understanding, procured me
+every intelligence I wished for.</p>
+<p>Palatines were settled here by the late Lord Southwell about seventy
+years ago.</p>
+<p>They preserve some of their German customs: sleep between two
+beds.&nbsp; They appoint a burgomaster, to whom they appeal in case of all
+disputes; <!-- page 118--><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+118</span>and they yet preserve their language, but that is
+declining.&nbsp; They are very industrious, and in consequence are much
+happier and better fed, clothed, and lodged than the Irish peasants.&nbsp;
+We must not, however, conclude from hence that all is owing to this; their
+being independent farmers, and having leases, are circumstances which will
+create industry.&nbsp; Their crops are much better than those of their
+neighbours.&nbsp; There are three villages of them, about seventy families
+in all.&nbsp; For some time after they settled they fed upon sour-crout,
+but by degrees left it off, and took to potatoes; but now subsist upon them
+and butter and milk, but with a great deal of oat bread, and some of wheat,
+some meat and fowls, of which they raise many.&nbsp; They have all offices
+to their houses, that is, stables and cow-houses, and a lodge for their
+ploughs, etc.&nbsp; They keep their cows in the house in winter, feeding
+them upon hay and oat straw.&nbsp; They are remarkable for the goodness and
+cleanliness of their houses.&nbsp; The women are very industrious, reap the
+corn, plough the ground sometimes, and do whatever work may be going on;
+they also spin, and make their children do the same.&nbsp; Their wheat is
+much better than any in the country, insomuch that they get a better price
+than anybody else.&nbsp; Their industry goes so far, that jocular reports
+of its excess are spread.&nbsp; In a very pinching season, one of them
+yoked his wife against a horse, and went in that manner to work, and <!--
+page 119--><a name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+119</span>finished a journey at plough.&nbsp; The industry of the women is
+a perfect contrast to the Irish ladies in the cabins, who cannot be
+persuaded, on any consideration, even to make hay, it not being the custom
+of the country, yet they bind corn, and do other works more
+laborious.&nbsp; Mrs. Quin, who is ever attentive to introduce whatever can
+contribute to their welfare and happiness, offered many premiums to induce
+them to make hay, of hats, cloaks, stockings, etc. etc., but all would not
+do.</p>
+<p>Few places have so much wood about them as Adair; Mr. Quin has above one
+thousand acres in his hands, in which a large proportion is under
+wood.&nbsp; The deer park of four hundred acres is almost full of old oak
+and very fine thorns, of a great size; and about the house, the plantations
+are very extensive, of elm and other wood, but that thrives better than any
+other sort.&nbsp; I have nowhere seen finer than vast numbers here.&nbsp;
+There is a fine river runs under the house, and within view are no less
+than three ruins of Franciscan friaries, two of them remarkably beautiful,
+and one has most of the parts perfect, except the roof.</p>
+<p>In Mr. Quin&rsquo;s house there are some very good pictures,
+particularly an Annunciation by Domenichino, which is a beautiful
+piece.&nbsp; It was brought lately from Italy by Mr. Quin, junior.&nbsp;
+The colours are rich and mellow, and the hairs of the heads inimitably
+pleasing; the group of angels at the top, to the left of the piece, <!--
+page 120--><a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>is very
+natural.&nbsp; It is a piece of great merit.&nbsp; The companion is a
+Magdalen; the expression of melancholy, or rather misery, remarkably
+strong.&nbsp; There is a gloom in the whole in full unison with the
+subject.&nbsp; There are, besides these, some others inferior, yet of
+merit, and two very good portraits of Lord Dartry (Mrs. Quin&rsquo;s
+brother), and of Mr. Quin, junior, by Pompeio Battoni.&nbsp; A piece in an
+uncommon style, done on oak, of Esther and Ahasuerus; the colours tawdry,
+but the grouping attitudes and effect pleasing.</p>
+<p>Castle Oliver is a place almost entirely of Mr. Oliver&rsquo;s creation;
+from a house, surrounded with cabins and rubbish, he has fixed it in a fine
+lawn, surrounded by good wood.&nbsp; The park he has very much improved on
+an excellent plan; by means of seven feet hurdles, he fences off part of it
+that wants to be cleaned or improved; these he cultivates, and leaves for
+grass, and then takes another spot, which is by much the best way of doing
+it.&nbsp; In the park is a glen, an English mile long, winding in a
+pleasing manner, with much wood hanging on the banks.&nbsp; Mr. Oliver has
+conducted a stream through this vale, and formed many little water-falls in
+an exceedingly good taste, chiefly overhung with wood, but in some places
+open with several little rills, trickling over stones down the
+slopes.&nbsp; A path winds through a large wood and along the brow of the
+glen; this path leads to a hermitage, a cave of rock, in a good taste, and
+to some benches, <!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 121</span>from which the views of the water and wood are
+in the sequestered style they ought to be.&nbsp; One of these little views,
+which catches several falls under the arch of the bridge, is one of the
+prettiest touches of the kind I have seen.&nbsp; The vale beneath the
+house, when viewed from the higher grounds, is pleasing; it is very well
+wooded, there being many inclosures, surrounded by pine trees, and a thick
+fine mass of wood rises from them up the mountain-side, makes a very good
+figure, and would be better, had not Mr. Oliver&rsquo;s father cut it into
+vistas for shooting.&nbsp; Upon the whole, the place is highly improved,
+and when the mountains are planted, in which Mr. Oliver is making a
+considerable progress, it will be magnificent.</p>
+<p>In the house are several fine pictures, particularly five pieces by Seb.
+Ricci, Venus and &AElig;neas; Apollo and Pan; Venus and Achilles; and
+Pyrrhus and Andromache, by Lazzerini; and the Rape of the Lapithi by the
+Centaurs.&nbsp; The last is by much the finest, and is a very capital
+piece; the expression is strong, the figures are in bold relief, and the
+colouring good.&nbsp; Venus and Achilles is a pleasing picture; the
+continence of Scipio is well grouped, but Scipio, as in every picture I
+ever saw of him, has no expression.&nbsp; Indeed, chastity is in the
+countenance so passive a virtue as not to be at all suited to the genius of
+painting; the idea is rather that of insipidity, and accordingly
+Scipio&rsquo;s expression is generally insipid enough.&nbsp; Two fine
+pieces, by Lucca <!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 122</span>Jordano, Hercules and Anteus; Samson Killing
+the Lion: both dark and horrid, but they are highly finished and
+striking.&nbsp; Six heads of old men, by Nagori, excellent; and four young
+women, in the character of the seasons.</p>
+<p>October 9.&nbsp; Left Castle Oliver.&nbsp; Had I followed my
+inclination, my stay would have been much longer, for I found it equally
+the residence of entertainment and instruction.&nbsp; Passed through
+Kilfennan and Duntreleague, in my way to Tipperary.&nbsp; The road leads
+everywhere on the sides of the hills, so as to give a very distinct view of
+the lower grounds; the soil all the way is the same sort of sandy reddish
+loam I have already described, incomparable land for tillage: as I advanced
+it grew something lighter, and in many places free from gravel.&nbsp;
+Bullocks the stock all the way.&nbsp; Towards Tipperary I saw vast numbers
+of sheep, and many bullocks.&nbsp; All this line of country is part of the
+famous golden vale.&nbsp; To Thomas Town, where I was so unfortunate as not
+to find Mr. Matthew at home; the domain is one thousand five hundred
+English acres, so well planted that I could hardly believe myself in
+Ireland.&nbsp; There is a hill in the park from which the view of it, the
+country and the Galties, are striking.</p>
+<p>October 12.&nbsp; To Lord de Montalt&rsquo;s, at Dundrum, a place which
+his lordship has ornamented in the modern style of improvement: the house
+was situated in the midst of all the regular exertions of the last
+age.&nbsp; <!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+123</span>Parterres, parapets of earth, straight walks, knots and clipped
+hedges, all which he has thrown down, with an infinite number of hedges and
+ditches, filled up ponds, etc., and opened one very noble lawn around him,
+scattered negligently over with trees, and cleared the course of a
+choked-up river, so that it flows at present in a winding course through
+the grounds.</p>
+<p>October 13.&nbsp; Leaving Dundrum, passed through Cashel, where is a
+rock and ruin on it, called the Rock of Cashel, supposed to be of the
+remotest antiquity.&nbsp; Towards Clonmel, the whole way through the same
+rich vein of red sandy loam I have so often mentioned: I examined it in
+several fields, and found it to be of an extraordinary fertility, and as
+fine turnip land as ever I saw.&nbsp; It is much under sheep; but towards
+Clonmel there is a great deal of tillage.</p>
+<p>The first view of that town, backed by a high ridge of mountains, with a
+beautiful space near it of inclosures, fringed with a scattering of trees,
+was very pleasing.&nbsp; It is the best situated place in the county of
+Tipperary, on the Suir, which brings up boats of ten tons burthen.&nbsp; It
+appears to be a busy populous place, yet I was told that the manufacture of
+woollens is not considerable.&nbsp; It is noted for being the birthplace of
+the inimitable Sterne.</p>
+<p>To Sir William Osborne&rsquo;s, three miles the other side
+Clonmel.&nbsp; From a character so remarkable for intelligence and
+precision, I could not fail of <!-- page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 124</span>meeting information of the most valuable
+kind.&nbsp; This gentleman has made a mountain improvement which demands
+particular attention, being upon a principle very different from common
+ones.</p>
+<p>Twelve years ago he met with a hearty-looking fellow of forty, followed
+by a wife and six children in rags, who begged.&nbsp; Sir William
+questioned him upon the scandal of a man in full health and vigour,
+supporting himself in such a manner: the man said he could get no work:
+&ldquo;Come along with me, I will show you a spot of land upon which I will
+build a cabin for you, and if you like it you shall fix there.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The fellow followed Sir William, who was as good as his word: he built him
+a cabin, gave him five acres of a heathy mountain, lent him four pounds to
+stock with, and gave him, when he had prepared his ground, as much lime as
+he would come for.&nbsp; The fellow flourished; he went on gradually;
+repaid the four pounds, and presently became a happy little cottar: he has
+at present twelve acres under cultivation, and a stock in trade worth at
+least &pound;80; his name is John Conory.</p>
+<p>The success which attended this man in two or three years brought others
+who applied for land, and Sir William gave them as they applied.&nbsp; The
+mountain was under lease to a tenant, who valued it so little, that upon
+being reproached with not cultivating, or doing something with it, he
+assured Sir William that it was utterly impracticable to do anything with
+it, and <!-- page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>offered it to him without any deduction of rent.&nbsp; Upon this
+mountain he fixed them; gave them terms as they came determinable with the
+lease of the farm, so that every one that came in succession had shorter
+and shorter tenures; yet are they so desirous of settling, that they come
+at present, though only two years remain for a term.</p>
+<p>In this manner Sir William has fixed twenty-two families, who are all
+upon the improving hand, the meanest growing richer; and find themselves so
+well off, that no consideration will induce them to work for others, not
+even in harvest: their industry has no bounds; nor is the day long enough
+for the revolution of their incessant labour.&nbsp; Some of them bring turf
+to Clonmel, and Sir William has seen Conory returning loaded with soap
+ashes.</p>
+<p>He found it difficult to persuade them to make a road to their village,
+but when they had once done it, he found none in getting cross roads to it,
+they found such benefit in the first.&nbsp; Sir William has continued to
+give whatever lime they come for: and they have desired one thousand
+barrels among them for the year 1766, which their landlord has accordingly
+contracted for with his lime-burner, at 11d. a barrel.&nbsp; Their houses
+have all been built at his expense, and done by contract at &pound;6 each,
+after which they raise what little offices they want for themselves.</p>
+<p>October 15.&nbsp; Left New Town, and keeping on the <!-- page 126--><a
+name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 126</span>banks of the Suir,
+passed through Carrick to Curraghmore, the seat of the Earl of
+Tyrone.&nbsp; This line of country, in point of soil, inferior to what I
+have of late gone through: so that I consider the rich country to end at
+Clonmel.</p>
+<p>Emigrations from this part of Ireland principally to Newfoundland: for a
+season they have &pound;18 or &pound;20 for their pay, and are maintained,
+but they do not bring home more than &pound;7 to &pound;11.&nbsp; Some of
+them stay and settle; three years ago there was an emigration of indented
+servants to North Carolina of three hundred, but they were stopped by
+contrary winds, etc.&nbsp; There had been something of this constantly, but
+not to that amount.&nbsp; The oppression which the poor people have most to
+complain of is the not having any tenures in their lands, by which means
+they are entirely subject to their employers.</p>
+<p>Manufactures here are only woollens.&nbsp; Carrick is one of the
+greatest manufacturing towns in Ireland.&nbsp; Principally for ratteens,
+but of late they have got into broadcloths, all for home consumption; the
+manufacture increases, and is very flourishing.&nbsp; There are between
+three and four hundred people employed by it in Carrick and its
+neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>Curraghmore is one of the finest places in Ireland, or indeed that I
+have anywhere seen.&nbsp; The house, which is large, is situated upon a
+rising ground, in a vale surrounded by very bold hills, which rise in a
+variety of <!-- page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+127</span>forms and offer to the eye, in rising through the grounds, very
+noble and striking scenes.&nbsp; These hills are exceedingly varied, so
+that the detour of the place is very pleasing.&nbsp; In order to see it to
+advantage, I would advise a traveller to take the ride which Lord Tyrone
+carried me.&nbsp; Passed through the deer-park wood of old oaks, spread
+over the side of a bold hill, and of such an extent, that the scene is a
+truly forest one, without any other boundary in view than what the stems of
+trees offer from mere extent, retiring one behind another till they thicken
+so much to the eye, under the shade of their spreading tops, as to form a
+distant wall of wood.&nbsp; This is a sort of scene not common in Ireland;
+it is a great extent alone that will give it.&nbsp; From this hill enter an
+evergreen plantation, a scene which winds up the deer-park hill, and opens
+on to the brow of it, which commands a most noble view indeed.&nbsp; The
+lawns round the house appear at one&rsquo;s feet, at the bottom of a great
+declivity of wood, almost everywhere surrounded by plantations.&nbsp; The
+hills on the opposite side of the vale against the house consist of a large
+lawn in the centre of the two woods, that to the right of an immense
+extent, which waves over a mountain-side in the finest manner imaginable,
+and lead the eye to the scenery on the left, which is a beautiful vale of
+rich inclosures, of several miles extent, with the Suir making one great
+reach through it, and a bold bend just before it enters a gap in the hills
+towards <!-- page 128--><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+128</span>Waterford, and winds behind them; to the right you look over a
+large plain, backed by the great Cummeragh Mountains.&nbsp; For a distinct
+extent of view, the parts of which are all of a commanding magnitude, and a
+variety equal to the number, very few prospects are finer than this.</p>
+<p>From hence the boundary plantation extends some miles to the west and
+north-west of the domain, forming a margin to the whole of different
+growths, having been planted, by degrees, from three to sixteen
+years.&nbsp; It is in general well grown, and the trees thriven
+exceedingly, particularly the oak, beech, larch, and firs.&nbsp; It is very
+well sketched, with much variety given to it.</p>
+<p>Pass by the garden across the river which murmurs over a rocky bed, and
+follow the riding up a steep hill, covered with wood from some breaks, in
+which the house appears perfectly buried in a deep wood, and come out,
+after a considerable extent of ride, into the higher lawn, which commands a
+view of the scenery about the house; and from the brow of the hill the
+water, which is made to imitate a river, has a good effect, and throws a
+great air of cheerfulness over the scene, for from hence the declivity
+below it is hid.&nbsp; But the view, which is the most pleasing from hence,
+the finest at Curraghmore, and indeed one of the most striking that is
+anywhere to be seen, is that of the hanging wood to the right of the house,
+rising in so noble a sweep as perfectly to fill the eye, and leave the <!--
+page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 129</span>fancy
+scarce anything to wish: at the bottom is a small semicircular lawn, around
+which flows the river, under the immediate shade of very noble oaks.&nbsp;
+The whole wood rises boldly from the bottom, tree above tree, to a vast
+height, of large oak.&nbsp; The masses of shade are but tints of one
+colour; it is not chequered with a variety.&nbsp; There is a majestic
+simplicity, a unity in the whole, which is attended with an uncommon
+impression, and such as none but the most magnificent scenes can raise.</p>
+<p>Descending from hence through the roads, the riding crosses the river,
+and passes through the meadow which has such an effect in the preceding
+scene, from which also the view is very fine, and leads home through a
+continued and an extensive range of fine oak, partly on a declivity, at the
+bottom of which the river murmurs its broken course.</p>
+<p>Besides this noble riding, there is a very agreeable walk runs
+immediately on the banks of the river, which is perfect in its style; it is
+a sequestered line of wood, so high on the declivities in some places, and
+so thick on the very edge in others, overspreading the river, that the
+character of the scene is gloom and melancholy, heightened by the noise of
+the water falling from stone to stone.&nbsp; There is a considerable
+variety in the banks of it, and in the figures and growth of the wood, but
+none that hurts the impression, which is well preserved throughout.</p>
+<p><!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+130</span>October 17.&nbsp; Accompanied Lord Tyrone to Waterford; made some
+inquiries into the state of their trade, but found it difficult, from the
+method in which the custom-house books are kept, to get the details I
+wished; but in the year following, having the pleasure of a long visit at
+Ballycanvan, the seat of Cornelius Bolton, Esq., his son, the member for
+the city, procured me every information I could wish, and that in so
+liberal and polite a manner, that it would not be easy to express the
+obligations I am under to both.&nbsp; In general, I was informed that the
+trade of the place had increased considerably in ten years, both the
+exports and imports&mdash;the exports of the products of pasturage, full
+one-third in twelve years.&nbsp; That the staple trade of the place is the
+Newfoundland trade.&nbsp; This is very much increased; there is more of it
+here than anywhere.&nbsp; The number of people who go as passengers in the
+Newfoundland ships is amazing: from sixty to eighty ships, and from three
+thousand to five thousand annually.&nbsp; They come from most parts of
+Ireland, from Cork, Kerry, etc.&nbsp; Experienced men will get eighteen to
+twenty-five pounds for the season, from March to November.&nbsp; A man who
+never went will have five to seven pounds and his passage, and others rise
+to twenty pounds; the passage out they get, but pay home two pounds.&nbsp;
+An industrious man in a year will bring home twelve to sixteen pounds with
+him, and some more.&nbsp; A great point for them is to be able to carry
+<!-- page 131--><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+131</span>out all their slops, for everything there is exceedingly dear,
+one or two hundred per cent. dearer than they can get them at home.&nbsp;
+They are not allowed to take out any woollen goods but for their own
+use.&nbsp; The ships go loaded with pork, beef, butter, and some salt; and
+bring home passengers, or get freights where they can; sometimes rum.&nbsp;
+The Waterford pork comes principally from the barony of Iverk, in Kilkenny,
+where they fatten great numbers of large hogs; for many weeks together they
+kill here three to four thousand a week, the price fifty shillings to four
+pounds each; goes chiefly to Newfoundland.&nbsp; One was killed in Mr.
+Penrose&rsquo;s cellar that weighed five hundredweight and a quarter, and
+measured from the nose to the end of the tail nine feet four inches.</p>
+<p>There is a foundry at Waterford for pots, kettles, weights, and all
+common utensils; and a manufactory by Messrs. King and Tegent of anvils to
+anchors, twenty hundredweight, etc., which employs forty hands.&nbsp;
+Smiths earn from 6s. to 24s. a week.&nbsp; Nailers from 10s. to 12s.&nbsp;
+And another less considerable.&nbsp; There are two sugar-houses, and many
+salt-houses.&nbsp; The salt is boiled over lime-kilns.</p>
+<p>There is a fishery upon the coast of Waterford, for a great variety of
+fish, herrings particularly, in the mouth of Waterford Harbour, and two
+years ago in such quantities there, that the tides left the ditches full of
+them.&nbsp; There are some premium boats both <!-- page 132--><a
+name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span>here and at
+Dungarvan, but the quantity of herrings barrelled is not considerable.</p>
+<p>The butter trade of Waterford has increased greatly for seven years
+past; it comes from Waterford principally, but much from Carlow; for it
+comes from twenty miles beyond Carlow, for sixpence per hundred.&nbsp; From
+the 1st of January, 1774, to the 1st of January, 1775, there were exported
+fifty-nine thousand eight hundred and fifty-six casks of butter, each, on
+an average, one hundredweight, at the mean price of 50s.&nbsp; Revenue of
+Waterford, 1751, &pound;17,000; 1776, &pound;52,000.&nbsp; The slaughter
+trade has increased, but not so much as the butter.&nbsp; Price of butter
+now at Waterford, 58s.; twenty years&rsquo; average, 42s.&nbsp; Beef now to
+25s.; average, twenty years, 10s. to 18s.&nbsp; Pork, now 30s.; average,
+twenty years, 16s. to 22s.&nbsp; Eighty sail of ships now belonging to the
+port, twenty years ago not thirty.&nbsp; They pay to the captains of ship
+of two hundred tons &pound;5 a month; the mate &pound;3 10s.&nbsp; Ten men
+at 40s., five years ago only 27s.&nbsp; Building ships, &pound;10 a
+ton.&nbsp; Wear and tear of such a ship, &pound;20 a month.&nbsp; Ship
+provisions, 20s. a month.</p>
+<p>The new church in this city is a very beautiful one; the body of it is
+in the same style exactly as that of Belfast, already described: the total
+length one hundred and seventy feet, the breadth fifty-eight.&nbsp; The
+length of the body of the church ninety-two, the height forty; breadth
+between the pillars, twenty-six.&nbsp; The aisle <!-- page 133--><a
+name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 133</span>(which I do not
+remember at Belfast) is fifty-eight by forty-five.&nbsp; A room on one side
+the steeple, space for the bishop&rsquo;s court, twenty-four by eighteen;
+on the other side, a room of the same size for the vestry; and twenty-eight
+feet square left for a steeple when their funds will permit.&nbsp; The
+whole is light and beautiful.&nbsp; It was built by subscription, and there
+is a fine organ bespoke at London.&nbsp; But the finest object in this city
+is the quay, which is unrivalled by any I have seen.&nbsp; It is an English
+mile long; the buildings on it are only common houses, but the river is
+near a mile over, flows up to the town in one noble reach, and the opposite
+shore a bold hill, which rises immediately from the water to a height that
+renders the whole magnificent.&nbsp; This is scattered with some wood, and
+divided into pastures of a beautiful verdure by hedges.&nbsp; I crossed the
+water, in order to walk up the rocks on the top of this hill.&nbsp; In one
+place, over against Bilberry quarry, you look immediately down on the
+river, which flows in noble reaches from Granny Castle on the right past
+Cromwell&rsquo;s rock, the shores on both sides quite steep, especially the
+rock of Bilberry.&nbsp; You look over the whole town, which here appears in
+a triangular form.&nbsp; Besides the city the Cummeragh mountains,
+Slein-a-man, etc., come in view.&nbsp; Kilmacow river falls into the Suir,
+after flowing through a large extent of well-planted country.&nbsp; This is
+the finest view about the city.</p>
+<p><!-- page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+134</span>From Waterford to Passage, and got my chaise and horses on board
+the <i>Countess of Tyrone</i> packet, in full expectation of sailing
+immediately, as the wind was fair, but I soon found the difference of these
+private vessels and the Post-Office packets at Holyhead and Dublin.&nbsp;
+When the wind was fair the tide was foul; and when the tide was with them
+the wind would not do.&nbsp; In English, there was not a complement of
+passengers, and so I had the agreeableness of waiting with my horses in the
+hold, by way of rest, after a journey of above one thousand five hundred
+miles.</p>
+<p>October 18.&nbsp; After a beastly night passed on shipboard, and finding
+no signs of departure, walked to Ballycanvan, the seat of Cornelius Bolton,
+Esq.; rode with Mr. Bolton, jun., to Faithleghill, which commands one of
+the finest views I have seen in Ireland.&nbsp; There is a rock on the top
+of a hill which has a very bold view on every side down on a great extent
+of country, much of which is grass inclosures of a good verdure.&nbsp; This
+hill is the centre of a circle of about ten miles diameter, beyond which
+higher lands rise, which, after spreading to a great extent, have on every
+side a background of mountain: in a northerly direction Mount Leinster,
+between Wexford and Wicklow, twenty-six miles off, rises in several heads
+far above the clouds.&nbsp; A little to the right of this, Sliakeiltha
+(<i>i.e.</i> &ldquo;the woody mountain&rdquo;), at a less distance, is a
+fine object.&nbsp; To the left, Tory Hill, only five miles, in a regular
+form, varies <!-- page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+135</span>the outline.&nbsp; To the east, there is the Long Mountain,
+eighteen miles distant, and several lesser Wexford hills.&nbsp; To the
+south-east, the Saltees.&nbsp; To the south, the ocean, and the Colines
+about the bay of Tramore.&nbsp; To the west, Monavollagh rises two thousand
+one hundred and sixty feet above the level of the sea, eighteen miles off,
+being part of the great range of the Cummeragh mountains: and to the
+north-west Slein-a-man, at the distance of twenty-four miles; so that the
+outline is everywhere bold and distinct, though distant.&nbsp; These
+circumstances would alone form a great view, but the water part of it,
+which fills up the canvas, is in a much superior style.&nbsp; The great
+river Suir takes a winding course from the city of Waterford, through a
+rich country, hanging on the sides of hills to its banks, and, dividing
+into a double channel, forms the lesser island, both of which courses you
+command distinctly.&nbsp; United, it makes a bold reach under the hill on
+which you stand, and there receives the noble tribute of the united waters
+of the Barrow and Nore in two great channels, which form the larger
+island.&nbsp; Enlarged by such an accession of water, it winds round the
+hill in a bending course, of the freest and most graceful outline,
+everywhere from one to three miles across, with bold shores that give a
+sharp outline to its course to the ocean.&nbsp; Twenty sail of ships at
+Passage gave animation to the scene.&nbsp; Upon the whole, the boldness of
+the mountain outline, the variety of <!-- page 136--><a
+name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>the grounds, the vast
+extent of river, with the declivity to it from the point of view,
+altogether form so unrivalled a scenery, every object so commanding, that
+the general want of wood is almost forgotten.</p>
+<p>Two years after this account was written I again visited this enchanting
+hill, and walked to it, day after day, from Ballycanvan, and with
+increasing pleasure.&nbsp; Mr. Bolton, jun., has, since I was there before,
+inclosed forty acres on the top and steep slope to the water, and begun to
+plant them.&nbsp; This will be a prodigious addition; for the slope forming
+the bold shore for a considerable space, and having projections from which
+the wood will all be seen in the gentle hollows of the hill, the effect
+will be amazingly fine.&nbsp; Walks and a riding are tracing out, which
+will command fresh beauties at every step.&nbsp; The spots from which a
+variety of beautiful views are seen are numerous.&nbsp; All the way from
+Ballycanvan to Faithleg, the whole, to the amount of one thousand two
+hundred acres, is the property of Mr. Bolton.</p>
+<p>Farms about Ballycanvan, Waterford, etc., are generally small, from
+twenty and thirty to five hundred acres, generally about two hundred and
+fifty.&nbsp; All above two hundred acres are in general dairies; some of
+the dairy ones rise very high.&nbsp; The soil is a reddish stony or slaty
+gravel, dry, except low lands, which are clay or turf.&nbsp; Rents vary
+much&mdash;about the town very high, from &pound;5 5s. to &pound;9, but at
+the distance <!-- page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+137</span>of a few miles towards Passage, etc., they are from 20s. to 40s.,
+and some higher, but the country in general does not rise so high, usually
+10s. to 20s. for dairying land.</p>
+<p>The poor people spin their own flax, but not more, and a few of them
+wool for themselves.&nbsp; Their food is potatoes and milk; but they have a
+considerable assistance from fish, particularly herrings; part of the year
+they have also barley, oaten, and rye bread.&nbsp; They are incomparably
+better off in every respect than twenty years ago.&nbsp; Their increase
+about Ballycanvan is very great, and tillage all over this neighbourhood is
+increased.&nbsp; The rent of a cabin 10s.; an acre with it 20s.&nbsp; The
+grass of a cow a few years ago 20s., now 25s. or 30s.</p>
+<p>An exceeding good practice here in making their fences is, they plant
+the quick on the side of the bank in the common manner, and then, instead
+of the dead hedge we use in England on the top of the bank, they plant a
+row of old thorns, two or three feet high, which readily grow, and form at
+once a most excellent fence.&nbsp; Their way also of taking in sand-banks
+from the river deserves notice.&nbsp; They stake down a row of furzes at
+low water, laying stones on them to the height of one or two feet; these
+retain the mud, which every tide brings in, so as to fill up all within the
+furze as high as their tops.&nbsp; I remarked, on the strand, that a few
+boatloads of stones laid carelessly had had this <!-- page 138--><a
+name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 138</span>effect, for within
+them I measured twelve inches deep of rich blue mud left behind them, the
+same as they use in manuring, full of shells, and effervesced strongly with
+vinegar.</p>
+<p>Among the poor people the fishermen are in much the best
+circumstances.&nbsp; The fishery is considerable; Waterford and its harbour
+have fifty boats each, from eight to twelve tons, six men on an average to
+each, but to one of six tons five men go.&nbsp; A boat of eight tons costs
+&pound;40; one of twelve, &pound;60.&nbsp; To each boat there is a train of
+nets of six pair, which costs from &pound;4 4s. to &pound;6 6s.; tan them
+with bark.&nbsp; Their only net fishery is that of herrings, which is
+commonly carried on by shares.&nbsp; The division of the fish is, first,
+one-fourth for the boat; and then the men and nets divide the rest, the
+latter reckoned as three men.&nbsp; They reckon ten maze of herrings an
+indifferent night&rsquo;s work; when there is a good take, forty maze have
+been taken, twenty a good night; the price per maze from 1s. to 7s.,
+average 5s.&nbsp; Their take in 1775, the greatest they have known, when
+they had more than they could dispose of, and the whole town and country
+stunk of them, they retailed them thirty-two for a penny; 1773 and 1774
+good years.&nbsp; They barrelled many, but in general there is an import of
+Swedish.&nbsp; Besides the common articles I have registered, the following
+are: pigeons, 1s. a couple; a hare, 1s.; partridges, 9d.; turbots, fine
+ones, 4s. to 10s.; soles a pair, large, 1s. 6d <!-- page 139--><a
+name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 139</span>to 1s.; lobsters, 3d.
+each; oysters, 6s. per hundred; rabbits, 1s. to 1s. 4d. a couple; cod, 1s.
