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diff --git a/28896-8.txt b/28896-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dc11605 --- /dev/null +++ b/28896-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1082 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Stories And Tales Of The Irish, by William Carleton + +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: Stories And Tales Of The Irish + A Linked Index to the Project Gutenberg Editions + +Author: William Carleton + +Editor: David Widger + +Release Date: May 20, 2009 [EBook #28896] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES AND TALES OF THE IRISH *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + + +STORIES AND TALES OF THE IRISH + +By William Carleton + + +AN INDEX + + +Edited by David Widger +Project Gutenberg Editions + + + + +CONTENTS + +## Willy Reilly +## Fardorougha, The Miser +## Black Baronet +## The Evil Eye +## Jane Sinclair +## Lha Dhu +## The Dead Boxer +## Ellen Duncan +## The Proctor's Daughter +## Valentine M'Clutchy +## The Tithe-Proctor +## The Emigrants Of Ahadarra +## Ned M'Keown +## The Three Tasks +## Shane Fadh's Wedding +## Larry M'Farland's Wake +## The Battle Of The Factions +## The Station +## The Party Fight And Funeral +## The Lough Derg Pilgrim +## The Hedge School +## The Midnight Mass +## The Donagh +## Phil Purcel, The Pig-Driver +## The Geography Of An Irish Oath +## The Lianhan Shee +## Going To Maynooth +## The Poor Scholar +## The Black Prophet +## Phelim Otoole's Courtship +## Wildgoose Lodge +## Tubber Derg (The Red Well) +## Neal Malone +## Art Maguire (The Broken Pledge) + + + + +VOLUMES, CHAPTERS AND STORIES + + +Willy Reilly +PREFACE To The Second Edition +CHAPTER I. An Adventure and an Escape. +CHAPTER II. The Cooleen Baum. +CHAPTER III. Daring Attempt of the Red Rapparee +CHAPTER IV. His Rival makes his Appearance, and its Consequences +CHAPTER V. The Plot and the Victims. +CHAPTER VI. The Warning an Escape +CHAPTER VII. An Accidental Incident favorable to Reilly +CHAPTER VIII. A Conflagration An Escape And an Adventure +CHAPTER IX. A Prospect of Bygone Times +CHAPTER X. Scenes that took place in the Mountain Cave +CHAPTER XI. The Squire's Dinner and his Guests. +CHAPTER XII. Sir Robert Meets a Brother Sportsman +CHAPTER XIII. Reilly is Taken, but Connived at by the Sheriff +CHAPTER XIV. Reilly takes Service with Squire Folliard. +CHAPTER XV. More of Whitecraft's Plots and Pranks +CHAPTER XVI. Sir Robert ingeniously extricates Himself out of difficulty +CHAPTER XVII. Awful Conduct of Squire Folliard +CHAPTER XVIII. Something not very Pleasant for all Parties. +CHAPTER XIX. Reilly's Disguise Penetrated +CHAPTER XX. The Rapparee Secured +CHAPTER XXI. Sir Robert Accepts of an Invitation. +CHAPTER XXII. The Squire Comforts Whitecraft in his Affliction. +CHAPTER XXIII. The Squire becomes Theological and a Proselytizer +CHAPTER XXIV. Jury of the Olden Time +CHAPTER XXV. Reilly stands his Trial +List of Illustrations + +Page 11— Is It a Double Murder You Are About to Execute? + +Page 18— Looked With Her Dark Eyes Upon Reilly + +Page 28 (and Frontispiece)— You Must Endeavor to Convert Him from Popery + +Page 29— Readjustment of his Toilet, at the Large Mirror + +Page 35— Touch Me Not, Sir + +Page 65— Dashed up to the Scene of Struggle + +Page 65a— I Entreat You, to Show These Men Mercy Now + +Page 91— Here, Now, I Spread out My Arms—fire! + +Age 115— Isn't he a Nice Bit of Goods to Run Away With A Pretty Girl? + +Page 140— Discharged a Pistol at