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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54258 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54258)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1, No. 16,
-October 17, 1840, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1, No. 16, October 17, 1840
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: February 28, 2017 [EBook #54258]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brownfox and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
-images generously made available by JSTOR www.jstor.org)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL.
-
- NUMBER 16. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1840. VOLUME I.
-
-[Illustration: THE CASTLE AND LAKE OF INCHIQUIN, COUNTY OF CLARE.]
-
-Connemara itself, now so celebrated for its lakes and mountains, was not
-less unknown a few years since than the greater portion of the county
-of Clare. Without roads, or houses of entertainment for travellers, its
-magnificent coast and other scenery were necessarily unvisited by the
-pleasure tourists, and but little appreciated even by their inhabitants
-themselves. But Clare can no longer be said to be an unvisited district:
-the recent formation of roads has opened to observation many features of
-interest previously inaccessible to the traveller, and its singular coast
-scenery--the most sublimely magnificent in the British islands, if not in
-Europe--has at least been made known to the public by topographical and
-scientific explorers--it has become an attractive locality to artists and
-pleasure tourists, and will doubtless be visited by increasing numbers of
-such persons in each successive year.
-
-There is however as yet in this county too great a deficiency in the
-number of respectable houses of entertainment suited to the habits
-of pleasure tourists; for though the wealthier and more educated
-classes in the British empire are becoming daily a more travelling and
-picturesque-hunting genus, they will not be content to live on fine
-scenery, but must have food for the body as well as for the mind; and
-truly they must be enthusiastic lovers of the picturesque, who, to
-gratify their taste, will subject themselves to the vicissitudes of such
-an uncertain climate as ours, without the certainty of such consoling
-comforts as are afforded in a clean and comfortable inn.
-
-Yet we do not despair of seeing this want soon supplied. Wherever there
-is a demand for a commodity it will not be long wanting; and the people
-of Clare are too sagacious not to perceive, however slowly, the practical
-wisdom of holding out every inducement of this kind to those who might
-be disposed to visit them and spend their money among them. The first
-step necessary, however, to produce such results in any little frequented
-district, is to make its objects of interest known to the public by the
-pencil and the pen--the rest will follow in due course; and our best
-efforts, such as they are, shall not be unexerted towards effecting such
-an important good as well for Clare as for many other as yet little known
-localities of our country.
-
-Clare is indeed on many accounts deserving of greater attention than
-it has hitherto received. It is a county rich in attractions for the
-geologist and naturalist, and interesting in the highest degree to
-the lovers of the picturesque. With a surface singularly broken and
-diversified, full of mountains, hills, lakes, and rivers, dotted all over
-with every class of ancient remains, its scenery is peculiarly Irish, and
-though of a somewhat melancholy aspect, it is never wanting in a poetic
-and historic interest. Such a district is not indeed exactly suited to
-the tastes of the common scenery-hunter, for it possesses but little of
-that woody and artificially adorned scenery which he requires, and can
-alone enjoy; and hence it has usually been described by tourists and
-topographers with a coldness which shows how little its peculiarities had
-impressed their feelings, and how incompetent they were to communicate to
-others a just estimate of its character. Let us take as an example the
-notice given by the writers of Lewis’s Topographical Dictionary, of one
-of the Clare beauties of which the natives are most proud--the caverns
-called the To-meens or To-mines, near Kiltanan:--
-
-“At Kiltanan is a succession of limestone caverns, through which a
-rivulet takes its course: these are much visited in summer; many
-petrified shells are found in the limestone, some of which are nearly
-perfect, and--_very curious_!”
-
-This it must be confessed is cold enough; but the description of the same
-locality given by our friend the author of the Guide through Ireland, is,
-as our readers will see, not a whit warmer. It is as follows:--
-
-“A mile from Tulla is Kiltanan, the handsome residence of James Moloney,
-Esq.; and in addition to the pleasure of a well-kept residence, in a
-naked and sadly neglected country, _some interest_ is excited by the
-subterraneous course of the rivulet called the To-meens, which waters
-this demesne!”
-
-Now, would any person be induced by such descriptions as those to
-visit the said To-meens? We suspect not. But hear with what delight a
-native writer of this county actually revels in a description of these
-remarkable caves:--
-
-“About a mile N. W. of Tulla lies the river of Kiltanan, and Milltown,
-famous for its ever-amazing and elegant subterraneous curiosities,
-called the To-mines: they form a part of the river, midway between
-Kiltanan House and the Castle of Milltown, extending under ground for a
-space, which (from its invisible winding banks and crystal meanders) may
-reasonably be computed a quarter of an English mile: they are vaulted,
-and sheltered with a solid rock, transmitting a sufficiency of light and
-air by intermediate chinks and apertures gradually offering at certain
-intervals.
-
-At each side of this Elysian-like river are roomy passages or rather
-apartments, freely communicating one with the other, and scarcely
-obvious to any inclemency whatsoever: they are likewise decorated with
-a sandy beach level along to walk on, whilst the curious spectators are
-crowned with garlands of ivy, hanging in triplets from the impending
-rocky shades: numbers of the sporting game, the wily fox, the wary hare,
-and the multiplying rabbit, &c. merrily parading in view of their own
-singular and various absconding haunts and retreats. Ingenious nature
-thus entertains her welcome visitants from the entrance to the extremity
-of the To-mines. Lo! when parting liberally rewarded, and amply satisfied
-with such egregious and wonderful exhibitions, a bridge or arch over
-the same river, curiously composed of solid stone, appears to them as a
-lively representation of an artificial one.
-
-What can the much boasted of Giants’ Causeway, in the north of this
-kingdom, produce but scenes of horror and obscurity? whilst the To-mines
-of the barony of Tulla, like unto the artificial beauties of the Latomi
-of Syracuse, freely exhibit the most natural and pleasing appearances.
-
-Let the literati and curious, after taking the continental tour of
-Europe, praise and even write of the imaginary beauties and natural
-curiosities of Italy and Switzerland--pray, let them also, on a cool
-reflection, repair to the county of Clare, view and touch upon the truly
-subterraneous and really unartificial curiosities of the To-mines: they
-will impartially admit that these naturally enchanting rarities may be
-freely visited, and generously treated of, by the ingenious and learned
-of this and after ages.”--_A Short Tour, or an Impartial and Accurate
-Description of the County of Clare, by John Lloyd, Ennis; 1780._
-
-Excellent. Mr Lloyd! Your style is indeed a _little_ peculiar, and
-what some would think extravagant and grotesque; but you describe with
-feeling, and we shall certainly visit your To-meens next summer. But
-in the mean time we must notice another Clare lion, of which you have
-given us no account--the lake and castle, which we have drawn as an
-embellishment to our present number. This is a locality respecting the
-beauty of which there can be no difference of opinion: it has all the
-circumstances which give interest to a landscape--wood, water, lake,
-mountain, and ancient ruin--and the effect of their combination is
-singularly enhanced by the surprise created by the appearance of a scene
-so delightful in a district wild, rocky, and unimproved.
-
-The lake of Inchiquin is situated in the parish of Kilnaboy, barony
-of Inchiquin, and is about two miles and a half in circumference. It
-is bounded on its western side by a range of hills rugged but richly
-wooded, and rising abruptly from its margin; and on its southern side,
-the domain surrounding the residence of the Burton family, and the
-ornamental grounds of Adelphi, the residence of W. and F. Fitzgerald,
-Esqrs. contribute to adorn a scene of remarkable natural beauty. One
-solitary island alone appears on its surface, unless that be ranked as
-one on which the ancient castle is situated, and which may originally
-have been insulated, though no longer so. The castle, which is situated
-at the northern side of the lake, though greatly dilapidated, is still a
-picturesque and interesting ruin, consisting of the remains of a barbican
-tower, keep, and old mansion-house attached to it; and its situation on
-a rocky island or peninsula standing out in the smooth water, with its
-grey walls relieved by the dark masses of the wooded hills behind, is
-eminently striking and imposing.
-
-It is from this island or peninsula that the barony takes its name; and
-from this also the chief of the O’Briens, the Marquis of Thomond, derives
-his more ancient title of Earl of Inchiquin. For a long period it was the
-principal residence of the chiefs of this great family, to one of whom it
-unquestionably owes its origin; but we have not been able to ascertain
-with certainty the name of its founder, or date of its erection. There
-is, however, every reason to ascribe its foundation to Tiege O’Brien,
-king or lord of Thomond, who died, according to the Annals of the Four
-Masters, in 1466, as he is the first of his name on record who made
-it his residence, and as its architectural features are most strictly
-characteristic of the style of the age in which he flourished.
-
-But though the erection of this castle is properly to be ascribed to the
-O’Briens, it is a great error in the writers of Lewis’s Topographical
-Dictionary to state that it has been from time immemorial the property
-of the O’Brien family. The locality, as its name indicates, and as
-history and tradition assure us, was the ancient residence of the
-O’Quins, a family of equal antiquity with the O’Briens, and of the same
-stock--namely, the Dal Cas or descendants of Cormac Cas, the son of
-Ollioll Oluim, who was monarch of Ireland in the beginning of the third
-century. The O’Quins were chiefs of the clan called Hy-Ifearnan, and
-their possessions were bounded by those of the O’Deas on the east, the
-O’Loughlins and O’Conors (Corcomroe) on the west and north-west, the
-O’Hynes on the north, and the O’Hehirs on the south. At what period or
-from what circumstance the O’Quins lost their ancient patrimony, we have
-not been able to discover; but it would appear to have been about the
-middle or perhaps close of the fourteenth century, to which time their
-genealogy as chiefs is recorded in that invaluable repository of Irish
-family history, the Book of Mac Firbis; and it would seem most probable
-that they were transplanted by the O’Briens about this period to the
-county of Limerick, in which they are subsequently found. Their removal
-is indeed differently accounted for in a popular legend still current in
-the barony, and which, according to our recollections of it, is to the
-following effect:
-
-In the youth of the last O’Quin of Inchiquin, he saw from his residence a
-number of swans of singular beauty frequenting the west side of the lake,
-and wandering along its shore. Wishing, if possible, to possess himself
-of one of them, he was in the habit of concealing himself among the rocks
-and woods in its vicinity, hoping that he might take them by surprise,
-and he was at length successful: one of them became his captive, and was
-secretly carried to his residence, when, to his amazement and delight,
-throwing off her downy covering, she assumed the form of a beautiful
-woman, and shortly after became his wife. Previous to the marriage,
-however, she imposed certain conditions on her lover as the price of
-her consent, to which he willingly agreed. These were--first, that
-their union should be kept secret; secondly, that he should not receive
-any visitors at his mansion, particularly those of the O’Briens; and,
-lastly, that he should wholly abstain from gambling. For some years these
-conditions were strictly adhered to; they lived in happiness together,
-and two children blessed their union. But it happened unfortunately
-at length that at the neighbouring races at Cood he fell in with the
-O’Briens, by whom he was hospitably treated; and being induced to indulge
-in too much wine, he forgot his engagements to his wife, and invited
-them to his residence on a certain day to repay their kindness to him.
-His wife heard of this invitation with sadness, but proceeded without
-remonstrance to prepare the feast for his guests. But she did not grace
-it with her presence; and when the company had assembled, and were
-engaged in merriment, she withdrew to her own apartment, to which she
-called her children, and after embracing them in a paroxysm of grief,
-which they could not account for, she took her original feathery covering
-from a press in which it had been kept, arrayed herself in it, and
-assuming her pristine shape, plunged into the lake, and was never seen
-afterwards. On the same night, O’Quin, again forgetful of the promises
-he had made her, engaged in play with Tiege-an-Cood O’Brien, the most
-distinguished of his guests, and lost the whole of his property.
-
-The reader is at liberty to believe as much or as little of this story
-as he pleases: but at all events the legend is valuable in a historical
-point of view, as indicating the period when the lands of Inchiquin
-passed into the hands of the O’Brien family; nor is it wholly improbable
-that under the guise of a wild legend may be concealed some indistinct
-tradition of such a real occurrence as that O’Quin made a union long kept
-hidden, with a person of inferior station, and that its discovery drew
-down upon his head the vengeance of his proud compeers, and led to their
-removal to another district of the chiefs of the clan Hy-Ifearnan.
-
-Be this, however, as it may, the ancient family of O’Quin--more fortunate
-than most other Irish families of noble origin--has never sunk into
-obscurity, or been without a representative of aristocratic rank; and it
-can at present boast of a representative among the nobility of the empire
-in the person of its justly presumed chief, the noble Earl of Dunraven.
-
-We have thus slightly touched on the history of the O’Quins, not only as
-it was connected with that of the locality which we had to illustrate,
-but also as necessary to correct a great error into which Burke and other
-modern genealogists have fallen in their accounts of the origin of the
-name and descent of this family. Thus it is stated by those writers that
-“the surname is derived from Con Ceadcaha, or Con of the hundred battles,
-monarch of Ireland in the second century, whose grandson was called Cuinn
-(rather O’Cuinn), that is, the descendant of Con, when he wielded the
-sceptre in 254.” But those writers should not have been ignorant that
-Con, which literally signifies the powerful, was a common name in Ireland
-both in Christian and Pagan times; and still more, they should not have
-been ignorant of the important fact for a genealogist, that the use of
-surnames was unknown in Ireland till the close of the tenth century. The
-story is altogether a silly fiction; and as the real origin of the family
-appears to be now unknown even to themselves, and as their pedigree has
-never as yet been printed, we are tempted to give it in an English form,
-translated from the original, preserved in the books of Lecan and Duald
-Mac Firbis:--
-
- “Conor O’Quinn,
- the son of Donell,
-
- ---- Donell,
-
- ---- Thomas,
-
- ---- Donell,
-
- ---- Donogh,
-
- ---- Giolla Seanain,
-
- ---- Donogh,
-
- ---- Morough,
-
- ---- Corc, who was the tutor of Murtogh O’Brien (the great
- grandson of Brian Boru),
-
- ---- Feidhleachair,
-
- ---- Niall, who was henchman to Morough, the son of Brian
- Boru, whose fate he shared in the battle of Clontarf,
-
- ---- Conn, from whom the name is derived.”
