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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 #55460 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55460)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 49,
-June 5, 1841, 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. 49, June 5, 1841
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: August 30, 2017 [EBook #55460]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRISH PENNY JOURNAL, JUNE 5, 1841 ***
-
-
-
-
-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 49. SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1841. VOLUME I.
-
-[Illustration: VICTORIA CASTLE, KILLINEY, COUNTY OF DUBLIN.]
-
-Our metropolitan readers, at least, and many others besides, are aware
-of the magnificent but not easily to be realised project, recently
-propounded, of erecting a town on the east side of Malpas’s or Killiney
-Hill--a situation certainly of unrivalled beauty and grandeur. Plans,
-most satisfactory, and views prospective as well as perspective of this
-as yet non-existent Brighton or Clifton, have been laid before the
-public, with a view to obtain the necessary ways and means to give it a
-more substantial reality; but alas! for the uncertainty of human wishes!
-Queenstown, despite the popularity of our sovereign, is not likely, for
-some time at least, to present a rivalry, in any thing but its romantic
-and commanding site, to the busy, bustling, and not very symmetrically
-built town which has been erected in honour of Her august eldest uncle.
-The good people of Kingstown may therefore rejoice; their glory will not
-for some time at least be eclipsed; and the lovers of natural romantic
-scenery who have not money--they seldom have--to employ in promising
-speculations, may also rejoice, for the wild and precipitous cliffs of
-Killiney are likely to retain for some years longer a portion of their
-romantic beauty; the rocks will not be shaped into well-dressed forms
-of prim gentility; the purple heather and blossomy furze, “unprofitable
-gay,” may give nature’s brilliant colouring to the scenery, and the wild
-sea-birds may sport around: the time has not arrived when they will be
-destroyed or banished from their ancient haunt by the encroachment of man.
-
-But however this may be, the first stone of the new town has been laid;
-nay, the first building--no less a building than “Victoria Castle”--has
-been actually erected; and, as a memorial of one of the gigantic
-projects of this speculating nineteenth century of ours, we have felt it
-incumbent on us to give its fair proportions a place in our immortal and
-universally read miscellany, in order to hand down its pristine form to
-posterity in ages when it shall have been shaped by time into a genuine
-antique ruin.
-
-Of the architectural style and general appearance of Victoria Castle, our
-engraving gives a good idea. Like most modern would-be castles, it has
-towers and crenellated battlements and _large_ windows in abundance, and
-is upon the whole as unlike a real old castle as such structures usually
-are. It is, however, a picturesque and imposing structure of its kind,
-and, what is of more consequence to its future occupants, a cheerful and
-commodious habitation, which is more than can be said of most genuine
-castles, or of many more classical imitations of them; and its situation,
-on a terrace on the south side of Killiney Hill, is one as commanding and
-beautiful as could possibly be imagined.
-
-Nothing in nature can indeed surpass the beauty, variety, and extent
-of the prospects which may be enjoyed from this spot or its immediate
-vicinity, and we might fill a whole number of our Journal in describing
-their principal features. To most of our readers, however, they must
-be already familiar, and to those who have not had the pleasure of
-enjoying a sight of them, it will convey a sufficient general idea of
-what they must be, to acquaint them that Killiney Hill from the same
-point commands, towards the west, views of the far-famed Bay of Dublin,
-the city, and the richly-cultivated and villa-studded plains by which
-it is surrounded, towards the north, the bold, rugged promontory of
-Howth, with the islands of Dalkey, Ireland’s eye, Lambay, and the peaked
-mountain-ranges of Down and Lowth in the extreme distance; and lastly,
-towards the east and south, the sea, and the lovely Bay of Killiney,
-with its shining yellow strand, curved into the form of a spacious and
-magnificent amphitheatre, from which, as in seats above each other,
-ascend the richly-wooded hills, backed by the mountains of Dublin and
-Wicklow, with all their exquisite variety of forms and fitful changes of
-colour. In short, it may truly be said of this delightful situation, that
-though other localities may possess some individual character of scenery
-of greater beauty or grandeur, there are few if any in the British
-empire that could fairly be compared with it for its variety and general
-interest.
-
-Of the great interest of Killiney to the naturalist, and the geologist
-more particularly, we have already endeavoured to give our readers
-some notion in a paper, in a recent number, from the pen of our able
-and accomplished friend Dr Schouler; and Killiney is scarcely less
-interesting to the antiquary than to the man of science. Though till a
-recent period its now cultivated and thickly inhabited hills and shores
-presented the virgin appearance of a country nearly in the state which
-nature left it, the numerous monuments of antiquity scattered about them
-clearly evinced that man had been a wanderer if not an inhabitant here
-in the most remote times. Numerous kistvaens containing human skeletons
-have been found between the road and the sea, undoubtedly of pagan times;
-and we have ourselves seen in our young days six very large urns of
-baked clay, containing burned bones, which were discovered in sinking
-the foundations for a cottage, near the road between the Killiney and
-Rochestown hills. We have also seen several sepulchral stone circles,
-now no longer remaining; and there is yet to be seen of the same period,
-a fine cromleac, situated near Shanganagh, and that most remarkable and
-interesting pagan temple, near the Martello tower, with its judgment
-chair, and the figures of the sun and moon sculptured on one of the
-stones within its enclosure. Nor is Killiney without its monument of
-Christian piety of as early date as any to be found in Ireland. In the
-beautiful ivied ruin of its parish church, the antiquary may enjoy a
-sight of one of the most characteristic examples of the temples erected
-by the Irish immediately after their conversion to Christianity, and make
-himself intimate with a style of architecture not now to be found in
-other portions of the British empire.
-
- P.
-
-
-
-
-THE CASTLE OF AUGHENTAIN, OR A LEGEND OF THE BROWN GOAT,
-
-A TALE OF TOM GRASSIEY, THE SHANAHUS.
-
-BY WILLIAM CARLETON.
-
-
-When Tom had expressed an intention of relating an old story, the hum
-of general conversation gradually subsided into silence, and every face
-assumed an expression of curiosity and interest, with the exception of
-Jemsy Baccagh, who was rather deaf, and blind George M’Givor, so called
-because he wanted an eye; both of whom, in high and piercing tones,
-carried on an angry discussion touching a small law-suit that had gone
-against Jemsy in the Court Leet, of which George was a kind of rustic
-attorney. An outburst of impatient rebuke was immediately poured upon
-them from fifty voices. “Whisht with yez, ye pair of devils’ limbs, an’
-Tom goin’ to tell us a story. Jemsy, your sowl’s as crooked as your lame
-leg, you sinner; an’ as for blind George, if roguery would save a man,
-he’d escape the devil yet. Tarenation to yez, an’ be quiet till we hear
-the story!”
-
-“Ay,” said Tom, “Scripthur says that when the blind leads the blind, both
-will fall into the ditch; but God help the lame that have blind George
-to lead them; we might aisily guess where he’d guide them to, especially
-such a poor innocent as Jemsy there.” This banter, as it was not intended
-to give offence, so was it received by the parties to whom it was
-addressed with laughter and good humour.
-
-“Silence, boys,” said Tom; “I’ll jist take a draw of the pipe till I
-put my mind in a proper state of transmigration for what I’m goin’ to
-narrate.”
-
-He then smoked on for a few minutes, his eyes complacently but
-meditatively closed, and his whole face composed into the philosophic
-spirit of a man who knew and felt his own superiority, as well as what
-was expected from him. When he had sufficiently arranged the materials in
-his mind, he took the pipe out of his mouth, rubbed the shank-end of it
-against the cuff of his coat, then handed it to his next neighbour, and
-having given a short preparatory cough, thus commenced his legend:--
-
-“You must know that afther Charles the First happened to miss his head
-one day, havin’ lost it while playin’ a game of ‘Heads an’ Points’ with
-the Scotch, that a man called Nolly Rednose, or Oliver Crummle, was
-sent over to Ireland with a parcel of breekless Highlanders an’ English
-Bodaghs to subduvate the Irish, an’ as many of the Prodestans as had been
-friends to the late king, who were called Royalists. Now, it appears by
-many larned transfigurations that Nolly Rednose had in his army a man
-named Balgruntie, or the Hog of Cupar; a fellow who was as coorse as
-sackin’, as cunnin’ as a fox, an’ as gross as the swine he was named
-afther. Rednose, there is no doubt of it, was as nate a hand at takin’
-a town or castle as ever went about it; but then, any town that didn’t
-surrendher at discretion was sure to experience little mitigation at
-his hands; an’ whenever he was bent on wickedness, he was sure to say
-his prayers at the commencement of every siege or battle; that is, he
-intended to show no marcy in, for he’d get a book, an’ openin’ it at
-the head of his army, he’d cry, ‘Ahem, my brethren, let us praise God
-by endeavourin’ till sing sich or sich a psalm;’ an’ God help the man,
-woman, or child, that came before him after that. Well an’ good: it so
-happened that a squadron of his psalm-singers were dispatched by him from
-Enniskillen, where he stopped to rendher assistance to a part of his
-army that O’Neill was leatherin’ down near Dungannon, an’ on their way
-they happened to take up their quarthers for the night at the Mill of
-Aughentain. Now, above all men in the creation, who should be appointed
-to lead this same squadron but the Hog of Cupar. ‘Balgruntie, go off wid
-you,’ said Crummle, when administering his instructions to him; ‘but
-be sure that wherever you meet a fat royalist on the way, to pay your
-respects to him as a Christian ought,’ says he; ‘an’, above all things,
-my dear brother Balgruntie, _don’t neglect your devotions_, otherwise our
-arms can’t prosper; and be sure,’ says he, with a pious smile, ‘that if
-they promulgate opposition, you will make them bleed anyhow, either in
-purse or person; or if they provoke the grace o’ God, take a little from
-them in both; an’ so the Lord’s name be praised, yeamen!’
-
-Balgruntie sang a psalm of thanksgivin’ for bein’ elected by his
-commander to sich a holy office, set out on his march, an’ the next
-night he an’ his choir slep in the mill of Aughentain, as I said. Now,
-Balgruntie had in this same congregation of his a long-legged Scotchman
-named Sandy Saveall, which name he got by way of etymology, for his
-charity; for it appears by the historical elucidations that Sandy was
-perpetually rantinizin’ about sistherly affection an’ brotherly love: an’
-what showed more taciturnity than any thing else was, that while this
-same Sandy had the persuasion to make every one believe that he thought
-of nothing else, he shot more people than any ten men in the squadron. He
-was indeed what they call a dead shot, for no one ever knew him to miss
-any thing he fired at. He had a musket that could throw point blank an
-English mile, an’ if he only saw a man’s nose at that distance, he used
-to say that with aid from above he could blow it for him with a leaden
-handkerchy, meaning that he could blow it off his face with a musket
-bullet; and so by all associations he could, for indeed the faits he
-performed were very insinivating an’ problematical.
-
-Now, it so happened that at this period there lived in the castle a
-fine wealthy ould royalist, named Graham or Grimes, as they are often
-denominated, who had but one child, a daughter, whose beauty an’
-perfections were mellifluous far an’ near over the country, an’ who had
-her health drunk, as the toast of Ireland, by the Lord Lieutenant in the
-Castle of Dublin, undher the sympathetic appellation of ‘the Rose of
-Aughentain.’ It was her son that afterwards ran through the estate, and
-was forced to part wid the castle; an’ it’s to him the proverb colludes,
-which mentions ‘ould John Grame, that swallowed the castle of Aughentain.’
-
-Howsomever, that bears no prodigality to the story I’m narratin’. So
-what would you have of it, but Balgruntie, who had heard of the father’s
-wealth and the daughter’s beauty, took a holy hankerin’ afther both; an’
-havin’ as usual said his prayers an’ sung a psalm, he determined for
-to clap his thumb upon the father’s money, thinkin’ that the daughter
-would be the more aisily superinduced to folly it. In other words, he
-made up his mind to sack the castle, carry off the daughter and marry
-her righteously, rather, he said, through a sincere wish to bring her
-into a state of grace, by a union with a God-fearin’ man, whose walk he
-trusted was Zionward, than from any cardinal detachment for her wealth
-or beauty. He accordingly sent up a file of the most pious men he had,
-picked fellows, with good psalm-singin’ voices and strong noses, to
-request that John Graham would give them possession of the castle for
-a time, an’ afterwards join them at prayers, as a proof that he was no
-royalist, but a friend to Crummle an’ the Commonwealth. Now, you see, the
-best of it was, that the very man they demanded this from was commonly
-denominated by the people as ‘Gunpowdher Jack,’ in consequence of the
-great signification of his courage; an’, besides, he was known to be
-a member of the Hell-fire Club, that no person could join that hadn’t
-fought three duels, and killed at least one man; and in ordher to show
-that they regarded neither God nor hell, they were obligated to dip one
-hand in blood an’ the other in fire, before they could be made members
-of the club. It’s aisy to see, then, that Graham was not likely to quail
-before a handful of the very men he hated wid all the vociferation in his
-power, an’ he accordingly put his head out of the windy, an’ axed them
-their tergiversation for bein’ there.
-
-‘Begone about your business,’ he said; ‘I owe you no regard. What
-brings you before the castle of a man who despises you? Don’t think to
-determinate me, you cauting rascals, for you can’t. My castle’s well
-provided wid men, an’ ammunition, an’ food; an’ if you don’t be off, I’ll
-make you sing a different tune from a psalm one.’ Begad he did, plump to
-them, out of the windy.
-
-When Crummle’s men returned to Balgruntie in the mill, they related
-what had tuck place, an’ he said that afther prayers he’d send a second
-message in writin’, an’ if it wasn’t attended to, they’d put their trust
-in God an’ storm the castle. The squadron he commanded was not a numerous
-one; an’ as they had no artillery, an’ were surrounded by enemies, the
-takin’ of the castle, which was a strong one, might cost them some
-snufflication. At all events, Balgruntie was bent on makin’ the attempt,
-especially afther he heard that the castle was well vittled, an’ indeed
-he was meritoriously joined by his men, who piously licked their lips
-on hearin’ of such glad tidings. Graham was a hot-headed man, without
-much ambidexterity or deliberation, otherwise he might have known that
-the bare mintion of the beef an’ mutton in his castle was only fit to
-make such a hungry pack desperate. But be that as it may, in a short
-time Balgruntie wrote him a letter, demandin’ of him, in the name of
-Nolly Rednose an’ the Commonwealth, to surrendher the castle, or if not,
-that, ould as he was, he would make him as soople as a two-year-ould.
-Graham, afther readin’ it, threw the letther back to the messengers wid
-a certain recommendation to Balgruntie regardin’ it; but whether the
-same recommendation was followed up an’ acted on so soon as he wished,
-historical retaliations do not inform.
-
-On their return the military narrated to their commander the reception
-they resaved a second time from Graham, an’ he then resolved to lay
-regular siege to the castle; but as he knew he could not readily take it
-by violence, he determined, as they say, to starve the garrison leisurely
-an’ by degrees. But, first an’ foremost, a thought struck him, an’ he
-immediently called Sandy Saveall behind the mill-hopper, which he had now
-turned into a pulpit for the purpose of expoundin’ the word, an’ givin’
-exhortations to his men.
-
-‘Sandy,’ said he, ‘are you in a state of justification to-day?’
-
-‘Towards noon,’ replied Sandy, ‘I had some strong wristlings with the
-enemy; but I am able, undher praise, to say that I defated him in three
-attacks, and I consequently feel my righteousness much recruited. I had
-some wholesome communings with the miller’s daughter, a comely lass,
-who may yet be recovered from the world, an’ led out of the darkness of
-Aigyp, by a word in saison.’
-
-‘Well, Sandy,’ replied the other, ‘I lave her to your own instructions;
-there is another poor benighted maiden, who is also comely, up in the
-castle of that godless sinner, who belongeth to the Perdition Club; an’,
-indeed, Sandy, until he is somehow removed, I think there is little hope
-of plucking her like a brand out of the burning.’