+each, large; salmon, 1&frac14;d. to 2d.</p>
+<p>A very extraordinary circumstance I was told&mdash;that within five or
+six years there has been much hay carried from Waterford to Norway, in the
+Norway ships that bring deals.&nbsp; As hay is dear here, it proves a most
+backward state of husbandry in that northerly region, since the
+neighbourhood of sea-ports to which this hay can alone go is generally the
+best improved in all countries.</p>
+<p>October 19, the wind being fair, took my leave of Mr. Bolton, and went
+back to the ship.&nbsp; Met with a fresh scene of provoking delays, so that
+it was the next morning, October 20, at eight o&rsquo;clock, before we
+sailed, and then it was not wind, but a cargo of passengers that spread our
+sails.&nbsp; Twelve or fourteen hours are not an uncommon passage, but such
+was our luck that, after being in sight of the lights on the Smalls, we
+were by contrary winds blown opposite to Arklow sands.&nbsp; A violent gale
+arose, which presently blew a storm that lasted thirty-six hours, in which,
+under a reefed mainsail, the ship drifted up and down wearing in order to
+keep clear of the coasts.</p>
+<p>No wonder this appeared to me, a fresh-water sailor, as a storm, when
+the oldest men on board reckoned it a violent one.&nbsp; The wind blew in
+furious gusts; the waves ran very high; the cabin windows <!-- page
+140--><a name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 140</span>burst open,
+and the sea pouring in set everything afloat, and among the rest a poor
+lady, who had spread her bed on the floor.&nbsp; We had, however, the
+satisfaction to find, by trying the pumps every watch, that the ship made
+little water.&nbsp; I had more time to attend these circumstances than the
+rest of the passengers, being the only one in seven who escaped without
+being sick.&nbsp; It pleased God to preserve us, but we did not cast anchor
+in Milford Haven till Tuesday morning, the 22nd, at one o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>It is much to be wished that there were some means of being secure of
+packets sailing regularly, instead of waiting till there is such a number
+of passengers as satisfies the owner and captain.&nbsp; With the
+Post-Office packets there is this satisfaction, and a great one it
+is.&nbsp; The contrary conduct is so perfectly detestable that I should
+suppose the scheme of Waterford ones can never succeed.</p>
+<p>Two years after, having been assured this conveyance was put on a new
+footing, I ventured to try it again, but was mortified to find that the
+<i>Tyrone</i>, the only one that could take a chaise or horses (the
+<i>Countess</i> being laid up), was repairing, but would sail in five
+days.&nbsp; I waited, and received assurance after assurance that she would
+be ready on such a day, and then on another.&nbsp; In a word, I waited
+twenty-four days before I sailed.&nbsp; Moderately speaking, I could by
+Dublin have reached Turin or Milan as soon as I did <!-- page 141--><a
+name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>Milford in this
+conveyance.&nbsp; All this time the papers had constant advertisements of
+the <i>Tyrone</i> sailing regularly, instead of letting the public know
+that she was under a repair.&nbsp; Her owner seems to be a fair and worthy
+man; he will therefore probably give up the scheme entirely, unless
+assisted by the corporation with at least four ships more, to sail
+regularly with or without passengers.&nbsp; At present it is a general
+disappointment.&nbsp; I was fortunate in Mr. Bolton&rsquo;s acquaintance,
+passing my time very agreeably at his hospitable mansion; but those who, in
+such a case, should find a Waterford inn their resource, would curse the
+<i>Tyrone</i>, and set off for Dublin.&nbsp; The expenses of this passage
+are higher than those from Dublin to Holyhead: I paid&mdash;</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;&nbsp; s. d.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>A four-wheel chaise</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>3&nbsp; 3&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Three horses</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>3&nbsp; 3&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Self</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1&nbsp; 1&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Two servants</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1&nbsp; 1&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Custom-house at Waterford, hay, oats, etc.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>2&nbsp; 1&nbsp; 7</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Ditto at Pembroke and Hubberston</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>3&nbsp; 0&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sailors, boats, and sundry small charges</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>1 15&nbsp; 5</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&pound;15&nbsp; 5&nbsp; 0</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>1777.&nbsp; Upon a second journey to Ireland this year, I took the
+opportunity of going from Dublin to Mitchelstown, by a route through the
+central part of the kingdom, which I had not before sufficiently
+viewed.</p>
+<p><!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+142</span>Left Dublin the 24th of September, and taking the road to Naas, I
+was again struck with the great population of the country, the cabins being
+so much poorer in the vicinity of the capital than in the more distant
+parts of the kingdom.</p>
+<p>To Kildare, crossing the Curragh, so famous for its turf.&nbsp; It is a
+sheep-walk of above four thousand English acres, forming a more beautiful
+lawn than the hand of art ever made.&nbsp; Nothing can exceed the extreme
+softness of the turf, which is of a verdure that charms the eye, and highly
+set off by the gentle inequality of surface.&nbsp; The soil is a fine dry
+loam on a stony bottom; it is fed by many large flocks, turned on it by the
+occupiers of the adjacent farms, who alone have the right, and pay very
+great rents on that account.&nbsp; It is the only considerable common in
+the kingdom.&nbsp; The sheep yield very little wool, not more than 3lb. per
+fleece, but of a very fine quality.</p>
+<p>From Furness to Shaen Castle, in the Queen&rsquo;s County, Dean
+Coote&rsquo;s; but as the husbandry, etc., of this neighbourhood is already
+registered, I have only to observe that Mr. Coote was so kind as to show me
+the improved grounds of Dawson&rsquo;s Court, the seat of Lord Carlow,
+which I had not seen before.&nbsp; The principal beauties of the place are
+the well-grown and extensive plantations, which form a shade not often met
+with in Ireland.&nbsp; There is in the backgrounds a lake well accompanied
+with wood, broken by several <!-- page 143--><a name="page143"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 143</span>islands that are covered with underwood, and
+an ornamented walk passing on the banks which leads from the house.&nbsp;
+This lake is in the season perfectly alive with wild-fowl.&nbsp; Near it is
+a very beautiful spot, which commands a view of both woods and water; a
+situation either for a house or a temple.&nbsp; Mr. Dawson is adding to the
+plantations, an employment of all others the most meritorious in
+Ireland.&nbsp; Another work, scarcely less so, was the erecting a large
+handsome inn, wherein the same gentleman intends establishing a person who
+shall be able to supply travellers post with either chaises or horses.</p>
+<p>From Shaen Castle to Gloster, in the King&rsquo;s County, the seat of
+John Lloyd, Esq., member for that county, to whose attention I owe the
+following particulars, in which he took every means to have me well and
+accurately informed.&nbsp; But first let me observe that I was much pleased
+to remark, all the way from Naas quite to Rosscrea, that the country was
+amongst the finest I had seen in Ireland, and consequently that I was
+fortunate in having an opportunity of seeing it after the involuntary
+omission of last year.&nbsp; The cabins, though many of them are very bad,
+yet are better than in some other counties, and chimneys generally a part
+of them.&nbsp; The people, too, have no very miserable appearance; the
+breed of cattle and sheep good, and the hogs much the best I have anywhere
+seen in Ireland.&nbsp; Turf is everywhere at hand, and in plenty; <!-- page
+144--><a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>yet are the
+bogs not so general as to affect the beauty of the country, which is very
+great in many tracts, with a scattering of wood, which makes it
+pleasing.&nbsp; Shaen Castle stands in the midst of a very fine
+tract.&nbsp; From Mountrath to Gloster, Mr. Lloyd&rsquo;s, I could have
+imagined myself in a very pleasing part of England.&nbsp; The country
+breaks into a variety of inequalities of hill and dale; it is all well
+inclosed with fine hedges; there is a plenty of wood, not so monopolised as
+in many parts of the kingdom by here and there a solitary seat, but spread
+over the whole face of the prospect: look which way you will, it is
+cultivated and cheerful.</p>
+<p>The Shannon adds not a little to the convenience and agreeableness of a
+residence so near it.&nbsp; Besides affording these sorts of wild-fowl, the
+quantity and size of its fish are amazing: pikes swarm in it, and rise in
+weight to fifty pounds.&nbsp; In the little flat spaces on its banks are
+small but deep lochs, which are covered in winter and in floods.&nbsp; When
+the river withdraws, it leaves plenty of fish in them, which are caught to
+put into stews.&nbsp; Mr. Holmes has a small one before his door at
+Johnstown, with a little stream which feeds it.&nbsp; A trowling-rod here
+gets you a bite in a moment, of a pike from twenty to forty pounds.&nbsp; I
+ate of one of twenty-seven pounds so taken.&nbsp; I had also the pleasure
+of seeing a fisherman bring three trout, weighing fourteen pounds, and sell
+them for sixpence-halfpenny a piece.&nbsp; A couple of boats lying at
+anchor, with lines <!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 145</span>extended from one to the other, and hooks in
+plenty from them, have been known to catch an incredible quantity of
+trout.&nbsp; Colonel Prittie, in one morning, caught four stone odd pounds,
+thirty-two trout.&nbsp; In general they rise from three to nine
+pounds.&nbsp; Perch swarm; they appeared in the Shannon for the first time
+about ten years ago, in such plenty that the poor lived on them.&nbsp;
+Bream of six pounds; eels very plentiful.&nbsp; There are many gillaroos in
+the river; one of twelve pounds weight was sent to Mr. Jenkinson.&nbsp;
+Upon the whole, these circumstances, with the pleasure of shooting and
+boating on the river, added to the glorious view it yields, and which is
+enough at any time to cheer the mind, render this neighbourhood one of the
+most enviable situations to live in that I have seen in Ireland.&nbsp; The
+face of the country gives every circumstance of beauty.&nbsp; From
+Killodeernan Hill, behind the new house building by Mr. Holmes, the whole
+is seen to great advantage.&nbsp; The spreading part of the Shannon, called
+Loch Derg, is commanded distinctly for many miles.&nbsp; It is in two grand
+divisions of great variety: that to the north is a reach of five miles
+leading to Portumna.&nbsp; The whole hither shore a scenery of hills,
+checkered by enclosures and little woods, and retiring from the eye into a
+rich distant prospect.&nbsp; The woods of Doras, belonging to Lord
+Clanricarde, form a part of the opposite shore, and the river itself
+presents an island of one hundred and twenty acres.&nbsp; Inclining <!--
+page 146--><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>to the
+left, a vale of rough ground, with an old castle in it, is backed by a bold
+hill, which intercepts the river there, and then the great reach of fifteen
+miles, the bay of Sheriff, spreads to the eye, with a magnificence not a
+little added to by the boundary, a sharp outline of the county of Clare
+mountains, between which and the Duharrow hills the Shannon finds its
+way.&nbsp; These hills lead the eye still more to the left, till the Keeper
+meets it, presenting a very beautiful outline that sinks into other ranges
+of hill, uniting with the Devil&rsquo;s Bit.&nbsp; The home scenery of the
+grounds, woods, hills, and lake of Johnstown, is beautiful.</p>
+<p>Dancing is very general among the poor people, almost universal in every
+cabin.&nbsp; Dancing-masters of their own rank travel through the country
+from cabin to cabin, with a piper or blind fiddler, and the pay is sixpence
+a quarter.&nbsp; It is an absolute system of education.&nbsp; Weddings are
+always celebrated with much dancing, and a Sunday rarely passes without a
+dance.&nbsp; There are very few among them who will not, after a hard
+day&rsquo;s work, gladly walk seven miles to have a dance.&nbsp; John is
+not so lively, but then a hard day&rsquo;s work with him is certainly a
+different affair from what it is with Paddy.&nbsp; Other branches of
+education are likewise much attended to, every child of the poorest family
+learning to read, write, and cast accounts.</p>
+<p>There is a very ancient custom here, for a number of country neighbours
+among the poor people to fix upon <!-- page 147--><a
+name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 147</span>some young woman that
+ought, as they think, to be married.&nbsp; They also agree upon a young
+fellow as a proper husband for her.&nbsp; This determined, they send to the
+fair one&rsquo;s cabin to inform her that on the Sunday following
+&ldquo;she is to be horsed,&rdquo; that is, carried on men&rsquo;s
+backs.&nbsp; She must then provide whisky and cider for a treat, as all
+will pay her a visit after mass for a hurling match.&nbsp; As soon as she
+is horsed, the hurling begins, in which the young fellow appointed for her
+husband has the eyes of all the company fixed on him.&nbsp; If he comes off
+conqueror, he is certainly married to the girl; but if another is
+victorious, he as certainly loses her, for she is the prize of the
+victor.&nbsp; These trials are not always finished in one Sunday; they take
+sometimes two or three, and the common expression when they are over is,
+that &ldquo;such a girl was goaled.&rdquo;&nbsp; Sometimes one barony hurls
+against another, but a marriageable girl is always the prize.&nbsp; Hurling
+is a sort of cricket, but instead of throwing the ball in order to knock
+down a wicket, the aim is to pass it through a bent stick, the end stuck in
+the ground.&nbsp; In these matches they perform such feats of activity as
+ought to evidence the food they live on to be far from deficient in
+nourishment.</p>
+<p>In the hills above Derry are some very fine slate quarries, that employ
+sixty men.&nbsp; The quarrymen are paid 3s. a thousand for the slates, and
+the labourers 5d. a day.&nbsp; They are very fine, and sent by the Shannon
+to <!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+148</span>distant parts of the kingdom; the price at the quarry 6s. a
+thousand, and at the shore 6s. 8d.&nbsp; Four hundred thousand slates are
+raised to pay the rent only, from which some estimate may be made of the
+quantity.</p>
+<p>Mr. Head has a practice in his fences which deserves universal
+imitation; it is planting trees for gate-posts.&nbsp; Stone piers are
+expensive, and always tumbling down; trees are beautiful, and never want
+repairing.&nbsp; Within fifteen years this gentleman has improved Derry so
+much, that those who had only seen it before would find it almost a new
+creation.&nbsp; He has built a handsome stone house, on the slope of a hill
+rising from the Shannon, and backed by some fine woods, which unite with
+many old hedges well planted to form a woodland scene beautiful in the
+contrast to the bright expanse of the noble river below.&nbsp; The
+declivity on which these woods are finishes in a mountain, which rises
+above the whole.&nbsp; The Shannon gives a bend around the adjoining lands,
+so as to be seen from the house both to the west and north, the lawn
+falling gradually to a margin of wood on the shore, which varies the
+outline.&nbsp; The river is two miles broad, and on the opposite shore
+cultivated inclosures rise in some places almost to the mountain top, which
+is very bold.</p>
+<p>It is a very singular demesne; a stripe of very beautiful ground,
+reaching two miles along the banks of the river, which forms his fence on
+one side, with a wall on the other.&nbsp; There is so much wood as to
+render <!-- page 149--><a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+149</span>it very pleasing; adding to every day by planting all the fences
+made or repaired.&nbsp; From several little hills, which rise in different
+parts of it, extensive views of the river are commanded quite to Portumna;
+but these are much eclipsed by that from the top of the hill above the
+slate quarry.&nbsp; From thence you see the river for at least forty miles,
+from Portumna to twenty miles beyond Limerick.&nbsp; It has the appearance
+of a fine basin, two miles over, into which three great rivers lead, being
+the north and south course and the Bay of Sheriff.&nbsp; The reaches of it
+one beyond another to Portumna are fine.&nbsp; At the foot of the mountain
+Mr. Head&rsquo;s demesne extends in a shore of rich woodland.</p>
+<p>October 7.&nbsp; Took my leave of Mr. Head, after passing four days very
+agreeably.&nbsp; Through Killaloe, over the Shannon, a very long bridge of
+many arches; went out of the road to see a fall of that river at Castle
+Connel, where there is such an accompaniment of wood as to form a very
+pleasing scenery.&nbsp; The river takes a very rapid rocky course around a
+projecting rock, on which a gentleman has built a summer-house, and formed
+a terrace: it is a striking spot.&nbsp; To Limerick.&nbsp; Laid at
+Bennis&rsquo;s, the first inn we had slept in from Dublin.&nbsp; God
+preserve us this journey from another!</p>
+<p>It is not uncommon, especially in mountainous countries, to find objects
+that much deserve the attention of travellers entirely neglected by
+them.&nbsp; There <!-- page 150--><a name="page150"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 150</span>are a few instances of this upon Lord
+Kingsborough&rsquo;s estate, in the neighbourhood of Mitchelstown.&nbsp;
+The first I shall mention is a cave at Skeheenrinky, on the road between
+Cahir and that place.&nbsp; The opening to it is a cleft of rock in a
+limestone hill, so narrow as to be difficult to get into it.&nbsp; I
+descended by a ladder of about twenty steps, and then found myself in a
+vault of a hundred feet long, and fifty or sixty high.&nbsp; A small hole
+on the left leads from this a winding course of I believe not less than
+half an Irish mile, exhibiting a variety that struck me much.&nbsp; In some
+places the cavity in the rock is so large that when well lighted up by
+candles (not flambeaux; Lord Kingsborough once showed it me with them, and
+we found their smoke troublesome) it takes the appearance of a vaulted
+cathedral, supported by massy columns.&nbsp; The walls, ceiling, floor, and
+pillars, are by turns composed of every fantastic form; and often of very
+beautiful incrustations of spar, some of which glitters so much that it
+seems powdered with diamonds; and in others the ceiling is formed of that
+sort which has so near a resemblance to a cauliflower.&nbsp; The spar
+formed into columns by the dropping of water has taken some very regular
+forms; but others are different, folded in plaits of light drapery, which
+hang from their support in a very pleasing manner.&nbsp; The angles of the
+walls seem fringed with icicles.&nbsp; One very long branch of the cave,
+which turns to the north, <!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 151</span>is in some places so narrow and low, that one
+crawls into it, when it suddenly breaks into large vaulted spaces, in a
+thousand forms.&nbsp; The spar in all this cave is very brilliant, and
+almost equal to Bristol stone.&nbsp; For several hundred yards in the
+larger branch there is a deep water at the bottom of the declivity to the
+right, which the common people call the river.&nbsp; A part of the way is
+over a sort of potter&rsquo;s clay, which moulds into any form, and is of a
+brown colour; a very different soil from any in the neighbouring
+country.&nbsp; I have seen the famous cave in the Peak, but think it very
+much inferior to this; and Lord Kingsborough, who has viewed the Grot
+d&rsquo;Aucel in Burgundy, says that it is not to be compared with it.</p>
+<p>But the commanding region of the Galtees deserves more attention.&nbsp;
+Those who are fond of scenes in which Nature reigns in all her wild
+magnificence should visit this stupendous chain.&nbsp; It consists of many
+vast mountains, thrown together in an assemblage of the most interesting
+features, from the boldness and height of the declivities, freedom of
+outline, and variety of parts, filling a space of about six miles by three
+or four.&nbsp; Galtymore is the highest point, and rises like the lord and
+father of the surrounding progeny.&nbsp; From the top you look down upon a
+great extent of mountain, which shelves away from him to the south, east,
+and west; but to the north the ridge is almost a perpendicular
+declivity.&nbsp; On that side the <!-- page 152--><a
+name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 152</span>famous golden vale of
+Limerick and Tipperary spreads a rich level to the eye, bounded by the
+mountains of Clare, King&rsquo;s and Queen&rsquo;s Counties, with the
+course of the Shannon, for many miles below Limerick.&nbsp; To the south
+you look over alternate ridges of mountains, which rise one beyond another,
+till in a clear day the eye meets the ocean near Dungarvan.&nbsp; The
+mountains of Waterford and Knockmealdown fill up the space to the
+south-east.&nbsp; The western is the most extensive view; for nothing stops
+the eye till Mangerton and Macgillicuddy Reeks point out the spot where
+Killarney&rsquo;s lake calls for a farther excursion.&nbsp; The prospect
+extends into eight counties&mdash;Cork, Kerry, Waterford, Limerick, Clare,
+Queen&rsquo;s, Tipperary, King&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>A little to the west of this proud summit, below it in a very
+extraordinary hollow, is a circular lake of two acres, reported to be
+unfathomable.&nbsp; The descriptions which I have read of the craters of
+exhausted volcanoes leave very little doubt of this being one; and the
+conical regularity of the summit of Galtymore speaks the same
+language.&nbsp; East of this respectable hill, to use Sir William
+Hamilton&rsquo;s language, is a declivity of about one-quarter of a mile,
+and there Galtybeg rises in a yet more regular cone; and between the two
+hills is another lake, which from its position seems to have been once the
+crater which threw up Galtybeg, as the first mentioned was the origin of
+Galtymore.&nbsp; Beyond <!-- page 153--><a name="page153"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 153</span>the former hill is a third lake, and east of
+that another hill; I was told of a fourth, with another corresponding
+mountain.&nbsp; It is only the mere summits of these mountains which rise
+above the lakes.&nbsp; Speaking of them below, they may be said to be on
+the tops of the hills.&nbsp; They are all of them at the bottom of an
+almost regularly circular hollow.&nbsp; On the side next the mountain-top
+are walls of perpendicular rocks, in regular strata, and some of them piled
+on each other, with an appearance of art rather than nature.&nbsp; In these
+rocks the eagles, which are seen in numbers on the Galtees, have their
+nests.&nbsp; Supposing the mountains to be of volcanic origin, and these
+lakes the craters, of which I have not a doubt, they are objects of the
+greatest curiosity, for there is an unusual regularity in every
+considerable summit having its corresponding crater.&nbsp; But without this
+circumstance, the scenery is interesting in a very great degree.&nbsp; The
+mountain summits, which are often wrapped in the clouds, at other times
+exhibit the freest outline; the immense scooped hollows which sink at your
+feet, declivities of so vast a depth as to give one terror to look down;
+with the unusual forms of the lower region of hills, particularly Bull
+Hill, and Round Hill, each a mile over, yet rising out of circular vales,
+with the regularity of semi-globes, unite upon the whole to exhibit a
+scenery to the eye in which the parts are of a magnitude so commanding, a
+character so interesting, and a variety so striking, <!-- page 154--><a
+name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 154</span>that they well
+deserve to be examined by every curious traveller.</p>
+<p>Nor are these immense outlines the whole of what is to be seen in this
+great range of mountains.&nbsp; Every glen has its beauties: there is a
+considerable mountain river, or rather torrent, in every one of them; but
+the greatest are the Funcheon, between Sefang and Galtymore; the Limestone
+river, between Galtymore and Round Hill, and the Grouse river, between
+Coolegarranroe and Mr. O&rsquo;Callaghan&rsquo;s mountain; these present to
+the eye, for a tract of about three miles, every variety that rock, water,
+and mountain can give, thrown into all the fantastic forms which art may
+attempt in ornamented grounds, but always fails in.&nbsp; Nothing can
+exceed the beauty of the water, when not discoloured by rain; its lucid
+transparency shows, at considerable depths, every pebble no bigger than a
+pin, every rocky basin alive with trout and eels, that play and dash among
+the rocks as if endowed with that native vigour which animates, in a
+superior degree, every inhabitant of the mountains, from the bounding red
+deer and the soaring eagle down even to the fishes of the brook.&nbsp;
+Every five minutes you have a water-fall in these glens, which in any other
+region would stop every traveller to admire it.&nbsp; Sometimes the vale
+takes a gentle declivity, and presents to the eye at one stroke twenty or
+thirty falls, which render the scenery all alive with motion; the rocks are
+<!-- page 155--><a name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+155</span>tossed about in the wildest confusion, and the torrent bursts by
+turns from above, beneath, and under them; while the background is always
+filled up with the mountains which stretch around.</p>
+<p>In the western glen is the finest cascade in all the Galtees.&nbsp;
+There are two falls, with a basin in the rock between, but from some points
+of view they appear one: the rock over which the water tumbles is about
+sixty feet high.&nbsp; A good line in which to view these objects is either
+to take the Killarney and Mallow road to Mitchelstown and from thence by
+Lord Kingsborough&rsquo;s new one to Skeheenrinky, there to take one of the
+glens to Galtybeg and Galtymore, and return to Mitchelstown by the
+Wolf&rsquo;s Track, Temple Hill, and the Waterfall; or, if the Cork road is
+travelling, to make Dobbin&rsquo;s inn, at Ballyporeen, the head-quarters,
+and view them from thence.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Having heard much of the beauties of a part of the Queen&rsquo;s County
+I had not before seen, I took that line of country in my way on a journey
+to Dublin.</p>
+<p>From Mitchelstown to Cashel, the road leads as far as Galbally in the
+route already travelled from Cullen.&nbsp; Towards Cashel the country is
+various.&nbsp; The only objects deserving attention are the plantations of
+Thomastown, the seat of Francis Mathew, Esq.; they consist chiefly of
+hedgerow trees in double and treble rows, are well grown, and of such
+extent as to form an <!-- page 156--><a name="page156"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 156</span>uncommon woodland scene in Ireland.&nbsp;
+Found the widow Holland&rsquo;s inn, at Cashel, clean and very civil.&nbsp;
+Take the road to Urlingford.&nbsp; The rich sheep pastures, part of the
+famous golden vale, reach between three and four miles from Cashel to the
+great bog by Botany Hill, noted for producing a greater variety of plants
+than common.&nbsp; That bog is separated by only small tracts of land from
+the string of bogs which extend through the Queen&rsquo;s County, from the
+great bog of Allen; it is here of considerable extent, and exceedingly
+improvable.&nbsp; Then enter a low marshy bad country, which grows worse
+after passing the sixty-sixth milestone, and successive bogs in it.&nbsp;
+Breakfast at Johnstown, a regular village on a slight eminence, built by
+Mr. Hayley.&nbsp; It is near the spa of Ballyspellin.</p>
+<p>Rows of trees are planted, but their heads all cut off, I suppose from
+their not thriving, being planted too old.&nbsp; Immediately on leaving
+these planted avenues, enter a row of eight or ten new cabins, at a
+distance from each other, which appear to be a new undertaking, the land
+about them all pared and burnt, and the ashes in heaps.</p>
+<p>Enter a fine planted country, with much corn and good thriving quick
+hedges for many miles.&nbsp; The road leads through a large wood, which
+joins Lord Ashbrook&rsquo;s plantations, whose house is situated in the
+midst of more wood than almost any one I have seen in Ireland.&nbsp; Pass
+Durrow; the country for two or three <!-- page 157--><a
+name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 157</span>miles continues all
+inclosed with fine quick hedges, is beautiful, and has some resemblance to
+the best parts of Essex.&nbsp; Sir Robert Staple&rsquo;s improvements join
+this fine tract.&nbsp; They are completed in a most perfect manner, the
+hedges well grown, cut, and in such excellent order that I can scarcely
+believe myself to be in Ireland.&nbsp; His gates are all of iron.&nbsp;
+These sylvan scenes continue through other seats, beautifully situated
+amidst gentle declivities of the finest verdure, full-grown woods,
+excellent hedges, and a pretty river winding by the house.&nbsp; The whole
+environs of several would be admired in the best parts of England.</p>
+<p>Cross a great bog, within sight of Lord de Vesci&rsquo;s
+plantations.&nbsp; The road leads over it, being drained for that purpose
+by deep cuts on either side.&nbsp; I should apprehend this bog to be among
+the most improvable in the country.&nbsp; Slept at Ballyroan, at an inn
+kept by three animals who call themselves women; met with more impertinence
+than at any other in Ireland.&nbsp; It is an execrable hole.&nbsp; In three
+or four miles pass Sir John Parnel&rsquo;s, prettily situated in a neatly
+dressed lawn, with much wood about it, and a lake quite alive with wild
+fowl.</p>
+<p>Pass Monstereven, and cross directly a large bog, drained and partly
+improved; but all of it bearing grass, and seems in a state that might
+easily be reduced to rich meadow, with only a dressing of lime.&nbsp; Here
+I got again into the road I had travelled before.</p>
+<p><!-- page 158--><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+158</span>I must in general remark, that from near Urlingford to Dawson
+Court, near Monstereven, which is completely across the Queen&rsquo;s
+County, is a line of above thirty English miles, and is for that extent by
+much the most improved of any I have seen in Ireland.&nbsp; It is generally
+well planted, has many woods, and not consisting of patches of plantation
+just by gentlemen&rsquo;s houses, but spreading over the whole face of the
+country, so as to give it the richness of an English woodland scene.&nbsp;
+What a country would Ireland be had the inhabitants of the rest of it
+improved the whole like this!</p>
+<h2>PART II.</h2>
+<h3>SECTION I.&mdash;Soil, Face of the Country, and Climate.</h3>
+<p>To judge of Ireland by the conversation one sometimes hears in England,
+it would be supposed that one-half of it was covered with bogs, and the
+other with mountains filled with Irish ready to fly at the sight of a
+civilised being.&nbsp; There are people who will smile when they hear that,
+in proportion to the size of the two countries, Ireland is more cultivated
+than England, having much less waste land of all sorts.&nbsp; Of
+uncultivated mountains there are no such tracts as are found in our four
+northern counties, and the North <!-- page 159--><a
+name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 159</span>Riding of Yorkshire,
+with the eastern line of Lancaster, nearly down to the Peak of Derby, which
+form an extent of above a hundred miles of waste.&nbsp; The most
+considerable of this sort in Ireland are in Kerry, Galway, and Mayo, and
+some in Sligo and Donegal.&nbsp; But all these together will not make the
+quantity we have in the four northern counties; the valleys in the Irish
+mountains are also more inhabited, I think, than those of England, except
+where there are mines, and consequently some sort of cultivation creeping
+up the sides.&nbsp; Natural fertility, acre for acre over the two kingdoms,
+is certainly in favour of Ireland; of this I believe there can scarcely be
+a doubt entertained, when it is considered that some of the more beautiful,
+and even best cultivated counties in England, owe almost everything to the
+capital, art, and industry of the inhabitants.</p>
+<p>The circumstance which strikes me as the greatest singularity of Ireland
+is the rockiness of the soil, which should seem at first sight against that
+degree of fertility; but the contrary is the fact.&nbsp; Stone is so
+general, that I have great reason to believe the whole island is one vast
+rock of different strata and kinds rising out of the sea.&nbsp; I have
+rarely heard of any great depths being sunk without meeting with it.&nbsp;
+In general it appears on the surface in every part of the kingdom; the
+flattest and most fertile parts, as Limerick, Tipperary, and Meath, have it
+at no great <!-- page 160--><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+160</span>depth, almost as much as the more barren ones.&nbsp; May we not
+recognise in this the hand of bounteous Providence, which has given perhaps
+the most stony soil in Europe to the moistest climate in it?&nbsp; If as
+much rain fell upon the clays of England (a soil very rarely met with in
+Ireland, and never without much stone) as falls upon the rocks of her
+sister island, those lands could not be cultivated.&nbsp; But the rocks are
+here clothed with verdure; those of limestone, with only a thin covering of
+mould, have the softest and most beautiful turf imaginable.</p>
+<p>Of the great advantages resulting from the general plenty of limestone
+and limestone gravel, and the nature of the bogs, I shall have occasion to
+speak more particularly hereafter.</p>
+<p>The rockiness of the soil in Ireland is so universal that it
+predominates in every sort.&nbsp; One cannot use with propriety the terms
+clay, loam, sand, etc.; it must be a stony clay, a stony loam, a gravelly
+sand.&nbsp; Clay, especially the yellow, is much talked of in Ireland, but
+it is for want of proper discrimination.&nbsp; I have once or twice seen
+almost a pure clay upon the surface, but it is extremely rare.&nbsp; The
+true yellow clay is usually found in a thin stratum under the surface
+mould, and over a rock; harsh, tenacious, stony, strong loams, difficult to
+work, are not uncommon: but they are quite different from English
+clays.</p>
+<p>Friable, sandy loams, dry but fertile, are very <!-- page 161--><a
+name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 161</span>common, and they form
+the best soils in the kingdom for tillage and sheep.&nbsp; Tipperary and
+Roscommon abound particularly in them.&nbsp; The most fertile of all are
+the bullock pastures of Limerick, and the banks of the Shannon in Clare,
+called the Corcasses.&nbsp; These are a mellow, putrid, friable loam.</p>
+<p>Sand which is so common in England, and yet more common through Spain,
+France, Germany, and Poland, quite from Gibraltar to Petersburg, is nowhere
+met with in Ireland, except for narrow slips of hillocks, upon the sea
+coast.&nbsp; Nor did I ever meet with or hear of a chalky soil.</p>
+<p>The bogs, of which foreigners have heard so much, are very extensive in
+Ireland; that of Allen extends eighty miles, and is computed to contain
+three hundred thousand acres.&nbsp; There are others also, very extensive,
+and smaller ones scattered over the whole kingdom; but these are not in
+general more than are wanted for fuel.&nbsp; When I come to speak of the
+improvement of waste lands, I shall describe them particularly.</p>
+<p>Besides the great fertility of the soil, there are other circumstances
+which come within my sphere to mention.&nbsp; Few countries can be better
+watered by large and beautiful rivers; and it is remarkable that by much
+the finest parts of the kingdom are on the banks of these rivers.&nbsp;
+Witness the Suir, Blackwater, the Liffey, the Boyne, the Nore, the Barrow,
+and part of the Shannon, they wash a scenery that can hardly be <!-- page
+162--><a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+162</span>exceeded.&nbsp; From the rockiness of the country, however, there
+are few of them that have not obstructions, which are great impediments to
+inland navigation.</p>
+<p>The mountains of Ireland give to travelling that interesting variety
+which a flat country can never abound with.&nbsp; And, at the same time,
+they are not in such number as to confer the usual character of poverty
+which attends them.&nbsp; I was either upon or very near the most
+considerable in the kingdom.&nbsp; Mangerton, and the Reeks, in Kerry; the
+Galties in Cork; those of Mourne in Down; Crow Patrick, and Nephin in Mayo,
+these are the principal in Ireland, and they are of a character, in height
+and sublimity, which should render them the objects of every
+traveller&rsquo;s attention.</p>
+<p>Relative to the climate of Ireland, a short residence cannot enable a
+man to speak much from his own experience; the observations I have made
+myself confirm the idea of its being vastly wetter than England; from the
+20th of June to the 20th of October I kept a register, and there were, in
+one hundred and twenty-two days, seventy-five of rain, and very many of
+them incessant and heavy.&nbsp; I have examined similar registers I kept in
+England, and can find no year that even approaches to such a moisture as
+this.&nbsp; But there is a register of an accurate diary published which
+compares London and Cork.&nbsp; The result is, that the quantity at the
+latter place was double to that at London.&nbsp; See Smith&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;History of Cork.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 163--><a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+163</span>From the information I received, I have reason to believe that
+the rainy season sets in usually about the first of July and continues very
+wet till September or October, when there is usually a dry fine season of a
+month or six weeks.&nbsp; I resided in the county of Cork, etc., from
+October till March, and found the winter much more soft and mild than ever
+I experienced one in England.&nbsp; I was also a whole summer there (1778),
+and it is fair to mention that it was as fine a one as ever I knew in
+England, though by no means so hot.&nbsp; I think hardly so wet as very
+many I have known in England.&nbsp; The tops of the Galty mountains
+exhibited the only snow we saw; and as to frosts, they were so slight and
+rare that I believe myrtles, and yet tenderer plants, would have survived
+without any covering.&nbsp; But when I say that the winter was not
+remarkable for being wet, I do not mean that we had a dry atmosphere.&nbsp;
+The inches of rain which fell in the winter I speak of would not mark the
+moisture of the climate.&nbsp; As many inches will fall in a single
+tropical shower as in a whole year in England.&nbsp; See Mitchel&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Present State of Great Britain and North America.&rdquo;&nbsp; But
+if the clouds presently disperse, and a bright sun shines, the air may soon
+be dry.&nbsp; The worst circumstance of the climate of Ireland is the
+constant moisture without rain.&nbsp; Wet a piece of leather, and lay it in
+a room where there is neither sun nor fire, and it will not in summer even
+be dry in a month.&nbsp; I have known <!-- page 164--><a
+name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 164</span>gentlemen in Ireland
+deny their climate being moister than England, but if they have eyes let
+them open them, and see the verdure that clothes their rocks, and compare
+it with ours in England&mdash;where rocky soils are of a russet brown
+however sweet the food for sheep.&nbsp; Does not their island lie more
+exposed to the great Atlantic; and does not the west wind blow
+three-fourths of a year?&nbsp; If there was another island yet more
+westward, would not the climate of Ireland be improved?&nbsp; Such persons
+speak equally against fact, reason, and philosophy.&nbsp; That the moisture
+of a climate does not depend on the quantity of rain that falls, but on the
+powers of aerial evaporation, Dr. Dobson has clearly proved.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Phil. Trans.&rdquo; vol. lxvii., part i., p. 244.</p>
+<h4>Oppression.</h4>
+<p>Before I conclude this article of the common labouring poor in Ireland,
+I must observe, that their happiness depends not merely upon the payment of
+their labour, their clothes, or their food; the subordination of the lower
+classes, degenerating into oppression, is not to be overlooked.&nbsp; The
+poor in all countries, and under all governments, are both paid and fed,
+yet there is an infinite difference between them in different ones.&nbsp;
+This inquiry will by no means turn out so favourable as the preceding
+articles.&nbsp; It must be very apparent to every traveller through that
+country, that <!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 165</span>the labouring poor are treated with harshness,
+and are in all respects so little considered that their want of importance
+seems a perfect contrast to their situation in England, of which country,
+comparatively speaking, they reign the sovereigns.&nbsp; The age has
+improved so much in humanity, that even the poor Irish have experienced its
+influence, and are every day treated better and better; but still the
+remnant of the old manners, the abominable distinction of religion, united
+with the oppressive conduct of the little country gentlemen, or rather
+vermin of the kingdom, who never were out of it, altogether bear still very
+heavy on the poor people, and subject them to situations more mortifying
+than we ever behold in England.&nbsp; The landlord of an Irish estate,
+inhabited by Roman Catholics, is a sort of despot who yields obedience, in
+whatever concerns the poor, to no law but that of his will.&nbsp; To
+discover what the liberty of the people is, we must live among them, and
+not look for it in the statutes of the realm: the language of written law
+may be that of liberty, but the situation of the poor may speak no language
+but that of slavery.&nbsp; There is too much of this contradiction in
+Ireland; a long series of oppressions, aided by many very ill-judged laws,
+have brought landlords into a habit of exerting a very lofty superiority,
+and their vassals into that of an almost unlimited submission: speaking a
+language that is despised, professing a religion that is abhorred <!-- page
+166--><a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 166</span>and being
+disarmed, the poor find themselves in many cases slaves even in the bosom
+of written liberty.&nbsp; Landlords that have resided much abroad are
+usually humane in their ideas, but the habit of tyranny naturally contracts
+the mind, so that even in this polished age there are instances of a severe
+carriage towards the poor, which is quite unknown in England.</p>
+<p>A landlord in Ireland can scarcely invent an order which a servant,
+labourer, or cottar dares to refuse to execute.&nbsp; Nothing satisfies him
+but an unlimited submission.&nbsp; Disrespect, or anything tending towards
+sauciness, he may punish with his cane or his horsewhip with the most
+perfect security; a poor man would have his bones broke if he offered to
+lift his hands in his own defence.&nbsp; Knocking-down is spoken of in the
+country in a manner that makes an Englishman stare.&nbsp; Landlords of
+consequence have assured me that many of their cottars would think
+themselves honoured by having their wives and daughters sent for to the bed
+of their master; a mark of slavery that proves the oppression under which
+such people must live.&nbsp; Nay, I have heard anecdotes of the lives of
+people being made free with without any apprehension of the justice of a
+jury.&nbsp; But let it not be imagined that this is common; formerly it
+happened every day, but law gains ground.&nbsp; It must strike the most
+careless traveller to see whole strings of cars whipped into a ditch by a
+gentleman&rsquo;s footman to make way for his <!-- page 167--><a
+name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>carriage; if they are
+overturned or broken in pieces, no matter, it is taken in patience; were
+they to complain they would perhaps be horsewhipped.&nbsp; The execution of
+the laws lies very much in the hands of justices of the peace, many of whom
+are drawn from the most illiberal class in the kingdom.&nbsp; If a poor man
+lodges a complaint against a gentleman, or any animal that chooses to call
+itself a gentleman, and the justice issues out a summons for his
+appearance, it is a fixed affront, and he will infallibly be called
+out.&nbsp; Where manners are in conspiracy against law, to whom are the
+oppressed people to have recourse?&nbsp; It is a fact, that a poor man
+having a contest with a gentleman, must&mdash;but I am talking nonsense,
+they know their situation too well to think of it; they can have no
+defence, but by means of protection from one gentleman against another, who
+probably protects his vassal as he would the sheep he intends to eat.</p>
+<p>The colours of this picture are not charged.&nbsp; To assert that all
+these cases are common would be an exaggeration, but to say that an
+unfeeling landlord will do all this with impunity, is to keep strictly to
+truth: and what is liberty but a farce and a jest, if its blessings are
+received as the favour of kindness and humanity, instead of being the
+inheritance of right?</p>
+<p>Consequences have flowed from these oppressions which ought long ago to
+have put a stop to them.&nbsp; In <!-- page 168--><a
+name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>England we have heard
+much of White-boys, Steel-boys, Oak-boys, Peep-of-day-boys, etc.&nbsp; But
+these various insurgents are not to be confounded, for they are very
+different.&nbsp; The proper distinction in the discontents of the people is
+into Protestant and Catholic.&nbsp; All but the White-boys were among the
+manufacturing Protestants in the north: the White-boys Catholic labourers
+in the south.&nbsp; From the best intelligence I could gain, the riots of
+the manufacturers had no other foundation but such variations in the
+manufacture as all fabrics experience, and which they had themselves known
+and submitted to before.&nbsp; The case, however, was different with the
+White-boys, who being labouring Catholics met with all those oppressions I
+have described, and would probably have continued in full submission had
+not very severe treatment in respect of tithes, united with a great
+speculative rise of rent about the same time, blown up the flame of
+resistance; the atrocious acts they were guilty of made them the object of
+general indignation; acts were passed for their punishment, which seemed
+calculated for the meridian of Barbary.&nbsp; This arose to such a height
+that by one they were to be hanged under circumstances without the common
+formalities of a trial, which, though repealed the following session, marks
+the spirit of punishment; while others remain yet the law of the land, that
+would if executed tend more to raise than quell an insurrection.&nbsp; From
+all <!-- page 169--><a name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+169</span>which it is manifest that the gentlemen of Ireland never thought
+of a radical cure from overlooking the real cause of the disease, which in
+fact lay in themselves, and not in the wretches they doomed to the
+gallows.&nbsp; Let them change their own conduct entirely, and the poor
+will not long riot.&nbsp; Treat them like men who ought to be as free as
+yourselves.&nbsp; Put an end to that system of religious persecution which
+for seventy years has divided the kingdom against itself; in these two
+circumstances lies the cure of insurrection; perform them completely, and
+you will have an affectionate poor, instead of oppressed and discontented
+vassals.</p>
+<p>A better treatment of the poor in Ireland is a very material point of
+the welfare of the whole British Empire.&nbsp; Events may happen which may
+convince us fatally of this truth; if not, oppression must have broken all
+the spirit and resentment of men.&nbsp; By what policy the Government of
+England can for so many years have permitted such an absurd system to be
+matured in Ireland is beyond the power of plain sense to discover.</p>
+<h4>Emigrations.</h4>
+<p>Before the American war broke out, the Irish and Scotch emigrations were
+a constant subject of conversation in England, and occasioned much
+discourse even in parliament.&nbsp; The common observation was, <!-- page
+170--><a name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 170</span>that if they
+were not stopped, those countries would be ruined, and they were generally
+attributed to a great rise of rents.&nbsp; Upon going over to Ireland I
+determined to omit no opportunities of discovering the cause and extent of
+this emigration, and my information, as may be seen in the minutes of the
+journey, was very regular.&nbsp; I have only a few general remarks to make
+on it here.</p>
+<p>The spirit of emigration in Ireland appeared to be confined to two
+circumstances, the Presbyterian religion, and the linen manufacture.&nbsp;
+I heard of very few emigrants except among manufacturers of that
+persuasion.&nbsp; The Catholics never went; they seem not only tied to the
+country, but almost to the parish in which their ancestors lived.&nbsp; As
+to the emigration in the north it was an error in England to suppose it a
+novelty which arose with the increase in rents.&nbsp; The contrary was the
+fact; it had subsisted perhaps forty years, insomuch that at the ports of
+Belfast, Derry, etc., the passenger trade, as they called it, had long been
+a regular branch of commerce, which employed several ships, and consisted
+in carrying people to America.&nbsp; The increasing population of the
+country made it an increasing trade, but when the linen trade was low, the
+passenger trade was always high.&nbsp; At the time of Lord Donegan letting
+his estate in the north, the linen business suffered a temporary decline,
+which sent great numbers to America, and gave rise to <!-- page 171--><a
+name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 171</span>the error that it was
+occasioned by the increase of his rents.&nbsp; The fact, however, was
+otherwise, for great numbers of those who went from his lands actually sold
+those leases for considerable sums, the hardship of which was supposed to
+have driven them to America.&nbsp; Some emigration, therefore, always
+existed, and its increase depended on the fluctuations of linen; but as to
+the effect there was as much error in the conclusions drawn in England as
+before in the cause.</p>
+<p>It is the misfortune of all manufactures worked for a foreign market to
+be upon an insecure footing; periods of declension will come, and when in
+consequence of them great numbers of people are out of employment, the best
+circumstance is their enlisting in the army or navy, and it is the common
+result; but unfortunately the manufacture in Ireland (of which I shall have
+occasion to speak more hereafter) is not confined as it ought to be to
+towns, but spreads into all cabins of the country.&nbsp; Being half
+farmers, half manufacturers, they have too much property in cattle, etc.,
+to enlist when idle; if they convert it into cash it will enable them to
+pay their passage to America, an alternative always chosen in preference to
+the military life.&nbsp; The consequence is, that they must live without
+work till their substance is quite consumed before they will enlist.&nbsp;
+Men who are in such a situation that from various causes they cannot work,
+and won&rsquo;t enlist, should emigrate; if they stay at home they must
+<!-- page 172--><a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+172</span>remain a burthen upon the community.&nbsp; Emigration should not,
+therefore, be condemned in states so ill-governed as to possess many people
+willing to work, but without employment.</p>
+<h3>SECTION II.&mdash;Roads, Cars.</h3>
+<p>For a country, so very far behind us as Ireland, to have got suddenly so
+much the start of us in the article of roads, is a spectacle that cannot
+fail to strike the English traveller exceedingly.&nbsp; But from this
+commendation the turnpikes in general must be excluded; they are as bad as
+the bye-roads are admirable.&nbsp; It is a common complaint that the tolls
+of the turnpikes are so many jobs, and the roads left in a state that
+disgrace the kingdom.</p>
+<p>The following is the system on which the cross-roads are made.&nbsp; Any
+person wishing to make or mend a road has it measured by two persons, who
+swear to the measurement before a justice of the peace.&nbsp; It is
+described as leading from one market-town to another (it matters not in