-
-The pedigree is carried up from this Con through eighteen generations to
-Cormac Cas, the son of Ollioll Oluim, and the common progenitor of all
-the tribes of the Dal-Cassians.
-
-In this notice we may add, as an evidence of the ancient rank of the
-family, that the Irish annalists at the year 1188 record the death of
-Edaoin, the daughter of O’Quin, Queen of Munster, on her pilgrimage at
-Derry in that year. She appears to have been the wife of Mortogh O’Brien,
-who died without issue in 1168, and was succeeded by his brother Donald
-More, the last king of all Munster.
-
-The Castle of Inchiquin is referred to in the Irish Annals as the
-residence of the chiefs of the O’Brien family, at the years 1542, 1559,
-and 1573; but the notices contain no interest to the general reader.
-
- P.
-
-
-
-
-ANCIENT IRISH LITERATURE--No. II.
-
-
-In a preceding paper under this heading we lately gave a sample from the
-lighter class of native Irish poetry of the seventeenth century, namely,
-“The Woman of Three Cows.” We have now to present our readers with a
-specimen of a more serious character, belonging to the same age--an Elegy
-on the death of the Tironian and Tirconnellian princes, who having fled
-with others from Ireland in the year 1607, and afterwards dying at Rome,
-were there interred on St Peter’s Hill, in one grave.
-
-The poem is the production of O’Donnell’s bard, Owen Roe Mac an Bhaird,
-or Ward, who accompanied the family in their flight, and is addressed
-to Nuala, O’Donnell’s sister, who was also one of the fugitives. As the
-circumstances connected with the flight of the Northern Earls, and which
-led to the subsequent confiscation of the six Ulster Counties by James
-I., may not be immediately in the recollection of many of our readers, it
-may be proper briefly to state, that their departure from this country
-was caused by the discovery of a letter directed to Sir William Ussher,
-Clerk of the Council, which was dropped in the Council-chamber on the
-7th of May, and which accused the Northern chieftains generally of a
-conspiracy to overthrow the government. Whether this charge was founded
-in truth or not, it is not necessary for us to express any opinion; but
-as in some degree necessary to the illustration of the poem, and as
-an interesting piece of hitherto unpublished literature in itself, we
-shall here, as a preface to the poem, extract the following account of
-the flight of the Northern Earls, as recorded in the Annals of the Four
-Masters, and translated by Mr O’Donovan:--
-
-“Maguire (Cuconnaught) and Donogh, son of Mahon, who was son of the
-Bishop O’Brien, sailed in a ship to Ireland, and put in at the harbour
-of Swilly. They then took with them from Ireland the Earl O’Neill (Hugh,
-son of Ferdoragh) and the Earl O’Donnell (Rory, son of Hugh, who was son
-of Magnus) and many others of the nobles of the province of Ulster. These
-are the persons who went with O’Neill, namely, his Countess, Catherina,
-daughter of Magennis, and her three sons; Hugh, the Baron, John and
-Brian; Art Oge, son of Cormac, who was son of the Baron; Ferdoragh, son
-of Con, who was son of O’Neill; Hugh Oge, son of Brian, who was son of
-Art O’Neill; and many others of his most intimate friends. These were
-they who went with the Earl O’Donnell, namely, Caffer, his brother, with
-his sister Nuala; Hugh, the Earl’s child, wanting three weeks of being
-one year old; Rose, daughter of O’Doherty and wife of Caffer, with her
-son Hugh, aged two years and three months; his (Rory’s) brother son
-Donnell Oge, son of Donnell, Naghtan son of Calvach, who was son of
-Donogh Cairbreach O’Donnell, and many others of his intimate friends.
-They embarked on the Festival of the Holy Cross in Autumn.
-
-This was a distinguished company; and it is certain that the sea has not
-borne and the wind has not wafted in modern times a number of persons
-in one ship more eminent, illustrious or noble, in point of genealogy,
-heroic deeds, valour, feats of arms, and brave achievements, than they.
-Would that God had but permitted them to remain in their patrimonial
-inheritances until the children should arrive at the age of manhood! Woe
-to the heart that meditated, woe to the mind that conceived, woe to the
-council that recommended the project of this expedition, without knowing
-whether they should, to the end of their lives, be able to return to
-their native principalities or patrimonies.”
-
-
-
-
-AN ELEGY ON THE TIRONIAN AND TIRCONNELLIAN PRINCES BURIED AT ROME.
-
-“A bhean fuair faill air an ffeart!”
-
-
- O, Woman of the Piercing Wail,
- Who mournest o’er yon mound of clay
- With sigh and groan,
- Would God thou wert among the Gael!
- Thou wouldst not then from day to day
- Weep thus alone.
- ’Twere long before, around a grave
- In green Tirconnell, one could find
- This loneliness;
- Near where Beann-Boirche’s banners wave
- Such grief as thine could ne’er have pined
- Companionless.
-
- Beside the wave, in Donegall,
- In Antrim’s glens, or fair Dromore,
- Or Killilee,
- Or where the sunny waters fall,
- At Assaroe, near Erna’s shore,
- This could not be.
- On Derry’s plains--in rich Drumclieff--
- Throughout Armagh the Great, renowned
- In olden years,
- No day could pass but Woman’s grief
- Would rain upon the burial-ground
- Fresh floods of tears!
-
- O, no!--from Shannon, Boyne, and Suir,
- From high Dunluce’s castle-walls,
- From Lissadill,
- Would flock alike both rich and poor,
- One wail would rise from Cruachan’s halls
- To Tara’s hill;
- And some would come from Barrow-side,
- And many a maid would leave her home
- On Leitrim’s plains,
- And by melodious Banna’s tide,
- And by the Mourne and Erne, to come
- And swell thy strains!
-
- O, horses’ hoofs would trample down
- The Mount whereon the martyr-saint[1]
- Was crucified.
- From glen and hill, from plain and town,
- One loud lament, one thrilling plaint,
- Would echo wide.
- There would not soon be found, I ween,
- One foot of ground among those bands
- For museful thought,
- So many shriekers of the _keen_[2]
- Would cry aloud, and clap their hands,
- All woe-distraught!
-
- Two princes of the line of Conn
- Sleep in their cells of clay beside
- O’Donnell Roe:
- Three royal youths, alas! are gone,
- Who lived for Erin’s weal, but died
- For Erin’s woe!
- Ah! could the men of Ireland read
- The names these noteless burial-stones
- Display to view
- Their wounded hearts afresh would bleed.
- Their tears gush forth again, their groans
- Resound anew!
-
- The youths whose relics moulder here
- Were sprung from Hugh, high Prince and Lord
- Of Aileach’s lands;
- Thy noble brothers, justly dear,
- Thy nephew, long to be deplored
- By Ulster’s bands.
- Theirs were not souls wherein dull Time
- Could domicile Decay or house
- Decrepitude!
- They passed from Earth ere Manhood’s prime,
- Ere years had power to dim their brows
- Or chill their blood.
-
- And who can marvel o’er thy grief,
- Or who can blame thy flowing tears,
- That knows their source?
- O’Donnell, Dunnasava’s chief,
- Cut off amid his vernal years,
- Lies here a corse
- Beside his brother Cathbar, whom
- Tirconnell of the Helmets mourns
- In deep despair--
- For valour, truth, and comely bloom,
- For all that greatens and adorns,
- A peerless pair.
-
- O, had these twain, and he, the third,
- The Lord of Mourne, O’Niall’s son,
- Their mate in death--
- A prince in look, in deed, and word--
- Had these three heroes yielded on
- The field their breath,
- O, had they fallen on Criffan’s plain,
- There would not be a town or clan
- From shore to sea,
- But would with shrieks bewail the Slain,
- Or chant aloud the exulting _rann_[3]
- Of jubilee!
-
- When high the shout of battle rose,
- On fields where Freedom’s torch still burned
- Through Erin’s gloom,
- If one, if barely one of those
- Were slain, all Ulster would have mourned
- The hero’s doom!
- If at Athboy, where hosts of brave
- Ulidian horsemen sank beneath
- The shock of spears,
- Young Hugh O’Neill had found a grave,
- Long must the North have wept his death
- With heart-wrung tears!
-
- If on the day of Ballach-myre
- The Lord of Mourne had met, thus young,
- A warrior’s fate,
- In vain would such as thou desire
- To mourn, alone, the champion sprung
- From Niall the Great!
- No marvel this--for all the Dead,
- Heaped on the field, pile over pile,
- At Mullach-brack,
- Were scarce an _eric_[4] for his head,
- If Death had stayed his footsteps while
- On victory’s track!
-
- If on the Day of Hostages
- The fruit had from the parent bough
- Been rudely torn
- In sight of Munster’s bands--Mac-Nee’s
- Such blow the blood of Conn, I trow,
- Could ill have borne.
- If on the day of Ballach-boy
- Some arm had laid, by foul surprise,
- The chieftain low,
- Even our victorious shout of joy
- Would soon give place to rueful cries
- And groans of woe!
-
- If on the day the Saxon host
- Were forced to fly--a day so great
- For Ashanee[5]--
- The Chief had been untimely lost,
- Our conquering troops should moderate
- Their mirthful glee.
- There would not lack on Lifford’s day,
- From Galway, from the glens of Boyle,
- From Limerick’s towers,
- A marshalled file, a long array.
- Of mourners to bedew the soil
- With tears in showers!
-
- If on the day a sterner fate
- Compelled his flight from Athenree,
- His blood had flowed,
- What numbers all disconsolate
- Would come unasked, and share with thee
- Affliction’s load!
- If Derry’s crimson field had seen
- His life-blood offered up, though ’twere
- On Victory’s shrine,
- A thousand cries would swell the _keen_,
- A thousand voices of despair
- Would echo thine!
-
- O, had the fierce Dalcassian swarm
- That bloody night on Fergus’ banks,
- But slain our Chief,
- When rose his camp in wild alarm--
- How would the triumph of his ranks
- Be dashed with grief!
- How would the troops of Murbach mourn
- If on the Curlew Mountains’ day,
- Which England rued,
- Some Saxon hand had left them lorn,
- By shedding there, amid the fray,
- Their prince’s blood!
-
- Red would have been our warriors’ eyes
- Had Roderick found on Sligo’s field
- A gory grave,
- No Northern Chief would soon arise
- So sage to guide, so strong to shield,
- So swift to save.
- Long would Leith-Cuinn have wept, if Hugh
- Had met the death he oft had dealt
- Among the foe;
- But, had our Roderick fallen too,
- All Erin must, alas! have felt
- The deadly blow!
-
- What do I say? Ah, woe is me!
- Already we bewail in vain
- Their fatal fall:
- And Erin, once the Great and Free,
- Now vainly mourns her breakless chain,
- And iron thrall!
- Then, daughter of O’Donnell! dry
- Thine overflowing eyes, and turn
- Thy heart aside!
- For Adam’s race is born to die,
- And sternly the sepulchral urn
- Mocks human pride!
-
- Look not, nor sigh, for earthly throne,
- Nor place thy trust in arm of clay--
- But on thy knees
- Uplift thy soul to GOD alone,
- For all things go their destined way
- As He decrees.
- Embrace the faithful Crucifix,
- And seek the path of pain and prayer
- Thy Saviour trod;
- Nor let thy spirit intermix
- With earthly hope and worldly care
- Its groans to GOD!
-
- And Thou, O mighty Lord! whose ways
- Are far above our feeble minds
- To understand,
- Sustain us in these doleful days,
- And render light the chain that binds
- Our fallen land!
- Look down upon our dreary state,
- And through the ages that may still
- Roll sadly on,
- Watch Thou o’er hapless Erin’s fate,
- And shield at least from darker ill
- The blood of Conn!
-
- M.
-
-[1] St Peter. This passage is not exactly a blunder, though at first it
-may seem one: the poet supposes the grave itself transferred to Ireland,
-and he naturally includes in the transference the whole of the immediate
-locality around the grave.--TR.
-
-[2] _Caoine._
-
-[3] Song.
-
-[4] A compensation or fine.
-
-[5] Ballyshannon.
-
-
-
-
-BOB PENTLAND, OR THE GAUGER OUTWITTED.
-
-BY WILLIAM CARLETON.
-
-
-That the Irish are a ready-witted people, is a fact to the truth of which
-testimony has been amply borne both by their friends and enemies. Many
-causes might be brought forward to account for this questionable gift,
-if it were our intention to be philosophical; but as the matter has been
-so generally conceded, it would be but a waste of logic to prove to the
-world that which the world cares not about, beyond the mere fact that
-it is so. On this or any other topic one illustration is worth twenty
-arguments, and, accordingly, instead of broaching a theory we shall
-relate a story.
-
-Behind the hill or rather mountain of Altnaveenan lies one of those deep
-and almost precipitous vallies, on which the practised eye of an illicit
-distiller would dwell with delight, as a topography not likely to be
-invaded by the unhallowed feet of the gauger and his red-coats. In point
-of fact, the spot we speak of was from its peculiarly isolated situation
-nearly invisible, unless to such as came very close to it. Being so
-completely hemmed in and concealed by the round and angular projections
-of the mountain hills, you could never dream of its existence at all,
-until you came upon the very verge of the little precipitous gorge which
-led into it. This advantage of position was not, however, its only one.
-It is true indeed that the moment you had entered it, all possibility of
-its being applied to the purposes of distillation at once vanished, and
-you consequently could not help exclaiming, “what a pity that so safe
-and beautiful a nook should have not a single spot on which to erect a
-still-house, or rather on which to raise a sufficient stream of water
-to the elevation necessary for the process of distilling.” If a gauger
-actually came to the little chasm, and cast his scrutinizing eye over it,
-he would immediately perceive that the erection of a private still in
-such a place was a piece of folly not generally to be found in the plans
-of those who have recourse to such practices.