-
-He serenaded Sandy in the face as he spoke, an’ then cast an extemporary
-glance at the musket, which was as much as to say ‘can you translate an
-insinivation?’ Sandy concocted a smilin’ reply; an’ takin’ up the gun,
-rubbed the barrel, an’ pattin’ it as a sportsman would pat the neck of
-his horse or dog, wid reverence for comparin’ the villain to either one
-or the other.
-
-‘If it was known, Sandy,’ said Balgruntie, ‘it would harden her heart
-against me; an’ as he is hopeless at all events, bein’ a member of that
-Perdition Club’----
-
-‘True,’ said Sandy, ‘but you lave the miller’s daughter to me?’
-
-‘I said so.’
-
-‘Well, if his removal will give you any consolidation in the matther, you
-may say no more.’
-
-‘I could not, Sandy, justify it to myself to take him away by open
-violence, for you know that I bear a conscience if any thing too tendher
-and dissolute. Also I wish, Sandy, to presarve an ondeniable reputation
-for humanity; an’, besides, the daughter might become as reprobate as the
-father if she suspected me to be personally concarned in it. I have heard
-a good deal about him, an’ am sensibly informed that he has been shot at
-twice before, by the sons, it is thought, of an enemy that he himself
-killed rather significantly in a duel.’
-
-‘Very well,’ replied Sandy; ‘I would myself feel scruples; but as both
-our consciences is touched in the business, I think I am justified.
-Indeed, captain, it is very likely afther all that we are but the mere
-instruments in it, an’ that it is through us that this ould unrighteous
-sinner is to be removed by a more transplendant judgment.’
-
-Begad, neighbours, when a rascal is bent on wickedness, it is aisy to
-find cogitations enough to back him in his villany. And so was it with
-Sandy Saveall and Balgruntie.
-
-That evenin’ ould Graham was shot through the head standin’ in the windy
-of his own castle, an’ to extenuate the suspicion of sich an act from
-Crummle’s men, Balgruntie himself went up the next day, beggin’ very
-politely to have a friendly explanation with Squire Graham, sayin’ that
-he had harsh ordhers, but that if the castle was peaceably delivered to
-him, he would, for the sake of the young lady, see that no injury should
-be offered either to her or her father.
-
-The young lady, however, had the high drop in her, and becoorse the only
-answer he got was a flag of defiance. This nettled the villain, an’ he
-found there was nothin’ else for it but to plant a strong guard about the
-castle to keep all that was in, in--and all that was out, out.
-
-In the mean time, the very appearance of the Crumwellians in the
-neighbourhood struck such terror into the people, that the country, which
-was then only very thinly inhabited, became quite desarted, an’ for
-miles about the face of a human bein’ could not be seen, barrin’ their
-own, sich as they were. Crummle’s track was always a bloody one, an’ the
-people knew that they were wise in puttin’ the hills an’ mountain passes
-between him an’ them. The miller an’ his daughter bein’ encouraged by
-Sandy, staid principally for the sake of Miss Graham; but except them,
-there was not a man or woman in the barony to bid good-morrow to or
-say Salvey Dominey. On the beginnin’ of the third day, Balgruntie, who
-knew his officialities extremely well, an’ had sent down a messenger
-to Dungannon to see whether matters were so bad as they had been
-reported, was delighted to hear that O’Neill had disappeared from the
-neighbourhood. He immediately informed Crummle of this, and tould him
-that he had laid siege to one of the leadin’ passes of the north, an’
-that, by gettin’ possession of the two castles of Aughentain and Augher,
-he could keep O’Neill in check, and command that part of the country.
-Nolly approved of this, an’ ordhered him to proceed, but was sorry that
-he could send him no assistance at present; ‘however,’ said he, ‘with a
-good cause, sharp swords, an’ aid from above, there is no fear of us.’
-
-They now set themselves to take the castle in airnest. Balgruntie an’
-Sandy undherstood one another, an’ not a day passed that some one wasn’t
-dropped in it. As soon as ever a face appeared, pop went the deadly
-musket, an’ down fell the corpse of whoever it was aimed at. Miss Graham
-herself was spared for good reasons, but in the coorse of ten or twelve
-days she was nearly alone. Ould Graham, though a man that feared nothing,
-was only guilty of a profound swagger when he reported the strength
-of the castle and the state of the provisions to Balgruntie an’ his
-crew. But above all things, that which eclipsed their distresses was
-the want of wather. There was none in the castle, an’ although there
-is a beautiful well beside it, yet, _farcer gair_, it was of small
-responsibility to them. Here, then, was the poor young lady placed at
-the marcy of her father’s murdherer; for however she might have doubted
-in the beginnin’ that he was shot by the Crumwellians, yet the death of
-nearly all the servants of the house in the same way was a sufficient
-proof that it was like masther like man in this case. What, however, was
-to be done? The whole garrison now consisted only of Miss Graham herself,
-a fat man cook advanced in years, who danced in his distress in ordher
-that he might suck his own perspiration, and a little orphan boy that she
-tuck undher her purtection. It was a hard case, an’ yet, God bless her,
-she held out like a man.
-
-It’s an ould sayin’ that there’s no tyin’ up the tongue of Fame, an’ it’s
-also a true one. The account of the siege had gone far an’ near in the
-counthry, an’ none of the Irish, no matter what they were who ever heard
-it, but wor sorry. Sandy Saveall was now the devil an’ all. As there was
-no more in the castle to shoot, he should find something to regenerate
-his hand upon: for instance, he practised upon three or four of Graham’s
-friends, who undher one pretence or other were seen skulkin’ about the
-castle, an’ none of their relations durst come to take away their bodies
-in ordher to bury them. At length things came to that pass, that poor
-Miss Graham was at the last gasp for something to drink; she had ferreted
-out as well as she could a drop of moisture here an’ there in the damp
-corners of the castle, but now all that was gone; the fat cook had sucked
-himself to death, and the little orphan boy died calmly away a few hours
-afther him, lavin’ the helpless lady with a tongue swelled an’ furred,
-and a mouth parched and burned, for want of drink. Still the blood of
-the Grahams was in her, and yield she would not to the villain that left
-her as she was. Sich then was the transparency of her situation, when
-happening to be on the battlements to catch, if possible, a little of the
-dew of heaven, she was surprised to see something flung up, which rolled
-down towards her feet; she lifted it, an’ on examinin’ the contents,
-found it to be a stone covered with a piece of brown paper, inside which
-was a slip of white, containing the words, ‘Endure--relief is near you!’
-But, poor young lady, of what retrospection could these tidings be to one
-in her situation?--she could scarcely see to read them; her brain was
-dizzy, her mouth like a cindher, her tongue swelled an’ black, an’ her
-breath felt as hot as a furnace. She could barely breathe, an’ was in
-the very act of lyin’ down undher the triumphant air of heaven to die,
-when she heard the shrill voice of a young kid in the castle yard, and
-immediently remembered that a brown goat which her lover, a gentleman
-named Simpson, had, when it was a kid, made her a present of, remained in
-the castle about the stable during the whole siege. She instantly made
-her way slowly down stairs, got a bowl, and havin’ milked the goat, she
-took a little of the milk, which I need not asseverate at once relieved
-her. By this means she recovered, an’ findin’ no further anticipation
-from druth, she resolved like a hairo to keep the Crumwellians out, an’
-to wait till either God or man might lend her a helpin’ hand.
-
-Now, you must know that the miller’s purty daughter had also a sweetheart
-called _Suil Gair_ Maguire, or sharp-eye’d Maguire, an humble branch of
-the great Maguires of Enniskillen; an’ this same Suil Gair was servant
-an’ foster-brother to Simpson, who was the intended husband of Miss
-Graham. Simpson, who lived some miles off, on hearin’ the condition of
-the castle, gathered together all the royalists far an’ near; an’ as
-Crummle was honestly hated by both Romans an’ Prodestans, faith, you see,
-Maguire himself promised to send a few of his followers to the rescue.
-In the mean time, Suil Gair dressed himself up like a fool or idiot, an’
-undher the protection of the miller’s daughter, who blarnied Saveall
-in great style, was allowed to wandher about an’ joke wid the sogers;
-but especially he took a fancy to Sandy, and challenged him to put one
-stone out of five in one of the port-holes of the castle, at a match of
-finger-stone. Sandy, who was nearly as famous at that as the musket, was
-rather relaxed when he saw that Suil Gair could at least put in every
-second stone, an’ that he himself could hardly put one in out of twenty.
-Well, at all events it was durin’ their sport that fool Paddy, as they
-called him, contrived to fling the scrap of writin’ I spoke of across the
-battlements at all chances; for when he undhertook to go to the castle,
-he gave up his life as lost; but he didn’t care about that, set in case
-he was able to save either his foster-brother or Miss Graham. But this is
-not at all indispensable, for it is well known that many a foster-brother
-sacrificed his life the same way, and in cases of great danger, when the
-real brother would beg to decline the compliment.
-
-Things were now in a very connubial state entirely. Balgruntie heard
-that relief was comin’ to the castle, an’ what to do he did not know;
-there was little time to be lost, however, an’ something must be done. He
-praiched flowery discourses twice a-day from the mill-hopper, an’ sang
-psalms for grace to be directed in his righteous intentions; but as yet
-he derived no particular predilection from either. Sandy appeared to have
-got a more bountiful modelum of grace than his captain, for he succeeded
-at last in bringin’ the miller’s daughter to sit undher the word at her
-father’s hopper. Fool Paddy, as they called Maguire, had now become a
-great favourite wid the sogers, an’ as he proved to be quite harmless
-and inoffensive, they let him run about the place widout opposition. The
-castle, to be sure, was still guarded, but Miss Graham kept her heart
-up in consequence of the note, for she hoped every day to get relief
-from her friends. Balgruntie, now seein’ that the miller’s daughter was
-becomin’ more serious undher the taichin’ of Saveall, formed a plan that
-he thought might enable him to penethrate the castle, an’ bear off the
-lady an’ the money. This was to strive wid very delicate meditation to
-prevail on the miller’s daughter, through the renown that he thought
-Sandy had over her, to open a correspondency wid Miss Graham; for he
-knew that if one of the gates was unlocked, and the unsuspectin’ girl
-let in, the whole squadron would soon be in afther her. Now, this plan
-was the more dangerous to Miss Graham, because the miller’s daughter
-had intended to bring about the very same denouncement for a different
-purpose. Between her friend an’ her enemies it was clear the poor lady
-had little chance; an’ it was Balgruntie’s intention, the moment he had
-sequestrated her and the money, to make his escape, an’ lave the castle
-to whosomever might choose to take it. Things, however, were ordhered to
-take a different bereavement: the Hog of Cupar was to be trapped in the
-hydrostatics of his own hypocrisy, an’ Saveall to be overmatched in his
-own premises. Well, the plot was mentioned to Sandy, who was promised
-a good sketch of the prog; an’ as it was jist the very thing he dreamt
-about night an’ day, he snapped at it as a hungry dog would at a sheep’s
-trotter. That night the miller’s daughter--whose name I may as well say
-was Nannie Duffy, the purtiest girl an’ the sweetest singer that ever was
-in the counthry--was to go to the castle an’ tell Miss Graham that the
-sogers wor all gone, Crummle killed, an’ his whole army massacrayed to
-atoms. This was a different plan from poor Nannie’s, who now saw clearly
-what they were at. But never heed a woman for bein’ witty when hard
-pushed.
-
-‘I don’t like to do it,’ said she, ‘for it looks like thrachery,
-espishilly as my father has left the neighbourhood, and I don’t know
-where he is gone to; an’ you know thrachery’s ondacent in either man or
-woman. Still, Sandy, it goes hard for me to refuse one that I--I----well,
-I wish I knew where my father is--I would like to know what he’d think of
-it.’
-
-‘Hut,’ said Sandy, ‘where’s the use of such scruples in a good
-cause?--when we get the money, we’ll fly. It is principally for the sake
-of waining you an’ her from the darkness of idolatry that we do it.
-Indeed, my conscience would not rest well if I let a soul an’ body like
-yours remain a prey to Sathan, my darlin’.’
-
-‘Well,’ said she, ‘doesn’t the captain exhort this evenin’?’
-
-‘He does, my beloved, an’ with a blessin’ will expound a few verses from
-the Song of Solomon.’
-
-‘It’s betther then,’ said she, ‘to sit under the word, an’ perhaps some
-light may be given to us.’
-
-This delighted Saveall’s heart, who now looked upon pretty Nannie as
-his own; indeed, he was obliged to go gradually and cautiously to work,
-for cruel though Nolly Rednose was, Sandy knew that if any violent act
-of that kind should raich him, the guilty party would sup sorrow. Well,
-accordin’ to this pious arrangement, Balgruntie assembled all his men
-who were not on duty about the hopper, in which he stood as usual,
-an’ had commenced a powerful exhortation, the substratum of which was
-devoted to Nannie; he dwelt upon the happiness of religious love; said
-that scruples were often suggested by Satan, an’ that a heavenly duty
-was but terrestrial when put in comparishment wid an earthly one. He
-also made collusion to the old Squire that was popped by Sandy; said
-it was often a judgment for the wicked man to die in his sins; an’ was
-gettin’ on wid great eloquence an’ emulation, when a low rumblin’ noise
-was heard, an’ Balgruntie, throwin’ up his clenched hands an’ grindin’
-his teeth, shouted out, ‘Hell and d----n, I’ll be ground to death!
-The mill’s goin’ on! Murdher! murdher! I’m gone!’ Faith, it was true
-enough--she had been wickedly set a-goin’ by some one; an’ before they
-had time to stop her, the Hog of Cupar had the feet and legs twisted off
-him before their eyes--a fair illustration of his own doctrine, that
-it is often a judgment for the wicked man to die in his sins. When the
-mill was stopped, he was pulled out, but didn’t live twenty minutes, in
-consequence of the loss of blood. Time was pressin’, so they ran up a
-shell of a coffin, and tumbled it into a pit that was hastily dug for it
-on the mill-common.
-
-This, however, by no manner of manes relieved poor Nannie from her
-difficulty, for Saveall, finding himself now first in command, determined
-not to lose a moment in tolerating his plan upon the castle.
-
-‘You see,’ said he, ‘that a way is opened for us that we didn’t expect;
-an’ let us not close our eyes to the light that has been given, lest it
-might be suddenly taken from us again. In this instance I suspect that
-fool Paddy has been made the chosen instrument; for it appears upon
-inquiry that he too has disappeared. However, heaven’s will be done! we
-will have the more to ourselves, my beloved--ehem! It is now dark,’ he
-proceeded, ‘so I shall go an’ take my usual smoke at the mill window, an’
-in about a quarther of an hour I’ll be ready.’
-
-‘But I’m all in a tremor after sich a frightful accident,’ replied
-Nannie: ‘an’ I want to get a few minutes’ quiet before we engage upon our
-undhertakin.’
-
-This was very natural, and Saveall accordingly took his usual seat at a
-little windy in the gable of the mill, that faced the miller’s house; an’
-from the way the bench was fixed, he was obliged to sit with his face
-exactly towards the same direction. There we leave him meditatin’ upon
-his own righteous approximations, till we folly _Suil Gair_ Maguire, or
-fool Paddy, as they called him, who practicated all that was done.
-
-Maguire and Nannie, findin’ that no time was to be lost, gave all over
-as ruined, unless somethin’ could be acted on quickly. Suil Gair at
-once thought of settin’ the mill a-goin’, but kept the plan to himself,
-any further than tellin’ her not to be surprised at any thing she might
-see. He then told her to steal him a gun, but if possible to let it be
-Saveall’s, as he knew it could be depended on. ‘But I hope you won’t shed
-any blood if you can avoid it,’ said she; ‘_that_ I don’t like.’ ‘Tut,’
-replied Suil Gair, makin’ evasion to the question, ‘it’s good to have it
-about me for my own defence.’