+what direction), that it will be a public good, and that it will require
+such a sum per perch of twenty-one feet, to make or repair the same.&nbsp;
+A certificate to this purpose (of which printed forms are sold), with the
+blanks filled up, is signed by the measurers, and also by two persons
+called overseers, one of whom is usually the person applying for the road,
+the <!-- page 173--><a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+173</span>other the labourer he intends to employ as an overseer of the
+work, which overseer swears also before the justice the truth of the
+valuation.&nbsp; The certificate thus prepared is given by any person to
+some one of the grand jury, at either of the assizes, but usually in the
+spring.&nbsp; When all the common business of trials is over, the jury
+meets on that of roads; the chairman reads the certificates, and they are
+all put to the vote, whether to be granted or not.&nbsp; If rejected, they
+are torn in pieces and no further notice taken; if granted, they are put on
+the file.</p>
+<p>This vote of approbation, without any further form, enables the person
+who applied for the presentment immediately to construct or repair the road
+in question, which he must do at his own expense; he must finish it by the
+following assizes, when he is to send a certificate of his having expended
+the money pursuant to the application; this certificate is signed by the
+foreman, who also signs an order on the treasurer of the county to pay him,
+which is done immediately.&nbsp; In like manner are bridges, houses of
+correction, gaols, etc. etc., built and repaired.&nbsp; If a bridge over a
+river which parts two counties, half is done by one and the other half by
+the other county.</p>
+<p>The expense of these works is raised by a tax on the lands, paid by the
+tenant; in some counties it is acreable, but in others it is on the plough
+land, and as no two plough lands are of the same size, is a very unequal
+<!-- page 174--><a name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+174</span>tax.&nbsp; In the county of Meath it is acreable, and amounts to
+one shilling per acre, being the highest in Ireland; but in general it is
+from threepence to sixpence per acre, and amounts of late years through the
+whole kingdom to one hundred and forty thousand pounds a year.</p>
+<p>The juries will very rarely grant a presentment for a road which amounts
+to above fifty pounds, or for more than six or seven shillings a perch, so
+that if a person wants more to be made than such a sum will do, he divides
+it into two or three different measurements or presentments.&nbsp; By the
+Act of Parliament, all presentment-roads must be twenty-one feet wide at
+least from fence to fence, and fourteen feet of it formed with stone or
+gravel.</p>
+<p>As the power of the grand jury extends in this manner to the cutting new
+roads where none ever were before, as well as to the repairing and widening
+old ones, exclusive, however, of parks, gardens, etc., it was necessary to
+put a restriction against the wanton expense of it.&nbsp; Any presentment
+may be traversed that is opposed, by denying the allegations of the
+certificate; this is sure of delaying it until another assizes, and in the
+meantime persons are appointed to view the line of road demanded, and
+report on the necessity or hardship of the case.&nbsp; The payment of the
+money may also be traversed after the certificate of its being laid out;
+for if any person views and finds it a manifest imposition <!-- page
+175--><a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 175</span>and job, he
+has that power to delay payment until the cause is cleared up and
+proved.&nbsp; But this traverse is not common.&nbsp; Any persons are
+eligible for asking presentments; but it is usually done only by resident
+gentlemen, agents, clergy, or respectable tenantry.&nbsp; It follows
+necessarily, that every person is desirous of making the roads leading to
+his own house, and that private interest alone is considered in it, which I
+have heard objected to the measure; but this I must own appears to me the
+great merit of it.&nbsp; Whenever individuals act for the public alone, the
+public is very badly served; but when the pursuit of their own interest is
+the way to benefit the public, then is the public good sure to be promoted;
+such is the case of presentment of roads: for a few years the good roads
+were all found leading from houses like rays from a centre, with a
+surrounding space, without any communication; but every year brought the
+remedy, until in a short time, those rays pointing from so many centres
+met, and then the communication was complete.&nbsp; The original Act passed
+but seventeen years ago, and the effect of it in all parts of the kingdom
+is so great, that I found it perfectly practicable to travel upon wheels by
+a map; I will go here; I will go there; I could trace a route upon paper as
+wild as fancy could dictate, and everywhere I found beautiful roads without
+break or hindrance, to enable me to realise my design.&nbsp; What a figure
+would a person make in <!-- page 176--><a name="page176"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 176</span>England, who should attempt to move in that
+manner, where the roads, as Dr. Burn has well observed, are almost in as
+bad a state as in the time of Philip and Mary.&nbsp; In a few years there
+will not be a piece of bad road except turnpikes in all Ireland.&nbsp; The
+money raised for this first and most important of all national purposes, is
+expended among the people who pay it, employs themselves and their teams,
+encourages their agriculture, and facilitates so greatly the improvement of
+waste lands, that it ought always to be considered as the first step to any
+undertaking of that sort.</p>
+<p>At first, roads, in common with bridges, were paid out of the general
+treasure of the county, but by a subsequent act the road tax is now on
+baronies; each barony pays for its own roads.&nbsp; By another act juries
+were enabled to grant presentments of narrow mountain roads, at two
+shillings and sixpence a perch.&nbsp; By another, they were empowered to
+grant presentments of footpaths, by the side of roads, at one shilling a
+perch.&nbsp; By a very late act, they are also enabled to contract at
+three-halfpence per perch per annum from the first making of a road, for
+keeping it in repair, which before could not be done without a fresh
+presentment.&nbsp; Arthur King, Esq. of Moniva, whose agriculture is
+described in the preceding minutes, and who at that time represented the
+county of Galway, was the worthy citizen who first brought this excellent
+measure into parliament: Ireland, and every <!-- page 177--><a
+name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 177</span>traveller that ever
+visits it ought, to the latest time, to revere the memory of such a
+distinguished benefactor to the public.&nbsp; Before that time the roads,
+like those of England, remained impassable, under the miserable police of
+the six days&rsquo; labour.&nbsp; Similar good effects would here flow from
+adopting the measure, which would ease the kingdom of a great burthen in
+its public effects absolutely contemptible; and the tax here, as in
+Ireland, ought to be so laid, as to be borne by the tenant whose business
+it is at present to repair.</p>
+<p>Upon the imperfections of the Irish system I have only to remark, that
+juries should, in some cases, be more ready than they are to grant these
+presentments.&nbsp; In general, they are extremely liberal, but sometimes
+they take silly freaks of giving none, or very few.&nbsp; Experience having
+proved, from the general goodness of the roads, that abuses cannot be very
+great, they should go on with spirit to perfect the great work throughout
+the kingdom; and as a check upon those who lay out the money, it might
+perhaps be advisable to print county maps of the presentment roads, with
+corresponding lists and tables of the names of all persons who have
+obtained presentments, the sums they received, and for what roads.&nbsp;
+These should be given freely by the jurymen, to all their acquaintance,
+that every man might know, to whose carelessness or jobbing the public was
+indebted for bad roads, when <!-- page 178--><a name="page178"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 178</span>they had paid for good ones.&nbsp; Such a
+practice would certainly deter many.</p>
+<p>At 11,042,642 acres in the kingdom, &pound;140,000 a year amounts to
+just threepence an acre for the whole territory: a very trifling tax for
+such an improvement, and which almost ranks in public ease and benefit with
+that of the post-office.</p>
+<h3>SECTION III.&mdash;Manners and Customs.</h3>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Quid leges sine moribus,<br />
+Vana proficiunt!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is but an illiberal business for a traveller, who designs to publish
+remarks upon a country to sit down coolly in his closet and write a satire
+on the inhabitants.&nbsp; Severity of that sort must be enlivened with an
+uncommon share of wit and ridicule, to please.&nbsp; Where very gross
+absurdities are found, it is fair and manly to note them; but to enter into
+character and disposition is generally uncandid, since there are no people
+but might be better than they are found, and none but have virtues which
+deserve attention, at least as much as their failings; for these reasons
+this section would not have found a place in my observations, had not some
+persons, of much more flippancy than wisdom, given very gross
+misrepresentations of the Irish nation.&nbsp; It is with pleasure,
+therefore, that I take up the pen on the present occasion; as a much longer
+residence there <!-- page 179--><a name="page179"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 179</span>enables me to exhibit a very different
+picture; in doing this, I shall be free to remark, wherein I think the
+conduct of certain classes may have given rise to general and consequently
+injurious condemnation.</p>
+<p>There are three races of people in Ireland, so distinct as to strike the
+least attentive traveller: these are the Spanish which are found in Kerry,
+and a part of Limerick and Cork, tall and thin, but well made, a long
+visage, dark eyes, and long black lank hair.&nbsp; The time is not remote
+when the Spaniards had a kind of settlement on the coast of Kerry, which
+seemed to be overlooked by government.&nbsp; There were many of them in
+Queen Elizabeth&rsquo;s reign, nor were they entirely driven out till the
+time of Cromwell.&nbsp; There is an island of Valentia on that coast, with
+various other names, certainly Spanish.&nbsp; The Scotch race is in the
+north, where are to be found the feature which are supposed to mark that
+people, their accent and many of their customs.&nbsp; In a district near
+Dublin, but more particularly in the baronies of Bargie and Forth in the
+county of Wexford, the Saxon tongue is spoken without any mixture of the
+Irish, and the people have a variety of customs mentioned in the minutes,
+which distinguish them from their neighbours.&nbsp; The rest of the kingdom
+is made up of mongrels.&nbsp; The Milesian race of Irish, which may be
+called native, are scattered over the kingdom, but chiefly found in
+Connaught and Munster; a few considerable families, whose genealogy <!--
+page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 180</span>is
+undoubted, remain, but none of them with considerable possessions except
+the O&rsquo;Briens and Mr. O&rsquo;Neil; the former have near twenty
+thousand pounds a year in the family, the latter half as much, the remnant
+of a property once his ancestors, which now forms six or seven of the
+greatest estates in the kingdom.&nbsp; O&rsquo;Hara and M&rsquo;Dermot are
+great names in Connaught, and O&rsquo;Donnohue a considerable one in Kerry;
+but I heard of a family of O&rsquo;Drischal&rsquo;s in Cork, who claim an
+origin prior in Ireland to any of the Milesian race.</p>
+<p>The only divisions which a traveller, who passed through the kingdom
+without making any residence could make, would be into people of
+considerable fortune and mob.&nbsp; The intermediate division of the scale,
+so numerous and respectable in England, would hardly attract the least
+notice in Ireland.&nbsp; A residence in the kingdom convinces one, however,
+that there is another class in general of small fortune&mdash;country
+gentlemen and renters of land.&nbsp; The manners, habits, and customs of
+people of considerable fortune are much the same everywhere, at least there
+is very little difference between England and Ireland, it is among the
+common people one must look for those traits by which we discriminate a
+national character.&nbsp; The circumstances which struck me most in the
+common Irish were, vivacity and a great and eloquent volubility of speech;
+one would think they could take snuff and talk without tiring till
+doomsday.&nbsp; They are infinitely more cheerful and <!-- page 181--><a
+name="page181"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 181</span>lively than anything
+we commonly see in England, having nothing of that incivility of sullen
+silence with which so many Englishmen seem to wrap themselves up, as if
+retiring within their own importance.&nbsp; Lazy to an excess at work, but
+so spiritedly active at play, that at hurling, which is the cricket of
+savages, they shew the greatest feats of agility.&nbsp; Their love of
+society is as remarkable as their curiosity is insatiable; and their
+hospitality to all comers, be their own poverty ever so pinching, has too
+much merit to be forgotten.&nbsp; Pleased to enjoyment with a joke, or
+witty repartee, they will repeat it with such expression, that the laugh
+will be universal.&nbsp; Warm friends and revengeful enemies; they are
+inviolable in their secrecy, and inevitable in their resentment; with such
+a notion of honour, that neither threat nor reward would induce them to
+betray the secret or person of a man, though an oppressor, whose property
+they would plunder without ceremony.&nbsp; Hard drinkers and quarrelsome;
+great liars, but civil, submissive, and obedient.&nbsp; Dancing is so
+universal among them, that there are everywhere itinerant dancing-masters,
+to whom the cottars pay sixpence a quarter for teaching their
+families.&nbsp; Besides the Irish jig, which they can dance with a most
+luxuriant expression, minuets and country-dances are taught; and I even
+heard some talk of cotillions coming in.</p>
+<p>Some degree of education is also general, hedge <!-- page 182--><a
+name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 182</span>schools, as they are
+called, (they might as well be termed ditch ones, for I have seen many a
+ditch full of scholars,) are everywhere to be met with where reading and
+writing are taught; schools are also common for men; I have seen a dozen
+great fellows at school, and was told they were educating with an intention
+of being priests.&nbsp; Many strokes in their character are evidently to be
+ascribed to the extreme oppression under which they live.&nbsp; If they are
+as great thieves and liars as they are reported, it is certainly owing to
+this cause.</p>
+<p>If from the lowest class we rise to the highest, all there is gaiety,
+pleasure, luxury, and extravagance; the town life at Dublin is formed on
+the model of that of London.&nbsp; Every night in the winter there is a
+ball or a party, where the polite circle meet, not to enjoy but to sweat
+each other; a great crowd crammed into twenty feet square gives a zest to
+the <i>agr&eacute;ments</i> of small talk and whist.&nbsp; There are four
+or five houses large enough to receive a company commodiously, but the rest
+are so small as to make parties detestable.&nbsp; There is however an
+agreeable society in Dublin, in which a man of large fortune will not find
+his time heavy.&nbsp; The style of living may be guessed from the fortunes
+of the resident nobility and great commoners; there are about thirty that
+possess incomes from seven to twenty thousand pounds a year.&nbsp; The
+court has nothing remarkable or splendid in it, but varies very <!-- page
+183--><a name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 183</span>much,
+according to the private fortune or liberality of disposition in the lord
+lieutenant.</p>
+<p>In the country their life has some circumstances which are not commonly
+seen in England.&nbsp; Large tracts of land are kept in hand by everybody
+to supply the deficiencies of markets; this gives such a plenty, that,
+united with the lowness of taxes and prices, one would suppose it difficult
+for them to spend their incomes, if Dublin in the winter did not lend
+assistance.&nbsp; Let it be considered that the prices of meat are much
+lower than in England; poultry only a fourth of the price; wild fowl and
+fish in vastly greater plenty; rum and brandy not half the price; coffee,
+tea, and wines far cheaper; labour not above a third; servants&rsquo; wages
+upon an average thirty per cent. cheaper.&nbsp; That taxes are
+inconsiderable, for there is no land-tax, no poor-rates, no window tax, no
+candle or soap tax, only half a wheel-tax, no servants&rsquo; tax, and a
+variety of other articles heavily burdened in England, but not in
+Ireland.&nbsp; Considering all this, one would think they could not spend
+their incomes; they do contrive it, however.&nbsp; In this business they
+are assisted by two customs that have an admirable tendency to it, great
+numbers of horses and servants.</p>
+<p>In England such extensive demesnes would be parks around the seats for
+beauty as much as use, but it is not so in Ireland; the words deer-park and
+demesne <!-- page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+184</span>are to be distinguished; there are great demesnes without any
+parks, but a want of taste, too common in Ireland, is having a deer-park at
+a distance from the house; the residence surrounded by walls, or hedges, or
+cabins; and the lawn inclosure scattered with animals of various sorts,
+perhaps three miles off.&nbsp; The small quantity of corn proportioned to
+the total acres, shows how little tillage is attended to even by those who
+are the best able to carry it on; and the column of turnips proves in the
+clearest manner what the progress of improvement is in that kingdom.&nbsp;
+The number of horses may almost be esteemed a satire upon common sense;
+were they well fed enough to be useful, they would not be so numerous, but
+I have found a good hack for a common ride scarce in a house where there
+were a hundred.&nbsp; Upon an average, the horses in gentlemen&rsquo;s
+stables throughout the kingdom are not fed half so well as they are in
+England by men of equal fortune; yet the number makes the expense of them
+very heavy.</p>
+<p>Another circumstance to be remarked in the country life is the
+miserableness of many of their houses; there are men of five thousand a
+year in Ireland, who live in habitations that a man of seven hundred a year
+in England would disdain; an air of neatness, order, dress, and
+<i>propret&eacute;</i>, is wanting to a surprising degree around the
+mansion; even new and excellent houses have often nothing of this about
+them.&nbsp; But the <!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 185</span>badness of the houses is remedying every hour
+throughout the whole kingdom, for the number of new ones just built, or
+building, is prodigiously great.&nbsp; I should suppose there were not ten
+dwellings in the kingdom thirty years ago that were fit for an English pig
+to live in.&nbsp; Gardens were equally bad, but now they are running into
+the contrary extreme, and wall in five, six, ten, and even twenty Irish
+acres for a garden, but generally double or treble what is necessary.</p>
+<p>The tables of people of fortune are very plentifully spread; many
+elegantly, differing in nothing from those of England.&nbsp; I think I
+remarked that venison wants the flavour it has with us, probably for the
+same reason, that the produce of rich parks is never equal to that of poor
+ones; the moisture of the climate, and the richness of the soil, give fat
+but not flavour.&nbsp; Another reason is the smallness of the parks, a man
+who has three or four thousand acres in his hands, has not perhaps above
+three or four hundred in his deer-park, and range is a great point for good
+venison.&nbsp; Nor do I think that garden vegetables have the flavour found
+in those of England, certainly owing to the climate; green peas I found
+everywhere perfectly insipid, and lettuce, etc., not good.&nbsp; Claret is
+the common wine of all tables, and so much inferior to what is drunk in
+England, that it does not appear to be the same wine; but their port is
+incomparable, so much better than the English, as to prove, if proof was
+wanting, the <!-- page 186--><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+186</span>abominable adulterations it must undergo with us.&nbsp; Drinking
+and duelling are two charges which have long been alleged against the
+gentlemen of Ireland, but the change of manners which has taken place in
+that kingdom is not generally known in England.&nbsp; Drunkenness ought no
+longer to be a reproach, for at every table I was at in Ireland I saw a
+perfect freedom reign, every person drank just as little as they pleased,
+nor have I ever been asked to drink a single glass more than I had an
+inclination for; I may go farther and assert that hard drinking is very
+rare among people of fortune; yet it is certain that they sit much longer
+at table than in England.&nbsp; I was much surprised at first going over to
+find no summons to coffee, the company often sitting till eight, nine, or
+ten o&rsquo;clock before they went to the ladies.&nbsp; If a gentleman
+likes tea or coffee, he retires without saying anything; a stranger of rank
+may propose it to the master of the house, who from custom contrary to that
+of England, will not stir till he receives such a hint, as they think it
+would imply a desire to save their wine.&nbsp; If the gentlemen were
+generally desirous of tea, I take it for granted they would have it, but
+their slighting is one inconvenience to such as desire it, not knowing when
+it is provided, conversation may carry them beyond the time, and then if
+they do trifle over the coffee it will certainly be cold.&nbsp; There is a
+want of attention in this, which the ladies should remedy, if they will not
+break the old custom <!-- page 187--><a name="page187"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 187</span>and send to the gentlemen, which is what they
+ought to do, they certainly should have a salver fresh.&nbsp; I must,
+however, remark, that at the politest tables, which are those of people who
+have resided much out of Ireland, this point is conducted exactly as it is
+in England.</p>
+<p>Duelling was once carried to an excess, which was a real reproach and
+scandal to the kingdom; it of course proceeded from excessive drinking; as
+the cause has disappeared, the effect has nearly followed; not however,
+entirely, for it is yet far more common among people of fashion than in
+England.&nbsp; Of all practices, a man who felt for the honour of his
+country would wish soonest to banish this, for there is not one favourable
+conclusion to be drawn from it: as to courage, nobody can question that of
+a polite and enlightened nation, entitled to a share of the reputation of
+the age; but it implies uncivilised manners, an ignorance of those forms
+which govern polite societies, or else a brutal drunkenness; the latter is
+no longer the cause or the pretence.&nbsp; As to the former, they would
+place the national character so backward, would take from it so much of its
+pretence to civilisation, elegance and politeness of manners, that no true
+Irishman would be pleased with the imputation.&nbsp; Certain it is, that
+none are so captious as those who think themselves neglected or despised;
+and none are so ready to believe themselves either one or the other as
+persons unused to <!-- page 188--><a name="page188"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 188</span>good company.&nbsp; Captious people,
+therefore, who are ready to take an affront, must inevitably have been
+accustomed to ill company, unless there should be something uncommonly
+crooked in their natural dispositions, which is not to be supposed.&nbsp;
+Let every man that fights his one, two, three, or half-a-dozen duels,
+receive it as a maxim, that every one he adds to the number is but an
+additional proof of his being ill-educated, and having vitiated his manners
+by the contagion of bad company; who is it that can reckon the most
+numerous rencontres? who but the bucks, bloods, landjobbers, and little
+drunken country gentlemen?&nbsp; Ought not people of fashion to blush at a
+practice which will very soon be the distinction only of the most
+contemptible of the people? the point of honour will and must remain for
+the decision of certain affronts, but it will rarely be had recourse to in
+polite, sensible, and well-bred company.&nbsp; The practice among real
+gentlemen in Ireland every day declining is a strong proof that a knowledge
+of the world corrects the old manners, and consequently its having ever
+been prevalent was owing to the causes to which I have attributed it.</p>
+<p>There is another point of manners somewhat connected with the present
+subject, which partly induced me to place a motto at the head of this
+section.&nbsp; It is the conduct of juries; the criminal law of Ireland is
+the same as that of England, but in the execution it is <!-- page 189--><a
+name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>so different as
+scarcely to be known.&nbsp; I believe it is a fact, at least I have been
+assured so, that no man was ever hanged in Ireland for killing another in a
+duel: the security is such that nobody ever thought of removing out of the
+way of justice, yet there have been deaths of that sort, which had no more
+to do with honour than stabbing in the dark.&nbsp; I believe Ireland is the
+only country in Europe, I am sure it is the only part of the British
+dominions, where associations among men of fortune are necessary for
+apprehending ravishers.&nbsp; It is scarcely credible how many young women
+have even of late years been ravished, and carried off in order (as they
+generally have fortunes) to gain to appearance a voluntary marriage.&nbsp;
+These actions, it is true, are not committed by the class I am considering
+at present; but they are tried by them, and acquitted.&nbsp; I think there
+has been only one man executed for that crime, which is so common as to
+occasion the associations I mentioned; it is to this supine execution of
+the law that such enormities are owing.&nbsp; Another circumstance which
+has the effect of screening all sorts of offenders, is men of fortune
+protecting them, and making interest for their acquittal, which is attended
+with a variety of evil consequences.&nbsp; I heard it boasted in the county
+of Fermanagh, that there had not been a man hanged in it for two-and-twenty
+years; all I concluded from this <!-- page 190--><a
+name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>was, that there had
+been many a jury who deserved it richly.</p>
+<p>Let me, however, conclude what I have to observe on the conduct of the
+principal people residing in Ireland, that there are great numbers among
+them who are as liberal in all their ideas as any people in Europe; that
+they have seen the errors which have given an ill character to the manners
+of their country, and done everything that example could effect to produce
+a change: that that happy change has been partly effected, and is effecting
+every hour, insomuch that a man may go into a vast variety of families
+which he will find actuated by no other principles than those of the most
+cultivated politeness, and the most liberal urbanity.</p>
+<p>But I must now come to another class of people, to whose conduct it is
+almost entirely owing that the character of the nation has not that lustre
+abroad, which I dare assert it will soon very generally merit: this is the
+class of little country gentlemen; tenants, who drink their claret by means
+of profit rents; jobbers in farms; bucks; your fellows with round hats,
+edged with gold, who hunt in the day, get drunk in the evening, and fight
+the next morning.&nbsp; I shall not dwell on a subject so perfectly
+disagreeable, but remark that these are the men among whom drinking,
+wrangling, quarrelling, fighting, ravishing, etc. etc. are found as in
+their native soil; once to a degree that made them <!-- page 191--><a
+name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>a pest of society;
+they are growing better, but even now, one or two of them got by accident
+(where they have no business) into better company are sufficient very much
+to derange the pleasures that result from a liberal conversation.&nbsp; A
+new spirit; new fashions; new modes of politeness exhibited by the higher
+ranks are imitated by the lower, which will, it is to be hoped, put an end
+to this race of beings; and either drive their sons and cousins into the
+army or navy, or sink them into plain farmers like those we have in
+England, where it is common to see men with much greater property without
+pretending to be gentlemen.&nbsp; I repeat it from the intelligence I
+received, that even this class are very different from what they were
+twenty years ago, and improve so fast that the time will soon come when the
+national character will not be degraded by any set.</p>
+<p>That character is upon the whole respectable: it would be unfair to
+attribute to the nation at large the vices and follies of only one class of
+individuals.&nbsp; Those persons from whom it is candid to take a general
+estimate do credit to their country.&nbsp; That they are a people learned,
+lively, and ingenious, the admirable authors they have produced will be an
+eternal monument; witness their Swift, Sterne, Congreve, Boyle, Berkeley,
+Steele, Farquhar, Southerne, and Goldsmith.&nbsp; Their talent for
+eloquence is felt, and acknowledged in the parliaments of both the
+kingdoms.&nbsp; <!-- page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 192</span>Our own service both by sea and land, as well
+as that (unfortunately for us) of the principal monarchies of Europe, speak
+their steady and determined courage.&nbsp; Every unprejudiced traveller who
+visits them will be as much pleased with their cheerfulness, as obliged by
+their hospitality; and will find them a brave, polite, and liberal
+people.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TOUR IN IRELAND***</p>
+<pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Tour in Ireland, by Arthur Young, Edited by
+Henry Morley
+
+
+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: A Tour in Ireland
+ 1776-1779
+
+
+Author: Arthur Young
+
+Editor: Henry Morley
+
+Release Date: August 25, 2007 [eBook #22387]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TOUR IN IRELAND***
+
+
+This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler.
+
+
+
+
+
+A TOUR IN IRELAND.
+1776-1779.
+
+
+ BY
+ ARTHUR YOUNG.
+
+ CASSELL & COMPANY, LIMITED:
+ _LONDON_, _PARIS_, _NEW YORK & MELBOURNE_.
+ 1897.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+Arthur Young was born in 1741, the son of a clergyman, at Bradfield, in
+Suffolk. He was apprenticed to a merchant at Lynn, but his activity of
+mind caused him to be busy over many questions of the day. He wrote when
+he was seventeen a pamphlet on American politics, for which a publisher
+paid him with ten pounds' worth of books. He started a periodical, which
+ran to six numbers. He wrote novels. When he was twenty-eight years old
+his father died, and, being free to take his own course in life, he would
+have entered the army if his mother had not opposed. He settled down,
+therefore, to farming, and applied to farming all his zealous energy for
+reform, and all the labours of his busy pen. In 1768, a year before his
+father's death, he had published "A Six Weeks' Tour through the Southern
+Counties of England and Wales," which found many readers.
+
+Between 1768 and 1771 Arthur Young produced also "The Farmer's Letters to
+the People of England, containing the Sentiments of a Practical
+Husbandman on the present State of Husbandry." In 1770 he published, in
+two thick quartos, "A Course of Experimental Agriculture, containing an
+exact Register of the Business transacted during Five Years on near 300
+Acres of various Soils;" also in the same year appeared "Rural Economy;
+or, Essays on the Practical Part of Husbandry;" also in the same year
+"The Farmer's Guide in Hiring and Stocking Farms," in two volumes, with
+plans. Also in the same year appeared his "Farmer's Kalendar," of which
+the 215th edition was published in 1862. There had been a second edition
+of the "Six Weeks' Tour in the South of England," with enlargements, in
+1769, and Arthur Young was encouraged to go on with increasing vigour to
+the publication of "The Farmer's Tour through the East of England: being
+a Register of a Journey through various Counties, to inquire into the
+State of Agriculture, Manufactures, and Population." This extended to
+four volumes, and appeared in the years 1770 and 1771. In 1771 also
+appeared, in four volumes, with plates, "A Six Months' Tour through the
+North of England, containing an Account of the Present State of
+Agriculture, Manufactures, and Population in several Counties of this
+Kingdom."
+
+Thus Arthur Young took all his countrymen into counsel while he was
+learning his art, as a farmer who brought to his calling a vigorous
+spirit of inquiry with an activity in the diffusion of his thoughts that
+is a part of God's gift to the men who have thoughts to diffuse; the
+instinct for utterance being almost invariably joined to the power of
+suggesting what may help the world.
+
+Whether he was essentially author turned farmer, or farmer turned author,
+Arthur Young has the first place in English literature as a
+farmer-author. Other practical men have written practical books of
+permanent value, which have places of honour in the literature of the
+farm; but Arthur Young's writings have won friends for themselves among
+readers of every class, and belong more broadly to the literature of the
+country.
+
+Between 1766 and 1775 he says that he made 3,000 pounds by his
+agricultural writings. The pen brought him more profit than the plough.
+He took a hundred acres in Hertfordshire, and said of them, "I know not
+what epithet to give this soil; sterility falls short of the idea; a
+hungry vitriolic gravel--I occupied for nine years the jaws of a wolf. A
+nabob's fortune would sink in the attempt to raise good arable crops in
+such a country. My experience and knowledge had increased from
+travelling and practice, but all was lost when exerted on such a spot."
+He tried at one time to balance his farm losses by reporting for the
+_Morning Post_, taking a seventeen-mile walk home to his farm every
+Saturday night.
+
+In 1780 Arthur Young published this "Tour in Ireland, with General
+Observations on the Present State of that Kingdom in 1776-78." The
+general observations, which give to all his books a wide general
+interest, are, in this volume, of especial value to us now. It is here
+reprinted as given by Pinkerton.
+
+In 1784 Arthur Young began to edit "Annals of Agriculture," which were
+continued through forty-five volumes. All writers in it were to sign
+their names, but when His Majesty King George III. contributed a
+description of Mr. Duckett's Farm at Petersham, he was allowed to sign
+himself "Ralph Robinson of Windsor."
+
+In 1792 Arthur Young published the first quarto volume, and in 1794 the
+two volumes of his "Travels during the years 1787-8-9 and 1790,
+undertaken more particularly with a view of ascertaining the Cultivation,
+Wealth, Resources and National Prosperity of the Kingdom of France."
+This led to the official issue in France in 1801, by order of the
+Directory, of a translation of Young's agricultural works, under the
+title of "Le Cultivateur Anglais." Arthur Young also corresponded with
+Washington, and received recognition from the Empress Catherine of
+Russia, who sent him a gold snuff-box, and ermine cloaks for his wife and
+daughter. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society.
+
+In 1793 his labours led to the formation of a Board of Agriculture, of
+which he was appointed secretary.
+
+When he was set at ease by this appointment, with a house and 400 pounds
+a year, Arthur Young had been about to experiment on the reclaiming of
+four thousand acres of Yorkshire moorland. The Agricultural Board was
+dissolved in 1816, four years before surveys of the agriculture of each
+county were made for the Agricultural Board, Arthur Young himself
+contributing surveys of Hertfordshire, Lincolnshire, Oxfordshire,
+Norfolk, Suffolk, and Sussex.
+
+Arthur Young's sight became dim in 1808, and blindness gradually
+followed. He died in 1820 at his native village of Bradfield, in
+Suffolk, at the age of seventy-nine years.
+
+ H. M.
+
+
+
+
+A TOUR IN IRELAND.
+
+
+June 19, 1776. Arrived at Holyhead, after an instructive journey through
+a part of England and Wales I had not seen before. Found the packet, the
+_Claremont_, Captain Taylor, would sail very soon. After a tedious
+passage of twenty-two hours, landed on the 20th in the morning, at
+Dunlary, four miles from Dublin, a city which much exceeded my
+expectation. The public buildings are magnificent, very many of the
+streets regularly laid out, and exceedingly well built. The front of the
+Parliament-house is grand, though not so light as a more open finishing
+of the roof would have made it. The apartments are spacious, elegant,
+and convenient, much beyond that heap of confusion at Westminster, so
+inferior to the magnificence to be looked for in the seat of empire. I
+was so fortunate as to arrive just in time to see Lord Harcourt, with the
+usual ceremonies, prorogue the Parliament. Trinity College is a
+beautiful building, and a numerous society; the library is a very fine
+room, and well filled. The new Exchange will be another edifice to do
+honour in Ireland; it is elegant, cost forty thousand pounds, but
+deserves a better situation. From everything I saw, I was struck with
+all those appearances of wealth which the capital of a thriving community
+may be supposed to exhibit. Happy if I find through the country in
+diffused prosperity the right source of this splendour! The common
+computation of inhabitants 200,000, but I should suppose exaggerated.
+Others guessed the number 140,000 or 150,000.
+
+June 21. Introduced by Colonel Burton to the Lord Lieutenant, who was
+pleased to enter into conversation with me on my intended journey, made
+many remarks on the agriculture of several Irish counties, and showed
+himself to be an excellent farmer, particularly in draining. Viewed the
+Duke of Leinster's house, which is a very large stone edifice, the front
+simple but elegant, the pediment light; there are several good rooms; but
+a circumstance unrivalled is the court, which is spacious and
+magnificent, the opening behind the house is also beautiful. In the
+evening to the Rotunda, a circular room, ninety feet diameter, an
+imitation of Ranelagh, provided with a band of music.
+
+The barracks are a vast building, raised in a plain style, of many
+divisions; the principal front is of an immense length. They contain
+every convenience for ten regiments.
+
+June 23. Lord Charlemont's house in Dublin is equally elegant and
+convenient, the apartments large, handsome, and well disposed, containing
+some good pictures, particularly one by Rembrandt, of Judas throwing the
+money on the floor, with a strong expression of guilt and remorse; the
+whole group fine. In the same room is a portrait of Caesar Borgia, by
+Titian. The library is a most elegant apartment of about forty by
+thirty, and of such a height as to form a pleasing proportion; the light
+is well managed, coming in from the cove of the ceiling, and has an
+exceeding good effect; at one end is a pretty ante-room, with a fine copy
+of the Venus de Medicis, and at the other two small rooms, one a cabinet
+of pictures and antiquities, the other medals. In the collection also of
+Robert Fitzgerald, Esq., in Merion Square, are several pieces which very
+well deserve a traveller's attention; it was the best I saw in Dublin.
+Before I quit that city I observe, on the houses in general, that what
+they call their two-roomed ones are good and convenient. Mr. Latouche's,
+in Stephen's Green, I was shown as a model of this sort, and I found it
+well contrived, and finished elegantly. Drove to Lord Charlemont's villa
+at Marino, near the city, where his lordship has formed a pleasing lawn,
+margined in the higher part by a well-planted thriving shrubbery, and on
+a rising ground a banqueting-room, which ranks very high among the most
+beautiful edifices I have anywhere seen; it has much elegance, lightness,
+and effect, and commands a fine prospect. The rising ground on which it
+stands slopes off to an agreeable accompaniment of wood, beyond which on
+one side is Dublin Harbour, which here has the appearance of a noble
+river crowded with ships moving to and from the capital. On the other
+side is a shore spotted with white buildings, and beyond it the hills of
+Wicklow, presenting an outline extremely various. The other part of the
+view (it would be more perfect if the city was planted out) is varied, in
+some places nothing but wood, in others breaks of prospect. The lawn,
+which is extensive, is new grass, and appears to be excellently laid
+down, the herbage a fine crop of white clover (_trifolium repens_),
+trefoil, rib-grass (_plantago lanceolata_), and other good plants.
+Returned to Dublin, and made inquiries into other points, the prices of
+provisions, etc. The expenses of a family in proportion to those of
+London are, as five to eight.
+
+Having the year following lived more than two months in Dublin, I am able
+to speak to a few points, which as a mere traveller I could not have
+done. The information I before received of the prices of living is
+correct. Fish and poultry are plentiful and very cheap. Good lodgings
+almost as dear as they are in London; though we were well accommodated
+(dirt excepted) for two guineas and a-half a week. All the lower ranks
+in this city have no idea of English cleanliness, either in apartments,
+persons, or cookery. There is a very good society in Dublin in a
+Parliament winter: a great round of dinners and parties; and balls and
+suppers every night in the week, some of which are very elegant; but you
+almost everywhere meet a company much too numerous for the size of the
+apartments. They have two assemblies on the plan of those of London, in
+Fishamble Street, and at the Rotunda; and two gentlemen's clubs, Anthry's
+and Daly's, very well regulated: I heard some anecdotes of deep play at
+the latter, though never to the excess common at London. An ill-judged
+and unsuccessful attempt was made to establish the Italian Opera, which
+existed but with scarcely any life for this one winter; of course they
+could rise no higher than a comic one. _La Buona Figliuola_, _La
+Frascatana_, and _Il Geloso in Cimento_, were repeatedly performed, or
+rather murdered, except the parts of Sestini. The house was generally
+empty, and miserably cold. So much knowledge of the state of a country
+is gained by hearing the debates of a Parliament, that I often frequented
+the gallery of the House of Commons. Since Mr. Flood has been silenced
+with the Vice-Treasurership of Ireland, Mr. Daly, Mr. Grattan, Sir
+William Osborn, and the prime serjeant Burgh, are reckoned high among the
+Irish orators. I heard many very eloquent speeches, but I cannot say
+they struck me like the exertion of the abilities of Irishmen in the
+English House of Commons, owing perhaps to the reflection both on the
+speaker and auditor, that the Attorney-General of England, with a dash of
+his pen, can reverse, alter, or entirely do away the matured result of
+all the eloquence, and all the abilities of this whole assembly. Before
+I conclude with Dublin I shall only remark, that walking in the streets
+there, from the narrowness and populousness of the principal
+thoroughfares, as well as from the dirt and wretchedness of the canaille,
+is a most uneasy and disgusting exercise.
+
+June 24. Left Dublin, and passed through the Phoenix Park, a very
+pleasing ground, at the bottom of which, to the left, the Liffey forms a
+variety of landscapes: this is the most beautiful environ of Dublin.
+Take the road to Luttrel's Town, through a various scenery on the banks
+of the river. That domain is a considerable one in extent, being above
+four hundred acres within the wall, Irish measure; in the front of the
+house is a fine lawn bounded by rich woods, through which are many
+ridings, four miles in extent. From the road towards the house they lead
+through a very fine glen, by the side of a stream falling over a rocky
+bed, through the dark woods, with great variety on the sides of steep
+slopes, at the bottom of which the Liffey is either heard or seen
+indistinctly. These woods are of great extent, and so near the capital,
+form a retirement exceedingly beautiful. Lord Irnham and Colonel Luttrel
+have brought in the assistance of agriculture to add to the beauties of
+the place; they have kept a part of the lands in cultivation in order to
+lay them down the better to grass; one hundred and fifty acres have been
+done, and above two hundred acres most effectually drained in the covered
+manner filled with stones. These works are well executed. The drains
+are also made under the roads in all wet places, with lateral short ones
+to take off the water instead of leaving it, as is common, to soak
+against the causeway, which is an excellent method. Great use has been
+made of limestone gravel in the improvements, the effect of which is so
+considerable, that in several spots where it was laid on ten years ago,
+the superiority of the grass is now similar to what one would expect from
+a fresh dunging.
+
+Leaving Luttrel's Town I went to St. Wolstan's, which Lord Harcourt had
+been so obliging as to desire I would make my quarters, from whence to
+view to the right or left.
+
+June 25. To Mr. Clement's, at Killadoon, who has lately built an
+excellent house, and planted much about it, with the satisfaction of
+finding that all his trees thrive well. I remarked the beech and larch
+seemed to get beyond the rest. He is also a good farmer.
+
+June 26. Breakfasted with Colonel Marlay, at Cellbridge, found he had
+practised husbandry with much success, and given great attention to it
+from the peace of 1763, which put a period to a gallant scene of service
+in Germany. Walked through his grounds, which I found in general very
+well cultivated; his fences excellent; his ditches five by six and seven
+by six; the banks well made, and planted with quicks; the borders dug
+away, covered with lime till perfectly slacked, them mixed with dung and
+carried into the fields, a practice which Mr. Marlay has found of very
+great benefit.
+
+Viewed Lucan, the seat of Agmondisham Vesey, Esq., on the banks of the
+Liffey. The house is rebuilding, but the wood on the river, with walks
+through it, is exceedingly beautiful. The character of the place is that
+of a sequestered shade. Distant views are everywhere shut out, and the
+objects all correspond perfectly with the impression they were designed
+to raise. It is a walk on the banks of the river, chiefly under a
+variety of fine wood, which rises on varied slopes, in some parts gentle,
+in others steep, spreading here and there into cool meadows, on the
+opposite shore, rich banks of wood or shrubby ground. The walk is
+perfectly sequestered, and has that melancholy gloom which should ever
+dwell in such a place. The river is of a character perfectly suited to
+the rest of the scenery, in some places breaking over rocks, in other
+silent, under the thick shade of spreading wood. Leaving Lucan, the next
+place is Leixlip, a fine one, on the river, with a fall, which in a wet
+season is considerable. Then St. Wolstan's, belonging to the Dean of
+Derry, a beautiful villa, which is also on the river; the grounds gay and
+open, though not without the advantage of much wood, disposed with
+judgment. A winding shrubbery quits the river, and is made to lead
+through some dressed ground that is pretty and cheerful.
+
+Mr. Conolly's, at Castle Town, to which all travellers resort, is the
+finest house in Ireland, and not exceeded by many in England. It is a
+large handsome edifice, situated in the middle of an extensive lawn,
+which is quite surrounded with fine plantations disposed to the best
+advantage. To the north these unite into very large woods, through which
+many winding walks lead, with the convenience of several ornamented
+seats, rooms, etc. On the other side of the house, upon the river, is a
+cottage, with a shrubbery, prettily laid out; the house commands an
+extensive view, bounded by the Wicklow mountains. It consists of several
+noble apartments. On the first floor is a beautiful gallery, eighty feet
+long, elegantly fitted up.
+
+June 27. Left Lord Harcourt's, and having received an invitation from
+the Duke of Leinster, passed through Mr. Conolly's grounds to his Grace's
+seat at Cartown. The park ranks among the finest in Ireland. It is a
+vast lawn, which waves over gentle hills, surrounded by plantations of
+great extent, and which break and divide in places so as to give much
+variety. A large but gentle vale winds through the whole, in the bottom
+of which a small stream has been enlarged into a fine river, which throws
+a cheerfulness through most of the scenes: over it a handsome stone
+bridge. There is a great variety on the banks of this vale; part of it
+consists of mild and gentle slopes, part steep banks of thick wood. In
+another place they are formed into a large shrubbery, very elegantly laid
+out, and dressed in the highest order, with a cottage, the scenery about
+which is uncommonly pleasing: and farther on this vale takes a stronger
+character, having a rocky bank on one side, and steep slopes scattered
+irregularly, with wood on the other. On one of the most rising grounds
+in the park is a tower, from the top of which the whole scenery is
+beheld; the park spreads on every side in fine sheets of lawn, kept in
+the highest order by eleven hundred sheep, scattered over with rich
+plantations, and bounded by a large margin of wood, through which is a
+riding.
+
+From hence took the road to Summerhill, the seat of the Right Hon. H. L.
+Rowley. The country is cheerful and rich; and if the Irish cabins
+continue like what I have hitherto seen, I shall not hesitate to
+pronounce their inhabitants as well off as most English cottagers. They
+are built of mud walls eighteen inches or two feet thick, and well
+thatched, which are far warmer than the thin clay walls in England. Here
+are few cottars without a cow, and some of them two. A bellyful
+invariably of potatoes, and generally turf for fuel from a bog. It is
+true they have not always chimneys to their cabins, the door serving for
+that and window too. If their eyes are not affected with the smoke, it
+may be an advantage in warmth. Every cottage swarms with poultry, and
+most of them have pigs.
+
+Went in the evening to Lord Mornington's at Dangan, who is making many
+improvements, which he showed me. His plantations are extensive, and he
+has formed a large water, having five or six islands much varied, and
+promontories of high land shoot so far into it as to form almost distant
+lakes; the effect pleasing. There are above a hundred acres under water,
+and his lordship has planned a considerable addition to it. Returned to
+Summerhill.
+
+June 29. Left it, taking the road to Slaine, the country very pleasant
+all the way; much of it on the banks of the Boyne, variegated with some
+woods, planted hedgerows, and gentle hills. The cabins continue much the
+same, the same plenty of poultry, pigs, and cows. The cattle in the road
+have their fore legs all tied together with straw to keep them from
+breaking into the fields; even sheep, and pigs, are all in the same
+bondage.
+
+Lord Conyngham's seat, Slaine Castle, on the Boyne, is one of the most
+beautiful places I have seen; the grounds are very bold and various,
+rising round the castle in noble hills or beautiful inequalities of
+surface, with an outline of flourishing plantations. Under the castle
+flows the Boyne, in a reach broken by islands, with a very fine shore of
+rock on one side, and wood on the other. Through the lower plantations
+are ridings, which look upon several beautiful scenes formed by the
+river, and take in the distant country, exhibiting the noblest views of
+waving Cultinald hills, with the castle finely situated in the midst of
+the planted domain, through which the Boyne winds its beautiful course.
+
+Under Mr. Lambert's house on the same river is a most romantic and
+beautiful spot; rocks on the side, rising in peculiar forms very boldly;
+the other steep wood, the river bending short between them like a
+land-locked basin.
+
+Lord Conyngham's keeping up Slaine Castle, and spending great sums,
+though he rarely resides there, is an instance of magnificence not often
+met with; while it is so common for absentees to drain the kingdom of
+every shilling they can, so contrary a conduct ought to be held in the
+estimation which it justly deserves.
+
+June 30. Rode out to view the country and some improvements in the
+neighbourhood: the principal of which are those of Lord Chief Baron
+Foster, which I saw from Glaston hill, in the road from Slaine to
+Dundalk.