-
-This absence, however, of the requisite conveniences was only apparent,
-not real. To the right, about one hundred yards above the entrance to
-it, ran a ledge of rocks, some fifty feet high, or so. Along their lower
-brows, near the ground, grew thick matted masses of long heath, which
-covered the entrance to a cave about as large and as high as an ordinary
-farm-house. Through a series of small fissures in the rocks which formed
-its roof, descended a stream of clear soft water, precisely in body and
-volume such as was actually required by the distiller; but, unless by
-lifting up this mass of heath, no human being could for a moment imagine
-that there existed any such grotto, or so unexpected and easy an entrance
-to it. Here there was a private still-house made by the hand of nature
-herself, such as no art or ingenuity of man could equal.
-
-Now it so happened that about the period we write of, there lived in our
-parish two individuals so antithetical to each other in their pursuits of
-life, that we question whether throughout all the instinctive antipathies
-of nature we could find any two animals more destructive of each other
-than the two we mean--to wit, Bob Pentland the gauger, and little George
-Steen the illicit distiller. Pentland was an old, stanch, well-trained
-fellow, of about fifty years or more, steady and sure, and with all the
-characteristic points of the high-bred gauger about him. He was a tallish
-man, thin but lathy, with a hooked nose that could scent the tread of a
-distiller with the keenness of a slew-hound; his dark eye was deep-set,
-circumspect, and roguish in its expression, and his shaggy brow seemed
-always to be engaged in calculating whereabouts his inveterate foe,
-little George Steen, that eternally blinked him, when almost in his very
-fangs, might then be distilling. To be brief, Pentland was proverbial for
-his sagacity and adroitness in detecting distillers, and little George
-was equally proverbial for having always baffled him, and that, too,
-sometimes under circumstances where escape seemed hopeless.
-
-The incidents which we are about to detail occurred at that period of
-time when the collective wisdom of our legislators thought it advisable
-to impose a fine upon the whole townland in which the still head and
-worm might be found; thus opening a door for knavery and fraud, and,
-as it proved in most cases, rendering the innocent as liable to suffer
-for an offence they never contemplated as the guilty who planned and
-perpetrated it. The consequence of such a law was, that still-houses were
-always certain to be erected either at the very verge of the neighbouring
-districts, or as near them as the circumstances of convenience and
-situation would permit. The moment of course that the hue-and-cry of the
-gauger and his myrmidons was heard upon the wind, the whole apparatus was
-immediately heaved over the _mering_ to the next townland, from which
-the fine imposed by parliament was necessarily raised, whilst the crafty
-and offending district actually escaped. The state of society generated
-by such a blundering and barbarous statute as this, was dreadful. In
-the course of a short time, reprisals, law-suits, battles, murders, and
-massacres, multiplied to such an extent throughout the whole country,
-that the sapient senators who occasioned such commotion were compelled
-to repeal their own act as soon as they found how it worked. Necessity,
-together with being the mother of invention, is also the cause of many an
-accidental discovery. Pentland had been so frequently defeated by little
-George, that he vowed never to rest until he had secured him; and George
-on the other hand frequently told him--for they were otherwise on the
-best terms--that he defied him, or as he himself more quaintly expressed
-it, “that he defied the devil, the world, and Bob Pentland.” The latter,
-however, was a very sore thorn in his side, and drove him from place to
-place, and from one haunt to another, until he began to despair of being
-able any longer to outwit him, or to find within the parish any spot at
-all suitable for distillation with which Pentland was not acquainted. In
-this state stood matters between them, when George fortunately discovered
-at the hip of Altnaveenan hill the natural grotto we have just sketched
-so briefly. Now, George was a man, as we have already hinted, of great
-fertility of resources; but there existed in the same parish another
-distiller who outstripped him in that farsighted cunning which is so
-necessary in misleading or circumventing such a sharp-scented old hound
-as Pentland. This was little Mickey M’Quade, a short-necked squat little
-fellow with bow legs, who might be said rather to creep in his motion
-than to walk. George and Mickey were intimate friends, independently of
-their joint antipathy against the gauger, and, truth to tell, much of
-the mortification and many of the defeats which Pentland experienced at
-George’s hands, were, _sub rosa_, to be attributed to Mickey. George was
-a distiller from none of the motives which generally actuate others of
-that class. He was in truth an analytic philosopher--a natural chemist
-never out of some new experiment--and we have reason to think might have
-been the Kane or Faraday or Dalton of his day, had he only received a
-scientific education. Not so honest Mickey, who never troubled his head
-about an experiment, but only thought of making a good running, and
-defeating the gauger. The first thing of course that George did, was to
-consult Mickey, and both accordingly took a walk up to the scene of their
-future operations. On examining it, and fully perceiving its advantages,
-it might well be said that the look of exultation and triumph which
-passed between them was not unworthy of their respective characters.
-
-“This will do,” said George. “Eh--don’t you think we’ll put our finger in
-Pentland’s eye yet?” Mickey spat sagaciously over his beard, and after a
-second glance gave one grave grin which spoke volumes. “It’ll do,” said
-he; “but there’s one point to be got over that maybe you didn’t think of;
-an’ you know that half a blink, half a point, is enough for Pentland.”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“What do you intend to do with the smoke when the fire’s lit? There’ll
-be no keepin’ _that_ down. Let but Pentland see as much smoke risin’ as
-would come out of an ould woman’s dudeen, an’ he’d have us.”
-
-George started, and it was clear by the vexation and disappointment which
-were visible on his brow that unless this untoward circumstance could be
-managed, their whole plan was deranged, and the cave of no value.
-
-“What’s to be done?” he inquired of his cooler companion. “If we can’t
-get over this, we may bid good bye to it.”
-
-“Never mind,” said Mickey; “I’ll manage it, and _do_ Pentland still.”
-“Ay, but how?”
-
-“It’s no matter. Let us not lose a minute in settin’ to work. Lave
-the other thing to me; an’ if I don’t account for the smoke without
-discoverin’ the entrance to the still, I’ll give you lave to crop the
-ears off my head.”
-
-George knew the cool but steady self-confidence for which Mickey was
-remarkable, and accordingly, without any further interrogatory, they both
-proceeded to follow up their plan of operations.
-
-In those times when distillation might be truly considered as almost
-universal, it was customary for farmers to build their out-houses with
-secret chambers and other requisite partitions necessary for carrying it
-on. Several of them had private stores built between false walls, the
-entrance to which was only known to a few, and many of them had what
-were called _Malt-steeps_ sunk in hidden recesses and hollow gables, for
-the purpose of steeping the barley, and afterwards of turning and airing
-it, until it was sufficiently hard to be kiln-dried and ground. From the
-mill it was usually conveyed to the still-house upon what were termed
-_Slipes_, a kind of car that was made without wheels, in order the more
-easily to pass through morasses and bogs which no wheeled vehicle could
-encounter.
-
-In the course of a month or so, George and Mickey, aided by their
-friends, had all the apparatus of keeve, hogshead, &c., together with
-still head and worm, set up and in full work.
-
-“And now, Mickey,” inquired his companion, “how will you manage about
-the smoke? for you know that the two worst informers against a private
-distiller, barrin’ a _stag_, is a smoke by day an’ a fire by night.”
-
-“I know that,” replied Mickey; “an’ a rousin’ smoke we’ll have, for fraid
-a little puff wouldn’t do us. Come, now, an’ I’ll show you.”
-
-They both ascended to the top, where Mickey had closed all the open
-fissures of the roof with the exception of that which was directly over
-the fire of the still. This was at best not more than six inches in
-breadth and about twelve long. Over it he placed a piece of strong plate
-iron perforated with holes, and on this he had a fire of turf, beside
-which sat a little boy who acted as a vidette. The thing was simple but
-effective. Clamps of turf were at every side of them, and the boy was
-instructed, if the gauger, whom he well knew, ever appeared, to heap on
-fresh fuel, so as to increase the smoke in such a manner as to induce
-him to suppose that _all_ he saw of it proceeded merely from the fire
-before him. In fact, the smoke from the cave below was so completely
-identified with and lost in that which was emitted from the fire above,
-that no human being could penetrate the mystery, if not made previously
-acquainted with it. The writer of this saw it during the hottest process
-of distillation, and failed to make the discovery, although told that
-the still-house was within a circle of three hundred yards, the point
-he stood on being considered the centre. On more than one occasion has
-he absconded from home, and spent a whole night in the place, seized
-with that indescribable fascination which such a scene holds forth to
-youngsters, as well as from his irrepressible anxiety to hear the old
-stories and legends with the recital of which they generally pass the
-night.
-
-In this way, well provided against the gauger--indeed much better than
-our readers are yet aware of, as they shall understand by and bye--did
-George, Mickey, and their friends, proceed for the greater part of a
-winter without a single visit from Pentland. Several successful runnings
-had come off, which had of course turned out highly profitable, and
-they were just now preparing to commence their last, not only for the
-season, but the last they should ever work together, as George was
-making preparations to go early in the spring to America. Even this
-running was going on to their satisfaction, and the singlings had been
-thrown again into the still, from the worm of which projected the strong
-medicinal _first-shot_ as the doubling commenced--this last term meaning
-the spirit in its pure and finished state. On this occasion the two
-worthies were more than ordinarily anxious, and certainly doubled their
-usual precautions against a surprise, for they knew that Pentland’s
-visits resembled the pounces of a hawk or the springs of a tiger more
-than any thing else to which they could compare them. In this they were
-not disappointed. When the doubling was about half finished, he made
-his appearance, attended by a strong party of reluctant soldiers--for
-indeed it is due to the military to state that they never took delight
-in harassing the country people at the command of a keg-hunter, as they
-generally nicknamed the gauger. It had been arranged that the vidette
-at the iron plate should whistle a particular tune the moment that
-the gauger or a red-coat, or in fact any person whom he did not know,
-should appear. Accordingly, about eight o’clock in the morning they
-heard the little fellow in his highest key whistling up that well-known
-and very significant old Irish air called “Go to the devil an’ shake
-yourself”--which in this case was applied to the gauger in any thing but
-an allegorical sense.
-
-“Be the pins,” which was George’s usual oath, “be the pins, Mickey, it’s
-over with us--Pentland’s here, for there’s the sign.”
-
-Mickey paused for a moment and listened very gravely; then squirting out
-a tobacco spittle, “Take it aisy,” said he; “I have half a dozen fires
-about the hills, any one as like this as your right hand is to your left.
-I didn’t spare trouble, for I knew that if we’d get over this day, we’d
-be out of his power.”
-
-“Well, my good lad,” said Pentland, addressing the vidette, “what’s this
-fire for?”
-
-“What is it for, is it?”
-
-“Yes; if you don’t let me know instantly, I’ll blow your brains out,
-and get you hanged and transported afterwards.” This he said with a
-thundering voice, cocking a large horse pistol at the same time.
-
-“Why, sir,” said the boy, “it’s watchin’ a still I am; but be the hole o’
-my coat if you tell upon me, it’s broilin’ upon these coals I’ll be soon.”
-
-“Where is the still then? An’ the still-house, where is it?”
-
-“Oh, begorra, as to where the still or still-house is, they wouldn’t tell
-_me_ that.”
-
-“Why, sirra, didn’t you say this moment you were watching a still?”
-
-“I meant, sir,” replied the lad with a face that spoke of pure idiocy,
-“that it was the gauger I was watchin’, an’ I was to whistle upon my
-fingers to let the boy at that fire on the hill there above know that he
-was comin’.”
-
-“Who told you to do so?”
-
-“Little George, sir, an’ Mickey M’Quade.”
-
-“Ay, ay, right enough there, my lad--two of the most notorious schemers
-unhanged they are both. But now, like a good boy, tell me the truth, an’
-I’ll give you the price of a pair of shoes. Do you know where the still
-or still-house is? Because if you do, an’ won’t tell me, here are the
-soldiers at hand to make a prisoner of you; an’ if they do, all the world
-can’t prevent you from being hanged, drawn, and quartered.”
-
-“Oh, bad cess may seize the morsel o’ me knows that; but if you’ll give
-me the money, sir, I’ll tell you who can bring you to it, for he tould
-me yestherday mornin’ that he knew, an’ offered to bring me there last
-night, if I’d steal him a bottle that my mother keeps the holy water in
-at home, tal he’d put whisky in it.”
-
-“Well, my lad, who is this boy?”
-
-“Do you know Harry Neil, or Mankind, sir?”
-
-“I do, my good boy.”
-
-“Well, it’s a son of his, sir; an’ look, sir; do you see the smoke
-farthest up to the right, sir?”
-
-“To the right? Yes.”
-
-“Well, ’tis there, sir, that Darby Neil is watchin’; and he _says_ he
-knows.”
-
-“How long have you been watching here?”
-
-“This is only the third day, sir, for _me_; but the rest, them boys
-above, has been here a good while.”
-
-“Have you seen nobody stirring about the hills since you came?”
-
-“Only once, sir, yesterday, I seen two men having an empty sack or two,
-runnin’ across the hill there above.”
-
-At this moment the military came up, for he had himself run forward in
-advance of them, and he repeated the substance of his conversation with
-our friend the vidette. Upon examining the stolidity of his countenance,
-in which there certainly was a woful deficiency of meaning, they agreed
-among themselves that his appearance justified the truth of the story
-which he told the gauger, and upon being still further interrogated, they
-were confirmed that none but a stupid lout like himself would entrust to
-his keeping any secret worth knowing. They now separated themselves into
-as many detached parties as there were fires burning on the hills about
-them, the gauger himself resolving to make for that which Darby Neil had
-in his keeping, for he could not help thinking that the vidette’s story
-was too natural to be false. They were just in the act of separating
-themselves to pursue their different routes, when the lad said,
-
-“Look, sir! look, sir! bad scran be from me but there’s a still any way.
-Sure I often seen a still; that’s jist like the one that Philip Hogan the
-tinker mended in George Steen’s barn.”
-
-“Hollo, boys,” exclaimed Pentland, “stoop! stoop! they are coming this
-way, and don’t see us: no, hang them, no! they have discovered us now,
-and are off towards Mossfield. By Jove this will be a bitter trick if
-they succeed; confound them, they are bent for Ballagh, which is my own
-property; and may I be hanged if we do not intercept them; but it is I
-myself who will have to pay the fine.”