-
-He could often have shot either Balgruntie or Saveall in daylight,
-but not without certain death to himself, as he knew that escape was
-impossible. Besides, time was not before so pressin’ upon them, an’ every
-day relief was expected. Now, however, that relief was so near--for
-Simpson with a party of royalists an’ Maguire’s men must be within a
-couple of hours’ journey--it would be too intrinsic entirely to see the
-castle plundhered, and the lady carried off by such a long-legged skyhill
-as Saveall. Nannie consequentially, at great risk, took an opportunity of
-slipping his gun to Suil Gair, who was the best shot of the day in that
-or any other part of the country; and it was in consequence of this that
-he was called Suil Gair, or Sharp Eye. But, indeed, all the Maguires were
-famous shots; an’ I’m tould there’s one of them now in Dublin that could
-hit a pigeon’s egg or a silver sixpence at the distance of a hundred
-yards.[1] Suil Gair did not merely raise the sluice when he set the mill
-a-goin’, but he whipped it out altogether an’ threw it into the dam, so
-that the possibility of saving the Hog of Cupar was irretrievable. He
-made off, however, an’ threw himself among the tall ragweeds that grew
-upon the common, till it got dark, when Saveall, as was his custom,
-should take his evenin’ smoke at the windy. Here he sat for some period,
-thinkin’ over many ruminations, before he lit his cutty pipe, as he
-called it.
-
-‘Now,’ said he to himself, ‘what is there to hindher me from takin’ away,
-or rather from makin’ sure of the grand lassie, instead of the miller’s
-daughter? If I get intil the castle, it can be soon effected; for if she
-has any regard for her reputation, she will be quiet. I’m a braw handsome
-lad enough, a wee thought high in the cheek bones, scaly in the skin, an’
-knock-knee’d a trifle, but stout an’ lathy, an’ tough as a withy. But,
-again, what is to be done wi Nannie? Hut, she’s but a miller’s daughter,
-an’ may be disposed of if she gets troublesome. I know she’s fond of
-me, but I dinna blame her for that. However, it wadna become me now to
-entertain scruples, seein’ that the way is made so plain for me. But,
-save us! eh, sirs, that was an awful death, an’ very like a judgment on
-the Hog of Cupar! It is often a judgment for the wicked to die in their
-sins! Balgruntie wasna that’---- Whatever he intended to say further,
-cannot be analogized by man, for, just as he had uttered the last word,
-which he did while holding the candle to his pipe, the bullet of his own
-gun entered between his eyes, and the next moment he was a corpse.
-
-Suil Gair desarved the name he got, for truer did never bullet go to the
-mark from Saveall’s own aim than it did from his. There is now little
-more to be superadded to my story. Before daybreak the next mornin’,
-Simpson came to the relief of his intended wife; Crummle’s party war
-surprised, taken, an’ cut to pieces; an’ it so happened that from that
-day to this the face of a soger belongin’ to him was never seen near
-the mill or castle of Aughentain, with one exception only, and that was
-this:--You all know that the mill is often heard to go at night when
-nobody sets her a-goin’, an’ that the most sevendable scrames of torture
-come out of the hopper, an’ that when any one has the courage to look in,
-they’re sure to see a man dressed like a soger, with a white mealy face,
-in the act, so to say, of havin’ his legs ground off him. Many a guess
-was made about who the spirit could be, but all to no purpose. There,
-however, is the truth for yez; the spirit that shrieks in the hopper
-is Balgruntie’s ghost, an’ he’s to be ground that way till the day of
-judgment.
-
-Be coorse, Simpson and Miss Graham were married, as war Nannie Duffy an’
-Suil Gair; an’ if they all lived long an’ happy, I wish we may all live
-ten times longer an’ happier; an’ so we will, but in a betther world than
-this, plaise God.”
-
-“Well, but, Tom,” said Gordon, “how does that account for my name, which
-you said you’d tell me?”
-
-“Right,” said Tom; “begad I was near forgettin’ it. Why, you see, sich
-was their veneration for the goat that was the manes, undher God, of
-savin’ Miss Graham’s life, that they changed the name of Simpson to
-Gordon, which signifies in Irish _gor dhun_, or a brown goat, that all
-their posterity might know the great obligations they lay undher to that
-reverend animal.”
-
-“An’ do you mane to tell me,” said Gordon, “that my name was never heard
-of until Oliver Crummle’s time?”
-
-“I do. Never in the wide an’ subterraneous earth was sich a name known
-till afther the prognostication I tould you; an’ it never would either,
-only for the goat, sure. I can prove it by the pathepathetics. Denny
-Mullin, will you give us another draw o’ the pipe?”
-
-Tom’s authority in these matters was unquestionable, and, besides, there
-was no one present learned enough to contradict him, with any chance of
-success, before such an audience. The argument was consequently, without
-further discussion, decided in his favour, and Gordon was silenced
-touching the origin and etymology of his own name.
-
-This legend we have related as nearly as we can remember in Tom’s words.
-We may as well, however, state at once that many of his legends were
-wofully deficient in authenticity, as indeed those of most countries are.
-Nearly half the Irish legends are _ex post facto_ or _postliminious_.
-There is no record, for instance, that Oliver Cromwell ever saw the
-castle of Aughentain, or that any such event as that narrated by Tom
-ever happened in or about it. It is much more likely that the story, if
-ever there was any truth in it, is of Scotch origin, as indeed the names
-would seem to import. There is no doubt, however, that the castle of
-Aughentain, which is now in the possession of a gentleman named Browne we
-think, was once the property of a family called Graham. In our boyhood
-there was a respectable family of that name living in its immediate
-vicinity, but we know not whether they are the descendants of those who
-owned the castle or not.
-
-[1] The celebrated Brian Maguire, the first shot of his day, was at this
-time living in Dublin.
-
-
-
-
-THE HERRING.--SECOND ARTICLE.
-
-THE FISHERY.
-
-
-Having given in a former number some account of the natural history of
-this valuable little creature, we now proceed, in accordance with our
-promise, to give a description of the various modes of taking and curing
-it; and as the Dutch were the first to see the importance, and devote
-themselves to the improvement, of the herring fishery, we shall commence
-with them.
-
-So early as the year 1307, the Dutch had turned their attention to this
-subject; and lest any of our more thoughtless or less informed readers
-should deem the matter one of secondary consideration, or probably
-of even less, we shall lay before them some statistical accounts of
-the Dutch fisheries, extracted from returns of the census of the
-States-General, taken in the year 1669. In that year the total amount of
-population was 2,400,000.
-
- Of whom were employed as fishermen, and in
- equipping fishermen with their boats, tackle,
- conveying of salt, &c. 450,000
- Employed in the navigation of ships in foreign trade, 250,000
- Shipwrights, handicraftsmen, and manufacturers, 650,000
- Inland fishermen, agriculturists, and labourers, 200,000
- Gentry, statesmen, soldiers, and inhabitants in
- general, 850,000
- ----------
- Total, 2,400,000
-
-Thus nearly a fifth of the population of Holland was entirely engaged in
-and supported by the herring and deep-sea fishery, and thus arose the
-saying that “the foundations of Amsterdam were laid on herring bones;”
-and hence did De Witt assert that “Holland derived her main support from
-the herring fishery, and that it ought to be considered as the right arm
-of the republic.”
-
-Before Holland was humbled upon the seas, and whilst she was at the
-pinnacle of her prosperity, she had ten thousand sail of shipping, with
-168,000 mariners, afloat. Of these no less than 6400 vessels, with
-112,000 mariners, were employed in and connected with the herring fishery
-alone, “although the country itself affords them neither materials, nor
-victual, nor merchandise, to be accounted of, towards their setting
-forth.” When we come to the subject of curing, we shall take occasion to
-point out the modes by which the Dutch attained their excellence, and
-established this surprising trade; but at present we have but to describe
-their manner of fishing.
-
-The GREAT FISHERY commences on the 24th of June, and terminates on the
-31st of December, and is carried on in the latitudes of Shetland and
-Edinburgh, and on the coast of Great Britain, with strong-decked vessels
-called busses, manned by fourteen or fifteen men, and well supplied with
-casks, salt, nets, and every material requisite for catching and curing
-at sea. Each buss has generally fifty, and must not have less than forty
-nets of 32 fathoms in length each, 8 fathoms in depth, and a buoy-rope
-of 8 fathoms; an empty barrel less than a herring barrel is attached to
-each buoy-rope. This fleet of nets, as it is called, is divided by buoys
-into four parts, by which their position is marked and their taking in
-facilitated; the buoys at the extreme ends are painted white, with the
-owners’ and vessels’ names upon them. By the Dutch fishery laws it is
-provided that the yarn of the nets must be of good unmixed Dutch or
-Baltic hemp, which must be inspected before use by sworn surveyors; the
-yarn must be well spun; and each full net, or fourth part of a fleet,
-must be 740 meshes in length and 68 in depth, and the nets must be
-inspected and marked before they can be used.
-
-The Dutch always shoot their nets, that is, cast them into the sea, at
-sunset, and take them in before sunrise. In shooting them they cast them
-to windward, so that the wind may prevent the vessel from coming upon
-them. The whole of the nets are attached to four strong ropes joined to
-each other, and are taken in by means of the capstan, to which four or
-five men attend, whilst four more shake out the fish.
-
-The SMALL FISHERY, or fresh-herring fishery, is carried on to the east
-of Yarmouth in deep water, with flat-bottomed vessels without keels, so
-formed for the purpose of being run ashore in any convenient place.
-
-It is forbidden by the 15th and 16th articles of the Dutch fishery laws
-to gut the herrings taken by the small fishery either at sea or ashore,
-under pain of one month’s imprisonment, and a fine of five guilders for
-every hundred herrings, as well as the confiscation of the herrings,
-unless special permission has been obtained from the king, at the request
-of the States.
-
-The PAN FISHERY is carried on in the rivers, inland seas, and on the
-coast of Holland, within three miles of the shore.
-
-The same prohibition, under similar penalties, that exists against curing
-fish taken in the small fishery, extends to this.
-
-We have given the first place to the Dutch in this account, in
-consequence of their having been the first to see the importance of
-the fishery, but they take the lead no longer; the English and Scotch
-have successfully rivalled them in curing, and for the quantity taken
-during the season the Norwegians surpass all others. The Norwegian is a
-wholesale fishery, every description of ship and boat being in demand.
-They have curing stations on shore, to which the boats bring the fish
-as fast as they are caught; and there are large vessels with barrels and
-salt lying out amongst the fishers, buying from those who do not wish to
-lose time by going ashore. Every description of net, as well as every
-sort of vessel, is in requisition; some fishing at anchor, some sailing,
-and others hauling their seines on shore, but the grand method is as
-follows:--
-
-An immense range of nets with very small meshes so small as to prevent
-the herrings from fastening in them, is extended round a shoal of fish,
-and gradually moved towards some creek or narrow inlet of the sea. The
-nets are drawn close and made fast across the entrance, and the enormous
-body of herrings thus crowded up into a narrow space is taken out and
-cured at leisure. This mode of fishing is called a “lock.”
-
-The following passage from a letter written by a gentleman who witnessed
-the fishery near Hitteroe, to Mr Mitchell of Leith, will give our readers
-some idea of its extent:--
-
-“On the other side of the Sound we saw what is termed a _lock_, that
-is, several nets joined together, forming a bar before a small bay,
-into which the herrings were crowded. In this place there were several
-thousand barrels of herrings, so compactly confined together that an oar
-could stand up in the mass. There were in the neighbourhood of Hitteroe
-altogether about four or five thousand nets, and about two thousand boats
-and vessels; and there were caught, according to the opinion of several
-intelligent persons, this day (24th January 1833), not less than ten
-thousand barrels.”
-
-The entire quantity taken on the coast of Norway during the fall of
-1832 and the spring of 1833 was estimated at 680,000 barrels, which was
-considered to be a fair average take.
-
-We come now to the home fishery, in which Yarmouth takes the lead in
-the size of vessels and magnitude of tackle employed. The fishing is
-carried on by the Yarmouth men in decked vessels called “luggers,”
-from 20 to 50 tons burthen, having three masts, and rigged with three
-lugsails, topsails, mizou, foresail, and jib: the crew of the largest
-consisting of twelve men and a boy, who are paid according to the
-quantity of fish caught. Each ordinary vessel carries two hundred nets
-of 48 feet in length and 30 in depth, each having meshes of 1 inch or
-1⅛ inch, as usual in herring nets. Of these nets they shoot one hundred
-at a time, reserving the other hundred for cases of accident or mishap.
-When launched, each net is attached by two seizings of 1½ inch rope,
-having a depth of 18 feet, to a four-stranded (generally 4 inch) warp of
-3600 feet in length; this warp is made fast to a rope from the bow of
-the vessel, which in stormy weather can be let out to ease the strain,
-to the extent of 100 fathoms, or 600 feet. For each net there are two
-buoys (4-gallon barrels) made fast to the warp, and there are four buoys
-besides, to mark the distances, two for the quarter and three-quarter
-stations, painted red and white quarterly, one for the half distance or
-middle of the fleet, painted half red and half white, and one for the
-extremity, painted all white; each of them has painted on it the names of
-the ship, master, owner, and port, in order that they may be restored in
-case of breaking away during bad weather; and so good an understanding
-exists upon this subject amongst the fishermen, that the nets are always
-restored by the finder to the owner upon payment of only 1s. for each
-net; and no one must suffer a stray net to drift away; if seen, it must
-be taken in. This fishery commences in the beginning of October, and
-lasts little more than two months. The nets are shot after the Dutch
-fashion, at sunset; but if the appearances are favourable, they are taken
-in once or twice during the night, and again at sunrise. 100 barrels of
-herrings are frequently taken by these nets at a single haul, and 600
-barrels may be considered as a fair average fishing for one vessel during
-the season. The number of decked vessels employed at Yarmouth alone in
-the fishery is about 500.
-
-Next, and likely from its steady increase soon to become the first, is
-the Scotch fishery.
-
-Like the Norwegian, every description of boat and net is to be found
-employed amongst the Scottish islands, but the most regularly employed
-vessels are open undecked boats, of 28 to 32 feet in length, or
-thereabouts, and 9 to 11 feet in breadth, usually rigged with two masts
-and two sails. They have on board from twelve to thirty nets of from 150
-to 186 feet in length each, and from 20 to 31 feet in depth.
-
-From the Report by the Commissioners of the British Herring Fishery, of
-the fishery of 1838, year ending 5th April 1839, it appears that there
-were then engaged in the fishery 11,357 boats, decked and undecked,
-throughout England and Scotland, manned by 50,238 men and boys, and
-employing 85,573 persons in all, including coopers, packers, curers, and
-labourers.
-
-Of the entire number of vessels, about 9000 belonged to Scottish ports.
-
-The entire quantity of herrings exported amounted to 239,730½ barrels, of
-which 195,301 barrels were Scotch; and of those exported, 149,926 barrels
-were sent to and disposed of in Ireland.
-
-The entire quantity of herrings taken by Scottish boats, and cured both
-for home use and exportation, was 495,589 barrels; the total by English
-and Scotch 555,559¾ barrels; but this return does not include the
-Yarmouth fishery, the herrings there being always smoked, or made into
-what are called _red herrings_.
-
-We need not describe the Prussian and other methods, as they resemble
-some one or other of those already mentioned. Come we now to our own,
-which we have purposely reserved to the last.
-
-Amongst the fishermen of Ireland, the men of Kinsale have long been the
-admitted leaders; and the Kinsale hookers are celebrated throughout the
-nautical world as among the best sea-boats that ever weathered a gale.
-They are half-decked vessels, with one mast, carrying a fore and aft
-mainsail, foresail, and jib, and are usually manned by four men and a
-boy. They are seldom used in the herring fishery, being for the most part
-confined to the deep-sea line fishery upon the Nymph bank, where cod,
-ling, hake, haddock, turbot, plaice, &c., abound in such quantity that
-many persons affirm it to be second only to the banks of Newfoundland.