+
+In conversation with Lord Longford I made many inquiries concerning the
+state of the lower classes, and found that in some respects they were in
+good circumstances, in others indifferent; they have, generally speaking,
+such plenty of potatoes as always to command a bellyful; they have flax
+enough for all their linen, most of them have a cow, and some two, and
+spin wool enough for their clothes; all a pig, and numbers of poultry,
+and in general the complete family of cows, calves, hogs, poultry, and
+children pig together in the cabin; fuel they have in the utmost plenty.
+Great numbers of families are also supported by the neighbouring lakes,
+which abound prodigiously with fish. A child with a packthread and a
+crooked pin will catch perch enough in an hour for the family to live on
+the whole day, and his lordship has seen five hundred children fishing at
+the same time, there being no tenaciousness in the proprietors of the
+lands about a right to the fish. Besides perch, there is pike upwards of
+five feet long, bream, tench, trout of ten pounds, and as red as salmon,
+and fine eels. All these are favourable circumstances, and are very
+conspicuous in the numerous and healthy families among them.
+
+Reverse the medal: they are ill clothed, and make a wretched appearance,
+and what is worse, are much oppressed by many who make them pay too dear
+for keeping a cow, horse, etc. They have a practice also of keeping
+accounts with the labourers, contriving by that means to let the poor
+wretches have very little cash for their year's work. This is a great
+oppression, farmers and gentlemen keeping accounts with the poor is a
+cruel abuse: so many days' work for a cabin; so many for a potato garden;
+so many for keeping a horse, and so many for a cow, are clear accounts
+which a poor man can understand well, but farther it ought never to go;
+and when he has worked out what he has of this sort, the rest of his work
+ought punctually to be paid him every Saturday night. Another
+circumstance mentioned was the excessive practice they have in general of
+pilfering. They steal everything they can lay their hands on, and I
+should remark, that this is an account which has been very generally
+given me: all sorts of iron hinges, chains, locks, keys, etc.; gates will
+be cut in pieces, and conveyed away in many places as fast as built;
+trees as big as a man's body, and that would require ten men to move,
+gone in a night. Lord Longford has had the new wheels of a car stolen as
+soon as made. Good stones out of a wall will be taken for a fire-hearth,
+etc., though a breach is made to get at them. In short, everything, and
+even such as are apparently of no use to them; nor is it easy to catch
+them, for they never carry their stolen goods home, but to some bog-hole.
+Turnips are stolen by car-loads, and two acres of wheat plucked off in a
+night. In short, their pilfering and stealing is a perfect nuisance.
+How far it is owing to the oppression of laws aimed solely at the
+religion of these people, how far to the conduct of the gentlemen and
+farmers, and how far to the mischievous disposition of the people
+themselves, it is impossible for a passing traveller to ascertain. I am
+apt to believe that a better system of law and management would have good
+effects. They are much worse treated than the poor in England, are
+talked to in more opprobrious terms, and otherwise very much oppressed.
+
+Left Packenham Hall.
+
+Two or three miles from Lord Longford's in the way to Mullingar the road
+leads up a mountain, and commands an exceeding fine view of Lock
+Derrevaragh, a noble water eight miles long, and from two miles to half a
+mile over; a vast reach of it, like a magnificent river, opens as you
+rise the hill. Afterwards I passed under the principal mountain, which
+rises abruptly from the lake into the boldest outline imaginable. The
+water there is very beautiful, filling up the steep vale formed by this
+and the opposite hills.
+
+Reached Mullingar.
+
+It was one of the fair days. I saw many cows and beasts, and more
+horses, with some wool. The cattle were of the same breed that I had
+generally seen in coming through the country.
+
+July 5. Left Mullingar, which is a dirty ugly town, and taking the road
+to Tullamore, stopped at Lord Belvidere's, with which place I was as much
+struck as with any I had ever seen. The house is perched on the crown of
+a very beautiful little hill, half surrounded with others, variegated and
+melting into one another. It is one of the most singular places that is
+anywhere to be seen, and spreading to the eye a beautiful lawn of
+undulating ground margined with wood. Single trees are scattered in some
+places, and clumps in others; the general effect so pleasing, that were
+there nothing further, the place would be beautiful, but the canvas is
+admirably filled. Lake Ennel, many miles in length, and two or three
+broad, flows beneath the windows. It is spotted with islets, a
+promontory of rock fringed with trees shoots into it, and the whole is
+bounded by distant hills. Greater and more magnificent scenes are often
+met with, but nowhere a more beautiful or a more singular one.
+
+From Mullingar to Tullespace I found rents in general at twenty shillings
+an acre, with much relet at thirty shillings, yet all the crops except
+bere were very bad, and full of weeds. About the latter-named place the
+farms are generally from one hundred to three hundred acres; and their
+course: 1. fallow; 2. bere; 3. oats; 4. oats; 5. oats. Great quantities
+of potatoes all the way, crops from forty to eighty barrels.
+
+The road before it comes to Tullamore leads through a part of the bog of
+Allen, which seems here extensive, and would make a noble tract of
+meadow. The way the road was made over it was simply to cut a drain on
+each side, and then lay on the gravel, which, as fast as it was laid and
+spread, bore the ears. Along the edges is fine white clover.
+
+In conversation upon the subject of a union with Great Britain, I was
+informed that nothing was so unpopular in Ireland as such an idea; and
+that the great objection to it was increasing the number of absentees.
+When it was in agitation, twenty peers and sixty commoners were talked of
+to sit in the British Parliament, which would be the resident of eighty
+of the best estates in Ireland. Going every year to England would, by
+degrees, make them residents; they would educate their children there,
+and in time become mere absentees: becoming so they would be unpopular,
+others would be elected, who, treading in the same steps, would yield the
+place still to others; and thus by degrees, a vast portion of the kingdom
+now resident would be made absentees, which would, they think, be so
+great a drain to Ireland, that a free trade would not repay it.
+
+I think the idea is erroneous, were it only for one circumstance, the
+kingdom would lose, according to this reasoning, an idle race of country
+gentlemen, and in exchange their ports would fill with ships and
+commerce, and all the consequences of commerce, an exchange that never
+yet proved disadvantageous to any country.
+
+Viewed Mount Juliet, Lord Carrick's seat, which is beautifully situated
+on a fine declivity on the banks of the Nore, commanding some extensive
+plantations that spread over the hills, which rise in a various manner on
+the other side of the river. A knoll of lawn rises among them with
+artificial ruins upon it, but the situation is not in unison with the
+idea of a ruin, very rarely placed to effect, unless in retired and
+melancholy spots.
+
+The river is a very fine one, and has a good accompaniment of well grown
+wood. From the cottage a more varied scene is viewed, cheering and
+pleasing; and from the tent in the farther plantation a yet gayer one,
+which looks down on several bends of the river.
+
+July 11. Left Kilsaine. Mr. Bushe accompanied me to Woodstock, the seat
+of Sir W. Fownes. From Thomastown hither is the finest ride I have yet
+had in Ireland. The road leaving Thomastown leads on the east side of
+the river, through some beautiful copse woods, which before they were cut
+must have had a most noble effect, with the river Nore winding at the
+bottom. The country then opens somewhat, and you pass most of the way
+for six or seven miles to Innisteague, on a declivity shelving down to
+the river, which takes a varied winding course, sometimes lively,
+breaking over a rocky bottom, at others still and deep under the gloom of
+some fine woods, which hang down the sides of steep hills. Narrow slips
+of meadow of a beautiful verdure in some places form the shore, and unite
+with cultivated fields that spread over the adjoining hills, reaching
+almost the mountain tops. These are large and bold, and give in general
+to the scenes features of great magnificence. Passed Sir John Hasler's
+on the opposite side of the river, finely situated, and Mr. Nicholson's
+farm on this side, who has very extensive copses which line the river.
+Coming in sight of Sir W. Fownes's, the scenery is striking; the road
+mounts the side of the hill, and commands the river at the bottom of the
+declivity, with groups of trees prettily scattered about, and the little
+borough of Innisteague in a most picturesque situation, the whole bounded
+by mountains. Cross the bridge, and going through the town, take a path
+that leads to a small building in the woods, called Mount Sandford. It
+is at the top of a rocky declivity almost perpendicular, but with brush
+wood growing from the rocks. At the bottom is the river, which comes
+from the right from behind a very bold hanging wood, that seems to unite
+with the hill on the opposite shore. At this pass the river fills the
+vale, but it widens by degrees, and presents various reaches, intermixed
+with little tufts of trees. The bridge we passed over is half hid.
+Innisteague is mixed with them, and its buildings backed by a larger
+wood, give variety to the scene. Opposite to the point of view there are
+some pretty enclosures, fringed with wood, and a line of cultivated
+mountain sides, with their bare tops limit the whole.
+
+Taking my leave of Mr. Bushe, I followed the road to Ross. Passed
+Woodstock, of which there is a very fine view from the top of one of the
+hills, the house in the centre of a sloping wood of five hundred English
+acres, and hanging in one noble shade to the river, which flows at the
+bottom of a winding glen. From the same hill in front it is seen in a
+winding course for many miles through a great extent of enclosures,
+bounded by mountains. As I advanced the views of the river Nore were
+very fine, till I came to Ross, where from the hill before you go down to
+the ferry is a noble scene of the Barrow, a vast river flowing through
+bold shores. In some places trees on the bank half obscure it, in others
+it opens in large reaches, the effect equally grand and beautiful. Ships
+sailing up to the town, which is built on the side of a hill to the
+water's edge, enliven the scene not a little. The water is very deep and
+the navigation secure, so that ships of seven hundred tons may come up to
+the town; but these noble harbours on the coast of Ireland are only
+melancholy capabilities of commerce: it is languid and trifling. There
+are only four or five brigs and sloops that belong to the place.
+
+Having now passed through a considerable extent of country, in which the
+Whiteboys were common, and committed many outrages, I shall here review
+the intelligence I received concerning them throughout the county of
+Kilkenny. I made many inquiries into the origin of those disturbances,
+and found that no such thing as a leveller or Whiteboy was heard of till
+1760, which was long after the landing of Thurot, or the intending
+expedition of M. Conflans. That no foreign coin was ever seen among
+them, though reports to the contrary were circulated; and in all the
+evidence that was taken during ten or twelve years, in which time there
+appeared a variety of informers, none was ever taken, whose testimony
+could be relied on, that ever proved any foreign interposition. Those
+very few who attempted to favour it, were of the most infamous and
+perjured characters. All the rest, whose interest it was to make the
+discovery, if they had known it, and who concealed nothing else,
+pretended to no such knowledge. No foreign money appeared, no arms of
+foreign construction, no presumptive proof whatever of such a connection.
+They began in Tipperary, and were owing to some inclosures of commons,
+which they threw down, levelling the ditches, and were first known by the
+name of Levellers. After that, they began with the tithe-proctors (who
+are men that hire tithes of the rectors), and these proctors either
+screwed the cottars up to the utmost shilling, or relet the tithes to
+such as did it. It was a common practice with them to go in parties
+about the country, swearing many to be true to them, and forcing them to
+join by menaces, which they very often carried into execution. At last
+they set up to be general redressers of grievances, punished all
+obnoxious persons who advanced the value of lands, or hired farms over
+their heads; and, having taken the administration of justice into their
+hands, were not very exact in the distribution of it. Forced masters to
+release their apprentices, carried off the daughters of rich farmers, and
+ravished them into marriages, of which four instances happened in a
+fortnight. They levied sums of money on the middling and lower farmers
+in order to support their cause, by paying attorneys, etc., in defending
+prosecutions against them; and many of them subsisted for some years
+without work, supported by these contributions. Sometimes they committed
+several considerable robberies, breaking into houses, and taking the
+money, under pretence of redressing grievances. In the course of these
+outrages they burnt several houses, and destroyed the whole substance of
+men obnoxious to them. The barbarities they committed were shocking.
+One of their usual punishments (and by no means the most severe) was
+taking people out of their beds, carrying them naked in winter on
+horseback for some distance, and burying them up to their chin in a hole
+filled with briars, not forgetting to cut off their ears. In this manner
+the evil existed for eight or ten years, during which time the gentlemen
+of the country took some measures to quell them. Many of the magistrates
+were active in apprehending them; but the want of evidence prevented
+punishments, for many of those who even suffered by them had no spirit to
+prosecute. The gentlemen of the country had frequent expeditions to
+discover them in arms; but their intelligence was so uncommonly good by
+their influence over the common people, that not one party that ever went
+out in quest of them was successful. Government offered large rewards
+for informations, which brought a few every year to the gallows, without
+any radical cure for the evil. The reason why it was not more effective
+was the necessity of any person that gave evidence against them quitting
+their houses and country, or remaining exposed to their resentment. At
+last their violence arose to a height which brought on their suppression.
+The popish inhabitants of Ballyragget, six miles from Kilkenny, were the
+first of the lower people who dared openly to associate against them;
+they threatened destruction to the town, gave notice that they would
+attack it, were as good as their word, came two hundred strong, drew up
+before a house in which were fifteen armed men, and fired in at the
+windows; the fifteen men handled their arms so well, that in a few rounds
+they killed forty or fifty. They fled immediately, and ever after left
+Ballyragget in peace: indeed, they have never been resisted at all
+without showing a great want of both spirit and discipline. It should,
+however, be observed, that they had but very few arms, those in bad
+order, and no cartridges. Soon after this they attacked the house of Mr.
+Power in Tipperary, the history of which is well known. His murder
+spirited up the gentlemen to exert themselves in suppressing the evil,
+especially in raising subscriptions to give private rewards to whoever
+would give evidence or information concerning them. The private
+distribution had much more effect than larger sums which required a
+public declaration; and Government giving rewards to those who resisted
+them, without having previously promised it, had likewise some effect.
+Laws were passed for punishing all who assembled, and (what may have a
+great effect) for recompensing, at the expense of the county or barony,
+all persons who suffered by their outrages. In consequence of this
+general exertion, above twenty were capitally convicted, and most of them
+executed; and the gaols of this and the three neighbouring counties,
+Carlow, Tipperary, and Queen's County, have many in them whose trials are
+put off till next assizes, and against whom sufficient evidence for
+conviction, it is supposed, will appear. Since this all has been quiet,
+and no outrages have been committed: but before I quit the subject, it is
+proper to remark that what coincided very much to abate the evil was the
+fall in the price of lands which has taken place lately. This is
+considerable, and has much lessened the evil of hiring farms over the
+heads of one another; perhaps, also, the tithe-proctors have not been
+quite so severe in their extortions: but this observation is by no means
+general; for in many places tithes yet continue to be levied with all
+those circumstances which originally raised the evil.
+
+July 15. Leaving Courtown, took the Arklow road; passed a finely wooded
+park of Mr. Ram's, and a various country with some good corn in it. Flat
+lands by the coast let very high, and mountain at six or seven shillings
+an acre, and some at eight shillings or ten shillings. Passed to
+Wicklow, prettily situated on the sea, and from Newrybridge walked to see
+Mr. Tye's, which is a neat farm, well wooded, with a river running
+through the fields.
+
+Reached in the evening Mount Kennedy, the seat of General Cunninghame,
+who fortunately proved to me an instructor as assiduous as he is able.
+He is in the midst of a country almost his own, for he has 10,000 Irish
+acres here. His domain, and the grounds about it, are very beautiful;
+not a level can be seen; every spot is tossed about in a variety of hill
+and dale. In the middle of the lawn is one of the greatest natural
+curiosities in the kingdom: an immense arbutus tree, unfortunately blown
+down, but yet vegetating. One branch, which parts from the body near the
+ground, and afterwards into many large branches, is six feet two inches
+in circumference. The General buried part of the stem as it laid, and it
+is from several branches throwing out fine young shoots: it is a most
+venerable remnant. Killarney, the region of the arbutus, boasts of no
+such tree as this.
+
+July 16. Rode in the morning to Drum; a large extent of mountains and
+wood on the General's estate. It is a very noble scenery; a vast rocky
+glen; one side bare rocks to an immense height, hanging in a thousand
+whimsical yet frightful forms, with vast fragments tumbled from them, and
+lying in romantic confusion; the other a fine mountain side covered with
+shrubby wood. This wild pass leads to the bottom of an amphitheatre of
+mountain, which exhibits a very noble scenery. To the right is an
+immense sweep of mountain completely wooded; taken as a single object it
+is a most magnificent one, but its forms are picturesque in the highest
+degree; great projections of hill, with glens behind all wooded, have a
+noble effect. Every feature of the whole view is great, and unites to
+form a scene of natural magnificence. From hence a riding is cut through
+the hanging wood, which rises to a central spot, where the General has
+cleared away the rubbish from under the wood, and made a beautiful waving
+lawn with many oaks and hollies scattered about it: here he has built a
+cottage, a pretty, whimsical oval room, from the windows of which are
+three views, one of distant rich lands opening to the sea, one upon a
+great mountain, and a third upon a part of the lawn. It is well placed,
+and forms upon the whole a most agreeable retreat.
+
+July 17. Took my leave of General Cunninghame, and went through the glen
+of the downs in my way to Powerscourt. The glen is a pass between two
+vast ridges of mountains covered with wood, which have a very noble
+effect. The vale is no wider than to admit the road, a small gurgling
+river almost by its side, and narrow slips of rocky and shrubby ground
+which part them. In the front all escape seems denied by an immense
+conical mountain, which rises out of the glen and seems to fill it up.
+The scenery is of a most magnificent character. On the top of the ridge
+to the right Mr. La Touche has a banqueting-room. Passing from this
+sublime scene, the road leads through cheerful grounds all under corn,
+rising and falling to the eye, and then to a vale of charming verdure
+broken into inclosures, and bounded by two rocky mountains, distant
+darker mountains filling up the scene in front. This whole ride is
+interesting, for within a mile and a half of "Tinnyhinch" (the inn to
+which I was directed), you come to a delicious view on the right: a small
+vale opening to the sea, bounded by mountains, whose dark shade forms a
+perfect contrast to the extreme beauty and lively verdure of the lower
+scene, consisting of gently swelling lawns rising from each other, with
+groups of trees between, and the whole so prettily scattered with white
+farms, as to add every idea of cheerfulness. Kept on towards
+Powerscourt, which presently came in view from the edge of a declivity.
+You look full upon the house, which appears to be in the most beautiful
+situation in the world, on the side of a mountain, half-way between its
+bare top and an irriguous vale at its foot. In front, and spreading
+among woods on either side, is a lawn whose surface is beautifully varied
+in gentle declivities, hanging to a winding river.
+
+Lowering the hill the scenery is yet more agreeable. The near inclosures
+are margined with trees, through whose open branches are seen whole
+fields of the most lively verdure. The trees gather into groups, and the
+lawn swells into gentle inequalities, while the river winding beneath
+renders the whole truly pleasing.
+
+Breakfasted at the inn at Tinnyhinch, and then drove to the park to see
+the waterfall. The park itself is fine; you enter it between two vast
+masses of mountain, covered with wood, forming a vale scattered with
+trees, through which flows a river on a broken rocky channel. You follow
+this vale till it is lost in a most uncommon manner; the ridges of
+mountain, closing, form one great amphitheatre of wood, from the top of
+which, at the height of many hundred feet, bursts the water from a rock,
+and tumbling down the side of a very large one, forms a scene singularly
+beautiful. At the bottom is a spot of velvet turf, from which rises a
+clump of oaks, and through their stems, branches and leaves, the falling
+water is seen as a background, with an effect more picturesque than can
+be well imagined. These few trees, and this little lawn, give the
+finishing to the scene. The water falls behind some large fragments of
+rock, and turns to the left, down a stony channel, under the shade of a
+wood.
+
+Returning to Tinnyhinch, I went to Inniskerry, and gained by this detour
+in my return to go to the Dargle, a beautiful view which I should
+otherwise have lost. The road runs on the edge of a declivity, from
+whence there is a most pleasing prospect of the river's course through
+the vale and the wood of Powerscourt, which here appear in large masses
+of dark shade, the whole bounded by mountains. Turn to the left into the
+private road that leads to the Dargle, and presently it gives a specimen
+of what is to be expected by a romantic glen of wood, where the high
+lands almost lock into each other, and leave scarce a passage for the
+river at bottom, which rages as if with difficulty forcing its way. It
+is topped by a high mountain, and in front you catch a beautiful plat of
+inclosures bounded by the sea. Enter the Dargle, which is the name of a
+glen near a mile long, come presently to one of the finest ranges of wood
+I have anywhere seen. It is a narrow glen or vale formed by the sides of
+two opposite mountains; the whole thickly spread with oak wood. At the
+bottom (and the depth is immense), it is narrowed to the mere channel of
+the river, which rather tumbles from rock to rock than runs. The extent
+of wood that hangs to the eye in every direction is great, the depth of
+the precipice on which you stand immense, which with the roar of the
+water at bottom forms a scene truly interesting. In less than a quarter
+of a mile, the road passing through the wood leads to another point of
+view to the right. It is the crown of a vast projecting rock, from which
+you look down a precipice absolutely perpendicular, and many hundred feet
+deep, upon the torrent at the bottom, which finds its noisy way over
+large fragments of rock. The point of view is a great projection of the
+mountain on this side, answered by a concave of the opposite, so that you
+command the glen both to the right and left. It exhibits on both immense
+sheets of forest, which have a most magnificent appearance. Beyond the
+wood to the right, are some inclosures hanging on the side of a hill,
+crowned by a mountain. I knew not how to leave so interesting a spot;
+the impressions raised by it are strong. The solemnity of such an extent
+of wood unbroken by any intervening objects, and the whole hanging over
+declivities, is alone great; but to this the addition of a constant roar
+of falling water, either quite hid, or so far below as to be seen but
+obscurely, united to make those impressions stronger. No contradictory
+emotions are raised; no ill-judged temples appear to enliven a scene that
+is gloomy rather than gay. Falling or moving water is a lively object;
+but this being obscure the noise operates differently. Following the
+road a little further, there is another bold rocky projection from which
+also there is a double view to the right and left. In front so immense a
+sweep of hanging wood, that a nobler scene can hardly be imagined; the
+river as before, at the bottom of the precipice, which is so steep and
+the depth so great as to be quite fearful to look down. This horrid
+precipice, the pointed bleak mountains in view, with the roar of the
+water, all conspire to raise one great emotion of the sublime. You
+advance scarcely twenty yards before a pretty scene opens to the left--a
+distant landscape of inclosures, with a river winding between the hills
+to the sea. Passing to the right, fresh scenes of wood appear; half-way
+to the bottom, one different from the preceding is seen; you are almost
+inclosed in wood, and look to the right through some low oaks on the
+opposite bank of wood, with an edging of trees through which the sky is
+seen, which, added to an uncommon elegance in the outline of the hill,
+has a most pleasing effect. Winding down to a thatched bench on a rocky
+point, you look upon an uncommon scene. Immediately beneath is a vast
+chasm in the rock, which seems torn asunder to let the torrent through
+that comes tumbling over a rocky bed far sunk into a channel embosomed in
+wood. Above is a range of gloomy obscure woods, which half overshadow
+it, and rising to a vast height, exclude every object. To the left the
+water rolls away over broken rocks--a scene duly romantic. Followed the
+path: it led me to the water's edge, at the bottom of the glen, where is
+a new scene, in which not a single circumstance hurts the principal
+character. In a hollow formed of rock and wood (every object excluded
+but those and water) the torrent breaks forth from fragments of rock, and
+tumbles through the chasm, rocks bulging over it as if ready to fall into
+the channel and stop the impetuous water. The shade is so thick as to
+exclude the heavens; all is retired and gloomy, a brown horror breathing
+over the whole. It is a spot for melancholy to muse in.
+
+Return to the carriage, and quit the Dargle, which upon the whole is a
+very singular place, different from all I have seen in England, and I
+think preferable to most. Cross a murmuring stream, clear as crystal,
+and, rising a hill, look back on a pleasing landscape of inclosures,
+which, waving over hills, end in mountains of a very noble character.
+Reach Dublin.
+
+July 20. To Drogheda, a well-built town, active in trade, the Boyne
+bringing ships to it. It was market-day, and I found the quantity of
+corn, etc., and the number of people assembled, very great; few country
+markets in England more thronged. The Rev. Mr. Nesbit, to whom
+recommended, absent, which was a great loss to me, as I had several
+inquiries which remained unsatisfied.
+
+To the field of battle on the Boyne. The view of the scene from a rising
+ground which looks down upon it is exceedingly beautiful, being one of
+the completest landscapes I have seen. It is a vale, losing itself in
+front between bold declivities, above which are some thick woods and
+distant country. Through the vale the river winds and forms an island,
+the point of which is tufted with trees in the prettiest manner
+imaginable; on the other side a rich scenery of wood, among which is Dr.
+Norris's house. To the right, on a rising ground on the banks of the
+river, is the obelisk, backed by a very bold declivity. Pursued the road
+till near it, quitted my chaise, and walked to the foot of it. It is
+founded on a rock which rises boldly from the river. It is a noble
+pillar, and admirably placed. I seated myself on the opposite rock, and
+indulged the emotions which, with a melancholy not unpleasing, filled my
+bosom, while I reflected on the consequences that had sprung from the
+victory here obtained. Liberty was then triumphant. May the virtues of
+our posterity secure that prize which the bravery of their ancestors won!
+Peace to the memory of the Prince to whom, whatever might be his
+failings, we owed that day memorable in the annals of Europe!
+
+Returned part of the way, and took the road to Cullen, where the Lord
+Chief Baron Forster received me in the most obliging manner, and gave me
+a variety of information uncommonly valuable. He has made the greatest
+improvements I have anywhere met with. The whole country twenty-two
+years ago was a waste sheep-walk, covered chiefly with heath, with some
+dwarf furze and fern. The cabins and people as miserable as can be
+conceived; not a Protestant in the country, nor a road passable for a
+carriage. In a word, perfectly resembling other mountainous tracts, and
+the whole yielding a rent of not more than from three shillings to four
+shillings an acre. Mr. Forster could not bear so barren a property, and
+determined to attempt the improvement of an estate of five thousand acres
+till then deemed irreclaimable. He encouraged the tenants by every
+species of persuasion and expense, but they had so ill an opinion of the
+land that he was forced to begin with two or three thousand acres in his
+own hands; he did not, however, turn out the people, but kept them in to
+see the effects of his operations.
+
+To Dundalk. The view down on this town also very beautiful: swelling
+hills of a fine verdure, with many rich inclosures backed by a bold
+outline of mountain that is remarkable. Laid at the Clanbrassil Arms,
+and found it a very good inn. The place, like most of the Irish towns I
+have been in, full of new buildings, with every mark of increasing wealth
+and prosperity. A cambric manufacture was established here by
+Parliament, but failed; it was, however, the origin of that more to the
+north.
+
+July 22. Left Dundalk, took the road through Ravensdale to Mr.
+Fortescue, to whom I had a letter, but unfortunately he was in the South
+of Ireland. Here I saw many good stone and slate houses, and some bleach
+greens; and I was much pleased to see the inclosures creeping high up the
+sides of the mountains, stony as they are. Mr. Fortescue's situation is
+very romantic--on the side of a mountain, with fine wood hanging on every
+side, with the lawn beautifully scattered with trees spreading into them,
+and a pretty river winding through the vale, beautiful in itself, but
+trebly so on information that before he fixed there it was all a wild
+waste. Rents in Ravensdale ten shillings; mountain land two shillings
+and sixpence to five shillings. Also large tracts rented by villages,
+the cottars dividing it among themselves, and making the mountain common
+for their cattle.
+
+Breakfasted at Newry--the Globe, another good inn. This town appears
+exceedingly flourishing, and is very well built; yet forty years ago, I
+was told, there were nothing but mud cabins in it. This great rise has
+been much owing to the canal to Loch Neagh. I crossed it twice; it is
+indeed a noble work. I was amazed to see ships of one hundred and fifty
+tons and more lying in it, like barges in an English canal. Here is a
+considerable trade.
+
+Reached Armagh in the evening, and waited on the Primate.
+
+July 23. His Grace rode out with me to Armagh, and showed me some of the
+noble and spirited works by which he has perfectly changed the face of
+the neighbourhood. The buildings he has erected in seven years, one
+would suppose, without previous information, to be the work of an active
+life. A list of them will justify this observation.
+
+He has erected a very elegant palace, ninety feet by sixty, and forty
+high, in which an unadorned simplicity reigns. It is light and pleasing,
+without the addition of wings or lesser parts, which too frequently
+wanting a sufficient uniformity with the body of the edifice, are
+unconnected with it in effect, and divide the attention. Large and ample
+offices are conveniently placed behind a plantation at a small distance.
+Around the palace is a large lawn, which spreads on every side over the
+hills, and is skirted by young plantations, in one of which is a terrace,
+which commands a most beautiful view of cultivated hill and dale. The
+view from the palace is much improved by the barracks, the school, and a
+new church at a distance, all which are so placed as to be exceedingly
+ornamental to the whole country.
+
+The barracks were erected under his Grace's directions, and form a large
+and handsome edifice. The school is a building of considerable extent,
+and admirably adapted for the purpose: a more convenient or a better
+contrived one is nowhere to be seen. There are apartments for a master,
+a school-room fifty-six feet by twenty-eight, a large dining-room, and
+spacious, airy dormitories, with every other necessary, and a spacious
+playground walled in; the whole forming a handsome front: and attention
+being paid to the residence of the master (the salary is four hundred
+pounds a year), the school flourishes, and must prove one of the greatest
+advantages to the country of anything that could have been established.
+This edifice entirely at the Primate's expense. The church is erected of
+white stone, and having a tall spire makes a very agreeable object in a
+country where churches and spires do not abound--at least, such as are
+worth looking at. Three other churches the Primate has also built, and
+done considerable reparations to the cathedral.
+
+He has been the means also of erecting a public infirmary, which was
+built by subscription, contributing amply to it himself.
+
+A public library he has erected at his own expense, given a large
+collection of books, and endowed it. The room is excellently adapted,
+forty-five feet by twenty-five, and twenty high, with a gallery, and
+apartments for a librarian.
+
+He has further ornamented the city with a market-house and shambles, and
+been the direct means, by giving leases upon that condition, of almost
+new-building the whole place. He found it a nest of mud cabins, and he
+will leave it a well-built city of stone and slate. I heard it asserted
+in common conversation that his Grace, in these noble undertakings, had
+not expended less than thirty thousand pounds, besides what he had been
+the means of doing, though not directly at his own expense.
+
+In the evening reached Mr. Brownlow's at Lurgan, to whom I am indebted
+for some valuable information. This gentleman has made very great
+improvements in his domain. He has a lake at the bottom of a slight
+vale, and around are three walks, at a distance from each other; the
+centre one is the principal, and extends two miles. It is well conducted
+for leading to the most agreeable parts of the grounds, and for
+commanding views of Loch Neagh, and the distant country. There are
+several buildings, a temple, green-house, etc. The most beautiful scene
+is from a bench on a gently swelling hill, which rises almost on every
+side from the water. The wood, the water, and the green slopes, here
+unite to form a very pleasing landscape. Let me observe one thing much
+to his honour; he advances his tenants money for all the lime they
+choose, and takes payment in eight years with rent.
+
+Upon inquiring concerning the emigrations, I found that in 1772 and 1773
+they were at the height; that some went from this neighbourhood with
+property, but not many. They were in general poor and unemployed. They
+find here that when provisions are very cheap, the poor spend much of
+their time in whisky-houses. All the drapers wish that oatmeal was never
+under one penny a pound. Though farms are exceedingly divided, yet few
+of the people raise oatmeal enough to feed themselves; all go to market
+for some. The weavers earn by coarse linens one shilling a day, by fine
+one shilling and fourpence, and it is the same with the spinners--the
+finer the yarn, the more they earn; but in common a woman earns about
+threepence. For coarse linens they do not reckon the flax hurt by
+standing for seed. Their own flax is much better than the imported.
+
+This country is in general beautiful, but particularly so about the
+straits that lead into Strangford Loch. From Mr. Savage's door the view
+has great variety. To the left are tracts of hilly grounds, between
+which the sea appears, and the vast chain of mountains in the Isle of Man
+distinctly seen. In front the hills rise in a beautiful outline, and a
+round hill projects like a promontory into the strait, and under it the
+town amidst groups of trees; the scene is cheerful of itself, but
+rendered doubly so by the ships and herring-boats sailing in and out. To
+the right the view is crowned by the mountains of Mourne, which, wherever
+seen, are of a character peculiarly bold, and even terrific. The shores
+of the loch behind Mr. Savage's are bold ground, abounding with numerous
+pleasing landscapes; the opposite coast, consisting of the woods and
+improvements of Castle Ward, is a fine scenery.
+
+Called at Lord Bangor's, at Castle Ward, to deliver a letter of
+recommendations but unfortunately he was on a sailing party to England;
+walked through the woods, etc. The house was built by the present lord.
+It is a very handsome edifice, with two principal fronts, but not of the
+same architecture, for the one is Gothic and the other Grecian. From the
+temple is a fine wooded scene: you look down on a glen of wood, with a
+winding hill quite covered with it, and which breaks the view of a large
+bay. Over it appears the peninsula of Strangford, which consists of
+enclosures and wood. To the right the bay is bounded by a fine grove,
+which projects into it. A ship at anchor added much. The house well
+situated above several rising woods; the whole scene a fine one. I
+remarked in Lord Bangor's domains a fine field of turnips, but unhoed.
+There were some cabbages also.
+
+Belfast is a very well built town of brick, they having no stone quarry
+in the neighbourhood. The streets are broad and straight, and the
+inhabitants, amounting to about fifteen thousand, make it appear lively
+and busy. The public buildings are not numerous nor very striking, but
+over the exchange Lord Donegal is building an assembly room, sixty feet
+long by thirty broad, and twenty-four high; a very elegant room. A
+card-room adjoining, thirty by twenty-two, and twenty-two high; a
+tea-room of the same size. His lordship is also building a new church,
+which is one of the lightest and most pleasing I have anywhere seen: it
+is seventy-four by fifty-four, and thirty high to the cornice, the aisles
+separated by a double row of columns; nothing can be lighter or more
+pleasing. The town belongs entirely to his lordship. Rent of it 2,000
+pounds a year. His estate extends from Drumbridge, near Lisburn, to
+Larne, twenty miles in a right line, and is ten broad. His royalties are
+great, containing the whole of Loch Neagh, which is, I suppose, the
+greatest of any subject in Europe. His eel fishery at Tome, and Port
+New, on the river Ban, lets for 500 pounds a year; and all the fisheries
+are his to the leap at Coleraine. The estate is supposed to be 31,000
+pounds a year, the greatest at present in Ireland. Inishowen, in
+Donegal, is his, and is 11,000 pounds of it. In Antrim, Lord Antrim's is
+the most extensive property, being four baronies, and one hundred and
+seventy-three thousand acres. The rent 8,000 pounds a year, but re-let
+for 64,000 pounds a year, by tenants that have perpetuities, perhaps the
+cruellest instance in the world of carelessness for the interests of
+posterity. The present lord's father granted those leases.
+
+I was informed that Mr. Isaac, near Belfast, had four acres, Irish
+measure, of strong clay land not broken up for many years, which being
+amply manured with lime rubbish and sea shells, and fallowed, was sown
+with wheat, and yielded 87 pounds 9s. at 9s. to 12s. per cwt. Also that
+Mr. Whitley, of Ballinderry, near Lisburn, a tenant of Lord Hertford's,
+has rarely any wheat that does not yield him 18 pounds an acre. The
+tillage of the neighbourhood for ten miles round is doubled in a few
+years. Shall export one thousand tons of corn this year from Belfast,
+most of it to the West Indies, particularly oats.
+
+August 1. To Arthur Buntin's, Esq., near Belfast; the soil a stiff clay;
+lets at old rents 10s., new one 18s., the town parks of that place 30s.
+to 70s., ten miles round it 10s. to 20s., average 13s. A great deal of
+flax sown, every countryman having a little, always on potato land, and
+one ploughing: they usually sow each family a bushel of seed. Those who
+have no land pay the farmers 20s. rent for the land a bushel of seed
+sows, and always on potato land. They plant many more potatoes than they
+eat, to supply the market at Belfast; manure for them with all their
+dung, and some of them mix dung, earth, and lime, and this is found to do
+better. There is much alabaster near the town, which is used for stucco
+plaster; sells from 1 pound 1s. to 25s. a ton.
+
+On my way to Antrim, viewed the bleach green of Mr. Thomas Sinclair; it
+is the completest I have seen here. I understood that the bleaching
+season lasted nine months, and that watering on the grass was quite left
+off. Mr. Sinclair himself was not at home, or I should probably have
+gained some intelligence that might have been useful.
+
+Crossed the mountains by the new road to Antrim, and found them to the
+summits to consist of exceeding good loam, and such as would improve into
+good meadow. It is all thrown to the little adjoining farms, with very
+little or any rent paid for it. They make no other use of it than
+turning their cows on. Pity they do not improve; a work more profitable
+than any they could undertake. All the way to Antrim lands let, at an
+average, at 8s. The linen manufacture spreads over the whole country,
+consequently the farms are very small, being nothing but patches for the
+convenience of weavers.
+
+From Antrim to Shanes Castle the road runs at the end of Loch Neagh,
+commanding a noble view of it; of such an extent that the eye can see no
+land over it. It appears like a perfect sea, and the shore is broken
+sand-banks, which look so much like it, that one can hardly believe the
+water to be fresh. Upon my arrival at the castle, I was most agreeably
+saluted with four men hoeing a field of turnips round it, as a
+preparation for grass. These were the first turnip-hoers I have seen in
+Ireland, and I was more pleased than if I had seen four emperors.
+
+The castle is beautifully situated on the lake, the windows commanding a
+very noble view of it; and this has the finer effect, as the woods are
+considerable, and form a fine accompaniment to this noble inland sea.
+
+Rode from Mr. Lesly's to view the Giant's Causeway. It is certainly a
+very great curiosity as an object for speculation upon the manner of its
+formation; whether it owes its origin to fire, and is a species of lava,
+or to crystallisation, or to whatever cause, is a point that has employed
+the attention of men much more able to decide upon it than I am; and has
+been so often treated, that nothing I could say could be new. When two
+bits of these basalts are rubbed together quick, they emit a considerable
+scent like burnt leather. The scenery of the Causeway, nor of the
+adjacent mountains, is very magnificent, though the cliffs are bold; but
+for a considerable distance there is a strong disposition in the rocks to
+run into pentagonal cylinders, and even at a bridge by Mr. Lesly's is a
+rock in which the same disposition is plainly visible. I believe the
+Causeway would have struck me more if I had not seen the prints of
+Staffa.
+
+Returned to Lesly Hill, and on August 5th departed for Coleraine. There
+the Right Hon. Mr. Jackson assisted me with the greatest politeness in
+procuring the intelligence I wished about the salmon fishery, which is
+the greatest in the kingdom, and viewed both fisheries, above and below
+the town, very pleasantly situated on the river Ban. The salmon spawn in
+all the rivers that run into the Ban about the beginning of August, and
+as soon as they have done, swim to the sea, where they stay till January,
+when they begin to return to the fresh water, and continue doing it till
+August, in which voyage they are taken. The nets are set in the middle
+of January, but by Act of Parliament no nets nor weirs can be kept down
+after the 12th of August. All the fisheries on the river Ban let at
+6,000 pounds a year. From the sea to the rock above Coleraine, where the
+weirs are built, belongs to the London companies; the greatest part of
+the rest to Lord Donegal. The eel fisheries let at 1,000 pounds a year,
+and the salmon fisheries at Coleraine at 1,000 pounds. The eels make
+periodical voyages, as the salmon, but instead of spawning in the fresh
+water, they go to the sea to spawn, and the young fry return against the
+stream; to enable them to do which with greater ease at the leap straw
+ropes are hung in the water for them. When they return to sea they are
+taken. Many of them weigh nine or ten pounds. The young salmon are
+called _grawls_, and grow at a rate which I should suppose scarce any
+fish commonly known equals; for within the year some of them will come to
+sixteen and eighteen pounds, but in general ten or twelve pounds. Such
+as escape the first year's fishery are salmon; and at two years old will
+generally weigh twenty to twenty-five pounds. This year's fishery has
+proved the greatest that ever was known, and they had the largest haul,
+taking 1,452 salmon at one drag of one net. In the year 1758 they had
+882, which was the next greatest haul. I had the pleasure of seeing 370
+drawn in at once. They have this year taken 400 tons of fish; 200 sold
+fresh at a penny and three-halfpence a pound, and two hundred salted, at
+18 pounds and 20 pounds per ton, which are sent to London, Spain, and
+Italy. The fishery employs eighty men, and the expenses in general are
+calculated to equal the rent.
+
+The linen manufacture is very general about Coleraine, coarse ten-hundred
+linen. It is carried to Dublin in cars, one hundred and ten miles, at
+5s. per cwt. in summer, and 7s. 6d. in winter.
+
+From Limavady to Derry there is very little uncultivated land. Within
+four miles of the latter, rents are from 12s. to 20s.; mountains paid for
+but in the gross. Reached Derry at night, and waited two hours in the
+dark before the ferry-boat came over for me.