-
-The pursuit instantly commenced with a speed and vigour equal to the
-ingenuity of this singular act of retaliation on the gauger. Pentland
-himself being long-winded from much practice in this way, and being
-further stimulated by the prospective loss which he dreaded, made as
-beautiful a run of it as any man of his years could do. It was all in
-vain, however. He merely got far enough to see the still head and worm
-heaved across the march ditch into his own property, and to reflect after
-seeing it that he was certain to have the double consolation of being
-made a standing joke of for life, and of paying heavily for the jest out
-of his own pocket. In the mean time, he was bound of course to seize the
-still, and report the caption; and as he himself farmed the townland in
-question, the fine was levied to the last shilling, upon the very natural
-principle that if he had been sufficiently active and vigilant, no man
-would have attempted to set up a still so convenient to his own residence
-and property.
-
-This manœuvre of keeping in reserve an old or second set of apparatus,
-for the purpose of acting the lapwing and misleading the gauger, was
-afterwards often practised with success; but the first discoverer of
-it was undoubtedly Mickey M’Quade, although the honour of the discovery
-is attributed to his friend George Steen. The matter, however, did not
-actually end here, for in a few days afterwards some malicious wag--in
-other words, George himself--had correct information sent to Pentland
-touching the locality of the cavern and the secret of its entrance. On
-this occasion the latter brought a larger military party than usual along
-with him, but it was only to make him feel that he stood in a position
-if possible more ridiculous than the first. He found indeed the marks
-of recent distillation in the place, but nothing else. Every vessel and
-implement connected with the process had been removed, with the exception
-of one bottle of whisky, to which was attached by a bit of twine the
-following friendly note:--
-
- “MR PENTLAND, SIR--Take this bottle home and drink your own
- health. You can’t do less. It was distilled _under your nose_
- the first day you came to look for us, and bottled for you
- while you were speaking to the little boy that made a hare of
- you. Being distilled then under your nose, let it be drunk in
- the same place, and don’t forget while doing so to drink the
- health of
-
- G. S.”
-
-The incident went abroad like wildfire, and was known everywhere. Indeed
-for a long time it was the standing topic of the parish; and so sharply
-was it felt by Pentland that he could never keep his temper if asked, “Mr
-Pentland, when did you see little George Steen?”--a question to which he
-was never known to give a civil reply.
-
-
-
-
-THE GLOBE OF THE EARTH.
-
-
-We were surprised very much some time ago at considering how much of
-the surface of the globe is covered by the waters of the lakes and
-oceans, and took the opportunity then of adverting to the importance
-of water in the general economy of nature. When, however, we pass to
-the consideration of the magnitude of the earth itself, the relative
-proportion of water appears to be much less considerable.
-
-Although there are many places in the great Atlantic and Pacific Oceans
-where the depth of water is very great, yet it has been deduced from
-principles that are not liable to much error, that the general or average
-depth does not exceed three miles. It may appear very strange that we
-can assert any thing positive about the depth of water in those seas,
-that are to the lines used for sounding quite unfathomable; but it is
-effected very simply. Every person has seen a wave advancing along the
-level surface of a canal, and by observing with a watch, it could easily
-be found to move more quickly at some times than at others. The deeper
-any part of the canal is, the more rapidly does the wave move along; and
-partly by experiment, and partly by reasoning, the connection between the
-depth of the water and velocity of the wave has been discovered. Now,
-the tide which comes to Dublin every twelve hours is produced by the
-influence of the sun and moon on the vast body of water in the Southern
-Pacific Ocean; and the great wave there formed turns round Cape Horn,
-and passes up the Atlantic Ocean, to arrive at the coasts of Europe and
-North America. The time occupied by this great wave in passing from one
-end to the other of the Atlantic can thus be known, and, precisely as in
-a canal, the depth of water thus calculated.
-
-The circumference of the earth at its widest part is about 25,000, and
-its diameter 8000 miles. Hence the sheet of water which constitutes
-the ocean forms but 3-4000ths of its thickness, or nearly the same
-proportion as if we took an eighteen inch globe, and having spilled
-water on its surface, allowed all the excess of water to drain off. The
-remaining wetness would represent pretty nearly the condition of the
-waters of the ocean on the surface of the earth. By this means we can
-form, though obscurely, to our minds, an idea of the great magnitude of
-the earth itself. This magnitude renders also very inconsiderable those
-inequalities on the surface of the earth which constitute our highest
-ridges of mountains. A true model of Mont Blanc, the highest of European
-mountains, if constructed on the eighteen inch globe before referred to,
-would be unfelt by a finger drawn along its surface, and it would be
-only some of the highest peaks of the Andes and Himalayah that could be
-distinctly felt. Where man also employs his most gigantic energies and
-greatest efforts of skill to penetrate below the surface, forming mines
-by which the supplies of coal, of iron, of copper, and other minerals,
-have been obtained from the earliest times, the cavities that he makes
-can only be compared with the trace given by the point of a pin that had
-lightly touched the globe, and which would require a favourable incidence
-of light to see.
-
-The earth is therefore almost perfectly a smooth and solid ball. It is,
-however, almost certain that it was not always solid. It is, on the
-contrary, almost certain that at a period far exceeding in remoteness
-any time of which mere human indications can be found, the globe of the
-earth was one mass of liquid matter, heated to a degree exceeding our
-most intense fires, and wherein were melted all together the various
-elements which have since arranged themselves into their present forms.
-From having been thus liquid, the earth, which, revolving on its axis,
-produces by the side it turns to the sun the alternating day and night,
-has bulged out where the rotation of the surface is most rapid, at the
-equator, and has become flattened at the extremities of its axis, at the
-poles, just as a thin hoop which we spin round becomes compressed. The
-amount of this flattening is however very small. The equatorial diameter
-of the earth being accurately 7925, and the polar diameter being 7898,
-the compression is 27 miles.
-
-To account for the existence of this compression, the earth must have
-been originally liquid, for otherwise the rotation on its axis could not
-have generated this regular form. If it had been solid when it began to
-revolve, it should either have retained its original form, or it should
-have broken in pieces; but certainly unless it had been liquid, it could
-not have arrived at the exact degree of flattening which its velocity of
-rotation should have produced in a liquid mass.
-
-The intensely heated and liquid earth, revolving in the cold and empty
-spaces of the planetary system, gradually must have lost its excess
-of heat. Cooling most rapidly at the surface, it there solidified,
-and generated the first rocks. The loss of heat still going on, the
-solidification proceeded to a greater and greater depth, and should
-ultimately have reduced the earth to the same temperature as the empty
-space among the stars. The temperature of space has been calculated
-to be almost the same as that in the winter at Melville Island, in
-northernmost America, that is, 56 deg. below zero, or as far below the
-freezing point of water as the temperature of the hottest water that the
-hand can bear is above it. The earth is, however, not allowed to cool to
-that degree. It receives from the sun by radiation a quantity of heat
-which counteracts its tendency to cool, and hence the mean temperature
-of the surface of the earth has remained the same from the earliest
-historical epochs. In fact, at the surface we can find no trace of that
-original and internal great heat, the temperature of the surface of the
-earth being regulated altogether by the effect of the sun’s rays; but
-if we dig down to a moderate depth, about 45 feet, the influence of the
-sun becomes insensible. Within that space also we can detect a very
-curious and important arrangement of the heat. It is not that the whole
-surface becomes warmed in summer and cold in winter, but the heat which
-is received from the sun in one summer travels by conduction beneath the
-surface, and is succeeded by the heat of the next summer, an intervening
-and cooler layer corresponding to the winter time, so that at a depth of
-20 feet we may detect the heat which had fallen upon the surface four or
-five years before, this space of 45 feet being formed of numerous layers
-like the coatings of an onion, one for each year, until becoming less and
-less distinct, according as the depth increases, they join together in
-forming the layer of invariable temperature in which all the effect of
-the sun’s heat is lost.
-
-If we dig down still farther, the earth, though having lost the heating
-power of the sun, becomes sensibly warmer. The greater the depth to
-which we descend, the higher is the temperature found to be. Thus, where
-deep sinkings have been made for mines or wells, the air or water at the
-bottom is found to be much higher in temperature than at the invariable
-layer which gives the mean temperature of the place. This observation was
-first made in the case of the deep mines in Cornwall, and, although for
-some time ascribed to the presence of the workmen and the burning lamps,
-has since been verified by observations in all parts of Europe, and such
-agreement found, that the law connecting the temperature with the depth
-has been at least approximately determined.
-
-It is found, counting from the invariable layer, that the temperature
-increases about one degree of Fahrenheit’s scale for every fifty feet in
-depth. Thus, a well having been sunk at Rudersdorff to a depth of 630
-feet, the water at the bottom was found to be 67 degrees, while the mean
-temperature was 50 degrees. In a coal mine at Newcastle, which reaches
-to a depth of 1584 feet, the mean temperature of the surface being 48
-degrees, the thermometer was found to stand at 73 degrees in the lowest
-part of the mine, and hence the elevation of temperature was 25 degrees.
-Observations elsewhere vary between these limits; but the general result
-is, that the rise is one degree for about every fifty feet, as above
-stated.
-
-When we consider the great magnitude of the earth, and observe the
-rapidity with which the increase of temperature occurs, it will strike
-every person that we in reality inhabit a mere pellicle or skin, which
-has formed by cooling upon the surface, whilst all the internal mass of
-our globe may still be in the same state of igneous fusion and tumultuous
-action of elements, from which its present mineral constitution on the
-surface has resulted. For although it has cooled so far that at the
-surface all traces of its central fires have disappeared, yet at a mile
-and a half below the surface the temperature is such as should boil
-water: at a depth of five miles, lead would melt. Thirty miles below the
-surface, cast iron, and all those rocks which are generally the product
-of volcanoes in action, as trap and basalt, would fuse; and hence we may
-consider those terrific phenomena which have so frequently desolated some
-of the most beautiful districts of the earth, as being minute apertures
-or cracks in the thin coating of our planet, and giving vent from time to
-time to some small portions of the internal fires which work beneath.
-
-Additional evidence of the existence of this central heat may be derived
-from the peculiarity of springs. Those springs which carry off and are
-supplied with water from the surface, change their temperature with the
-season, being in winter cold, but in summer warm. Others, deriving their
-waters from a deeper layer of soil, as from the stratum of constant heat,
-are always the same, and, possessing the mean temperature of the place,
-feel warm in winter and cold in summer. Such springs exist in every
-country, and are very useful in ascertaining the mean temperature, for
-in place of watching a thermometer for a year, and taking averages, it
-is only necessary to select with proper caution such a deeply supplied
-spring, and by observing the temperature of its waters, the mean
-temperature of the place is found.
-
-A certain quantity of the water which is absorbed by the ground after
-rain must penetrate to a great depth, must descend, in fact, until at 1½
-miles it is boiled and driven up again to find some outlet as a spring.
-In rising up, however, it is for the most part cooled; but having charged
-itself with various saline and metallic bodies, under the most favourable
-circumstances of high temperature and pressure, it issues as a hot
-mineral spring or spa. On getting into the air, it generally abandons a
-great part of what it had dissolved, and forms in many cases enormous
-depositions of solid rock.
-
-A company in Paris have formed the idea of using the water thus heated by
-the powers below, for the purposes of public baths. The neighbourhood of
-Paris is peculiarly fitted for what are termed Artesian wells, in which
-the water often rises considerably above the surface of the ground. Under
-the auspices of this company, a well has been sunk already to the depth
-of 1600 feet, and water obtained at 77 degrees; but to obtain natural
-hot water at a temperature of 100 degrees, which would be required for
-bathing purposes, an additional depth of probably as much more will be
-required. It is said the projectors are not now sanguine of its pecuniary
-success.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE SECRET OF SUCCESS IN LIFE.--In no department of life do men rise
-to eminence who have not undergone a long and diligent preparation;
-for whatever be the difference in the mental power of individuals, it
-is the cultivation of the mind alone that leads to distinction. John
-Hunter was as remarkable for his industry as for his talents, of which
-his museum alone forms a most extraordinary proof; and if we look around
-and contemplate the history of those men whose talents and acquirements
-we must esteem, we find that their superiority of knowledge has been
-the result of great labour and diligence. It is an ill-founded notion
-to say that merit in the long-run is neglected. It is sometimes joined
-to circumstances that may have a little influence in counteracting it,
-as an unfortunate manner and temper; but generally it meets with its
-due reward. The world are not fools--every person of merit has the best
-chance of success; and who would be ambitious of public approbation, if
-it had not the power of discriminating?--_Physic and Physicians._
-
- * * * * *
-
- Printed and Published every Saturday by GUNN and CAMERON, at
- the Office of the General Advertiser, No. 6, Church Lane,
- College Green, Dublin; and sold by all Booksellers.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1, No.
-16, October 17, 1840, by Various
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1, No. 16,
-October 17, 1840, by Various
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-Title: The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1, No. 16, October 17, 1840
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-Author: Various
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-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL.</h1>
-
-<table summary="Headline layout">
- <tr>
- <td class="smcap">Number 16.</td>
- <td class="center">SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1840.</td>
- <td class="right smcap">Volume I.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter gap4" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/inchiquin.jpg" width="500" height="420" alt="Inchiquin castle and lake" />
-</div>
-
-<h2>THE CASTLE AND LAKE OF INCHIQUIN, COUNTY OF CLARE.</h2>
-
-<p>Connemara itself, now so celebrated for its lakes and mountains,
-was not less unknown a few years since than the greater
-portion of the county of Clare. Without roads, or houses of
-entertainment for travellers, its magnificent coast and other
-scenery were necessarily unvisited by the pleasure tourists,
-and but little appreciated even by their inhabitants themselves.