Our Hero + +Page 143— No, Sir Robert, I Cannot Take Your Hand + +Page 157— There is Not a Toss-up Between Them + +Page 175— Give That Ring to the Prisoner + +Page 176— What, What is This? What Do You Mean? + +Page 182— It is He! It Is He! + +Page 183— My Son! My Son! + + + + +Fardorougha, The Miser + +PART I. + +PART II. + +PART III. + +PART IV. + +PART V. + +PART VI. + +PART VII. + +PART VIII. AND LAST. +List of Illustrations + +Page 191— Imprinted the Father's First Kiss + +Page 245— He Rattled, and Thumped, And Screamed + +Page 282— O'donovan Took the Beloved One in his Arms + +Page 311— Most Frightful of All Precipices—death + + + + +Black Baronet +PREFACE. +CHAPTER I. A Mail-coach by Night, and a Bit of Moonshine. +CHAPTER II. The Town and its Inhabitants. +CHAPTER III. Pauden Gair's Receipt how to make a Bad Dinner a Good One +CHAPTER IV. An Anonymous Letter +CHAPTER V. Sir Thomas Gourlay fails in unmasking the Stranger +CHAPTER VI. Extraordinary Scene between Fenton and the Stranger. +CHAPTER VII. The Baronet attempts by Falsehood +CHAPTER VIII. The Fortune-Teller—An Equivocal Prediction. +CHAPTER IX. Candor and Dissimulation +CHAPTER X. A Family Dialogue—and a Secret nearly Discovered. +CHAPTER XI. The Stranger's Visit to Father MacMalum. +CHAPTER XII. Crackenfudge Outwitted by Fenton +CHAPTER XIII. The Stranger's Second Visit to Father M'Mahon +CHAPTER XIV. Crackenfudge put upon a Wrong Scent +CHAPTER XV. Interview between Lady Gourlay and the Stranger +CHAPTER XVI. Conception and Perpetration of a Diabolical Plot against Fenton. +CHAPTER XVII. A Scene in Jemmy Trailcudgel's +CHAPTER XVIII. Dunphy visits the County Wicklow +CHAPTER XIX. Interview between Trailcudgel and the Stranger +CHAPTER XX. Interview between Lords Cullamore, Dunroe, and Lady Emily +CHAPTER XXI. A Spy Rewarded +CHAPTER XXII. Lucy at Summerfield Cottage. +CHAPTER XXIII. A Lunch in Summerfield Cottage. +CHAPTER XXIV. An Irish Watchhouse in the time of the "Charlies." +CHAPTER XXV. The Police Office +CHAPTER XXVI. The Priest Returns Sir Thomas's Money and Pistols +CHAPTER XXVII. Lucy calls upon Lady Gourlay, where she meets her Lover +CHAPTER XXVIII. Innocence and Affection overcome by Fraud and Hypocrisy +CHAPTER XXIX. Lord Dunroe's Affection for his Father +CHAPTER XXX. A Courtship on Novel Principles. +CHAPTER XXXI. The Priest goes into Corbet's House very like a Thief +CHAPTER XXXII. Discovery of the Baronet's Son +CHAPTER XXXIII. The Priest asks for a Loan of Fifty Guineas +CHAPTER XXXIV. Young Gourlay's Affectionate Interview with His Father +CHAPTER XXXV. Lucy's Vain but Affecting Expostulation with her Father +CHAPTER XXXVI. Contains a Variety of Matters +CHAPTER XXXVII. Dandy's Visit to Summerfield Cottage +CHAPTER XXXVIII. An Unpleasant Disclosure to Dunroe +CHAPTER XXXIX. Fenton Recovered—The Mad-House +CHAPTER XL. Lady Gourlay sees her Son. +CHAPTER XLI. Denouement. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 329— A Pair of Enormous Legs, With Spurs on Them + +Page 350— How Will You Be Prepared to Render an Account + +Page 409— He Stooped and Wildly Kissed Her Now Passive Lips + +Page 446— Pistols, Which he Instantly Cocked, and Held Ready + +Page 584— A Faint Smile Seemed to Light up his Face + + + + +The Evil Eye +PREFACE. +CHAPTER I. Short and Preliminary +CHAPTER II. A Murderer's Wake and the Arrival of a Stranger +CHAPTER III. Breakfast next morning +CHAPTER IV. Woodward meets a Guide +CHAPTER V. The Bonfire—The Prodigy +CHAPTER VI. Shawn-na-Middogue +CHAPTER VII. A Council of Two +CHAPTER VIII. A Healing of the Breach +CHAPTER IX. Chase of the White Hare +CHAPTER X. True Love Defeated +CHAPTER XI. A Conjurer's Levee +CHAPTER XII. Fortune-telling +CHAPTER XIII. Woodward is Discarded from Mr. Goodwin's Family +CHAPTER XIV. Shawn-na-Middogue Stabs Charles Lindsay +CHAPTER XV. The Banshee. +CHAPTER XVI. A House of Sorrow +CHAPTER XVII. Description of the Original Tory +CHAPTER XVIII. The Toir, or Tory Hunt +CHAPTER XIX. Plans and Negotiations +CHAPTER XX. Woodward's Visit to Ballyspellan +CHAPTER XXI. The Dinner at Ballyspellan +CHAPTER XXII. History of the Black Spectre +CHAPTER XXIII. Greatrakes at Work—Denouement +List of Illustrations +Frontispiece +Titlepage +Page 631— The Gaze Was Long and Combative +Page 652— I Will Follow It Until Morning +Page 697— One Long, Dark, Inexplicable Gaze +Page 736— Shawn-na-middogue, Your Mother's Victim +Page 774— Kiss You for the Sake of Our Early Love + + + + +Jane Sinclair + +PART I. + +PART II. + +PART III. +List of Illustrations + +Page 5— Having Gained the Bank, he Approached Them + +Page 44— Spot Which Would Have Been Fatal to You + +Page 52— How is This?—how Is This?—he Is Not Here! + + + + +Lha Dhu + + + + +The Dead Boxer + +CHAPTER I. + +CHAPTER II. + +CHAPTER III. + +CHAPTER IV. + +CHAPTER V. + +CHAPTER VI. + +CHAPTER VII. + +CHAPTER VIII. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 91— With Stealthy Pace he Crept Over + +Page 110— He Made a Stab at My Neck + + + + +Ellen Duncan + +ELLEN DUNCAN + +THE PROCTOR'S DAUGHTER +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 120— One Long and Lingering Look of Affection + +Page 124— "Shame! Oh, for Shame!" Were the First Exclamations + + + + +Valentine M'Clutchy +PREFACE +CHAPTER I. An Irish Pair and Spoileen Tent +CHAPTER II. Birth and Origin of Mr. M'Clutchy +CHAPTER III. Solomon M'Slime, a Religious Attorney +CHAPTER IV. Poll Doolin, the Child Cadger +CHAPTER V. A Mysterious Meeting +CHAPTER VI. The Life and Virtues of an Irish Absentee +CHAPTER VII. Reflections on Absenteeism +CHAPTER VIII. Poverty and Sorrow +CHAPTER IX. A Dialogue, exhibiting Singular Principles of Justice +CHAPTER X. A Dutiful Grandson and a Respectable Grandmother +CHAPTER XI. Darby and Solomon at Prayer +CHAPTER XII. Interview between Darby and Mr. Lucre +CHAPTER XIII. Darby's Brief Retirement from Public Life. +CHAPTER XIV. Poll Doolin's Honesty, and Phil's Gallantry +CHAPTER XV. Objects of an English Traveller +CHAPTER XVI. Solomon in Trouble +CHAPTER XVII. A Moral Survey, or a Wise Man led by a Fool +CHAPTER XVIII. An Execution by Val's Blood-Hounds +CHAPTER XIX. An Orange Lodge at Full Work +CHAPTER XX. Sobriety and Loyalty +CHAPTER XXI. Darby's Piety Rewarded +CHAPTEK XXII. Castle Cumber Grand Jury Room +CHAPTER XXIII. A Rent Day +CHAPTEK XXIV. Raymond's Sense of Justice +CHAPTER XXV. Val and his Son brought to Trial +CHAPTER XXVI. Harman's Interview with Mary M'Loughlin +CHAPTER XXVII. Bob Beatty's Last Illness +CHAPTER XXVIII. Darby is a Spiritual Ganymede +CHAPTER XXIX. Solomon Suffers a Little Retribution +CHAPTER XXX. The Mountain Grave-Yard +CHAPTER XXXI. Richard Topertoe and his Brother +List of Illustrations + +Page 142— There's As Many Curses Before You in Hell + +Page 186— See, Mary, See—they're Gallopin + +Page 216— Oh, What a Sweet Convert You Are + +Page 231— Borrow the Loan of Your Religion + +Page 233— How Many Articles in Your Church? + +Page 322— "Ah, Very Right," Said Bob. + +Page 355— Such Was the End of Valentine M'clutchy + + + + +The Tithe-Proctor +PREFACE. +CHAPTER I. The Chapel Green of Esker Dearg. +CHAPTER II. The Proctor's Principles and His Family. +CHAPTER III. Mountain Legislation, and its Executive of Blood. +CHAPTER IV. Mirth and Murder—A Tithe-Proctor's Office. +CHAPTER V. A Hang-Choice Shot—The "Garrison" on Short Commons. +CHAPTER VI. Unexpected Generosity—A False Alarm. +CHAPTER VII. A Shoneen Magistrate Distributing Justice. +CHAPTER VIII. An Unreformed Church +CHAPTER IX. Sport in the Mountains. +CHAPTER X. The Sport Continued. +CHAPTER XI. The Sport Still Continued. +CHAPTER XII. Out of the Frying-Pan into the Fire. +CHAPTER XIII. Strange Faces—Dare-Devil O'Driscol Aroused +CHAPTER XIV. State of the Country +CHARTER XV. Scene in a Parsonage—Anti-Tithe Ringleader. +CHAPTER XVI. Massacre of Carrickshock +CHAPTER XVII. Midnight Court of Justice +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 374— the Priest Interfered, and Prevented A Conflict + +Page 421— Just Trust Yourself to Me + +Page 445— Alarmed at the Appearance of a Lawless Whiteboy + +Destruction of the Castle + + + + +The Emigrants Of Ahadarra +CHAPTER I. A strong Farmer's Establishment and Family. +CHAPTER II. Gerald Cavanagh and his Family +CHAPTER III. Jemmy Burke Refuses to be, Made a Fool Of +CHAPTER IV. A Poteen Still-House at Midnight—Its Inmates. +CHAPTER V. Who Robbed Jemmy Burke? +CHAPTEE VI. Nanny Peety looks mysterious +CHAPTER VII. The Spinster's Kemp. +CHAPTER VIII. Anonymous Letter with a Name to It +CHAPTER IX. A Little Polities, Much Friendship, and Some Mystery +CHAPTER X. More of the Hycy Correspondence +CHAPTEE XI. Death of a Virtuous Mother. +CHAPTER XII. Hycy Concerts a Plot and is urged to Marry. +CHAPTER XIII. Mrs. M'Mahon's Funeral. +CHAPTER XIV. Mysterious Letter +CHAPTER XV. State of the Country +CHAPTER XVI. A Spar Between Kate and Philip Hogan +CHAPTER XVII. Interview between Hycy and Finigan +CHAPTER XVIII. A Family Dialogue +CHAPTER XIX. Bryan Bribed—is Rejected by Kathleen. +CHAPTER XX. M'Mahon is Denounced from the Altar +CHAPTER XXI. Thomas M'Mahon is forced to determine on Emigration. +CHAPTER XII. Mystery Among the Hogans +CHAPTER XXIII. Harry Clinton's Benevolence Defeated +CHAPTER XXIV. Thoughts on Our Country and Our Countrymen +CHAPTER XXV. The Old Places—Death of a Patriarch. +CHAPTEE XXVI. Containing a Variety of Matters. +CHAPTER XXVII. Conclusion. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 403—Peety Dhu Turned Towards the House + +Page 603— Country Where I'd Not See These Ould Hills + +Page 623— I Must Leave You—I Must Go + +Page 635— Hycy Received the Money, Set Spurs to his Horse + + + + +Ned M'Keown + +INTRODUCTION. + +NED M'KEOWN. + +THE THREE TASKS. + +SHANE FADH'S WEDDING. + +LARRY M'FARLAND'S WAKE. + +THE BATTLE OF THE FACTIONS. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 656— Bringing Home "graceless Ned," + +Age 676— Throw It over Your Left Shoulder + +Page 693— How he Kept his Sate So Long Has Puzzled Me + +Page 713— 'Why, Larry,' Says He, 'how Did You Get In' + +Page 725— The Man Who Could Hit That Could Hit Anything + + + + +The Station + +THE STATION. + +THE PARTY FIGHT AND FUNERAL. + +THE LOUGH DERG PILGRIM. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 756— They Set Off, Whip and Spur, at Full Speed + +Page 763— Usually Stood, Shaking at Us his Rod + +Page 818— In This Trim Did I Return to My Friends + + + + +The Hedge School + +THE HEDGE SCHOOL. + +THE MIDNIGHT MASS. + +THE DONAGH; OR, THE HORSE STEALERS. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 831— The Findramore Boys Have Sacked You at Last + +Page 886— Upon the Very Spot Where he Had Shot His Rival + +Page 899— Have I Murdhered My Daughter? + + + + +Phil Purcel, The Pig-Driver + +PHIL PURCEL, THE PIG-DRIVER. + +THE GEOGRAPHY OF AN IRISH OATH. + +THE LIANHAN SHEE. +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 911— These Be Not Hirish Pigs at Oll + +Page 919— A Rueful Blank Expression in his Visage + +Page 975— Who's There?—What Are You?—Speak! + + + + +Going To Maynooth +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 985— You're a Fool, Misther O'Shaughnessy! + + + + +The Poor Scholar +List of Illustrations + +Frontispiece + +Titlepage + +Page 1099— Received a Rather Vigorous Thwack on the Ear + + + + +The Black Prophet + +CHAPTER I. — Glendhu, or the Black Glen; Scene of Domestic Affection. + +CHAPTER II. — The Black Prophet Prophesies. + +CHAPTER III. — A Family on the Decline—Omens. + +CHAPTER IV. — A Dance, and Double Discovery. + +CHAPTER V. — The Black Prophet is Startled by a Black Prophecy. + +CHAPTER VI. — A Rustic Miser and His Establishment + +CHAPTER VII. — A Panorama of Misery. + +CHAPTER VIII. — A Middle Man and Magistrate—Master and Man. + +CHAPTER IX. — Meeting of Strangers—Mysterious Dialogue. + +CHAPTER X. — The Black Prophet makes a Disclosure. + +CHAPTER XI. — Pity and Remorse. + +CHAPTER XII. — Famine, Death, and Sorrow. + +CHAPTER XIII. — Sarah's Defence of a Murderer. + +CHAPTEE XIV. — A Middleman Magistrate of the Old School, and his Clerk. + +CHAPTER XV. — A Plot and a Prophecy. + +CHAPTER XVI. — Mysterious Disappearance of the Tobacco-box. + +CHAPTER XVII. — National Calamity—Sarah in Love and Sorrow. + +CHAPTER XVIII. — Love Wins the Race from Profligacy. + +CHAPTER XIX. — Hanlon Secures the Tobacco-box.—Strange Scene + +CHAPTER XX. — Tumults—Confessions of Murder. + +CHAPTEE XXI. — Condy Datton goes to Prison. + +CHAPTER XXII. — Re-appearance of the Box—Friendly Dialogue + +CHAPTER XXIII. — Darby in Danger—Nature Triumphs. + +CHAPTER XXIV. — Rivalry. + +CHAPTEE XXV. — Sarah Without Hope. + +CHAPTER XXVI. — The Pedlar Runs a Close Risk of the Stocks. + +CHAPTER XXVII. — Sarah Ill—Mave Again, Heroic. + +CHAPTER XXVIII. — Double Treachery. + +CHAPTER XXIX. — A Picture of the Present—Sarah Breaks her Word. + +CHAPTER XXX. — Self-sacrifice—Villany + +CHAPTER XXXI. — A Double Trial—Retributive Justice. + +CHAPTER XXXII. — Conclusion. +List of Illustrations + +Page 785— "It's False," Replied the Young Fellow + +Page 807— Tom's Clutches Were Again at his Throat + +Page 834— The Prophet's Brow Darkened + +Page 847— I'll Tell You Nothing About It + +Page 853— His Eye, Like That of His Father, When Enraged + +Page 913— I'll Have Nothing to Do With This Robbery + + + + +Phelim Otoole's Courtship + +PHELIM O'TOOLE'S COURTSHIP. + +WILDGOOSE LODGE + +TUBBER DERG; Or, THE RED WELL. + +NEAL MALONE. + +ART MAGUIRE; OR, THE BROKEN PLEDGE +List of Illustrations + +Page Wg939— By This Sacred An' Holy Book of God + +Page Am994— At Length Margaret Spoke + +Page Am1018— They Immediately Expelled Him + +Page Am1019— There's a Sleep That Nobody Wakens From + + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Stories And Tales Of The Irish, by William Carleton + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES AND TALES OF THE IRISH *** + +***** This file should be named 28896-8.txt or 28896-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/8/9/28896/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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