+
+August 7. In the morning went to the bishop's palace to leave my letters
+of recommendation; for I was informed of my misfortune in his being out
+of the kingdom. He was upon a voyage to Staffa, and had sent home some
+of the stones of which it consists. They appeared perfectly to resemble
+in shape, colour, and smell, those of the Giant's Causeway.
+
+August 8. Left Derry, and took the road by Raphoe to the Rev. Mr.
+Golding's at Clonleigh, who favoured me with much valuable information.
+The view of Derry at the distance of a mile or two is the most
+picturesque of any place I have seen. It seems to be built on an island
+of bold land rising from the river, which spreads into a fine basin at
+the foot of the town; the adjacent country hilly. The scene wants
+nothing but wood to make it a perfect landscape.
+
+August 11. Left Mount Charles, and passing through Donegal took the road
+to Ballyshannon; came presently to several beautiful landscapes, swelling
+hills cultivated, with the bay flowing up among them. They want nothing
+but more wood, and are beautiful without it. Afterwards likewise to the
+left they rise in various outlines, and die away insensibly into one
+another. When the road leads to a full view of the bay of Donegal, these
+smiling spots, above which the proud mountains rear their heads, are
+numerous, the hillocks of almost regular circular forms. They are very
+pleasing from form, verdure, and the water breaking in their vales.
+
+Before I got to Ballyshannon, remarked a bleach green, which indicates
+weaving in the neighbourhood. Viewed the salmon-leap at Ballyshannon,
+which is let for 400 pounds a year. The scenery of it is very beautiful.
+It is a fine fall, and the coast of the river very bold, consisting of
+perpendicular rocks with grass of a beautiful verdure to the very edge.
+It projects in little promontories, which grew longer as they approach
+the sea, and open to give a fine view of the ocean. Before the fall in
+the middle of the river, is a rocky island on which is a curing house,
+instead of the turret of a ruined castle for which it seems formed. The
+town prettily situated on the rising ground on each side of the river.
+To Sir James Caldwell's. Crossing the bridge, stopped for a view of the
+river, which is a very fine one, and was delighted to see the salmon
+jump, to me an unusual sight; the water was perfectly alive with them.
+Rising the hill, look back on the town; the situation beautiful, the
+river presents a noble view. Come to Belleek, a little village with one
+of the finest water-falls I remember anywhere to have seen; viewed it
+from the bridge. The river in a very broad sheet comes from behind some
+wood, and breaks over a bed of rocks, not perpendicular, but shelving in
+various directions, and foams away under the arches, after which it grows
+more silent and gives a beautiful bend under a rock crowned by a fine
+bank of wood. Reached Castle Caldwell at night, where Sir James Caldwell
+received me with a politeness and cordiality that will make me long
+remember it with pleasure.
+
+August 15. To Belleisle, the charming seat of the Earl of Ross. It is
+an island in Loch Earne, of two hundred Irish acres, every part of it
+hill, dale, and gentle declivities; it has a great deal of wood, much of
+which is old, and forms both deep shades and open, cheerful groves. The
+trees hang on the slopes, and consequently show themselves to the best
+advantage. All this is exceedingly pretty, but it is rendered trebly so
+by the situation. A reach of the lake passes before the house, which is
+situated near the banks among some fine woods, which give both beauty and
+shelter. This sheet of water, which is three miles over, is bounded in
+front by an island of thick wood, and by a bold circular hill which is
+his lordship's deer park; this hill is backed by a considerable mountain.
+To the right are four or five fine clumps of dark wood--so many islands
+which rise boldly from the lake; the water breaks in straits between
+them, and forms a scene extremely picturesque. On the other side the
+lake stretches behind wood in a strait which forms Belleisle. Lord Ross
+has made walks round the island, from which there is a considerable
+variety of prospect. A temple is built on a gentle hill, commanding the
+view of the wooded islands above-mentioned, but the most pleasing
+prospect of them is coming out from the grotto. They appear in an
+uncommon beauty; two seem to join, and the water which flows between
+takes the appearance of a fine bay, projecting deep into a dark wood:
+nothing can be more beautiful. The park hill rises above them, and the
+whole is backed with mountains. The home scene at your feet also is
+pretty; a lawn scattered with trees that forms the margin of the lake,
+closing gradually in a thick wood of tall trees, above the tops of which
+is a distant view of Cultiegh mountain, which is there seen in its
+proudest solemnity.
+
+They plough all with horses three or four in a plough, and all abreast.
+Here let it be remarked that they very commonly plough and harrow with
+their horses drawing by the tail: it is done every season. Nothing can
+put them beside this, and they insist that, take a horse tired in traces
+and put him to work by the tail, he will draw better: quite fresh again.
+Indignant reader, this is no jest of mine, but cruel, stubborn, barbarous
+truth. It is so all over Cavan.
+
+At Clonells, near Castlerea, lives O'Connor, the direct descendant of
+Roderick O'Connor, who was king of Connaught six or seven hundred years
+ago; there is a monument of him in Roscommon Church, with his sceptre,
+etc. I was told as a certainty that this family were here long before
+the coming of the Milesians. Their possessions, formerly so great, are
+reduced to three or four hundred pounds a year, the family having fared
+in the revolutions of so many ages much worse than the O'Niels and
+O'Briens. The common people pay him the greatest respect, and send him
+presents of cattle, etc., upon various occasions. They consider him as
+the prince of a people involved in one common ruin.
+
+Another great family in Connaught is Macdermot, who calls himself Prince
+of Coolavin. He lives at Coolavin, in Sligo, and though he has not above
+one hundred pounds a year, will not admit his children to sit down in his
+presence. This was certainly the case with his father, and some assured
+me even with the present chief. Lord Kingsborough, Mr. Ponsonby, Mr.
+O'Hara, Mr. Sandford, etc., came to see him, and his address was curious:
+"O'Hara, you are welcome! Sandford, I am glad to see your mother's son"
+(his mother was an O'Brien): "as to the rest of ye, come in as ye can."
+Mr. O'Hara, of Nymphsfield, is in possession of a considerable estate in
+Sligo, which is the remains of great possessions they had in that
+country. He is one of the few descendants of the Milesian race.
+
+To Lord Kingston's, to whom I had a letter, but unfortunately for me he
+was at Spa. Walked down to Longford Hill to view the lake. It is one of
+the most delicious scenes I ever beheld; a lake of five miles by four,
+which fills the bottom of a gentle valley almost of a circular form,
+bounded very boldly by the mountains. Those to the left rise in a noble
+slope; they lower rather in front, and let in a view of Strand mountain,
+near Sligo, above twenty miles off. To the right you look over a small
+part of a bog to a large extent of cultivated hill, with the blue
+mountains beyond. Were this little piece of bog planted, the view would
+be more complete; the hill on which you stand has a foliage of well-grown
+trees, which form the southern shore. You look down on six islands, all
+wooded, and on a fine promontory to the left, which shoots far into the
+lake. Nothing can be more pleasing than their uncommon variety. The
+first is small (Rock Island), tufted with trees, under the shade of which
+is an ancient building, once the residence of Macdermot. The next a
+mixture of lawn and wood. The third, which appears to join this, is of a
+darker shade, yet not so thick but you can see the bright lawn under the
+trees. House Island is one fine, thick wood, which admits not a gleam of
+light, a contrast to the silver bosom of the lake. Church Island is at a
+greater distance; this is also a clump, and rises boldly. Rock Island is
+of wood; it opens in the centre and shows a lawn with a building on it.
+It is impossible to imagine a more pleasing and cheerful scene. Passed
+the chapel to Smithfield Hill, which is a fine rising ground, quite
+surrounded with plantations. From hence the view is changed; here the
+promontory appears very bold, and over its neck you see another wooded
+island in a most picturesque situation. Nothing can be more picturesque
+than Rock Island, its ruin overhung with ivy. The other islands assume
+fresh and varied outlines, and form upon the whole one of the most
+luxuriant scenes I have met with.
+
+The views of the lake and environs are very fine as you go to Boyle; the
+woods unite into a large mass, and contrast the bright sheet of water
+with their dark shades.
+
+The lands about Kingston are very fine, a rich, dry, yellow, sandy loam,
+the finest soil that I have seen in Ireland; all grass, and covered with
+very fine bullocks, cows, and sheep. The farms rise to five hundred
+acres, and are generally in divisions, parted by stone walls, for oxen,
+cows, young cattle, and sheep separate. Some of the lands will carry an
+ox and a wether per acre; rents, 15s. to 20s.
+
+Dined at Boyle, and took the road to Ballymoat. Crossed an immense
+mountainy bog, where I stopped and made inquiries; found that it was ten
+miles long, and three and a half over, containing thirty-five square
+miles; that limestone quarries were around and in it, and limestone
+gravel in many places to be found, and used in the lands that join it.
+In addition to this I may add that there is a great road crossing it.
+Thirty-five miles are twenty-two thousand four hundred acres. What an
+immense field of improvement! Nothing would be easier than to drain it
+(vast tracts of land have such a fall), that not a drop of water could
+remain. These hilly bogs are extremely different from any I have seen in
+England. In the moors in the north the hills and mountains are all
+covered with heath, like the Irish bogs, but they are of various soils,
+gravel, shingle, moor, etc., and boggy only in spots, but the Irish bog
+hills are all pure bog to a great depth without the least variation of
+soil; and the bog being of a hilly form, is a proof that it is a growing
+vegetable mass, and not owing merely to stagnant water. Sir Laurence
+Dundass is the principal proprietor of this.
+
+Reached Ballymoat in the evening, the residence of the Hon. Mr.
+Fitzmaurice, where I expected great pleasure in viewing a manufactory, of
+which I heard much since I came to Ireland. He was so kind as to give me
+the following account of it in the most liberal manner:--
+
+"Twenty years ago the late Lord Shelburne came to Ballymoat, a wild
+uncultivated region without industry or civility, and the people all
+Roman Catholics, without an atom of a manufacture, not even spinning. In
+order to change this state of things, his lordship contracted with people
+in the north to bring Protestant weavers and establish a manufactory, as
+the only means of making the change he wished. This was done, but
+falling into the hands of rascals he lost 5,000 pounds by the business,
+with only seventeen Protestant families and twenty-six or twenty-seven
+looms established for it. Upon his death Lady Shelburne wished to carry
+his scheme into execution, and to do it gave much encouragement to Mr.
+Wakefield, the great Irish factor in London, by granting advantageous
+leases under the contract of building and colonising by weavers from the
+north, and carrying on the manufactory. He found about twenty looms
+working upon their own account, and made a considerable progress in this
+for five years, raising several buildings, cottages for the weavers, and
+was going on as well as the variety of his business would admit,
+employing sixty looms. He then died, when a stand was made to all the
+works for a year, in which everything went much to ruin. Lady Shelburne
+then employed a new manager to carry on the manufacture upon his own
+account, giving him very profitable grants of lands to encourage him to
+do it with spirit. He continued for five years, employing sixty looms
+also, but his circumstances failing, a fresh stop was put to the work.
+
+"Then it was that Mr. Fitzmaurice, in the year 1774, determined to exert
+himself in pushing on a manufactory which promised to be of such
+essential service to the whole country. To do this with effect, he saw
+that it was necessary to take it entirely into his own hands. He could
+lend money to the manager to enable him to go on, but that would be at
+best hazardous, and could never do it in the complete manner in which he
+wished to establish it. In this period of consideration, Mr. Fitzmaurice
+was advised by his friends never to engage in so complex a business as a
+manufacture, in which he must of necessity become a merchant, also engage
+in all the hazard, irksomeness, etc., of commerce, so totally different
+from his birth, education, ideas, and pursuits; but tired with the
+inactivity of common life, he determined not only to turn manufacturer,
+but to carry on the business in the most spirited and vigorous manner
+that was possible. In the first place he took every means of making
+himself a complete master of the business; he went through various
+manufactures, inquired into the minutiae, and took every measure to know
+it to the bottom. This he did so repeatedly and with such attention in
+the whole progress, from spinning to bleaching and selling, that he
+became as thorough a master of it as an experienced manager; he has wove
+linen, and done every part of the business with his own hands. As he
+determined to have the works complete, he took Mr. Stansfield the
+engineer, so well known for his improved saw-mills, into his pay. He
+sent him over to Ballymoat in the winter of 1774, in order to erect the
+machinery of a bleach mill upon the very best construction; he went to
+all the great mills in the north of Ireland to inspect them, to remark
+their deficiencies, that they might be improved in the mills he intended
+to erect. This knowledge being gained, the work was begun, and as water
+was necessary, a great basin was formed by a dam across a valley, by
+which means thirty-four acres were floated, to serve as a reservoir for
+dry seasons, to secure plenty at all times."
+
+August 30. Rode to Rosshill, four miles off, a headland that projects
+into the Bay of Newport, from which there is a most beautiful view of the
+bay on both sides; I counted thirty islands very distinctly, all of them
+cultivated under corn and potatoes, or pastured by cattle. At a distance
+Clare rises in a very bold and picturesque style; on the left Crow
+Patrick, and to the right other mountains. It is a view that wants
+nothing but wood.
+
+September 5. To Drumoland, the seat of Sir Lucius O'Brien, in the county
+of Clare, a gentleman who had been repeatedly assiduous to procure me
+every sort of information. I should remark, as I have now left Galway,
+that that county, from entering it in the road to Tuam till leaving it
+to-day, has been, upon the whole, inferior to most of the parts I have
+travelled in Ireland in point of beauty: there are not mountains of a
+magnitude to make the view striking. It is perfectly free from woods,
+and even trees, except about gentlemen's houses, nor has it a variety in
+its face. I do not, however, speak without exception; I passed some
+tracts which are cheerful. Drumoland has a pleasing variety of grounds
+about the house; it stands on a hill gently rising from a lake of
+twenty-four acres, in the middle of a noble wood of oak, ash, poplar,
+etc.; three beautiful hills rise above, over which the plantations spread
+in a varied manner; and these hills command very fine views of the great
+rivers Fergus and Shannon at their junction, being each of them a league
+wide.
+
+There is a view of the Shannon from Limerick to Foynes Island, which is
+thirty miles, with all its bays, bends, islands, and fertile shores. It
+is from one to three miles broad, a most noble river, deserving regal
+navies for its ornament, or, what are better, fleets of merchantmen, the
+cheerful signs of far-extended commerce, instead of a few miserable
+fishing-boats, the only canvas that swelled upon the scene; but the want
+of commerce in her ports is the misfortune not the fault of
+Ireland--thanks for the deficiency to that illiberal spirit of trading
+jealousy, which has at times actuated and disgraced so many nations. The
+prospect has a noble outline in the bold mountains of Tipperary, Cork,
+Limerick, and Kerry. The whole view magnificent.
+
+At the foot of this hill is the castle of Bunratty, a very large edifice,
+the seat of the O'Briens, princes of Thomond; it stands on the bank of a
+river, which falls into the Shannon near it. About this castle and that
+of Rosmanagher the land is the best in the county of Clare; it is worth 1
+pound 13s. an acre, and fats a bullock per acre in summer, besides winter
+feed.
+
+To Limerick, through a cheerful country, on the banks of the river, in a
+vale surrounded by distant mountains. That city is very finely situated,
+partly on an island formed by the Shannon. The new part, called Newtown
+Pery, from Mr. Pery the speaker, who owns a considerable part of the
+city, and represents it in Parliament, is well built. The houses are new
+ones, of brick, large, and in right lines. There is a communication with
+the rest of the town by a handsome bridge of three large arches erected
+at Mr. Pery's expense. Here are docks, quays, and a custom-house, which
+is a good building, faces the river, and on the opposite banks is a large
+quadrangular one, the house of industry. This part of Limerick is very
+cheerful and agreeable, and carries all the marks of a flourishing place.
+
+The exports of this port are beef, pork, butter, hides, and rape-seed.
+The imports are rum, sugar, timber, tobacco, wines, coals, bark, salt,
+etc. The customs and excise, about sixteen years ago, amounted to 16,000
+pounds, at present 32,000 pounds, and rather more four or five years ago.
+
+Whole revenue 1751 16,000 pounds
+" " 1775 51,000 pounds
+
+ _Revenue of the Port of Limerick. Year ending_
+
+March 25, 1759 20,494 pounds
+ " 1760 29,197
+ " 1761 20,727
+ " 1762 20,650
+ " 1763 20,525
+ " 1764 32,635
+ " 1765 31,099
+ _Com. Jour_., vol. xiv., p. 71.
+
+ _Price of Provisions_.
+
+Wheat, 1s. 1d. a stone Wild ducks, 20d. to 2s. a couple.
+Barley and oats, 5.75d. to 6d. Teal, 10d. a couple.
+Scotch coals, 18s.; Whitehaven, Plover, 6d. a couple.
+20s.
+A boat-load of turf, 20 tons, Widgeon, 10d. ditto.
+45s.
+Salmon, three-halfpence. Hares, 1s. each, commonly sold all
+ year.
+Trout, 2d., very fine, per lb. Woodcocks, 20d. to 2s. 2d. a brace.
+Eels, 2d. a pound. Oysters, 4d. to 1s. a 100.
+Rabbits, 8d. a couple. Lobsters, 1s. to 1s. 6d., if good.
+
+Land sells at twenty years' purchase. Rents were at the highest in 1765;
+fell since, but in four years have fallen 8s. to 10s. an acre about
+Limerick. They are at a stand at present, owing to the high price of
+provisions from pasture. The number of people in Limerick is computed at
+thirty-two thousand; it is exceedingly populous for the size, the chief
+street quite crowded; many sedan chairs in town, and some hackney
+chaises. Assemblies the year round, in a new assembly-house built for
+the purpose, and plays and concerts common.
+
+Upon the whole, Limerick must be a very gay place, but when the usual
+number of troops are in town much more so. To show the general expenses
+of living, I was told of a person's keeping a carriage, four horses,
+three men, three maids, a good table, a wife, three children, and a
+nurse, and all for 500 pounds a year:
+
+ l. s. d. l. s. d.
+A footman 4 4 0 to 6 6 0
+A professed 6 6 0
+woman-cook
+A house-maid 3 0 0
+A kitchen-maid 2 0 0
+A butler 10 0 0 to 12 0 0
+
+A barrel of beef or pork, 200lb. weight. Vessels of 400 tons can come up
+with spring tides, which rise fourteen feet.
+
+September 9. To Castle Oliver; various country, not so rich to
+appearance as the Caucasus, being fed bare; much hilly sheep walk, and
+for a considerable way a full third of it potatoes and corn: no sign of
+depopulation. Just before I got to the hills a field of ragwort
+(_senesio jacoboea_) buried the cows. The first hill of Castle Oliver
+interesting. After rising a mountain so high that no one could think of
+any house, you come in view of a vale, quite filled with fine woods,
+fields margined with trees, and hedge plantations climbing up the
+mountains. Having engaged myself to Mr. Oliver, to return from Killarney
+by his house, as he was confined to Limerick by the assizes, I shall omit
+saying anything of it at present.
+
+September 16. To Cove by water, from Mr. Trent's quay. The view of Lota
+is charming; a fine rising lawn from the water, with noble spreading
+woods reaching on each side; the house a very pleasing front, with lawn
+shooting into the woods. The river forms a creek between two hills, one
+Lota, the other opening to another hill of inclosures well wooded. As
+the boat leaves the shore nothing can be finer than the view behind us;
+the back woods of Lota, the house and lawn, and the high bold inclosures
+towards Cork, form the finest shore imaginable, leading to Cork, the city
+appearing in full view, Dunkettle wooded inclosures, a fine sweep of
+hill, joining Mr. Hoare's at Factory Hill, whose woods have a beautiful
+effect. Dunkettle House almost lost in a wood. As we advance, the woods
+of Lota and Dunkettle unite in one fine mass. The sheet of water, the
+rising lawns, the house in the most beautiful situation imaginable, with
+more woods above it than lawns below it, the west shore of Loch Mahon, a
+very fine rising hill cut into inclosures but without wood, land-locked
+on every side with high lands, scattered with inclosures, woods, seats,
+etc., with every cheerful circumstance of lively commerce, have
+altogether a great effect. Advancing to Passage the shores are various,
+and the scenery enlivened by fourscore sail of large ships; the little
+port of Passage at the water's edge, with the hills rising boldly above
+it. The channel narrows between the great island and the hills of
+Passage. The shores bold, and the ships scattered about them, with the
+inclosures hanging behind the masts and yards picturesque. Passing the
+straits a new basin of the harbour opens, surrounded with high lands.
+Monkstown Castle on the hill to the right, and the grounds of
+Ballybricken, a beautiful intermixed scene of wood and lawn. The high
+shore of the harbour's mouth opens gradually. The whole scene is
+land-locked. The first view of Haulbowline Island and Spike Island, high
+rocky lands, with the channel opening to Cove, where are a fleet of ships
+at anchor, and Rostellan, Lord Inchiquin's house, backed with hills, a
+scenery that wants nothing but the accompaniment of wood. The view of
+Ballybricken changes; it now appears to be unfortunately cut into right
+lines. Arrived at the ship at Cove; in the evening returned, leaving Mr.
+Jefferys and family on board for a voyage to Havre, in their way to
+Paris.
+
+Dunkettle is one of the most beautiful places I have seen in Ireland. It
+is a hill of some hundred acres broken into a great variety of ground by
+gentle declivities, with everywhere an undulating outline and the whole
+varied by a considerable quantity of wood, which in some places is thick
+enough to take the appearance of close groves, in others spreads into
+scattered thickets and a variety of single groups. This hill, or rather
+cluster of hills, is surrounded on one side by a reach of Cork Harbour,
+over which it looks in the most advantageous manner; and on the other by
+an irriguous vale, through which flows the river Glanmire; the opposite
+shore of that river has every variety that can unite to form pleasing
+landscapes for the views from Dunkettle grounds; in some places narrow
+glens, the bottoms of which are quite filled with water, and the steep
+banks covered with thick woods that spread a deep shade; in others the
+vale opens to form the site of a pretty cheerful village, overhung by
+hill and wood: here the shore rises gradually into large inclosures,
+which spread over the hills, stretching beyond each other; and there the
+vale melts again into a milder variety of fields. A hill thus situated,
+and consisting in itself of so much variety of surface, must necessarily
+command many pleasing views. To enjoy these to the better advantage, Mr.
+Trent (than whom no one has a better taste, both to discover and describe
+the beauties of natural scenes) is making a walk around the whole, which
+is to bend to the inequalities of the ground, so as to take the principal
+points in view. The whole is so beautiful, that if I were to make the
+regular detour, the description might be too minute; but there are some
+points which gave me so much pleasure that I know not how to avoid
+recommending to others that travel this way to taste the same
+satisfaction. From the upper part of the orchard you look down a part of
+the river, where it opens into a regular basin, one corner stretching up
+to Cork, lost behind the hill of Lota, the lawn of which breaks on the
+swelling hills among the woods; the house obscured, and therefore seeming
+a part of your home scene; the losing the river behind the beautiful
+projection of Lota is more pleasing than can be expressed. The other
+reach, leading to the harbour's mouth, is half hidden by the trees, which
+margin the foot of the hill on which you stand; in front a noble range of
+cultivated hills, the inclosures broken by slight spots of wood, and
+prettily varied with houses, without being so crowded as to take off the
+rural effect. The scene is not only beautiful in those common
+circumstances which form a landscape, but is alive with the cheerfulness
+of ships and boats perpetually moving. Upon the whole, it is one of the
+most luxuriant prospects I have anywhere seen. Leaving the orchard, pass
+on the brow of a hill which forms the bank of the river of Glanmire,
+commanding the opposite woods of Lota in all their beauty. Rise to the
+top of the high hill which joins the deer park, and exhibits a scene
+equally extensive and beautiful; you look down on a vale which winds
+almost around at your feet, finishing to the left in Cork river, which
+here takes the appearance of a lake, bounded by wood and hills, and sunk
+in the bottom of a vale, in a style which painting cannot imitate; the
+opposite hills of Lota, wood, and lawn, seem formed as objects for this
+point of view: at your feet a hill rises out of the vale, with higher
+ones around it, the margins scattered wood; to the right, towards
+Riverstown, a vale; the whole backed by cultivated hills to Kallahan's
+field. Milder scenes follow: a bird's-eye view of a small vale sunk at
+your feet, through which the river flows; a bridge of several arches
+unites two parts of a beautiful village, the meadow grounds of which rise
+gently, a varied surface of wood and lawn, to the hills of Riverstown,
+the whole surrounded by delicious sweeps of cultivated hills. To the
+left a wooded glen rising from the vale to the horizon, the scenery
+sequestered, but pleasing; the oak wood which hangs on the deer-park
+hills, an addition. Down to the brow of the hill, where it hangs over
+the river, a picturesque interesting spot. The inclosures of the
+opposite bank hang beautifully to the eye, and the wooded glen winds up
+the hill. Returning to the house I was conducted to the hill, where the
+grounds slope off to the river of Cork, which opens to view in noble
+reaches of a magnitude that fills the eye and the imagination; a whole
+country of a character truly magnificent, and behind the winding vale
+which leads between a series of hills to Glanmire.
+
+
+
+Pictures at Dunkettle.
+
+
+A St. Michael, etc., the subject confused, by Michael Angelo. A St.
+Francis on wood, a large original of Guido. A St. Cecilia, original of
+Romanelli. An Assumption of the Virgin, by L. Carracci. A Quaker's
+meeting, of above fifty figures, by Egbert Hemskerk. A sea view and rock
+piece, by Vernet. A small flagellation, by Sebastian del Piombo. A
+Madonna and Child, small, by Rubens. The Crucifixion, many figures in
+miniature, excellent, though the master is unknown. An excellent copy of
+the famous Danae of Titian, at Monte Cavallo, near Naples, by Cioffi of
+Naples. Another of the Venus of Titian, at the Tribuna in Florence.
+Another of Venus blinding Cupid, by Titian, at the Palazzo Borghese in
+Rome. Another of great merit of the Madonna della Sedia of Raphael, at
+the Palazzo Pitti in Florence, by Stirn, a German, lately at Rome.
+Another of a Holy Family, from Raphael, of which there are said to be
+three originals, one at the king's palace in Naples, one in the Palais
+Royal in Paris, and the third in the collection of Lord Exeter, lately
+purchased at Rome. A portrait of Sir Patrick Trent, by Sir P. Lely. An
+excellent portrait of a person unknown, by Dahl.
+
+September 17. To Castlemartyr, the seat of the Earl of Shannon, one of
+the most distinguished improvers in Ireland; in whom I found the most
+earnest desire to give me every species of information, with a knowledge
+and ability which enabled him to do it most effectually. Passed through
+Middleton, a well-built place, which belongs to the noble lord to whom it
+gives title. Castlemartyr is an old house, but much added to by the
+present earl; he has built, besides other rooms, a dining one thirty-two
+feet long by twenty-two broad, and a drawing one, the best rooms I have
+seen in Ireland, a double cube of twenty-five feet, being fifty long,
+twenty-five broad, and twenty-five high. The grounds about the house are
+very well laid out; much wood well grown, considerable lawns, a river
+made to wind through them in a beautiful manner, an old castle so
+perfectly covered with ivy as to be a picturesque object. A winding walk
+leads for a considerable distance along the banks of this river, and
+presents several pleasing landscapes.
+
+From Rostellan to Lota, the seat of Frederick Rogers, Esq. I had before
+seen it in the highest perfection from the water going from Dunkettle to
+Cove, and from the grounds of Dunkettle. Mrs. Rogers was so obliging as
+to show me the back grounds, which are admirably wooded, and of a fine
+varied surface.
+
+Got to Cork in the evening, and waited on the Dean, who received me with
+the most flattering attention. Cork is one of the most populous places I
+have ever been in; it was market-day, and I could scarce drive through
+the streets, they were so amazingly thronged: on the other days the
+number is very great. I should suppose it must resemble a Dutch town,
+for there are many canals in the streets, with quays before the houses.
+The best built part is Morrison's Island, which promises well; the old
+part of the town is very close and dirty. As to its commerce, the
+following particulars I owe to Robert Gordon, Esq., the surveyor-general:
+
+ _Average of Nineteen Years' Export, ending March_ 24, 1773.
+
+Hides, at 1 pounds each 64,000 pounds
+Bay and woollen yarn 294,000
+Butter, at 30s. per cwt. from 56s. to 180,000
+72s.
+Beef, at 20s. a barrel 291,970
+Camlets, serges, etc. 40,000
+Candles 34,220
+Soap 20,000
+Tallow 20,000
+Herrings, 18 to 35,000l. all their 21,000
+own
+Glue 20 to 25,000 22,000
+Pork 64,000
+Wool to England 14,000
+Small exports, Gottenburg herrings, 35,000
+horns, hoofs, etc., feather-beds,
+palliasses, feathers, etc.
+ 1,100,190
+
+Average prices of the nineteen years on the custom books. All exports on
+those books are rated at the value of the reign of Charles II.; but the
+imports have always 10 per cent. on the sworn price added to them.
+Seventy to eighty sail of ships belong to Cork. Average of ships that
+entered that port in those nineteen years, eight hundred and seventy-two
+per annum. The number of people at Cork mustered by the clergy by
+hearth-money, and by the number of houses, payments to minister, average
+of the three, sixty-seven thousand souls, if taken before the 1st of
+September, after that twenty thousand increased. There are seven hundred
+coopers in the town. Barrels all of oak or beech, all from America: the
+latter for herrings, now from Gottenburg and Norway. The excise of Cork
+now no more than in Charles the Second's reign. Ridiculous!
+
+Cork old duties, in 1751, 62,000 pounds
+produced
+Now the same 140,000
+
+Bullocks, 16,000 head, 32,000 barrels; 41,000 hogs, 20,000 barrels.
+Butter, 22,000 firkins of half a hundredweight each, both increase this
+year, the whole being
+
+240,000 firkins of butter,
+ 120,000 barrels of beef.
+
+Export of woollen yarn from Cork, 300,000 pounds a year in the Irish
+market. No wool smuggled, or at least very little. The wool comes to
+Cork, etc., and is delivered out to combers, who make it into balls.
+These balls are bought up by the French agents at a vast price, and
+exported; but even this does not amount to 40,000 pounds a year.
+
+
+
+Prices.
+
+
+Beef, 21s. per cwt., never so high by 2s. 6d.; pork, 30s., never higher
+than 18s. 6d., owing to the army demand. Slaughter dung, 8d. for a horse
+load. Country labourer, 6d.; about town, 10d. Milk, seven pints a
+penny. Coals, 3s. 8d. to 5s. a barrel, six of which make a ton. Eggs,
+four a penny.
+
+Cork labourers. Cellar ones, twenty thousand; have 1s. 1d. a day, and as
+much bread, beef, and beer as they can eat and drink, and seven pounds of
+offals a week for their families. Rent for their house, 40s. Masons'
+and carpenters' labourers, 10d. a day. Sailors now 3 pounds a month and
+provisions: before the American war, 28s. Porters and coal-heavers paid
+by the great. State of the poor people in general incomparably better
+off than they were twenty years ago. There are imported eighteen
+thousand barrels annually of Scotch herrings, at 18s. a barrel. The salt
+for the beef trade comes from Lisbon, St. Ube's, etc. The salt for the
+fish trade from Rochelle. For butter English and Irish.
+
+Particulars of the woollen fabrics of the county of Cork received from a
+manufacturer. The woollen trade, serges and camlets, ratteens, friezes,
+druggets, and narrow cloths, the last they make to 10s. and 12s. a yard;
+if they might export to 8s. they are very clear that they could get a
+great trade for the woollen manufactures of Cork. The wool comes from
+Galway and Roscommon, combed here by combers, who earn 8s. to 10s. a
+week, into balls of twenty-four ounces, which is spun into worsteds of
+twelve skeins to the ball, and exported to Yarmouth for Norwich; the
+export price, 30 pounds a pack to 33 pounds, never before so high;
+average of them, 26 pounds to 30 pounds. Some they work up at home into
+serges, stuffs, and camlets; the serges at 12d. a yard, thirty-four
+inches wide; the stuffs sixteen inches, at 18d., the camlets at 9.5d. to
+13d.; the spinners at 9d. a ball, one in a week; or a ball and half 12d.
+a week, and attend the family besides; this is done most in Waterford and
+Kerry, particularly near Killarney; the weavers earn 1s. a day on an
+average. Full three-fourths of the wool is exported in yarn, and only
+one-fourth worth worked up. Half the wool of Ireland is combed in the
+county of Cork.
+
+A very great manufacture of ratteens at Carrick-on-Suir; the bay worsted
+is for serges, shalloons, etc. Woollen yarn for coarse cloths, which
+latter have been lost for some years, owing to the high price of wool.
+The bay export has declined since 1770, which declension is owing to the
+high price of wool.
+
+No wool smuggled, not even from Kerry; not a sloop's cargo in twenty
+years, the price too high; the declension has been considerable. For
+every eighty-six packs that are exported, a licence from the Lord
+Lieutenant, for which 20 pounds is paid.
+
+From the Act of the last sessions of Great Britain for exporting woollen
+goods for the troops in the pay of Ireland, Mr. Abraham Lane, of Cork,
+established a new manufacture of army clothing for that purpose, which is
+the first at Cork, and pays 40 pounds a week in labour only. Upon the
+whole there has been no increase of woollen manufacture within twenty
+years. Is clearly of opinion that many fabrics might be worked up here
+much cheaper than in France, of cloths that the French have beat the
+English out of; these are, particularly, broadcloths of one yard and half
+yard wide, from 3s. to 6s. 6d. a yard for the Levant trade. Friezes
+which are now supplied from Carcassone in Languedoc. Friezes, of
+twenty-four to twenty-seven inches, at 10d. to 13d. a yard. Flannels,
+twenty-seven to thirty-six, from 7d. to 14d. Serges of twenty-seven to
+thirty-six inches, at 7d. to 12d. a yard; these would work up the coarse
+wool. At Ballynasloe Fair, in July, 200,000 pounds a year bought in
+wool. There is a manufactory of knit-stocking by the common women about
+Cork, for eight or ten miles around; the yarn from 12d. to 18d. a pair,
+and the worsted from 16d. to 20d., and earn from 12d. to 18d. a week.
+Besides their own consumption, great quantities are sent to the north of
+Ireland.
+
+All the weavers in the country are confined to towns, have no land, but
+small gardens. Bandle, or narrow linen, for home consumption, is made in
+the western part of the county. Generally speaking, the circumstances of
+all the manufacturing poor are better than they were twenty years ago.
+The manufactures have not declined, though the exportation has, owing to
+the increased home consumptions. Bandon was once the seat of the stuff,
+camlet, and shag manufacture, but has in seven years declined above
+three-fourths. Have changed it for the manufacture of coarse green
+linens, for the London market, from 6d. to 9d. a yard, twenty-seven
+inches wide; but the number of manufactures in general much lessened.
+
+Rode to the mouth of Cork Harbour; the grounds about it are all fine,
+bold, and varied, but so bare of trees, that there is not a single view
+but what pains one in the want of wood. Rents of the tract south of the
+river Caragoline, from 5s. to 30s.; average, 10s. Not one man in five
+has a cow, but generally from one to four acres, upon which they have
+potatoes, and five or six sheep, which they milk, and spin their wool.
+Labour 5d. in winter, 6d. in summer; many of them for three months in the
+year live on potatoes and water, the rest of it they have a good deal of
+fish. But it is remarked, at Kinsale, that when sprats are most
+plentiful, diseases are most common. Rent for a mere cabin, 10s. Much
+paring and burning; paring twenty-eight men a day, sow wheat on it and
+then potatoes; get great crops. The soil a sharp, stony land; no
+limestone south of the above river. Manure for potatoes, with sea-weed,
+for 26s., which gives good crops, but lasts only one year. Sea-sand much
+used; no shells in it. Farms rise to two or three hundred acres, but are
+hired in partnership.
+
+Before I quit the environs of Cork, I must remark that the country on the
+harbour I think preferable, in many respects, for a residence, to
+anything I have seen in Ireland. First, it is the most southerly part of
+the kingdom. Second, there are very great beauties of prospect. Third,
+by much the most animated, busy scene of shipping in all Ireland, and
+consequently, fourth, a ready price for every product. Fifth, great
+plenty of excellent fish and wild fowl. Sixth, the neighbourhood of a
+great city for objects of convenience.
+
+September 25. Took the road to Nedeen, through the wildest region of
+mountains that I remember to have seen; it is a dreary but an interesting
+road. The various horrid, grotesque, and unusual forms in which the
+mountains rise and the rocks bulge; the immense height of some distant
+heads, which rear above all the nearer scenes, the torrents roaring in
+the vales, and breaking down the mountain sides, with here and there a
+wretched cabin, and a spot of culture yielding surprise to find human
+beings the inhabitants of such a scene of wildness, altogether keep the
+traveller's mind in an agitation and suspense. These rocks and mountains
+are many of them no otherwise improvable than by planting, for which,
+however, they are exceedingly well adapted.
+
+Sir John Colthurst was so obliging as to send half a dozen labourers with
+me, to help my chaise up a mountain side, of which he gave a formidable
+account: in truth it deserved it. The road leads directly against a
+mountain ridge, and those who made it were so incredibly stupid, that
+they kept the straight line up the hill, instead of turning aside to the
+right to wind around a projection of it. The path of the road is worn by
+torrents into a channel, which is blocked up in places by huge fragments,
+so that it would be a horrid road on a level; but on a hill so steep,
+that the best path would be difficult to ascend--it may be supposed
+terrible: the labourers, two passing strangers, and my servant, could
+with difficulty get the chaise up. It is much to be regretted that the
+direction of the road is not changed, as all the rest from Cork to Nedeen
+is good enough. For a few miles towards the latter place the country is
+flat on the river Kenmare, much of it good, and under grass or corn.
+Passed Mr. Orpine's at Ardtilly, and another of the same name at
+Killowen.
+
+Nedeen is a little town, very well situated, on the noble river Kenmare,
+where ships of one hundred and fifty tons may come up; there are but
+three or four good houses. Lord Shelburne, to whom the place belongs,
+has built one for his agent. There is a vale of good land, which is here
+from a mile and a half to a mile broad; and to the north and south, great
+ridges of mountains said to be full of mines.
+
+At Nedeen, Lord Shelburne had taken care to have me well informed by his
+people in that country, which belongs for the greatest part to himself,
+he has above one hundred and fifty thousand Irish acres in Kerry; the
+greatest part of the barony of Glanrought belongs to him, most of
+Dunkerron and Ivragh. The country is all a region of mountains, inclosed
+by a vale of flat land on the river; the mountains to the south come to
+the water's edge, with but few variations, the principal of which is
+Ardee, a farm of Lord Shelburne's to the north of the river, the flat
+land is one-half to three-quarters of a mile broad. The mountains to the
+south reach to Bear-haven, and those to the north to Dingle Bay; the soil
+is extremely various; to the south of the river all are sandstones, and
+the hills loam, stone, gravel, and bog. To the north there is a slip of
+limestone land, from Kilgarvon to Cabbina-cush, that is six miles east of
+Nedeen, and three to the west, but is not more than a quarter of a mile
+broad, the rest, including the mountains, all sandstone. As to its
+rents, it is very difficult to tell what they are; for land is let by the
+plough-land and gineve, twelve gineves to the plough-land; but the latter
+denomination is not of any particular quantity, for no two plough-lands
+are the same. The size of farms is various, from forty acres to one
+thousand; less quantities go with cabins, and some farms are taken by
+labourers in partnership.
+
+Soon entered the wildest and most romantic country I had anywhere seen; a
+region of steep rocks and mountains which continued for nine or ten
+miles, till I came in view of Mucruss. There is something magnificently
+wild in this stupendous scenery, formed to impress the mind with a
+certain species of terror. All this tract has a rude and savage air, but
+parts of it are strikingly interesting; the mountains are bare and rocky,
+and of a great magnitude; the vales are rocky glens, where a mountain
+stream tumbles along the roughest bed imaginable, and receives many
+torrents, pouring from clefts, half overhung with shrubby wood; some of
+these streams are seen, and the roar of others heard, but hid by vast
+masses of rock. Immense fragments, torn from the precipices by storms
+and torrents, are tumbled in the wildest confusion, and seem to hang
+rather than rest upon projecting precipices. Upon some of these
+fragments of rock, perfectly detached from the soil, except by the side
+on which they lie, are beds of black turf, with luxuriant crops of heath,
+etc., which appeared very curious to me, having nowhere seen the like;
+and I observed very high in the mountains--much higher than any
+cultivation is at present, on the right hand--flat and cleared spaces of
+good grass among the ridges of rock, which had probably been cultivated,
+and proved that these mountains were not incapable from climate of being
+applied to useful purposes.