-But Clare can no longer be said to be an unvisited district:
-the recent formation of roads has opened to observation many
-features of interest previously inaccessible to the traveller,
-and its singular coast scenery&mdash;the most sublimely magnificent
-in the British islands, if not in Europe&mdash;has at least been
-made known to the public by topographical and scientific
-explorers&mdash;it has become an attractive locality to artists and
-pleasure tourists, and will doubtless be visited by increasing
-numbers of such persons in each successive year.</p>
-
-<p>There is however as yet in this county too great a deficiency
-in the number of respectable houses of entertainment suited to
-the habits of pleasure tourists; for though the wealthier and
-more educated classes in the British empire are becoming
-daily a more travelling and picturesque-hunting genus, they
-will not be content to live on fine scenery, but must have food
-for the body as well as for the mind; and truly they must be
-enthusiastic lovers of the picturesque, who, to gratify their
-taste, will subject themselves to the vicissitudes of such an uncertain
-climate as ours, without the certainty of such consoling
-comforts as are afforded in a clean and comfortable inn.</p>
-
-<p>Yet we do not despair of seeing this want soon supplied.
-Wherever there is a demand for a commodity it will not be
-long wanting; and the people of Clare are too sagacious not
-to perceive, however slowly, the practical wisdom of holding
-out every inducement of this kind to those who might be disposed
-to visit them and spend their money among them.
-The first step necessary, however, to produce such results in
-any little frequented district, is to make its objects of interest
-known to the public by the pencil and the pen&mdash;the rest will
-follow in due course; and our best efforts, such as they are,
-shall not be unexerted towards effecting such an important
-good as well for Clare as for many other as yet little known
-localities of our country.</p>
-
-<p>Clare is indeed on many accounts deserving of greater attention<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-than it has hitherto received. It is a county rich in
-attractions for the geologist and naturalist, and interesting in
-the highest degree to the lovers of the picturesque. With a
-surface singularly broken and diversified, full of mountains,
-hills, lakes, and rivers, dotted all over with every class of ancient
-remains, its scenery is peculiarly Irish, and though of a
-somewhat melancholy aspect, it is never wanting in a poetic
-and historic interest. Such a district is not indeed exactly
-suited to the tastes of the common scenery-hunter, for it possesses
-but little of that woody and artificially adorned scenery
-which he requires, and can alone enjoy; and hence it has usually
-been described by tourists and topographers with a coldness
-which shows how little its peculiarities had impressed their
-feelings, and how incompetent they were to communicate to
-others a just estimate of its character. Let us take as an
-example the notice given by the writers of Lewis’s Topographical
-Dictionary, of one of the Clare beauties of which the
-natives are most proud&mdash;the caverns called the To-meens or
-To-mines, near Kiltanan:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“At Kiltanan is a succession of limestone caverns, through
-which a rivulet takes its course: these are much visited in
-summer; many petrified shells are found in the limestone,
-some of which are nearly perfect, and&mdash;<em>very curious</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>This it must be confessed is cold enough; but the description
-of the same locality given by our friend the author of
-the Guide through Ireland, is, as our readers will see, not a
-whit warmer. It is as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“A mile from Tulla is Kiltanan, the handsome residence
-of James Moloney, Esq.; and in addition to the pleasure of a
-well-kept residence, in a naked and sadly neglected country,
-<em>some interest</em> is excited by the subterraneous course of the
-rivulet called the To-meens, which waters this demesne!”</p>
-
-<p>Now, would any person be induced by such descriptions as
-those to visit the said To-meens? We suspect not. But hear
-with what delight a native writer of this county actually
-revels in a description of these remarkable caves:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“About a mile N. W. of Tulla lies the river of Kiltanan, and
-Milltown, famous for its ever-amazing and elegant subterraneous
-curiosities, called the To-mines: they form a part of the
-river, midway between Kiltanan House and the Castle of
-Milltown, extending under ground for a space, which (from
-its invisible winding banks and crystal meanders) may reasonably
-be computed a quarter of an English mile: they are
-vaulted, and sheltered with a solid rock, transmitting a sufficiency
-of light and air by intermediate chinks and apertures
-gradually offering at certain intervals.</p>
-
-<p>At each side of this Elysian-like river are roomy passages
-or rather apartments, freely communicating one with the
-other, and scarcely obvious to any inclemency whatsoever:
-they are likewise decorated with a sandy beach level along to
-walk on, whilst the curious spectators are crowned with garlands
-of ivy, hanging in triplets from the impending rocky
-shades: numbers of the sporting game, the wily fox, the
-wary hare, and the multiplying rabbit, &amp;c. merrily parading in
-view of their own singular and various absconding haunts
-and retreats. Ingenious nature thus entertains her welcome
-visitants from the entrance to the extremity of the To-mines.
-Lo! when parting liberally rewarded, and amply satisfied
-with such egregious and wonderful exhibitions, a bridge or
-arch over the same river, curiously composed of solid stone,
-appears to them as a lively representation of an artificial one.</p>
-
-<p>What can the much boasted of Giants’ Causeway, in the north
-of this kingdom, produce but scenes of horror and obscurity?
-whilst the To-mines of the barony of Tulla, like unto the artificial
-beauties of the Latomi of Syracuse, freely exhibit the
-most natural and pleasing appearances.</p>
-
-<p>Let the literati and curious, after taking the continental
-tour of Europe, praise and even write of the imaginary beauties
-and natural curiosities of Italy and Switzerland&mdash;pray,
-let them also, on a cool reflection, repair to the county of
-Clare, view and touch upon the truly subterraneous and
-really unartificial curiosities of the To-mines: they will impartially
-admit that these naturally enchanting rarities may
-be freely visited, and generously treated of, by the ingenious
-and learned of this and after ages.”&mdash;<cite>A Short Tour, or an
-Impartial and Accurate Description of the County of Clare,
-by John Lloyd, Ennis; 1780.</cite></p>
-
-<p>Excellent. Mr Lloyd! Your style is indeed a <em>little</em> peculiar,
-and what some would think extravagant and grotesque;
-but you describe with feeling, and we shall certainly visit your
-To-meens next summer. But in the mean time we must notice
-another Clare lion, of which you have given us no account&mdash;the
-lake and castle, which we have drawn as an embellishment
-to our present number. This is a locality respecting the
-beauty of which there can be no difference of opinion: it has
-all the circumstances which give interest to a landscape&mdash;wood,
-water, lake, mountain, and ancient ruin&mdash;and the effect
-of their combination is singularly enhanced by the surprise
-created by the appearance of a scene so delightful in a district
-wild, rocky, and unimproved.</p>
-
-<p>The lake of Inchiquin is situated in the parish of Kilnaboy,
-barony of Inchiquin, and is about two miles and a half in circumference.
-It is bounded on its western side by a range of
-hills rugged but richly wooded, and rising abruptly from its
-margin; and on its southern side, the domain surrounding the
-residence of the Burton family, and the ornamental grounds
-of Adelphi, the residence of W. and F. Fitzgerald, Esqrs. contribute
-to adorn a scene of remarkable natural beauty. One
-solitary island alone appears on its surface, unless that be
-ranked as one on which the ancient castle is situated, and
-which may originally have been insulated, though no longer
-so. The castle, which is situated at the northern side of the
-lake, though greatly dilapidated, is still a picturesque and interesting
-ruin, consisting of the remains of a barbican tower,
-keep, and old mansion-house attached to it; and its situation
-on a rocky island or peninsula standing out in the smooth
-water, with its grey walls relieved by the dark masses of the
-wooded hills behind, is eminently striking and imposing.</p>
-
-<p>It is from this island or peninsula that the barony takes its
-name; and from this also the chief of the O’Briens, the Marquis
-of Thomond, derives his more ancient title of Earl of Inchiquin.
-For a long period it was the principal residence of
-the chiefs of this great family, to one of whom it unquestionably
-owes its origin; but we have not been able to ascertain
-with certainty the name of its founder, or date of its erection.
-There is, however, every reason to ascribe its foundation to
-Tiege O’Brien, king or lord of Thomond, who died, according
-to the Annals of the Four Masters, in 1466, as he is the
-first of his name on record who made it his residence, and as
-its architectural features are most strictly characteristic of
-the style of the age in which he flourished.</p>
-
-<p>But though the erection of this castle is properly to be
-ascribed to the O’Briens, it is a great error in the writers of
-Lewis’s Topographical Dictionary to state that it has been
-from time immemorial the property of the O’Brien family.
-The locality, as its name indicates, and as history and tradition
-assure us, was the ancient residence of the O’Quins, a
-family of equal antiquity with the O’Briens, and of the same
-stock&mdash;namely, the Dal Cas or descendants of Cormac Cas,
-the son of Ollioll Oluim, who was monarch of Ireland in the
-beginning of the third century. The O’Quins were chiefs of the
-clan called Hy-Ifearnan, and their possessions were bounded by
-those of the O’Deas on the east, the O’Loughlins and O’Conors
-(Corcomroe) on the west and north-west, the O’Hynes
-on the north, and the O’Hehirs on the south. At what period
-or from what circumstance the O’Quins lost their ancient
-patrimony, we have not been able to discover; but it
-would appear to have been about the middle or perhaps close
-of the fourteenth century, to which time their genealogy as
-chiefs is recorded in that invaluable repository of Irish family
-history, the Book of Mac Firbis; and it would seem most probable
-that they were transplanted by the O’Briens about this
-period to the county of Limerick, in which they are subsequently
-found. Their removal is indeed differently accounted
-for in a popular legend still current in the barony, and which,
-according to our recollections of it, is to the following effect:</p>
-
-<p>In the youth of the last O’Quin of Inchiquin, he saw from
-his residence a number of swans of singular beauty frequenting
-the west side of the lake, and wandering along its shore.
-Wishing, if possible, to possess himself of one of them, he was
-in the habit of concealing himself among the rocks and woods
-in its vicinity, hoping that he might take them by surprise,
-and he was at length successful: one of them became his captive,
-and was secretly carried to his residence, when, to his
-amazement and delight, throwing off her downy covering, she
-assumed the form of a beautiful woman, and shortly after became
-his wife. Previous to the marriage, however, she imposed
-certain conditions on her lover as the price of her consent,
-to which he willingly agreed. These were&mdash;first, that
-their union should be kept secret; secondly, that he should
-not receive any visitors at his mansion, particularly those
-of the O’Briens; and, lastly, that he should wholly abstain
-from gambling. For some years these conditions were
-strictly adhered to; they lived in happiness together, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-two children blessed their union. But it happened unfortunately
-at length that at the neighbouring races at Cood he fell
-in with the O’Briens, by whom he was hospitably treated; and
-being induced to indulge in too much wine, he forgot his engagements
-to his wife, and invited them to his residence on a certain
-day to repay their kindness to him. His wife heard of
-this invitation with sadness, but proceeded without remonstrance
-to prepare the feast for his guests. But she did not
-grace it with her presence; and when the company had assembled,
-and were engaged in merriment, she withdrew to her
-own apartment, to which she called her children, and after
-embracing them in a paroxysm of grief, which they could not
-account for, she took her original feathery covering from a
-press in which it had been kept, arrayed herself in it, and
-assuming her pristine shape, plunged into the lake, and was
-never seen afterwards. On the same night, O’Quin, again
-forgetful of the promises he had made her, engaged in play
-with Tiege-an-Cood O’Brien, the most distinguished of his
-guests, and lost the whole of his property.</p>
-
-<p>The reader is at liberty to believe as much or as little of
-this story as he pleases: but at all events the legend is valuable
-in a historical point of view, as indicating the period
-when the lands of Inchiquin passed into the hands of the
-O’Brien family; nor is it wholly improbable that under the
-guise of a wild legend may be concealed some indistinct
-tradition of such a real occurrence as that O’Quin made a
-union long kept hidden, with a person of inferior station, and
-that its discovery drew down upon his head the vengeance
-of his proud compeers, and led to their removal to another
-district of the chiefs of the clan Hy-Ifearnan.</p>
-
-<p>Be this, however, as it may, the ancient family of O’Quin&mdash;more
-fortunate than most other Irish families of noble
-origin&mdash;has never sunk into obscurity, or been without a
-representative of aristocratic rank; and it can at present
-boast of a representative among the nobility of the empire in
-the person of its justly presumed chief, the noble Earl of
-Dunraven.</p>
-
-<p>We have thus slightly touched on the history of the O’Quins,
-not only as it was connected with that of the locality which we
-had to illustrate, but also as necessary to correct a great error
-into which Burke and other modern genealogists have fallen
-in their accounts of the origin of the name and descent of this
-family. Thus it is stated by those writers that “the surname
-is derived from Con Ceadcaha, or Con of the hundred
-battles, monarch of Ireland in the second century, whose
-grandson was called Cuinn (rather O’Cuinn), that is, the
-descendant of Con, when he wielded the sceptre in 254.”
-But those writers should not have been ignorant that Con,
-which literally signifies the powerful, was a common name in
-Ireland both in Christian and Pagan times; and still more,
-they should not have been ignorant of the important fact for
-a genealogist, that the use of surnames was unknown in Ireland
-till the close of the tenth century. The story is altogether
-a silly fiction; and as the real origin of the family
-appears to be now unknown even to themselves, and as their
-pedigree has never as yet been printed, we are tempted to
-give it in an English form, translated from the original, preserved
-in the books of Lecan and Duald Mac Firbis:&mdash;</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>“Conor O’Quinn,</li>
-<li>the son of Donell,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Donell,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Thomas,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Donell,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Donogh,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Giolla Seanain,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Donogh,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Morough,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Corc, who was the tutor of Murtogh O’Brien (the great grandson of Brian Boru),</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Feidhleachair,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Niall, who was henchman to Morough, the son of Brian Boru, whose fate he shared in the battle of Clontarf,</li>
-<li><span class="ditto">&mdash;&mdash;</span> Conn, from whom the name is derived.”</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The pedigree is carried up from this Con through eighteen
-generations to Cormac Cas, the son of Ollioll Oluim, and the
-common progenitor of all the tribes of the Dal-Cassians.</p>
-
-<p>In this notice we may add, as an evidence of the ancient
-rank of the family, that the Irish annalists at the year 1188
-record the death of Edaoin, the daughter of O’Quin, Queen
-of Munster, on her pilgrimage at Derry in that year. She
-appears to have been the wife of Mortogh O’Brien, who died
-without issue in 1168, and was succeeded by his brother
-Donald More, the last king of all Munster.</p>
-
-<p>The Castle of Inchiquin is referred to in the Irish Annals
-as the residence of the chiefs of the O’Brien family, at the
-years 1542, 1559, and 1573; but the notices contain no interest
-to the general reader.</p>
-
-<p class="right">P.</p>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">ANCIENT IRISH LITERATURE&mdash;No. II.</h2>
-
-<p>In a preceding paper under this heading we lately gave a
-sample from the lighter class of native Irish poetry of the seventeenth
-century, namely, “The Woman of Three Cows.”