-But the usual mode of fishing for herrings, and which is adopted all
-along the south, south-west, and west coast of Ireland, especially
-at Valencia and Kenmare, is with the deep-sea seine. This is formed
-sometimes for the express purpose, but frequently by a subscription of
-nets. Fifteen men bring a drift-net each, 20 fathoms or 120 feet in
-length, and 5 fathoms or 30 feet in depth; these are all joined together,
-five nets in length, and three in depth, so that the whole seine is 600
-feet in length and 90 feet in depth, with a cork-rope (that is, a rope
-having large pieces of cork attached to it at intervals) at the top, and
-leaden sinkers attached to the foot-rope, which unites all the nets at
-the bottom. Two warps of 60 fathoms each are requisite, and there are
-brails (small half-inch ropes) attached to the foot-rope, which are of
-use to haul upon, in order to purse up the net and prevent the fish from
-escaping.
-
-The seine is shot from a boat whilst it is being pulled round the shoal
-of fish. All having been thrown over, the warp is hauled upon until the
-net is brought into ten fathoms’ depth of water, when the brails and
-foot-rope are hauled in, and the fish is tucked into the largest boat.
-In this manner 80,000 to 100,000 herrings (about 100 barrels) may be
-taken at a haul. But where the people are too poor to supply themselves
-with nets or boats, many contrivances are made use of. For boats, the
-_curragh_, made of wicker and covered with a horse’s skin, or canvass
-pitched, is used, and often even this cannot be had; sometimes the people
-load a horse with the nets, mount him and swim him out, shooting the nets
-from his back; and for nets, in many places, the people use their sheets,
-blankets, and quilts, which they subscribe and sew together, often to the
-number of sixty, and the fish thus taken are divided in due proportion
-amongst the subscribers.
-
-After the foreign statistics which we have laid before our readers,
-they will doubtless expect us to inform them how many vessels and what
-number of hands are _now_ employed in the Irish fishery. This, however,
-we are unable to do. The Commissioners of the Herring Fishery have
-their jurisdiction confined to Scotland and England, almost exclusively
-to Scotland, the fishery of which is thriving under their fostering
-care in a most surprising manner. By their judicious attention to the
-encouragement of careful curing, and the distribution of small aids in
-money to poor fishermen, the number of boats employed in 1839 exceeded
-that of the former year by 78; and the progressive increase in the
-fishery is fully exemplified by the following table, showing the quantity
-of herrings cured during the five years preceding the return now before
-us:--
-
- Year 1835 277,317 barrels.
- ” 1836 497,614¾ ”
- ” 1837 397,829¼ ”
- ” 1838 507,774¾ ”
- ” 1839 555,559¾ ”
-
-By this table it appears that the Scotch fishery has doubled its amount
-in five years, without any description of bounty being given. It may,
-however, be as well to state, before concluding this paper, that it
-appears, by the Reports of the Irish Commissioners, whose sittings
-terminated in the year 1830, that during the time that Ireland possessed
-a Fishery Board, the number of persons employed in the fishery had more
-than doubled. At the time of the first appointment of Commissioners
-of Irish Fisheries in 1819, the number of men employed was estimated
-at 30,000. By the first return which they could venture to pronounce
-accurate, being for the year ending 5th April 1822, the number was
-36,192 men; 5th April 1823, the number was 44,892 men, being an increase
-of 8700; at 5th April 1824, the number was 49,448, being an increase
-on the preceding year of 4556; 5th April 1825, the number was 52,482,
-being an increase on the preceding year of 3034; and the numbers went
-on regularly progressing every year during the existence of the Board,
-until its termination, as the following extract from the last Report will
-best exhibit. It is for the year 1830, at which time the bounty had been
-reduced to one shilling per barrel:--
-
-“The Commissioners have still the gratification to find, from the
-returns made by the local inspectors, that the number of fishermen still
-continues to experience a yearly increase. The gross amount, as taken
-from the returns of the preceding year, was 63,421 men. The gross amount,
-as taken from the returns of the present year, is 64,771 men, being an
-increase on the past year of 1350 men.”
-
-By the same report it appeared that the number of decked vessels was
-345; tonnage 9810; men 2147--half-decked vessels 769; tonnage 9457; men
-3852--row-boats 9522; men 46,212.
-
-The quantity of herrings cured for bounty in the year ending 5th April
-1830, was 16,855 barrels, the bounty on which was £842 15s.
-
-The tonnage bounty paid to vessels engaged in the cod and ling fishery
-was £829 10s; and the bounty on cured cod, &c. was £960.
-
-There is not in the reports that we have seen any attempt at estimating
-the quantity of herrings caught, which is somewhat extraordinary,
-considering the accuracy with which the number of fishermen, curers,
-coopers, &c., was ascertained; but the quantity cured is given above.
-
-Whilst, however, the number of fishermen employed in the fisheries
-generally, increased so very considerably during the period that the
-Irish Fishery Board was in operation, it is an extraordinary, and to us
-inexplicable fact, that the quantity of herrings cured for bounty in any
-one season never exceeded 16,855 barrels, so that even the high bounty
-of 4s per barrel was not sufficient to induce the Irish fishermen to
-cure their herrings in a proper manner. In short, the fishery board, in
-so far as the primary object of its formation was concerned, was totally
-inoperative, and the people of this country were as dependent then as now
-upon the Scotch curers for the requisite supply of the staple luxury of
-the poorer classes.
-
-It is impossible to say to what extent the fisheries may have fallen off,
-if at all, in Ireland, since the abolition of the fishery board; but as
-the quantity of salted herrings imported into Ireland from Scotland has
-not materially increased since, it may be presumed that as many herrings
-are caught and cured now as at any former period.
-
-The alleged decline of the Irish fisheries has by many been attributed
-entirely to the withdrawal of the bounties and the fishery board. But
-when we consider the exceedingly trifling amount of bounty paid on
-herrings in any one year, the discontinuance of so small a sum as £842
-15s 7d (the amount in 1829-30) could not possibly have any perceptible
-influence upon a branch of industry which gave employment to 75,366
-persons.
-
-Nor could the discontinuance of the grants made for harbours and small
-loans to poor fishermen have produced any material influence upon the
-fisheries, as the total amount advanced in ten years for these two
-objects was only £39,508 18s 2d, or less than £4000 a-year.
-
-There is then but one other point of view in which the withdrawal of
-the fishery board could have operated injuriously, namely, the absence
-of that supervision and authority in regulating the fisheries which the
-officers of the board exercised to a certain extent, and which in our
-opinion ought to have been continued.
-
-The various modes of curing herrings will form the subject of a future
-article.
-
-
-
-
-CASTLECOR, A REVERIE,
-
-BY J. U. U.
-
-
- Ancient oaks of Castlecor,
- Which the wreck of weathery war,
- Summer’s sun or winter blast,
- Chance and change still sweeping past,
- Still have left thus hoar and high
- While the world hath fleeted by.
-
- Many a race of pride hath run,
- Many a field been lost and won;
- Many a day of shame and glory
- Past into the dream of story,
- Since the spring time of your birth
- Revelled on this ancient earth.
-
- Well your crown of age ye wear--
- High upon this noon-day air,
- Broadly waving in the light,
- Thickset tufts of verdure bright;
- While, beneath, your massive shade
- Sleeps upon the ferny glade.
-
- Where the summer sunbeam plays
- O’er the long-drawn leafy ways,
- Down through tremulous gleams of green,
- On some spot at distance seen;
- Where the foliage opens brightly,
- If the fallow-deer bound lightly;
- Well the swiftly passing gleam
- Mingles into fancy’s dream,
- See in shadowy light appear
- Some old hunter of the deer,
- Through the stillness of the wood,
- Bent in listening attitude;
- Then amid the haunted glade
- Melt away in distant shade.
-
- Were not life as brief and frail
- As a gossip’s idle tale,
- What eventful hours might be
- Here recalled to memory!
-
- Straight upon the visioned sight,
- Through the rifts of leafy light,
- Where yon verdurous dusk disparts,
- What strange cloud of blackness starts
- ’Tis the grim and gloomy hold;
- Which ruled here in days of old,
- Leaving a name where once it stood;
- ’Tis the “castle in the wood.”
-
- Lo! from parapet and tower
- Frowns the pride of ancient power--
- Lo! from out the cullised port
- Pours the storm of raid or sport;
- Haughty eye and ruthless hand
- Iron chief and ruthless band;
- Well the robber chief I know,
- Tracked by many a home of woe.
- Onward bound; nor far behind
- Swells a murmur on the wind--
- From his kerne and lowring prey,
- Pride of pastures far away,
- Hither bound from foray rude,
- To his “castle in the wood.”
- Still the pageant nears--but lo;
- Fancy shifts the gliding show,
- To a sight of gayer mood.
-
- On free air in sunshine glancing,
- See a jovial train advancing,
- Bright housed steed and palfrey prancing,
- Horn and hound and hawk are there,
- Spear and scarf, and mantle fair,
- Sport and jest, and laughter gay,
- Shout and jolly hark away!
- On the glittering pageant streams,
- Vanishing in golden gleams.
-
- Next across the shadowy lawn,
- Cowled and cinctured form glides on
- With ruddy cheek though solemn gear,
- Full glad it seems of journey done,
- That started with the rising sun,
- And confident of jovial cheer;
- Such never yet was wanting here.
-
- Who follows fast, with footstep light,
- And eye of fire, and garment white?
- O, now the child of song I know,
- For the sun on his tuneful harp is bright!
- And free on the wind his long locks flow--
- O! glad will they be in yon halls below.
-
- But all is gone--one sober glance
- Hath whirled in air the fitful trance,
- The visioned wood that fancy ranged,
- Is still a wood, but O, how changed!
-
- Ancient Power’s, barbaric sway,
- Iron deeds have passed away--
- Superstition’s gloomy hour,
- With the tyrant’s feudal power--
- All have passed!--and in their stead,
- Piety with reverent head,
- Sense, and mild humanity,
- Polished hospitality,
- Taste that spreads improvement round,
- On the old paternal ground;
- And without its blood and crime,
- Keeps the grace of elder time.
-
-
-
-
-SCRAPS FROM THE NORTHERN SCRIP.
-
-[The following specimens of the Icelandic Sagas have been closely
-translated for the Irish Penny Journal, from the publications of the
-Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries, Copenhagen.]
-
-
-NO. I.--KING OLAVE AND THE DEVIL.
-
-And now the enemy of the whole human race, the devil himself, saw how
-his kingdom began to be laid waste, he who always persecutes human
-nature, and he saw how much on the other hand God’s kingdom prospered and
-increased; thereat he now felt great envy, and he puts on the human form,
-because he could so much the more easily deceive men, if he looked like
-a man himself. It so happened that King Olave was on a visit at Œgvald’s
-Ness,[2] about the anniversary of our Lord Jesus Christ’s nativity; and
-as all were regularly seated in the evening, and preparations were making
-for the drinking bout, and they were waiting until the royal table should
-be covered, there came an old one-eyed man into the hall with a silk hat
-on his head; he was very talkative, and could relate divers kinds of
-things; he was led forward before the king, who asked him the news, to
-which he replied, that he could relate various matters about the ancient
-kings and their battles. The king asked whether he knew who Œgvald was,
-he whom the Ness was called after. He answered, “He dwelt here on the
-Ness, and dearly loved a cow, so that she would follow him wherever he
-led her, and he would drink her milk; and therefore people that love
-cattle say that man and cow shall go together. This king fought many a
-battle, and once he strove with the king of Skorestrand; in that battle
-fell many a man, and there fell also King Œgvald, and he was afterwards
-buried aloft here on the Ness, and his barrow will be found here a little
-way from the house; in the other barrow lies the cow.” The drinking bout
-was now held according to usage, and all the diversions that had been
-appointed. Afterwards many went away to sleep. Then the king had that
-old man called to him, and he sat on the footstool by the king’s bed,
-and the king asked him about many matters, which he explained well, and
-like an experienced man. And when he had related much and explained many
-things well, the king became constantly the more desirous to hear him;
-he therefore staid awake a great part of the night, and continued to ask
-him about many things. At last the bishop reminded him in a few words
-that the king should stop speaking with the man; but the king thought
-he had related a part, but that another was still wanting. Far in the
-night, however, the king at last fell asleep, but awoke soon after, and
-asked whether the stranger was awake; he did not answer. The king said
-to the watchers that they should lead him up, but he was not found. The
-king then stood up, had his cupbearer and cook called to him, and asked
-whether any unknown man had gone to them when they were preparing the
-guest-chamber. The head cook said, “There came a little while ago, sire,
-a man to us, and said to me, as I was preparing the meat for a savoury
-dish for you, ‘Why do you prepare such meat for the king’s table as
-choice food for him, which is so lean?’ I told him then to get me some
-fatter and better meat, if he had any such. He said, ‘Come with me, and I
-will show you some fat and good meat, which is fit for a king’s table.’
-And he led me to a house, and showed me two sides of very fat flesh; and
-this have I prepared for you, sire!” The king now saw it was a wile of
-the devil, and said to the cook, “Take that meat now, and cast it into
-the sea, that none may eat thereof; and if any one tastes of it, he
-will quickly die. But whom do you suppose that devil to have been, the
-stranger guest?” “We know not,” said they, “who it is.” The king said,
-“I believe that devil took upon himself Odin’s form.” According to the
-king’s command the meat was carried out, and cast into the sea; but the
-stranger was nowhere found, and search was made for him round about the
-Ness, according to the king’s commandment.--_From Olave Tryggvason’s
-Saga._
-
-[2] The Norse word which becomes _ness_ as the termination of several
-British localities and _The Noze_ in our maps of Norway, means
-“promontory” (literally “nose”) and must not be confounded with _The
-Ness_ in the county of Londonderry, which is in Irish “the waterfall.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- Printed and published every Saturday by GUNN and CAMERON, at
- the Office of the General Advertiser, No. 6, Church Lane,
- College Green, Dublin.--Agents:--R. GROOMBRIDGE, Panyer Alley,
- Paternoster Row, London; SIMMS and DINHAM, Exchange Street,
- Manchester; C. DAVIES, North John Street, Liverpool; JOHN
- MENZIES, Prince’s Street, Edinburgh; and DAVID ROBERTSON,
- Trongate, Glasgow.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No.
-49, June 5, 1841, by Various
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 49,
-June 5, 1841, by Various
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-Title: The Irish Penny Journal, Vol. 1 No. 49, June 5, 1841
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-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL.</h1>
-
-<table summary="Headline layout" class="fts">
- <tr>
- <td class="smcap">Number 49.</td>
- <td class="center">SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1841.</td>
- <td class="right smcap">Volume I.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter gap4" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/victoria.jpg" width="500" height="390" alt="Victoria Castle" />
-</div>
-
-<h2>VICTORIA CASTLE, KILLINEY, COUNTY OF DUBLIN.</h2>
-
-<p>Our metropolitan readers, at least, and many others besides,
-are aware of the magnificent but not easily to be realised
-project, recently propounded, of erecting a town on the east
-side of Malpas’s or Killiney Hill&mdash;a situation certainly of
-unrivalled beauty and grandeur. Plans, most satisfactory,
-and views prospective as well as perspective of this as yet
-non-existent Brighton or Clifton, have been laid before the
-public, with a view to obtain the necessary ways and means to
-give it a more substantial reality; but alas! for the uncertainty
-of human wishes! Queenstown, despite the popularity
-of our sovereign, is not likely, for some time at least, to
-present a rivalry, in any thing but its romantic and commanding
-site, to the busy, bustling, and not very symmetrically
-built town which has been erected in honour of Her
-august eldest uncle. The good people of Kingstown may
-therefore rejoice; their glory will not for some time at least
-be eclipsed; and the lovers of natural romantic scenery who
-have not money&mdash;they seldom have&mdash;to employ in promising
-speculations, may also rejoice, for the wild and precipitous
-cliffs of Killiney are likely to retain for some years longer a
-portion of their romantic beauty; the rocks will not be shaped
-into well-dressed forms of prim gentility; the purple heather and
-blossomy furze, “unprofitable gay,” may give nature’s brilliant
-colouring to the scenery, and the wild sea-birds may sport
-around: the time has not arrived when they will be destroyed or
-banished from their ancient haunt by the encroachment of man.</p>
-
-<p>But however this may be, the first stone of the new town
-has been laid; nay, the first building&mdash;no less a building than
-“Victoria Castle”&mdash;has been actually erected; and, as a memorial
-of one of the gigantic projects of this speculating nineteenth
-century of ours, we have felt it incumbent on us to
-give its fair proportions a place in our immortal and universally
-read miscellany, in order to hand down its pristine form to
-posterity in ages when it shall have been shaped by time into
-a genuine antique ruin.</p>
-
-<p>Of the architectural style and general appearance of Victoria
-Castle, our engraving gives a good idea. Like most
-modern would-be castles, it has towers and crenellated battlements
-and <em>large</em> windows in abundance, and is upon the
-whole as unlike a real old castle as such structures usually
-are. It is, however, a picturesque and imposing structure of
-its kind, and, what is of more consequence to its future occupants,
-a cheerful and commodious habitation, which is more
-than can be said of most genuine castles, or of many more
-classical imitations of them; and its situation, on a terrace on
-the south side of Killiney Hill, is one as commanding and
-beautiful as could possibly be imagined.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing in nature can indeed surpass the beauty, variety,
-and extent of the prospects which may be enjoyed from this
-spot or its immediate vicinity, and we might fill a whole
-number of our Journal in describing their principal features.