+
+From one of these heights I looked forward to the Lake of Killarney at a
+considerable distance, and backward to the river Kenmare; came in view of
+a small part of the upper lake, spotted with several islands, and
+surrounded by the most tremendous mountains that can be imagined, of an
+aspect savage and dreadful. From this scene of wild magnificence, I
+broke at once upon all the glories of Killarney; from an elevated point
+of view I looked down on a considerable part of the lake, which gave me a
+specimen of what I might expect. The water you command (which, however,
+is only a part of the lake) appears a basin of two or three miles round;
+to the left it is inclosed by the mountains you have passed, particularly
+by the Turk, whose outline is uncommonly noble, and joins a range of
+others, that form the most magnificent shore in the world: on the other
+side is a rising scenery of cultivated hills, and Lord Kenmare's park and
+woods; the end of the lake at your feet is formed by the root of
+Mangerton, on whose side the road leads. From hence I looked down on a
+pretty range of inclosures on the lake, and the woods and lawns of
+Mucruss, forming a large promontory of thick wood, shooting far into the
+lake. The most active fancy can sketch nothing in addition. Islands of
+wood beyond seem to join it, and reaches of the lake, breaking partly
+between, give the most lively intermixture of water; six or seven isles
+and islets form an accompaniment: some are rocky, but with a slight
+vegetation, others contain groups of trees, and the whole thrown into
+forms, which would furnish new ideas to a painter. Farther is a chain of
+wooded islands, which also appear to join the mainland, with an offspring
+of lesser ones scattered around.
+
+Arrived at Mr. Herbert's at Mucruss, to whose friendly attention I owed
+my succeeding pleasure. There have been so many descriptions of
+Killarney written by gentlemen who have resided some time there, and seen
+it at every season, that for a passing traveller to attempt the like
+would be in vain; for this reason I shall give the mere journal of the
+remarks I made on the spot, in the order I viewed the lake.
+
+September 27. Walked into Mr. Herbert's beautiful grounds, to Oroch's
+Hill, in the lawn that he has cleared from that profusion of stones which
+lie under the wall; the scene which this point commands is truly
+delicious; the house is on the edge of the lawn, by a wood which covers
+the whole peninsula, fringes the slope at your feet, and forms a
+beautiful shore to the lake. Tomys and Glena are vast mountainous masses
+of incredible magnificence, the outline soft and easy in its swells,
+whereas those above the eagle's nest are of so broken and abrupt an
+outline, that nothing can be imagined more savage, an aspect horrid and
+sublime, that gives all the impressions to be wished to astonish rather
+than please the mind. The Turk exhibits noble features, and Mangerton's
+huge body rises above the whole. The cultivated tracts towards Killarney
+form a shore in contrast to the terrific scenes I have just mentioned;
+the distant boundary of the lake, a vast ridge of distant blue mountains
+towards Dingle. From hence entered the garden, and viewed Mucruss Abbey,
+one of the most interesting scenes I ever saw; it is the ruin of a
+considerable abbey, built in Henry VI.'s time, and so entire, that if it
+were more so, though the building would be more perfect, the ruin would
+be less pleasing; it is half obscured in the shade of some venerable ash
+trees; ivy has given the picturesque circumstance, which that plant alone
+can confer, while the broken walls and ruined turrets throw over it
+
+ "The last mournful graces of decay;"
+
+heaps of skulls and bones scattered about, with nettles, briars, and
+weeds sprouting in tufts from the loose stones, all unite to raise those
+melancholy impressions, which are the merit of such scenes, and which can
+scarcely anywhere be felt more completely. The cloisters form a dismal
+area, in the centre of which grows the most prodigious yew-tree I ever
+beheld, in one great stem, two feet diameter, and fourteen feet high,
+from whence a vast head of branches spreads on every side, so as to
+perform a perfect canopy to the whole space. I looked for its fit
+inhabitant; it is a spot where
+
+ "The moping owl doth to the moon complain."
+
+This ruin is in the true style in which all such buildings should appear;
+there is not an intruding circumstance, the hand of dress has not touched
+it, melancholy is the impression which such scenes should kindle, and it
+is here raised most powerfully.
+
+From the abbey we passed to the terrace, a natural one of grass, on the
+very shore of the lake; it is irregular and winding; a wall of rocks
+broken into fantastic forms by the waves: on the other side a wood,
+consisting of all sorts of plants, which the climate can protect, and
+through which a variety of walks are traced. The view from this terrace
+consists of many parts of various characters, but in their different
+styles complete; the lake opens a spreading sheet of water, spotted by
+rocks and islands, all but one or two wooded; the outlines of them are
+sharp and distinct; nothing can be more smiling than this scene, soft and
+mild, a perfect contrast of beauty to the sublimity of the mountains
+which form the shore: these rise in an outline, so varied, and at the
+same time so magnificent, that nothing greater can be imagined; Tomys and
+Glena exhibit an immensity in point of magnitude, but from a large
+hanging wood on the slope, and from the smoothness of the general
+surface, it has nothing savage, whereas the mountains above and near the
+eagle's nest are of the most broken outlines; the declivities are bulging
+rocks, of immense size, which seem to impend in horrid forms over the
+lake, and where an opening among them is caught, others of the same rude
+character rear their threatening heads. From different parts of the
+terrace these scenes are viewed in numberless varieties.
+
+Returned to breakfast, and pursued Mr. Herbert's new road, which he has
+traced through the peninsula to Dynis Island, three miles in length; and
+it is carried in so judicious a manner through a great variety of ground,
+rocky woods, lawns, etc., that nothing can be more pleasing; it passes
+through a remarkable scene of rocks, which are covered with woods. From
+thence to the marble quarry, which Mr. Herbert is working, and where he
+gains variety of marbles, green, red, white, and brown, prettily veined;
+the quarry is a shore of rocks, which surround a bay of the lake, and
+forms a scene consisting of but few parts, but those strongly marked; the
+rocks are bold, and broken into slight caverns; they are fringed with
+scattered trees, and from many parts of them wood shoots in that romantic
+manner so common at Killarney. Full in front Turk Mountain rises with
+the proudest outline, in that abrupt magnificence which fills up the
+whole space before one, and closes the scene.
+
+The road leads by a place where copper-mines were worked; many shafts
+appear; as much ore was raised as sold for twenty-five thousand pounds,
+but the works were laid aside, more from ignorance in the workmen than
+any defects in the mine.
+
+Came to the opening on the great lake, which appears to advantage here,
+the town of Killarney on the north-east shore. Look full on the mountain
+Glena, which rises in very bold manner, the hanging woods spread half
+way, and are of great extent, and uncommonly beautiful. Two very
+pleasing scenes succeed; that to the left is a small bay, hemmed in by a
+neck of land in front; the immediate shore rocks, which are in a
+picturesque style, and crowned entirely with arbutus, and other wood; a
+pretty retired scene, where a variety of objects give no fatigue to the
+eye. The other is an admirable mixture of the beautiful and sublime: a
+bare rock of an almost regular figure projects from a headland into the
+lake, which, with much wood and highland, forms one side of the scene;
+the other is wood from a rising ground only; the lake open between, in a
+sheet of no great extent, but in front is the hanging wood of Glena,
+which appears in full glory.
+
+Mr. Herbert has built a handsome Gothic bridge, to unite the peninsula to
+the island of Brickeen, through the arch of which the waters of the north
+and south lake flow. It is a span of twenty-seven feet, and seventeen
+high, and over it the road leads to that island. From thence to Brickeen
+nearly finished, and it is to be thrown across a bottom into Dynis.
+
+Returned by the northern path through a thick wood for some distance, and
+caught a very agreeable view of Ash Island, seen through an opening,
+inclosed on both sides with wood. Pursued the way from these grounds to
+Keelbeg, and viewed the bay of the Devil's Island, which is a beautiful
+one, inclosed by a shore, to the right of very noble rocks in ledges and
+other forms, crowned in a striking manner with wood; a little rocky islet
+rises in front; to the left the water opens, and Turk Mountain rises with
+that proud superiority which attends him in all these scenes.
+
+The view of the promontory of Dindog, near this place, closes this part
+of the lake, and is indeed singularly beautiful. It is a large rock,
+which shoots far into the water, of a height sufficient to be
+interesting, in full relief, fringed with a scanty vegetation; the shore
+on which you stand bending to the right, as if to meet that rock,
+presents a circular shade of dark wood: Turk still the background, in a
+character of great sublimity, and Mangerton's loftier summit, but less
+interesting outline, a part of the scenery. These views, with others of
+less moment, are connected by a succession of lawns breaking among the
+wood, pleasing the eye with lively verdure, and relieving it from the
+fatigue of the stupendous mountain scenes.
+
+September 28. Took boat on the lake, from the promontory of Dindog
+before mentioned. I had been under a million of apprehensions that I
+should see no more of Killarney; for it blew a furious storm all night,
+and in the morning the bosom of the lake heaved with agitation,
+exhibiting few marks but those of anger. After breakfast it cleared up,
+the clouds dispersed by degrees, the waves subsided, the sun shone out in
+all its splendour; every scene was gay, and no ideas but pleasure
+possessed the breast. With these emotions sallied forth, nor did they
+disappoint us.
+
+Rowed under the rocky shore of Dindog, which is romantic to a great
+degree. The base, by the beating of the waves, is worn into caverns, so
+that the heads of the rocks project considerably beyond the base, and
+hang over in a manner which makes every part of it interesting.
+Following the coast, open marble quarry bay, the shore great fragments of
+rock tumbled about in the wildest manner.
+
+The island of rocks against the copper-mine shore a remarkable group.
+The shore near Casemilan is of a different nature; it is wood in some
+places, in unbroken masses down to the water's edge, in others divided
+from it by smaller tracts of rock. Come to a beautiful land-locked bay,
+surrounded by a woody shore, which, opening in places, shows other woods
+more retired. Tomys is here viewed in a unity of form, which gives it an
+air of great magnificence. Turk was obscured by the sun shining
+immediately above him, and, casting a stream of burning light on the
+water, displayed an effect to describe which the pencil of a Claude alone
+would be equal. Turn out of the bay, and gain a full view of the Eagle's
+Nest, the mountains above it, and Glena; they form a perfect contrast;
+the first are rugged, but Glena mild. Here the shore is a continued
+wood.
+
+Pass the bridge, and cross to Dynis, an island Mr. Herbert has improved
+in the most agreeable manner, by cutting walks through it that command a
+variety of views. One of these paths on the banks of the channel to the
+upper lake is sketched with great taste; it is on one side walled with
+natural rocks, from clefts of which shoot a thousand fine arbutuses, that
+hang in a rich foliage of flowers and scarlet berries; a turf bench in a
+delicious spot; the scene close and sequestered, just enough to give
+every pleasing idea annexed to retirement.
+
+Passing the bridge, by a rapid stream, came presently to the Eagle's
+Nest: having viewed this rock from places where it appears only a part of
+an object much greater than itself, I had conceived an idea that it did
+not deserve the applause given it, but upon coming near I was much
+surprised; the approach is wonderfully fine, the river leads directly to
+its foot, and does not give the turn till immediately under, by which
+means the view is much more grand than it could otherwise be; it is
+nearly perpendicular, and rises in such full majesty, with so bold an
+outline, and such projecting masses in its centre, that the magnificence
+of the object is complete. The lower part is covered with wood, and
+scattered trees climb almost to the top, which (if trees can be amiss in
+Ireland) rather weaken the impression raised by this noble rock. This
+part is a hanging wood, or an object whose character is perfect beauty;
+but the upper scene, the broken outline, rugged sides, and bulging
+masses, all are sublime, and so powerful, that sublimity is the general
+impression of the whole, by overpowering the idea of beauty raised by the
+wood. This immense height of the mountains of Killarney may be estimated
+by this rock; from any distant place that commands it, it appears the
+lowest crag of a vast chain, and of no account; but on a close approach
+it is found to command a very different respect.
+
+Pass between the mountains called the Great Range, towards the upper
+lake. Here Turk, which has so long appeared with a figure perfectly
+interesting, is become, from a different position, an unmeaning lump.
+The rest of the mountains, as you pass, assume a varied appearance, and
+are of a prodigious magnitude. The scenery in this channel is great and
+wild in all its features; wood is very scarce; vast rocks seem tossed in
+confusion through the narrow vale, which is opened among the mountains
+for the river to pass. Its banks are rocks in a hundred forms; the
+mountain-sides are everywhere scattered with them. There is not a
+circumstance but is in unison with the wild grandeur of the scene.
+
+Coleman's Eye, a narrow pass, opens a different scenery. Came to a
+region in which the beautiful and the great are mixed without offence.
+The islands are most of them thickly wooded. Oak Isle in particular
+rises on a pretty base, and is a most beautiful object: Macgillicuddy
+Reeks, with their broken points; Baum, with his perfect cone; the Purple
+Mountain, with his broad and more regular head; and Turk, having assumed
+a new and more interesting aspect, unite with the opposite hills, part of
+which have some wood left on them, to form a scene uncommonly striking.
+Here you look back on a very peculiar spot; it is a parcel of rocks which
+cross the lake, and form a gap that opens to distant water, the whole
+backed by Turk, in a style of the highest grandeur.
+
+Come to Derry Currily, which is a great sweep of mountain, covered partly
+with wood, hanging in a very noble manner, but part cut down, much of it
+mangled, and the rest inhabited by coopers, boat-builders, carpenters,
+and turners, a sacrilegious tribe, who have turned the Dryads from their
+ancient habitations. The cascade here is a fine one; but passed quickly
+from hence to scenes unmixed with pain.
+
+Row to the cluster of the Seven Islands, a little archipelago; they rise
+very boldly from the water upon rocky bases, and are crowned in the most
+beautiful manner with wood, among which are a number of arbutuses; the
+channels among them opening to new scenes, and the great amphitheatre of
+rock and mountain that surround them unite to form a noble view.
+
+Into the river, at the very end of the lake, which winds towards
+Macgillicuddy Reeks in fanciful meanders.
+
+Returned by a course somewhat different, through the Seven Islands, and
+back to the Eagle's Nest, viewing the scenes already mentioned in new
+positions. At that noble rock fired three cannon for the echo, which
+indeed is prodigious; the report does not consist of direct
+reverberations from one rock to another with a pause between, but has an
+exact resemblance to a peal of thunder rattling behind the rock, as if
+travelling the whole scenery we had viewed, and lost in the immensity of
+Macgillicuddy Reeks.
+
+Returning through the bridge, turn to the left round Dynis Island, under
+the woods of Glena; open on the cultivated country beyond the town of
+Killarney, and come gradually in sight of Innisfallen and Ross Island.
+
+Pass near to the wood of Glena, which here takes the appearance of one
+immense sweep hanging in the most beautiful manner imaginable, on the
+side of a vast mountain to a point, shooting into the great lake. A more
+glorious scene is not to be imagined. It is one deep mass of wood,
+composed of the richest shades perfectly dipping in the water, without
+rock or strand appearing, not a break in the whole. The eye passing upon
+the sheet of liquid silver some distance, to meet so entire a sweep of
+every tint that can compose one vast mass of green, hanging to such an
+extent as to fill not only the eye but the imagination, unites in the
+whole to form the most noble scene that is anywhere to be beheld.
+
+Turn under the north shore of Mucruss; the lake here is one great expanse
+of water, bounded by the woods described, the islands of Innisfallen,
+Ross, etc., and the peninsula. The shore of Mucruss has a great variety;
+it is in some places rocky; huge masses tumbled from their base lie
+beneath, as in a chaos of ruin. Great caverns worn under them in a
+variety of strange forms; or else covered with woods of a variety of
+shades. Meet the point of Ardnagluggen (in English where the water
+dashes on the rocks) and come under Ornescope, a rocky headland of a most
+bold projection hanging many yards over its base, with an old
+weather-beaten yew growing from a little bracket of rock, from which the
+spot is called Ornescope, or yew broom.
+
+Mucruss gardens presently open among the woods, and relieve the eye,
+almost fatigued with the immense objects upon which it has so long gazed;
+these softer scenes of lawn gently swelling among the shrubs and trees
+finished the second day.
+
+September 29. Rode after breakfast to Mangerton Cascade and Drumarourk
+Hill, from which the view of Mucruss is uncommonly pleasing.
+
+Pass the other hill, the view of which I described the 27th, and went to
+Colonel Huffy's monument, from whence the scene is different from the
+rest; the foreground is a gentle hill, intersected by hedges, forming
+several small lawns. There are some scattered trees and houses, with
+Mucruss Abbey half obscured by wood, the whole cheerful and backed by
+Turk. The lake is of a triangular form, Ross Island and Innisfallen its
+limits; the woods of Mucruss and the islands take a new position.
+
+Returning, took a boat again towards Ross Isle, and as Mucruss retires
+from us, nothing can be more beautiful than the spots of lawn in the
+terrace opening in the wood; above it the green hills with clumps, and
+the whole finishing in the noble group of wood about the abbey, which
+here appears a deep shade, and so fine a finishing one, that not a tree
+should be touched. Rowed to the east point of Ross, which is well
+wooded; turn to the south coast. Doubling the point, the most beautiful
+shore of that island appears; it is the well-wooded environs of a bay,
+except a small opening to the castle; the woods are in deep shades, and
+rise on the regular slopes of a high range of rocky coast. The part in
+front of Filekilly point rises in the middle, and sinks towards each end.
+The woods of Tomys here appear uncommonly fine. Open Innisfallen, which
+is composed at this distance of the most various shades, within a broken
+outline, entirely different from the other islands, groups of different
+masses rising in irregular tufts, and joined by lower trees. No pencil
+could mix a happier assemblage. Land near a miserable room, where
+travellers dine. Of the isle of Innisfallen, it is paying no great
+compliment to say it is the most beautiful in the king's dominions, and
+perhaps in Europe. It contains twenty acres of land, and has every
+variety that the range of beauty, unmixed with the sublime, can give.
+The general feature is that of wood; the surface undulates into swelling
+hills, and sinks into little vales; the slopes are in every direction,
+the declivities die gently away, forming those slight inequalities which
+are the greatest beauty of dressed grounds. The little valleys let in
+views of the surrounding lake between the hills, while the swells break
+the regular outline of the water, and give to the whole an agreeable
+confusion. The wood has all the variety into which nature has thrown the
+surface; in some parts it is so thick as to appear impenetrable, and
+secludes all farther view; in others, it breaks into tufts of tall
+timber, under which cattle feed. Here they open, as if to offer to the
+spectator the view of the naked lawn; in others close, as if purposely to
+forbid a more prying examination. Trees of large size and commanding
+figure form in some places natural arches; the ivy mixing with the
+branches, and hanging across in festoons of foliage, while on one side
+the lake glitters among the trees, and on the other a thick gloom dwells
+in the recesses of the wood. The figure of the island renders one part a
+beautiful object to another; for the coast being broken and indented,
+forms bays surrounded either with rock or wood: slight promontories shoot
+into the lake, whose rocky edges are crowned with wood. These are the
+great features of Innisfallen; the slighter touches are full of beauties
+easily imagined by the reader. Every circumstance of the wood, the
+water, the rocks, and lawn, are characteristic, and have a beauty in the
+assemblage from mere disposition. I must, however, observe that this
+delicious retreat is not kept as one could wish.
+
+Scenes that are great and commanding, from magnitude or wildness, should
+never be dressed; the rugged, and even the horrible, may add to the
+effect upon the mind: but in such as Innisfallen, a degree of dress, that
+is, cleanliness, is even necessary to beauty. I have spoken of lawn, but
+I should observe that expression indicates what it ought to be rather
+than what it is. It is very rich grass, poached by oxen and cows, the
+only inhabitants of the island. No spectator of taste but will regret
+the open grounds not being drained with hollow cuts; the ruggedness of
+the surface levelled, and the grass kept close shaven by many sheep
+instead of beasts. The bushes and briars, where they have encroached on
+what ought to be lawn, cleared away; some parts of the isle more opened;
+in a word no ornaments given, for the scene wants them not, but
+obstructions cleared, ruggedness smoothed, and the whole cleaned. This
+is what ought to be done; as to what might be made of the island, if its
+noble proprietor (Lord Kenmare) had an inclination, it admits of being
+converted into a terrestrial paradise; lawning with the intermixture of
+other shrubs and wood, and a little dress, would make it an example of
+what ornamented grounds might be, but which not one in a thousand is.
+Take the island, however, as it is, with its few imperfections, and where
+are we to find such another? What a delicious retreat! an emperor could
+not bestow such a one as Innisfallen; with a cottage, a few cows, and a
+swarm of poultry, is it possible that happiness should refuse to be a
+guest here?
+
+Row to Ross Castle, in order to coast that island; there is nothing
+peculiarly striking in it; return the same way around Innisfallen. In
+this little voyage the shore of Ross is one of the most beautiful of the
+wooded ones in the lake; it seems to unite with Innisfallen, and projects
+into the water in thick woods one beyond another. In the middle of the
+channel a large rock, and from the other shore a little promontory of a
+few scattered trees; the whole scene pleasing.
+
+The shore of Innisfallen has much variety, but in general it is woody,
+and of the beautiful character which predominates in that island. One
+bay, at taking leave of it, is exceedingly pretty; it is a semicircular
+one, and in the centre there is a projecting knoll of wood within a bay;
+this is uncommon, and has an agreeable effect.
+
+The near approach to Tomys exhibits a sweep of wood, so great in extent,
+and so rich in foliage, that no person can see without admiring it. The
+mountainous part above is soon excluded by the approach; wood alone is
+seen, and that in such a noble range as to be greatly striking; it just
+hollows into a bay, and in the centre of it is a chasm in the wood; this
+is a bed of a considerable stream, which forms O'Sullivan's cascade, to
+which all strangers are conducted, as one of the principal beauties of
+Killarney. Landed to the right of it, and walked under the thick shade
+of the wood, over a rocky declivity, close to the torrent stream, which
+breaks impetuously from rock to rock, with a roar that kindles
+expectation. The picture in your fancy will not exceed the reality; a
+great stream bursts from the deep bosom of a wooded glen, hollowed into a
+retired recess of rocks and trees, itself a most pleasing and romantic
+spot, were there not a drop of water: the first fall is many feet
+perpendicularly over a rock; to the eye it immediately makes another, the
+basin into which it pours being concealed; from this basin it forces
+itself impetuously between two rocks. This second fall is also of a
+considerable height; but the lower one, the third, is the most
+considerable; it issues in the same manner from a basin hid from the
+point of view. These basins being large, there appears a space of
+several yards between each fall, which adds much to the picturesque
+scenery; the whole is within an arch of wood, that hangs over it; the
+quantity of water is so considerable, as to make an almost deafening
+noise, and uniting with the torrent below, where the fragments of rock
+are large and numerous, throw an air of grandeur over the whole. It is
+about seventy feet high. Coast from hence the woody shores of Tomys and
+Glena; they are upon the whole much the most beautiful ones I have
+anywhere seen; Glena woods having more oak, and some arbutuses, are the
+finer and deeper shades; Tomys has a great quantity of birch, whose
+foliage is not so luxuriant. The reader may figure to himself what these
+woods are, when he is informed that they fill an unbroken extent of six
+miles in length, and from half a mile to a mile and a half in breadth,
+all hanging on the sides of two vast mountains, and coming down with a
+full robe of rich luxuriance to the very water's edge. The acclivity of
+these hills is such, that every tree appears full to the eye. The
+variety of the ground is great; in some places great swells in the
+mountain-side, with corresponding hollows, present concave and convex
+masses; in others, considerable ridges of land and rock rise from the
+sweep, and offer to the astonished eye yet other varieties of shade.
+Smaller mountains rise regularly from the immense bosom of the larger,
+and hold forth their sylvan heads, backed by yet higher woods. To give
+all the varieties of this immense scenery of forest is impossible. Above
+the whole is a prodigious mass of mountain, of a gently swelling outline
+and soft appearance, varying as the sun or clouds change their position,
+but never becoming rugged or threatening to the eye.
+
+The variations are best seen by rowing near the shore, when every stroke
+of the oar gives a new outline, and fresh tints to please the eye: but
+for one great impression, row about two miles from the shore of Glena; at
+that distance the inequalities in the surface are no longer seen, but the
+eye is filled with so immense a range of wood, crowned with a mountain in
+perfect unison with itself, that objects, whose character is that of
+beauty, are here, from their magnitude, truly magnificent, and attended
+with a most forcible expression.--Returned to Mucruss.
+
+September 30. This morning I had dedicated to the ascent of Mangerton,
+but his head was so enshrouded in clouds, and the weather so bad, that I
+was forced to give up the scheme: Mr. Herbert has measured him with very
+accurate instruments, of which he has a great collection, and found his
+height eight hundred and thirty-five yards above the level of the sea.
+The Devil's Punch-bowl, from the description I had of it, must be the
+crater of an exhausted volcano: there are many signs of them about
+Killarney, particularly vast rocks on the sides of mountains, in streams,
+as if they had rolled from the top in one direction. Brown stone rocks
+are also sometimes found on lime-quarries, tossed thither perhaps in some
+vast eruption.
+
+In my way from Killarney to Castle Island, rode into Lord Kenmare's park,
+from whence there is another beautiful view of the lake, different from
+many of the preceding; there is a broad margin of cultivated country at
+your feet, to lead the eye gradually in the lake, which exhibits her
+islands to this point more distinctly than to any other, and the
+backgrounds of the mountains of Glena and Tomys give a bold relief.
+
+Upon the whole, Killarney, among the lakes that I have seen, can scarcely
+be said to have a rival. The extent of water in Loch Earne is much
+greater, the islands more numerous, and some scenes near Castle Caldwell
+of perhaps as great magnificence. The rocks at Keswick are more sublime,
+and other lakes may have circumstances in which they are superior; but
+when we consider the prodigious woods of Killarney, the immensity of the
+mountains, the uncommon beauty of the promontory of Mucruss and the Isle
+of Innisfallen, the character of the islands, the singular circumstance
+of the arbutus, and the uncommon echoes, it will appear, upon the whole,
+to be in reality superior to all comparison.
+
+Before I quit it I have one other observation to make, which is relative
+to the want of accommodations and extravagant expense of strangers
+residing at Killarney. I speak it not at all feelingly, thanks to Mr.
+Herbert's hospitality, but from the accounts given me: the inns are
+miserable, and the lodgings little better. I am surprised somebody with
+a good capital does not procure a large well-built inn, to be erected on
+the immediate shore of the lake, in an agreeable situation, at a distance
+from the town; there are very few places where such a one would answer
+better; there ought to be numerous and good apartments. A large
+rendezvous-room for billiards, cards, dancing, music, etc., to which the
+company might resort when they chose it; an ordinary for those that like
+dining in public; boats of all sorts, nets for fishing, and as great a
+variety of amusements as could be collected, especially within doors; for
+the climate being very rainy, travellers wait with great impatience in a
+dirty common inn, which they would not do if they were in the midst of
+such accommodations as they meet with at an English spa. But above all,
+the prices of everything, from a room and a dinner to a barge and a band
+of music, to be reasonable, and hung up in every part of the house. The
+resort of strangers to Killarney would then be much increased, and their
+stay would be greatly prolonged; they would not view it post-haste, and
+fly away the first moment to avoid dirt and imposition. A man with a
+good capital and some ingenuity would, I think, make a fortune by fixing
+here upon such principles.
+
+The state of the poor in the whole county of Kerry represented as
+exceedingly miserable, and owing to the conduct of men of property, who
+are apt to lay the blame on what they call land pirates, or men who offer
+the highest rent, and who, in order to pay this rent, must and do re-let
+all the cabin lands at an extravagant rise, which is assigning over all
+the cabins to be devoured by one farmer. The cottars on a farm cannot go
+from one to another, in order to find a good master, as in England; for
+all the country is in the same system, and no redress to be found. Such
+being the case, the farmers are enabled to charge the price of labour as
+low as they please, and rate the land as high as they like. This is an
+evil which oppresses them cruelly, and certainly has its origin in its
+landlords when they set their farms, setting all the cabins with them,
+instead of keeping them tenants to themselves. The oppression is, the
+farmer valuing the labour of the poor at fourpence or fivepence a day,
+and paying that in land rated much above its value. Owing to this the
+poor are depressed; they live upon potatoes and sour milk, and the
+poorest of them only salt and water to them, with now and then a herring.
+Their milk is bought; for very few keep cows, scarce any pigs, but a few
+poultry. Their circumstances are incomparably worse than they were
+twenty years ago; for they had all cows, but then they wore no linen: all
+now have a little flax. To these evils have been owing emigrations,
+which have been considerable.
+
+To the west of Tralee are the Mahagree Islands, famous for their corn
+products; they are rock and sand, stocked with rabbits; near them a sandy
+tract, twelve miles long, and one mile broad, to the north, with the
+mountains to the south, famous for the best wheat in Kerry; all under the
+plough.
+
+Arriving at Ardfert, Lord Crosby, whose politeness I have every reason to
+remember, was so obliging as to carry me by one of the finest strands I
+ever rode upon, to view the mouth of the Shannon at Ballengary, the site
+of an old fort. It is a vast rock, separated from the country by a chasm
+of prodigious depth, through which the waves drive. The rocks of the
+coast here are in the boldest style, and hollowed by the furious Atlantic
+waves into caverns in which they roar. It was a dead calm, yet the swell
+was so heavy, that the great waves rolled in and broke upon the rocks
+with such violence as to raise an immense foam, and give one an idea of
+what a storm would be; but fancy rarely falls short in her pictures. The
+view of the Shannon is exceedingly noble; it is eight miles over, the
+mouth formed by two headlands of very high and bold cliffs, and the reach
+of the river in view very extensive; it is an immense scenery: perhaps
+the noblest mouth of a river in Europe.
+
+Ardfert is very near the sea, so near it that single trees or rows are
+cut in pieces with the wind, yet about Lord Glendour's house there are
+extensive plantations exceedingly flourishing, many fine ash and beech;
+about a beautiful Cistercian abbey, and a silver fir of forty-eight
+years' growth, of an immense height and size.
+
+October 3. Left Ardfert, accompanying Lord Crosby to Listowel. Called
+in the way to view Lixnaw, the ancient seat of the Earls of Kerry, but
+deserted for ten years past, and now presents so melancholy a scene of
+desolation, that it shocked me to see it. Everything around lies in
+ruin, and the house itself is going fast off by thieving depredations of
+the neighbourhood. I was told a curious anecdote of this estate; which
+shows wonderfully the improvement of Ireland. The present Earl of
+Kerry's grandfather, Thomas, agreed to lease the whole estate for 1,500
+pounds a year to a Mr. Collis for ever, but the bargain went off upon a
+dispute whether the money should be paid at Cork or Dublin. Those very
+lands are now let at 20,000 pounds a year. There is yet a good deal of
+wood, particularly a fine ash grove, planted by the present Earl of
+Shelburne's father.
+
+Proceeded to Woodford, Robert Fitzgerald's, Esq., passing Listowel
+Bridge; the vale leading to it is very fine, the river is broad, the
+lands high, and one side a very extensive hanging wood, opening on those
+of Woodford in a pleasing style.
+
+Woodford is an agreeable scene; close to the house is a fine winding
+river under a bank of thick wood, with the view of an old castle hanging
+over it.
+
+In 1765, Mr. Fitzgerald was travelling from Constantinople to Warsaw, and
+a waggon with his baggage heavily laden overset; the country people
+harnessed two buffaloes by the horns, in order to draw it over, which
+they did with ease. In some very instructive conversation I had with
+this gentleman on the subject of his travels, this circumstance
+particularly struck me.
+
+October 4. From Woodford to Tarbat, the seat of Edward Leslie, Esq.,
+through a country rather dreary, till it came upon Tarbat, which is so
+much the contrary that it appeared to the highest advantage; the house is
+on the edge of a beautiful lawn, with a thick margin of full grown wood,
+hanging on a steep bank to the Shannon, so that the river is seen from
+the house over the tops of this wood, which being of a broken irregular
+outline has an effect very striking and uncommon; the river is two or
+three miles broad here, and the opposite coast forms a promontory which
+has from Tarbat exactly the appearance of a large island. To the east,
+the river swells into a triangular lake, with a reach opening at the
+distant corner of it to Limerick. The union of wood, water, and lawn
+forms upon the whole a very fine scene; the river is very magnificent.
+From the hill on the coast above the island, the lawn and wood appear
+also to great advantage. But the finest point of view is from the higher
+hill on the other side of the house, which looking down on all these
+scenes, they appear as a beautiful ornament to the Shannon, which spreads
+forth its proud course from two to nine miles wide, surrounded by
+highlands; a scenery truly magnificent.
+
+The state of the poor is something better than it was twenty years ago,
+particularly their clothing, cattle, and cabins. They live upon potatoes
+and milk; all have cows, and when they dry them, buy others. They also
+have butter, and most of them keep pigs, killing them for their own use.
+They have also herrings. They are in general in the cottar system, of
+paying for labour by assigning some land to each cabin. The country is
+greatly more populous than twenty years ago, and is now increasing; and
+if ever so many cabins were built by a gradual increase, tenants would be
+found for them. A cabin and five acres of land will let for 4 pounds a
+year. The industrious cottar, with two, three, or four acres, would be
+exceedingly glad to have his time to himself, and have such an annual
+addition of land as he was able to manage, paying a fair rent for it;
+none would decline it but the idle and worthless.
+
+Tithes are all annually valued by the proctors, and charged very high.
+There are on the Shannon about one hundred boats employed in bringing
+turf to Limerick from the coast of Kerry and Clare, and in fishing; the
+former carry from twenty to twenty-five tons, the latter from five to
+ten, and are navigated each by two men and a boy.
+
+October 5. Passed through a very unentertaining country (except for a
+few miles on the bank of the Shannon) to Altavilla, but Mr. Bateman being
+from home, I was disappointed in getting an account of the palatines
+settled in his neighbourhood. Kept the road to Adair, where Mrs. Quin,
+with a politeness equalled only by her understanding, procured me every
+intelligence I wished for.
+
+Palatines were settled here by the late Lord Southwell about seventy
+years ago.
+
+They preserve some of their German customs: sleep between two beds. They
+appoint a burgomaster, to whom they appeal in case of all disputes; and
+they yet preserve their language, but that is declining. They are very
+industrious, and in consequence are much happier and better fed, clothed,
+and lodged than the Irish peasants. We must not, however, conclude from
+hence that all is owing to this; their being independent farmers, and
+having leases, are circumstances which will create industry. Their crops
+are much better than those of their neighbours. There are three villages
+of them, about seventy families in all. For some time after they settled
+they fed upon sour-crout, but by degrees left it off, and took to
+potatoes; but now subsist upon them and butter and milk, but with a great
+deal of oat bread, and some of wheat, some meat and fowls, of which they
+raise many. They have all offices to their houses, that is, stables and
+cow-houses, and a lodge for their ploughs, etc. They keep their cows in
+the house in winter, feeding them upon hay and oat straw. They are
+remarkable for the goodness and cleanliness of their houses. The women
+are very industrious, reap the corn, plough the ground sometimes, and do
+whatever work may be going on; they also spin, and make their children do
+the same. Their wheat is much better than any in the country, insomuch
+that they get a better price than anybody else. Their industry goes so
+far, that jocular reports of its excess are spread. In a very pinching
+season, one of them yoked his wife against a horse, and went in that
+manner to work, and finished a journey at plough. The industry of the
+women is a perfect contrast to the Irish ladies in the cabins, who cannot
+be persuaded, on any consideration, even to make hay, it not being the
+custom of the country, yet they bind corn, and do other works more
+laborious. Mrs. Quin, who is ever attentive to introduce whatever can
+contribute to their welfare and happiness, offered many premiums to
+induce them to make hay, of hats, cloaks, stockings, etc. etc., but all
+would not do.
+
+Few places have so much wood about them as Adair; Mr. Quin has above one
+thousand acres in his hands, in which a large proportion is under wood.
+The deer park of four hundred acres is almost full of old oak and very
+fine thorns, of a great size; and about the house, the plantations are
+very extensive, of elm and other wood, but that thrives better than any
+other sort. I have nowhere seen finer than vast numbers here. There is
+a fine river runs under the house, and within view are no less than three
+ruins of Franciscan friaries, two of them remarkably beautiful, and one
+has most of the parts perfect, except the roof.
+
+In Mr. Quin's house there are some very good pictures, particularly an
+Annunciation by Domenichino, which is a beautiful piece. It was brought
+lately from Italy by Mr. Quin, junior. The colours are rich and mellow,
+and the hairs of the heads inimitably pleasing; the group of angels at
+the top, to the left of the piece, is very natural. It is a piece of
+great merit. The companion is a Magdalen; the expression of melancholy,
+or rather misery, remarkably strong. There is a gloom in the whole in
+full unison with the subject. There are, besides these, some others
+inferior, yet of merit, and two very good portraits of Lord Dartry (Mrs.
+Quin's brother), and of Mr. Quin, junior, by Pompeio Battoni. A piece in
+an uncommon style, done on oak, of Esther and Ahasuerus; the colours
+tawdry, but the grouping attitudes and effect pleasing.
+
+Castle Oliver is a place almost entirely of Mr. Oliver's creation; from a
+house, surrounded with cabins and rubbish, he has fixed it in a fine
+lawn, surrounded by good wood. The park he has very much improved on an
+excellent plan; by means of seven feet hurdles, he fences off part of it
+that wants to be cleaned or improved; these he cultivates, and leaves for
+grass, and then takes another spot, which is by much the best way of
+doing it. In the park is a glen, an English mile long, winding in a
+pleasing manner, with much wood hanging on the banks. Mr. Oliver has
+conducted a stream through this vale, and formed many little water-falls
+in an exceedingly good taste, chiefly overhung with wood, but in some
+places open with several little rills, trickling over stones down the
+slopes. A path winds through a large wood and along the brow of the
+glen; this path leads to a hermitage, a cave of rock, in a good taste,
+and to some benches, from which the views of the water and wood are in
+the sequestered style they ought to be. One of these little views, which
+catches several falls under the arch of the bridge, is one of the
+prettiest touches of the kind I have seen. The vale beneath the house,
+when viewed from the higher grounds, is pleasing; it is very well wooded,
+there being many inclosures, surrounded by pine trees, and a thick fine
+mass of wood rises from them up the mountain-side, makes a very good
+figure, and would be better, had not Mr. Oliver's father cut it into
+vistas for shooting. Upon the whole, the place is highly improved, and
+when the mountains are planted, in which Mr. Oliver is making a
+considerable progress, it will be magnificent.
+
+In the house are several fine pictures, particularly five pieces by Seb.
+Ricci, Venus and AEneas; Apollo and Pan; Venus and Achilles; and Pyrrhus
+and Andromache, by Lazzerini; and the Rape of the Lapithi by the
+Centaurs. The last is by much the finest, and is a very capital piece;
+the expression is strong, the figures are in bold relief, and the
+colouring good. Venus and Achilles is a pleasing picture; the continence
+of Scipio is well grouped, but Scipio, as in every picture I ever saw of
+him, has no expression. Indeed, chastity is in the countenance so
+passive a virtue as not to be at all suited to the genius of painting;
+the idea is rather that of insipidity, and accordingly Scipio's
+expression is generally insipid enough. Two fine pieces, by Lucca
+Jordano, Hercules and Anteus; Samson Killing the Lion: both dark and
+horrid, but they are highly finished and striking. Six heads of old men,
+by Nagori, excellent; and four young women, in the character of the
+seasons.
+
+October 9. Left Castle Oliver. Had I followed my inclination, my stay
+would have been much longer, for I found it equally the residence of
+entertainment and instruction. Passed through Kilfennan and
+Duntreleague, in my way to Tipperary. The road leads everywhere on the
+sides of the hills, so as to give a very distinct view of the lower
+grounds; the soil all the way is the same sort of sandy reddish loam I
+have already described, incomparable land for tillage: as I advanced it
+grew something lighter, and in many places free from gravel. Bullocks
+the stock all the way. Towards Tipperary I saw vast numbers of sheep,
+and many bullocks. All this line of country is part of the famous golden
+vale. To Thomas Town, where I was so unfortunate as not to find Mr.
+Matthew at home; the domain is one thousand five hundred English acres,
+so well planted that I could hardly believe myself in Ireland. There is
+a hill in the park from which the view of it, the country and the
+Galties, are striking.
+
+October 12. To Lord de Montalt's, at Dundrum, a place which his lordship
+has ornamented in the modern style of improvement: the house was situated
+in the midst of all the regular exertions of the last age. Parterres,
+parapets of earth, straight walks, knots and clipped hedges, all which he
+has thrown down, with an infinite number of hedges and ditches, filled up
+ponds, etc., and opened one very noble lawn around him, scattered
+negligently over with trees, and cleared the course of a choked-up river,
+so that it flows at present in a winding course through the grounds.
+
+October 13. Leaving Dundrum, passed through Cashel, where is a rock and
+ruin on it, called the Rock of Cashel, supposed to be of the remotest
+antiquity. Towards Clonmel, the whole way through the same rich vein of
+red sandy loam I have so often mentioned: I examined it in several
+fields, and found it to be of an extraordinary fertility, and as fine
+turnip land as ever I saw. It is much under sheep; but towards Clonmel
+there is a great deal of tillage.
+
+The first view of that town, backed by a high ridge of mountains, with a
+beautiful space near it of inclosures, fringed with a scattering of
+trees, was very pleasing. It is the best situated place in the county of
+Tipperary, on the Suir, which brings up boats of ten tons burthen. It
+appears to be a busy populous place, yet I was told that the manufacture
+of woollens is not considerable. It is noted for being the birthplace of
+the inimitable Sterne.