-We have now to present our readers with a specimen of a
-more serious character, belonging to the same age&mdash;an Elegy
-on the death of the Tironian and Tirconnellian princes, who
-having fled with others from Ireland in the year 1607, and
-afterwards dying at Rome, were there interred on St Peter’s
-Hill, in one grave.</p>
-
-<p>The poem is the production of O’Donnell’s bard, Owen
-Roe Mac an Bhaird, or Ward, who accompanied the family
-in their flight, and is addressed to Nuala, O’Donnell’s sister,
-who was also one of the fugitives. As the circumstances connected
-with the flight of the Northern Earls, and which led to
-the subsequent confiscation of the six Ulster Counties by
-James I., may not be immediately in the recollection of many
-of our readers, it may be proper briefly to state, that their
-departure from this country was caused by the discovery of a
-letter directed to Sir William Ussher, Clerk of the Council,
-which was dropped in the Council-chamber on the 7th of May,
-and which accused the Northern chieftains generally of a conspiracy
-to overthrow the government. Whether this charge
-was founded in truth or not, it is not necessary for us to express
-any opinion; but as in some degree necessary to the
-illustration of the poem, and as an interesting piece of hitherto
-unpublished literature in itself, we shall here, as a preface to
-the poem, extract the following account of the flight of the
-Northern Earls, as recorded in the Annals of the Four Masters,
-and translated by Mr O’Donovan:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Maguire (Cuconnaught) and Donogh, son of Mahon, who
-was son of the Bishop O’Brien, sailed in a ship to Ireland, and
-put in at the harbour of Swilly. They then took with them
-from Ireland the Earl O’Neill (Hugh, son of Ferdoragh) and
-the Earl O’Donnell (Rory, son of Hugh, who was son of Magnus)
-and many others of the nobles of the province of Ulster.
-These are the persons who went with O’Neill, namely, his
-Countess, Catherina, daughter of Magennis, and her three
-sons; Hugh, the Baron, John and Brian; Art Oge, son of
-Cormac, who was son of the Baron; Ferdoragh, son of Con,
-who was son of O’Neill; Hugh Oge, son of Brian, who was
-son of Art O’Neill; and many others of his most intimate
-friends. These were they who went with the Earl O’Donnell,
-namely, Caffer, his brother, with his sister Nuala; Hugh,
-the Earl’s child, wanting three weeks of being one year old;
-Rose, daughter of O’Doherty and wife of Caffer, with her son
-Hugh, aged two years and three months; his (Rory’s) brother
-son Donnell Oge, son of Donnell, Naghtan son of Calvach,
-who was son of Donogh Cairbreach O’Donnell, and
-many others of his intimate friends. They embarked on the
-Festival of the Holy Cross in Autumn.</p>
-
-<p>This was a distinguished company; and it is certain that
-the sea has not borne and the wind has not wafted in modern
-times a number of persons in one ship more eminent, illustrious
-or noble, in point of genealogy, heroic deeds, valour, feats
-of arms, and brave achievements, than they. Would that God
-had but permitted them to remain in their patrimonial inheritances
-until the children should arrive at the age of manhood!
-Woe to the heart that meditated, woe to the mind that conceived,
-woe to the council that recommended the project of
-this expedition, without knowing whether they should, to the
-end of their lives, be able to return to their native principalities
-or patrimonies.”</p>
-
-<h3>AN ELEGY<br />
-<span class="smaller">ON THE TIRONIAN AND TIRCONNELLIAN PRINCES BURIED AT ROME.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="irish center">“A bhean fuair faill air an ffeart!”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O, Woman of the Piercing Wail,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Who mournest o’er yon mound of clay</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">With sigh and groan,</div>
-<div class="verse">Would God thou wert among the Gael!</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Thou wouldst not then from day to day</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Weep thus alone.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">’Twere long before, around a grave</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">In green Tirconnell, one could find</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">This loneliness;</div>
-<div class="verse">Near where Beann-Boirche’s banners wave</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Such grief as thine could ne’er have pined</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Companionless.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Beside the wave, in Donegall,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">In Antrim’s glens, or fair Dromore,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Or Killilee,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or where the sunny waters fall,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">At Assaroe, near Erna’s shore,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">This could not be.</div>
-<div class="verse">On Derry’s plains&mdash;in rich Drumclieff&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Throughout Armagh the Great, renowned</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">In olden years,</div>
-<div class="verse">No day could pass but Woman’s grief</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Would rain upon the burial-ground</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Fresh floods of tears!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O, no!&mdash;from Shannon, Boyne, and Suir,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">From high Dunluce’s castle-walls,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">From Lissadill,</div>
-<div class="verse">Would flock alike both rich and poor,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">One wail would rise from Cruachan’s halls</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">To Tara’s hill;</div>
-<div class="verse">And some would come from Barrow-side,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And many a maid would leave her home</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">On Leitrim’s plains,</div>
-<div class="verse">And by melodious Banna’s tide,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And by the Mourne and Erne, to come</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">And swell thy strains!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O, horses’ hoofs would trample down</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The Mount whereon the martyr-saint<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Was crucified.</div>
-<div class="verse">From glen and hill, from plain and town,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">One loud lament, one thrilling plaint,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Would echo wide.</div>
-<div class="verse">There would not soon be found, I ween,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">One foot of ground among those bands</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">For museful thought,</div>
-<div class="verse">So many shriekers of the <i lang="ga">keen</i><a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Would cry aloud, and clap their hands,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">All woe-distraught!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Two princes of the line of Conn</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Sleep in their cells of clay beside</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">O’Donnell Roe:</div>
-<div class="verse">Three royal youths, alas! are gone,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Who lived for Erin’s weal, but died</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">For Erin’s woe!</div>
-<div class="verse">Ah! could the men of Ireland read</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The names these noteless burial-stones</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Display to view</div>
-<div class="verse">Their wounded hearts afresh would bleed.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Their tears gush forth again, their groans</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Resound anew!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The youths whose relics moulder here</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Were sprung from Hugh, high Prince and Lord</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Of Aileach’s lands;</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy noble brothers, justly dear,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Thy nephew, long to be deplored</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">By Ulster’s bands.</div>
-<div class="verse">Theirs were not souls wherein dull Time</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Could domicile Decay or house</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Decrepitude!</div>
-<div class="verse">They passed from Earth ere Manhood’s prime,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Ere years had power to dim their brows</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Or chill their blood.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">And who can marvel o’er thy grief,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Or who can blame thy flowing tears,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">That knows their source?</div>
-<div class="verse">O’Donnell, Dunnasava’s chief,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Cut off amid his vernal years,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Lies here a corse</div>
-<div class="verse">Beside his brother Cathbar, whom</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Tirconnell of the Helmets mourns</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">In deep despair&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">For valour, truth, and comely bloom,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">For all that greatens and adorns,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">A peerless pair.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O, had these twain, and he, the third,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The Lord of Mourne, O’Niall’s son,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Their mate in death&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">A prince in look, in deed, and word&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Had these three heroes yielded on</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">The field their breath,</div>
-<div class="verse">O, had they fallen on Criffan’s plain,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">There would not be a town or clan</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">From shore to sea,</div>
-<div class="verse">But would with shrieks bewail the Slain,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Or chant aloud the exulting <i lang="ga">rann</i><a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Of jubilee!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">When high the shout of battle rose,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">On fields where Freedom’s torch still burned</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Through Erin’s gloom,</div>
-<div class="verse">If one, if barely one of those</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Were slain, all Ulster would have mourned</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">The hero’s doom!</div>
-<div class="verse">If at Athboy, where hosts of brave</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Ulidian horsemen sank beneath</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">The shock of spears,</div>
-<div class="verse">Young Hugh O’Neill had found a grave,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Long must the North have wept his death</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">With heart-wrung tears!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">If on the day of Ballach-myre</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The Lord of Mourne had met, thus young,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">A warrior’s fate,</div>
-<div class="verse">In vain would such as thou desire</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">To mourn, alone, the champion sprung</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">From Niall the Great!</div>
-<div class="verse">No marvel this&mdash;for all the Dead,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Heaped on the field, pile over pile,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">At Mullach-brack,</div>
-<div class="verse">Were scarce an <i lang="ga">eric</i><a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> for his head,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">If Death had stayed his footsteps while</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">On victory’s track!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">If on the Day of Hostages</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">The fruit had from the parent bough</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Been rudely torn</div>
-<div class="verse">In sight of Munster’s bands&mdash;Mac-Nee’s</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Such blow the blood of Conn, I trow,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Could ill have borne.</div>
-<div class="verse">If on the day of Ballach-boy</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Some arm had laid, by foul surprise,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">The chieftain low,</div>
-<div class="verse">Even our victorious shout of joy</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Would soon give place to rueful cries</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">And groans of woe!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">If on the day the Saxon host</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Were forced to fly&mdash;a day so great</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">For Ashanee<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">The Chief had been untimely lost,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Our conquering troops should moderate</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Their mirthful glee.</div>
-<div class="verse">There would not lack on Lifford’s day,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">From Galway, from the glens of Boyle,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">From Limerick’s towers,</div>
-<div class="verse">A marshalled file, a long array.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Of mourners to bedew the soil</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">With tears in showers!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">If on the day a sterner fate</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Compelled his flight from Athenree,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">His blood had flowed,</div>
-<div class="verse">What numbers all disconsolate</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Would come unasked, and share with thee</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Affliction’s load!</div>
-<div class="verse">If Derry’s crimson field had seen</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">His life-blood offered up, though ’twere</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">On Victory’s shrine,</div>
-<div class="verse">A thousand cries would swell the <i lang="ga">keen</i>,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">A thousand voices of despair</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Would echo thine!</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O, had the fierce Dalcassian swarm</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">That bloody night on Fergus’ banks,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">But slain our Chief,</div>
-<div class="verse">When rose his camp in wild alarm&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">How would the triumph of his ranks</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Be dashed with grief!</div>
-<div class="verse">How would the troops of Murbach mourn</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">If on the Curlew Mountains’ day,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Which England rued,</div>
-<div class="verse">Some Saxon hand had left them lorn,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">By shedding there, amid the fray,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Their prince’s blood!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Red would have been our warriors’ eyes</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Had Roderick found on Sligo’s field</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">A gory grave,</div>
-<div class="verse">No Northern Chief would soon arise</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">So sage to guide, so strong to shield,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">So swift to save.</div>
-<div class="verse">Long would Leith-Cuinn have wept, if Hugh</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Had met the death he oft had dealt</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Among the foe;</div>
-<div class="verse">But, had our Roderick fallen too,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">All Erin must, alas! have felt</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">The deadly blow!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">What do I say? Ah, woe is me!</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Already we bewail in vain</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Their fatal fall:</div>
-<div class="verse">And Erin, once the Great and Free,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Now vainly mourns her breakless chain,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">And iron thrall!</div>
-<div class="verse">Then, daughter of O’Donnell! dry</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Thine overflowing eyes, and turn</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Thy heart aside!</div>
-<div class="verse">For Adam’s race is born to die,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And sternly the sepulchral urn</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Mocks human pride!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Look not, nor sigh, for earthly throne,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Nor place thy trust in arm of clay&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">But on thy knees</div>
-<div class="verse">Uplift thy soul to <span class="smcap">God</span> alone,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">For all things go their destined way</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">As He decrees.</div>
-<div class="verse">Embrace the faithful Crucifix,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And seek the path of pain and prayer</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Thy Saviour trod;</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor let thy spirit intermix</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">With earthly hope and worldly care</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Its groans to <span class="smcap">God</span>!</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">And Thou, O mighty Lord! whose ways</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">Are far above our feeble minds</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">To understand,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sustain us in these doleful days,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And render light the chain that binds</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Our fallen land!</div>
-<div class="verse">Look down upon our dreary state,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And through the ages that may still</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Roll sadly on,</div>
-<div class="verse">Watch Thou o’er hapless Erin’s fate,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And shield at least from darker ill</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">The blood of Conn!</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse right">M.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> St Peter. This passage is not exactly a blunder, though at first it may
-seem one: the poet supposes the grave itself transferred to Ireland, and he
-naturally includes in the transference the whole of the immediate locality
-around the grave.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Tr.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i lang="ga">Caoine.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Song.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> A compensation or fine.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Ballyshannon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">BOB PENTLAND, <span class="smaller">OR THE</span> GAUGER OUTWITTED.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">BY WILLIAM CARLETON.</p>
-
-<p>That the Irish are a ready-witted people, is a fact to the truth
-of which testimony has been amply borne both by their friends
-and enemies. Many causes might be brought forward to
-account for this questionable gift, if it were our intention to
-be philosophical; but as the matter has been so generally conceded,
-it would be but a waste of logic to prove to the world
-that which the world cares not about, beyond the mere fact
-that it is so. On this or any other topic one illustration is
-worth twenty arguments, and, accordingly, instead of broaching
-a theory we shall relate a story.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the hill or rather mountain of Altnaveenan lies
-one of those deep and almost precipitous vallies, on which the
-practised eye of an illicit distiller would dwell with delight, as
-a topography not likely to be invaded by the unhallowed feet
-of the gauger and his red-coats. In point of fact, the spot
-we speak of was from its peculiarly isolated situation nearly
-invisible, unless to such as came very close to it. Being so
-completely hemmed in and concealed by the round and angular
-projections of the mountain hills, you could never dream of
-its existence at all, until you came upon the very verge of the
-little precipitous gorge which led into it. This advantage of
-position was not, however, its only one. It is true indeed that
-the moment you had entered it, all possibility of its being applied
-to the purposes of distillation at once vanished, and you
-consequently could not help exclaiming, “what a pity that so
-safe and beautiful a nook should have not a single spot on
-which to erect a still-house, or rather on which to raise a sufficient
-stream of water to the elevation necessary for the process
-of distilling.” If a gauger actually came to the little
-chasm, and cast his scrutinizing eye over it, he would immediately
-perceive that the erection of a private still in such a
-place was a piece of folly not generally to be found in the
-plans of those who have recourse to such practices.</p>
-
-<p>This absence, however, of the requisite conveniences was
-only apparent, not real. To the right, about one hundred
-yards above the entrance to it, ran a ledge of rocks, some
-fifty feet high, or so. Along their lower brows, near the
-ground, grew thick matted masses of long heath, which
-covered the entrance to a cave about as large and as high as
-an ordinary farm-house. Through a series of small fissures
-in the rocks which formed its roof, descended a stream of
-clear soft water, precisely in body and volume such as was
-actually required by the distiller; but, unless by lifting up
-this mass of heath, no human being could for a moment imagine
-that there existed any such grotto, or so unexpected and
-easy an entrance to it. Here there was a private still-house
-made by the hand of nature herself, such as no art or ingenuity
-of man could equal.</p>
-
-<p>Now it so happened that about the period we write of, there
-lived in our parish two individuals so antithetical to each
-other in their pursuits of life, that we question whether
-throughout all the instinctive antipathies of nature we could
-find any two animals more destructive of each other than the
-two we mean&mdash;to wit, Bob Pentland the gauger, and little
-George Steen the illicit distiller. Pentland was an old,
-stanch, well-trained fellow, of about fifty years or more,
-steady and sure, and with all the characteristic points of the
-high-bred gauger about him. He was a tallish man, thin but
-lathy, with a hooked nose that could scent the tread of a distiller
-with the keenness of a slew-hound; his dark eye was
-deep-set, circumspect, and roguish in its expression, and his
-shaggy brow seemed always to be engaged in calculating
-whereabouts his inveterate foe, little George Steen, that eternally
-blinked him, when almost in his very fangs, might then
-be distilling. To be brief, Pentland was proverbial for his
-sagacity and adroitness in detecting distillers, and little
-George was equally proverbial for having always baffled him,
-and that, too, sometimes under circumstances where escape
-seemed hopeless.</p>
-
-<p>The incidents which we are about to detail occurred
-at that period of time when the collective wisdom of our legislators
-thought it advisable to impose a fine upon the whole
-townland in which the still head and worm might be found;
-thus opening a door for knavery and fraud, and, as it proved
-in most cases, rendering the innocent as liable to suffer for an
-offence they never contemplated as the guilty who planned
-and perpetrated it. The consequence of such a law was, that
-still-houses were always certain to be erected either at the
-very verge of the neighbouring districts, or as near them as
-the circumstances of convenience and situation would permit.