-To most of our readers, however, they must be already familiar,
-and to those who have not had the pleasure of enjoying
-a sight of them, it will convey a sufficient general idea of what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span>
-they must be, to acquaint them that Killiney Hill from the
-same point commands, towards the west, views of the far-famed
-Bay of Dublin, the city, and the richly-cultivated and
-villa-studded plains by which it is surrounded, towards the
-north, the bold, rugged promontory of Howth, with the
-islands of Dalkey, Ireland’s eye, Lambay, and the peaked
-mountain-ranges of Down and Lowth in the extreme distance;
-and lastly, towards the east and south, the sea, and the lovely
-Bay of Killiney, with its shining yellow strand, curved into
-the form of a spacious and magnificent amphitheatre, from
-which, as in seats above each other, ascend the richly-wooded
-hills, backed by the mountains of Dublin and Wicklow, with
-all their exquisite variety of forms and fitful changes of colour.
-In short, it may truly be said of this delightful situation, that
-though other localities may possess some individual character
-of scenery of greater beauty or grandeur, there are few if
-any in the British empire that could fairly be compared with
-it for its variety and general interest.</p>
-
-<p>Of the great interest of Killiney to the naturalist, and the
-geologist more particularly, we have already endeavoured to
-give our readers some notion in a paper, in a recent number,
-from the pen of our able and accomplished friend Dr Schouler;
-and Killiney is scarcely less interesting to the antiquary than
-to the man of science. Though till a recent period its now
-cultivated and thickly inhabited hills and shores presented the
-virgin appearance of a country nearly in the state which nature
-left it, the numerous monuments of antiquity scattered about
-them clearly evinced that man had been a wanderer if not
-an inhabitant here in the most remote times. Numerous
-kistvaens containing human skeletons have been found between
-the road and the sea, undoubtedly of pagan times; and
-we have ourselves seen in our young days six very large
-urns of baked clay, containing burned bones, which were
-discovered in sinking the foundations for a cottage, near the
-road between the Killiney and Rochestown hills. We have
-also seen several sepulchral stone circles, now no longer
-remaining; and there is yet to be seen of the same period, a
-fine cromleac, situated near Shanganagh, and that most remarkable
-and interesting pagan temple, near the Martello
-tower, with its judgment chair, and the figures of the sun and
-moon sculptured on one of the stones within its enclosure.
-Nor is Killiney without its monument of Christian piety of as
-early date as any to be found in Ireland. In the beautiful ivied
-ruin of its parish church, the antiquary may enjoy a sight
-of one of the most characteristic examples of the temples
-erected by the Irish immediately after their conversion to
-Christianity, and make himself intimate with a style of architecture
-not now to be found in other portions of the British
-empire.</p>
-
-<p class="right">P.</p>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">THE CASTLE OF AUGHENTAIN, OR A LEGEND OF THE BROWN GOAT,<br />
-<span class="smaller">A TALE OF TOM GRASSIEY, THE SHANAHUS.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="center">BY WILLIAM CARLETON.</p>
-
-<p>When Tom had expressed an intention of relating an old
-story, the hum of general conversation gradually subsided
-into silence, and every face assumed an expression of curiosity
-and interest, with the exception of Jemsy Baccagh, who was
-rather deaf, and blind George M’Givor, so called because he
-wanted an eye; both of whom, in high and piercing tones,
-carried on an angry discussion touching a small law-suit that
-had gone against Jemsy in the Court Leet, of which George
-was a kind of rustic attorney. An outburst of impatient rebuke
-was immediately poured upon them from fifty voices.
-“Whisht with yez, ye pair of devils’ limbs, an’ Tom goin’
-to tell us a story. Jemsy, your sowl’s as crooked as your lame
-leg, you sinner; an’ as for blind George, if roguery would save
-a man, he’d escape the devil yet. Tarenation to yez, an’ be
-quiet till we hear the story!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” said Tom, “Scripthur says that when the blind leads
-the blind, both will fall into the ditch; but God help the lame
-that have blind George to lead them; we might aisily guess
-where he’d guide them to, especially such a poor innocent as
-Jemsy there.” This banter, as it was not intended to give
-offence, so was it received by the parties to whom it was addressed
-with laughter and good humour.</p>
-
-<p>“Silence, boys,” said Tom; “I’ll jist take a draw of the pipe
-till I put my mind in a proper state of transmigration for
-what I’m goin’ to narrate.”</p>
-
-<p>He then smoked on for a few minutes, his eyes complacently
-but meditatively closed, and his whole face composed into the
-philosophic spirit of a man who knew and felt his own superiority,
-as well as what was expected from him. When he
-had sufficiently arranged the materials in his mind, he took the
-pipe out of his mouth, rubbed the shank-end of it against the
-cuff of his coat, then handed it to his next neighbour, and
-having given a short preparatory cough, thus commenced his
-legend:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“You must know that afther Charles the First happened to
-miss his head one day, havin’ lost it while playin’ a game of
-‘Heads an’ Points’ with the Scotch, that a man called Nolly
-Rednose, or Oliver Crummle, was sent over to Ireland with a
-parcel of breekless Highlanders an’ English Bodaghs to subduvate
-the Irish, an’ as many of the Prodestans as had been
-friends to the late king, who were called Royalists. Now,
-it appears by many larned transfigurations that Nolly Rednose
-had in his army a man named Balgruntie, or the Hog of
-Cupar; a fellow who was as coorse as sackin’, as cunnin’ as
-a fox, an’ as gross as the swine he was named afther. Rednose,
-there is no doubt of it, was as nate a hand at takin’ a
-town or castle as ever went about it; but then, any town that
-didn’t surrendher at discretion was sure to experience little
-mitigation at his hands; an’ whenever he was bent on wickedness,
-he was sure to say his prayers at the commencement of
-every siege or battle; that is, he intended to show no marcy
-in, for he’d get a book, an’ openin’ it at the head of his army,
-he’d cry, ‘Ahem, my brethren, let us praise God by endeavourin’
-till sing sich or sich a psalm;’ an’ God help the man,
-woman, or child, that came before him after that. Well an’
-good: it so happened that a squadron of his psalm-singers
-were dispatched by him from Enniskillen, where he stopped to
-rendher assistance to a part of his army that O’Neill was
-leatherin’ down near Dungannon, an’ on their way they happened
-to take up their quarthers for the night at the Mill of
-Aughentain. Now, above all men in the creation, who should
-be appointed to lead this same squadron but the Hog of Cupar.
-‘Balgruntie, go off wid you,’ said Crummle, when administering
-his instructions to him; ‘but be sure that wherever you
-meet a fat royalist on the way, to pay your respects to him as
-a Christian ought,’ says he; ‘an’, above all things, my dear
-brother Balgruntie, <em>don’t neglect your devotions</em>, otherwise
-our arms can’t prosper; and be sure,’ says he, with a pious
-smile, ‘that if they promulgate opposition, you will make them
-bleed anyhow, either in purse or person; or if they provoke the
-grace o’ God, take a little from them in both; an’ so the Lord’s
-name be praised, yeamen!’</p>
-
-<p>Balgruntie sang a psalm of thanksgivin’ for bein’ elected by
-his commander to sich a holy office, set out on his march, an’
-the next night he an’ his choir slep in the mill of Aughentain,
-as I said. Now, Balgruntie had in this same congregation of
-his a long-legged Scotchman named Sandy Saveall, which name
-he got by way of etymology, for his charity; for it appears by
-the historical elucidations that Sandy was perpetually rantinizin’
-about sistherly affection an’ brotherly love: an’ what
-showed more taciturnity than any thing else was, that while
-this same Sandy had the persuasion to make every one believe
-that he thought of nothing else, he shot more people than any
-ten men in the squadron. He was indeed what they call a
-dead shot, for no one ever knew him to miss any thing he fired
-at. He had a musket that could throw point blank an English
-mile, an’ if he only saw a man’s nose at that distance, he
-used to say that with aid from above he could blow it for
-him with a leaden handkerchy, meaning that he could blow it
-off his face with a musket bullet; and so by all associations he
-could, for indeed the faits he performed were very insinivating
-an’ problematical.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it so happened that at this period there lived in the
-castle a fine wealthy ould royalist, named Graham or Grimes,
-as they are often denominated, who had but one child, a
-daughter, whose beauty an’ perfections were mellifluous far
-an’ near over the country, an’ who had her health drunk, as
-the toast of Ireland, by the Lord Lieutenant in the Castle of
-Dublin, undher the sympathetic appellation of ‘the Rose of
-Aughentain.’ It was her son that afterwards ran through the
-estate, and was forced to part wid the castle; an’ it’s to him
-the proverb colludes, which mentions ‘ould John Grame, that
-swallowed the castle of Aughentain.’</p>
-
-<p>Howsomever, that bears no prodigality to the story I’m
-narratin’. So what would you have of it, but Balgruntie,
-who had heard of the father’s wealth and the daughter’s
-beauty, took a holy hankerin’ afther both; an’ havin’ as usual
-said his prayers an’ sung a psalm, he determined for to clap
-his thumb upon the father’s money, thinkin’ that the daughter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
-would be the more aisily superinduced to folly it. In other
-words, he made up his mind to sack the castle, carry off the
-daughter and marry her righteously, rather, he said, through
-a sincere wish to bring her into a state of grace, by a union
-with a God-fearin’ man, whose walk he trusted was Zionward,
-than from any cardinal detachment for her wealth or beauty.
-He accordingly sent up a file of the most pious men he had,
-picked fellows, with good psalm-singin’ voices and strong noses,
-to request that John Graham would give them possession of
-the castle for a time, an’ afterwards join them at prayers, as
-a proof that he was no royalist, but a friend to Crummle an’
-the Commonwealth. Now, you see, the best of it was, that
-the very man they demanded this from was commonly denominated
-by the people as ‘Gunpowdher Jack,’ in consequence
-of the great signification of his courage; an’, besides, he was
-known to be a member of the Hell-fire Club, that no person
-could join that hadn’t fought three duels, and killed at
-least one man; and in ordher to show that they regarded
-neither God nor hell, they were obligated to dip one hand in
-blood an’ the other in fire, before they could be made members
-of the club. It’s aisy to see, then, that Graham was not likely
-to quail before a handful of the very men he hated wid all the
-vociferation in his power, an’ he accordingly put his head out
-of the windy, an’ axed them their tergiversation for bein’ there.</p>
-
-<p>‘Begone about your business,’ he said; ‘I owe you no regard.
-What brings you before the castle of a man who despises
-you? Don’t think to determinate me, you cauting rascals,
-for you can’t. My castle’s well provided wid men, an’
-ammunition, an’ food; an’ if you don’t be off, I’ll make you
-sing a different tune from a psalm one.’ Begad he did, plump
-to them, out of the windy.</p>
-
-<p>When Crummle’s men returned to Balgruntie in the mill,
-they related what had tuck place, an’ he said that afther
-prayers he’d send a second message in writin’, an’ if it wasn’t
-attended to, they’d put their trust in God an’ storm the
-castle. The squadron he commanded was not a numerous
-one; an’ as they had no artillery, an’ were surrounded by enemies,
-the takin’ of the castle, which was a strong one, might
-cost them some snufflication. At all events, Balgruntie was
-bent on makin’ the attempt, especially afther he heard that the
-castle was well vittled, an’ indeed he was meritoriously joined
-by his men, who piously licked their lips on hearin’ of such
-glad tidings. Graham was a hot-headed man, without much
-ambidexterity or deliberation, otherwise he might have known
-that the bare mintion of the beef an’ mutton in his castle was
-only fit to make such a hungry pack desperate. But be that
-as it may, in a short time Balgruntie wrote him a letter, demandin’
-of him, in the name of Nolly Rednose an’ the Commonwealth,
-to surrendher the castle, or if not, that, ould as he
-was, he would make him as soople as a two-year-ould. Graham,
-afther readin’ it, threw the letther back to the messengers
-wid a certain recommendation to Balgruntie regardin’ it;
-but whether the same recommendation was followed up an’
-acted on so soon as he wished, historical retaliations do not
-inform.</p>
-
-<p>On their return the military narrated to their commander
-the reception they resaved a second time from Graham, an’
-he then resolved to lay regular siege to the castle; but as he
-knew he could not readily take it by violence, he determined,
-as they say, to starve the garrison leisurely an’ by degrees.
-But, first an’ foremost, a thought struck him, an’ he immediently
-called Sandy Saveall behind the mill-hopper, which he
-had now turned into a pulpit for the purpose of expoundin’ the
-word, an’ givin’ exhortations to his men.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sandy,’ said he, ‘are you in a state of justification to-day?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Towards noon,’ replied Sandy, ‘I had some strong wristlings
-with the enemy; but I am able, undher praise, to say that
-I defated him in three attacks, and I consequently feel my
-righteousness much recruited. I had some wholesome communings
-with the miller’s daughter, a comely lass, who may
-yet be recovered from the world, an’ led out of the darkness
-of Aigyp, by a word in saison.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Sandy,’ replied the other, ‘I lave her to your own
-instructions; there is another poor benighted maiden, who is
-also comely, up in the castle of that godless sinner, who belongeth
-to the Perdition Club; an’, indeed, Sandy, until he is somehow
-removed, I think there is little hope of plucking her like
-a brand out of the burning.’</p>
-
-<p>He serenaded Sandy in the face as he spoke, an’ then cast
-an extemporary glance at the musket, which was as much as
-to say ‘can you translate an insinivation?’ Sandy concocted
-a smilin’ reply; an’ takin’ up the gun, rubbed the barrel, an’
-pattin’ it as a sportsman would pat the neck of his horse or
-dog, wid reverence for comparin’ the villain to either one or
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>‘If it was known, Sandy,’ said Balgruntie, ‘it would harden
-her heart against me; an’ as he is hopeless at all events, bein’
-a member of that Perdition Club’&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘True,’ said Sandy, ‘but you lave the miller’s daughter to
-me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I said so.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, if his removal will give you any consolidation in the
-matther, you may say no more.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I could not, Sandy, justify it to myself to take him away by
-open violence, for you know that I bear a conscience if any
-thing too tendher and dissolute. Also I wish, Sandy, to presarve
-an ondeniable reputation for humanity; an’, besides, the
-daughter might become as reprobate as the father if she suspected
-me to be personally concarned in it. I have heard a
-good deal about him, an’ am sensibly informed that he has
-been shot at twice before, by the sons, it is thought, of an
-enemy that he himself killed rather significantly in a duel.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well,’ replied Sandy; ‘I would myself feel scruples;
-but as both our consciences is touched in the business, I think
-I am justified. Indeed, captain, it is very likely afther all
-that we are but the mere instruments in it, an’ that it is
-through us that this ould unrighteous sinner is to be removed
-by a more transplendant judgment.’</p>
-
-<p>Begad, neighbours, when a rascal is bent on wickedness,
-it is aisy to find cogitations enough to back him in his villany.