+
+To Sir William Osborne's, three miles the other side Clonmel. From a
+character so remarkable for intelligence and precision, I could not fail
+of meeting information of the most valuable kind. This gentleman has
+made a mountain improvement which demands particular attention, being
+upon a principle very different from common ones.
+
+Twelve years ago he met with a hearty-looking fellow of forty, followed
+by a wife and six children in rags, who begged. Sir William questioned
+him upon the scandal of a man in full health and vigour, supporting
+himself in such a manner: the man said he could get no work: "Come along
+with me, I will show you a spot of land upon which I will build a cabin
+for you, and if you like it you shall fix there." The fellow followed
+Sir William, who was as good as his word: he built him a cabin, gave him
+five acres of a heathy mountain, lent him four pounds to stock with, and
+gave him, when he had prepared his ground, as much lime as he would come
+for. The fellow flourished; he went on gradually; repaid the four
+pounds, and presently became a happy little cottar: he has at present
+twelve acres under cultivation, and a stock in trade worth at least 80
+pounds; his name is John Conory.
+
+The success which attended this man in two or three years brought others
+who applied for land, and Sir William gave them as they applied. The
+mountain was under lease to a tenant, who valued it so little, that upon
+being reproached with not cultivating, or doing something with it, he
+assured Sir William that it was utterly impracticable to do anything with
+it, and offered it to him without any deduction of rent. Upon this
+mountain he fixed them; gave them terms as they came determinable with
+the lease of the farm, so that every one that came in succession had
+shorter and shorter tenures; yet are they so desirous of settling, that
+they come at present, though only two years remain for a term.
+
+In this manner Sir William has fixed twenty-two families, who are all
+upon the improving hand, the meanest growing richer; and find themselves
+so well off, that no consideration will induce them to work for others,
+not even in harvest: their industry has no bounds; nor is the day long
+enough for the revolution of their incessant labour. Some of them bring
+turf to Clonmel, and Sir William has seen Conory returning loaded with
+soap ashes.
+
+He found it difficult to persuade them to make a road to their village,
+but when they had once done it, he found none in getting cross roads to
+it, they found such benefit in the first. Sir William has continued to
+give whatever lime they come for: and they have desired one thousand
+barrels among them for the year 1766, which their landlord has
+accordingly contracted for with his lime-burner, at 11d. a barrel. Their
+houses have all been built at his expense, and done by contract at 6
+pounds each, after which they raise what little offices they want for
+themselves.
+
+October 15. Left New Town, and keeping on the banks of the Suir, passed
+through Carrick to Curraghmore, the seat of the Earl of Tyrone. This
+line of country, in point of soil, inferior to what I have of late gone
+through: so that I consider the rich country to end at Clonmel.
+
+Emigrations from this part of Ireland principally to Newfoundland: for a
+season they have 18 or 20 pounds for their pay, and are maintained, but
+they do not bring home more than 7 to 11 pounds. Some of them stay and
+settle; three years ago there was an emigration of indented servants to
+North Carolina of three hundred, but they were stopped by contrary winds,
+etc. There had been something of this constantly, but not to that
+amount. The oppression which the poor people have most to complain of is
+the not having any tenures in their lands, by which means they are
+entirely subject to their employers.
+
+Manufactures here are only woollens. Carrick is one of the greatest
+manufacturing towns in Ireland. Principally for ratteens, but of late
+they have got into broadcloths, all for home consumption; the manufacture
+increases, and is very flourishing. There are between three and four
+hundred people employed by it in Carrick and its neighbourhood.
+
+Curraghmore is one of the finest places in Ireland, or indeed that I have
+anywhere seen. The house, which is large, is situated upon a rising
+ground, in a vale surrounded by very bold hills, which rise in a variety
+of forms and offer to the eye, in rising through the grounds, very noble
+and striking scenes. These hills are exceedingly varied, so that the
+detour of the place is very pleasing. In order to see it to advantage, I
+would advise a traveller to take the ride which Lord Tyrone carried me.
+Passed through the deer-park wood of old oaks, spread over the side of a
+bold hill, and of such an extent, that the scene is a truly forest one,
+without any other boundary in view than what the stems of trees offer
+from mere extent, retiring one behind another till they thicken so much
+to the eye, under the shade of their spreading tops, as to form a distant
+wall of wood. This is a sort of scene not common in Ireland; it is a
+great extent alone that will give it. From this hill enter an evergreen
+plantation, a scene which winds up the deer-park hill, and opens on to
+the brow of it, which commands a most noble view indeed. The lawns round
+the house appear at one's feet, at the bottom of a great declivity of
+wood, almost everywhere surrounded by plantations. The hills on the
+opposite side of the vale against the house consist of a large lawn in
+the centre of the two woods, that to the right of an immense extent,
+which waves over a mountain-side in the finest manner imaginable, and
+lead the eye to the scenery on the left, which is a beautiful vale of
+rich inclosures, of several miles extent, with the Suir making one great
+reach through it, and a bold bend just before it enters a gap in the
+hills towards Waterford, and winds behind them; to the right you look
+over a large plain, backed by the great Cummeragh Mountains. For a
+distinct extent of view, the parts of which are all of a commanding
+magnitude, and a variety equal to the number, very few prospects are
+finer than this.
+
+From hence the boundary plantation extends some miles to the west and
+north-west of the domain, forming a margin to the whole of different
+growths, having been planted, by degrees, from three to sixteen years.
+It is in general well grown, and the trees thriven exceedingly,
+particularly the oak, beech, larch, and firs. It is very well sketched,
+with much variety given to it.
+
+Pass by the garden across the river which murmurs over a rocky bed, and
+follow the riding up a steep hill, covered with wood from some breaks, in
+which the house appears perfectly buried in a deep wood, and come out,
+after a considerable extent of ride, into the higher lawn, which commands
+a view of the scenery about the house; and from the brow of the hill the
+water, which is made to imitate a river, has a good effect, and throws a
+great air of cheerfulness over the scene, for from hence the declivity
+below it is hid. But the view, which is the most pleasing from hence,
+the finest at Curraghmore, and indeed one of the most striking that is
+anywhere to be seen, is that of the hanging wood to the right of the
+house, rising in so noble a sweep as perfectly to fill the eye, and leave
+the fancy scarce anything to wish: at the bottom is a small semicircular
+lawn, around which flows the river, under the immediate shade of very
+noble oaks. The whole wood rises boldly from the bottom, tree above
+tree, to a vast height, of large oak. The masses of shade are but tints
+of one colour; it is not chequered with a variety. There is a majestic
+simplicity, a unity in the whole, which is attended with an uncommon
+impression, and such as none but the most magnificent scenes can raise.
+
+Descending from hence through the roads, the riding crosses the river,
+and passes through the meadow which has such an effect in the preceding
+scene, from which also the view is very fine, and leads home through a
+continued and an extensive range of fine oak, partly on a declivity, at
+the bottom of which the river murmurs its broken course.
+
+Besides this noble riding, there is a very agreeable walk runs
+immediately on the banks of the river, which is perfect in its style; it
+is a sequestered line of wood, so high on the declivities in some places,
+and so thick on the very edge in others, overspreading the river, that
+the character of the scene is gloom and melancholy, heightened by the
+noise of the water falling from stone to stone. There is a considerable
+variety in the banks of it, and in the figures and growth of the wood,
+but none that hurts the impression, which is well preserved throughout.
+
+October 17. Accompanied Lord Tyrone to Waterford; made some inquiries
+into the state of their trade, but found it difficult, from the method in
+which the custom-house books are kept, to get the details I wished; but
+in the year following, having the pleasure of a long visit at
+Ballycanvan, the seat of Cornelius Bolton, Esq., his son, the member for
+the city, procured me every information I could wish, and that in so
+liberal and polite a manner, that it would not be easy to express the
+obligations I am under to both. In general, I was informed that the
+trade of the place had increased considerably in ten years, both the
+exports and imports--the exports of the products of pasturage, full
+one-third in twelve years. That the staple trade of the place is the
+Newfoundland trade. This is very much increased; there is more of it
+here than anywhere. The number of people who go as passengers in the
+Newfoundland ships is amazing: from sixty to eighty ships, and from three
+thousand to five thousand annually. They come from most parts of
+Ireland, from Cork, Kerry, etc. Experienced men will get eighteen to
+twenty-five pounds for the season, from March to November. A man who
+never went will have five to seven pounds and his passage, and others
+rise to twenty pounds; the passage out they get, but pay home two pounds.
+An industrious man in a year will bring home twelve to sixteen pounds
+with him, and some more. A great point for them is to be able to carry
+out all their slops, for everything there is exceedingly dear, one or two
+hundred per cent. dearer than they can get them at home. They are not
+allowed to take out any woollen goods but for their own use. The ships
+go loaded with pork, beef, butter, and some salt; and bring home
+passengers, or get freights where they can; sometimes rum. The Waterford
+pork comes principally from the barony of Iverk, in Kilkenny, where they
+fatten great numbers of large hogs; for many weeks together they kill
+here three to four thousand a week, the price fifty shillings to four
+pounds each; goes chiefly to Newfoundland. One was killed in Mr.
+Penrose's cellar that weighed five hundredweight and a quarter, and
+measured from the nose to the end of the tail nine feet four inches.
+
+There is a foundry at Waterford for pots, kettles, weights, and all
+common utensils; and a manufactory by Messrs. King and Tegent of anvils
+to anchors, twenty hundredweight, etc., which employs forty hands.
+Smiths earn from 6s. to 24s. a week. Nailers from 10s. to 12s. And
+another less considerable. There are two sugar-houses, and many
+salt-houses. The salt is boiled over lime-kilns.
+
+There is a fishery upon the coast of Waterford, for a great variety of
+fish, herrings particularly, in the mouth of Waterford Harbour, and two
+years ago in such quantities there, that the tides left the ditches full
+of them. There are some premium boats both here and at Dungarvan, but
+the quantity of herrings barrelled is not considerable.
+
+The butter trade of Waterford has increased greatly for seven years past;
+it comes from Waterford principally, but much from Carlow; for it comes
+from twenty miles beyond Carlow, for sixpence per hundred. From the 1st
+of January, 1774, to the 1st of January, 1775, there were exported
+fifty-nine thousand eight hundred and fifty-six casks of butter, each, on
+an average, one hundredweight, at the mean price of 50s. Revenue of
+Waterford, 1751, 17,000 pounds; 1776, 52,000 pounds. The slaughter trade
+has increased, but not so much as the butter. Price of butter now at
+Waterford, 58s.; twenty years' average, 42s. Beef now to 25s.; average,
+twenty years, 10s. to 18s. Pork, now 30s.; average, twenty years, 16s.
+to 22s. Eighty sail of ships now belonging to the port, twenty years ago
+not thirty. They pay to the captains of ship of two hundred tons 5
+pounds a month; the mate 3 pounds 10s. Ten men at 40s., five years ago
+only 27s. Building ships, 10 pounds a ton. Wear and tear of such a
+ship, 20 pounds a month. Ship provisions, 20s. a month.
+
+The new church in this city is a very beautiful one; the body of it is in
+the same style exactly as that of Belfast, already described: the total
+length one hundred and seventy feet, the breadth fifty-eight. The length
+of the body of the church ninety-two, the height forty; breadth between
+the pillars, twenty-six. The aisle (which I do not remember at Belfast)
+is fifty-eight by forty-five. A room on one side the steeple, space for
+the bishop's court, twenty-four by eighteen; on the other side, a room of
+the same size for the vestry; and twenty-eight feet square left for a
+steeple when their funds will permit. The whole is light and beautiful.
+It was built by subscription, and there is a fine organ bespoke at
+London. But the finest object in this city is the quay, which is
+unrivalled by any I have seen. It is an English mile long; the buildings
+on it are only common houses, but the river is near a mile over, flows up
+to the town in one noble reach, and the opposite shore a bold hill, which
+rises immediately from the water to a height that renders the whole
+magnificent. This is scattered with some wood, and divided into pastures
+of a beautiful verdure by hedges. I crossed the water, in order to walk
+up the rocks on the top of this hill. In one place, over against
+Bilberry quarry, you look immediately down on the river, which flows in
+noble reaches from Granny Castle on the right past Cromwell's rock, the
+shores on both sides quite steep, especially the rock of Bilberry. You
+look over the whole town, which here appears in a triangular form.
+Besides the city the Cummeragh mountains, Slein-a-man, etc., come in
+view. Kilmacow river falls into the Suir, after flowing through a large
+extent of well-planted country. This is the finest view about the city.
+
+From Waterford to Passage, and got my chaise and horses on board the
+_Countess of Tyrone_ packet, in full expectation of sailing immediately,
+as the wind was fair, but I soon found the difference of these private
+vessels and the Post-Office packets at Holyhead and Dublin. When the
+wind was fair the tide was foul; and when the tide was with them the wind
+would not do. In English, there was not a complement of passengers, and
+so I had the agreeableness of waiting with my horses in the hold, by way
+of rest, after a journey of above one thousand five hundred miles.
+
+October 18. After a beastly night passed on shipboard, and finding no
+signs of departure, walked to Ballycanvan, the seat of Cornelius Bolton,
+Esq.; rode with Mr. Bolton, jun., to Faithleghill, which commands one of
+the finest views I have seen in Ireland. There is a rock on the top of a
+hill which has a very bold view on every side down on a great extent of
+country, much of which is grass inclosures of a good verdure. This hill
+is the centre of a circle of about ten miles diameter, beyond which
+higher lands rise, which, after spreading to a great extent, have on
+every side a background of mountain: in a northerly direction Mount
+Leinster, between Wexford and Wicklow, twenty-six miles off, rises in
+several heads far above the clouds. A little to the right of this,
+Sliakeiltha (_i.e._ "the woody mountain"), at a less distance, is a fine
+object. To the left, Tory Hill, only five miles, in a regular form,
+varies the outline. To the east, there is the Long Mountain, eighteen
+miles distant, and several lesser Wexford hills. To the south-east, the
+Saltees. To the south, the ocean, and the Colines about the bay of
+Tramore. To the west, Monavollagh rises two thousand one hundred and
+sixty feet above the level of the sea, eighteen miles off, being part of
+the great range of the Cummeragh mountains: and to the north-west
+Slein-a-man, at the distance of twenty-four miles; so that the outline is
+everywhere bold and distinct, though distant. These circumstances would
+alone form a great view, but the water part of it, which fills up the
+canvas, is in a much superior style. The great river Suir takes a
+winding course from the city of Waterford, through a rich country,
+hanging on the sides of hills to its banks, and, dividing into a double
+channel, forms the lesser island, both of which courses you command
+distinctly. United, it makes a bold reach under the hill on which you
+stand, and there receives the noble tribute of the united waters of the
+Barrow and Nore in two great channels, which form the larger island.
+Enlarged by such an accession of water, it winds round the hill in a
+bending course, of the freest and most graceful outline, everywhere from
+one to three miles across, with bold shores that give a sharp outline to
+its course to the ocean. Twenty sail of ships at Passage gave animation
+to the scene. Upon the whole, the boldness of the mountain outline, the
+variety of the grounds, the vast extent of river, with the declivity to
+it from the point of view, altogether form so unrivalled a scenery, every
+object so commanding, that the general want of wood is almost forgotten.
+
+Two years after this account was written I again visited this enchanting
+hill, and walked to it, day after day, from Ballycanvan, and with
+increasing pleasure. Mr. Bolton, jun., has, since I was there before,
+inclosed forty acres on the top and steep slope to the water, and begun
+to plant them. This will be a prodigious addition; for the slope forming
+the bold shore for a considerable space, and having projections from
+which the wood will all be seen in the gentle hollows of the hill, the
+effect will be amazingly fine. Walks and a riding are tracing out, which
+will command fresh beauties at every step. The spots from which a
+variety of beautiful views are seen are numerous. All the way from
+Ballycanvan to Faithleg, the whole, to the amount of one thousand two
+hundred acres, is the property of Mr. Bolton.
+
+Farms about Ballycanvan, Waterford, etc., are generally small, from
+twenty and thirty to five hundred acres, generally about two hundred and
+fifty. All above two hundred acres are in general dairies; some of the
+dairy ones rise very high. The soil is a reddish stony or slaty gravel,
+dry, except low lands, which are clay or turf. Rents vary much--about
+the town very high, from 5 pounds 5s. to 9 pounds, but at the distance of
+a few miles towards Passage, etc., they are from 20s. to 40s., and some
+higher, but the country in general does not rise so high, usually 10s. to
+20s. for dairying land.
+
+The poor people spin their own flax, but not more, and a few of them wool
+for themselves. Their food is potatoes and milk; but they have a
+considerable assistance from fish, particularly herrings; part of the
+year they have also barley, oaten, and rye bread. They are incomparably
+better off in every respect than twenty years ago. Their increase about
+Ballycanvan is very great, and tillage all over this neighbourhood is
+increased. The rent of a cabin 10s.; an acre with it 20s. The grass of
+a cow a few years ago 20s., now 25s. or 30s.
+
+An exceeding good practice here in making their fences is, they plant the
+quick on the side of the bank in the common manner, and then, instead of
+the dead hedge we use in England on the top of the bank, they plant a row
+of old thorns, two or three feet high, which readily grow, and form at
+once a most excellent fence. Their way also of taking in sand-banks from
+the river deserves notice. They stake down a row of furzes at low water,
+laying stones on them to the height of one or two feet; these retain the
+mud, which every tide brings in, so as to fill up all within the furze as
+high as their tops. I remarked, on the strand, that a few boatloads of
+stones laid carelessly had had this effect, for within them I measured
+twelve inches deep of rich blue mud left behind them, the same as they
+use in manuring, full of shells, and effervesced strongly with vinegar.
+
+Among the poor people the fishermen are in much the best circumstances.
+The fishery is considerable; Waterford and its harbour have fifty boats
+each, from eight to twelve tons, six men on an average to each, but to
+one of six tons five men go. A boat of eight tons costs 40 pounds; one
+of twelve, 60 pounds. To each boat there is a train of nets of six pair,
+which costs from 4 pounds 4s. to 6 pounds 6s.; tan them with bark. Their
+only net fishery is that of herrings, which is commonly carried on by
+shares. The division of the fish is, first, one-fourth for the boat; and
+then the men and nets divide the rest, the latter reckoned as three men.
+They reckon ten maze of herrings an indifferent night's work; when there
+is a good take, forty maze have been taken, twenty a good night; the
+price per maze from 1s. to 7s., average 5s. Their take in 1775, the
+greatest they have known, when they had more than they could dispose of,
+and the whole town and country stunk of them, they retailed them
+thirty-two for a penny; 1773 and 1774 good years. They barrelled many,
+but in general there is an import of Swedish. Besides the common
+articles I have registered, the following are: pigeons, 1s. a couple; a
+hare, 1s.; partridges, 9d.; turbots, fine ones, 4s. to 10s.; soles a
+pair, large, 1s. 6d to 1s.; lobsters, 3d. each; oysters, 6s. per hundred;
+rabbits, 1s. to 1s. 4d. a couple; cod, 1s. each, large; salmon, 1.25d. to
+2d.
+
+A very extraordinary circumstance I was told--that within five or six
+years there has been much hay carried from Waterford to Norway, in the
+Norway ships that bring deals. As hay is dear here, it proves a most
+backward state of husbandry in that northerly region, since the
+neighbourhood of sea-ports to which this hay can alone go is generally
+the best improved in all countries.
+
+October 19, the wind being fair, took my leave of Mr. Bolton, and went
+back to the ship. Met with a fresh scene of provoking delays, so that it
+was the next morning, October 20, at eight o'clock, before we sailed, and
+then it was not wind, but a cargo of passengers that spread our sails.
+Twelve or fourteen hours are not an uncommon passage, but such was our
+luck that, after being in sight of the lights on the Smalls, we were by
+contrary winds blown opposite to Arklow sands. A violent gale arose,
+which presently blew a storm that lasted thirty-six hours, in which,
+under a reefed mainsail, the ship drifted up and down wearing in order to
+keep clear of the coasts.
+
+No wonder this appeared to me, a fresh-water sailor, as a storm, when the
+oldest men on board reckoned it a violent one. The wind blew in furious
+gusts; the waves ran very high; the cabin windows burst open, and the sea
+pouring in set everything afloat, and among the rest a poor lady, who had
+spread her bed on the floor. We had, however, the satisfaction to find,
+by trying the pumps every watch, that the ship made little water. I had
+more time to attend these circumstances than the rest of the passengers,
+being the only one in seven who escaped without being sick. It pleased
+God to preserve us, but we did not cast anchor in Milford Haven till
+Tuesday morning, the 22nd, at one o'clock.
+
+It is much to be wished that there were some means of being secure of
+packets sailing regularly, instead of waiting till there is such a number
+of passengers as satisfies the owner and captain. With the Post-Office
+packets there is this satisfaction, and a great one it is. The contrary
+conduct is so perfectly detestable that I should suppose the scheme of
+Waterford ones can never succeed.
+
+Two years after, having been assured this conveyance was put on a new
+footing, I ventured to try it again, but was mortified to find that the
+_Tyrone_, the only one that could take a chaise or horses (the _Countess_
+being laid up), was repairing, but would sail in five days. I waited,
+and received assurance after assurance that she would be ready on such a
+day, and then on another. In a word, I waited twenty-four days before I
+sailed. Moderately speaking, I could by Dublin have reached Turin or
+Milan as soon as I did Milford in this conveyance. All this time the
+papers had constant advertisements of the _Tyrone_ sailing regularly,
+instead of letting the public know that she was under a repair. Her
+owner seems to be a fair and worthy man; he will therefore probably give
+up the scheme entirely, unless assisted by the corporation with at least
+four ships more, to sail regularly with or without passengers. At
+present it is a general disappointment. I was fortunate in Mr. Bolton's
+acquaintance, passing my time very agreeably at his hospitable mansion;
+but those who, in such a case, should find a Waterford inn their
+resource, would curse the _Tyrone_, and set off for Dublin. The expenses
+of this passage are higher than those from Dublin to Holyhead: I paid--
+
+ l. s. d.
+A four-wheel chaise 3 3 0
+Three horses 3 3 0
+Self 1 1 0
+Two servants 1 1 0
+Custom-house at Waterford, hay, oats, etc. 2 1 7
+Ditto at Pembroke and Hubberston 3 0 0
+Sailors, boats, and sundry small charges 1 15 5
+ 15 5 0
+
+ * * * * *
+
+1777. Upon a second journey to Ireland this year, I took the opportunity
+of going from Dublin to Mitchelstown, by a route through the central part
+of the kingdom, which I had not before sufficiently viewed.
+
+Left Dublin the 24th of September, and taking the road to Naas, I was
+again struck with the great population of the country, the cabins being
+so much poorer in the vicinity of the capital than in the more distant
+parts of the kingdom.
+
+To Kildare, crossing the Curragh, so famous for its turf. It is a
+sheep-walk of above four thousand English acres, forming a more beautiful
+lawn than the hand of art ever made. Nothing can exceed the extreme
+softness of the turf, which is of a verdure that charms the eye, and
+highly set off by the gentle inequality of surface. The soil is a fine
+dry loam on a stony bottom; it is fed by many large flocks, turned on it
+by the occupiers of the adjacent farms, who alone have the right, and pay
+very great rents on that account. It is the only considerable common in
+the kingdom. The sheep yield very little wool, not more than 3lb. per
+fleece, but of a very fine quality.
+
+From Furness to Shaen Castle, in the Queen's County, Dean Coote's; but as
+the husbandry, etc., of this neighbourhood is already registered, I have
+only to observe that Mr. Coote was so kind as to show me the improved
+grounds of Dawson's Court, the seat of Lord Carlow, which I had not seen
+before. The principal beauties of the place are the well-grown and
+extensive plantations, which form a shade not often met with in Ireland.
+There is in the backgrounds a lake well accompanied with wood, broken by
+several islands that are covered with underwood, and an ornamented walk
+passing on the banks which leads from the house. This lake is in the
+season perfectly alive with wild-fowl. Near it is a very beautiful spot,
+which commands a view of both woods and water; a situation either for a
+house or a temple. Mr. Dawson is adding to the plantations, an
+employment of all others the most meritorious in Ireland. Another work,
+scarcely less so, was the erecting a large handsome inn, wherein the same
+gentleman intends establishing a person who shall be able to supply
+travellers post with either chaises or horses.
+
+From Shaen Castle to Gloster, in the King's County, the seat of John
+Lloyd, Esq., member for that county, to whose attention I owe the
+following particulars, in which he took every means to have me well and
+accurately informed. But first let me observe that I was much pleased to
+remark, all the way from Naas quite to Rosscrea, that the country was
+amongst the finest I had seen in Ireland, and consequently that I was
+fortunate in having an opportunity of seeing it after the involuntary
+omission of last year. The cabins, though many of them are very bad, yet
+are better than in some other counties, and chimneys generally a part of
+them. The people, too, have no very miserable appearance; the breed of
+cattle and sheep good, and the hogs much the best I have anywhere seen in
+Ireland. Turf is everywhere at hand, and in plenty; yet are the bogs not
+so general as to affect the beauty of the country, which is very great in
+many tracts, with a scattering of wood, which makes it pleasing. Shaen
+Castle stands in the midst of a very fine tract. From Mountrath to
+Gloster, Mr. Lloyd's, I could have imagined myself in a very pleasing
+part of England. The country breaks into a variety of inequalities of
+hill and dale; it is all well inclosed with fine hedges; there is a
+plenty of wood, not so monopolised as in many parts of the kingdom by
+here and there a solitary seat, but spread over the whole face of the
+prospect: look which way you will, it is cultivated and cheerful.
+
+The Shannon adds not a little to the convenience and agreeableness of a
+residence so near it. Besides affording these sorts of wild-fowl, the
+quantity and size of its fish are amazing: pikes swarm in it, and rise in
+weight to fifty pounds. In the little flat spaces on its banks are small
+but deep lochs, which are covered in winter and in floods. When the
+river withdraws, it leaves plenty of fish in them, which are caught to
+put into stews. Mr. Holmes has a small one before his door at Johnstown,
+with a little stream which feeds it. A trowling-rod here gets you a bite
+in a moment, of a pike from twenty to forty pounds. I ate of one of
+twenty-seven pounds so taken. I had also the pleasure of seeing a
+fisherman bring three trout, weighing fourteen pounds, and sell them for
+sixpence-halfpenny a piece. A couple of boats lying at anchor, with
+lines extended from one to the other, and hooks in plenty from them, have
+been known to catch an incredible quantity of trout. Colonel Prittie, in
+one morning, caught four stone odd pounds, thirty-two trout. In general
+they rise from three to nine pounds. Perch swarm; they appeared in the
+Shannon for the first time about ten years ago, in such plenty that the
+poor lived on them. Bream of six pounds; eels very plentiful. There are
+many gillaroos in the river; one of twelve pounds weight was sent to Mr.
+Jenkinson. Upon the whole, these circumstances, with the pleasure of
+shooting and boating on the river, added to the glorious view it yields,
+and which is enough at any time to cheer the mind, render this
+neighbourhood one of the most enviable situations to live in that I have
+seen in Ireland. The face of the country gives every circumstance of
+beauty. From Killodeernan Hill, behind the new house building by Mr.
+Holmes, the whole is seen to great advantage. The spreading part of the
+Shannon, called Loch Derg, is commanded distinctly for many miles. It is
+in two grand divisions of great variety: that to the north is a reach of
+five miles leading to Portumna. The whole hither shore a scenery of
+hills, checkered by enclosures and little woods, and retiring from the
+eye into a rich distant prospect. The woods of Doras, belonging to Lord
+Clanricarde, form a part of the opposite shore, and the river itself
+presents an island of one hundred and twenty acres. Inclining to the
+left, a vale of rough ground, with an old castle in it, is backed by a
+bold hill, which intercepts the river there, and then the great reach of
+fifteen miles, the bay of Sheriff, spreads to the eye, with a
+magnificence not a little added to by the boundary, a sharp outline of
+the county of Clare mountains, between which and the Duharrow hills the
+Shannon finds its way. These hills lead the eye still more to the left,
+till the Keeper meets it, presenting a very beautiful outline that sinks
+into other ranges of hill, uniting with the Devil's Bit. The home
+scenery of the grounds, woods, hills, and lake of Johnstown, is
+beautiful.
+
+Dancing is very general among the poor people, almost universal in every
+cabin. Dancing-masters of their own rank travel through the country from
+cabin to cabin, with a piper or blind fiddler, and the pay is sixpence a
+quarter. It is an absolute system of education. Weddings are always
+celebrated with much dancing, and a Sunday rarely passes without a dance.
+There are very few among them who will not, after a hard day's work,
+gladly walk seven miles to have a dance. John is not so lively, but then
+a hard day's work with him is certainly a different affair from what it
+is with Paddy. Other branches of education are likewise much attended
+to, every child of the poorest family learning to read, write, and cast
+accounts.
+
+There is a very ancient custom here, for a number of country neighbours
+among the poor people to fix upon some young woman that ought, as they
+think, to be married. They also agree upon a young fellow as a proper
+husband for her. This determined, they send to the fair one's cabin to
+inform her that on the Sunday following "she is to be horsed," that is,
+carried on men's backs. She must then provide whisky and cider for a
+treat, as all will pay her a visit after mass for a hurling match. As
+soon as she is horsed, the hurling begins, in which the young fellow
+appointed for her husband has the eyes of all the company fixed on him.
+If he comes off conqueror, he is certainly married to the girl; but if
+another is victorious, he as certainly loses her, for she is the prize of
+the victor. These trials are not always finished in one Sunday; they
+take sometimes two or three, and the common expression when they are over
+is, that "such a girl was goaled." Sometimes one barony hurls against
+another, but a marriageable girl is always the prize. Hurling is a sort
+of cricket, but instead of throwing the ball in order to knock down a
+wicket, the aim is to pass it through a bent stick, the end stuck in the
+ground. In these matches they perform such feats of activity as ought to
+evidence the food they live on to be far from deficient in nourishment.
+
+In the hills above Derry are some very fine slate quarries, that employ
+sixty men. The quarrymen are paid 3s. a thousand for the slates, and the
+labourers 5d. a day. They are very fine, and sent by the Shannon to
+distant parts of the kingdom; the price at the quarry 6s. a thousand, and
+at the shore 6s. 8d. Four hundred thousand slates are raised to pay the
+rent only, from which some estimate may be made of the quantity.
+
+Mr. Head has a practice in his fences which deserves universal imitation;
+it is planting trees for gate-posts. Stone piers are expensive, and
+always tumbling down; trees are beautiful, and never want repairing.
+Within fifteen years this gentleman has improved Derry so much, that
+those who had only seen it before would find it almost a new creation.
+He has built a handsome stone house, on the slope of a hill rising from
+the Shannon, and backed by some fine woods, which unite with many old
+hedges well planted to form a woodland scene beautiful in the contrast to
+the bright expanse of the noble river below. The declivity on which
+these woods are finishes in a mountain, which rises above the whole. The
+Shannon gives a bend around the adjoining lands, so as to be seen from
+the house both to the west and north, the lawn falling gradually to a
+margin of wood on the shore, which varies the outline. The river is two
+miles broad, and on the opposite shore cultivated inclosures rise in some
+places almost to the mountain top, which is very bold.
+
+It is a very singular demesne; a stripe of very beautiful ground,
+reaching two miles along the banks of the river, which forms his fence on
+one side, with a wall on the other. There is so much wood as to render
+it very pleasing; adding to every day by planting all the fences made or
+repaired. From several little hills, which rise in different parts of
+it, extensive views of the river are commanded quite to Portumna; but
+these are much eclipsed by that from the top of the hill above the slate
+quarry. From thence you see the river for at least forty miles, from
+Portumna to twenty miles beyond Limerick. It has the appearance of a
+fine basin, two miles over, into which three great rivers lead, being the
+north and south course and the Bay of Sheriff. The reaches of it one
+beyond another to Portumna are fine. At the foot of the mountain Mr.
+Head's demesne extends in a shore of rich woodland.
+
+October 7. Took my leave of Mr. Head, after passing four days very
+agreeably. Through Killaloe, over the Shannon, a very long bridge of
+many arches; went out of the road to see a fall of that river at Castle
+Connel, where there is such an accompaniment of wood as to form a very
+pleasing scenery. The river takes a very rapid rocky course around a
+projecting rock, on which a gentleman has built a summer-house, and
+formed a terrace: it is a striking spot. To Limerick. Laid at Bennis's,
+the first inn we had slept in from Dublin. God preserve us this journey
+from another!
+
+It is not uncommon, especially in mountainous countries, to find objects
+that much deserve the attention of travellers entirely neglected by them.
+There are a few instances of this upon Lord Kingsborough's estate, in the
+neighbourhood of Mitchelstown. The first I shall mention is a cave at
+Skeheenrinky, on the road between Cahir and that place. The opening to
+it is a cleft of rock in a limestone hill, so narrow as to be difficult
+to get into it. I descended by a ladder of about twenty steps, and then
+found myself in a vault of a hundred feet long, and fifty or sixty high.
+A small hole on the left leads from this a winding course of I believe
+not less than half an Irish mile, exhibiting a variety that struck me
+much. In some places the cavity in the rock is so large that when well
+lighted up by candles (not flambeaux; Lord Kingsborough once showed it me
+with them, and we found their smoke troublesome) it takes the appearance
+of a vaulted cathedral, supported by massy columns. The walls, ceiling,
+floor, and pillars, are by turns composed of every fantastic form; and
+often of very beautiful incrustations of spar, some of which glitters so
+much that it seems powdered with diamonds; and in others the ceiling is
+formed of that sort which has so near a resemblance to a cauliflower.
+The spar formed into columns by the dropping of water has taken some very
+regular forms; but others are different, folded in plaits of light
+drapery, which hang from their support in a very pleasing manner. The
+angles of the walls seem fringed with icicles. One very long branch of
+the cave, which turns to the north, is in some places so narrow and low,
+that one crawls into it, when it suddenly breaks into large vaulted
+spaces, in a thousand forms. The spar in all this cave is very
+brilliant, and almost equal to Bristol stone. For several hundred yards
+in the larger branch there is a deep water at the bottom of the declivity
+to the right, which the common people call the river. A part of the way
+is over a sort of potter's clay, which moulds into any form, and is of a
+brown colour; a very different soil from any in the neighbouring country.
+I have seen the famous cave in the Peak, but think it very much inferior
+to this; and Lord Kingsborough, who has viewed the Grot d'Aucel in
+Burgundy, says that it is not to be compared with it.
+
+But the commanding region of the Galtees deserves more attention. Those
+who are fond of scenes in which Nature reigns in all her wild
+magnificence should visit this stupendous chain. It consists of many
+vast mountains, thrown together in an assemblage of the most interesting
+features, from the boldness and height of the declivities, freedom of
+outline, and variety of parts, filling a space of about six miles by
+three or four. Galtymore is the highest point, and rises like the lord
+and father of the surrounding progeny. From the top you look down upon a
+great extent of mountain, which shelves away from him to the south, east,
+and west; but to the north the ridge is almost a perpendicular declivity.
+On that side the famous golden vale of Limerick and Tipperary spreads a
+rich level to the eye, bounded by the mountains of Clare, King's and
+Queen's Counties, with the course of the Shannon, for many miles below
+Limerick. To the south you look over alternate ridges of mountains,
+which rise one beyond another, till in a clear day the eye meets the
+ocean near Dungarvan. The mountains of Waterford and Knockmealdown fill
+up the space to the south-east. The western is the most extensive view;
+for nothing stops the eye till Mangerton and Macgillicuddy Reeks point
+out the spot where Killarney's lake calls for a farther excursion. The
+prospect extends into eight counties--Cork, Kerry, Waterford, Limerick,
+Clare, Queen's, Tipperary, King's.
+
+A little to the west of this proud summit, below it in a very
+extraordinary hollow, is a circular lake of two acres, reported to be
+unfathomable. The descriptions which I have read of the craters of
+exhausted volcanoes leave very little doubt of this being one; and the
+conical regularity of the summit of Galtymore speaks the same language.
+East of this respectable hill, to use Sir William Hamilton's language, is
+a declivity of about one-quarter of a mile, and there Galtybeg rises in a
+yet more regular cone; and between the two hills is another lake, which
+from its position seems to have been once the crater which threw up
+Galtybeg, as the first mentioned was the origin of Galtymore. Beyond the
+former hill is a third lake, and east of that another hill; I was told of
+a fourth, with another corresponding mountain. It is only the mere
+summits of these mountains which rise above the lakes. Speaking of them
+below, they may be said to be on the tops of the hills. They are all of
+them at the bottom of an almost regularly circular hollow. On the side
+next the mountain-top are walls of perpendicular rocks, in regular
+strata, and some of them piled on each other, with an appearance of art
+rather than nature. In these rocks the eagles, which are seen in numbers
+on the Galtees, have their nests. Supposing the mountains to be of
+volcanic origin, and these lakes the craters, of which I have not a
+doubt, they are objects of the greatest curiosity, for there is an
+unusual regularity in every considerable summit having its corresponding
+crater. But without this circumstance, the scenery is interesting in a
+very great degree. The mountain summits, which are often wrapped in the
+clouds, at other times exhibit the freest outline; the immense scooped
+hollows which sink at your feet, declivities of so vast a depth as to
+give one terror to look down; with the unusual forms of the lower region
+of hills, particularly Bull Hill, and Round Hill, each a mile over, yet
+rising out of circular vales, with the regularity of semi-globes, unite
+upon the whole to exhibit a scenery to the eye in which the parts are of
+a magnitude so commanding, a character so interesting, and a variety so
+striking, that they well deserve to be examined by every curious
+traveller.
+
+Nor are these immense outlines the whole of what is to be seen in this
+great range of mountains. Every glen has its beauties: there is a
+considerable mountain river, or rather torrent, in every one of them; but
+the greatest are the Funcheon, between Sefang and Galtymore; the
+Limestone river, between Galtymore and Round Hill, and the Grouse river,
+between Coolegarranroe and Mr. O'Callaghan's mountain; these present to
+the eye, for a tract of about three miles, every variety that rock,
+water, and mountain can give, thrown into all the fantastic forms which
+art may attempt in ornamented grounds, but always fails in. Nothing can
+exceed the beauty of the water, when not discoloured by rain; its lucid
+transparency shows, at considerable depths, every pebble no bigger than a
+pin, every rocky basin alive with trout and eels, that play and dash
+among the rocks as if endowed with that native vigour which animates, in
+a superior degree, every inhabitant of the mountains, from the bounding
+red deer and the soaring eagle down even to the fishes of the brook.
+Every five minutes you have a water-fall in these glens, which in any
+other region would stop every traveller to admire it. Sometimes the vale
+takes a gentle declivity, and presents to the eye at one stroke twenty or
+thirty falls, which render the scenery all alive with motion; the rocks
+are tossed about in the wildest confusion, and the torrent bursts by
+turns from above, beneath, and under them; while the background is always
+filled up with the mountains which stretch around.
+
+In the western glen is the finest cascade in all the Galtees. There are
+two falls, with a basin in the rock between, but from some points of view
+they appear one: the rock over which the water tumbles is about sixty
+feet high. A good line in which to view these objects is either to take
+the Killarney and Mallow road to Mitchelstown and from thence by Lord
+Kingsborough's new one to Skeheenrinky, there to take one of the glens to
+Galtybeg and Galtymore, and return to Mitchelstown by the Wolf's Track,
+Temple Hill, and the Waterfall; or, if the Cork road is travelling, to
+make Dobbin's inn, at Ballyporeen, the head-quarters, and view them from
+thence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Having heard much of the beauties of a part of the Queen's County I had
+not before seen, I took that line of country in my way on a journey to
+Dublin.
+
+From Mitchelstown to Cashel, the road leads as far as Galbally in the
+route already travelled from Cullen. Towards Cashel the country is
+various. The only objects deserving attention are the plantations of
+Thomastown, the seat of Francis Mathew, Esq.; they consist chiefly of
+hedgerow trees in double and treble rows, are well grown, and of such
+extent as to form an uncommon woodland scene in Ireland. Found the widow
+Holland's inn, at Cashel, clean and very civil. Take the road to
+Urlingford. The rich sheep pastures, part of the famous golden vale,
+reach between three and four miles from Cashel to the great bog by Botany
+Hill, noted for producing a greater variety of plants than common. That
+bog is separated by only small tracts of land from the string of bogs
+which extend through the Queen's County, from the great bog of Allen; it
+is here of considerable extent, and exceedingly improvable. Then enter a
+low marshy bad country, which grows worse after passing the sixty-sixth
+milestone, and successive bogs in it. Breakfast at Johnstown, a regular
+village on a slight eminence, built by Mr. Hayley. It is near the spa of
+Ballyspellin.
+
+Rows of trees are planted, but their heads all cut off, I suppose from
+their not thriving, being planted too old. Immediately on leaving these
+planted avenues, enter a row of eight or ten new cabins, at a distance
+from each other, which appear to be a new undertaking, the land about
+them all pared and burnt, and the ashes in heaps.