-The moment of course that the hue-and-cry of the gauger and
-his myrmidons was heard upon the wind, the whole apparatus
-was immediately heaved over the <i lang="ga">mering</i> to the next townland,
-from which the fine imposed by parliament was necessarily
-raised, whilst the crafty and offending district actually
-escaped. The state of society generated by such a blundering
-and barbarous statute as this, was dreadful. In the course
-of a short time, reprisals, law-suits, battles, murders, and
-massacres, multiplied to such an extent throughout the whole
-country, that the sapient senators who occasioned such commotion
-were compelled to repeal their own act as soon as they
-found how it worked. Necessity, together with being the
-mother of invention, is also the cause of many an accidental
-discovery. Pentland had been so frequently defeated by little
-George, that he vowed never to rest until he had secured him;
-and George on the other hand frequently told him&mdash;for they
-were otherwise on the best terms&mdash;that he defied him, or as
-he himself more quaintly expressed it, “that he defied the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
-devil, the world, and Bob Pentland.” The latter, however,
-was a very sore thorn in his side, and drove him from place
-to place, and from one haunt to another, until he began to despair
-of being able any longer to outwit him, or to find within
-the parish any spot at all suitable for distillation with which
-Pentland was not acquainted. In this state stood matters
-between them, when George fortunately discovered at the hip
-of Altnaveenan hill the natural grotto we have just sketched
-so briefly. Now, George was a man, as we have already
-hinted, of great fertility of resources; but there existed in the
-same parish another distiller who outstripped him in that farsighted
-cunning which is so necessary in misleading or circumventing
-such a sharp-scented old hound as Pentland.
-This was little Mickey M’Quade, a short-necked squat little
-fellow with bow legs, who might be said rather to creep in his
-motion than to walk. George and Mickey were intimate
-friends, independently of their joint antipathy against the
-gauger, and, truth to tell, much of the mortification and many
-of the defeats which Pentland experienced at George’s hands,
-were, <i lang="la">sub rosa</i>, to be attributed to Mickey. George was a distiller
-from none of the motives which generally actuate others
-of that class. He was in truth an analytic philosopher&mdash;a natural
-chemist never out of some new experiment&mdash;and we have
-reason to think might have been the Kane or Faraday or
-Dalton of his day, had he only received a scientific education.
-Not so honest Mickey, who never troubled his head about an
-experiment, but only thought of making a good running, and
-defeating the gauger. The first thing of course that George
-did, was to consult Mickey, and both accordingly took a walk
-up to the scene of their future operations. On examining it,
-and fully perceiving its advantages, it might well be said that
-the look of exultation and triumph which passed between them
-was not unworthy of their respective characters.</p>
-
-<p>“This will do,” said George. “Eh&mdash;don’t you think we’ll
-put our finger in Pentland’s eye yet?” Mickey spat sagaciously
-over his beard, and after a second glance gave one grave
-grin which spoke volumes. “It’ll do,” said he; “but there’s
-one point to be got over that maybe you didn’t think of; an’
-you know that half a blink, half a point, is enough for Pentland.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you intend to do with the smoke when the fire’s
-lit? There’ll be no keepin’ <em>that</em> down. Let but Pentland see
-as much smoke risin’ as would come out of an ould woman’s
-dudeen, an’ he’d have us.”</p>
-
-<p>George started, and it was clear by the vexation and disappointment
-which were visible on his brow that unless this
-untoward circumstance could be managed, their whole plan
-was deranged, and the cave of no value.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s to be done?” he inquired of his cooler companion.
-“If we can’t get over this, we may bid good bye to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Mickey; “I’ll manage it, and <em>do</em> Pentland
-still.” “Ay, but how?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no matter. Let us not lose a minute in settin’ to
-work. Lave the other thing to me; an’ if I don’t account for
-the smoke without discoverin’ the entrance to the still, I’ll
-give you lave to crop the ears off my head.”</p>
-
-<p>George knew the cool but steady self-confidence for which
-Mickey was remarkable, and accordingly, without any further
-interrogatory, they both proceeded to follow up their plan of
-operations.</p>
-
-<p>In those times when distillation might be truly considered
-as almost universal, it was customary for farmers to build
-their out-houses with secret chambers and other requisite partitions
-necessary for carrying it on. Several of them had private
-stores built between false walls, the entrance to which
-was only known to a few, and many of them had what were
-called <em>Malt-steeps</em> sunk in hidden recesses and hollow gables,
-for the purpose of steeping the barley, and afterwards of
-turning and airing it, until it was sufficiently hard to be kiln-dried
-and ground. From the mill it was usually conveyed to
-the still-house upon what were termed <em>Slipes</em>, a kind of car
-that was made without wheels, in order the more easily to
-pass through morasses and bogs which no wheeled vehicle
-could encounter.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of a month or so, George and Mickey, aided
-by their friends, had all the apparatus of keeve, hogshead, &amp;c.,
-together with still head and worm, set up and in full work.</p>
-
-<p>“And now, Mickey,” inquired his companion, “how will
-you manage about the smoke? for you know that the two
-worst informers against a private distiller, barrin’ a <em>stag</em>, is
-a smoke by day an’ a fire by night.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that,” replied Mickey; “an’ a rousin’ smoke we’ll
-have, for fraid a little puff wouldn’t do us. Come, now, an’
-I’ll show you.”</p>
-
-<p>They both ascended to the top, where Mickey had closed
-all the open fissures of the roof with the exception of that
-which was directly over the fire of the still. This was at best
-not more than six inches in breadth and about twelve long.
-Over it he placed a piece of strong plate iron perforated with
-holes, and on this he had a fire of turf, beside which sat a little
-boy who acted as a vidette. The thing was simple but effective.
-Clamps of turf were at every side of them, and the boy
-was instructed, if the gauger, whom he well knew, ever appeared,
-to heap on fresh fuel, so as to increase the smoke in
-such a manner as to induce him to suppose that <em>all</em> he saw of
-it proceeded merely from the fire before him. In fact, the
-smoke from the cave below was so completely identified with
-and lost in that which was emitted from the fire above, that
-no human being could penetrate the mystery, if not made previously
-acquainted with it. The writer of this saw it during
-the hottest process of distillation, and failed to make the discovery,
-although told that the still-house was within a circle
-of three hundred yards, the point he stood on being considered
-the centre. On more than one occasion has he absconded
-from home, and spent a whole night in the place, seized with
-that indescribable fascination which such a scene holds forth
-to youngsters, as well as from his irrepressible anxiety to hear
-the old stories and legends with the recital of which they generally
-pass the night.</p>
-
-<p>In this way, well provided against the gauger&mdash;indeed much
-better than our readers are yet aware of, as they shall understand
-by and bye&mdash;did George, Mickey, and their friends, proceed
-for the greater part of a winter without a single visit
-from Pentland. Several successful runnings had come off,
-which had of course turned out highly profitable, and they
-were just now preparing to commence their last, not only for
-the season, but the last they should ever work together, as
-George was making preparations to go early in the spring to
-America. Even this running was going on to their satisfaction,
-and the singlings had been thrown again into the still,
-from the worm of which projected the strong medicinal <em>first-shot</em>
-as the doubling commenced&mdash;this last term meaning the
-spirit in its pure and finished state. On this occasion the
-two worthies were more than ordinarily anxious, and certainly
-doubled their usual precautions against a surprise, for
-they knew that Pentland’s visits resembled the pounces of a
-hawk or the springs of a tiger more than any thing else to
-which they could compare them. In this they were not disappointed.
-When the doubling was about half finished, he made
-his appearance, attended by a strong party of reluctant soldiers&mdash;for
-indeed it is due to the military to state that they
-never took delight in harassing the country people at the
-command of a keg-hunter, as they generally nicknamed the
-gauger. It had been arranged that the vidette at the iron plate
-should whistle a particular tune the moment that the gauger
-or a red-coat, or in fact any person whom he did not know,
-should appear. Accordingly, about eight o’clock in the morning
-they heard the little fellow in his highest key whistling up
-that well-known and very significant old Irish air called “Go
-to the devil an’ shake yourself”&mdash;which in this case was applied
-to the gauger in any thing but an allegorical sense.</p>
-
-<p>“Be the pins,” which was George’s usual oath, “be the
-pins, Mickey, it’s over with us&mdash;Pentland’s here, for there’s
-the sign.”</p>
-
-<p>Mickey paused for a moment and listened very gravely;
-then squirting out a tobacco spittle, “Take it aisy,” said
-he; “I have half a dozen fires about the hills, any one as like
-this as your right hand is to your left. I didn’t spare trouble,
-for I knew that if we’d get over this day, we’d be out of
-his power.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my good lad,” said Pentland, addressing the vidette,
-“what’s this fire for?”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it for, is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; if you don’t let me know instantly, I’ll blow your
-brains out, and get you hanged and transported afterwards.”
-This he said with a thundering voice, cocking a large horse
-pistol at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, sir,” said the boy, “it’s watchin’ a still I am; but
-be the hole o’ my coat if you tell upon me, it’s broilin’ upon
-these coals I’ll be soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the still then? An’ the still-house, where is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, begorra, as to where the still or still-house is, they
-wouldn’t tell <em>me</em> that.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, sirra, didn’t you say this moment you were watching
-a still?”</p>
-
-<p>“I meant, sir,” replied the lad with a face that spoke of
-pure idiocy, “that it was the gauger I was watchin’, an’ I
-was to whistle upon my fingers to let the boy at that fire on
-the hill there above know that he was comin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you to do so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Little George, sir, an’ Mickey M’Quade.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, ay, right enough there, my lad&mdash;two of the most notorious
-schemers unhanged they are both. But now, like a
-good boy, tell me the truth, an’ I’ll give you the price of a
-pair of shoes. Do you know where the still or still-house is?
-Because if you do, an’ won’t tell me, here are the soldiers at
-hand to make a prisoner of you; an’ if they do, all the world
-can’t prevent you from being hanged, drawn, and quartered.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, bad cess may seize the morsel o’ me knows that; but
-if you’ll give me the money, sir, I’ll tell you who can bring
-you to it, for he tould me yestherday mornin’ that he knew,
-an’ offered to bring me there last night, if I’d steal him a bottle
-that my mother keeps the holy water in at home, tal he’d
-put whisky in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my lad, who is this boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know Harry Neil, or Mankind, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do, my good boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s a son of his, sir; an’ look, sir; do you see the
-smoke farthest up to the right, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“To the right? Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ’tis there, sir, that Darby Neil is watchin’; and he
-<em>says</em> he knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long have you been watching here?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is only the third day, sir, for <em>me</em>; but the rest, them
-boys above, has been here a good while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen nobody stirring about the hills since you
-came?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only once, sir, yesterday, I seen two men having an empty
-sack or two, runnin’ across the hill there above.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the military came up, for he had himself run
-forward in advance of them, and he repeated the substance of
-his conversation with our friend the vidette. Upon examining
-the stolidity of his countenance, in which there certainly was
-a woful deficiency of meaning, they agreed among themselves
-that his appearance justified the truth of the story which he
-told the gauger, and upon being still further interrogated,
-they were confirmed that none but a stupid lout like himself
-would entrust to his keeping any secret worth knowing.