-And so was it with Sandy Saveall and Balgruntie.</p>
-
-<p>That evenin’ ould Graham was shot through the head standin’
-in the windy of his own castle, an’ to extenuate the suspicion
-of sich an act from Crummle’s men, Balgruntie himself went
-up the next day, beggin’ very politely to have a friendly explanation
-with Squire Graham, sayin’ that he had harsh ordhers,
-but that if the castle was peaceably delivered to him, he would,
-for the sake of the young lady, see that no injury should be
-offered either to her or her father.</p>
-
-<p>The young lady, however, had the high drop in her, and
-becoorse the only answer he got was a flag of defiance. This
-nettled the villain, an’ he found there was nothin’ else for it
-but to plant a strong guard about the castle to keep all that
-was in, in&mdash;and all that was out, out.</p>
-
-<p>In the mean time, the very appearance of the Crumwellians
-in the neighbourhood struck such terror into the people, that
-the country, which was then only very thinly inhabited, became
-quite desarted, an’ for miles about the face of a human bein’
-could not be seen, barrin’ their own, sich as they were. Crummle’s
-track was always a bloody one, an’ the people knew
-that they were wise in puttin’ the hills an’ mountain passes
-between him an’ them. The miller an’ his daughter bein’ encouraged
-by Sandy, staid principally for the sake of Miss
-Graham; but except them, there was not a man or woman in
-the barony to bid good-morrow to or say Salvey Dominey.
-On the beginnin’ of the third day, Balgruntie, who knew his
-officialities extremely well, an’ had sent down a messenger to
-Dungannon to see whether matters were so bad as they had
-been reported, was delighted to hear that O’Neill had disappeared
-from the neighbourhood. He immediately informed
-Crummle of this, and tould him that he had laid siege to one
-of the leadin’ passes of the north, an’ that, by gettin’ possession
-of the two castles of Aughentain and Augher, he could
-keep O’Neill in check, and command that part of the country.
-Nolly approved of this, an’ ordhered him to proceed, but was
-sorry that he could send him no assistance at present;
-‘however,’ said he, ‘with a good cause, sharp swords, an’ aid
-from above, there is no fear of us.’</p>
-
-<p>They now set themselves to take the castle in airnest.
-Balgruntie an’ Sandy undherstood one another, an’ not a day
-passed that some one wasn’t dropped in it. As soon as ever
-a face appeared, pop went the deadly musket, an’ down fell
-the corpse of whoever it was aimed at. Miss Graham herself
-was spared for good reasons, but in the coorse of ten or
-twelve days she was nearly alone. Ould Graham, though a
-man that feared nothing, was only guilty of a profound swagger
-when he reported the strength of the castle and the state
-of the provisions to Balgruntie an’ his crew. But above all
-things, that which eclipsed their distresses was the want of
-wather. There was none in the castle, an’ although there is
-a beautiful well beside it, yet, <em>farcer gair</em>, it was of small responsibility
-to them. Here, then, was the poor young lady
-placed at the marcy of her father’s murdherer; for however<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>
-she might have doubted in the beginnin’ that he was shot by
-the Crumwellians, yet the death of nearly all the servants of
-the house in the same way was a sufficient proof that it was
-like masther like man in this case. What, however, was to be
-done? The whole garrison now consisted only of Miss Graham
-herself, a fat man cook advanced in years, who danced
-in his distress in ordher that he might suck his own perspiration,
-and a little orphan boy that she tuck undher her purtection.
-It was a hard case, an’ yet, God bless her, she held out
-like a man.</p>
-
-<p>It’s an ould sayin’ that there’s no tyin’ up the tongue of
-Fame, an’ it’s also a true one. The account of the siege had
-gone far an’ near in the counthry, an’ none of the Irish, no
-matter what they were who ever heard it, but wor sorry.
-Sandy Saveall was now the devil an’ all. As there was no
-more in the castle to shoot, he should find something to regenerate
-his hand upon: for instance, he practised upon three or
-four of Graham’s friends, who undher one pretence or other
-were seen skulkin’ about the castle, an’ none of their relations
-durst come to take away their bodies in ordher to bury them.
-At length things came to that pass, that poor Miss Graham
-was at the last gasp for something to drink; she had ferreted
-out as well as she could a drop of moisture here an’
-there in the damp corners of the castle, but now all that was
-gone; the fat cook had sucked himself to death, and the little
-orphan boy died calmly away a few hours afther him, lavin’
-the helpless lady with a tongue swelled an’ furred, and a
-mouth parched and burned, for want of drink. Still the blood
-of the Grahams was in her, and yield she would not to the
-villain that left her as she was. Sich then was the transparency
-of her situation, when happening to be on the battlements
-to catch, if possible, a little of the dew of heaven, she
-was surprised to see something flung up, which rolled down
-towards her feet; she lifted it, an’ on examinin’ the contents,
-found it to be a stone covered with a piece of brown
-paper, inside which was a slip of white, containing the
-words, ‘Endure&mdash;relief is near you!’ But, poor young lady,
-of what retrospection could these tidings be to one in her situation?&mdash;she
-could scarcely see to read them; her brain was
-dizzy, her mouth like a cindher, her tongue swelled an’ black,
-an’ her breath felt as hot as a furnace. She could barely
-breathe, an’ was in the very act of lyin’ down undher the triumphant
-air of heaven to die, when she heard the shrill voice
-of a young kid in the castle yard, and immediently remembered
-that a brown goat which her lover, a gentleman named Simpson,
-had, when it was a kid, made her a present of, remained
-in the castle about the stable during the whole siege. She
-instantly made her way slowly down stairs, got a bowl, and
-havin’ milked the goat, she took a little of the milk, which I
-need not asseverate at once relieved her. By this means she
-recovered, an’ findin’ no further anticipation from druth, she
-resolved like a hairo to keep the Crumwellians out, an’ to
-wait till either God or man might lend her a helpin’ hand.</p>
-
-<p>Now, you must know that the miller’s purty daughter had
-also a sweetheart called <em>Suil Gair</em> Maguire, or sharp-eye’d
-Maguire, an humble branch of the great Maguires of Enniskillen;
-an’ this same Suil Gair was servant an’ foster-brother
-to Simpson, who was the intended husband of Miss Graham.
-Simpson, who lived some miles off, on hearin’ the condition of
-the castle, gathered together all the royalists far an’ near;
-an’ as Crummle was honestly hated by both Romans an’
-Prodestans, faith, you see, Maguire himself promised to send
-a few of his followers to the rescue. In the mean time, Suil
-Gair dressed himself up like a fool or idiot, an’ undher the
-protection of the miller’s daughter, who blarnied Saveall in
-great style, was allowed to wandher about an’ joke wid the
-sogers; but especially he took a fancy to Sandy, and challenged
-him to put one stone out of five in one of the port-holes
-of the castle, at a match of finger-stone. Sandy, who was
-nearly as famous at that as the musket, was rather relaxed
-when he saw that Suil Gair could at least put in every second
-stone, an’ that he himself could hardly put one in out of
-twenty. Well, at all events it was durin’ their sport that
-fool Paddy, as they called him, contrived to fling the scrap
-of writin’ I spoke of across the battlements at all chances; for
-when he undhertook to go to the castle, he gave up his life as
-lost; but he didn’t care about that, set in case he was able to
-save either his foster-brother or Miss Graham. But this is
-not at all indispensable, for it is well known that many a foster-brother
-sacrificed his life the same way, and in cases of
-great danger, when the real brother would beg to decline the
-compliment.</p>
-
-<p>Things were now in a very connubial state entirely. Balgruntie
-heard that relief was comin’ to the castle, an’ what
-to do he did not know; there was little time to be lost, however,
-an’ something must be done. He praiched flowery discourses
-twice a-day from the mill-hopper, an’ sang psalms for
-grace to be directed in his righteous intentions; but as yet
-he derived no particular predilection from either. Sandy appeared
-to have got a more bountiful modelum of grace than
-his captain, for he succeeded at last in bringin’ the miller’s
-daughter to sit undher the word at her father’s hopper. Fool
-Paddy, as they called Maguire, had now become a great favourite
-wid the sogers, an’ as he proved to be quite harmless
-and inoffensive, they let him run about the place widout opposition.
-The castle, to be sure, was still guarded, but Miss
-Graham kept her heart up in consequence of the note, for she
-hoped every day to get relief from her friends. Balgruntie,
-now seein’ that the miller’s daughter was becomin’ more
-serious undher the taichin’ of Saveall, formed a plan that he
-thought might enable him to penethrate the castle, an’ bear
-off the lady an’ the money. This was to strive wid very delicate
-meditation to prevail on the miller’s daughter, through
-the renown that he thought Sandy had over her, to open a
-correspondency wid Miss Graham; for he knew that if one of
-the gates was unlocked, and the unsuspectin’ girl let in, the
-whole squadron would soon be in afther her. Now, this plan
-was the more dangerous to Miss Graham, because the miller’s
-daughter had intended to bring about the very same denouncement
-for a different purpose. Between her friend an’
-her enemies it was clear the poor lady had little chance; an’
-it was Balgruntie’s intention, the moment he had sequestrated
-her and the money, to make his escape, an’ lave the castle to
-whosomever might choose to take it. Things, however, were
-ordhered to take a different bereavement: the Hog of Cupar
-was to be trapped in the hydrostatics of his own hypocrisy,
-an’ Saveall to be overmatched in his own premises. Well,
-the plot was mentioned to Sandy, who was promised a good
-sketch of the prog; an’ as it was jist the very thing he dreamt
-about night an’ day, he snapped at it as a hungry dog would
-at a sheep’s trotter. That night the miller’s daughter&mdash;whose
-name I may as well say was Nannie Duffy, the purtiest girl
-an’ the sweetest singer that ever was in the counthry&mdash;was to
-go to the castle an’ tell Miss Graham that the sogers wor all
-gone, Crummle killed, an’ his whole army massacrayed to
-atoms. This was a different plan from poor Nannie’s, who
-now saw clearly what they were at. But never heed a woman
-for bein’ witty when hard pushed.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t like to do it,’ said she, ‘for it looks like thrachery,
-espishilly as my father has left the neighbourhood, and I don’t
-know where he is gone to; an’ you know thrachery’s ondacent
-in either man or woman. Still, Sandy, it goes hard for
-me to refuse one that I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;well, I wish I knew where my
-father is&mdash;I would like to know what he’d think of it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hut,’ said Sandy, ‘where’s the use of such scruples in a
-good cause?&mdash;when we get the money, we’ll fly. It is principally
-for the sake of waining you an’ her from the darkness of
-idolatry that we do it. Indeed, my conscience would not rest
-well if I let a soul an’ body like yours remain a prey to Sathan,
-my darlin’.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said she, ‘doesn’t the captain exhort this evenin’?’</p>
-
-<p>‘He does, my beloved, an’ with a blessin’ will expound a
-few verses from the Song of Solomon.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s betther then,’ said she, ‘to sit under the word, an’
-perhaps some light may be given to us.’</p>
-
-<p>This delighted Saveall’s heart, who now looked upon pretty
-Nannie as his own; indeed, he was obliged to go gradually
-and cautiously to work, for cruel though Nolly Rednose was,
-Sandy knew that if any violent act of that kind should raich
-him, the guilty party would sup sorrow. Well, accordin’ to
-this pious arrangement, Balgruntie assembled all his men who
-were not on duty about the hopper, in which he stood as
-usual, an’ had commenced a powerful exhortation, the substratum
-of which was devoted to Nannie; he dwelt upon the
-happiness of religious love; said that scruples were often suggested
-by Satan, an’ that a heavenly duty was but terrestrial
-when put in comparishment wid an earthly one. He also made
-collusion to the old Squire that was popped by Sandy; said
-it was often a judgment for the wicked man to die in his sins;
-an’ was gettin’ on wid great eloquence an’ emulation, when a
-low rumblin’ noise was heard, an’ Balgruntie, throwin’ up his
-clenched hands an’ grindin’ his teeth, shouted out, ‘Hell and
-d&mdash;&mdash;n, I’ll be ground to death! The mill’s goin’ on!
-Murdher! murdher! I’m gone!’ Faith, it was true enough&mdash;she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span>
-had been wickedly set a-goin’ by some one; an’ before
-they had time to stop her, the Hog of Cupar had the feet and
-legs twisted off him before their eyes&mdash;a fair illustration of
-his own doctrine, that it is often a judgment for the wicked
-man to die in his sins. When the mill was stopped, he was
-pulled out, but didn’t live twenty minutes, in consequence of
-the loss of blood. Time was pressin’, so they ran up a shell of a
-coffin, and tumbled it into a pit that was hastily dug for it on
-the mill-common.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, by no manner of manes relieved poor Nannie
-from her difficulty, for Saveall, finding himself now first
-in command, determined not to lose a moment in tolerating
-his plan upon the castle.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see,’ said he, ‘that a way is opened for us that we
-didn’t expect; an’ let us not close our eyes to the light that
-has been given, lest it might be suddenly taken from us again.
-In this instance I suspect that fool Paddy has been made the
-chosen instrument; for it appears upon inquiry that he too
-has disappeared. However, heaven’s will be done! we will
-have the more to ourselves, my beloved&mdash;ehem! It is now
-dark,’ he proceeded, ‘so I shall go an’ take my usual smoke
-at the mill window, an’ in about a quarther of an hour I’ll be
-ready.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But I’m all in a tremor after sich a frightful accident,’
-replied Nannie: ‘an’ I want to get a few minutes’ quiet before
-we engage upon our undhertakin.’</p>
-
-<p>This was very natural, and Saveall accordingly took his
-usual seat at a little windy in the gable of the mill, that faced
-the miller’s house; an’ from the way the bench was fixed, he
-was obliged to sit with his face exactly towards the same direction.
-There we leave him meditatin’ upon his own righteous
-approximations, till we folly <em>Suil Gair</em> Maguire, or fool
-Paddy, as they called him, who practicated all that was done.</p>
-
-<p>Maguire and Nannie, findin’ that no time was to be lost, gave
-all over as ruined, unless somethin’ could be acted on quickly.
-Suil Gair at once thought of settin’ the mill a-goin’, but kept
-the plan to himself, any further than tellin’ her not to be surprised
-at any thing she might see. He then told her to steal
-him a gun, but if possible to let it be Saveall’s, as he knew it
-could be depended on. ‘But I hope you won’t shed any blood
-if you can avoid it,’ said she; ‘<em>that</em> I don’t like.’ ‘Tut,’ replied
-Suil Gair, makin’ evasion to the question, ‘it’s good to have
-it about me for my own defence.’</p>
-
-<p>He could often have shot either Balgruntie or Saveall in
-daylight, but not without certain death to himself, as he knew
-that escape was impossible. Besides, time was not before so
-pressin’ upon them, an’ every day relief was expected. Now,
-however, that relief was so near&mdash;for Simpson with a party of
-royalists an’ Maguire’s men must be within a couple of hours’
-journey&mdash;it would be too intrinsic entirely to see the castle
-plundhered, and the lady carried off by such a long-legged
-skyhill as Saveall. Nannie consequentially, at great risk,
-took an opportunity of slipping his gun to Suil Gair, who was
-the best shot of the day in that or any other part of the country;
-and it was in consequence of this that he was called Suil
-Gair, or Sharp Eye. But, indeed, all the Maguires were famous
-shots; an’ I’m tould there’s one of them now in Dublin
-that could hit a pigeon’s egg or a silver sixpence at the distance
-of a hundred yards.<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Suil Gair did not merely raise the
-sluice when he set the mill a-goin’, but he whipped it out altogether
-an’ threw it into the dam, so that the possibility of
-saving the Hog of Cupar was irretrievable. He made off,
-however, an’ threw himself among the tall ragweeds that grew
-upon the common, till it got dark, when Saveall, as was his
-custom, should take his evenin’ smoke at the windy. Here he
-sat for some period, thinkin’ over many ruminations, before
-he lit his cutty pipe, as he called it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ said he to himself, ‘what is there to hindher me
-from takin’ away, or rather from makin’ sure of the grand lassie,
-instead of the miller’s daughter? If I get intil the castle,
-it can be soon effected; for if she has any regard for her reputation,
-she will be quiet. I’m a braw handsome lad enough,
-a wee thought high in the cheek bones, scaly in the skin, an’
-knock-knee’d a trifle, but stout an’ lathy, an’ tough as a
-withy. But, again, what is to be done wi Nannie? Hut,
-she’s but a miller’s daughter, an’ may be disposed of if she
-gets troublesome. I know she’s fond of me, but I dinna blame
-her for that. However, it wadna become me now to entertain
-scruples, seein’ that the way is made so plain for me.