+
+Enter a fine planted country, with much corn and good thriving quick
+hedges for many miles. The road leads through a large wood, which joins
+Lord Ashbrook's plantations, whose house is situated in the midst of more
+wood than almost any one I have seen in Ireland. Pass Durrow; the
+country for two or three miles continues all inclosed with fine quick
+hedges, is beautiful, and has some resemblance to the best parts of
+Essex. Sir Robert Staple's improvements join this fine tract. They are
+completed in a most perfect manner, the hedges well grown, cut, and in
+such excellent order that I can scarcely believe myself to be in Ireland.
+His gates are all of iron. These sylvan scenes continue through other
+seats, beautifully situated amidst gentle declivities of the finest
+verdure, full-grown woods, excellent hedges, and a pretty river winding
+by the house. The whole environs of several would be admired in the best
+parts of England.
+
+Cross a great bog, within sight of Lord de Vesci's plantations. The road
+leads over it, being drained for that purpose by deep cuts on either
+side. I should apprehend this bog to be among the most improvable in the
+country. Slept at Ballyroan, at an inn kept by three animals who call
+themselves women; met with more impertinence than at any other in
+Ireland. It is an execrable hole. In three or four miles pass Sir John
+Parnel's, prettily situated in a neatly dressed lawn, with much wood
+about it, and a lake quite alive with wild fowl.
+
+Pass Monstereven, and cross directly a large bog, drained and partly
+improved; but all of it bearing grass, and seems in a state that might
+easily be reduced to rich meadow, with only a dressing of lime. Here I
+got again into the road I had travelled before.
+
+I must in general remark, that from near Urlingford to Dawson Court, near
+Monstereven, which is completely across the Queen's County, is a line of
+above thirty English miles, and is for that extent by much the most
+improved of any I have seen in Ireland. It is generally well planted,
+has many woods, and not consisting of patches of plantation just by
+gentlemen's houses, but spreading over the whole face of the country, so
+as to give it the richness of an English woodland scene. What a country
+would Ireland be had the inhabitants of the rest of it improved the whole
+like this!
+
+
+
+
+PART II.
+
+
+SECTION I.--Soil, Face of the Country, and Climate.
+
+
+To judge of Ireland by the conversation one sometimes hears in England,
+it would be supposed that one-half of it was covered with bogs, and the
+other with mountains filled with Irish ready to fly at the sight of a
+civilised being. There are people who will smile when they hear that, in
+proportion to the size of the two countries, Ireland is more cultivated
+than England, having much less waste land of all sorts. Of uncultivated
+mountains there are no such tracts as are found in our four northern
+counties, and the North Riding of Yorkshire, with the eastern line of
+Lancaster, nearly down to the Peak of Derby, which form an extent of
+above a hundred miles of waste. The most considerable of this sort in
+Ireland are in Kerry, Galway, and Mayo, and some in Sligo and Donegal.
+But all these together will not make the quantity we have in the four
+northern counties; the valleys in the Irish mountains are also more
+inhabited, I think, than those of England, except where there are mines,
+and consequently some sort of cultivation creeping up the sides. Natural
+fertility, acre for acre over the two kingdoms, is certainly in favour of
+Ireland; of this I believe there can scarcely be a doubt entertained,
+when it is considered that some of the more beautiful, and even best
+cultivated counties in England, owe almost everything to the capital,
+art, and industry of the inhabitants.
+
+The circumstance which strikes me as the greatest singularity of Ireland
+is the rockiness of the soil, which should seem at first sight against
+that degree of fertility; but the contrary is the fact. Stone is so
+general, that I have great reason to believe the whole island is one vast
+rock of different strata and kinds rising out of the sea. I have rarely
+heard of any great depths being sunk without meeting with it. In general
+it appears on the surface in every part of the kingdom; the flattest and
+most fertile parts, as Limerick, Tipperary, and Meath, have it at no
+great depth, almost as much as the more barren ones. May we not
+recognise in this the hand of bounteous Providence, which has given
+perhaps the most stony soil in Europe to the moistest climate in it? If
+as much rain fell upon the clays of England (a soil very rarely met with
+in Ireland, and never without much stone) as falls upon the rocks of her
+sister island, those lands could not be cultivated. But the rocks are
+here clothed with verdure; those of limestone, with only a thin covering
+of mould, have the softest and most beautiful turf imaginable.
+
+Of the great advantages resulting from the general plenty of limestone
+and limestone gravel, and the nature of the bogs, I shall have occasion
+to speak more particularly hereafter.
+
+The rockiness of the soil in Ireland is so universal that it predominates
+in every sort. One cannot use with propriety the terms clay, loam, sand,
+etc.; it must be a stony clay, a stony loam, a gravelly sand. Clay,
+especially the yellow, is much talked of in Ireland, but it is for want
+of proper discrimination. I have once or twice seen almost a pure clay
+upon the surface, but it is extremely rare. The true yellow clay is
+usually found in a thin stratum under the surface mould, and over a rock;
+harsh, tenacious, stony, strong loams, difficult to work, are not
+uncommon: but they are quite different from English clays.
+
+Friable, sandy loams, dry but fertile, are very common, and they form the
+best soils in the kingdom for tillage and sheep. Tipperary and Roscommon
+abound particularly in them. The most fertile of all are the bullock
+pastures of Limerick, and the banks of the Shannon in Clare, called the
+Corcasses. These are a mellow, putrid, friable loam.
+
+Sand which is so common in England, and yet more common through Spain,
+France, Germany, and Poland, quite from Gibraltar to Petersburg, is
+nowhere met with in Ireland, except for narrow slips of hillocks, upon
+the sea coast. Nor did I ever meet with or hear of a chalky soil.
+
+The bogs, of which foreigners have heard so much, are very extensive in
+Ireland; that of Allen extends eighty miles, and is computed to contain
+three hundred thousand acres. There are others also, very extensive, and
+smaller ones scattered over the whole kingdom; but these are not in
+general more than are wanted for fuel. When I come to speak of the
+improvement of waste lands, I shall describe them particularly.
+
+Besides the great fertility of the soil, there are other circumstances
+which come within my sphere to mention. Few countries can be better
+watered by large and beautiful rivers; and it is remarkable that by much
+the finest parts of the kingdom are on the banks of these rivers.
+Witness the Suir, Blackwater, the Liffey, the Boyne, the Nore, the
+Barrow, and part of the Shannon, they wash a scenery that can hardly be
+exceeded. From the rockiness of the country, however, there are few of
+them that have not obstructions, which are great impediments to inland
+navigation.
+
+The mountains of Ireland give to travelling that interesting variety
+which a flat country can never abound with. And, at the same time, they
+are not in such number as to confer the usual character of poverty which
+attends them. I was either upon or very near the most considerable in
+the kingdom. Mangerton, and the Reeks, in Kerry; the Galties in Cork;
+those of Mourne in Down; Crow Patrick, and Nephin in Mayo, these are the
+principal in Ireland, and they are of a character, in height and
+sublimity, which should render them the objects of every traveller's
+attention.
+
+Relative to the climate of Ireland, a short residence cannot enable a man
+to speak much from his own experience; the observations I have made
+myself confirm the idea of its being vastly wetter than England; from the
+20th of June to the 20th of October I kept a register, and there were, in
+one hundred and twenty-two days, seventy-five of rain, and very many of
+them incessant and heavy. I have examined similar registers I kept in
+England, and can find no year that even approaches to such a moisture as
+this. But there is a register of an accurate diary published which
+compares London and Cork. The result is, that the quantity at the latter
+place was double to that at London. See Smith's "History of Cork."
+
+From the information I received, I have reason to believe that the rainy
+season sets in usually about the first of July and continues very wet
+till September or October, when there is usually a dry fine season of a
+month or six weeks. I resided in the county of Cork, etc., from October
+till March, and found the winter much more soft and mild than ever I
+experienced one in England. I was also a whole summer there (1778), and
+it is fair to mention that it was as fine a one as ever I knew in
+England, though by no means so hot. I think hardly so wet as very many I
+have known in England. The tops of the Galty mountains exhibited the
+only snow we saw; and as to frosts, they were so slight and rare that I
+believe myrtles, and yet tenderer plants, would have survived without any
+covering. But when I say that the winter was not remarkable for being
+wet, I do not mean that we had a dry atmosphere. The inches of rain
+which fell in the winter I speak of would not mark the moisture of the
+climate. As many inches will fall in a single tropical shower as in a
+whole year in England. See Mitchel's "Present State of Great Britain and
+North America." But if the clouds presently disperse, and a bright sun
+shines, the air may soon be dry. The worst circumstance of the climate
+of Ireland is the constant moisture without rain. Wet a piece of
+leather, and lay it in a room where there is neither sun nor fire, and it
+will not in summer even be dry in a month. I have known gentlemen in
+Ireland deny their climate being moister than England, but if they have
+eyes let them open them, and see the verdure that clothes their rocks,
+and compare it with ours in England--where rocky soils are of a russet
+brown however sweet the food for sheep. Does not their island lie more
+exposed to the great Atlantic; and does not the west wind blow
+three-fourths of a year? If there was another island yet more westward,
+would not the climate of Ireland be improved? Such persons speak equally
+against fact, reason, and philosophy. That the moisture of a climate
+does not depend on the quantity of rain that falls, but on the powers of
+aerial evaporation, Dr. Dobson has clearly proved. "Phil. Trans." vol.
+lxvii., part i., p. 244.
+
+
+Oppression.
+
+
+Before I conclude this article of the common labouring poor in Ireland, I
+must observe, that their happiness depends not merely upon the payment of
+their labour, their clothes, or their food; the subordination of the
+lower classes, degenerating into oppression, is not to be overlooked.
+The poor in all countries, and under all governments, are both paid and
+fed, yet there is an infinite difference between them in different ones.
+This inquiry will by no means turn out so favourable as the preceding
+articles. It must be very apparent to every traveller through that
+country, that the labouring poor are treated with harshness, and are in
+all respects so little considered that their want of importance seems a
+perfect contrast to their situation in England, of which country,
+comparatively speaking, they reign the sovereigns. The age has improved
+so much in humanity, that even the poor Irish have experienced its
+influence, and are every day treated better and better; but still the
+remnant of the old manners, the abominable distinction of religion,
+united with the oppressive conduct of the little country gentlemen, or
+rather vermin of the kingdom, who never were out of it, altogether bear
+still very heavy on the poor people, and subject them to situations more
+mortifying than we ever behold in England. The landlord of an Irish
+estate, inhabited by Roman Catholics, is a sort of despot who yields
+obedience, in whatever concerns the poor, to no law but that of his will.
+To discover what the liberty of the people is, we must live among them,
+and not look for it in the statutes of the realm: the language of written
+law may be that of liberty, but the situation of the poor may speak no
+language but that of slavery. There is too much of this contradiction in
+Ireland; a long series of oppressions, aided by many very ill-judged
+laws, have brought landlords into a habit of exerting a very lofty
+superiority, and their vassals into that of an almost unlimited
+submission: speaking a language that is despised, professing a religion
+that is abhorred and being disarmed, the poor find themselves in many
+cases slaves even in the bosom of written liberty. Landlords that have
+resided much abroad are usually humane in their ideas, but the habit of
+tyranny naturally contracts the mind, so that even in this polished age
+there are instances of a severe carriage towards the poor, which is quite
+unknown in England.
+
+A landlord in Ireland can scarcely invent an order which a servant,
+labourer, or cottar dares to refuse to execute. Nothing satisfies him
+but an unlimited submission. Disrespect, or anything tending towards
+sauciness, he may punish with his cane or his horsewhip with the most
+perfect security; a poor man would have his bones broke if he offered to
+lift his hands in his own defence. Knocking-down is spoken of in the
+country in a manner that makes an Englishman stare. Landlords of
+consequence have assured me that many of their cottars would think
+themselves honoured by having their wives and daughters sent for to the
+bed of their master; a mark of slavery that proves the oppression under
+which such people must live. Nay, I have heard anecdotes of the lives of
+people being made free with without any apprehension of the justice of a
+jury. But let it not be imagined that this is common; formerly it
+happened every day, but law gains ground. It must strike the most
+careless traveller to see whole strings of cars whipped into a ditch by a
+gentleman's footman to make way for his carriage; if they are overturned
+or broken in pieces, no matter, it is taken in patience; were they to
+complain they would perhaps be horsewhipped. The execution of the laws
+lies very much in the hands of justices of the peace, many of whom are
+drawn from the most illiberal class in the kingdom. If a poor man lodges
+a complaint against a gentleman, or any animal that chooses to call
+itself a gentleman, and the justice issues out a summons for his
+appearance, it is a fixed affront, and he will infallibly be called out.
+Where manners are in conspiracy against law, to whom are the oppressed
+people to have recourse? It is a fact, that a poor man having a contest
+with a gentleman, must--but I am talking nonsense, they know their
+situation too well to think of it; they can have no defence, but by means
+of protection from one gentleman against another, who probably protects
+his vassal as he would the sheep he intends to eat.
+
+The colours of this picture are not charged. To assert that all these
+cases are common would be an exaggeration, but to say that an unfeeling
+landlord will do all this with impunity, is to keep strictly to truth:
+and what is liberty but a farce and a jest, if its blessings are received
+as the favour of kindness and humanity, instead of being the inheritance
+of right?
+
+Consequences have flowed from these oppressions which ought long ago to
+have put a stop to them. In England we have heard much of White-boys,
+Steel-boys, Oak-boys, Peep-of-day-boys, etc. But these various
+insurgents are not to be confounded, for they are very different. The
+proper distinction in the discontents of the people is into Protestant
+and Catholic. All but the White-boys were among the manufacturing
+Protestants in the north: the White-boys Catholic labourers in the south.
+From the best intelligence I could gain, the riots of the manufacturers
+had no other foundation but such variations in the manufacture as all
+fabrics experience, and which they had themselves known and submitted to
+before. The case, however, was different with the White-boys, who being
+labouring Catholics met with all those oppressions I have described, and
+would probably have continued in full submission had not very severe
+treatment in respect of tithes, united with a great speculative rise of
+rent about the same time, blown up the flame of resistance; the atrocious
+acts they were guilty of made them the object of general indignation;
+acts were passed for their punishment, which seemed calculated for the
+meridian of Barbary. This arose to such a height that by one they were
+to be hanged under circumstances without the common formalities of a
+trial, which, though repealed the following session, marks the spirit of
+punishment; while others remain yet the law of the land, that would if
+executed tend more to raise than quell an insurrection. From all which
+it is manifest that the gentlemen of Ireland never thought of a radical
+cure from overlooking the real cause of the disease, which in fact lay in
+themselves, and not in the wretches they doomed to the gallows. Let them
+change their own conduct entirely, and the poor will not long riot.
+Treat them like men who ought to be as free as yourselves. Put an end to
+that system of religious persecution which for seventy years has divided
+the kingdom against itself; in these two circumstances lies the cure of
+insurrection; perform them completely, and you will have an affectionate
+poor, instead of oppressed and discontented vassals.
+
+A better treatment of the poor in Ireland is a very material point of the
+welfare of the whole British Empire. Events may happen which may
+convince us fatally of this truth; if not, oppression must have broken
+all the spirit and resentment of men. By what policy the Government of
+England can for so many years have permitted such an absurd system to be
+matured in Ireland is beyond the power of plain sense to discover.
+
+
+Emigrations.
+
+
+Before the American war broke out, the Irish and Scotch emigrations were
+a constant subject of conversation in England, and occasioned much
+discourse even in parliament. The common observation was, that if they
+were not stopped, those countries would be ruined, and they were
+generally attributed to a great rise of rents. Upon going over to
+Ireland I determined to omit no opportunities of discovering the cause
+and extent of this emigration, and my information, as may be seen in the
+minutes of the journey, was very regular. I have only a few general
+remarks to make on it here.
+
+The spirit of emigration in Ireland appeared to be confined to two
+circumstances, the Presbyterian religion, and the linen manufacture. I
+heard of very few emigrants except among manufacturers of that
+persuasion. The Catholics never went; they seem not only tied to the
+country, but almost to the parish in which their ancestors lived. As to
+the emigration in the north it was an error in England to suppose it a
+novelty which arose with the increase in rents. The contrary was the
+fact; it had subsisted perhaps forty years, insomuch that at the ports of
+Belfast, Derry, etc., the passenger trade, as they called it, had long
+been a regular branch of commerce, which employed several ships, and
+consisted in carrying people to America. The increasing population of
+the country made it an increasing trade, but when the linen trade was
+low, the passenger trade was always high. At the time of Lord Donegan
+letting his estate in the north, the linen business suffered a temporary
+decline, which sent great numbers to America, and gave rise to the error
+that it was occasioned by the increase of his rents. The fact, however,
+was otherwise, for great numbers of those who went from his lands
+actually sold those leases for considerable sums, the hardship of which
+was supposed to have driven them to America. Some emigration, therefore,
+always existed, and its increase depended on the fluctuations of linen;
+but as to the effect there was as much error in the conclusions drawn in
+England as before in the cause.
+
+It is the misfortune of all manufactures worked for a foreign market to
+be upon an insecure footing; periods of declension will come, and when in
+consequence of them great numbers of people are out of employment, the
+best circumstance is their enlisting in the army or navy, and it is the
+common result; but unfortunately the manufacture in Ireland (of which I
+shall have occasion to speak more hereafter) is not confined as it ought
+to be to towns, but spreads into all cabins of the country. Being half
+farmers, half manufacturers, they have too much property in cattle, etc.,
+to enlist when idle; if they convert it into cash it will enable them to
+pay their passage to America, an alternative always chosen in preference
+to the military life. The consequence is, that they must live without
+work till their substance is quite consumed before they will enlist. Men
+who are in such a situation that from various causes they cannot work,
+and won't enlist, should emigrate; if they stay at home they must remain
+a burthen upon the community. Emigration should not, therefore, be
+condemned in states so ill-governed as to possess many people willing to
+work, but without employment.
+
+
+
+SECTION II.--Roads, Cars.
+
+
+For a country, so very far behind us as Ireland, to have got suddenly so
+much the start of us in the article of roads, is a spectacle that cannot
+fail to strike the English traveller exceedingly. But from this
+commendation the turnpikes in general must be excluded; they are as bad
+as the bye-roads are admirable. It is a common complaint that the tolls
+of the turnpikes are so many jobs, and the roads left in a state that
+disgrace the kingdom.
+
+The following is the system on which the cross-roads are made. Any
+person wishing to make or mend a road has it measured by two persons, who
+swear to the measurement before a justice of the peace. It is described
+as leading from one market-town to another (it matters not in what
+direction), that it will be a public good, and that it will require such
+a sum per perch of twenty-one feet, to make or repair the same. A
+certificate to this purpose (of which printed forms are sold), with the
+blanks filled up, is signed by the measurers, and also by two persons
+called overseers, one of whom is usually the person applying for the
+road, the other the labourer he intends to employ as an overseer of the
+work, which overseer swears also before the justice the truth of the
+valuation. The certificate thus prepared is given by any person to some
+one of the grand jury, at either of the assizes, but usually in the
+spring. When all the common business of trials is over, the jury meets
+on that of roads; the chairman reads the certificates, and they are all
+put to the vote, whether to be granted or not. If rejected, they are
+torn in pieces and no further notice taken; if granted, they are put on
+the file.
+
+This vote of approbation, without any further form, enables the person
+who applied for the presentment immediately to construct or repair the
+road in question, which he must do at his own expense; he must finish it
+by the following assizes, when he is to send a certificate of his having
+expended the money pursuant to the application; this certificate is
+signed by the foreman, who also signs an order on the treasurer of the
+county to pay him, which is done immediately. In like manner are
+bridges, houses of correction, gaols, etc. etc., built and repaired. If
+a bridge over a river which parts two counties, half is done by one and
+the other half by the other county.
+
+The expense of these works is raised by a tax on the lands, paid by the
+tenant; in some counties it is acreable, but in others it is on the
+plough land, and as no two plough lands are of the same size, is a very
+unequal tax. In the county of Meath it is acreable, and amounts to one
+shilling per acre, being the highest in Ireland; but in general it is
+from threepence to sixpence per acre, and amounts of late years through
+the whole kingdom to one hundred and forty thousand pounds a year.
+
+The juries will very rarely grant a presentment for a road which amounts
+to above fifty pounds, or for more than six or seven shillings a perch,
+so that if a person wants more to be made than such a sum will do, he
+divides it into two or three different measurements or presentments. By
+the Act of Parliament, all presentment-roads must be twenty-one feet wide
+at least from fence to fence, and fourteen feet of it formed with stone
+or gravel.
+
+As the power of the grand jury extends in this manner to the cutting new
+roads where none ever were before, as well as to the repairing and
+widening old ones, exclusive, however, of parks, gardens, etc., it was
+necessary to put a restriction against the wanton expense of it. Any
+presentment may be traversed that is opposed, by denying the allegations
+of the certificate; this is sure of delaying it until another assizes,
+and in the meantime persons are appointed to view the line of road
+demanded, and report on the necessity or hardship of the case. The
+payment of the money may also be traversed after the certificate of its
+being laid out; for if any person views and finds it a manifest
+imposition and job, he has that power to delay payment until the cause is
+cleared up and proved. But this traverse is not common. Any persons are
+eligible for asking presentments; but it is usually done only by resident
+gentlemen, agents, clergy, or respectable tenantry. It follows
+necessarily, that every person is desirous of making the roads leading to
+his own house, and that private interest alone is considered in it, which
+I have heard objected to the measure; but this I must own appears to me
+the great merit of it. Whenever individuals act for the public alone,
+the public is very badly served; but when the pursuit of their own
+interest is the way to benefit the public, then is the public good sure
+to be promoted; such is the case of presentment of roads: for a few years
+the good roads were all found leading from houses like rays from a
+centre, with a surrounding space, without any communication; but every
+year brought the remedy, until in a short time, those rays pointing from
+so many centres met, and then the communication was complete. The
+original Act passed but seventeen years ago, and the effect of it in all
+parts of the kingdom is so great, that I found it perfectly practicable
+to travel upon wheels by a map; I will go here; I will go there; I could
+trace a route upon paper as wild as fancy could dictate, and everywhere I
+found beautiful roads without break or hindrance, to enable me to realise
+my design. What a figure would a person make in England, who should
+attempt to move in that manner, where the roads, as Dr. Burn has well
+observed, are almost in as bad a state as in the time of Philip and Mary.
+In a few years there will not be a piece of bad road except turnpikes in
+all Ireland. The money raised for this first and most important of all
+national purposes, is expended among the people who pay it, employs
+themselves and their teams, encourages their agriculture, and facilitates
+so greatly the improvement of waste lands, that it ought always to be
+considered as the first step to any undertaking of that sort.
+
+At first, roads, in common with bridges, were paid out of the general
+treasure of the county, but by a subsequent act the road tax is now on
+baronies; each barony pays for its own roads. By another act juries were
+enabled to grant presentments of narrow mountain roads, at two shillings
+and sixpence a perch. By another, they were empowered to grant
+presentments of footpaths, by the side of roads, at one shilling a perch.
+By a very late act, they are also enabled to contract at three-halfpence
+per perch per annum from the first making of a road, for keeping it in
+repair, which before could not be done without a fresh presentment.
+Arthur King, Esq. of Moniva, whose agriculture is described in the
+preceding minutes, and who at that time represented the county of Galway,
+was the worthy citizen who first brought this excellent measure into
+parliament: Ireland, and every traveller that ever visits it ought, to
+the latest time, to revere the memory of such a distinguished benefactor
+to the public. Before that time the roads, like those of England,
+remained impassable, under the miserable police of the six days' labour.
+Similar good effects would here flow from adopting the measure, which
+would ease the kingdom of a great burthen in its public effects
+absolutely contemptible; and the tax here, as in Ireland, ought to be so
+laid, as to be borne by the tenant whose business it is at present to
+repair.
+
+Upon the imperfections of the Irish system I have only to remark, that
+juries should, in some cases, be more ready than they are to grant these
+presentments. In general, they are extremely liberal, but sometimes they
+take silly freaks of giving none, or very few. Experience having proved,
+from the general goodness of the roads, that abuses cannot be very great,
+they should go on with spirit to perfect the great work throughout the
+kingdom; and as a check upon those who lay out the money, it might
+perhaps be advisable to print county maps of the presentment roads, with
+corresponding lists and tables of the names of all persons who have
+obtained presentments, the sums they received, and for what roads. These
+should be given freely by the jurymen, to all their acquaintance, that
+every man might know, to whose carelessness or jobbing the public was
+indebted for bad roads, when they had paid for good ones. Such a
+practice would certainly deter many.
+
+At 11,042,642 acres in the kingdom, 140,000 pounds a year amounts to just
+threepence an acre for the whole territory: a very trifling tax for such
+an improvement, and which almost ranks in public ease and benefit with
+that of the post-office.
+
+
+
+SECTION III.--Manners and Customs.
+
+
+ Quid leges sine moribus,
+ Vana proficiunt!
+
+It is but an illiberal business for a traveller, who designs to publish
+remarks upon a country to sit down coolly in his closet and write a
+satire on the inhabitants. Severity of that sort must be enlivened with
+an uncommon share of wit and ridicule, to please. Where very gross
+absurdities are found, it is fair and manly to note them; but to enter
+into character and disposition is generally uncandid, since there are no
+people but might be better than they are found, and none but have virtues
+which deserve attention, at least as much as their failings; for these
+reasons this section would not have found a place in my observations, had
+not some persons, of much more flippancy than wisdom, given very gross
+misrepresentations of the Irish nation. It is with pleasure, therefore,
+that I take up the pen on the present occasion; as a much longer
+residence there enables me to exhibit a very different picture; in doing
+this, I shall be free to remark, wherein I think the conduct of certain
+classes may have given rise to general and consequently injurious
+condemnation.
+
+There are three races of people in Ireland, so distinct as to strike the
+least attentive traveller: these are the Spanish which are found in
+Kerry, and a part of Limerick and Cork, tall and thin, but well made, a
+long visage, dark eyes, and long black lank hair. The time is not remote
+when the Spaniards had a kind of settlement on the coast of Kerry, which
+seemed to be overlooked by government. There were many of them in Queen
+Elizabeth's reign, nor were they entirely driven out till the time of
+Cromwell. There is an island of Valentia on that coast, with various
+other names, certainly Spanish. The Scotch race is in the north, where
+are to be found the feature which are supposed to mark that people, their
+accent and many of their customs. In a district near Dublin, but more
+particularly in the baronies of Bargie and Forth in the county of
+Wexford, the Saxon tongue is spoken without any mixture of the Irish, and
+the people have a variety of customs mentioned in the minutes, which
+distinguish them from their neighbours. The rest of the kingdom is made
+up of mongrels. The Milesian race of Irish, which may be called native,
+are scattered over the kingdom, but chiefly found in Connaught and
+Munster; a few considerable families, whose genealogy is undoubted,
+remain, but none of them with considerable possessions except the
+O'Briens and Mr. O'Neil; the former have near twenty thousand pounds a
+year in the family, the latter half as much, the remnant of a property
+once his ancestors, which now forms six or seven of the greatest estates
+in the kingdom. O'Hara and M'Dermot are great names in Connaught, and
+O'Donnohue a considerable one in Kerry; but I heard of a family of
+O'Drischal's in Cork, who claim an origin prior in Ireland to any of the
+Milesian race.
+
+The only divisions which a traveller, who passed through the kingdom
+without making any residence could make, would be into people of
+considerable fortune and mob. The intermediate division of the scale, so
+numerous and respectable in England, would hardly attract the least
+notice in Ireland. A residence in the kingdom convinces one, however,
+that there is another class in general of small fortune--country
+gentlemen and renters of land. The manners, habits, and customs of
+people of considerable fortune are much the same everywhere, at least
+there is very little difference between England and Ireland, it is among
+the common people one must look for those traits by which we discriminate
+a national character. The circumstances which struck me most in the
+common Irish were, vivacity and a great and eloquent volubility of
+speech; one would think they could take snuff and talk without tiring
+till doomsday. They are infinitely more cheerful and lively than
+anything we commonly see in England, having nothing of that incivility of
+sullen silence with which so many Englishmen seem to wrap themselves up,
+as if retiring within their own importance. Lazy to an excess at work,
+but so spiritedly active at play, that at hurling, which is the cricket
+of savages, they shew the greatest feats of agility. Their love of
+society is as remarkable as their curiosity is insatiable; and their
+hospitality to all comers, be their own poverty ever so pinching, has too
+much merit to be forgotten. Pleased to enjoyment with a joke, or witty
+repartee, they will repeat it with such expression, that the laugh will
+be universal. Warm friends and revengeful enemies; they are inviolable
+in their secrecy, and inevitable in their resentment; with such a notion
+of honour, that neither threat nor reward would induce them to betray the
+secret or person of a man, though an oppressor, whose property they would
+plunder without ceremony. Hard drinkers and quarrelsome; great liars,
+but civil, submissive, and obedient. Dancing is so universal among them,
+that there are everywhere itinerant dancing-masters, to whom the cottars
+pay sixpence a quarter for teaching their families. Besides the Irish
+jig, which they can dance with a most luxuriant expression, minuets and
+country-dances are taught; and I even heard some talk of cotillions
+coming in.
+
+Some degree of education is also general, hedge schools, as they are
+called, (they might as well be termed ditch ones, for I have seen many a
+ditch full of scholars,) are everywhere to be met with where reading and
+writing are taught; schools are also common for men; I have seen a dozen
+great fellows at school, and was told they were educating with an
+intention of being priests. Many strokes in their character are
+evidently to be ascribed to the extreme oppression under which they live.
+If they are as great thieves and liars as they are reported, it is
+certainly owing to this cause.
+
+If from the lowest class we rise to the highest, all there is gaiety,
+pleasure, luxury, and extravagance; the town life at Dublin is formed on
+the model of that of London. Every night in the winter there is a ball
+or a party, where the polite circle meet, not to enjoy but to sweat each
+other; a great crowd crammed into twenty feet square gives a zest to the
+_agrements_ of small talk and whist. There are four or five houses large
+enough to receive a company commodiously, but the rest are so small as to
+make parties detestable. There is however an agreeable society in
+Dublin, in which a man of large fortune will not find his time heavy.
+The style of living may be guessed from the fortunes of the resident
+nobility and great commoners; there are about thirty that possess incomes
+from seven to twenty thousand pounds a year. The court has nothing
+remarkable or splendid in it, but varies very much, according to the
+private fortune or liberality of disposition in the lord lieutenant.
+
+In the country their life has some circumstances which are not commonly
+seen in England. Large tracts of land are kept in hand by everybody to
+supply the deficiencies of markets; this gives such a plenty, that,
+united with the lowness of taxes and prices, one would suppose it
+difficult for them to spend their incomes, if Dublin in the winter did
+not lend assistance. Let it be considered that the prices of meat are
+much lower than in England; poultry only a fourth of the price; wild fowl
+and fish in vastly greater plenty; rum and brandy not half the price;
+coffee, tea, and wines far cheaper; labour not above a third; servants'
+wages upon an average thirty per cent. cheaper. That taxes are
+inconsiderable, for there is no land-tax, no poor-rates, no window tax,
+no candle or soap tax, only half a wheel-tax, no servants' tax, and a
+variety of other articles heavily burdened in England, but not in
+Ireland. Considering all this, one would think they could not spend
+their incomes; they do contrive it, however. In this business they are
+assisted by two customs that have an admirable tendency to it, great
+numbers of horses and servants.
+
+In England such extensive demesnes would be parks around the seats for
+beauty as much as use, but it is not so in Ireland; the words deer-park
+and demesne are to be distinguished; there are great demesnes without any
+parks, but a want of taste, too common in Ireland, is having a deer-park
+at a distance from the house; the residence surrounded by walls, or
+hedges, or cabins; and the lawn inclosure scattered with animals of
+various sorts, perhaps three miles off. The small quantity of corn
+proportioned to the total acres, shows how little tillage is attended to
+even by those who are the best able to carry it on; and the column of
+turnips proves in the clearest manner what the progress of improvement is
+in that kingdom. The number of horses may almost be esteemed a satire
+upon common sense; were they well fed enough to be useful, they would not
+be so numerous, but I have found a good hack for a common ride scarce in
+a house where there were a hundred. Upon an average, the horses in
+gentlemen's stables throughout the kingdom are not fed half so well as
+they are in England by men of equal fortune; yet the number makes the
+expense of them very heavy.
+
+Another circumstance to be remarked in the country life is the
+miserableness of many of their houses; there are men of five thousand a
+year in Ireland, who live in habitations that a man of seven hundred a
+year in England would disdain; an air of neatness, order, dress, and
+_proprete_, is wanting to a surprising degree around the mansion; even
+new and excellent houses have often nothing of this about them. But the
+badness of the houses is remedying every hour throughout the whole
+kingdom, for the number of new ones just built, or building, is
+prodigiously great. I should suppose there were not ten dwellings in the
+kingdom thirty years ago that were fit for an English pig to live in.
+Gardens were equally bad, but now they are running into the contrary
+extreme, and wall in five, six, ten, and even twenty Irish acres for a
+garden, but generally double or treble what is necessary.
+
+The tables of people of fortune are very plentifully spread; many
+elegantly, differing in nothing from those of England. I think I
+remarked that venison wants the flavour it has with us, probably for the
+same reason, that the produce of rich parks is never equal to that of
+poor ones; the moisture of the climate, and the richness of the soil,
+give fat but not flavour. Another reason is the smallness of the parks,
+a man who has three or four thousand acres in his hands, has not perhaps
+above three or four hundred in his deer-park, and range is a great point
+for good venison. Nor do I think that garden vegetables have the flavour
+found in those of England, certainly owing to the climate; green peas I
+found everywhere perfectly insipid, and lettuce, etc., not good. Claret
+is the common wine of all tables, and so much inferior to what is drunk
+in England, that it does not appear to be the same wine; but their port
+is incomparable, so much better than the English, as to prove, if proof
+was wanting, the abominable adulterations it must undergo with us.
+Drinking and duelling are two charges which have long been alleged
+against the gentlemen of Ireland, but the change of manners which has
+taken place in that kingdom is not generally known in England.
+Drunkenness ought no longer to be a reproach, for at every table I was at
+in Ireland I saw a perfect freedom reign, every person drank just as
+little as they pleased, nor have I ever been asked to drink a single
+glass more than I had an inclination for; I may go farther and assert
+that hard drinking is very rare among people of fortune; yet it is
+certain that they sit much longer at table than in England. I was much
+surprised at first going over to find no summons to coffee, the company
+often sitting till eight, nine, or ten o'clock before they went to the
+ladies. If a gentleman likes tea or coffee, he retires without saying
+anything; a stranger of rank may propose it to the master of the house,
+who from custom contrary to that of England, will not stir till he
+receives such a hint, as they think it would imply a desire to save their
+wine. If the gentlemen were generally desirous of tea, I take it for
+granted they would have it, but their slighting is one inconvenience to
+such as desire it, not knowing when it is provided, conversation may
+carry them beyond the time, and then if they do trifle over the coffee it
+will certainly be cold. There is a want of attention in this, which the
+ladies should remedy, if they will not break the old custom and send to
+the gentlemen, which is what they ought to do, they certainly should have
+a salver fresh. I must, however, remark, that at the politest tables,
+which are those of people who have resided much out of Ireland, this
+point is conducted exactly as it is in England.
+
+Duelling was once carried to an excess, which was a real reproach and
+scandal to the kingdom; it of course proceeded from excessive drinking;
+as the cause has disappeared, the effect has nearly followed; not
+however, entirely, for it is yet far more common among people of fashion
+than in England. Of all practices, a man who felt for the honour of his
+country would wish soonest to banish this, for there is not one
+favourable conclusion to be drawn from it: as to courage, nobody can
+question that of a polite and enlightened nation, entitled to a share of
+the reputation of the age; but it implies uncivilised manners, an
+ignorance of those forms which govern polite societies, or else a brutal
+drunkenness; the latter is no longer the cause or the pretence. As to
+the former, they would place the national character so backward, would
+take from it so much of its pretence to civilisation, elegance and
+politeness of manners, that no true Irishman would be pleased with the
+imputation. Certain it is, that none are so captious as those who think
+themselves neglected or despised; and none are so ready to believe
+themselves either one or the other as persons unused to good company.
+Captious people, therefore, who are ready to take an affront, must
+inevitably have been accustomed to ill company, unless there should be
+something uncommonly crooked in their natural dispositions, which is not
+to be supposed. Let every man that fights his one, two, three, or
+half-a-dozen duels, receive it as a maxim, that every one he adds to the
+number is but an additional proof of his being ill-educated, and having
+vitiated his manners by the contagion of bad company; who is it that can
+reckon the most numerous rencontres? who but the bucks, bloods,
+landjobbers, and little drunken country gentlemen? Ought not people of
+fashion to blush at a practice which will very soon be the distinction
+only of the most contemptible of the people? the point of honour will and
+must remain for the decision of certain affronts, but it will rarely be
+had recourse to in polite, sensible, and well-bred company. The practice
+among real gentlemen in Ireland every day declining is a strong proof
+that a knowledge of the world corrects the old manners, and consequently
+its having ever been prevalent was owing to the causes to which I have
+attributed it.
+
+There is another point of manners somewhat connected with the present
+subject, which partly induced me to place a motto at the head of this
+section. It is the conduct of juries; the criminal law of Ireland is the
+same as that of England, but in the execution it is so different as
+scarcely to be known. I believe it is a fact, at least I have been
+assured so, that no man was ever hanged in Ireland for killing another in
+a duel: the security is such that nobody ever thought of removing out of
+the way of justice, yet there have been deaths of that sort, which had no
+more to do with honour than stabbing in the dark. I believe Ireland is
+the only country in Europe, I am sure it is the only part of the British
+dominions, where associations among men of fortune are necessary for
+apprehending ravishers. It is scarcely credible how many young women
+have even of late years been ravished, and carried off in order (as they
+generally have fortunes) to gain to appearance a voluntary marriage.
+These actions, it is true, are not committed by the class I am
+considering at present; but they are tried by them, and acquitted. I
+think there has been only one man executed for that crime, which is so
+common as to occasion the associations I mentioned; it is to this supine
+execution of the law that such enormities are owing. Another
+circumstance which has the effect of screening all sorts of offenders, is
+men of fortune protecting them, and making interest for their acquittal,
+which is attended with a variety of evil consequences. I heard it
+boasted in the county of Fermanagh, that there had not been a man hanged
+in it for two-and-twenty years; all I concluded from this was, that there
+had been many a jury who deserved it richly.
+
+Let me, however, conclude what I have to observe on the conduct of the
+principal people residing in Ireland, that there are great numbers among
+them who are as liberal in all their ideas as any people in Europe; that
+they have seen the errors which have given an ill character to the
+manners of their country, and done everything that example could effect
+to produce a change: that that happy change has been partly effected, and
+is effecting every hour, insomuch that a man may go into a vast variety
+of families which he will find actuated by no other principles than those
+of the most cultivated politeness, and the most liberal urbanity.
+
+But I must now come to another class of people, to whose conduct it is
+almost entirely owing that the character of the nation has not that
+lustre abroad, which I dare assert it will soon very generally merit:
+this is the class of little country gentlemen; tenants, who drink their
+claret by means of profit rents; jobbers in farms; bucks; your fellows
+with round hats, edged with gold, who hunt in the day, get drunk in the
+evening, and fight the next morning. I shall not dwell on a subject so
+perfectly disagreeable, but remark that these are the men among whom
+drinking, wrangling, quarrelling, fighting, ravishing, etc. etc. are
+found as in their native soil; once to a degree that made them a pest of
+society; they are growing better, but even now, one or two of them got by
+accident (where they have no business) into better company are sufficient
+very much to derange the pleasures that result from a liberal
+conversation. A new spirit; new fashions; new modes of politeness
+exhibited by the higher ranks are imitated by the lower, which will, it
+is to be hoped, put an end to this race of beings; and either drive their
+sons and cousins into the army or navy, or sink them into plain farmers
+like those we have in England, where it is common to see men with much
+greater property without pretending to be gentlemen. I repeat it from
+the intelligence I received, that even this class are very different from
+what they were twenty years ago, and improve so fast that the time will
+soon come when the national character will not be degraded by any set.
+
+That character is upon the whole respectable: it would be unfair to
+attribute to the nation at large the vices and follies of only one class
+of individuals. Those persons from whom it is candid to take a general
+estimate do credit to their country. That they are a people learned,
+lively, and ingenious, the admirable authors they have produced will be
+an eternal monument; witness their Swift, Sterne, Congreve, Boyle,
+Berkeley, Steele, Farquhar, Southerne, and Goldsmith. Their talent for
+eloquence is felt, and acknowledged in the parliaments of both the
+kingdoms. Our own service both by sea and land, as well as that
+(unfortunately for us) of the principal monarchies of Europe, speak their
+steady and determined courage. Every unprejudiced traveller who visits
+them will be as much pleased with their cheerfulness, as obliged by their
+hospitality; and will find them a brave, polite, and liberal people.
+
+
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