-They now separated themselves into as many detached parties
-as there were fires burning on the hills about them, the
-gauger himself resolving to make for that which Darby Neil
-had in his keeping, for he could not help thinking that the
-vidette’s story was too natural to be false. They were just in
-the act of separating themselves to pursue their different
-routes, when the lad said,</p>
-
-<p>“Look, sir! look, sir! bad scran be from me but there’s a still
-any way. Sure I often seen a still; that’s jist like the one that
-Philip Hogan the tinker mended in George Steen’s barn.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hollo, boys,” exclaimed Pentland, “stoop! stoop! they
-are coming this way, and don’t see us: no, hang them, no!
-they have discovered us now, and are off towards Mossfield.
-By Jove this will be a bitter trick if they succeed; confound
-them, they are bent for Ballagh, which is my own property;
-and may I be hanged if we do not intercept them; but it is I
-myself who will have to pay the fine.”</p>
-
-<p>The pursuit instantly commenced with a speed and vigour
-equal to the ingenuity of this singular act of retaliation on
-the gauger. Pentland himself being long-winded from much
-practice in this way, and being further stimulated by the prospective
-loss which he dreaded, made as beautiful a run of it
-as any man of his years could do. It was all in vain, however.
-He merely got far enough to see the still head and
-worm heaved across the march ditch into his own property,
-and to reflect after seeing it that he was certain to have the
-double consolation of being made a standing joke of for life,
-and of paying heavily for the jest out of his own pocket. In the
-mean time, he was bound of course to seize the still, and report
-the caption; and as he himself farmed the townland in question,
-the fine was levied to the last shilling, upon the very
-natural principle that if he had been sufficiently active and
-vigilant, no man would have attempted to set up a still so convenient
-to his own residence and property.</p>
-
-<p>This manœuvre of keeping in reserve an old or second set
-of apparatus, for the purpose of acting the lapwing and misleading
-the gauger, was afterwards often practised with success;
-but the first discoverer of it was undoubtedly Mickey
-M’Quade, although the honour of the discovery is attributed
-to his friend George Steen. The matter, however, did not
-actually end here, for in a few days afterwards some malicious
-wag&mdash;in other words, George himself&mdash;had correct information
-sent to Pentland touching the locality of the cavern and
-the secret of its entrance. On this occasion the latter brought
-a larger military party than usual along with him, but it was
-only to make him feel that he stood in a position if possible
-more ridiculous than the first. He found indeed the marks of
-recent distillation in the place, but nothing else. Every vessel
-and implement connected with the process had been removed,
-with the exception of one bottle of whisky, to which
-was attached by a bit of twine the following friendly note:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Mr Pentland, Sir</span>&mdash;Take this bottle home and drink
-your own health. You can’t do less. It was distilled <em>under
-your nose</em> the first day you came to look for us, and bottled
-for you while you were speaking to the little boy that made
-a hare of you. Being distilled then under your nose, let it be
-drunk in the same place, and don’t forget while doing so to
-drink the health of</p>
-
-<p class="right">G. S.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The incident went abroad like wildfire, and was known
-everywhere. Indeed for a long time it was the standing topic
-of the parish; and so sharply was it felt by Pentland that
-he could never keep his temper if asked, “Mr Pentland, when
-did you see little George Steen?”&mdash;a question to which he
-was never known to give a civil reply.</p>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">THE GLOBE OF THE EARTH.</h2>
-
-<p>We were surprised very much some time ago at considering
-how much of the surface of the globe is covered by the waters
-of the lakes and oceans, and took the opportunity then of adverting
-to the importance of water in the general economy of
-nature. When, however, we pass to the consideration of the
-magnitude of the earth itself, the relative proportion of water
-appears to be much less considerable.</p>
-
-<p>Although there are many places in the great Atlantic and
-Pacific Oceans where the depth of water is very great, yet it
-has been deduced from principles that are not liable to much
-error, that the general or average depth does not exceed
-three miles. It may appear very strange that we can assert
-any thing positive about the depth of water in those seas, that
-are to the lines used for sounding quite unfathomable; but it
-is effected very simply. Every person has seen a wave advancing
-along the level surface of a canal, and by observing
-with a watch, it could easily be found to move more quickly
-at some times than at others. The deeper any part of the
-canal is, the more rapidly does the wave move along; and
-partly by experiment, and partly by reasoning, the connection
-between the depth of the water and velocity of the wave has
-been discovered. Now, the tide which comes to Dublin every
-twelve hours is produced by the influence of the sun and
-moon on the vast body of water in the Southern Pacific Ocean;
-and the great wave there formed turns round Cape Horn,
-and passes up the Atlantic Ocean, to arrive at the coasts of
-Europe and North America. The time occupied by this
-great wave in passing from one end to the other of the Atlantic
-can thus be known, and, precisely as in a canal, the depth
-of water thus calculated.</p>
-
-<p>The circumference of the earth at its widest part is about
-25,000, and its diameter 8000 miles. Hence the sheet of water
-which constitutes the ocean forms but 3-4000ths of its thickness,
-or nearly the same proportion as if we took an eighteen
-inch globe, and having spilled water on its surface, allowed all
-the excess of water to drain off. The remaining wetness
-would represent pretty nearly the condition of the waters of the
-ocean on the surface of the earth. By this means we can form,
-though obscurely, to our minds, an idea of the great magnitude
-of the earth itself. This magnitude renders also very
-inconsiderable those inequalities on the surface of the earth
-which constitute our highest ridges of mountains. A true
-model of Mont Blanc, the highest of European mountains, if
-constructed on the eighteen inch globe before referred to, would
-be unfelt by a finger drawn along its surface, and it would
-be only some of the highest peaks of the Andes and Himalayah
-that could be distinctly felt. Where man also employs
-his most gigantic energies and greatest efforts of skill to penetrate
-below the surface, forming mines by which the supplies
-of coal, of iron, of copper, and other minerals, have been
-obtained from the earliest times, the cavities that he makes can
-only be compared with the trace given by the point of a pin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-that had lightly touched the globe, and which would require a
-favourable incidence of light to see.</p>
-
-<p>The earth is therefore almost perfectly a smooth and solid
-ball. It is, however, almost certain that it was not always
-solid. It is, on the contrary, almost certain that at a period
-far exceeding in remoteness any time of which mere human
-indications can be found, the globe of the earth was one mass
-of liquid matter, heated to a degree exceeding our most intense
-fires, and wherein were melted all together the various
-elements which have since arranged themselves into their present
-forms. From having been thus liquid, the earth, which,
-revolving on its axis, produces by the side it turns to the sun
-the alternating day and night, has bulged out where the rotation
-of the surface is most rapid, at the equator, and has become
-flattened at the extremities of its axis, at the poles, just
-as a thin hoop which we spin round becomes compressed.
-The amount of this flattening is however very small. The
-equatorial diameter of the earth being accurately 7925, and
-the polar diameter being 7898, the compression is 27 miles.</p>
-
-<p>To account for the existence of this compression, the earth
-must have been originally liquid, for otherwise the rotation
-on its axis could not have generated this regular form. If it
-had been solid when it began to revolve, it should either have
-retained its original form, or it should have broken in pieces;
-but certainly unless it had been liquid, it could not have arrived
-at the exact degree of flattening which its velocity of
-rotation should have produced in a liquid mass.</p>
-
-<p>The intensely heated and liquid earth, revolving in the cold
-and empty spaces of the planetary system, gradually must
-have lost its excess of heat. Cooling most rapidly at the
-surface, it there solidified, and generated the first rocks. The
-loss of heat still going on, the solidification proceeded to a
-greater and greater depth, and should ultimately have reduced
-the earth to the same temperature as the empty space among
-the stars. The temperature of space has been calculated to be
-almost the same as that in the winter at Melville Island, in northernmost
-America, that is, 56 deg. below zero, or as far below
-the freezing point of water as the temperature of the hottest
-water that the hand can bear is above it. The earth is, however,
-not allowed to cool to that degree. It receives from the
-sun by radiation a quantity of heat which counteracts its tendency
-to cool, and hence the mean temperature of the surface
-of the earth has remained the same from the earliest historical
-epochs. In fact, at the surface we can find no trace of that
-original and internal great heat, the temperature of the surface
-of the earth being regulated altogether by the effect of
-the sun’s rays; but if we dig down to a moderate depth, about
-45 feet, the influence of the sun becomes insensible. Within
-that space also we can detect a very curious and important
-arrangement of the heat. It is not that the whole surface becomes
-warmed in summer and cold in winter, but the heat
-which is received from the sun in one summer travels by conduction
-beneath the surface, and is succeeded by the heat of
-the next summer, an intervening and cooler layer corresponding
-to the winter time, so that at a depth of 20 feet we may detect
-the heat which had fallen upon the surface four or five
-years before, this space of 45 feet being formed of numerous
-layers like the coatings of an onion, one for each year, until
-becoming less and less distinct, according as the depth increases,
-they join together in forming the layer of invariable
-temperature in which all the effect of the sun’s heat is lost.</p>
-
-<p>If we dig down still farther, the earth, though having lost
-the heating power of the sun, becomes sensibly warmer. The
-greater the depth to which we descend, the higher is the temperature
-found to be. Thus, where deep sinkings have been
-made for mines or wells, the air or water at the bottom is
-found to be much higher in temperature than at the invariable
-layer which gives the mean temperature of the place.
-This observation was first made in the case of the deep mines
-in Cornwall, and, although for some time ascribed to the presence
-of the workmen and the burning lamps, has since been
-verified by observations in all parts of Europe, and such agreement
-found, that the law connecting the temperature with the
-depth has been at least approximately determined.</p>
-
-<p>It is found, counting from the invariable layer, that the temperature
-increases about one degree of Fahrenheit’s scale for
-every fifty feet in depth. Thus, a well having been sunk at
-Rudersdorff to a depth of 630 feet, the water at the bottom
-was found to be 67 degrees, while the mean temperature was
-50 degrees. In a coal mine at Newcastle, which reaches to a
-depth of 1584 feet, the mean temperature of the surface being
-48 degrees, the thermometer was found to stand at 73 degrees
-in the lowest part of the mine, and hence the elevation of temperature
-was 25 degrees. Observations elsewhere vary between
-these limits; but the general result is, that the rise is
-one degree for about every fifty feet, as above stated.</p>
-
-<p>When we consider the great magnitude of the earth, and
-observe the rapidity with which the increase of temperature
-occurs, it will strike every person that we in reality inhabit
-a mere pellicle or skin, which has formed by cooling upon the
-surface, whilst all the internal mass of our globe may still be in
-the same state of igneous fusion and tumultuous action of elements,
-from which its present mineral constitution on the surface
-has resulted. For although it has cooled so far that at
-the surface all traces of its central fires have disappeared,
-yet at a mile and a half below the surface the temperature is
-such as should boil water: at a depth of five miles, lead would
-melt. Thirty miles below the surface, cast iron, and all those
-rocks which are generally the product of volcanoes in action,
-as trap and basalt, would fuse; and hence we may consider
-those terrific phenomena which have so frequently desolated
-some of the most beautiful districts of the earth, as being
-minute apertures or cracks in the thin coating of our planet,
-and giving vent from time to time to some small portions of
-the internal fires which work beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Additional evidence of the existence of this central heat
-may be derived from the peculiarity of springs. Those springs
-which carry off and are supplied with water from the surface,
-change their temperature with the season, being in winter
-cold, but in summer warm. Others, deriving their waters from
-a deeper layer of soil, as from the stratum of constant heat,
-are always the same, and, possessing the mean temperature
-of the place, feel warm in winter and cold in summer. Such
-springs exist in every country, and are very useful in ascertaining
-the mean temperature, for in place of watching
-a thermometer for a year, and taking averages, it is only
-necessary to select with proper caution such a deeply supplied
-spring, and by observing the temperature of its waters, the
-mean temperature of the place is found.</p>
-
-<p>A certain quantity of the water which is absorbed by the
-ground after rain must penetrate to a great depth, must
-descend, in fact, until at 1½ miles it is boiled and driven up
-again to find some outlet as a spring. In rising up, however,
-it is for the most part cooled; but having charged itself with
-various saline and metallic bodies, under the most favourable
-circumstances of high temperature and pressure, it issues as
-a hot mineral spring or spa. On getting into the air, it generally
-abandons a great part of what it had dissolved, and
-forms in many cases enormous depositions of solid rock.</p>
-
-<p>A company in Paris have formed the idea of using the water
-thus heated by the powers below, for the purposes of public
-baths. The neighbourhood of Paris is peculiarly fitted for
-what are termed Artesian wells, in which the water often rises
-considerably above the surface of the ground. Under the
-auspices of this company, a well has been sunk already to
-the depth of 1600 feet, and water obtained at 77 degrees; but
-to obtain natural hot water at a temperature of 100 degrees,
-which would be required for bathing purposes, an additional
-depth of probably as much more will be required. It is said
-the projectors are not now sanguine of its pecuniary success.</p>
-
-<p class="gap4"><span class="smcap">The Secret of Success in Life.</span>&mdash;In no department of
-life do men rise to eminence who have not undergone a long
-and diligent preparation; for whatever be the difference in the
-mental power of individuals, it is the cultivation of the mind
-alone that leads to distinction. John Hunter was as remarkable
-for his industry as for his talents, of which his museum
-alone forms a most extraordinary proof; and if we look around
-and contemplate the history of those men whose talents and
-acquirements we must esteem, we find that their superiority
-of knowledge has been the result of great labour and diligence.
-It is an ill-founded notion to say that merit in the
-long-run is neglected. It is sometimes joined to circumstances
-that may have a little influence in counteracting it, as an unfortunate
-manner and temper; but generally it meets with its
-due reward. The world are not fools&mdash;every person of merit
-has the best chance of success; and who would be ambitious
-of public approbation, if it had not the power of discriminating?&mdash;<cite>Physic
-and Physicians.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Printed and Published every Saturday by <span class="smcap">Gunn</span> and <span class="smcap">Cameron</span>, at the Office
-of the General Advertiser, No. 6, Church Lane, College Green, Dublin;
-and sold by all Booksellers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1, No.
-16, October 17, 1840, by Various
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL ***
-
-***** This file should be named 54258-h.htm or 54258-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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