-But, save us! eh, sirs, that was an awful death, an’ very like
-a judgment on the Hog of Cupar! It is often a judgment for
-the wicked to die in their sins! Balgruntie wasna that’&mdash;&mdash; Whatever
-he intended to say further, cannot be analogized
-by man, for, just as he had uttered the last word, which he did
-while holding the candle to his pipe, the bullet of his own gun
-entered between his eyes, and the next moment he was a corpse.</p>
-
-<p>Suil Gair desarved the name he got, for truer did never
-bullet go to the mark from Saveall’s own aim than it did from
-his. There is now little more to be superadded to my story.
-Before daybreak the next mornin’, Simpson came to the relief
-of his intended wife; Crummle’s party war surprised, taken,
-an’ cut to pieces; an’ it so happened that from that day to
-this the face of a soger belongin’ to him was never seen near
-the mill or castle of Aughentain, with one exception only, and
-that was this:&mdash;You all know that the mill is often heard to go
-at night when nobody sets her a-goin’, an’ that the most sevendable
-scrames of torture come out of the hopper, an’ that when
-any one has the courage to look in, they’re sure to see a man
-dressed like a soger, with a white mealy face, in the act, so to
-say, of havin’ his legs ground off him. Many a guess was
-made about who the spirit could be, but all to no purpose.
-There, however, is the truth for yez; the spirit that shrieks
-in the hopper is Balgruntie’s ghost, an’ he’s to be ground that
-way till the day of judgment.</p>
-
-<p>Be coorse, Simpson and Miss Graham were married, as
-war Nannie Duffy an’ Suil Gair; an’ if they all lived long an’
-happy, I wish we may all live ten times longer an’ happier; an’
-so we will, but in a betther world than this, plaise God.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but, Tom,” said Gordon, “how does that account
-for my name, which you said you’d tell me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Tom; “begad I was near forgettin’ it. Why,
-you see, sich was their veneration for the goat that was the
-manes, undher God, of savin’ Miss Graham’s life, that they
-changed the name of Simpson to Gordon, which signifies in
-Irish <i lang="ga">gor dhun</i>, or a brown goat, that all their posterity might
-know the great obligations they lay undher to that reverend
-animal.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ do you mane to tell me,” said Gordon, “that my name
-was never heard of until Oliver Crummle’s time?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do. Never in the wide an’ subterraneous earth was sich
-a name known till afther the prognostication I tould you; an’
-it never would either, only for the goat, sure. I can prove it
-by the pathepathetics. Denny Mullin, will you give us another
-draw o’ the pipe?”</p>
-
-<p>Tom’s authority in these matters was unquestionable, and,
-besides, there was no one present learned enough to contradict
-him, with any chance of success, before such an audience.
-The argument was consequently, without further discussion,
-decided in his favour, and Gordon was silenced touching the
-origin and etymology of his own name.</p>
-
-<p>This legend we have related as nearly as we can remember
-in Tom’s words. We may as well, however, state at once
-that many of his legends were wofully deficient in authenticity,
-as indeed those of most countries are. Nearly half the Irish
-legends are <i lang="la">ex post facto</i> or <em>postliminious</em>. There is no record,
-for instance, that Oliver Cromwell ever saw the castle of
-Aughentain, or that any such event as that narrated by Tom
-ever happened in or about it. It is much more likely that the
-story, if ever there was any truth in it, is of Scotch origin, as
-indeed the names would seem to import. There is no doubt,
-however, that the castle of Aughentain, which is now in the
-possession of a gentleman named Browne we think, was once
-the property of a family called Graham. In our boyhood there
-was a respectable family of that name living in its immediate
-vicinity, but we know not whether they are the descendants of
-those who owned the castle or not.</p>
-
-<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> The celebrated Brian Maguire, the first shot of his day, was at this time
-living in Dublin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">THE HERRING.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Second Article.</span></h2>
-
-<h3>THE FISHERY.</h3>
-
-<p>Having given in a former number some account of the natural
-history of this valuable little creature, we now proceed, in
-accordance with our promise, to give a description of the
-various modes of taking and curing it; and as the Dutch
-were the first to see the importance, and devote themselves to
-the improvement, of the herring fishery, we shall commence
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>So early as the year 1307, the Dutch had turned their attention
-to this subject; and lest any of our more thoughtless
-or less informed readers should deem the matter one of
-secondary consideration, or probably of even less, we shall
-lay before them some statistical accounts of the Dutch fisheries,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span>
-extracted from returns of the census of the States-General,
-taken in the year 1669. In that year the total amount
-of population was 2,400,000.</p>
-
-<table summary="Dutch census figures">
- <tr>
- <td>Of whom were employed as fishermen, and in equipping fishermen with their boats, tackle, conveying of salt, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="right">450,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Employed in the navigation of ships in foreign trade,</td>
- <td class="right">250,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Shipwrights, handicraftsmen, and manufacturers,</td>
- <td class="right">650,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Inland fishermen, agriculturists, and labourers,</td>
- <td class="right">200,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Gentry, statesmen, soldiers, and inhabitants in general,</td>
- <td class="right">850,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="right">Total,</td>
- <td class="right total">2,400,000</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus nearly a fifth of the population of Holland was entirely
-engaged in and supported by the herring and deep-sea
-fishery, and thus arose the saying that “the foundations of
-Amsterdam were laid on herring bones;” and hence did De
-Witt assert that “Holland derived her main support from
-the herring fishery, and that it ought to be considered as the
-right arm of the republic.”</p>
-
-<p>Before Holland was humbled upon the seas, and whilst she
-was at the pinnacle of her prosperity, she had ten thousand
-sail of shipping, with 168,000 mariners, afloat. Of these no
-less than 6400 vessels, with 112,000 mariners, were employed
-in and connected with the herring fishery alone, “although
-the country itself affords them neither materials, nor victual,
-nor merchandise, to be accounted of, towards their setting
-forth.” When we come to the subject of curing, we shall take
-occasion to point out the modes by which the Dutch attained
-their excellence, and established this surprising trade; but at
-present we have but to describe their manner of fishing.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Great Fishery</span> commences on the 24th of June,
-and terminates on the 31st of December, and is carried on
-in the latitudes of Shetland and Edinburgh, and on the coast
-of Great Britain, with strong-decked vessels called busses,
-manned by fourteen or fifteen men, and well supplied with
-casks, salt, nets, and every material requisite for catching and
-curing at sea. Each buss has generally fifty, and must not
-have less than forty nets of 32 fathoms in length each, 8 fathoms
-in depth, and a buoy-rope of 8 fathoms; an empty
-barrel less than a herring barrel is attached to each buoy-rope.
-This fleet of nets, as it is called, is divided by buoys into four
-parts, by which their position is marked and their taking in
-facilitated; the buoys at the extreme ends are painted white,
-with the owners’ and vessels’ names upon them. By the
-Dutch fishery laws it is provided that the yarn of the nets
-must be of good unmixed Dutch or Baltic hemp, which must
-be inspected before use by sworn surveyors; the yarn must
-be well spun; and each full net, or fourth part of a fleet, must
-be 740 meshes in length and 68 in depth, and the nets must
-be inspected and marked before they can be used.</p>
-
-<p>The Dutch always shoot their nets, that is, cast them into
-the sea, at sunset, and take them in before sunrise. In shooting
-them they cast them to windward, so that the wind may
-prevent the vessel from coming upon them. The whole of the
-nets are attached to four strong ropes joined to each other,
-and are taken in by means of the capstan, to which four or
-five men attend, whilst four more shake out the fish.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Small Fishery</span>, or fresh-herring fishery, is carried
-on to the east of Yarmouth in deep water, with flat-bottomed
-vessels without keels, so formed for the purpose of being run
-ashore in any convenient place.</p>
-
-<p>It is forbidden by the 15th and 16th articles of the Dutch
-fishery laws to gut the herrings taken by the small fishery
-either at sea or ashore, under pain of one month’s imprisonment,
-and a fine of five guilders for every hundred herrings,
-as well as the confiscation of the herrings, unless special permission
-has been obtained from the king, at the request of the
-States.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Pan Fishery</span> is carried on in the rivers, inland seas,
-and on the coast of Holland, within three miles of the shore.</p>
-
-<p>The same prohibition, under similar penalties, that exists
-against curing fish taken in the small fishery, extends to
-this.</p>
-
-<p>We have given the first place to the Dutch in this account,
-in consequence of their having been the first to see the importance
-of the fishery, but they take the lead no longer; the
-English and Scotch have successfully rivalled them in curing,
-and for the quantity taken during the season the Norwegians
-surpass all others. The Norwegian is a wholesale fishery,
-every description of ship and boat being in demand. They
-have curing stations on shore, to which the boats bring the
-fish as fast as they are caught; and there are large vessels
-with barrels and salt lying out amongst the fishers, buying
-from those who do not wish to lose time by going ashore. Every
-description of net, as well as every sort of vessel, is in requisition;
-some fishing at anchor, some sailing, and others hauling
-their seines on shore, but the grand method is as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>An immense range of nets with very small meshes so small
-as to prevent the herrings from fastening in them, is extended
-round a shoal of fish, and gradually moved towards some
-creek or narrow inlet of the sea. The nets are drawn close
-and made fast across the entrance, and the enormous body of
-herrings thus crowded up into a narrow space is taken out
-and cured at leisure. This mode of fishing is called a “lock.”</p>
-
-<p>The following passage from a letter written by a gentleman
-who witnessed the fishery near Hitteroe, to Mr Mitchell
-of Leith, will give our readers some idea of its extent:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“On the other side of the Sound we saw what is termed a
-<em>lock</em>, that is, several nets joined together, forming a bar before
-a small bay, into which the herrings were crowded. In this
-place there were several thousand barrels of herrings, so compactly
-confined together that an oar could stand up in the
-mass. There were in the neighbourhood of Hitteroe altogether
-about four or five thousand nets, and about two thousand
-boats and vessels; and there were caught, according to
-the opinion of several intelligent persons, this day (24th January
-1833), not less than ten thousand barrels.”</p>
-
-<p>The entire quantity taken on the coast of Norway during
-the fall of 1832 and the spring of 1833 was estimated at
-680,000 barrels, which was considered to be a fair average
-take.</p>
-
-<p>We come now to the home fishery, in which Yarmouth takes
-the lead in the size of vessels and magnitude of tackle employed.
-The fishing is carried on by the Yarmouth men in decked
-vessels called “luggers,” from 20 to 50 tons burthen, having
-three masts, and rigged with three lugsails, topsails, mizou,
-foresail, and jib: the crew of the largest consisting of twelve
-men and a boy, who are paid according to the quantity of fish
-caught. Each ordinary vessel carries two hundred nets of 48
-feet in length and 30 in depth, each having meshes of 1 inch
-or 1⅛ inch, as usual in herring nets. Of these nets they shoot
-one hundred at a time, reserving the other hundred for cases
-of accident or mishap. When launched, each net is attached
-by two seizings of 1½ inch rope, having a depth of 18 feet, to
-a four-stranded (generally 4 inch) warp of 3600 feet in length;
-this warp is made fast to a rope from the bow of the vessel,
-which in stormy weather can be let out to ease the strain, to
-the extent of 100 fathoms, or 600 feet. For each net there
-are two buoys (4-gallon barrels) made fast to the warp, and
-there are four buoys besides, to mark the distances, two for
-the quarter and three-quarter stations, painted red and white
-quarterly, one for the half distance or middle of the fleet,
-painted half red and half white, and one for the extremity,
-painted all white; each of them has painted on it the names
-of the ship, master, owner, and port, in order that they may be
-restored in case of breaking away during bad weather; and so
-good an understanding exists upon this subject amongst the
-fishermen, that the nets are always restored by the finder to
-the owner upon payment of only 1s. for each net; and no one
-must suffer a stray net to drift away; if seen, it must be taken
-in. This fishery commences in the beginning of October, and
-lasts little more than two months. The nets are shot after
-the Dutch fashion, at sunset; but if the appearances are favourable,
-they are taken in once or twice during the night,
-and again at sunrise. 100 barrels of herrings are frequently
-taken by these nets at a single haul, and 600 barrels may be
-considered as a fair average fishing for one vessel during the
-season. The number of decked vessels employed at Yarmouth
-alone in the fishery is about 500.</p>
-
-<p>Next, and likely from its steady increase soon to become
-the first, is the Scotch fishery.</p>
-
-<p>Like the Norwegian, every description of boat and net is
-to be found employed amongst the Scottish islands, but the
-most regularly employed vessels are open undecked boats, of
-28 to 32 feet in length, or thereabouts, and 9 to 11 feet in
-breadth, usually rigged with two masts and two sails. They
-have on board from twelve to thirty nets of from 150 to 186
-feet in length each, and from 20 to 31 feet in depth.</p>
-
-<p>From the Report by the Commissioners of the British
-Herring Fishery, of the fishery of 1838, year ending 5th April
-1839, it appears that there were then engaged in the fishery
-11,357 boats, decked and undecked, throughout England and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span>
-Scotland, manned by 50,238 men and boys, and employing
-85,573 persons in all, including coopers, packers, curers, and
-labourers.</p>
-
-<p>Of the entire number of vessels, about 9000 belonged to
-Scottish ports.</p>
-
-<p>The entire quantity of herrings exported amounted to
-239,730½ barrels, of which 195,301 barrels were Scotch; and
-of those exported, 149,926 barrels were sent to and disposed
-of in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The entire quantity of herrings taken by Scottish boats,
-and cured both for home use and exportation, was 495,589
-barrels; the total by English and Scotch 555,559¾ barrels;
-but this return does not include the Yarmouth fishery, the
-herrings there being always smoked, or made into what are
-called <em>red herrings</em>.</p>
-
-<p>We need not describe the Prussian and other methods, as
-they resemble some one or other of those already mentioned.
-Come we now to our own, which we have purposely reserved
-to the last.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst the fishermen of Ireland, the men of Kinsale have
-long been the admitted leaders; and the Kinsale hookers are
-celebrated throughout the nautical world as among the best
-sea-boats that ever weathered a gale. They are half-decked
-vessels, with one mast, carrying a fore and aft mainsail, foresail,
-and jib, and are usually manned by four men and a boy.
-They are seldom used in the herring fishery, being for the
-most part confined to the deep-sea line fishery upon the
-Nymph bank, where cod, ling, hake, haddock, turbot, plaice,
-&amp;c., abound in such quantity that many persons affirm it to be
-second only to the banks of Newfoundland. But the usual
-mode of fishing for herrings, and which is adopted all along
-the south, south-west, and west coast of Ireland, especially
-at Valencia and Kenmare, is with the deep-sea seine. This
-is formed sometimes for the express purpose, but frequently
-by a subscription of nets. Fifteen men bring a drift-net each,
-20 fathoms or 120 feet in length, and 5 fathoms or 30 feet in
-depth; these are all joined together, five nets in length, and
-three in depth, so that the whole seine is 600 feet in length
-and 90 feet in depth, with a cork-rope (that is, a rope having
-large pieces of cork attached to it at intervals) at the top,
-and leaden sinkers attached to the foot-rope, which unites all
-the nets at the bottom. Two warps of 60 fathoms each are
-requisite, and there are brails (small half-inch ropes) attached
-to the foot-rope, which are of use to haul upon, in order to
-purse up the net and prevent the fish from escaping.</p>
-
-<p>The seine is shot from a boat whilst it is being pulled round
-the shoal of fish. All having been thrown over, the warp is
-hauled upon until the net is brought into ten fathoms’ depth of
-water, when the brails and foot-rope are hauled in, and the
-fish is tucked into the largest boat. In this manner 80,000 to
-100,000 herrings (about 100 barrels) may be taken at a haul.
-But where the people are too poor to supply themselves with
-nets or boats, many contrivances are made use of. For boats,
-the <em>curragh</em>, made of wicker and covered with a horse’s skin,
-or canvass pitched, is used, and often even this cannot be had;
-sometimes the people load a horse with the nets, mount him
-and swim him out, shooting the nets from his back; and for
-nets, in many places, the people use their sheets, blankets, and
-quilts, which they subscribe and sew together, often to the
-number of sixty, and the fish thus taken are divided in due
-proportion amongst the subscribers.</p>
-
-<p>After the foreign statistics which we have laid before our
-readers, they will doubtless expect us to inform them how
-many vessels and what number of hands are <em>now</em> employed in
-the Irish fishery. This, however, we are unable to do. The
-Commissioners of the Herring Fishery have their jurisdiction
-confined to Scotland and England, almost exclusively to Scotland,
-the fishery of which is thriving under their fostering
-care in a most surprising manner. By their judicious attention
-to the encouragement of careful curing, and the distribution
-of small aids in money to poor fishermen, the number of
-boats employed in 1839 exceeded that of the former year
-by 78; and the progressive increase in the fishery is fully exemplified
-by the following table, showing the quantity of herrings
-cured during the five years preceding the return now before
-us:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table summary="Quantity of herrings cured per year">
- <tr>
- <td>Year</td>
- <td>1835</td>
- <td>277,317</td>
- <td>barrels.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>1836</td>
- <td>497,614¾</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>1837</td>
- <td>397,829¼</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>1838</td>
- <td>507,774¾</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- <td>1839</td>
- <td>555,559¾</td>
- <td class="center">”</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>By this table it appears that the Scotch fishery has doubled
-its amount in five years, without any description of bounty being
-given. It may, however, be as well to state, before concluding
-this paper, that it appears, by the Reports of the Irish
-Commissioners, whose sittings terminated in the year 1830,
-that during the time that Ireland possessed a Fishery Board,
-the number of persons employed in the fishery had more than
-doubled. At the time of the first appointment of Commissioners
-of Irish Fisheries in 1819, the number of men employed
-was estimated at 30,000. By the first return which they could
-venture to pronounce accurate, being for the year ending 5th
-April 1822, the number was 36,192 men; 5th April 1823,
-the number was 44,892 men, being an increase of 8700;
-at 5th April 1824, the number was 49,448, being an increase on
-the preceding year of 4556; 5th April 1825, the number was
-52,482, being an increase on the preceding year of 3034; and
-the numbers went on regularly progressing every year during
-the existence of the Board, until its termination, as the following
-extract from the last Report will best exhibit. It is for
-the year 1830, at which time the bounty had been reduced to
-one shilling per barrel:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The Commissioners have still the gratification to find,
-from the returns made by the local inspectors, that the number
-of fishermen still continues to experience a yearly increase.
-The gross amount, as taken from the returns of the
-preceding year, was 63,421 men. The gross amount, as taken
-from the returns of the present year, is 64,771 men, being an
-increase on the past year of 1350 men.”</p>
-
-<p>By the same report it appeared that the number of decked
-vessels was 345; tonnage 9810; men 2147&mdash;half-decked vessels
-769; tonnage 9457; men 3852&mdash;row-boats 9522; men
-46,212.</p>
-
-<p>The quantity of herrings cured for bounty in the year
-ending 5th April 1830, was 16,855 barrels, the bounty on
-which was £842 15s.</p>
-
-<p>The tonnage bounty paid to vessels engaged in the cod and
-ling fishery was £829 10s; and the bounty on cured cod, &amp;c.
-was £960.</p>
-
-<p>There is not in the reports that we have seen any attempt
-at estimating the quantity of herrings caught, which
-is somewhat extraordinary, considering the accuracy with
-which the number of fishermen, curers, coopers, &amp;c., was ascertained;
-but the quantity cured is given above.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst, however, the number of fishermen employed in the
-fisheries generally, increased so very considerably during the
-period that the Irish Fishery Board was in operation, it is an
-extraordinary, and to us inexplicable fact, that the quantity
-of herrings cured for bounty in any one season never exceeded
-16,855 barrels, so that even the high bounty of 4s per barrel
-was not sufficient to induce the Irish fishermen to cure their
-herrings in a proper manner. In short, the fishery board, in
-so far as the primary object of its formation was concerned,
-was totally inoperative, and the people of this country were as
-dependent then as now upon the Scotch curers for the requisite
-supply of the staple luxury of the poorer classes.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to say to what extent the fisheries may have
-fallen off, if at all, in Ireland, since the abolition of the fishery
-board; but as the quantity of salted herrings imported into
-Ireland from Scotland has not materially increased since, it
-may be presumed that as many herrings are caught and
-cured now as at any former period.</p>
-
-<p>The alleged decline of the Irish fisheries has by many been
-attributed entirely to the withdrawal of the bounties and the
-fishery board. But when we consider the exceedingly trifling
-amount of bounty paid on herrings in any one year, the discontinuance
-of so small a sum as £842 15s 7d (the amount in
-1829-30) could not possibly have any perceptible influence
-upon a branch of industry which gave employment to 75,366
-persons.</p>
-
-<p>Nor could the discontinuance of the grants made for harbours
-and small loans to poor fishermen have produced any
-material influence upon the fisheries, as the total amount advanced
-in ten years for these two objects was only £39,508
-18s 2d, or less than £4000 a-year.</p>
-
-<p>There is then but one other point of view in which the withdrawal
-of the fishery board could have operated injuriously,
-namely, the absence of that supervision and authority in regulating
-the fisheries which the officers of the board exercised
-to a certain extent, and which in our opinion ought to have
-been continued.</p>
-
-<p>The various modes of curing herrings will form the subject
-of a future article.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">CASTLECOR, A REVERIE,<br />
-<span class="smaller">BY J. U. U.</span></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Ancient oaks of Castlecor,</div>
-<div class="verse">Which the wreck of weathery war,</div>
-<div class="verse">Summer’s sun or winter blast,</div>
-<div class="verse">Chance and change still sweeping past,</div>
-<div class="verse">Still have left thus hoar and high</div>
-<div class="verse">While the world hath fleeted by.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Many a race of pride hath run,</div>
-<div class="verse">Many a field been lost and won;</div>
-<div class="verse">Many a day of shame and glory</div>
-<div class="verse">Past into the dream of story,</div>
-<div class="verse">Since the spring time of your birth</div>
-<div class="verse">Revelled on this ancient earth.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Well your crown of age ye wear&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">High upon this noon-day air,</div>
-<div class="verse">Broadly waving in the light,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thickset tufts of verdure bright;</div>
-<div class="verse">While, beneath, your massive shade</div>
-<div class="verse">Sleeps upon the ferny glade.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Where the summer sunbeam plays</div>
-<div class="verse">O’er the long-drawn leafy ways,</div>
-<div class="verse">Down through tremulous gleams of green,</div>
-<div class="verse">On some spot at distance seen;</div>
-<div class="verse">Where the foliage opens brightly,</div>
-<div class="verse">If the fallow-deer bound lightly;</div>
-<div class="verse">Well the swiftly passing gleam</div>
-<div class="verse">Mingles into fancy’s dream,</div>
-<div class="verse">See in shadowy light appear</div>
-<div class="verse">Some old hunter of the deer,</div>
-<div class="verse">Through the stillness of the wood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Bent in listening attitude;</div>
-<div class="verse">Then amid the haunted glade</div>
-<div class="verse">Melt away in distant shade.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Were not life as brief and frail</div>
-<div class="verse">As a gossip’s idle tale,</div>
-<div class="verse">What eventful hours might be</div>
-<div class="verse">Here recalled to memory!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Straight upon the visioned sight,</div>
-<div class="verse">Through the rifts of leafy light,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where yon verdurous dusk disparts,</div>
-<div class="verse">What strange cloud of blackness starts</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis the grim and gloomy hold;</div>
-<div class="verse">Which ruled here in days of old,</div>
-<div class="verse">Leaving a name where once it stood;</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis the “castle in the wood.”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Lo! from parapet and tower</div>
-<div class="verse">Frowns the pride of ancient power&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Lo! from out the cullised port</div>
-<div class="verse">Pours the storm of raid or sport;</div>
-<div class="verse">Haughty eye and ruthless hand</div>
-<div class="verse">Iron chief and ruthless band;</div>
-<div class="verse">Well the robber chief I know,</div>
-<div class="verse">Tracked by many a home of woe.</div>
-<div class="verse">Onward bound; nor far behind</div>
-<div class="verse">Swells a murmur on the wind&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">From his kerne and lowring prey,</div>
-<div class="verse">Pride of pastures far away,</div>
-<div class="verse">Hither bound from foray rude,</div>
-<div class="verse">To his “castle in the wood.”</div>
-<div class="verse">Still the pageant nears&mdash;but lo;</div>
-<div class="verse">Fancy shifts the gliding show,</div>
-<div class="verse">To a sight of gayer mood.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">On free air in sunshine glancing,</div>
-<div class="verse">See a jovial train advancing,</div>
-<div class="verse">Bright housed steed and palfrey prancing,</div>
-<div class="verse">Horn and hound and hawk are there,</div>
-<div class="verse">Spear and scarf, and mantle fair,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sport and jest, and laughter gay,</div>
-<div class="verse">Shout and jolly hark away!</div>
-<div class="verse">On the glittering pageant streams,</div>
-<div class="verse">Vanishing in golden gleams.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Next across the shadowy lawn,</div>
-<div class="verse">Cowled and cinctured form glides on</div>
-<div class="verse">With ruddy cheek though solemn gear,</div>
-<div class="verse">Full glad it seems of journey done,</div>
-<div class="verse">That started with the rising sun,</div>
-<div class="verse">And confident of jovial cheer;</div>
-<div class="verse">Such never yet was wanting here.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Who follows fast, with footstep light,</div>
-<div class="verse">And eye of fire, and garment white?</div>
-<div class="verse">O, now the child of song I know,</div>
-<div class="verse">For the sun on his tuneful harp is bright!</div>
-<div class="verse">And free on the wind his long locks flow&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">O! glad will they be in yon halls below.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">But all is gone&mdash;one sober glance</div>
-<div class="verse">Hath whirled in air the fitful trance,</div>
-<div class="verse">The visioned wood that fancy ranged,</div>
-<div class="verse">Is still a wood, but O, how changed!</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Ancient Power’s, barbaric sway,</div>
-<div class="verse">Iron deeds have passed away&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Superstition’s gloomy hour,</div>
-<div class="verse">With the tyrant’s feudal power&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">All have passed!&mdash;and in their stead,</div>
-<div class="verse">Piety with reverent head,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sense, and mild humanity,</div>
-<div class="verse">Polished hospitality,</div>
-<div class="verse">Taste that spreads improvement round,</div>
-<div class="verse">On the old paternal ground;</div>
-<div class="verse">And without its blood and crime,</div>
-<div class="verse">Keeps the grace of elder time.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="gap4">SCRAPS FROM THE NORTHERN SCRIP.</h2>
-
-<p>[The following specimens of the Icelandic Sagas have been closely translated
-for the Irish Penny Journal, from the publications of the Royal Society
-of Northern Antiquaries, Copenhagen.]</p>
-
-<h3>NO. I.&mdash;KING OLAVE AND THE DEVIL.</h3>
-
-<p>And now the enemy of the whole human race, the devil himself,
-saw how his kingdom began to be laid waste, he who always
-persecutes human nature, and he saw how much on the
-other hand God’s kingdom prospered and increased; thereat
-he now felt great envy, and he puts on the human form, because
-he could so much the more easily deceive men, if he looked
-like a man himself. It so happened that King Olave was on a
-visit at Œgvald’s Ness,<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> about the anniversary of our Lord
-Jesus Christ’s nativity; and as all were regularly seated in
-the evening, and preparations were making for the drinking
-bout, and they were waiting until the royal table should be
-covered, there came an old one-eyed man into the hall with a
-silk hat on his head; he was very talkative, and could relate
-divers kinds of things; he was led forward before the king,
-who asked him the news, to which he replied, that he could
-relate various matters about the ancient kings and their battles.
-The king asked whether he knew who Œgvald was,
-he whom the Ness was called after. He answered, “He
-dwelt here on the Ness, and dearly loved a cow, so that she
-would follow him wherever he led her, and he would drink
-her milk; and therefore people that love cattle say that man
-and cow shall go together. This king fought many a battle,
-and once he strove with the king of Skorestrand; in that
-battle fell many a man, and there fell also King Œgvald,
-and he was afterwards buried aloft here on the Ness, and
-his barrow will be found here a little way from the house;
-in the other barrow lies the cow.” The drinking bout
-was now held according to usage, and all the diversions
-that had been appointed. Afterwards many went away to
-sleep. Then the king had that old man called to him, and
-he sat on the footstool by the king’s bed, and the king asked
-him about many matters, which he explained well, and like an
-experienced man. And when he had related much and explained
-many things well, the king became constantly the more
-desirous to hear him; he therefore staid awake a great part
-of the night, and continued to ask him about many things.
-At last the bishop reminded him in a few words that the
-king should stop speaking with the man; but the king thought
-he had related a part, but that another was still wanting. Far
-in the night, however, the king at last fell asleep, but awoke
-soon after, and asked whether the stranger was awake; he
-did not answer. The king said to the watchers that they
-should lead him up, but he was not found. The king then
-stood up, had his cupbearer and cook called to him, and asked
-whether any unknown man had gone to them when they were
-preparing the guest-chamber. The head cook said, “There
-came a little while ago, sire, a man to us, and said to me, as
-I was preparing the meat for a savoury dish for you, ‘Why
-do you prepare such meat for the king’s table as choice food
-for him, which is so lean?’ I told him then to get me some
-fatter and better meat, if he had any such. He said, ‘Come
-with me, and I will show you some fat and good meat, which
-is fit for a king’s table.’ And he led me to a house, and
-showed me two sides of very fat flesh; and this have I prepared
-for you, sire!” The king now saw it was a wile of the
-devil, and said to the cook, “Take that meat now, and cast
-it into the sea, that none may eat thereof; and if any one
-tastes of it, he will quickly die. But whom do you suppose that
-devil to have been, the stranger guest?” “We know not,”
-said they, “who it is.” The king said, “I believe that
-devil took upon himself Odin’s form.” According to the
-king’s command the meat was carried out, and cast into the
-sea; but the stranger was nowhere found, and search was
-made for him round about the Ness, according to the king’s
-commandment.&mdash;<cite>From Olave Tryggvason’s Saga.</cite></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The Norse word which becomes <em>ness</em> as the termination of several
-British localities and <em>The Noze</em> in our maps of Norway, means “promontory”
-(literally “nose”) and must not be confounded with <em>The Ness</em> in the
-county of Londonderry, which is in Irish “the waterfall.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<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.&mdash;Agents:&mdash;<span class="smcap">R.
-Groombridge</span>, Panyer Alley, Paternoster Row, London;
-<span class="smcap">Simms</span> and <span class="smcap">Dinham</span>, Exchange Street, Manchester; <span class="smcap">C. Davies</span>, North
-John Street, Liverpool; <span class="smcap">John Menzies</span>, Prince’s Street, Edinburgh;
-and <span class="smcap">David Robertson</span>, Trongate, Glasgow.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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